Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
I mean, now that we're all hearing, we're going which
one of us is getting naked first?
Speaker 2 (00:18):
Her head?
Speaker 3 (00:19):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (00:19):
Sorry, wrong show. I've been doing so many of these
lates I forgot which one I was doing. This is
that's going to be the next one with the other guy.
All right, well, uh well real quick. Let me let
me put this out there because I'm in a season
of gratitude right now personally on my personal growth journey,
and I'm glad you're both here. Because I've been saying
(00:40):
this to a lot of people. I'll say it openly
and publicly on the internet for everyone to hear. I'm
grateful for the both of you. You have both been
a huge part of my life for many many years,
and I'm thankful for the both of you being in
my life today and still and doing this show with me.
I think this is some of the most fun you
can ever have in a world doing a podcast, and
I really enjoyed this with people. So I just won't
(01:02):
put that out there for the world.
Speaker 2 (01:03):
So thank you, well, thank you because you have been
a big part of my life, so you've pushed me
to get out of my shell, especially doing this. But
many many years ago, with going to school doing different stuff.
So I appreciate you both. Plus you introduced me to Danielle.
Speaker 1 (01:27):
See I'm a matchmaker. Danielle was like, fuck, you just
signed my paycheck. I don't even care. I love you,
Okay today on this episode, we missed you last week, Danielle,
and it was totally my fault. Should I should I say?
I'm gonna say it. Okay, it was totally my fault.
So here's what happened. I thought that we all had
(01:50):
like a time setup, and then everybody was kind of like,
I got this going on. I got this going on,
and so when we didn't hear from you in the thing,
I just assumed you were like doing your thing, like
you had stuff going on and you just couldn't get
in it. And so we just ran with it because
again I was doing like so many things at the time,
and so I sent a message to just be like, hey,
(02:11):
we're going to jump in there, and then I totally
realized I didn't even send it to you, like I
sent it to the wrong person, and so I just
assumed you were off doing your own thing and didn't
respond to my message. So we cooked without you, and
so you missed the last episode, but you're back, and
it's my fault that you missed it, and I apologize,
but welcome back. You're you've you've been missed by the
(02:33):
millions of our adoring fans. What how is that a lie?
Every every d M I received in the last week
for this podcast was where did Danielle go? For real?
Speaker 3 (02:47):
It's got your fault.
Speaker 1 (02:48):
We don't want so, we don't want to listen to
this show anymore without her the light of our lives.
Speaker 3 (02:54):
That's a drama. I know.
Speaker 1 (02:56):
I always have been too, all right, speaking of speaking
of drama and drama queens, let's debate some ridiculous topics,
kind of a men versus women's showdown. This is a
show with two women versus one man. But like, there's
some ridiculous tops and I'll start the first one because
I don't know, I kind of have a mixed sense
about this. But who takes longer to get ready for anything?
(03:22):
Guys are girls? What's your opinions on this? Because again
we all get a little mixed background here. So Danielle,
I'll throw it to you first. If it's time to
go somewhere, and I mean like somewhere like you're not
just throwing on like a shirt to run out, but
like you got to actually be somewhere. Who's taken longer?
You're your husband. Yeah, but because because you're a typical
girl and like you wait till the last minute to
(03:44):
get ready or you're like doing hours of of.
Speaker 4 (03:47):
No, it doesn't take me that long, but it takes
me a little bit longer because if we're going to
do something, I usually have to get dressed, give my makeup,
make sure the kids are dressed, sure they're ready, and
then he.
Speaker 1 (03:59):
Just has to like he just has to like get
a shower and then and then be dressed and he's
ready to go, right.
Speaker 3 (04:04):
Yeah, but he usually helps me.
Speaker 4 (04:05):
He usually grabs everything we need to put it in
the car while the machine getting ready.
Speaker 3 (04:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (04:10):
See, so there's some shared responsibility there. I get you. Yeah,
I get you.
Speaker 3 (04:15):
It takes the longest.
Speaker 1 (04:17):
Yes, you think after all those years of practice, you
have it down though.
Speaker 4 (04:22):
Well I only do eyeliner or mascara, It still takes
me at least ten minutes. And then if I have
to do my hair, that's another like fifteen thirty minutes.
Speaker 1 (04:29):
Good lord, that's what I keep my hair got longer.
Speaker 3 (04:34):
So I can see that longer to get I.
Speaker 1 (04:36):
Can see it it got longer since the last time
we suppil I keep this this is about as long
as I keep it right here. I'm about to go
full on Kiwi mode here in a minute and get
this buzz down. But that that's less brushing I gotta do.
So when I'm getting ready, I'm ready, Katie. What about you,
Who's the who takes longer? I mean in your in
your situation, or just in general that you.
Speaker 2 (04:57):
Think who takes longer? Or who's always waiting on who?
Speaker 1 (05:03):
Yes, yeah, yeah, who's waiting on? Who's who's ready to go?
Whose ass is in the seat ready to go and
waiting on the other person.
Speaker 2 (05:12):
So I'm one of those that I like to take
my time getting ready. If you give me a time
of hey, I want to leave my five o'clock. Okay,
I know to start getting ready at three. That means shower, relax,
watch some TV, then do my hair. But I'm always
(05:33):
waiting on the guy. Now, if you're talking about who
takes longer to get ready, I will say that the
only guy that has take taken longer to actually get
ready from starting to finish would be Bobby, Oh.
Speaker 1 (05:47):
Yeah, I can legit.
Speaker 3 (05:51):
I don't.
Speaker 2 (05:51):
I don't know what takes them so long?
Speaker 1 (05:54):
I do. I know I went through this with him,
all right. I love with that dude for like six months,
almost a year. I'm telling you, I'm like, guy, I
don't know what your ritual is up there, because he
had he had his room upstairs with his own little
bathroom and everything. But this dude, I'd be like, showered
and dressed, ready to go, and this guy wants to
talk about all right, buddy, I'm getting a shower. Where
(06:15):
you been doing for the last three hours? Will that's
that's only going to take us ten minutes to get there,
don't wear It's not gonna take us ten minutes to
get there. To take us much longer.
Speaker 2 (06:25):
I'm convinced he's like he's got like an exfoliating like
ritual or something he does he does in private, something yeah, batman.
Speaker 1 (06:37):
Like, I know he likes his exfoliating body wash. I
know that much. And his cologne routine is on part
it's next to no one, all right. He knows what
he's doing with his smell pretty.
Speaker 2 (06:48):
Just him picking out an outfit. It's longer than me
and I change outfits about five times before I finally
decide what I'm gonna wear. Yeah, he takes longer.
Speaker 1 (07:02):
He usually wants to be a pretty, a pretty individual,
so he likes to get ready when he's going out there,
that's for certain. Yeah, I'll give you I think. I
think typically dudes are ready to go faster, but not
always like first you know what I mean.
Speaker 2 (07:18):
Well, you guys, you guys don't have as much prep time.
Like that's my thing is, Like if we're going out,
for instance, we went to Medieval Times the other day.
Speaker 1 (07:29):
Wild, I'm getting ready to go there next week. Okay,
go ahead.
Speaker 2 (07:31):
I had never been. But anyway, if we're going out
somewhere and it's okay, you know what I want to
do my hair? I want to you know, just the
process of washing your hair, then waiting, you know a
little bit for it to dry a little bit in
the towel before you have to blow dry it, which
(07:53):
takes about five ten minutes, and then straighten it, which
takes another like ten to fifteen minutes, and then doing
the makeup, trying to do all that stuff. The preparation
takes a long time because you know, we got hair
and if your hair is like naturally curly and you
want to go with it straight, it's a whole long process.
Speaker 1 (08:14):
That's that's why. That's that's so much. That's why I
don't understand, like were you choosing to go through all that?
Like you could just throw that up in a bun
and be ready to jam right like yeah, just like
right now, like I could tell which one of you
got ready this morning and which one of you just
woke up.
Speaker 3 (08:31):
I had to drive into town to take the.
Speaker 1 (08:35):
Did you go that's okay? So that's another point. Did
you get out of the car at all?
Speaker 3 (08:38):
Like?
Speaker 1 (08:38):
Did you go anywhere? When you dropped them off?
Speaker 4 (08:40):
I take JJ to his gate, but I usually just
dropped Derek off on his date and then I leave.
Speaker 1 (08:45):
And then you went right back home. Yeah, so, but
there's no reason to like do your hair and and
anything else.
Speaker 4 (08:52):
I just I just brushed my hair. I don't do
anything with my hair. We're doing something. I just carew
brush through it and then put some clothes on. I
don't go through my outfit. I fucking pick whatever's out
there and I throw it on.
Speaker 3 (09:04):
I don't care.
Speaker 1 (09:05):
See's there's two different people right there. That's what I'm saying. Yeah, no,
also two different situations.
Speaker 2 (09:12):
Yeah, when I take the kids to school, like today's
my day off, So people would be lucky if I
end up putting on a bra today, let alone watch
like doing any makeup. You will not catch me doing
makeup on my day off unless we're going somewhere in
the evening for dinner.
Speaker 1 (09:30):
That happens to me a lot too. I won't put
bras on on my day off either. I just I
won't do it.
Speaker 2 (09:36):
But like I take the kids to school, and I
even when I go pick them up too, it's nope,
I'm in sweatpants, like a baggy shirt, my hair thrown
up in a bun, throw some sunglasses on. I don't
who am I trying to impress a bunch of seven
year olds.
Speaker 1 (09:55):
I wonder if if people would say that, like those
are the tow okay, so, like you're saving up all
that get ready credit right like you, Like if you
could roll out of bed and throw something on and
drive kids to school and like hit a drive through
for some dunkin and stuff like that gives you credit
for like the thirty minutes you're gonna need for doing
your hair, Like on an important timeframe.
Speaker 2 (10:15):
Well, not to mention Danielle, can we talk about how
expensive makeup is?
Speaker 1 (10:23):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (10:23):
It is? It is not worth wasting? Like every day
it's like, God, do I want to spend waste the
money I'm putting on this makeup? Is it really? Am
I doing something that's really worth it? Like? Cause I
want years working on overnights, I never did my makeup.
(10:44):
I didn't wear makeup for like except for maybe a
handful of times a year. I didn't wear makeup for
like four years because it was, hey, I'm working overnights,
no customers are in the store. Once I went today,
it says, oh okay, I got to start starned money
on makeup now.
Speaker 3 (11:03):
As wild lot of people think that Scarah alone is
twelve dollars.
Speaker 2 (11:07):
My foundation is like sixty dollars because my skin.
Speaker 3 (11:13):
I will never buy that stuff.
Speaker 2 (11:16):
My skin is so sensitive though that I'll break out
to where I have to pay for the stuff that
doesn't break my face out, and that's sixty bucks.
Speaker 3 (11:26):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (11:26):
I don't wear a foundation or anything else. I will
do eyeliner and mascara and then maybe some lipstick. And
I can't do foundation. I don't know how to contour
my face. I don't know how to fuck to put
flush on, like, none of that. I don't know how
to do any of it.
Speaker 2 (11:42):
Even back when I even back when I used to
wear the cheaper like drug store foundation that was like
twelve fifteen bucks I used to spend. I used to
have to set aside and budget fifty to sixty dollars
a month on makeup. When I used to wear makeup
every single day, would never leave the house without makeup on.
(12:06):
I used to spend fifty sixty bucks a month on makeup,
and that was cheaper makeup. And now that I'm older
and everything's gone up in price, I'm like, no, I
don't care that much.
Speaker 3 (12:19):
Yeah, that's an interesting.
Speaker 1 (12:23):
So first, So what we gotta do is one, I
know there's people out there listening who know how to
do makeup and contouring and all that. I'm gonna I'm
gonna tag Danielle in this in this post.
Speaker 2 (12:31):
He's going damn me because I can't do makeup either.
Speaker 1 (12:34):
Shit, DM, both these ladies, Let's get them hooked up
with some some contouring classes or whatever. Shout outs on the.
Speaker 3 (12:41):
Show feel so gross on my face. I hate it.
Speaker 4 (12:46):
I don't know the feeling of it. It's like heavy
and like it gets inside my pores and then I
break out and then I'm just like, just.
Speaker 1 (12:53):
On the side note you're given, you're giving me. These
sound clips are in the dart and Bobby's gonna use them.
I'm just saying, that's raw audio. I can't do anything
about that.
Speaker 5 (13:05):
Have you ever seen that video of that chick that
like from start to finish of her contouring and doing
her makeup and she looks kind of uh and then
by the end of it she looks like a totally
different person than guys are, like, yeah, clipping in, going
this is.
Speaker 2 (13:22):
Why I don't trust females or filters.
Speaker 1 (13:25):
Yeah, that's a witchcraft man.
Speaker 2 (13:28):
But I see all the year olds doing makeup better
than I can.
Speaker 1 (13:32):
I see the ones where it's like movie it's like
movie quality makeup, right, but like they're singing like the
song that goes with that character, and it's like transitions
through and then all of a sudden they look like
that person. You're like, holy shit. They did like one
that was like alphaba she was like full green, and
I was like, dude, how did you do that by yourself?
Looking in a mirror because it looks as good as
(13:53):
the movie. And you know those movie makeup people do
like eight hours in a chair and all that bullshit,
Like U's nuts.
Speaker 2 (13:59):
Dude, And I don't sat there. I've even sat there
with like YouTube videos of how to do you know,
the winged and the smoky eye or you know whatever
like little makeup, and I look like a little kid
that got into our mom's makeup by the end of it.
(14:19):
And it's like, Okay, I can't do this to where
I literally do this same exact thing that I've been
doing since I was like fourteen, which beginning of two
thousand so back then, like anyone that's you know, in
their mid to late thirties will know how we used
to do our makeup in two thousand and two is
(14:43):
not anything like how these fourteen year olds these days
do their makeup.
Speaker 3 (14:47):
I still use my fingers to do my eyeshadow.
Speaker 1 (14:51):
See, but that's what we've talked about them before. I
don't know on this show. But that's just access of information, right,
because like, who taught you how to do your makeup? Nobody, nobody.
You just did it, like you just started doing it right,
and then somebody taught you or you just started doing it, right,
And like if you learn something it was from a friend, right,
like they saw you and you were like, oh yeah,
(15:12):
I did it like this, or they taught you a
different thing, right, But like to your point earlier, like
the access right now, like you can get on a
TikTok an, Instagram, a reel or something, search, makeup, whatever,
and there's probably millions of video YouTube, there's videos, and
these these kids have nothing but time. Like these younger kids,
they don't do anything but sit there and do that
(15:33):
and do that and do that until they get it
to be the way they want it to be. And
that's what's crazy to me. I don't I never had
time from makeup because I was always out, Like I
had to be out of the house like I was.
I wasn't allowed to sit and do my makeup. I
had to I had to go.
Speaker 2 (15:49):
Yeah, But it isn't like you're gonna tell me that
you didn't go through that phase like when you were
in like junior high and high school where like you
would spend all this time and with gel and trying
to like do your hair.
Speaker 1 (16:03):
See me personally know which is weird? Right? Like I
get it. Like I did have a lot of like
self image issues that I wanted to do because I uh,
I think more for me it was the outfits, like
I wanted to make sure that stuff matched and I
look good like h like my superhero shirts were good.
But like for me, like hair and stuff like I
(16:23):
just I think for the longest time, I had like
I just had slick back hair when I was at young,
so I just had like I would put gel in
my hands and then just slick it back and then
I would I would be gone because you know that's
what it was. But and then for basically the rest
I mean, once I got to like probably high school,
I've cut my hair like this just short and then
(16:45):
run away with it because I don't really care. I like,
I like more of what I'm wearing. I think is
more my statement. Like I like good shirts that have
fun messages on them, and I like certain types of shorts.
I used to have Jean jackets, but I think I
was younger than I was younger.
Speaker 2 (17:02):
I remember Jean Jackets. Danielle made a phase.
Speaker 1 (17:06):
Dude, Jean, you didn't have you didn't do the denim
you did the younger you did. I had. I think
I think.
Speaker 2 (17:15):
Every day was the nineties.
Speaker 1 (17:18):
Yeah, I'm pretty sure every day for fourth grade, I
wore a denim jean jacket. Yeah. It was dope. The
pockets on it were super strong. It was great. You
can put snacks in there, I'm telling you, man. And look,
everything goes with jeans, right Like, that's just the rule.
So you could wear anything with slick back hair and
(17:38):
a jean jacket. That's boss ship right there, that's boss move.
I'm telling you. I don't know. Hey, I want to
jump back real quick. You said something earlier. I'm excited
about this.
Speaker 3 (17:50):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (17:51):
You went to Medieval Times, which is like it's like
a chain. Do you know what that is? Daniel You
know what that is? Right?
Speaker 5 (17:58):
What?
Speaker 1 (17:58):
Okay? You ever seen a cable with Jim Carrey? Oh
my god, ladies and gentlemen, Danielle is so young that
she's sometimes beyond our help here, so all right, check
it out. Medieval Times is like it's like an entertainment situation.
They have nights of the roundtable and they fight each
other like with swords and axes and shit. Yeah, they
(18:21):
do all it. It's like, if you're in Medieval Times,
yourself and you're like a spectator while all like the
sport's going on. So like they bring you like authentic
like old food like turkey legs and bullshit like that. Right,
I've been to the one in the Vegas Oh fuck,
chickens even better. Uh, the one in Vegas at the
Excalibur is the Tournament of the Kings, And it's the
(18:42):
same thing. It's just done on a grander scale because
it's a resort in Vegas, right, it's on the strip.
So and then of course I've seen Cable Guy, which
is that that's a huge thing where they make fun
of Star Trek doing that shit. But was it was
it an experience for you? Like did you enjoy it?
Did your night win? Like what happened?
Speaker 2 (19:00):
So our night did not win? It was definitely in
an experience. We ended up doing the vip Royalty package.
Speaker 1 (19:12):
Nice, nice, didn't you?
Speaker 4 (19:15):
No?
Speaker 2 (19:15):
Because it was the last minute decision and I was
really upset because I wanted to go do my hair,
but I did do my makeup. Like, No, we did
the Vip Royalty which, oh my gosh, that that shit's expensive,
Like it was like five hundred bucks just for the
tickets for two adults. Two kids, but we were in
(19:39):
the front row. The food was great, the drinks were great.
Our night did not win. He was the he wasn't
like like he almost won and like the whole show
like he ended up like like trying to like take
(20:01):
over and then ran out and then came back like
towards the end and like tried to like win it ultimately.
So it was it was a really good show. Like
I was not expecting them to actually be like fighting
with like legit, Like you could tell these guys like
(20:22):
need a practice, practice, practice like a lot. That way,
no one gets hurt because it is legit. Metal forged
like swords like they weren't sharp, but they were throwing
the sparks like shousting to where like the stuff was breaking.
You could hear the metal. It. It was crazy. It
(20:42):
was crazy.
Speaker 1 (20:44):
There's like serious stunt performers and shit.
Speaker 2 (20:46):
Yeah, it was insane.
Speaker 1 (20:49):
Was it like was it by color or like country?
Was it like red Knight blue night or was it
like it was.
Speaker 2 (20:56):
No, it was by color. So there was like yellow, blue, green, red,
black and white and yellow and red.
Speaker 1 (21:09):
Yo, yellow and red. Which one was yours.
Speaker 2 (21:12):
Yellow, yellow and red?
Speaker 1 (21:14):
Oh he's a yellow and Red Night.
Speaker 2 (21:17):
Yeah, like everyone ended up gigging him like certain crowns
and they go see you and like the area and everything.
Speaker 1 (21:27):
Well of course he lost. He's the clown Night looking
like Ronald McDonald out there. Look at this action.
Speaker 2 (21:36):
It was pretty cool. It was pretty cool.
Speaker 1 (21:38):
No, it's an experience. I think it's great. I found
one in Orlando and I was like, we gotta go
right now. So we're going to go probably next week.
But do what. I think, it's always fun. I think
shows in general are fun. I'm finding myself in my
old age, Danielle. I'm old now. I like to go
and see things like thank you Do I look older
(22:00):
like I do? Do you remember when we were young
and we were like we were fighting crime and shit?
But I look older now?
Speaker 3 (22:05):
Right?
Speaker 2 (22:06):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (22:06):
Thanks? Anyway, last night check us out. So right now,
right now in Epcot, they have the Festival of the
Arts going on, and one of the main things this
year is the Disney on Broadway, so you can go
(22:27):
through this like exhibit that they got and you can
see all the different like they have, like costumes from
all the different shows they've got like set and prop
pieces and stuff. But at night they do two or
three shows a night, and they come out. It's about
a half hour show, but different people from different Broadway musicals,
(22:47):
Disney Broadway musicals come out and they sing different Disney
songs and go through a little show with you. So
last night I legitimately just went and saw one of
the guys he played Simba in the Lion King and
then the original Elsa from Broadway Frozen on Broadway. They
sang songs together. It is some stuff from Tarzan and
of course Frozen and Lion King. And I was like, yeah,
(23:10):
I gotta be I'm probably getting a little older because
this this is super entertaining me. Like I came to
Disney World tonight to watch some singers sing some Broadway
shows to like Throw Rise and some of the other stuff.
So but I like that stuff. I like the entertainment stuff.
There's a lot of shows in the parks. We saw
the stunt show for Aniana Jones. That Medieval Times thing
really gets me because it's it's like a big stunt show, right,
(23:31):
and like I'm pretty sure that they I mean they
change it all the time, like there might be like
a night where the Red and Yellow Night wins. Like
He's the main star, right, so, like you kind of
get a different experience every time you go do it.
But I think that stuff's really fun. It gives you
more of them. It's better than Chili's.
Speaker 2 (23:50):
Yeah, well our Wench that's a while she was telling
us that the more noise, the louder you like cheer
or scream or boo for the opponent, the better your
(24:11):
night does.
Speaker 1 (24:12):
Yeah, so they might gauge it just like that, like
if you have a really rowdy crowd in Green, like
they let Green wind.
Speaker 2 (24:18):
Yeah. So, like you know how I collect shot glasses? Yeah, yeah,
so I got the ultimate shot glass when I went
and it's a what one, two, three, four five? It
could be a six shot shot glass?
Speaker 1 (24:39):
Lord, yo to the bottom.
Speaker 2 (24:43):
Like the lower one. Uh, the lower marking says queen
than Princess, than lady and waiting then maiden than wench.
Speaker 1 (24:54):
Yo. The more you drink, the less status you get.
That's crazy, right, that's wild. It's a good looking shot class.
Speaker 2 (25:04):
Though, right, it just ain't gonna fit in my display case.
Speaker 3 (25:10):
Yo.
Speaker 1 (25:10):
Again, that's raw audio in the dark that Bobby might
use later if you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (25:15):
Hey, I was legit, like showing my roommate and I
was like.
Speaker 1 (25:22):
There it is. I'm pretty sure there's raw video in
here now too. You're welcome Internet, Well that's gonna be.
That's I'm glad you got to experience that, Danielle. You've
got to. Well we'll figure out if you come here,
we'll do it, or we'll all go to Vegas and
do it at the at the x Caliber. But it's
(25:43):
super fun, I think. So anyway, all right, I want
to play something else if we can, if we got time,
we got time. I want to play overrated or underrated.
And this kind of goes with like again from a
from a your guys's point of view to a guy's
point of view, like what are things right now that
(26:04):
you think are just overrated? Like social media wise in
the world, like something that's just going crazy and everybody's like,
I can't believe that's the best thing ever. I'll go first, ready,
Kim Kardashian, I don't know how twenty five that's exactly
what I thought too. I was like, how is she
still even a real person? But yeah, she still gets
(26:26):
like all kinds of support. She's got millions and millions.
I mean, she's a business woman. I get that, like
they own legitimate businesses and stuff, But to me, I
don't understand how that image attached to those businesses is
driving such successful business because she's overrated.
Speaker 2 (26:47):
I didn't even think she was still a thing, like.
Speaker 1 (26:50):
Yeah, she's still That was the whole thing with her kid.
It was late last year when the her and Kanye's
kid was like just for no reason other than they
didn't her mom pushing them through. Was she was in
the Lion King production at the LA Bowl or whatever.
What's that thing the amphitheater, you know what I'm talking about,
(27:10):
But no, not the it's a it's like an amphitheater
somewhere in LA where they do like shows, like they
do music there, they do concerts. Yeah, because it didn't
make any fucking sense for this person. Hit the kid
has no talent at all. Like I get that she's
a famous she's like a celebrity kid. But instead of
(27:31):
pushing her onto the world with no talent, no anything else,
like put her into some talent classes, like get her
into acting, get her into singing and stuff, and then
like let her while the world. But don't just be like, Okay,
there's our kid, and make her do that because it
was garbage. It was trash. And what was really sad
is like they showed all the audition tapes for like
the top six kids they were gonna pick, and any
(27:54):
one of those kids blew that that her daughter away,
like just astonishing. But I don't know, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (28:03):
That's like Paris Hilton being such a big thing back
in the early two thousands, and why just because she was.
Speaker 1 (28:12):
That's back when like reality TV was kicking off though,
like they were they were banking on that.
Speaker 2 (28:17):
Well yeah, but you walk into a wal Mart and
there's Paris Hilton, you know, like kitchen stuff that's stupid expensive.
Speaker 1 (28:29):
Yeah right now right, Like she's made it come back.
I mean, but it's the same thing with Drew Barrymore.
When was the last good Drew Barrymore movie. I'd say
probably like around fifty first dates maybe, But like she's
selling like cake mixers and coffee makers. Now it's kind
of strange, is she really? Yeah, it's the beautiful brand.
I don't know, it's all kinds of kitchen appliances and
stuff like that. It's not really like it doesn't really
(28:51):
make any sense because I mean, again, like it's like
Drew Barrymore, Adam Sandler, like those guys have like a
nostalgic connection to like people that are my age. Yeah,
but and they don't they don't well sure, but like
they're not like big celebrity names that you want to
have in your household right now. So it's just I
(29:13):
don't know, it's strange, strange to me, but definitely Kim
Kardashian's overrated.
Speaker 2 (29:19):
Absolutely, I'm trying to thankful.
Speaker 1 (29:21):
Do you think, Daniel, what's what's overrated? Daniel? What do
you think is overrated in the world today?
Speaker 3 (29:28):
Everything?
Speaker 1 (29:29):
Everything's overrated? Yeah, there's too much focus on everything.
Speaker 3 (29:34):
Well yeah, every fucking everybody put everything out of proportion.
And it's like, well.
Speaker 1 (29:39):
That's true. You talk about just like social media responses
to a lot of stuff.
Speaker 4 (29:44):
Yeah, I haven't been on social media in a while.
I mean it's still there. I just don't get on
very often.
Speaker 1 (29:51):
Good for you. That's a power move right now, that
really is. That's a power move right now to be
disconnected from social media like that.
Speaker 4 (29:59):
Yeah, everything still there, and I'll post every once in
a while for the most part, Like I don't sit
there and scroll for fucking.
Speaker 1 (30:05):
Hours, Right, And it's a catch joint too, right, because
what you're saying I'm getting is that social media itself
is overrated. Like there's more, there's better stuff to do
than be on social media. And I know you're the
kind of person who, like you will unplug from all
social media, unplug your phone and everything other than your
(30:26):
camera and leave on a Friday and come back on
a Sunday because you took your whole family to the lake, right,
because that's more important than the iPad kid generation doing
their thing. But the catch joint too is like it's
it's you need social media the network if you're growing anything, right,
Like if you're trying to do anything outside of a
nine to five or whatever, right, Yeah, And so you
(30:48):
kind of have to be on it, but there's a
thing where you have to disconnect from it. So like
I have to run a lot of social media platforms
for different things. But on my like if you look
at my personal social media pay there's like, I think
four posts in last year on one of them. There's
less than twelve in the last year on the other one,
Like so less than once a month was I posted
(31:09):
to my own stuff, But I was connected to social
media through all the other stuff, just posting and working
and like using it as a as a tool. And
I was kind of in the same thing you are, like,
it's just it's overrated. Like I don't need I don't
need to post so much or spend so much time
scrolling through other people's stuff. But I do want other
(31:29):
people to post a lot and scroll through so they
find my stuff so they repost myself. So it's kind
of like, I get it, but it's kind of hard
to It's kind of hard to, you know, you play
Devil's advocate a little bit. I don't know. Wait, you think, Katie,
what's overrated for you don't get She's like she's like.
Speaker 2 (31:48):
Men, well yeah it talk's the crazy one. Yeah, no,
TikTok like TikTok going off the other day, like, oh
my gosh, my roommate's daughter about lost it, Like she
(32:08):
was practically in tears.
Speaker 1 (32:09):
I'm going, I did lose it?
Speaker 2 (32:12):
Did you really?
Speaker 1 (32:13):
Dude? I didn't know what to do. I was texting
people at work. I'm like, I don't know what I'm
supposed to be doing right now. I don't I don't
know how to get through the day.
Speaker 2 (32:23):
You know, I just saw a meme earlier today that was, oh,
all these younger people losing their mind over TikTok being
deleted for twenty four hours or whatever it was. But
what about my Space and Tom, like we lost our MySpace?
Speaker 1 (32:45):
Well, and that's see, that's another one of those things
that's just crazy, like it's a changing of the times,
Like it goes along with what we were saying earlier,
like this generation gets more involved in that stuff, like
we I don't think when my Space was going away,
I didn't understand enough about social media to be worried
about it, right because everybody was just moving over to Facebook.
(33:07):
Which when and when I did that, like when I
stopped logging into my Space and I started logging into Facebook,
and I was like interacting with people faster, I was
seeing more stuff like it would just flow bear. So
it was just like that's the normal transition, that would
be the smartest thing, right.
Speaker 2 (33:23):
But see, here was the thing with my Space and Facebook.
Like MySpace. I loved MySpace. God, I'm dating myself. I
loved my Space because I would do all the coding, yeah,
completely put the whole overlay and build my own website
(33:44):
on it. And I do it for my friends. I
absolutely loved MySpace and at the time, all you had, Okay,
I'm going to really date myself. All you had before
Facebook came along, all you had was my Space and
aoball hometown. Do you remember aoball hometown for like.
Speaker 1 (34:07):
I remember that you could build your.
Speaker 2 (34:08):
Own website legit. I think my Aleball hometown page is
still active from one like I think two thousand and one. Yeah,
it's still active. But when like back then, like kids
nowadays don't understand, like you got Facebook, you got Instagram,
(34:31):
you got TikTok. I don't even know what other ones are,
but there's like a whole hand it. Yeah, yeah, like
there's there's tons of different social media platforms back on.
My Space was like shutting down and being taken over.
Like we all were forced to go to Facebook because
(34:54):
there was nothing else. Like I was one of those
last to join the Facebook fu clan because I was
not interested in it. You you can't make your own overlay
and design your your profile all your own ways.
Speaker 1 (35:13):
Yeah, and.
Speaker 2 (35:16):
Kids nowadays would have lost their shit and been so
triggered if Facebook you rated your top eight friends and
when you got mad at someone you took them off,
and oh why.
Speaker 5 (35:30):
Am I not on your top eight? Like kids nowadays
would be so triggered.
Speaker 2 (35:36):
Oh yeah, so triggered.
Speaker 1 (35:38):
There would be violence in the streets for sure.
Speaker 6 (35:41):
There would like it would be it would be like
legit riots and legit like, oh my god, I'm going
to kill myself because you removed me off of your
top eight, Like yeah, man, my face was a whole
different scene.
Speaker 2 (35:57):
We didn't have other social media was out.
Speaker 1 (36:02):
You had your own soundtrack when you saw somebody's page.
Speaker 3 (36:05):
Like it was.
Speaker 1 (36:07):
It was the most personalized social media thing I think
is out there right now.
Speaker 2 (36:14):
You know you talking, you talking about your own soundtrack
when you go to someone's page, because I know what
you're talking about. How you could put like whatever song
you wanted. Yeah, that just made me think about ring
back tones and how it was so cool to have
a ring back tone back then, and then when you
started applying for jobs it was, oh, I got to
(36:35):
turn off the ring back tone from eminem plussing on
it because what if an employer called me back like, yeah,
that's I've been very nostalgic lately.
Speaker 1 (36:48):
We used to, uh, we used to pay for ring
back tones and ring tones to assign to each individual
content or contact you had. I mean, like if you
got enough people's message, Yeah, if you had you you
had like you had a ring tone, A signed to
your mom, want to sign to your dad? Want to
(37:08):
sign to? Like you're like your significant other, your brother's
sisters like you, you would have like ten or fifteen
different ring tones that you paid for, and then you'd
have a ring back tone. Now my phone is on
silent most of all the time, Like it doesn't even
have a regular ringer on it, because I don't have
time to be hearing all these noises, extra noises. I'm
(37:29):
too old for that. Like, if it's extra noises, I
don't recognize it. I'm like, Oh, did the kitchen time.
Speaker 3 (37:35):
Or just go off?
Speaker 1 (37:35):
Did I put a pizza in the oven? No, it's
just a text message. That's crazy.
Speaker 2 (37:40):
Okay, let me let me ask you a question because
I'm genuinely curious. Because my dad gets frustrated with me.
He'll call me, I'll be at work and I won't answer.
He leaves me a voicemail. How often do you check
your voicemails?
Speaker 1 (37:55):
So like never, Like I'll get notifications like my phone
has a voicemail notification, but I very rarely check it
because nobody really ever leaves me voicemails. I leave people
voicemails all the time. I do it on purpose. Especially
I'll call Bobby three times a day, and if he
doesn't answer, he's getting three voicemails. In fact, I will
(38:17):
call him, I'll leave him like one third of the
voicemail on the first one, and then I'll call him
back an hour later, leave him the second part and
then the third one. I do that to people all
the time. I just call and leave random voicemails about
stuff they're not even involved in. I'll tell them I voicemail,
Oh didn't I should never call it. We just text.
But exactly like people I have to call and they
(38:38):
don't answer, I leave them random voicemails about stuff that
is actually not true or doesn't exist, or like I
let him know in places that I'm not like. It's
very fun to me because I mean, you know, how
often do they check their voicemail?
Speaker 2 (38:52):
So I'm the same way, Like I always leave people
voicemails when they don't answer, But how often do you
actually check your voicemail? Maybe once every couple of weeks
when you get tired of that icon sitting there. Yeah,
when I have a miss call from someone like my dad,
he'll call me. He always leaves me a voicemail and
(39:13):
I'll call him back the next chance that I get
and I'll be like, hey, what's up. He's like, oh, yeah,
that's right. You never check your voicemails. Nope. I just
called people like and if they don't answer when I
call them back, I text them, hey, what's up? Because
I don't want to go through that whole process of listening.
Oh you have twelve I'm listening voicemails. Okay, now I
(39:39):
got to sit There goes the zoom.
Speaker 1 (39:42):
I will also I'll instruct voicemails too, so like like
if I'm in a meeting or something, because because iPhone
transcribes your voicemail, so typically I wear airpose at work,
so it'll talk to me. Right, So somebody calls me,
like Brian or Boby or someone, I'll hit the custom
message thing real quick. I'm in a meeting, leave me
(40:04):
a saucy voicemail and I'll hit that and then it
sends them to you know, it hangs up, but they
get a message and they read the message, and they'll
do that and so and then it'll send, and then
the AirPod will read me the voicemail that they send,
and it's usually really fucked up, and I think it's
funny every time. I love that. Actually, I think it's
(40:26):
always fun. Oh well, it.
Speaker 2 (40:27):
Makes me think of you and Bobby and meeting sending
each other inappropriate stuff when you open it and it
starts making noise.
Speaker 1 (40:36):
That's that's a lot of why I where AirPods at work,
because that shit happens a lot, not just with Bobby,
just with people in general. Like you just open it up.
I'm like, I'm glad that's in my ear and not
where everybody can hear it.
Speaker 2 (40:49):
You open it up, and all you hear is.
Speaker 1 (40:53):
I would I would imagine like a lot, like like
probably ninety percent of anyone in any office going in
any meeting is probably on their phone listening to some
inappropriate ship, probably because it's more it's more fun than
whenever we're talking about.
Speaker 2 (41:11):
Legit legit.
Speaker 5 (41:12):
Those are some of those people sitting through meetings at
work are sending each other across this meeting room ship.
Speaker 1 (41:24):
We're typically texting each other all kinds of stuff like, man,
I can't believe this is still going on, like where we're.
Speaker 5 (41:28):
Gonnas are like, oh what do you think about that?
Speaker 1 (41:32):
And it's like what I just I've paid enough attention
to just go, well, I just want to piggyback off
what you were just saying. And really I think you know,
and you just one yeah, like if I heard the
last couple of things you said, like I don't care
what you said before, I'll just piggyback off of what
you just said, Like that's a really great point. And
(41:53):
what we really need to do is focus on that
as a key point, because guys, what we really we
really need to focus on and you just keep going.
You just say, you know, you just say words and
you'll get through it. It's fine.
Speaker 5 (42:03):
Oh so was stealing that the next time because I
get called out during meetings and Katie, what what you
do have anything for the group?
Speaker 6 (42:12):
Uh?
Speaker 3 (42:13):
No?
Speaker 1 (42:14):
Or you can away friends back, like if you heard
something someone said like five minutes ago, you can go
you know. I what I want to do is go
back to what James was saying earlier. I really like
that point and I just want to I just want
to follow through on that, make sure that we all
heard it. You know, safety is the key important thing
to do, you know, and you just kind of ramble
(42:35):
on it's really easy to be a manager really anywhere.
I think, well, this one is getting away from us.
I'm I'm again. I'm happy that you're both here. I
thank you both for coming in and talking with me
today and playing games and showing us your shotglass and
saying things that we can use raw audio for later
on what I can do with the shot glass? Yeah,
(42:57):
what you can do with the shotglass? Is there a
page where people can see that or that's not anymore?
Speaker 2 (43:04):
No?
Speaker 1 (43:05):
No, I don't know if I would. I'm just saying
I would tag it in the thing. Danielle got cut
off in some states. Did you know that? Like in
Texas and Florida you can't see you can't see Danielle
stuff anymore without proof of proof of age. Oh no,
not residency. You have to you have to prove that
(43:27):
you're of legal age to view certain things. But what
did you do? Oh, she's gonna tell you on the show.
But listen, I'm just saying, if you're not getting as
much money anymore, is because I think like thirteen states,
like yeah, like thirteen states banned you from from their
(43:48):
from their internet services, so you got to deal with that,
all right. Yeah, I don't think it's gonna disappear. I
think it's out there for a long.
Speaker 2 (43:59):
Time after what I just did with the shock laugh nothing.
Speaker 1 (44:04):
Man, nothing, nothing compared to the shock glass. Okay, any
any final thoughts before I walk us out of this
one and into the outro music.
Speaker 2 (44:18):
My only thought is, Danielle, you said you don't need
to you don't know how to use blush, but you're
blushing right now, so you don't need any you.
Speaker 1 (44:29):
So if you need a makeup tutorial about blush, you
can reach on out to Danielle Tagger in the bottom
of the episode. Again, thanks guys for being here. We're
getting out of here. Let's do it or go away.
We'll say goodbye and we'll see everybody next time. You're
not gonna be gone. You're not going.
Speaker 7 (44:45):
Anywhere, all right, Goodbye everybody, Bye bye.
Speaker 4 (45:00):
In the Esthetics, In the
Speaker 1 (45:05):
Bastings Intending Antics, ind