Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
Eating in line at the drive through of the DJC
Collectible Studio. I'm Midwest professional wrestling legend, Gauge Octane and
now a guy who once eight twenty two breadsticks at
the Fort Dodge Fizzoli's in nineteen ninety eight.
Speaker 2 (00:19):
Kyle Peterson, Welcome every one. Kyle here with the co
host Angie and you say hello.
Speaker 3 (00:26):
Welcome everyone, Angie.
Speaker 2 (00:28):
Angie here an Angie, what episode are we Episode eleven
of The Kyle Peterson Show. We're back again. We've beat
all expectations in the podcast universe. Like we said earlier
on three is the average podcast. We're at number eleven.
We're just blowing out expectations once again. Angie, you've been
blown out lately, No me neither. But God, yeah, thank God.
(00:50):
But here we are today with episode eleven of The
Kyle Peterson Show. We got a jam packed episode, Angie.
We even got a new segment along the way today,
so we're going to dive into that as well. But
first we got to thank our sponsor, DJC Collectibles. Use
discount code eight off DJC to save eight percent off
your entire order. Got to get a deal out there.
Thank you to DJC Collectibles. For sponsoring the podcast, and
(01:14):
of course if you want to be a sponsor on
the podcast, hit up The Kyle Peterson Show at gmail
dot com. And Angie, how are you Angie? Today? Today? Tuesday,
June tenth, as this does launch for everybody, of course
a day of course early for Patreon members. You guys
know the drill by now. But the new episodes do
(01:36):
hit on June tenth, and we're in a special day.
So let's just pretend it's June tenth today, Angie. It's
a very special day around this house. Today is Angie's birthday. Angie.
You're looking amazing for sixty two. No, Angie's birthday today.
Happy birthday, Angie. I would sing everyone happy birthday, but
nobody wants to hear that. But happy birthday to you.
Speaker 3 (01:55):
Thank you?
Speaker 2 (01:55):
Is it you feel a year older? Do you feel different?
Does anything feel different for you? Would you say you
don't get as excited for your birthday anymore?
Speaker 3 (02:03):
I never really did.
Speaker 2 (02:03):
You never did. That's sad. That's sad, if you ask me,
that's sad. You don't get excited. That's the one thing
all year I look forward to is my birthday night.
Speaker 3 (02:11):
You don't have expectations like I don't you get like
you get point.
Speaker 2 (02:16):
I got a little sad. I get sad when people
forget my birthday. Of course, it's such it's a day
of my birth and I think we talked about it
a little bit last time. It's like, it's your special day.
You should be able to do whatever you want to do.
You should get presents. Today's your special day. And you're
filming a podcast. Not really you know how it goes.
But Angie, what is your plans? You gave a hint
of where you thought you wanted to go for dinner
(02:37):
for your birthday? Are we going to still go there?
Speaker 3 (02:39):
Probably?
Speaker 2 (02:40):
Where are we going? Texas Roadhouse tea for Texas steak
for ang That's what we're talking about. And we have
a Texas Roadhouse like walking distance of our house, so
you know, beat the lines. Of course, we'll go for
the early bird special. Get the deal at like four thirty.
What would you save? Save a couple of dollars go
at four thirty for our age to let Angie, you're
up for the kids love Texas road House to I
(03:01):
don't know about MS. No, you got to pick where you
want to go where you want to go, and I'm
not sure. I'm still up in the air on where
I want to go. I'm not sure, but maybe we'll
go to Taco Bell. You never know. But Angie, so
you're gonna go to a Texas roadhouse. You think that's
a solid or do you think it might change?
Speaker 3 (03:17):
Pretty solid?
Speaker 2 (03:17):
Pretty solid? Okay? And I got a special birthday gift
in the mail for you. You're probably gonna hate it.
And I was hoping it would be here today, but
like most things, of course, fed X, it got delayed.
I got a little something for you, and maybe I
could use it too, but I think you'd look deal
with it better than I would, that's for sure. So
more to come, maybe or maybe not. It'll be a
president for Angie, but that'll be coming in the future here.
(03:39):
But we don't really get each other too many gifts
on that kind of stuff. It's more or less the
squad to eat and go from there and celebrate later.
So that's that's what we're thinking about. Who knows, who knows?
But yeah, anything else around your birthday? Anything else, So
you're hoping to do any expectations another trip around the sun.
You got any goals for the next year for yourself.
(04:00):
Do you have any deep thoughts of what you want
to do where your life is going. Do you think
you'll make it to one hundred podcasts? Not in the
next year you want that's for sure.
Speaker 3 (04:09):
Yeah, that's my goal.
Speaker 2 (04:10):
That's your goals to get to one hundred. Yeah, we're
thinking about shutting the show down at one hundred, so
it's going to be interesting. So we're getting closer and closer,
but that's it. You know. It's a good kind of bookend.
And one hundred sounds amazing, two hundred sounds kind of weird.
Three hundred, five hundred. So if we don't shut down
at one hundred, we got shut down a five hundred
for sure.
Speaker 3 (04:26):
Crazy.
Speaker 2 (04:27):
That's like two years it would be. Yeah, you know
that's crazy how that goes. Ben Angie, it's your special
day at your birthday. Is there any wisdom anything you
want to give anybody for your worth? No, she's no window,
just waiting a couple of weeks. It's my birthday and
this is going to be the all around birthday spectacular.
We're gonna have musical guests, we might have a clown.
I'm working on a clown to come here. There's gonna
be balloon animals, there's gonna be a lot of stuff,
(04:47):
so it'll be a little bit more festive than yours.
Apparently Angie and Angie wouldn't have it any other ways.
I guess the way it goes, Ben, Angie, what is
I'm putting her on the spot right here and put
her on the spot. And Angie, she just goes with
the flow on this is. She doesn't know what's coming. So, Angie,
what is your best ever birthday memory? This could be
from one to one hundred and one, all your birthdays.
(05:08):
What is your favorite birthday memory? Is anything? Stick out?
Somebody says, Angie, it's your birthday. What's the first thing
that pops into your head? Nothing? Nothing. You don't have anything,
not like we went to dinner at Perkins, went to Denny's,
We went to the Big City for a celebration. My
(05:28):
hair caught on fire, blowing out some candles.
Speaker 3 (05:30):
You don't have anything that happened to work one time,
but not not on a birthday.
Speaker 2 (05:35):
Hard times right there, hard times right there. But there's nothing.
I'm trying to think anything from the twenty plus years
of birthdays we've spent together. I apparently haven't done a
very good job on a You think we can do
a special show on just my birthdays.
Speaker 3 (05:50):
And for me, like anything you can think of. Yeah,
my memory is terrible.
Speaker 2 (05:54):
It is terrible. It is terrible. I can't believe you remembered.
It's episode eleven. I'm trying to think over the years
of what we did for your birthday. I mean, I
remember before kids, you know, and back in the day,
we'd go out and hang out. We'd go tie on on.
Who knows, I don't know, I guess nothing. No special
gifts that stick out, no special anything. Gosh, this is riveting.
(06:21):
She's got nothing, she's got nothing. Well, I got something
for you to chew on a little bit here, so
stay tuned for that. That could be your birthday surprise.
It'll be good, it'll be good. It might be a
little dry, but you'll get it down. You'll choke it down,
you always do. But that's it for the beginning of
the show. Angie, Happy Birthday once again. Of course, direct
all your happy Birthday messages to Angie of course, or
(06:42):
the copiers to show at gmail dot com. Whatever you
want to do, Angie. Hopefully maybe out of work, maybe
somebody will get you a gift out there at work too.
You never know. I can see one of these people's
walking up and give you like a Stargbucks gift card
or something that's your favorite thing in the world, Starbucks.
So we'll see Starbucks. You need to sponsor, Angie, she'd
be great. Who knows? Who knows? But Angie, now it's
(07:02):
time to go deeper once again. It's time for a
deeper dive. All right, Angie, It's time for a deeper dive,
a segment where we go a little bit deeper. And
this week we're diving what just a little bit little
bit Okay, I wasn't playing anything. I don't know what
(07:24):
you're applying. You're like, that's what you're doing. But it's
time for a deeper dive, Angie. And this one's going
to be near and dear to your heart because coming
over the weekend, coming over the weekend, is that right?
That is me too over the weekend last weekend, it was.
I've been talking about it on the Cole Puterson YouTube
channel of course, as well as the podcast was des
(07:45):
Moine Khan and as I said before Santio Comic Con
New York Comic con you take those, that's basically des
Moin Khan. If you know what that is, it's basically that.
But Angie did come with me to Des Moine Khan
this week. Angie, it was nice for you to come
visit and hang out. Did you enjoy yourself?
Speaker 3 (08:03):
I mean I didn't have fun, but it was clean and.
Speaker 2 (08:06):
We'll get into it. We'll get into it. But we
went to De Moin Khan. Angie came and joined me
as I was part of the action figure panel that
they had there. So they had panels of course, if
you've ever been to a comic con, they have, you know,
a cosplay panel, they have celebrity panels. They have all
kinds of different panels throughout the weekend and stuff. And
I guess they had a record attendance for the des
Moin Khan this year, ten thousand plus at this bad
(08:27):
Boy here, So it was a very busy convention. It
was a three day convention. We were there on Saturday
for I don't know, three hours something like that. I
got to be honest, Angie, then you could chime in.
There was really nothing as far as the store or
the floor, nothing really there For me, there was no
celebrities I wanted to meet. There was a lot of
artists and you know, voice actors usually see it that
kind of stuff. I think the big celebrities there were
(08:51):
Charlie Cox was his name, sure, Daredevil guy, the guy
plays Daredevil on the Marvel series. The guy that played
Luke Cage was there. Michael something or another. He was there.
Brandon Ralf, I think that's how he say his last name.
Speaker 3 (09:03):
Keep looking at me for reference.
Speaker 2 (09:05):
She doesn't know. Brandon Ralf, I think was there. I
know he was there, but he played Superman in one
of the movies. He was there. Vincent Danafrio, who played Kingpinn,
was in Full Metal Jacket, a lot of other things.
He was supposed to be there, but I think two
years in a row he canceled last minute. So he
hates des Mooincan. I think I wouldn't book him again,
you know, shame on him, of course. But there was
a lot of cancelation. That's what always happens to these
(09:27):
con things, of course. And there's a big Galaxy con
coming in the fall here as well, and I want
to go to that because Doctor Z is going to
be there. Doctor zeis himself and I got to meet
doctor Z. He's also gonna be at San Diego Comic Con,
which Angie will not be attending. Maybe next year we'll
see Angie, We'll see you. Gotta get you in to
that one at least one time. We'll see what happens.
Could be my final time, the time Angie goes too.
(09:49):
We'll see. But we didn't go to des moin kan.
We walked around, checked it out. A lot of cosplay,
a lot of anime tables and booths and stuff. Obviously
the artist ally and stuff. Good friend of the channel,
Dave Wheeler was there. We talked to him. I was
on the panel with Dave Wheeler. He was down there
doing sketch cards all that kind of stuff. So shoutut
to Dave Wheeler. Check out the Dave Wonder YouTube channels
(10:10):
did the panel with him as well. I think I
might have mentioned that we walked around. There was a
lot of weapons, a lot of weapons. You check a table,
you have to check your weapons. Yeah, And they asked
Angie to check her weapons right at the table there.
She turned around, she turned to the front and she said,
you know, you check these out and these do not detach,
These do not detach, that's right. So we Angie checked
her weapons at the door. It was nice. But we
(10:31):
got in there, we walked around. There wasn't really a
whole lot for us. There was min in Box toys
up there from Minnesota. We've done a toy vlog from there.
That was the best booth by far for me. That
was about really the only one that was all action figures.
There was a little dabbling here and there, but for
a whole it wasn't a lot. It wasn't really for
action figure people. A lot of photo opportunities, stuff like that.
(10:53):
I'm just not into that kind of con life. It's
just nothing that really resonates with me. A toy show,
I'm here for that. I do like some of the
celebrity stuff. There's very few celebrities I want to meet
out there, though, Boss Routing, that's the number one I
want to meet for anybody, you know, Boss Root. Of
course in Doctor Z. So I will go to the
one in September just to meet Doctor Z for sure,
if I don't meet him at San Diego Comic Con.
(11:13):
But we went around there and there wasn't a lot,
a whole lot going on. We didn't even get Angie
a hot dog in her We didn't even get that
done there, so that was a little disappointing for you too.
But yeah, but we did. Actually you got a hot
dog in the car. I think we went to the
back seat and you had one of those. I think
that's what she does. She's in the back seat and
it only cost her a dollar. I made her pay
and I made her pay. Now, no, we did. We
Actually you got a gas station hot dog. Ooh, even better,
(11:36):
even better, So we did do that. Then I did
go to the panel there, and I guess it was
I am, by no means a panel expert, but you know,
some panels are going to be bigger than others. But
the guy at the door said it was like sixty
five or sixty eight people at the panel, and that's
really good for a lot of these panels, as you
can imagine. So there's you know, it's very niche. And
obviously the number one panel of the weekend I think
(11:56):
was the guy that does Daredevil and that makes a
lot more sense. But it was good. The crowd was engaged,
saw some good friends there. There's people that traveled in
for it, so that was pretty cool. And Angie was
nice enough to film some of the panel there, and
if you watch my toy Hunt video, the most recent
toy Hunt video, you'll see a little bit of that.
Des Moines con a little walk through some of that,
and you'll also see a couple of a little smidge
(12:17):
of the panel there. Also, once again, Dave wondered Dave Wheeler,
he has a YouTube channel. He posted the whole panel
up there on his YouTube, so if you want to
check that out you can, for whatever reason, if you
want to see a little bit more of what we
talked about there. But it was fun to do the
panel stuff. It's always fun to talk. I love to
hear my voice, don ANGI yeah, I do. I love
to hear my voice apparently, So it talked about that,
(12:38):
told some stories and stuff. Unfortunately, my dad wasn't there.
I wish the dad would have been there, but he
didn't want to come. He's in a pass. I don't
even think he watched the YouTube video. I think he
was interested. But yeah, so that was it. That was
about doing Khan. I mean we were there probably three
hours with the panel, all involved, all in on that.
So it was a good time. It was definitely worth
the tramp. It was fun to talk to people, it
(12:59):
was fun to the panel and stuff. Obviously not gonna
be the biggest con. I think Sandu O Koma Con
has like one hundred and some thousand people through the
door for like the five six days of the con,
but they were pretty pumped about the de Moin Con.
Ten thousand people plus is nothing to sneeze at for sure,
so a nice boom to the economy. They were saying
on the news, there you go, there you go. So
(13:20):
there's gold say, well that's the anime. There wasn't any
like really hot chicks walking around either. Sometimes there's the
chicks and like bikinis and stuff walking around. There was
none of that Shenanigan's going on unfortunately. So I think
for next year, Angie's going to try to top it
all on that one there. We're gonna get you the
slave girl lea outfit and you'll wear that one around
that could be And she's like, I've never seen Star Wars.
(13:42):
I don't even know what that is exactly what you're
talking you. Oh wow, good for you, Angie, keeping me on. Yeah,
there we go, and I'll dress this job of the hut.
That'll be great. So there it is. There's a little
bit of a deeper dive into des Moine Comic Con.
It will probably do it another deeper dive in a
month or so, and I'll fill you in all about
(14:03):
my San Diego Comic Con trip this year. That should
be an all timer. I'm sure I can only imagine
with a special guest traveling buddy, Jeff George. I'm gonna
be worn out. I'm gonna need a vacation from the vacation.
But Angie, there is a deeper dive into comic Con. Now, Angie,
it's time for a new segment here on the channel.
It's going to be rained or hate it all right, Angie,
(14:34):
it's time for a new segment that's going to be
sweeping the nation here very very soon. I am sure.
I'm sure it will be. But it is rain it
or hate it, where Angie and I deep dive into
maybe a music review, maybe a movie review, and maybe
a documentary review. And that's what we got here today,
of course, the Pee Wee Herman documentary. Angie is sweeping
the nation. Yes, the nation is riveted by Pee Wee
(14:57):
in more ways than one. And Angie over the weekend
last weekend, we did check out the Pee Wee Herman documentary,
and Angie and I we don't like a lot of
the same shows. We're about as polar opposite in things.
You like love stories. Angie loves a good period piece.
You put like Renaissance people in there and they're playing
those crazy music, flutes and things. She's all in on
(15:17):
that period pieces all day long. I'm not mistaken.
Speaker 3 (15:21):
I just like to watch something that I feel like
has culture in it, like that I'm learning from. I like, well,
that's why I like it.
Speaker 2 (15:26):
It's not I always say we're exact opposite because always
say I like to feel like I'm getting dumber when
I'm watching something. I like stuff that just like is
mindless entertainment. I don't want to think. I think too
much all day long. I don't want to be challenged.
I don't want to think about stuff. So we're on
the total opposite, as.
Speaker 3 (15:41):
Silly as we are. I don't really like watching like
comedies and stuff.
Speaker 2 (15:44):
No, she's not a comedy. Yeah, I like. I like
movies with a lot of comedy, a lot of nudity,
a lot of gore, a lot of blood, a lot
of heavy metal. That's what I got.
Speaker 3 (15:54):
We're totally opposite. Hate comedy and I hate horror.
Speaker 2 (15:58):
That you love nudity. We can agree in the middle.
Right there. I see you walk around the house. You
have clothes on about five percent of the time. Around
this house, it's wild. It's a wild I'm like, we
got to close these blinds.
Speaker 3 (16:10):
Definitely.
Speaker 2 (16:11):
The neighbors are like, oh, we know what's going on
across the board. The carpet matches the drape, so there's
no carpet. We've got all that kind of stuff going on.
So it's a wild time around here. But I enjoy
it personally. Personally. The kids, Yeah, the kids don't like
I'd be I don't know what. I'd be horrified if
my mom when I was a kid, was walking around
like that. But Angie is just another day at the office.
(16:32):
So I'm gonna go go outside in the backyard.
Speaker 3 (16:35):
I've always been like ever since I was a little kid.
Speaker 2 (16:37):
There's a neighbor. She does, she does, And unfortunately, guys,
we can't do that on YouTube they'll shut us down.
And podcast is an audio, but maybe only fans you
can finally start that thing. Get the feet feet pictures
going on as you can get it all done.
Speaker 3 (16:52):
I do have a naked funny story.
Speaker 2 (16:54):
Oh save that for story time with Angie. That should
be a good one.
Speaker 3 (16:58):
Be like a two second story.
Speaker 2 (16:59):
But it's funny. Well, you want to share it, it's
up to you, or you want to save it.
Speaker 3 (17:02):
I'll save it.
Speaker 2 (17:03):
She's gonna save it all. Keep coming back, keep coming
back for episode twelve. That's what's gonna happen there. But
we were talking about what we like here, so we're
polar opposite. So unfortunately for us or fortunately, depending how
you look at it. You know, a lot of couples
will sit down watch movies together. They'll go to movies
and stuff. We've never been quite that way. It's usually
I'm maybe watching wrestling, editing videos. She's maybe on the
(17:23):
other end of the couch going through Instagram or something
like that, or whatever you're doing.
Speaker 3 (17:28):
I'd like to read a book, but I haven't figured
out that how to, like cause I have to have
noise kids, headphones or something.
Speaker 2 (17:33):
I'm an amazing multitasker, as most people do. I can
like watch TV, edit a video, and have a conversation
with somebody at the same time. I can do that
in my brain not Angie. Angie can't even focus, like
she's focused on a book. You can't even talk to her.
It's like you've got a shaker to get her attention.
She's very zoned in, so you might have trouble there.
(17:53):
But but yeah, we're usually watching that. So there's very
few shows we come together on. And the only thing
we really come together on is like murder mysteries. What
was the one we were talking about the other day
that Jeff George was just riveted.
Speaker 3 (18:04):
By, Oh, the cherry Peppini.
Speaker 2 (18:06):
The peppini, it's like a rappinie. You get a Jason's Deli,
one of those sandwiches, I think. But stuff like that,
we like a little that murder mystery intrigue, those documentary
type stuff. So we will come together on things like that.
But that's about it. You know, you don't really enjoy
You can watch wrestling, but you don't enjoy it. You
can care less. You're never gonna say, hey, pause that
while I'm going upstairs for face. She's never gonna say that,
(18:27):
that's for sure. So we don't have a lot of
stuff and that's probably good not too because you know,
as much as I would love to have you into
all that stuff? I kind of like that you're not
into that stuff because it'd be kind of weird. She's like, Hey,
are we gonna watch Toxic Avenger two tonight or what
what are we doing? It would be kind of weird
if Angie was doing that.
Speaker 3 (18:43):
It feel like I was like growing out with your Yeah, I.
Speaker 2 (18:45):
Like you being more girly girl stuff too. It just
helps even me out a little bit more. So it's
not a bad thing, I don't think. But Angie and
I did come together on one time one time this week,
and we came together and it was amazing, and we
watched we watched Pee Wee's a documentary on HBO Max
(19:06):
whatever they're calling it right now here, and pee Wee Herman.
You know, he sold a lot of hearts back in
the eighties, myself included. Of course, I was a Pee
Wee kid as well. I was trying to rack my
brain to have my first memories of Pee Wee. And
I'm not for sure for me what came first? Was
it pee Wee Pee Wee Did? What came first to me?
Was it the movie, of course, Pee Wee's Big Adventure,
(19:27):
or was it the TV show that was I believe
on CBS Saturday Mornings around my parts. That's what I
remember watching it. I'm not sure which one I saw first.
I'm thinking I saw the Playhouse TV show first, and
then I probably rented the VHS or saw it on TV.
Of the movie, that's what I'm guessing. I know for
sure I did not see that movie in the theater.
Did you see at the theater?
Speaker 3 (19:48):
I can't tell you where I saw it, but I
have no recollection of the show.
Speaker 2 (19:50):
Okay, I remember that movie. So it's interesting where you
came into your pee wee fandom or your pee wee history,
whatever it may have been. But for me, I'm pretty
sure it was the show, and then I watched the movie. Obviously,
for me, the movie holds up a lot better than
the show. The show is okay, I don't know. I
went back when it first went on streaming or something.
Let's say it was ten years ago or something. I
(20:11):
checked it out. But I'm big on the history of
stuff like that. So we did watch the pee Wee documentary,
and I'm sure there was a lot of new stuff
in there for you that you had no idea about.
Oh yeah, I mean, you didn't realize there was life
before pee Wee, and there was other stuff and all
kinds of things I remember. But for me, I've always
been kind of a I don't know if a pop
culture officionado or whatever, but I knew the history of Peewee.
(20:32):
I knew all about his arrest. I think you knew
about one but not the other.
Speaker 3 (20:35):
No, I didn't know.
Speaker 2 (20:36):
She didn't know about any of that kind of stuff.
I remember that was big news on the playground when
I was a kid. You guys, hear about pee Wee.
There was a lot of talk about that in the
old playground when I was a kid. That's crazy, but yeah,
pee Wee. The ups and downs of stuff, you know
now you always have to remember on these documentaries. Of course,
me being a person that's one class away from a
minor and film and I told you that before well,
(20:56):
you know, and documentary was a small part of that.
I was more filmed and john Ford Westerns and things
like that was more my specialty of my focus, my focus,
not even that one, but I've seen it, I have
seen it, but focusing on that, But there was documentary
sup portion stuff. And one thing about documentary is you
always got to remember is a lot of times only
one side of the story, and there's always two sides
(21:17):
of the story, of course, as we do know, so
you know, you have to kind of always go into
it with that lens. But I think it helped people
get to know Pee Weee a little bit more. And
I remember as a kid in like the nineties, when
Pee Wee was doing like the Buffy, the Vampire Slayer,
the Batman movie, stuff like that, it was very, very
strange for me as a kid to because he's so
pee Wee, He's so defined. It feels weird whenever he's
outside of that role. And I'm sure that was a
(21:39):
challenge for Pee Wee as much as he loved Pee
Wee when it brought him. It's also very strange that
it pigeonholes you into something you're known for only one thing.
And I guess you could say the same thing about me.
I'm known as an action figure guy, but I'm so
much more. Some call me bred Jesus, some call me others.
Some call me Daddy and that's Angie, but others, but
(22:01):
everyone in the house, maybe I got weird, got real weird,
got real weird real quick. But you know, Pee Wee
is a troubled UH, a tortured soul. Maybe in some ways,
I think that's fair enough. And it's it's interesting to
his uh battle with cancer. They talked about in that
documentary for like the last six years he was fighting
(22:22):
cancer or something, and it's I don't know, it's always
weird because I always think about that myself too, like
if I was fighting cancer or I was fighting AIDS,
if I was fighting the AIDS virus right now, like
a young Magic Johnson. Wait, he's got HIV partner. Oh,
pee Wee's yeah, that's right. Hard times for pee Wee
in more ways than one. Lucky lucky. But I always
(22:45):
think I'd probably be like pee Wee. I don't think
i'd tell anybody. I'd try to keep it all under wraps.
I'd just go away. I don't I don't necessarily want
all that sympathy. I don't think it wasn't obvious until
that that last voice recording at the end where he
was in pretty rough you could tell, but I could
understand that pee Wee, you don't want a bunch of
people coming at you, coming at you, just being like, oh,
(23:06):
poor peewee, poor pee Wee. I get that too, So
a little double edged Storge, but a conflicted life for
Pee Wee. But man, he was amazing as a kid.
Big Top pee Wee is where I kind of started
to lose interest as a little kid for pee Wee.
Do you even remember that one?
Speaker 3 (23:19):
Not really?
Speaker 2 (23:20):
Yeah, I mean it wasn't that good. It wasn't that good,
but it was interesting. One thing I guess I didn't
know for the documentary was how he grew up part
of his life in Florida around like the circus and stuff,
So you could tell that really impacted that. So that
was why he went Big Top pee Wee. So I
would love to see a movie like this done on
one Earnest Pee World, Jim Varney, do you know Ernest
Pee World?
Speaker 3 (23:39):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (23:39):
Oh, Ernest was my favorite if you had to say
Kyle Peewee or Ernest as a little kid, because I
loved watching Ernest as well. I was all in on Ernest.
Ernest was my man. I loved Ernest, and I got
a crazy story about Ernest when he dies, and I'm
going to save that for a story time with Kyle
one of these days, or maybe when they finally do
that Earnest documentary better yet, Angie Nandy, you and I
need to finance and do an Earnest documentary. Maybe that's time.
(24:02):
And he had those funny character friends of him, the
guy with the no teeth and oh Man, sign me
up for Ernest Peworld all day long. But I love Ernest,
but I love Peewee as well. But pee Wee and
I lost touch for a while, just like you and
pee Wee too. But it was a good documentary. It
was a little bit long, and it felt a little
bit rushed in parts for me. I don't know what
did you think?
Speaker 3 (24:20):
Well, they probably because he died, had to really like
clock it together.
Speaker 2 (24:23):
Yeah, I guess kind of, but they really kind of.
They really went fast from the movie to the show,
Like the first part ended where he was getting financing
and getting the movie all set up, and Angie bowed
out for about the last ten minutes of the first
part if you remember right, So she missed that, but
she didn't really miss anything in that point. But I
think they could have talked a little bit about the
movie a little bit more, maybe in a little bit
(24:45):
more into the show. There was a lot of stuff,
obviously in the back half the second part about some
of his legal troubles, which I don't want to drain
through all that kind of stuff there. But all in all,
like a lot of things, there's very few things. I
don't know, Angie feared this way or not. I don't
watch the things multiple times. I just don't watch things
multiple times. I have so many things I want to watch,
listen to, and read. I just feel like I don't
(25:06):
have time to go back and revisit it because I'm
missing on something new. I could have seen so very
few movies in my life I've watched multiple times. I
can probably count them on one hand. However, I guess
I contradict myself because I'm a kid who didn't really
like to watch movies. I liked sitcoms, TV shows from
classic stuff like The Nicket Night stuff is a little kid.
I've seen every episode of The Brady Bunch probably fifty times.
(25:27):
I've seen every episode of the Gi Joe cartoon about
fifty times. So I got a lot of that kind
of stuff. But long story shorty Angie, I'm getting going.
Do you watch Do you watch shows numerous times? You
watch them multiple times? No?
Speaker 3 (25:40):
I mean unless they're like eighties, nineties music or movies
I grew up.
Speaker 2 (25:44):
You listened to a lot of the same songs.
Speaker 3 (25:46):
I like to rewatch and be like, is it still
as good as I remember? I have that moment, But no,
not like over and over, not like Emma.
Speaker 2 (25:54):
How many times?
Speaker 3 (25:55):
I think that's like an ADHD thing. If you could
watch things like over and over and over again?
Speaker 2 (25:59):
Oh many times have you listened to the song Bouncy
by a Tease?
Speaker 3 (26:03):
Too many?
Speaker 2 (26:03):
See, that's what I'm saying. He listened a thousand times.
I've had to have heard it a hundred times. This
is the theme of the summer. Look it up. I
don't believe it. I don't believe it. I think you're
playing it. But but I don't watch a lot of movies.
It's just a movie is an investment in time, and
it better be good if you're going to get an
hour and a half to three hours of my time.
And the Peewee documentary was good. I watched it once.
(26:25):
I would never watch it again, would you ever? And
very few documentaries. The one that sticks out for me
that I've watched probably five times in my life, and
I've watched bits and pieces is the Lemmy documentary. You
want a good documentary. Check out the Lemmy one. That's
an old timer.
Speaker 3 (26:39):
If there was, he was eating all the blueberries.
Speaker 2 (26:42):
No, not that one. He was making some chips though
in his kitchen. And maybe one day we'll get Jeff
George on the channel and he could tell his story
about the time he went up to Lemmy's apartment and
hung out with Lemmy for the night. Man, I was riveted.
I was on the edge of my seat. Tell me
that story. I love those stories from late Nights at
the Rainbow from one Jeff George. So one day he'll
(27:02):
be in town and he'll be the guest co host
and we'll do some of that kind of stuff too.
But so now I guess we're gonna do the rate
it part of course, pee Wee. I wouldn't say I
hated it. I wouldn't say I loved it, but it
was worth a watch for me. You're probably in the
same boat. It was worth it for you. But we're
gonna rate it out of five because that's what we
rate on the food scale, so we might as well
do that same thing with this here. Let's rate the
(27:22):
Peewee documentary out of five. And of course, ladies first,
it's a Ladies' First Channel podcasting, and you what are
you gonna give it out of five?
Speaker 3 (27:30):
I'll give it a three.
Speaker 2 (27:31):
Three. That's where I'm at. I'm right there to three,
maybe a high three at that end to me on
my scale, I don't know if your scale be the same.
Five would be something I would say the way I've
viewed stuff, if it was a five, I'm gonna watch
this again, That's what I would say. There's very few
things that would ever hit a five for me. You know,
obviously one would be terrible. Three kind of right in
the middle. I'd stay upper middle as far as documentaries go.
It was worth the time. And I love Peewee's kind
(27:54):
of dry sense of humor. That was that what it
would be when he was doing the interviews, and he
would talk about stuff that was pretty funny. I like,
am I I don't know, I don't know. You tell me.
I like that a whole lot with people.
Speaker 3 (28:04):
I was shocked how in the closet he was. I
never knew that about him, Like, yeah, because I never
for a second thought he was straight. Ever seeing him
becomes a very flamboyant to me.
Speaker 2 (28:14):
I never thought of it the other way.
Speaker 3 (28:16):
Yeah, that's weird. It's weird because I feel like a
lot of his trouble was that he was so closeted
and just feel like it couldn't be himself because he
thought it would like ruin his career and so that
was like sad. That's kind of a sad part of it.
Speaker 2 (28:27):
Yeah, he had like the fake girlfriend. I forget what
that's kind of what you're here for, my fate, my
favorite Yeah, George kiss love the kiss. There you go,
who knows? Well, there it is, Raider hate it. We're
both kind of in the middle. Be interested. Here are
your thoughts on the old pee Wee documentary. A lot
of people have seen it, so I'm sure there'll be
(28:48):
a thought or two along the way. But Angie, now
it's time. We're gonna cohesive glue this together a little bit.
It's time for the Figure of the week. All right, Angie,
(29:12):
it's time for Figure of the week. And Figure of
the week. I'm a little bit conflicted right here. Like
I said, it does relate to the last segment here
as Figure of the Week. This week we're going to Neca.
We're going to the ultimate edition. We're going to the
Ultimate pee Wee Herman figure. Now, I unboxed this on
the Channel Engine, and I think, didn't you find this
for me? I think I called you to a store
and said they had it, and I think you picked
(29:33):
it up from me. I think that was the case,
and of course it was part of the target Hallithon
available everywhere else. I think now, and if you want
to check out the review, of course, search my name.
That's I always tell everybody. Search my name, search what
you're looking for. You'll find the figure review of it.
I did do the Peewee review, and this is going
to be a little bit of kind of after the
review after dark with Pee Wee. That sounds kind of interesting.
Speaker 3 (29:52):
Did you throw nder the bus.
Speaker 2 (29:53):
Or I like the figure a whole lot, but one
thing that so I liked it as I was reviewing it. Now,
I don't think I need cheaters yet. I wouldn't say that,
but I will say under the glamour shot. Of the
glamour shots, it gets like a very you get more
than meets the eye out of that because it's the camera,
it's closer in. I am not a huge fan of
the head sculpts on this Pee Wee, but one thing
(30:15):
I'll say when we were watching the documentary, he did
kind of have some rosy cheeks, is pee wee, kind
of like some blush or something like that. Sure, so
it looks weird, but then you go back and you look,
it looks a little bit better than I thought it did.
So it was funny. Is I liked it a whole lot.
As I'm doing the unboxing, I'm taking the glamour shots,
and obviously this is after the review. I'm like a
little little too cakey, a little too weird in the face.
(30:36):
But then watching the documentary made me remind this is correct,
So there is that there. So I wanted to have
a little follow up there be careful because that's where
I'm going to get to throw this under the bus. Unfortunately, Yeah,
I feel it the head his neck peg. I tried
to take the head off for the first time. Now.
Of course in the reviews I go through everything, we
(30:57):
go through the heads, but then the glamour shots you
move it around stuff and sometimes things go unfortunate a
little bit. And I went to move the head Bam, crack.
The neck peg broke right off, So I'm missing a
neck peg for people, and then it went down. I
was working on it, trying to get it, and it
went down the sink, So even worse on that one. There,
So very disappointing in the quality on this pee wee. Obviously,
(31:19):
you know, yeah, okay, heat up your joints, but you
shouldn't have to heat your joints up. We say that
all the time. So very disappointing on this pee wee.
I really want to get another pee wee, but like,
is it worth buying another one just for this? I
could put a little blue tack in there. I could
stick it in there. You know, it's weird when you
look really close to the face you get those rosy cheeks.
Speaker 3 (31:39):
Thought it was weird that they said he didn't they
say at some point he had fake teeth.
Speaker 2 (31:43):
Yeah, yeah, I think he had fake teeth, So I
don't know. But anyways, either way, I was very disappointed
in the structure. Obviously, as we always say, when things
break on the channel, I'm going to be real about it.
I'm going to tell people about it. But I always
do say your mileage may vary. Just because mine broke
doesn't mean yours is gonna break, and vice versa.
Speaker 3 (32:03):
When I was looking at it over there, I thought
it looked like he had no net.
Speaker 2 (32:06):
Yeah, he's missing just a little bit of the net
because the neck peg went there. Now, Angie, somebody's gonna
comment in the comments here, and I'll probably end up
taking this good friend of Chanail. We've mentioned him a
few times, Old Dave Wheeler, Dave Wonder, he's a my
action figure surgeon. When I go up to Minnesota for work,
I'll drive by and said, Dave, I got a stack
of stuff. Could you help me out and fix some
of these for me? He fixed Sheer Ramondo figure for me.
He's done it a few times. I'm sure he can figure.
(32:28):
So it's probably not that hard to get some kind
of peg in there. I probably even have another action
figure sitting an apartsman I could grab a peg out
of or something. So it's not the end of the world.
But it's still not fun. When you pay thirty eight
dollars for a figure and it breaks on you. It's
not a good day at the office. It's definitely not
for me. I work too hard for my money and
it drives me nuts when things there's supposed to be
a stress relief stress me. You don't farm you up.
(32:49):
I hate it. I hate it. So Figure of the Week.
I figure we talked about the documentary, figured it went
well with this pee wee here, So that's what we're
gonna do. We're gonna do the Figure of the Week.
But now, Angie, it's time for another favorite segment of
the channel. This is one you're gonna shine at. But
I'm gonna take a little of that shine this week, Angie,
it's time to try new foods because they might taste good.
(33:10):
You can try a little.
Speaker 1 (33:12):
They stay ada down Alerto Meda.
Speaker 2 (33:15):
They stay alenadad.
Speaker 4 (33:18):
We gotta try an.
Speaker 2 (33:21):
Tastes good, all right, Angie, It's time to try new
foods because they might taste good. This one I came
through on this week. Here, Angie's usually keeping her. You're
keeping Angie's scared already. We're not even there. You know
you'll try anything once, ANGI I know that about you.
I know that about you. But Angie, this week, this
is something I grabbed on the road because I'm a
(33:42):
man about town, man, man of the people, man of
many travels of course for my day job. And I
was at a gas station, as you do at a
gas station, and somebody, I think, asked the question to me.
Maybe it was in the traditional YouTube channel for Question
of the Week, but what is your favorite road snack? Oh?
I know it is my Patreon exclusive monthly Q. One
of the questions was, Kyle, what's your favorite road snack? Yes?
(34:04):
And Angie loves jerky as well, of course, right, yeah, yeah,
you dabble, you dabble, But I love jerky. I always
get a jerky on the road. That's usually what I get,
and it's it's in a bag.
Speaker 3 (34:16):
I feel like stuff like this ends up taking like
it't just it off yet. This will be okay, But I.
Speaker 2 (34:20):
Feel like we're getting a jerky.
Speaker 3 (34:21):
I'm not a beefstick girl.
Speaker 2 (34:23):
Oh yeah, you are. You take it. You take all
twelve inches, that's for sure of a beef stick. I've
seen you on it. I've seen you. I've seen you.
But Angie, today we're going to talk a little bit
of beef jerky, but a little bit off the beaten path.
And when I'm hitting a lot of these truck stops,
gas issue or whatever, there's always local beef jerky and
that always gets me excited at Oh a new local
beef jerky. I've never in Wisconsin a lot of beef
(34:43):
jerky up there. I was up there earlier. A lot
of stuff to see, a lot of new frozen pizzas,
a lot of new jerky. I'm here. I'm jerking it
all over Wisconsin, trying to get this here all over,
Angie Young. It's just a mess. A lot of times
it's a lot cleanup. But I'm always excited for some
new jerky, and that's what gets us here today. Angie,
what do we have today? Buffalo Bob's Alligator Jerky, Buffalo
Bob's Alligator jerk flavor flavor barbecue. Oh, I love barbecue jerky.
(35:08):
That's one of my favorites, so that should be good.
But Angie, have you ever had a sweet, sweet alligator
meat before?
Speaker 3 (35:14):
I don't think I have.
Speaker 2 (35:17):
One time, Elle and I went to a wrestling show
and there was a restaurant next door and they were
serving alligator, and we had the alligator. I've had it
a few times and they always say it tastes just
like chicken. It really does just taste like chicken, especially
especially the way they make it. You know, it's like
a chicken nugget. And I remember my daughter Elle, she
even admitted that if I wouldn't have told her it's alligator.
She would have thought it was chicken nuggets or whatever.
Speaker 3 (35:37):
Like that's pure alligator too, or do they prime mix.
Speaker 2 (35:41):
I think that was pure alligator over there, and in
this one we got seen now, this isn't even pure alligator.
It says ingredient ingredients alligator beef, pork, salt, spices, brown sugar, molasses, pepperika,
garlic powder or onion powder, celery powder. Perfect, and it's
made from berry and springs Michigan and Michigan of course
known for their alligators up there in Michigan. So you
(36:01):
better watch out. No MSG gluten free. I don't know.
So here's my guess, being a guy with a bit
of a grocery background, I bet you there's about five
percent alligator, and I'm pretty sure there's not a lot
of alligator in this. They said, okay, we got one alligator.
Different we're gonna make ten thousand sticks out of this
(36:21):
one alligator or one hundred thousand sticks or something, because
pork and beef in here. They're mixing it all up.
But at a lot of jerky is mixed. There's a
lot of people that get like deer jerky and they'll
mix it with other things. So long story short, let's see. Uh,
let's see what this is.
Speaker 3 (36:36):
Long story long.
Speaker 2 (36:37):
Gator meat tastes like and give it a smell.
Speaker 3 (36:41):
It smells like normal, doesn't it kind of Ooh.
Speaker 2 (36:45):
It's extra slimy. It is extremely slimy.
Speaker 3 (36:52):
Oh I hate it. Oh, mystery.
Speaker 2 (36:54):
It is very floppy. It's not a hard jerky.
Speaker 3 (36:58):
It looks like.
Speaker 2 (37:00):
Yeah, it looks like a fruits riper. Yeah, all right, well, ANGI,
we're gonna try this. We're gonna raise this eat from
one end.
Speaker 3 (37:11):
We don't. It tastes like totally normal.
Speaker 2 (37:15):
Tays like normal jerky. You taste barbecue. It's very slimy.
Speaker 3 (37:22):
Yeah, I would never know that it has alligator. And
then if if I didn't tell me nobody, it's got
a weird thing that and that kind of tastes off.
But it could be the spices.
Speaker 2 (37:34):
The taste or taste at the end. Tastes just like
jack links, barbecue jerkey.
Speaker 3 (37:41):
It's just kind of the smoker.
Speaker 2 (37:42):
But I wish it had a little bit more spice
to it, which is not spicy. It's barbecue. But I
don't even know if I can tell you this is
barbecue without was it expensive. I want to say it
was like three dollars or three ninety nine or something,
which I don't know.
Speaker 3 (37:57):
That's pretty auverage. Jerky is usually pretty expensive. I don't know.
Because the Gator wasn't it to be like a little more?
Speaker 2 (38:02):
I think Gator was a marketing tactic, yeah, for sure.
And they had a bunch of other stuff. They're like
Elk and Armadillo and I don't know, did a bunch
of other ones and Gator stuck out to me? M hm,
you know this isn't a new item either, ange well,
it could be, I don't know, but we didn't see
anything new at the stores this week, so we said, hey,
we got we've got a stockpile of stuff we've never
(38:23):
tried before that we can also try if we don't
see something brand new. That's where the jerky came in here.
What what are you thinking? Out of five hands? If
you had to rate it.
Speaker 3 (38:36):
Three, I mean, I wouldn't put low. It doesn't he's bad,
it just.
Speaker 2 (38:41):
Would you ever pick this up? You never in a
million ears would.
Speaker 3 (38:44):
So I wouldn't pick it up anyway.
Speaker 2 (38:48):
So three three seems high. But with your list, so
I'm gonna.
Speaker 3 (38:52):
Go well, because it tastes good. I don't want to
give it a bad one because.
Speaker 2 (38:57):
I'm going a two on this because I think there's
better jerkys out there that are more flavorable and stuff.
I think this is all gimmick. It's all it's all
show no go. That's what it is. It's all show
no go. Is what's going on right here? Fine for
what it is, I could eat this, no problem. I
could eat this every single day, but I'd rather pay
a dollar more for a Jack Link's barbecue that gives
(39:17):
me more. It's a thicker slice and there's more to it,
so i'd probably be here at that. Yeah. So not
not terrible, worth the try. Not the end of the world.
It doesn't taste like Gator I can tell you that
at all. Just tastes like an old boot jerky.
Speaker 3 (39:30):
So yeah, there's not even different. I thought maybe it
would be kind.
Speaker 2 (39:34):
Of like so not then, so I'm going to she's
going three. I mean, we're pretty much in the same ballpark,
and I don't think we're buying this again. But it's
fun to try this kind of stuff every once in
a while. So there it is. That's to try new
foods because it might taste good. But Angie, now we
got another segue. It's time for the album of the week.
(39:58):
All right, Angie, it's time for our of the week
and album of the week this week is a special one,
one you're just going to be over the moon for
and probably you never heard of. And this one comes
from an artist, a classic artist, a classic country Western artist,
and it relies a little bit on what we talked about.
It's the episode of segues, is what we should call
this Segues across the board. One we're missing is the
(40:19):
little segue you screwed round in outside. But we're going
to talk a little bit about a little Cajun stuff.
Of course, Alligator me going into a little bit of
guy from down from Louisiana way. We're going down to
Jerry Reid, you know, Jerry Reid, east bound and down.
When you're hot, you're hot. When you're not, you're not.
How about a little amous Moses. We're going to the
album the Essential Jerry Reid. And if you ask me,
(40:41):
and you ask a lot of people, who's the greatest
guitar player of all time? You hear people say Eddie
van Halen. You hear people say Jimmy Hendrix. I think
Angie says Taylor Swift is the greatest guitarist of all time.
I say, Jeff George, Jeff George. There you go. Eric
Clapton's of the world. There's a lot of great guitarists.
I think we can all agree on that, but I
do feel guys like Jerry Reid a very much looked
(41:02):
over in the grand pantheon of great guitarists. They usually
go to the flashy rock ones there, but Jerry Reid
could do all that stuff if you wanted to, and
he could do a whole lot more than that. One
of the absolute greatest guitar men I've ever seen in
my life. Just how fast you go the different stuff.
He could do just so many amazing songs. And that's
why I start with the essential Jerry Reid. As much
as I'd love to deep into all his one hundred
(41:24):
albums or whatever, the Essential gets you pretty much where
you want to go, and you can go from there.
There's a lot of good Jerry Reid stuff. Of course
most people know about Eastbounded Down and things like that
as well, but there's a lot of fun stuff on that.
And that's an album I got back on high school
that I still bust out from time to time here,
and I was thinking of Amos Moses, and I was
thinking about the Alligator Jerky, and I said, let's just
(41:44):
go to the swamp. Let's tie these ones in together here.
Speaker 3 (41:47):
And we're gonna go.
Speaker 2 (41:48):
Jerry Reid is the album of the week. I don't
know if Andy's got a whole lot to add to
that Jerry Reid stuff. I don't think no, I don't
think sho you like the Snowman though he's a favorite
of yours. And I got a Jerry Reid shirt I
wear around every once in a while. I always get
a lot of compliments on it, which always warms my
heart that people remember the great Jerry Reid. So shout
out to Jerry Reid, Shout out to the album of
the week, Shout out to Angie with my co host
(42:10):
over here. But Angie, now it's time to get into
another one. It's time for tales from retail.
Speaker 4 (42:25):
All right, Angie, it's time for tales from retail.
Speaker 2 (42:31):
But we could also call this story time with Kyle.
It kind of walks that line, well, like a young
Johnny Cash for keeping a country once again, sege the
word of the day. We should just do the Pewee
Herman Pewey's playhouse where they scream when it's the word
of the day. The word of the day is segue
is what it should be. But here we are today
and we're gonna talk, like I said, a little bit
of storytime with Kyle, a little bit of tales from retail,
and what we're talking about here today is first ever jobs. Now, Angie,
(42:55):
I'm gonna go to you first ladies, first channel, ladies,
first podcast, of course, Angie, what was your first ever
job that you did, like not had to mow the
yard or something like that. Your first job you could
have been any age and I'll get to mine here.
But where did you go to where you actually did
something and got money or another service? Of course, you
know some say I'm just jiggling, definitely working for.
Speaker 3 (43:16):
Like an egg company, EIG company, egg like agriculture.
Speaker 2 (43:20):
Oh egg, agg good company. I thought egg. I'm like,
what are you doing with eggs?
Speaker 3 (43:25):
So detasseling?
Speaker 2 (43:27):
Oh yes, yes, I remember now tastling that brings back.
I've never to tasseled today in my life, of course,
but I remember like seventh grade eighth grade. You'd be
the end of the school year. They pass out all
these flyers. We're looking for kids. We'll bust you in.
You parents drop you off, they bust you all in together.
You did tassel all day. I always heard there was
good money into tasseling.
Speaker 3 (43:48):
Yeah, my mom worked for asgro It became mon Santo, Okay,
So yeah, that's like that was like our whole thing
growing up. You had to spray the beans. Yep.
Speaker 2 (43:58):
Did your sisters do it too?
Speaker 3 (43:59):
I'm assuming I don't really remember them doing it or
just you, but I was. I was more the more
athletic one, so like I like doing stuff.
Speaker 2 (44:06):
Yeah, you're basically you're a generation behind Caitlyn Clark.
Speaker 3 (44:10):
Of course, she's just trying to put me behind a
computer and I'm just trying to be out in the field.
Speaker 2 (44:13):
She's want to be out in the field more ways
than one. And they're gonna I'm gonna plow those fields
a little bit later. That's what's gonna happen, of course.
But Angie is like a young kid. Of course. You know,
Caitlyn Clark a Hawkeye. You a hawk guy. For a
brief moment in time, you don't like that. We're a
cyclone family over here. But Angie somehow was a hawk
Gy briefly. And maybe that's another story time with Angie
in the future. We'll see, we'll talk about your basketball skills.
(44:36):
We'll get into it. But the tasseling, so that's something
I have never done. Is that where you like take
the top off the cornstock and you throw it in
the air or something. Is that what you do? You
like throw it in the ground and it helps like regrow.
Speaker 3 (44:47):
What is it?
Speaker 2 (44:48):
I don't it's something like that. I don't know it's
but I remember everybody's saying it was horrible because it
was muddy and it was hot. You absolutely disgusting. At
the end of the day, you probably get some of
those like silk well, you can't even get a because, yeah, caud,
you get cut by the stocks and stuff. Yeah, that's
why they have all these little kids slave labor. And
I'm sure they do that out in the country. I'm
(45:09):
still they sure do. But it's funny you say that,
because it's just like a memory came flashing back to
me in like seventh and eighth grade, where they'd put
this home, take this home to your parents, let's get
some kids slave labor. But I do remember kids getting
paid really well to do that, and I was like, man,
those kids, which leads me into my first job. And
this isn't really a job. But even when I was
like I remember as a little kid in the summers.
(45:30):
You know, it's totally different nowadays we've talked about. But
I'd get on my bicycle and i'd meet up from friends,
or I wouldn't meet friends, and it would be, you know,
I'd be up at eight o'clock in the morning, be
on my bicycle riding all over town, and I'd be
home at like six seven o'clock at night. Who knows
where I was, And I was maybe I was taking
my baseball bag. We were going to have a pickup
game of baseball, basketball, video games, different whatever. We might
be doing.
Speaker 3 (45:50):
Well.
Speaker 2 (45:50):
First thing I remember, though, was there was a car
wash by my house, not too far. There was also
a grocery store, which I guess gives a little tales
from retail, and I later worked at that grocery store.
But they had like fifty different paper machines, old school
paper machines out front with the coin returns and all that.
I would go to the car wash, and there was
another car wash i'd hit, and then i'd hit those
coin returns, and there'd be a couple of gas stations
(46:11):
that had stuff, and I would every single day I
would drive to the car wash, because people putting quarters
in the car wash the automatic, they'd leave quarters on
the top and forget about it. So I'd go to
each stall looking for corders, looking at the change return stuff,
grab whatever I could find there a little, and then
i'd go to the gas stations and then the big
grocery store, and I'd go back and forth, and i'd
hit each one to see, you know, if I could
(46:32):
get some change and stuff. And one of these days
we'll talk about like I hit a slot machine at
one of those. It was absolutely amazing. That'll be a
great story down the road. But I did usually find
some stuff. And back then, of course, you know, you
get a pack of cards for two dollars, you get
a drink for twenty five cents, whatever it may.
Speaker 3 (46:47):
Be, you're missing out. You should have hit the laundro mat.
Speaker 2 (46:49):
We didn't have those. We didn't have those around my
neck of the woods.
Speaker 3 (46:52):
You know, we were always on quarters at the Wonderment
you were.
Speaker 2 (46:54):
Just living out in the country. Everybody over at the
old laundry mat. But we had them in our house.
We were different, were there in the big city. Oh yeah, okay, well,
and even in college I had him in my things.
But so I would do that, and I don't know
if that was a real job. But then I would
also collect cans along the way. And I would pick
up cans. Of course in my area five cents for
(47:15):
pop cans, so kind of kind of I'm kind of
like a young from your small town. There was a
guy called Dan the can Man, like I was like
the modern day Dan the can Man. But I would
go around. I'd collect cans too, because your forging, you're
a little kid's like no different than being out in
the old West. Your fortune, your fortune, trying to find stuff,
trying to feed your family. And I'm trying to get
(47:36):
that crazy bread for a bag for like a dollar
back down, that's what you were doing. And you think
my dad was leaving money for me. No, every once
in a while he'd have change. But my dad's not
leaving change around the house. And you know, there'd be
kids stealing money out of the wallets. I would never
do that kind of stuff every once in a while.
Every once in a while, though, my dad would probably
float me like a five dollar bill or a couple
of dollars or something. I'm sure you would do that.
(47:56):
But I was foraging for cans and stuff, and I
collected a lot of cans, and I was lucky my dad.
We moved quite a few times as a kid, but
it was like the same area. It's like we moved
to a new housing development. Let's move to they're building
new houses now a couple of miles down the road.
Let's five years have passed, let's move to these new houses.
We just kept going west, moving into new houses. They
can board easily, your parents, they do. They always pish
(48:18):
out their furniture, and they always pitsh out their cars.
They do they and I can't even keep track of
their cars. They switch cars all the time, they switch
furniture all the time, they like, and then they switched houses.
But they've slowed that down. But when I was a kid,
we moved quite a few times, and it wasn't like
we moved far away, same school districts, stuff like that
for the most part. And uh, but we'd always be
like the first house in the block, and then they'd
(48:40):
build all the other houses later. The great thing for
me was I'd go and get all these cans from
all these houses. So I was going in and out
of these houses. It was crazy how many beer cans
you would pick up. And these guys are construction workers,
just all these beer cans in there and things like that.
I remember one day just finding a bunch of dollar
bills like thrown throughout and I'm picking it up, looking
good like it was at the club or something. But
(49:01):
I was getting all these cans, and I'd take all
these cans, of course, and then later I guess I
got paid back because when I started as a fourteen
year old and grocertoy, I had to do the cans
a lot of times and gross. But I would collect
cans and do all that kind of stuff. But my
first ever job came to me at twelve years old,
and it was a wild job, as you let me
tell you. So, of course you can still start. But
I started the grocery stores at fourteen, but I started
(49:22):
my first official I would call this official at twelve
years old, and it was for a lawn company. A
lawn company, you guys know, you've been around wherever you live,
there's long companies that will treat your yard, they'll do
your yard maintenance, whatever it may be. They paid kids,
and they put a little advertisement there. I jumped at it.
It was during the summertime, and all I had to
do is they dropped like ten thousand of them off
(49:42):
at my house and I had here's your neighborhoods. No
different than a paper route and stuff. Now we'll talk
about on the Channel one of these days. But Johnny Gosh,
the most famous paper boy of all time. Of course,
I think they made a video game after him, called
a paper Boy on Nintendo. I think maybe not, maybe not,
maybe a different kind of paper boy. But he was
kidnapped not too far from where I lived. If you
don't know the Johnny Gosh story, look it up. That's
going to be a story time with Kyle one of
(50:03):
these days on the Channel because lived it. It was
right in my area. So I'll talk all about that.
I'll give you all the real details on all that.
But I didn't want to do paper Boy because the
bad thing about delivering papers I always thought was this
house has the paper, this one doesn't, this one doesn't,
and then these people are gonna complain, Oh, the paper
didn't get here. It didn't get here until nine am.
You know, I like to drink my coffee at six am.
(50:24):
Even as a little twelve year old kid, I knew
the shenanigans around the paper and I want to be
a part of the paper route. So what I did
instead was I did this long care company and it
was these little flyers you put on somebody's doorknob and
you walk there. They're trying to drum up business and
you'd have this area and you'd walk up and you'd
do all that. The thing is, yeah, we hate it,
but I never had to knock on the door and
(50:45):
talk to people. And yeah, I asked that there was
a guy who just came to the door trying to
get like bug repellent or something in our house. And
I said, well, can I get this for free? And
I was just playing with the kid, and I told
the kid, I said, I respect your hustle, I respect
what you're doing. Good for you getting out out there
they're trying to but I don't want any piece of this.
And I said, can you give it to me for free?
And I was really I was putting through his paces
(51:05):
and see what kind of a salesman he was. I
almost gave him my business card, but we talked about that,
and then I said, go back to your boss. And
I said, I'll plug you on the pot. How about
we plug you on the podcast.
Speaker 3 (51:15):
The kids were dying in the they were laughing to this.
Speaker 2 (51:17):
I was going crazy on this guy, but then he
was all in. He subscribed to the YouTube, So shut
out guy.
Speaker 3 (51:22):
But shot a long guy.
Speaker 2 (51:24):
The good thing and the only thing I remember about
this kid was his last name was Peterson. I said, man,
good brother, like, that's our people. You're my people though,
and and then of course, Angie, we go away, and
about two minutes later we get the doorbell ringing again.
It's him again. I'm like, mister Peterson, what are you doing?
He's like, man, I hate to ask this or I forgot.
He said, but it's really hot out here. You got
to drink. And I said, you know, normally I wouldn't
(51:44):
give anybody a drink, but I said, since you've got
the same last name as me, hold on a second.
I went and got him a bottle of water, did
I not? I did get him a lot of water.
So I said, is Peterson's got to stick together. And
the first thing I asked him too, I said owen
or e en and he said owen. I said, that's
the magic word, buddy, and I put my arm around him.
I said, you're all right with me.
Speaker 3 (52:03):
If he was a Kyle, you would have I would.
Speaker 2 (52:06):
Have hooked it. I would have. I would have hooked
him in. He would have been the new co host
of the show if we had the same name. But
Kyle Peterson and Kyle Peterson showed him. Been amazing, of course.
But I did give him a water and I said, man,
that's for you, and I said us, o, EN's got
to stick together. We don't like those means. There's a
lot of a lot of feud there, of course, so
I gave him. I was like, I appreciate you what
you're doing here. I don't think you're going to get
any luck on this and it's a whole rigormarole, but
(52:28):
good for you kid hustling out there. Not enough kids
hustling these day and age. But I did do that.
And when I handed these things on the door knobs,
I got paid one penny apiece. Wow, that's what they
gave us. So it was really cool whatever it was
its thing. However, in a plot twist, then I saw
there was a newspaper I talked about. I didn't want
anything to do with these newspapers, and I don't want
to remember which house is which, and I don't want
(52:49):
to have to be a slave to the grind, like
the unskied roast of astrobach uh snake sabo, pick your poison.
There there was a thing called the Shopper, and maybe
you have the shopper here. We don't have it anymore.
It's gone, you know what I'm talking about. Everybody got
it was like a little mini newspaper with like maybe
your local couple of local articles, but it was mainly
coupons and things like that. That's mainly what it was.
(53:11):
And everybody got one. So I was cool with that. Okay,
everybody gets one. I can do that. It goes to
every single house, and you know, I actually I'm trying
to think, how did I think I did it? In
a backpack? So I filled my backpack and I had
four different kind of like groups, and I'd just go
back home and I'd fill my backpack and I'd just
basically pay them. I'd just be rifling these things off
(53:31):
from the sidewalk there, and there was a lot of
shenanigans with this place, and it still eats my soul
alive because I remember they called our house and they
and I think later on I figured this out, or
maybe my dad probably clued me in on it more likely,
but they were like, hey, we've got some reports that
some of you guys with the shopper are dumping them
all down like the sewage drain and not really delivering them.
You know, we're watching you guys out there. I'm like, okay,
(53:53):
I'm like and I never for a second thought about
doing anything like that. I was like, I'm gonna get
after it. I'm hitting every single house and I was
all in. I was not cheating the system or anything
like that. And I was very offended at about thirteen
years old when I took the shopper twelve years old landscaping,
thirteen year old shopper thing, and I was very offended
they said that to me, So I was pretty upset
(54:14):
about that, and then I stopped doing that once I
did get the grocery store job the day I turned fourteen,
and then off to the races after that. But wild
times delivering that thing. But I liked it. It was monotonous,
that's what I like. I didn't have to think. It
kind of goes back to my TV watching. I don't
have to think about it. I just chuck it. Here's
a house, here's a house, here's a house. Bam, bam bam.
It'd be a perfect job for my kids if they
(54:34):
still had that kind of thing. That'd be a good
start for them. But they don't want to start. That's
the problem. They don't want to start. They got to
start somewhere. I gotta start somewhere. So that was fun.
But I think I got paid a nickel for each
one of those, so that was a heck of an
increase from a penny. And it was a lot easier
to just throw them instead of having a walk up
to the door, putting a little thing on, hooking it
on there and moving on. And then sometime somebody'd walk
(54:56):
out of their house and oh, hey, what do you go?
Speaker 3 (54:58):
I got this.
Speaker 2 (54:58):
I don't care about it. I'm just dropp these off.
I'm not the salesman. That's what I wanted to be. Like,
I'm twelve years old. Leave me alone. I'm just dropping
these things off, but you know you're not allowed like
the shopper, and that you're not allowed to put it
in the mailbox. That's like against law or something. So
there was a lot of shenanigans. There's shenanigans and everything anymore.
I hate it. I hate the shenanigans. I hate it.
Speaker 3 (55:15):
Unless your accuracy of hitting that porch.
Speaker 2 (55:20):
Kid me, that was great.
Speaker 3 (55:21):
Didn't even have to stop the bike.
Speaker 2 (55:22):
I don't know. I didn't buke, so yeah, I don't
think I would have been very good on the bike.
Speaker 3 (55:26):
I had to hang the toggle to for that.
Speaker 2 (55:29):
But the shopper was throw like a newspaper, so you
wouldn't do both at once. They were separate jobs.
Speaker 3 (55:33):
Oh yeah, that would have been good. If you could
have done both at once.
Speaker 2 (55:36):
Oh double oh, that would have been great. I never
even that never even crossed my mind. I don't think.
I I think I quit that job, take this job.
I should have done that, though, But now now I'm
just thinking about all these pennies. How am I going
to make that money up? I gotta figure out a way.
I always I always got to figure those things out.
I don't know. But that's the tale of really my
(55:56):
first ever jobs and angiea the tasseler me just the song,
and dan Man continues on, that's why I told everybody
at the Des Moines Con. I said, you know, explain yourself.
And I said, really, guys, I just want to let
everybody know. I'm just a song and dance man. That's
what I said. That's how I introduced myself. And everybody
looked at me like, oh my gosh, he's gonna stand
up and he's gonna sing and dance. And I did,
I did, I did. So there it is, Angie. That
(56:18):
is a little story time slash tales from retail. I
don't know how you call it on that one there.
But now, Angie, it is time. It is time for
some final thoughts. All right, Angie, it's time for our
final thoughts here as we close up the episode. Finish
up this chapter of episode number eleven of The Kyle
(56:41):
Peterson Show, and Angie, we got a little viewer mail here,
and of course you want to be viewer mail, send
it to the Kyle Peterson Show at gmail dot com.
Of course if you got a question there, or you
can put it in the YouTube comments. And of course
don't forget to rate the review five stars wherever you
listen to the audio podcast, and even if you do
the video podcast, find the audio one somewhere give it
the old five star. And of course we always say,
if you want to sponsor the channel, hit up the
(57:02):
copiers and show email dot com. Once again, But Angie,
we got a little question of the week this week, Angie,
take it away from here.
Speaker 3 (57:08):
Okay. Michael Scarborough five seventy six, congratulations on tenth episode,
Angie and Kyle. I'm sitting in bed post surgery, recovering
from torn by set my future.
Speaker 2 (57:18):
That is your future?
Speaker 3 (57:20):
What is your movie or show marathon recommendation?
Speaker 2 (57:23):
Oh, it's funny and once again we should scream like
pee weee. It is segue once again, as is kind
of we talked about a little bit about that kind
of stuff and what we like to watch and things,
so very fitting question this week. Here. I guess, Angie,
you could start it's a lady's first channel. Oh gosh,
what is I guess you could say, pee wee. Even
you can say, well, watch that peewee documentary. I guess
that would be the first one we talked about here.
(57:45):
You want me to jump in with something the show.
Speaker 3 (57:47):
Show I rewatch sometimes is House that Won't the Doctor
or whatever?
Speaker 2 (57:50):
Never still love that one.
Speaker 3 (57:52):
And then movie probably like I don't know, Harry.
Speaker 2 (57:55):
Potter, Harry Potter. I saw the first ever Harry Potter.
I saw the first ever at the theater. I took
my little sister when she was little, and I've never
seen it again. So maybe I'll check out the Potter.
I'll be on Harry Pothead is what I'll be. Who knows?
What else do you like? Is that? It pretty much?
Speaker 3 (58:11):
I watched Gray's Anatomy for years, but I've I've quit
watching this too much. There's like.
Speaker 2 (58:16):
When Calls the Heart? You loved that one again?
Speaker 3 (58:20):
Not anymore?
Speaker 2 (58:21):
Yeah, not anymore.
Speaker 3 (58:21):
I don't know. For me.
Speaker 2 (58:23):
For TV shows, UH like wrestling, I watch a lot
of that obviously, but uh, Expedition Unknown, Destination Truth. I
always liked those kind of things, like Monster Quest was
a show back in the day. I love the Harry
Bypedal Creatures. I love all that kind of stuff. I
love the paranormal UFC UFC UFOs. I love the UFC
stuff too, The Ultimate Fighter, how about that one? But
(58:45):
I like stuff like that of course. I also like
I like a lot of terrible horror movies, like exploitation
movies and stuff about zombies and just terrible movies. I
love stuff like that. I love like folcy movies stuff
and our gento movie movies. And she's like, you're speaking
a different language to me. I like some of the
jallo films. You ever watched a good jallo film? Maybe
(59:07):
I'll introduce you to one of those one of these
days here. I like to watch stuff like that, But
I don't know a good show to watch as you're
recovering from bicep surgery boy and that see Angie's Future.
You're gonna tear that bicep one of those days, or
that shoulder that cuff.
Speaker 3 (59:23):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (59:23):
But besides, I just listed off a bunch stuff. There
is a what was that heavy metal show? Like heavy
Metal History? That was a really good one. I really enjoyed.
That was a long time ago that was on. That
was fun breaking down kind of the decades and different
genres of heavy metal music. I love stuff like that.
A lot of good documentaries out there. Hit up some
film noir, go way back watch some film noir movies.
(59:44):
How about? Those are always fun to do. But you're
right to wou'd you right to sleep there? Once you
put out Rio Bravo or El Dorado. Those were two
I had to write like a huge fifty page paper
on those ones back in the day. I think it
was Rio Bravo and El Dorado. They're basically the same
movie done differently, but it's the same exact movie. That
was always really cool and you had to compare and
contrast the movies and talk about the explanation, the same director,
(01:00:06):
Howard Hawks and stuff, you know, putting that film knowledge
out there. But that's enough. That's enough recommendations. That's enough
to keep you busy for a long time. But we
did get a couple other questions this week, once again
to the Kyle Peterson Show at gmail dot com. We
did get one from Eric Hutton. Hi, Kyle and Angy
have been loving your podcast. I watched on YouTube, so
there's no option for a five star review, but giving
(01:00:26):
you guys one, give it the old thumbs up on
YouTube is what you got to do. But he looks
forward to the podcast every single week with all the
videos both channels, You guys are so great together, and
he wants to purchase a book and he even wants
Angie to sign it. So, Angie signed a lot of
my books there, but we will get that out to you.
He just wants to buy a book there. So we
do have some books left. I only got a little
(01:00:47):
bit of a stack left, and I don't know if
I'll order more or not. We'll see what ends up happening.
But if you want a book, reach out Kyle Peterson
Show gmail dot com. Once again, Angie can sign it.
People have asked my dad to sign it. One person
didn't want me to sign it. I don't blame him.
I don't blame him, but shout out to Eric Cutting
there and then Mike Cummins. Mike actually won the copy
of the book a couple of weeks ago, so he
(01:01:07):
did get his book. But he does have a little
bit of a question here, Angie. Is it true that
Kyle wears Attorneya's finest loincloth to bed every single night? Yes,
it is true, Harry it's a hairy one too. It's
a Harry loincloth. But I do wear that to bed.
And it says Kyle, I know you're a jeep guy,
but would you ever buy a Hummer? Is there one
jeep you regret selling? Well, I love a good Hummer,
(01:01:29):
that's for sure, don't I. I'm a big fan of Angie's,
even a bigger fan a lot of the times too,
which it is wild to me. You're always down for
a Hummer ride, of course, But I have always wanted
a Hummer. But I want what was it called the
g one Hummer, like the old school hummer back in
the day. These mom hummers, I don't want anything to
do with. I don't like those things. But man, I
wanted a Hummer so bad. And there used to be
(01:01:51):
a Hummer dealership in the early two thousands down the
street from our house, and I wanted to go. And
I was only like, I don't know, I don't know
how old it like nineteen years old or something like that.
And I wanted to go test drive a Hummer so bad.
I knew they would never let me go in there
and just test drive a Hummer, because what's this kid,
He doesn't got money, He can't afford this two hundred
thousand dollar vehicles. And I begged my dad all the time.
(01:02:11):
It's the story of our relationship, my dad and dad.
Can we please go down there? Can we please test
drive a Hummer? And I'm trying to talk my dad
into buying a hummer, like he would never buy that
in ten million years. But I've always wanted one of
those old school hummers. And you don't see those around
anymore now I think about it. There used to be
one guy that drove around town. There was actually two
of them in town. They're totally gone. But I remember
the old magazines, like back in the day, there'd be
(01:02:33):
like hummers for sale and stuff, and I wanted like
a black one.
Speaker 3 (01:02:36):
Oh man, they really died out when gas prices.
Speaker 2 (01:02:38):
Went Yeah, they did, they did. But man, I haven't
thought about a hummer in a long time, at least
the automobile style. Uh yeah, So I would take one
in a heartbeat. And there's even a question here for
Gaye Octane. You're getting ahead of yourself, my comps. He's
not here yet. Gaye Octane, would you rather wrestle Flint
or Duke? What kind of match? And gay J octanea
assault of the Earth? Great guy does the announcement every
(01:03:00):
episode of the Kyle Peterson Show for us. But the
one thing about Gaye Octane is he doesn't watch my
reviews and he doesn't watch the podcast either. He can't
be bothered with our shenanigans. But he is going to
guest host here in July, so stay tuned for that.
But would you rather wrestle Flint or Duke? And we're
gonna have to ask that. I think he's more of
a Flint guy. I'm pretty sure. I don't think i'd
be friends with him if he was a duke guy.
(01:03:21):
So I'm pretty sure that's where he goes with that one.
So he probably would you want to fight your friend?
I'd love to roll around with Flint in the lackyard.
I'd be all in for that. I would be a
wonderful time. It would be a wonderful time. That is
the questions of the week, reviews, the week, whatever you
want to call it, all put into a nice little
ball here at episode eleven. Quite the episode. A lot
(01:03:42):
of stuff here, but of course the word of the
day is Angie, what she already forgot ah segu sega segue.
That was the word of the day here today. So
episode eleven, I can't believe in eleven episodes. Will be
back next week for episode twelve, Angie. Any excitement I
guess we can get of? Hey, how did the Texas
Roadhouse birthday. Go and you can give us the line
(01:04:04):
by line recap of what she ate, what she did
when she said, don't they put you on like a
little saddle. We've got to do that. We gotta film it.
You gotta do it, you gotta do it. We've got
to do that for sure.
Speaker 3 (01:04:15):
Last year, and then they take the like the hanging light,
like put it on you like a spotlight.
Speaker 2 (01:04:20):
I'm here, We're gonna film that for sure. But last year,
I just remembered. Last year we went to the Mexican restaurant, uh,
and you put the hat on, and then we were
nervous that she might have headlights, but thankfully crisis averted on. Yes, yes,
so there it is. Of course, you want to reach
out to us, the Cop Peters to Show at gmail
dot com. You guys know the drill by now. But
(01:04:41):
for episode eleven of The Cop Peterson Show, Angie, thank
you for coming even on your birthday. Happy birthday, Angie.
See you guys all real soon. Na, we'll do it live. Okay,
(01:05:01):
we'll do it live. Fuck it