Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
All right, here we go after show podcast when he's
plugging her headphones in as we speak. We just we
just kicked this thing right off. It's a brand new
week when you know what I mean? You know what
I mean? All right, get those on. I was hoping
you would smack your face with the headphones. You ever
do that hundreds of times? Yeah, because the studio headphones
we put, take them on, put them, you know, put
them on them, and sometimes they snap and hit you
(00:20):
right in the face. Yep, it's crazy.
Speaker 2 (00:22):
Do you ever think of the amount of times we
take them on and off every day? It's all day, Yeah,
constantly off and on, off and on.
Speaker 1 (00:29):
Yeah, we should get the buds.
Speaker 2 (00:31):
You know what, Lisa tried them. I don't think they
sound good really like Ryan Seacrest us on them and
then she doesn't use them.
Speaker 1 (00:38):
Maybe because she's been doing it the other way for
so long.
Speaker 2 (00:40):
But I think that sometimes there's feedback to yeah, you know,
Ryan Seacrest, I don't know. They probably buy them two
thousand dollars buds.
Speaker 1 (00:47):
Yeah, but the vibros. I think both have the buds right,
and I.
Speaker 2 (00:50):
Know has her sparkly ones.
Speaker 1 (00:52):
I don't know about I think that I think they do.
I think they do.
Speaker 2 (00:55):
I prefer I don't think the buds. I think the
budds would actually annoy me, Like being in.
Speaker 1 (01:00):
I think it's just more the way it looks. It
looks cleaner than having them.
Speaker 2 (01:04):
I think this looks official, having these nice big headphones on.
We're on the radio. Bitch, I'm not fucking walking with
my iPod.
Speaker 1 (01:10):
Okay, take it easy. It's Monday. A little bit aggressive
for a Monday, anyone. Anyway, welcome in Hope. Everyone had
a fantastic weekend. We had one day of good weather.
Speaker 2 (01:20):
I was saying, I actually thought about yesterday. I was
saying my boyfriend, I was like, it was so nice yesterday.
I was like, I wish it was like this on Saturday.
It's such a cheese when it's a Sunday.
Speaker 1 (01:27):
Yeah, it sucks. But I was out. I was out
by the pool the whole day. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:30):
My niece's birthday party yesterday, so it was like half outside.
Speaker 1 (01:34):
Yeah. The boyfriend came, he did with the family.
Speaker 2 (01:37):
He did come. He came to her party.
Speaker 1 (01:38):
What did dad think?
Speaker 2 (01:40):
My dad, you know, my dad just finished chemo. My
dad slept like the whole time. Yeah, yeah, he was
on like, my brother has an outdoor patio with like,
you know, couches, and my dad was like sleeping the
whole time on them. So they just said basically hi
and by. But he talked to like my brother, my
brother's friends were there, obviously my mom and my aunt's
and then she already knows my older so staring her
(02:00):
boyfriend because we've hung out with him a couple of times.
Speaker 1 (02:02):
Did they tell any embarrassing stories.
Speaker 2 (02:04):
No, it was funny though. At the end, my brother
said to him, Oh, because he's kind of reserved. We
were opposites. He's very reserved, not like he's engaged, but
he's quieter. So my brother goes, you know when he said,
you were reserved, but how are you gonna get a
worder with her? Anyways?
Speaker 1 (02:18):
So true.
Speaker 2 (02:19):
They were laughing about that. So they were making fun
of me a little bit. So it was good.
Speaker 1 (02:23):
It's good little you know, family playfulness.
Speaker 2 (02:25):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, no, it was really it was good. Thought.
Speaker 1 (02:27):
He was cute, well taken, taken the next step in
the relationship. I saw he was pumping you gas yeah,
and paid for it too.
Speaker 2 (02:34):
He's so sweet. Like literally, I went to get my
car out and he was like, my got it. I
was like, okay, there we were in my car and
I need gas. And then I was like, oh, it's
my car. I'm not gonna you know, I didn't expect
I thought he was gonna he wasna puppy for me.
But I like and he was like, no, I got it.
Speaker 1 (02:49):
I was like, okay, thanks, I do that.
Speaker 2 (02:51):
Yeah, I love it.
Speaker 1 (02:51):
I pay I paid too.
Speaker 2 (02:53):
So he's very like he's such a gentleman and he's
very like a provider like type mood.
Speaker 1 (02:59):
Like I mean, who are the guys that pull up
to a gas station in their girls car and make
the girl get out?
Speaker 2 (03:05):
There's plenty of them in this day and age. Oh
I want I would love our talkbackers to let us know.
I know there's been a girl or two that has
been with a guy that lets her pump her own gas.
It's crazy, but it's true. You know, guys nowadays do
not have like I'm I can't not believe I found
a guy like him in the sane age because the
guys I've dated before him, they were not like that.
(03:28):
They maybe like sometimes showed that little bit, but he's
constantly always, like even yesterday he put me on the
inside of the of the street. Yeah, that's a big
one when I think some guys don't do that anymore. Yeah,
I literally moved he like literally moved my body.
Speaker 1 (03:43):
Oh why did the change? Did they stop teaching?
Speaker 2 (03:46):
Yeah? I feel like guys now want to be the prize.
Guys think they're the prize. Now guys are And I'm
not saying that like, oh I'm this big like women
are these big prizes. I really believe the relationship is
one hundred and one hundred. You give a hundred, I
give a hundred. I take care of you, you take care
of me. But there is something nice about that old
school mentality of like a nice, strong masculine man that
(04:07):
wants to take care of you, and in turn it
puts me in my feminine energy. I've never cooked so
much or like been so like housekeepy, right, like wifely.
Speaker 1 (04:18):
Yeah, like empowers you.
Speaker 2 (04:19):
Yeah, it makes me want to do more of like
the I guess the gender role part of it, Like
I'm all about it. I'll cook you dinner, I'll do whatever.
Speaker 1 (04:28):
I mean. I don't picture you as a housewife, but.
Speaker 2 (04:31):
My mother stayed home with us for like ten years,
so I really did see what you would call like
a traditional marriage where my mom was a stay at
home mom and my dad was a breadwinner. So I
actually am used to that. Like my mom went back
to work when I was like twelve, and then it
kind of shifts a little bit where my dad did
all the cooking. Mom didn't really like cooking like that,
but like my dad did the yard work, my mom
(04:53):
did the housework like it was my brother took the
trash out, did the yar work, and then we did
the laundry, did the dishes. Not saying that guys can't
do those things like you can do long but I
just that was how our house worked, So I'm used
to it. Actually it doesn't bother me at all. I don't.
I don't, and I'm lucky with my schedule. I'm home
at three or four to start dinner like I would
(05:13):
feel the times. He works nine to five okay, yeah,
eight thirty to five thirty one at.
Speaker 1 (05:18):
His job, which is what it's.
Speaker 2 (05:21):
It's like the fire say, I don't fucking know he does.
He was telling my boyfriend, my.
Speaker 1 (05:26):
Brother, wait, hold on, hold on, is the reason why
you don't say it because you really just don't know
what it is. I thought you were hiding with his No.
Speaker 2 (05:32):
I really don't. I know the company, like I know,
I don't even know the name of it. I just
I know what they do, but I don't know what
they do. Is so he does fire safety like yeah,
like sprinkler systems like you know, like for for like
corporate buildings or like for like.
Speaker 1 (05:46):
He doesn't do the actual No, No, he does like the.
Speaker 2 (05:49):
He was like the planning part of it, like the
booking like that type of stuff.
Speaker 1 (05:52):
Okay, yeah, like in Boston.
Speaker 2 (05:55):
No, it's not in Boston, but they send people out
all over because they have accountants all over. They have
accounts all over this over like the country, I mean
the city, the state. I don't know exactly. I really don't.
Saying that you should.
Speaker 1 (06:08):
Maybe ask him, Yeah, but feel good.
Speaker 2 (06:11):
I don't think he can, doesn't. I mean, it's kind
of like but it gives you he gets like he's
definitely at the point where I think he's like, wants
a new job.
Speaker 1 (06:18):
Can I explain to you why though? Why? Because think
about this, you have one of the coolest jobs. Yes,
and he knows that. So he probably feels a little
bit inferior because his job is not so cool, so
it would be cool if one day we just started
asking questions and just inquire about it, like what do
you do?
Speaker 2 (06:34):
It's so funny. When I ever asked him stuff, He's like,
it was fine, it was good. Like he doesn't want
to talk about work. Like I try, I'll be like, oh,
how is Jake's fine? Like he doesn't really you know
what I mean, He's not really like we don't really.
Speaker 1 (06:44):
Talk about well, maybe it's just a boring job it is.
Speaker 2 (06:47):
Yeah, yeah, And then you have me telling you, oh,
we interviewed mom and Wayne's today.
Speaker 1 (06:51):
What does he want to do?
Speaker 2 (06:53):
He asked, He's been interviewing for other positions in other places.
I think he's I don't want to speak for him,
but I know like he's the type of guy that,
like he always has like the provider mentality. But I
think he's trying to he's kind of going through a
spot where he doesn't know exactly what he wants to
do for the rest of his life, which I feel like, you.
Speaker 1 (07:11):
Know, yeah, he's got to find out what his uh,
what his dream is and chase it.
Speaker 2 (07:15):
Yeah. Yeah, So my thing is if you can pay
for a rint and you can pay for dinner and
you can pay for a trip. What else do I need?
Speaker 1 (07:22):
And your gas and my gas?
Speaker 2 (07:23):
What else do I need?
Speaker 3 (07:26):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (07:26):
Man?
Speaker 1 (07:27):
All Remember you can always leave us a talk back
on the after Show. It has to be on the
iHeart app. You can find this podcast on all platforms,
but if you want to join it and leave a talkback,
which we encourage, you have to do that on the
iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 3 (07:38):
Than cute in the Hygienist, I am listening to the
after show. Can you fill me in on the whole
Shiloh Hill thing on Instagram? Because I was watching all
of that stuff and my anxiety got so bad I
had to just delete my whole Instagram and like I
never got to see what was on the actual tape,
Like I was waiting for him to get the VCR
and it just freaked me out and I couldn't do it.
(08:00):
So please fill us in because I'm dying.
Speaker 1 (08:03):
So Katelin's talking about that wrestler that I was talking about,
I think last week that ordered a pair of boots
covered in blood on the Dark Web. Member, I was
talking about my algorithm and how messed up it is,
So yeah, Shiloh Hill he's a WWE wrestler, but he
also has a popular Instagram page social media where he
does weird things in the dark web. He ordered a
pair of boots. The boots had would look like blood
(08:23):
on them. He actually got them in the mail, tested
it and it was blood on them, which is super creepy.
And it came with a VCR tape. Yes, and he
was trying to get a VCR so we could watch
it and then and then Kitlin stopped watching. So the
update is he did post a video and it's just
a bunch of weird, old, creepy like movie footage, like
who is this person?
Speaker 2 (08:44):
I don't that did this? But I don't know. I
what's more creepy the person doing people consuming it? Because
think about it, one could we do a lot of
things for consumers if we think about what do people want?
What can we do that's going to spark them to
be interested in what we're talking about? What park we're selling,
which is us, which is what we talk about. Right,
(09:04):
And I feel like if you like you could be
selling this and you have no interest in it, he
could think it's just as creepy as everybody else, right,
But he sees an avenue to make money, right, So
I don't know if he's the creepy. I think the
people that are consuming it are creepier.
Speaker 1 (09:22):
That's a good point because look at me. I complain
about my Instagram algorithm, and you know, if I see
weird stuff or stuff that like, I'm not, I don't
really like, but I watch it. An example are the
muckbang people right that are all over my Instagram, These
very like giant obese people that are just devouring food.
And I'm watching it like this is awful, but I
keep watching it because it keeps showing up. Right, That's
(09:44):
what it is.
Speaker 2 (09:44):
No, I think too, It's like, if you think about it,
how do I put this? So I don't want to
say I would do anything for money, But if you
see a lane that there is to make easy money, right,
that doesn't require anything legal. I don't know if what
he's doing is legal or not right, anything anything strenuous,
Why wouldn't you do it? You know what I mean?
Like for instance, feet picks? Right, Yeah, we always joke
(10:07):
that I would do it. Maybe I would do it right,
but I don't know who would consume it, right, I
think it's weird people right, But I'm like, you just
want picture on my toes? Sure for one hundred bucks.
Speaker 1 (10:18):
Okay.
Speaker 2 (10:19):
So I feel like it's we have to look at
who's consuming it more than who's putting it out, because
you look at like the whole way of the world, Like,
for instance, you have people like, we like the music
that we play, but we know we have colleagues that
work on other stations that don't even like the music
that they're playing, but they're just on that station that
plays that music, so they hype it up.
Speaker 1 (10:37):
Well, Maddie's a good example of Matti hated our music.
Speaker 2 (10:40):
Our music.
Speaker 1 (10:41):
Yeah, he wouldn't even talk.
Speaker 2 (10:42):
About it, you know what I mean. But it paid
him good. Yeah, so he was gonna be a part
of the product even though the well, both.
Speaker 1 (10:50):
Ends are a part of the problem is what you're saying,
which I agree with, I definitely agree with. Yeah, the
food one is really just it's really sad some of
these people because you look at their views, millions and
millions of views of the people watch fucking money, so
much money, but they're dying literally in front of your eyes.
Speaker 2 (11:07):
There has been people that have died, literally died, and
you see their content when they start out and they
were average size or maybe even underweight, and they were
just the one that had like a fast metabolism, so
they could do these things. But maybe they did it
once a week right before, just as like, oh, I
can eat whatever I want. There's one of people that
have really fast metabolism. It's not Justin and I. We're
jealous of those people, right, but when you do it
(11:29):
for as a job, we come here five days a week.
That means they're muck banging five six, seven days a week. Right.
They're getting all this money, sometimes millions of dollars to
just eat food, and they then become morbidly obese yep,
and have health complications and croak at like thirty yeads.
(11:50):
And it's somebody that I enjoy food. You enjoy food.
You know, we both struggle with our weight. You know,
plenty of times in our lives. We still struggle. Yeah,
we would probably I would love to be able to
muck bang. I like food.
Speaker 1 (12:05):
I love food.
Speaker 2 (12:06):
I could never do that.
Speaker 1 (12:07):
Well, my friend Alan the Plumber has a theory about
it because he just joined Instagram. He just joined it.
Speaker 2 (12:13):
Oh yeah, just like anti social media.
Speaker 1 (12:16):
His wife didn't really want him on there.
Speaker 2 (12:18):
Well, you know, I love Alan, but he he gives
me the vibe that he's signed some bitches gms.
Speaker 1 (12:22):
Yeah, I don't know about that. You know who knows,
but he shot. So I've been sending him all these
like rails, were sending them back and forth and he's like,
I send him some of these food ones. He goes,
I have a theory with you with fascination with the
food thing. He's like, you love food and you want
to eat the food, but you can't. So there's some
kind of like with you watching it. Yeah, like I
(12:43):
can't do that. I would love to do that. I
don't tell me a funny story real quick quick about
his wife, so, who I love dearly. I guess the
other day he was she like they were in the
kitchen and she bent over to like put dishes away
or something, and he made like a joke to her
and he's like, you know, because it's his wife. He goes,
oh yeah, He's like, can you can you shake your ass?
Do what the black girls do? Dude. She was so pissed,
(13:04):
She's like, what are you talking about? What do you
want me to do? Is that what you want? You want?
They got this big fight about it. I'm like, oh,
my god, why would you say that. I was just saying,
like in the videos, you know, like the twerking thing
that they do, I just wanted it to work for me.
I'm like, oh, oh my Alan's figure, he's the best.
But yeah, so the food thing.
Speaker 2 (13:22):
Really, Oh, I was saying, I actually don't watch them.
I can't watch them because I feel like, as someone
that's been bigger my majority of my life, that like,
I feel almost embarrassed for them because I know people
are just making fun of them and they don't act,
you know what I mean a lot of times. And
I like, there was this one girl for a long
time I haven't seen on my for you page in
a long time. She was about fifteen doing these muck
(13:44):
bangs right doing what she eats in a day. And
she's underage. She's not I think now she might be
seventeen or sixteen. She can't be eighteen yet because these
I've been watching. I watched these videos you know before,
in the last few years, and she was trying to
get to five hundred thousand views, and she saying like, oh,
I'll do this if you get to five hundred thousand
and then her mother would eat with her and I
was just like, oh, it's a family. Oh my god,
(14:05):
Like this girl is, you know, overweight, and she is
eating like shit on camera and people are just making
fun of her and exploiting her. And honestly, the way
she ate sometimes felt almost sexualized because it's slurping and
there's noises, and as a thirty year old woman, I'm like,
this is disgusting. Like this poor girl's exploiting herself and
she won't even realize how much she is exploring herself,
(14:26):
either for people to make fun of her and bully
her or people to sexualize that she's eating in a
weird way.
Speaker 1 (14:32):
Well, if you look at the comments, there are all
people saying like yo, like you're gonna kill yourself, or
like what are you doing? Or like you know, making
fun and the other people that that's engagement.
Speaker 2 (14:39):
Right exactly. But I'm like that when you're fifteen sixteen,
that's when you're really developing your sense of self, you
know what I mean? Like that's going to be her
jump off point for the rest of her life.
Speaker 1 (14:48):
No, I think that's you hit on that a couple
of minutes ago, which is so true. In this day
and age of social media and the Internet and YouTube
and streaming, it's the easy way to make money. Yeah, right,
Like you can make money not doing much work. I
think that's what all these young people want to do.
Like you ask Able what he wants to be, he
wants to be a YouTuber. Yeah, you know what I mean,
it's not obviously you know, he doesn't really understand that.
Speaker 2 (15:08):
I think we don't understand it is like we you know,
you there is only one or two percent of people
online making money.
Speaker 1 (15:15):
It's like being a rapper. What are the chances of being.
Speaker 2 (15:17):
Drake one in a billion? What are the chance of
being Kay Sennette one in a billion? Yeah, and like
even us, like we have a platform and you and
I transparency, we don't make money offline. Like it may
be an you know, an ad here in there that
might go on our Instagram, but like we're not like
but there's some random girl in her basement making a
million dollars because she's pretty or because she has some
(15:40):
niche content, you know what I mean, where we have
somewhat of a platform that would probably prompt people to
market us or market off of us. I'm not rolling
in twenty thirty forty thousand dollars a post. No, you
know what I mean? Just ki million dollars a post. Crazy,
I'm like, hey, can I get like five hundred bucks?
Like you know what? Do you know what I mean?
Like we we are this is our our part of
(16:03):
our life is content. Like we're content creators in a
lot of ways. And it's to Justin and I a
decade to make any money in this business, true or false?
Not enough money, not enough money.
Speaker 1 (16:15):
But hey, we're happy, all right, So short week. You know,
we're off Friday, but we'll have after.
Speaker 2 (16:20):
Show and then we're off all next week.
Speaker 1 (16:22):
Yeah, these after show podcast this week, soak them up.
So we'll try our best.
Speaker 2 (16:28):
Bye.