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April 23, 2025 13 mins

On the Wednesday April 23, 2025 edition of The Armstrong & Getty One More Thing Podcast...

  • Jack takes a dinghy around San Diego Bay....
  • Then, he shares the deets on his horrific return flight. 

Stupid Should Hurt: https://www.armstrongandgetty.com/

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
No one wants to see your feet. It's one more thing.
I'm strung and getty. We'll get to that in a moment.
As I did a little traveling over the weekend, which
turned out to be not the best idea since I
was sick and Sam was sick. I just thought we
would power through it or get over it or something,
and it did not work out that way, and we

(00:21):
ended up not doing a lot and coming back early.

Speaker 2 (00:24):
So it was very kind of a surprise when the
standard a little cough, little sniffle turns in something nasty.

Speaker 1 (00:29):
Yeah. Ended up spending a tremendous amount of money to
feel horrible in an exotic locale. Anyway, Our friend you
don't know, our friend Dave Katie. It's too bad. He's
one of the best people I've ever met in my life.
He was our boss in San Diego. He lives on
a boat. H Yeah. He had been carrying around a
card in his wallet for years. Live on a boat

(00:51):
by age sixty a goal setting and he did it.
He pulled it off by like a week.

Speaker 2 (00:57):
That's awesome.

Speaker 1 (00:58):
Goal setting is important, you really, I was talking with
him about that over the weekend. You can't just like
think about things occasionally that you actually want to do.
You got to commit to him like that, like I'm
going to do this by this date, and then you know,
lay the work to actually make that happen. Anyway, Henry
and I slept on his boat two nights in the

(01:20):
marina in San Diego, and he was at his girlfriend's house,
so Henry and I had to boat to ourselves. And
then we went out in the dinghy in San Diego Bay,
which is absolutely awesome. For whatever reason, there was just
no boat traffic. I guess because people love God and
Jesus and care about that more than boating or something.
But on Easter Sunday there was nobody out there but us,
and we were cruising around the bay in this little boat.

(01:45):
I didn't know you could do this until Dave told me.
We went under the Midway. The Midway is an aircraft carrier,
an old aircraft carrier from World War Two that they
have docked in some museum now, but you can go
under it, like around it really close, and the underneath
the anchors which are the size of you know, several
cars and stuff like that. Very very cool.

Speaker 2 (02:04):
Yeah wow.

Speaker 1 (02:05):
And then we saw one of those giant Disney cruise
ships take off right next to us, which was stunning
to watch up close. Also just oh, it's mind blowing
that anything could be that big and float. Were you
in the water in the dinghy at that point or Oh,
that had to be like awesome slash almost scary. It
was almost scary. I mean it was very obvious then

(02:27):
crazy how fast those things go. It doesn't look like
they're going that fast until you're like in front of
it and trying to get out of the way of it. Yeah,
they're going way faster than it looks. I've never been
on a cruise. Have you been on a cruise?

Speaker 3 (02:37):
Giddy?

Speaker 1 (02:38):
I have not. I've never had a desire to be
on a cruise.

Speaker 2 (02:41):
River cruise. The river cruise was fantastic. That's that's a
very different experience. Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 4 (02:48):
Oh, it's been afraid of cruises that like norovirus, being
stuck on a ship like that.

Speaker 1 (02:52):
Oh, many thousands of people, Like I was telling Henry
that there are more people on that boat than live
in my hometown, which I looked up and is actually true.
You know, many many thousands of people on a floating
hotel and everything like that, and I just I don't know.

Speaker 3 (03:04):
I got really deterred at the beginning of COVID when
all of those people got trapped on that boat and
it was docked like right at the base of the
Bay Bridge in the Bay Area, and every day when
I was driving home, because we're essential workers, right, I
would see that and go, oh, my gosh, these people
are just trapped and they have no idea when they're
getting off, and yep, I'm good.

Speaker 1 (03:26):
Anyway, I've never been on a cruise and I've never
been that close to a giant cruise ship, and I
didn't realize it was moving. We were out in the
water and Henry said, I think it's leaving, and I said,
are you sure? And I started paying attention. It was like, yes,
it was coming our way. And we cruised around that
for a while. He went out in the water, and
then these giant tug boats turned it around and then
it headed out to see. Very very fun and Henry

(03:48):
got to drive the boat around, which is highly cool
but very fun. But so I was talking to her
headed back to the hotel and I ended up talking
to the sort of person in tourist towns who has
a tent set up in a high traffic area and
sells little things. You know, We've all seen these sorts
of people. I'd never had a conversation like I had

(04:08):
with this guy, though, and he sold these little things
that my kids were super interested in. So I ended
up being there for a while and talking to him
when he sold a variety of little things, like all
those kind of tents do. He actually sold miniature collectible
tennis shoes. My son's super into sneaker world and like
knows all the hot sneakers and what are the most

(04:30):
popular throughout the years and what's coming out next year
and blah blah blah blah blah. And he and this
guy bonded on that. But he sells miniature ones and
like they're really detailed with actual laces and look exactly
like and have the hangtags on him and my son
thought they were so cool, and so they talked about
it for a long time. Anyway, and they're made in China,
and the tariffs are gonna end his business and make

(04:52):
it almost impossible to sell these things. And we talked
about all that. But the guy made when he was
set up by the Midway with his hint. He said
last year he made a half a million.

Speaker 2 (05:03):
Dollars wha selling these little mini shoes total sales.

Speaker 1 (05:07):
How much he got to keep I don't know, but
I know his mark up on these things was like
three times. And I'll bet he pays practically no taxes,
so he's certainly making I would assume he's making a
couple hundred thousand dollars a year doing that. Wow. Wow,
I just said, I said, I admire people like you
because he was very knowledgeable about his product. I mean,
he is a guy who clearly put in a tremendous

(05:28):
amount of effort, not to mention the hours to figure
out how to make a living, compared to some people
who have no interest in putting any effort into making
a living and just live off of you. Well, that's
something I know. You know, It's funny how people.

Speaker 2 (05:43):
Get crazy into something Like a friend of mine or
I'm sorry, my neighbor's son is like encyclopedic about bourbon.
He knows everything about all the big names in the
history and how this bought by this and that, and
the original distiller was actually the guy who blah blah blah.

(06:06):
But now they're under the label of and I'm like dude,
it's corn liquor. I mean, it's it's it's fine. I
drink it and I forget my problems for a little bit.
And some of it's better than others. But why would you?

Speaker 1 (06:17):
But it doesn't matter.

Speaker 2 (06:19):
It makes them happy. And mastery of a topic is
like I read a great, a great refutation of the
notion of that man'splaining ones in which they pointed out
that mastery of a topic or a skill is how
men gain status among other men and frequently how they

(06:42):
land a mate. And it's funny that a woman would
be like disdainful of it, but like, I have a
reasonable mastery of preparing and delivering a talk radio show,
and trust me, my wife's pretty happy about it at
this point. But that's that's how males gain status. And
in the female world world, it's more coalition building and
being a willing and helpful participant in that relationship that

(07:08):
articularly group relationship that is interesting.

Speaker 1 (07:10):
And then because we live in a you know, safe,
prosperous society here in America, you become you can become
an expert on something that's just not important. But we
have the evolutionary desire to, like, you know, you know,
you're you're sort of making fun of the guy's knowledge
of whiskeys and whatnot. You know more about rock and

(07:31):
roll trivia than the average person, useless, and not everybody
would be into that. No, No, indeed, yeah I wouldn't.

Speaker 2 (07:38):
I wouldn't say I'm making fun of it as much
as I'm intrigued.

Speaker 1 (07:42):
By it and don't get it right.

Speaker 2 (07:46):
But you know, back in the day, and you trip
something else in my head about back before we were
so safe and affluent and secure, you had damned well
be a really good swordsman or a really good rider,
or a really good farmer, or a really good gesture
for the blacksmith whatever. It had to be relevant. But yeah,

(08:10):
you had to be really good at it and be
an expert at it, or you'd probably starve.

Speaker 1 (08:14):
This guy's knowledge of sneakers for these little miniature sneakers
that he gets made. He started hand painting him and
making himself, and then he found a manufacturer in Tijuana,
and then he moved that to China as it grew.
That's just amazing people like that who carve out a
way to make a living like that. Yeah, anyway, the
shoe part or the senior feet part just about my

(08:35):
flight on Southwest. So I flew southwest, and as anybody
who flies Southwest, a lot of times they have people
who try to be funny. Who are the air waitresses,
And this one had a particularly good good one. I
mean she was really good. She had a full on
stand up routine, songs, got applause three different times. I mean,

(08:57):
it was really pretty impressive. I'll be here till the
end of the flight. Thank you. She was really good.
But one thing she mentioned that I had never heard
before on a flight was, uh, do not take off
your shoes. Let me say it again in case you
weren't paying attention. Do not take off your shoes. Nobody

(09:18):
wants to see your feet, nobody wants that. Please, do
not take off your shoes. God, I'd never heard anybody
say that before. And there were a couple of collaps.
There are probably some groans that I didn't hear. I've
never had the slightest desire to take off my shoes
on a flight. By more comfortable shoes are your shoes

(09:39):
that uncomfortable?

Speaker 3 (09:40):
There is something about certain people and getting on an
airplane where that is like the first thing they do.

Speaker 1 (09:47):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (09:48):
Yeah, it's like they're in a decliner at home.

Speaker 1 (09:50):
I'm really comfortable though. I got comfortable shoes on, and
I'm very comfortable.

Speaker 2 (09:55):
It would be often uncomfortable and there's nothing I can
do about it because of getting my foot smashed up.

Speaker 1 (10:01):
But yeah, I.

Speaker 2 (10:03):
Don't just just just bare feet, especially, I don't know.
I don't want your socked feet either. Your Oh my
my feet are exemplary. Oh my gosh, my socks as
fresh as a daisy.

Speaker 1 (10:16):
My shoes.

Speaker 4 (10:19):
I take my shoes off, and I asked the passenger
next to me to rub my feet.

Speaker 2 (10:23):
Oh yeah, why not?

Speaker 1 (10:26):
Got it? So? I was coughing yesterday on this flight,
I mean, just you. I felt so far sorry for
the people who sit next me. Both flights, for some
reason half full, and when they announced that half full
flight today, folks, so spread out, you know, enjoy yourself,
find a row whatever. Very few people are both flights

(10:48):
there and back, I end up with a full row.
I sit, I sit by the window and two people
sit next to me, and I didn't say anything to them.
It's like, what are you doing? This flight's half full?
Go back a few rows and sit by yourself. Why
are you sitting next to me. Why are we in
a four row? That is weird.

Speaker 3 (11:04):
You should have been coughing the entire boarding procedure.

Speaker 1 (11:08):
Ah, that would have been a good But this nice
lesbian couple, a married couple that sat down next to me.
But I was coughing and sneezing the entire flight, just endlessly,
and I felt so bad for me. I turned toward
the window and try to blow my nose that direction
and cough that direction so it wouldn't be quite as obvious.
But it was an hour and a half of I'd

(11:28):
have gotten the hell away from you, especially with open seats, yes,
many open seats. They could have gone anywhere else, and
they just sat there next to me.

Speaker 2 (11:37):
M wow.

Speaker 1 (11:39):
Yeah, I was like the last person you ever want
to sitting next to. I don't think I've ever heard
anybody sneeze or cough as much as I did on
that flight. You would think I'm gonna die. This is
going to kill me. This is the last thing I
ever do sitting next to this nimrod.

Speaker 2 (11:53):
God, drop your pants and take off your shoes before
you coughing sneeze next to me.

Speaker 1 (12:01):
I didn't want to, and I try to stifle it.
Which makes it makes it worse than you start thinking
in your head. I got a cough, I have to
cough so bad.

Speaker 2 (12:07):
You go.

Speaker 1 (12:10):
Just oh, it was horrible and Sam was running one
roll away. My kids don't sit next to me on
the flight. Is that weird? I feel like that's weird.
We do not sit together and they don't want to
sit near me. Three of us get on the plane
and we all sit in through different rows.

Speaker 2 (12:25):
That's interesting.

Speaker 1 (12:26):
I know, a little odd, but it's a part of
it's because we all like window seats. And I mean
I don't demand I sit in a window seat, but
everybody wants a window seats.

Speaker 2 (12:38):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (12:40):
I was picture of Jack like arm wrestling the kids.
Now I get the window seat. Yeah, I'm the dam
get out of my way. Yeah, so sorry to the
nice lesbian couple. I sneezed on. I'm not contagious according
to the doctor, so you're fine. What I had to.

Speaker 4 (12:58):
Grab the newspaper, gone into the Truman said I'm here
for the whole flight people, and just hid. Well, I
guess that's it.
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