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November 14, 2025 • 63 mins
Epstein, Battle In Barre 18, favorite seasonal classic TV special and SO MUCH MORE
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:50):
And File the Wall Productions bringing you the aired Out

(01:58):
podcast to Your Eyes, to your Ears, streamed everywhere you
get your podcasts and on the web. Airedoutvt dot com.
We're live on Facebook, We're live on YouTube this morning.
Here's what's playing. I was just on FGB theaters dot
com to see what's coming on this weekend. Some really
good movies at the Capitol show Place in Pilier, Now

(02:22):
You See Me three, Nuremberg Regretting You, which is saw
the trailer on that Little was Happy Springsteen, Wicked Part one, Yes,
the other Wicked is coming out. Paramount Twin in Barrie
has Predator, bad Lands and The Running Man for the

(02:42):
weekend and then coming soon. Get your tickets for Wicked
for Good, which Chrylyn and Lily are all worked up about,
Avatar Fire and Ash Rental Family, The Housemade Eternity, Five
Nights at Freddy's Two. Lily wants to see That So
Bad and Zoutopia wants to see that one as well,

(03:06):
The SpongeBob movie. Not entirely interested, but you never know,
might be there. FGB theaters dot com to see all
of the showtimes and grab your tickets in advance. Check
them out on Facebook and YouTube too. Today is National
Family PJ Day. Today FAMILYPJS. I've got him? No res

(03:35):
no familypjs.

Speaker 2 (03:36):
What are we talking about?

Speaker 1 (03:37):
You have familypjs? I do you have familypjs?

Speaker 2 (03:41):
No? I don't. Man, really no.

Speaker 1 (03:45):
You don't have the little Christmas matching family pajamas.

Speaker 2 (03:51):
Really no. That was like a rich kid kind of thing,
not a no, dude. Everything was now everybody did not Well,
everybody is.

Speaker 1 (04:00):
Now we've got him and we take our you know,
our family picture and the ridge.

Speaker 2 (04:05):
Today kids are rich. Look at every single kid walking
around with like a thousand dollars phone. I couldn't even imagine.
I asked my mother for a sixty dollars bear of
sneakers when I was a kid, and she screamed at
me in the middle of the store. Till now we
couldn't afford that jet and bear's the hell out of me?

Speaker 1 (04:23):
Hey man, thirteen days to Thanksgiving? Can you believe it?

Speaker 2 (04:27):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (04:28):
Birthdays birthdays today, Helen Fisk, uh, Casey Bright, Mark Parker,
Stephen Newton, Jamie catchupo A Manda and Amber Hatch, the twins,
both celebrating a birthday today. Uh, what's that? What did

(04:49):
you just say I'm so beautiful.

Speaker 2 (04:53):
That was.

Speaker 1 (04:55):
Oh you were talking to Athena.

Speaker 2 (04:56):
I was telling him, No, I understand.

Speaker 1 (05:00):
Weather from NBC Channel five, Be careful drive in these
next couple of days. Cloudy, snow showers and thirty five
degrees today, tonight, cloudy in twenty five Saturday, Tomorrow mostly cloudy,
thirty seven Sunday, rain and snow showers and forty but
falling fast in the afternoon with that cold front that

(05:22):
is coming. In sports, the Patriots hosted the Jets on
Thursday Night Football and beat them up twenty seven to
fourteen last night. To start up week number eleven tomorrow morning,
ten thirty. Right here where we are now, Logan Loose
is going to preview the matchups for Sunday, and there
are a long number of them.

Speaker 2 (05:43):
Say it again, you haven't got Logan's grandma on here yet.

Speaker 1 (05:46):
I haven't yet.

Speaker 2 (05:47):
No, that'd be a wild show. I'm hoping to that'd
be a wild one. Would she come in with like
a bottle of whiskey or something? Oh no, No, she
doesn't drink. Oh okay, hopefully she's medicated when she comes in.

Speaker 1 (06:00):
Really she's that outspoken.

Speaker 2 (06:03):
Oh she's very Yeah, Okay, we'll call it out spoken.
She definitely definitely speaks her mind. She's a wild woman,
She's she's a good woman though. She really is.

Speaker 1 (06:13):
Facebook question of Today this Morning, and I just posted
this up a short time ago. What's your favorite seasonal
classic TV special that you loved as a kid. For me,
it would have to be rooted off the Red Nose
reined here Froshie the Snowman was a little sad for me.
I'll be honest with you. I always cried during that
for some he melted. Yes, he came back. But and

(06:38):
Charlie Brown, thanks.

Speaker 2 (06:40):
Killed the football. Charlie Brown he fell for every year,
every time, every single time.

Speaker 1 (06:48):
Do you know that there is something he reminds me
of JD.

Speaker 2 (06:51):
Green? I how people treat JD. And he falls for
it every time.

Speaker 1 (06:57):
I was just gonna say, there is something.

Speaker 2 (07:01):
You're Charlie Brown. You are Charlie Brown.

Speaker 1 (07:05):
There is something so deep about that part of Charlie Brown.

Speaker 2 (07:14):
You know what? In something so in the Christmas spirit?
Can somebody tell me I am getting a cardigan sweater? Wait?

Speaker 1 (07:21):
Hang on a second, Good morning, Gee, good morning, Glenn, Hey, Donna, Ben.

Speaker 2 (07:25):
Is Glenn already for hunting season. Is he going to
bed right now to getting ready to get up early
for tomorrow?

Speaker 1 (07:30):
Is he hunting with Kenny?

Speaker 2 (07:32):
Well, as soon as Kenny gets out of the hospital, jeez,
Glenn will be up either because blind is all set
up and what you're just saying. So, starting next week,
as long as the book comes in, can I announce
it about the little please? The story time that we're
gonna do? Please do we are, We're gonna we're gonna
read some storytime children's books, Okay, starting next kind of

(07:59):
like a Mister Raws theme. Next Friday, Yeah, next Friday.

Speaker 1 (08:04):
All right, please don't think about No, don't tell anyone
the name of the book.

Speaker 2 (08:07):
Nope, I'm not gonna please. Okay, So, but I think
I'm at that Grandpa age where yeah, that would be
a nice segment, a nice little kid's book. I agree
to play along with it. Uh so, yeah, a little
story time. Yeah, we're getting into student holidays. Yeah, this
is the.

Speaker 1 (08:25):
Time of year where we want to do something like that.

Speaker 2 (08:27):
Yeah, absolutely special. It is rated PG. Thirteen, but it's
still a children's book.

Speaker 1 (08:33):
Great, right, that's I don't think any let's do that.
So what was your favorite classic TV special. Man, I
love the Charlie Brown Thanksgiving. We're gonna watch that tonight.

Speaker 2 (08:46):
You want, you know, if I'm being perfectly honest, A
lot of my childhood I don't. I don't have like
good memories.

Speaker 1 (08:53):
Okay of doing stuff like that.

Speaker 2 (08:55):
Yeah, you know, I can remember watching TV shows and
stuff like that, but they were usually ruined with you know,
a good old beaten Well that's I'm I'm sorry to
hear that. Do you remember that was like life though?
That was just normal life.

Speaker 1 (09:09):
Do you remember the days when Rudolph the Red Nose
reined here on CBS. It's like it came on on
Sunday night at eight o'clock. Yeah, and if you missed it,
you missed it.

Speaker 2 (09:22):
Yeah you did. It was only once a year and
that was it.

Speaker 1 (09:24):
Yeah, and now and then and we only have but.

Speaker 2 (09:28):
We missed it before we did because we did something
whatever my dad didn't like. At the times, we weren't allowed.

Speaker 1 (09:34):
I remember when I remember when it came out on
VHS and you could that was the beginning of the
on demand culture where it's like, oh my god, I
can get it a lotbusters. We had my brother had
recorded it on the TV on the VHS player when

(09:54):
it was on TV.

Speaker 2 (09:55):
Dude, you know what I just saw that.

Speaker 1 (09:57):
That's copyright infringement, right, Like, if.

Speaker 2 (09:59):
You're having problems filling in your resume, nobody can ever
check if you were a blockbuster manager.

Speaker 1 (10:09):
Gee says Frosty. Yeah, Frosty was a big one for me. Man,
I just I couldn't deal with when he melted. That
just killed me every time, even though I knew he
was gonna come back with the Magic Snow anyway.

Speaker 2 (10:24):
Magic No, I haven't heard that since Gustos.

Speaker 1 (10:29):
I haven't heard magic Snow and magic dust since since
Cheech and Chong's explanation of Santa Claus and Christmas. Have
you ever heard the story of Santa Claus from Cheech
and Chong? Yeah, okay, I think that was nineteen seventy nine.

Speaker 2 (10:46):
Yeah, I was gonna say about seven.

Speaker 1 (10:48):
Fantastic. I love it. It's one of my most favorite things. Still.
Live Nation just released. Live Nation just released the results
of a big, big poll this week that found that
live music is the world's favorite way to be entertained,
coming in second, coming in second live sporting events. Uh

(11:10):
and what a perfect segue into the Battle in Bury
eighteen which is.

Speaker 2 (11:14):
Kind of you know, we looked into that before, like
promoting a big concert up at the auditorium. I think
that would be a lot of fun. Yeah, well it's
been done. It's just been a long time. I mean
Rascal Flats played up at the Barry auditor.

Speaker 1 (11:30):
I want to keep going.

Speaker 2 (11:32):
Oh dude, Alison Krause saying my wedding song. Yeah, and
moments like this.

Speaker 1 (11:36):
When you say nothing at all? Wouldn't you say nothing
at all? Was that the name of the song?

Speaker 2 (11:42):
No? Moments like this?

Speaker 1 (11:43):
Oh yeah, what a beautiful voice. So how are the
tickets going for Battle and Barry eighteen?

Speaker 2 (11:50):
Phenomenal? December sixth? Get onto donny Brook Flight Promotions okay
dot com, or get onto our Facebook page or Instagram page.
You can email us, you can send us a message.
We will get you ticket. I think the front row
is already sold out, pretty positive. That's that's usually goes

(12:11):
the front row is tables. But we do have VIP seating,
which you sat at. Those were great seats, weren't they amazing?
The VIP table there where seats eight people. It's one
hundred dollars a seat and you get your you get
a waitress you get everything. You know. The other thing
Taylor mentioned last night, and I think how many people
would be interested in a black tie event kickboxing event,

(12:33):
like just all tables, a nice galla. That would be
a lot of fun, and then the whole night would
be like just a nut. Oh Year's Eve, how much
fun would that be on a New Year's Eve dinner meal?
Kickboxing that'd be pretty cool. Maybe someday it's a great

(12:56):
idea too it, I know, maybe someday Black Guy event,
Donny Brook, black tye.

Speaker 1 (13:00):
If I if I pay a little bit extra for
my ticket, can what could that possibly include me being
seated somewhere not with Kenny?

Speaker 2 (13:12):
Oh? Yeah, hundred percent that that's definitely. Uh, that's an
add on. That is an add on.

Speaker 1 (13:19):
And add on to not be with him.

Speaker 2 (13:21):
Yes, oh yes, yeah, you definitely have to pay extra.
If you don't want to pay extra, we'll definitely put
Kenny with you. You'll pay extra next time. We love Kenny.
We love Kenny ly.

Speaker 1 (13:34):
I'm only saying that because I know he's he's in
the hospital and not not listening this morning.

Speaker 2 (13:41):
Yeah, he's probably is less ship.

Speaker 1 (13:47):
Wow, we have a lot to talk about. First of all,
just a quick glimpse here at the community calendar, brought
to you by the World. There's so many, so many
things going on this weekend. I can't keep tracking from all.
I mean this.

Speaker 2 (14:00):
That's good to have things going on. You know what's
even better is that you're on here telling people because
it's a lot of people don't get don't know what's
going on for the weekends. A lot of people locally
don't even know when we have our fights.

Speaker 1 (14:12):
I know that's wild. We should say December sixth, December sixth,
yes Bury Bury auditors. Matter of fact, where's the Burry Auditorium?

Speaker 2 (14:24):
I don't know? Answer that it's at one twenty. It's
at twenty Auditorium Hill. Where is that behind Saint Monica's Church?
Right here in Barry City?

Speaker 1 (14:35):
Thank you?

Speaker 2 (14:36):
Exit six seven seven?

Speaker 1 (14:39):
Okay, exit six or seven of ten minutes away?

Speaker 2 (14:43):
Easy to get to, Yeah, super easy, right from Applebee's.
It's a help skipping and jump away.

Speaker 1 (14:48):
What are you saying to folks, uh, not local who
have never been to a battle in Berry?

Speaker 2 (14:54):
So that's the wild thing.

Speaker 1 (14:55):
We want to know what is the battle in Berry?

Speaker 2 (14:58):
So that's the thing is most people outside of this
demographic already know about us. We spend a ton of
money on advertising. They know they know that we put
we are the feature small glove moy Thai. We do.
So what we do one of the one of our
claims to fame or whatnot is we do professional Muay

(15:19):
Thai kickboxing and instead of using boxing gloves, we use
MMA gloves. So your guard has to be so much
more so when you're using a boxing glove, you can
use lazy guards because you don't need to close a
lot of space with a boxing glove. As your glove
gets smaller, your defense has to get tighter and until

(15:43):
you get to the bare knuckle, then it's super tight
for your defense. So it's a lot of fun to
watch because there's knockouts there. You know, there's a lot
more knockouts when it comes to the small glove. We
also do professional and amateur MMA. We do professional and
amateur kickboxing. We use We fly fighters in all the way.

(16:04):
We were trying to fly a fighter in from Sri Lanka,
the number one ranked fighter in Sri Lanka. His visa
got all fucked up so we couldn't get him over here.
We fly people in. We've had Sammy Mongoga up here
from Texas. He has over one hundred professional kickboxing fights.
Glover Tech Shriffs brought his teams up here.

Speaker 1 (16:23):
So Mark Coleman's been here there, Mark Coleman.

Speaker 2 (16:26):
My buddy, Hey, sober life with Mark Coleman.

Speaker 1 (16:28):
You see him out playing in the snow the other day.

Speaker 2 (16:30):
I did, I did. We have a lot of local teams.
You know, we have just up the road I where
I train out of Granite City MMA, they have fighters.
We have United Fighting Arts. I was training there last
night with Mike Desrozier. They have fighters up their combat
fitness up in Burlington. Those guys have fighters. You have

(16:53):
Team Lincoln, New Hampshire, they're always Yeah. You got Burgess,
Maine up there, Massachut, there's just New York. Yeah. We
bring in fighters from everywhere to fill in. So we
have you. You know, we have our Vermont fighters, but
we also bring in people to fill in for where
we lack the Vermont fighters. But the gyms are really

(17:14):
really growing. March, We're gonna do a straight kickboxing card.
I've already hit up like a master, Freddy Fredie Lapan.
I grew up with Freddy, so I hit him up
and I hit up a couple other karate studios, So
let them know because that's their forte. That's what they do.
They kickbox. So if we can, if we can get
more traditional gyms involved, then that's what they want to

(17:35):
do and help out their demographic of people. We'll do
that too.

Speaker 1 (17:38):
What are you saying to someone who's never been to
a battle in Perry, Oh.

Speaker 2 (17:41):
Come check out one live show. If you've never been
into a battle in Barry, send me a message and
just send a message to the page. And all I
want you to write is I've never been all right, yeah,
just send me a message and we'll see what we
can do.

Speaker 1 (17:57):
Donnybrook Fight Promotions dot Com.

Speaker 2 (18:00):
Yeah well yeah, you can go onto there or go
right to our Facebook or Instagram page. That's easier. You
get a quicker response through there. Okay. So and then Sunday,
every Sunday at noon, yeah, we do a giveaway. So
you got to follow the page, follow the Donning Brook page.
Make sure you get on there, like, follow and share
because every Sunday, when you do that, we enter your

(18:22):
name into the wind wheel.

Speaker 1 (18:23):
Okay, what's that? What is that?

Speaker 2 (18:25):
So the wind wheel? Like we'll come up with a
question like who's your favorite UFC fighter, And everybody in
the comments puts it on there. You know who their
favorite is. So we take those names. My daughter all
week long gathers all those names, puts them into like
a wheel of fortune wind wheel thing, and your name
never comes out of there. The wheel gets bigger and

(18:46):
bigger and bigger, and the prizes get bigger and bigger
and bigger. So last week we gave away four general
admission tickets. Nice, yeah, so oh yeah, yeah, So there's
a couple hundred dollars that we gave away. So we
get away gear, we give away VIP tables, we give
away VIP packages. There's ways, you know, we have if

(19:07):
that's something you're interested in doing, whether it be advertising
or you know, if you want if you want to
do something nice for your company, advertise, get your name
up there. You get a VIP table if you want
to treat your company to VIP treatment, to go down
and meet the fighters, meet the UFC officials. Just just

(19:27):
a cool night. It's a cool night.

Speaker 1 (19:29):
Just by by some of your your employees.

Speaker 2 (19:33):
Some check, buy a table, buy a VIP table, or
even better, because when you're when you are a VIP sponsor.
We allow them to go in Like they go into
the cage, they get to get pictures taken with the
ring girls, to get pictures taken with the our MC
margaret so and they get to and they get to
picture inside of the cage with their logos and stuff

(19:54):
like that. Nice. So it's a it's a plus. There's
a couple of thousand people that are there and your
name is getting shown in front of everybody.

Speaker 1 (20:00):
Big deal. So we're around three or four fights per year, yes,
all right.

Speaker 2 (20:06):
We just thrive for four, but right now we're doing
three because we just got so much go on.

Speaker 1 (20:10):
And this is the eighteenth battle and Barry yep, holy
crap wrecks December sixth saved that date on your.

Speaker 2 (20:17):
Campd Well, think about it. You know that our local fighters,
a lot of our local fighters, man, they that's where
their name came from. That's where they started at Chris
Parol right out of Donnybrook Fight Promotions. Bas those guys
out of Grantite City, right, I mean that was a
that was huge for them to jump start to other
promotions and ship.

Speaker 1 (20:35):
Quick check of the roads here. The things are great
right now, we're showing you a live cheem in Hartford
on I eighty nine South. Looks good, looks good, clear Road.
Hertford's a dangerous place. Hartford is a weird place. There's
a lot of drugs, there's a lot of crime. It's
the I've seen the dark side of Heartland, and I

(20:56):
don't because it's such a It looks like a peaceful
little Vermont town. And then in the suburbs there's just trap.
Oh we've seen you know, we see that everywhere. Man, Yeah,
I want to I also want to mention Uh no, no, no, no,
I just got of the things I want to mention.

(21:16):
The the glitz and glam Gala. That's where everybody gets
dialed up in their glitz and their glam fancy dresses
and we get all dressed up and uh and the
girls get together and they do the hair and the
makeup and they come out to the Elks Lodge. Once
a year they do this and it's coming up on

(21:38):
tomorrow night, seven pm. Oh wow, Yeah, I think you
and I should maybe put on our wigs and see
if we know.

Speaker 2 (21:46):
I would have No, no, do you still have the tuxedo?
I do, But this is a lady's don't we have
all this ladies, all right? Oh you want to hang
out at the door away for him to get all intoxicated.
We'll catch him on the way out.

Speaker 1 (22:04):
No, I want to see if we can sneak in there.

Speaker 2 (22:06):
You still have that we like the Budweiser girls.

Speaker 1 (22:10):
Do you still have that wig? The long blonde hair
one or the that was your wig? Do you still
if you're Richard Simmons wig?

Speaker 2 (22:21):
I do. And that was not Richard Simmons. That was
not That was the creepy eighties gym coach that we
all had. Uh. They were never creepy to me. But
if you were a girl in gym glass in the
eighties and you saw a dude with that little shorty
shorts and tube socks all the way to his knees
and a big old creeper mustache, you already knew.

Speaker 1 (22:43):
Wow. I'm still trying to get more info in the
sox sale in cap it as I was last Friday
when I was talking with you. Wow, still trying.

Speaker 2 (22:53):
To if only there was a representative or we knew
somebody from darn Tough at darned Uff. That should be a.

Speaker 1 (23:01):
Real November twenty second, which is next Saturday, it's a
week from tomorrow Barry Elks Lodge, in conjunction with the
Elks National Foundation, they're going to be hosting the annual
Hoop Shoot, which is you know, it's a Spaulding High
School thing and it's a big deal.

Speaker 2 (23:18):
I think we're forgetting. I think we're forgetting like the
most important Vermont tradition Saturday morning, or actually it starts
Friday night, and that's Widow weekend at Gustos with the
male strippers. That starts Friday night.

Speaker 1 (23:34):
Did you just say mail strippers?

Speaker 2 (23:35):
I did. So that was like a thing back in
the day. You would go there, like you didn't want
to go inside Gusto's, but you'd hang out in the
parky lot wait for the strippers to get done and
all them desperate ladies to help, and then the start
of deer season. That's where it starts. So it starts
Friday night at Gustos Deer season does guys are going
to their deer camps. They're hitting the bars in Hardwick,

(23:57):
the wives are hitting the local bars down here. And
this has been a Vermonte tradition for one hundred, two hundred.

Speaker 1 (24:03):
Years, two hundred years.

Speaker 2 (24:06):
They've been having their mail servers at gotstas or yeah,
I think this is like seventeen seventy six or something.
I wonder what they looked like back then. I don't
know they actually took the wool off. They stripped down
to their knickers.

Speaker 1 (24:22):
Corey is saying the the sock sales the twenty second
and twenty third, and Sherilyn is sitting at home right
now listening and saying, my god, I wish that Corey
didn't say that. So twenty second and twenty third is
the sox sale. I'll be there period. Also coming up
packed the pantry at Price Chopper many of us know

(24:44):
it has stuff a truck which has been around for
what is this twenty years?

Speaker 2 (24:48):
Oh yeah, over twenty.

Speaker 1 (24:51):
Huge November twentieth through the twenty second November twentieth through
the twenty second pack the pin entry again. Price Chopper
parking lot is where it is. They're not leaving until
the truck is stuffed. And here's the deal. Every single
nonperishable food item that is collected stays right here in

(25:12):
our community, goes right to keith av to the Salvation
Army and they fill that food pantry for one year.
And they do it our community does it in a
matter of a couple of days, which is so.

Speaker 2 (25:27):
It's got to be the life. It's so living like
kings on the system.

Speaker 1 (25:33):
I'm talking about something wonderful in our community.

Speaker 2 (25:36):
So I was so distracted. I was just watching the
three people with everything that they own pushing it down
the street, and I was thinking, those are the people
that are taking advantage of the system. The reason that
America is failing is because those people are living high
on the hog as they walk by with all of
their fucking possessions. Sorry, that was my little ranch. Anyway,

(25:57):
go ahead, What were we talking about?

Speaker 1 (25:58):
No, that's it. I was talking about pack the pantry
and yes, listens.

Speaker 2 (26:03):
And it used to be huge. We used to have
empathy for people. We used to care about people every year.
We used we had the the toys for tots. That's
another huge thing that used to do. Those things have
all fallen off. We don't do that. We don't we
don't have the Our sense of community is social media platforms.
I like you know, like you subscribe.

Speaker 1 (26:25):
Here's the thing. I understand what you're I understand what
you're alluding to, but I'm not sure I totally agree
with you. I think that it's that there's still some
programs that are alive and well yeah events, Oh I
I I believe that, and I think Packed the Pantry
is one of them.

Speaker 2 (26:45):
I think it's a great thing. I just I.

Speaker 1 (26:49):
It needs more support. It does need more support, and
that's why we're talking about it. Yeah, absolutely, because because
the Attom line is it helps people locally. Number two
Christmas for Kids. Jason Flurry Man.

Speaker 2 (27:08):
Yeah, dude, I really I like Jason, I really do.
I'm not a huge fan of comms, but I like
Jason Flurry. Jason's a He's.

Speaker 1 (27:14):
The real deal man.

Speaker 2 (27:15):
Yeah he is.

Speaker 1 (27:16):
He and his daughter are just kicking ass. They're still doing.

Speaker 2 (27:21):
Absolutely. I've offered him and his daughter to come up
and then for free lessons up there, and he tells
me he's gonna make it. But he's a busy dude. Man,
he's got his job. And then he collects all that,
all this the toys for the kids and shit, I mean.

Speaker 1 (27:36):
Hey, speaking of toys for tots here, who would it
be in our local community. Who's the rep for Toys
for Tots that could come in here and talk about
it on the air.

Speaker 2 (27:49):
Do you know how to hit up. Actually, you know
who could tell you that is Patty O'Neil. I don't
know who's running it right now, but she used to
run it. She could probably get somebody for you.

Speaker 1 (27:58):
All Right, I want to talk about what well. I
want to talk about this This week was.

Speaker 2 (28:09):
We should keep it mellow. We really should. I I'd
hate for you to lose sponsors because of my mouth.

Speaker 1 (28:16):
This week.

Speaker 2 (28:19):
Was shout out to Kidder's Interior.

Speaker 1 (28:22):
Yeah, that's one of your sponsors.

Speaker 2 (28:24):
That is one of my sponsors. Comfort In another one.
I want to touch it.

Speaker 1 (28:28):
I want to talk about this week, but first you're
talking about sponsors for Donningburg Fight Promotions. I want to
talk about Fecto Holmes, one of my sponsors.

Speaker 2 (28:38):
You know what, dude, I have nothing bad to say
about the Fecto family. They helped me out tremendously when
I was getting my start. They were the best people
to get your start when it came to working, because
they worked. That fucking family was such a hard Like

(28:58):
his mother was lugging shingles Victory. Yeah, but his mother,
his mother would lug shingles. They would get up there
and they would work and Dan oh yeah, well Dan,
Jimmy I grew up with Dan and Jimmy, and Dan
was younger. Jimmy is who I grew up with, but
I grew up their dad. So we would go up
there and in order to they would have a pay list.

(29:19):
They were like, this is what we pay for citing,
this is what we pay That pay list was created
where you had to earn your fucking money and you
couldn't sit around because you you wouldn't make any money.
So you had there was You had to put in
long days, put it in, but you could make money.
There was always money there. They they would hire local carpenters.

(29:41):
They always fed the local economy. Like you were hurting
for money, You like, I haven't sold any jobs. The
people today have never seen the bad times of construction,
when things are really slow, when the economy sucks, when
nobody's doing remodels anymore. So now you're out your onesies
and twosies. There was me and my cousin Pete. We

(30:01):
would go. We'd be like, hey, Victor, we don't have
any work this week. He'd be like, hey, I got
siding here. I got this. It wasn't a lot of money,
but it was a paycheck, and that was he was
a I always.

Speaker 1 (30:13):
One of the things that you and I have talked
about is that more adult children than ever are moving
back home more and from that more I said the
same thing, more from honors than ever. Also want to
see their aging parents close by so that they can
each in place. Accessory dwelling units are really they're really popular.

Speaker 2 (30:37):
Right doing that. I have a car to have garage,
and we just cleaned it out because I'm doing the
exact same thing because my in laws. So it really
bothered me that my in laws live down here and
they have to struggle every month. You know, it's a
fixed income, and they worked hard. Why the fuck do

(30:57):
they have to struggle? Yeah, so we're turning that into
a one bedroom apartment for them right at my house.
That's what we're doing that there were so that my
my wife can.

Speaker 1 (31:07):
I think that's fantastic, dude, I mean, the.

Speaker 2 (31:11):
Only way but okay, realistically, the only reason that it's
happening is because I'm doing it myself. I could afford
to hire somebody you're talking about. It costs sixty seventy
thousand dollars to do one of those.

Speaker 1 (31:25):
The thing about these ads though, is they can stand alone.
They can go on the property by themselves, or you
can attach them to.

Speaker 2 (31:33):
Bobby Bartlett your home. Yeah, I built one, Bobby Gilverert.
I built one for Bobby Barlett, exactly right on his
front lawn. It's beautiful, little like seven hundred, eight hundred
square foot one bedroom house is awesome.

Speaker 1 (31:46):
It gives you valuable extra living space. It brings your
family together, and frankly, it increases your property value big time, tenfold.
You can rent it, you can, you can offset your mortgage,
you can.

Speaker 2 (32:02):
You know. Let's be real though, if shit hits the
I'm just saying, who can you rely on your new
friend that you just met.

Speaker 1 (32:10):
Just saying or your family?

Speaker 2 (32:11):
I understand.

Speaker 1 (32:12):
Plus think about this. Guests arriving for the holidays. Put
them out in the a d U right, yep, thank you?
Wow Yeah, Fecto Holmes dot com. Check them out. I
was over there tour number seven oh nine. This beautiful

(32:37):
one bed to bath twenty seven feet by forty one
beautiful perimeter heat. I mean it's just a gorgeous. It's
right next to tractor supply. It's the red ADU. Oh
no shit, right next attractor supply party.

Speaker 2 (32:50):
That's a really cool little market. Go in there.

Speaker 1 (32:52):
It's the front porch.

Speaker 2 (32:53):
I love it when local people create new things in
the market. Talking about that burgo more burgogmon bergamont. Okay,
So I stopped in there yesterday because what is the
new fad between us all of our new friends? What
is it? What is it? Oh lord, it's this bag? Okay,

(33:14):
every all of my friends, we all carry this self
protection bag. Okay. Our wallets are in here, my stiletto
switchblades in here, everything's in here. So I stopped that.
It's not fair that my wife and all of our
wives get to go in there and buy three hundred
dollars purses. I want a three hundred dollars purse. So

(33:37):
I'm I'm thinking they are gonna start designing some beautiful
little man purses for us. Christmas is going to be
good for us guys this year locally.

Speaker 1 (33:52):
Can I can I see? Can I see your back?

Speaker 2 (33:54):
Yeah? Yeah? Oh no, I'm not throwing a glock in there.

Speaker 1 (34:01):
I just want to have a I just want to
have a look in here. Can we do this live
on the air unless you're gonna shoot me? Condoms?

Speaker 2 (34:15):
Who are you? Chris Hansen? I seriously.

Speaker 1 (34:20):
Hand moisturizer.

Speaker 2 (34:23):
Yeah, you seel drama hands are.

Speaker 1 (34:25):
Why do you have hand cream in here?

Speaker 2 (34:27):
Buddy? Do you see drama hands? Are? I work construction?
You need the hand cream?

Speaker 1 (34:33):
Vaseline?

Speaker 2 (34:36):
You never know, you can always find yourself in a
tight spot.

Speaker 1 (34:42):
Chapstick, Yeah, of course, hand sanitizer.

Speaker 2 (34:45):
Ye, normal run in the mill stuff.

Speaker 1 (34:48):
The hand lotion. I'm kind of.

Speaker 2 (34:52):
Did I wear crat your hands?

Speaker 3 (34:55):
I know?

Speaker 1 (34:55):
But are you?

Speaker 2 (34:58):
He didn't even talk about the glock ten millimeters or
all the nice stiletto inside of there.

Speaker 1 (35:06):
Uh, let's get serious for a second.

Speaker 2 (35:08):
Yes, let's get serious this week. Release the Epstein files.

Speaker 1 (35:13):
We're gonna talk We're gonna we're gonna talk about that
in a little bit. All right, we're talking about that
in a little bit. But but first, this this week,
I've really had some profound moments here on the air,
moments of like a lot of laughter and a lot

(35:35):
of fun. Uh, which was was yesterday Wednesday? Sergeant rick
Yarish came in here.

Speaker 2 (35:45):
Oh yeah, you had a lot of veterans. You had
Cody here.

Speaker 1 (35:47):
Had Cody here, Cody Copeland, the.

Speaker 2 (35:52):
Kids is stun man. A lot of people, so it's
really hard and me and him. I talked to him
in depth about this because I really like that I
relate to that kid. When you come back to Vermont
where he was, what he did. He's out of Acenza,
Italy one hundred and seventy third Airborne Division. You go overseas,

(36:16):
you see a lot of action. You the kid was
in constant combat for like a year, man some heavy combat.
So you go, you do all that, and then and
then you know you're back in either of Vicenza. You're
back in You're back in Brag, You're you're you're at
the bases, but you're surrounded by other people that can
relate to you. You come back to Vermont, there's no military,

(36:40):
there's no big military bases around here. Most people you
can't relate to. They don't except for the guys like
if you win in a guard unit, and you know,
those guys that you deployed with in a guard unit
are still around here. But when you go active duty
and you come back here, it's, uh, it's hard to

(37:00):
find people to relate to. There's a cycle that we
go through and there's stages you count. First thing when
you come back, you come back and you're like, holy shit,
the shit that I went through, I should have died,
so now I'm invincible. This is where soldiers have a
real problem because they come back and they're like, I
am fucking invincible, and that's when you get killed. Not

(37:21):
everybody's like this, but okay, no, uh, you're absolutely right,
because everybody does different things in the military. Everybody combat
arms is a different beast. That CIB that we talked
about is a different beast. That CIB is not a cab.
Let's explain that for a second. A CAB is a

(37:43):
combat action badge. If there is fire anywhere within a mile,
a mortar hits, you can qualify for that combat action badge,
a combat infantry badge, the rifle with the wreath. You
have to come under direct enemy fire. You have to
return fire. I mean, somebody was actually trying to kill

(38:05):
you and you either killed them you survived that, and
that is what you get. That was a direct fire.
So you're absolutely right. Not everybody goes through those stages.
It is very common for combat arms to go through
those stages. So you come back, you you go through

(38:27):
your your wild stage, I'll call it. This is a
really dangerous stage because you're not afraid of anybody like, dude,
I can't remember fistfighting some of the biggest dudes, like
I've been shot at all you're gonna do is beat
me up. I don't care, Let's fight, you know what
I mean. And I saw that in Cody when he
first came back.

Speaker 1 (38:47):
So when I say it was an interesting week, I'm
saying it was an interesting week. It was really a
sensitive time on the air, and Cody was light years

(39:14):
out of his comfort level. Two. He's never been on
the air before, he's never done anything like this, So
for him to come in here and talk about his
his experience, his life, what he's what he's been through
was massive, and frankly, I'll never forget it.

Speaker 2 (39:38):
But yeah, I mean, yeah, he's a good kid, and
there's there's just there's those stages that you go through,
and I recognize those stages. I've been through. I'm a
bit older, so I went through those stages already. So
I'm glad like he came on here, I'm glad he
got that was able to get that out.

Speaker 1 (39:58):
For for someone for a soldier two, give me a
CIB and a jump patch. I just I'm not familiar
with with all this kind of stuff.

Speaker 2 (40:20):
I know what those Those are jump wings. So those
are American jump wings. You get that you go through
jump school Fort Benning, Georgia. I went through jump school
in El Salvador. My wings were different. And that is
the CIB. That's Combat Infantry Badge, and that's I mean,

(40:41):
it's it's different earning that because so in order to
get any kind of awards in the infantry, you have
to go above and beyond your job. And your job
is to be in direct fire with people. Okay, So
it's not uncommon for somebody in other positions to get

(41:02):
like say a Bronze Star, a Bronze Star with Valor,
because say he was a mechanic on a on a truck,
but that truck could attack, So now he had to
turn from being a mechanic to being an infantry soldier.
So now he started fighting with them. They're like, okay,

(41:22):
well that wasn't your job. So you went above and
beyond your job. I'm gonna give you a Bronze Star
with Valor because you took the motivation to go above
and beyond your job and you did this and you
you swore it off attack. You could be surrounded by
a bunch of infantry soldiers. You know what they get.
They get that, that's what they get. They'll they won't

(41:44):
get a bronze star because that was their job. You
have to do extraordinary things to get anything in the infantry,
in a special operations unit, stuff like that. They don't
just Cody, especially when you're if you're not like a
captain or high up and see a senior n CL.

Speaker 1 (42:04):
Cody is a local guy man.

Speaker 2 (42:07):
And and you know what, you know what's weird is
my father served with his uncle Butchy in Vietnam. Yeah, but.

Speaker 1 (42:22):
You know what what strikes me is to have such
a hero who lives right down the road from me.

Speaker 2 (42:30):
Right. How many others are there? How many other veterans.
It's easy go to Spalding High School. They're on the wall.

Speaker 1 (42:39):
Mhmm.

Speaker 2 (42:42):
Yeah, there's so many local studs.

Speaker 1 (42:44):
I walked through the Norwich campus a couple of weeks ago,
and what I saw was so powerful. Oh yeah, Cody
wants to do to take his experience in some capacity

(43:05):
and put it out there for others to say, Hey,
we're here, we're here, we're not forgotten, we've come back,
We're lucky to be alive and let's connect, whether that's
over at the Veterans Home in Bradford or Northfield or whatever.

(43:26):
So I'm not sure exactly what we're going to do,
but we met each other because of you. I didn't
know who Cody was. You introduced us and look what
that Look what resulted in here. He came in here
and this isn't the kind of stuff that Cody does.

(43:47):
And he came in on camera right and shared his story,
very vulnerable. I mean, that was a that was a
veteran's day that I'll never for get. Rex, unbelievable experience.
And I want to thank you for introducing to Cody. Next,
we'll get him in the gym. Can we do that?

Speaker 2 (44:09):
Yeah, we'll get him in. He's gonna be a stud
because he's already been through so much shit already a stud,
yeah he is. But now we just got to give
him some hands, all right, So let's cut him in there.
But he's gotta get But so that's the thing is
he's in the cycle where that's so we go back
to that cycle. We go through that wild stage usually
involves drugs, alcohol, just being a crazy fuck fighting, and

(44:34):
then you have the stage where you know you get
rid of the drugs, but then the alcohol is still
an issue, and then hopefully, uh, you know, your kids
come along, we smarten to fuck up, we decide to
change things and go to the gym. And I don't
know if he's at that stage yet, but when he's ready,

(44:55):
we'll be here.

Speaker 1 (44:55):
Let's let's let's see if we can make that happen.

Speaker 2 (44:59):
Yeah, doors always open and always.

Speaker 1 (45:03):
And you don't have to go in there with with
the How am I trying to say this? You don't
have to go in there uh in angry dude. You
can just go in there saying Hey, like I say,
I'm a lofer, not a fighter.

Speaker 2 (45:21):
Thesey I have a pretitive I haven't had a competitive
role in probably a year. I don't competitively roll. I
have no reason to roll like that anymore. I'm not
training for a fight. Yeah when I roll, like last night,
I was rolling with another black belt, Dennis Sherman. It
was just yeah, we roll. We're not trying to kill
each other, but.

Speaker 1 (45:41):
Just just have learned some some skills on how to
defend yourself if you need to.

Speaker 2 (45:46):
It's more than that. For him, it would get a
lot of shit out. It brings it's so we spend
a lot of time you you, you, you spend that
time and that is really full of adrenaline and your
body like ah, so you spend a lot of time
chasing that and in the gym. You can kind of

(46:06):
find that with combat sports, like when you get in
a ring and you just you fight yourself so tired
that all you can do is back yourself into the
corner and barely lift your arms to try to protect yourself.
You know, that's probably the closest to adrenaline.

Speaker 1 (46:25):
Interesting. You know, I look forward to to chatting with
him and getting to know him more and and maybe
doing something on the air or off the air that
can can really make a difference and help others. I
mean that's the bottom line. Yeah, it's the bottom line.
I think connectivity, connectivity, relatability.

Speaker 2 (46:48):
Yeah, absolute man, Sunday, when will when?

Speaker 1 (46:55):
What times that start?

Speaker 2 (46:55):
Now noon? Me and my daughter do that. My daughter's
so cool.

Speaker 1 (46:59):
Donnie B Fight Promotions Facebook page, yeah, what you know,
or the or the website, but.

Speaker 2 (47:05):
Facebook page on Facebook YouTube, I always share it onto
the aired out podcast. But you have to get onto
our page and hit that little like button so that
you get the notifications when we're going live. Okay, all right,
so we'll do that. You know what I you know what,
I have my daughter doing with me right now. So
I'm teaching my daughter. We're skim coding inside of this house.

(47:28):
It's all plaster of fun time. So we're level five
skim coating everything. She's my little roller girl and then
I'm going through skimming it. So we're having We're kind
of like because I I I downsize. I had thirteen guys,
and that was the most stressful time in my life ever.
I thought I was gonna die. It was so stressful.

(47:51):
So I've taken up a crew. So I was like, Taylor,
you want to work with me. So she's been working
with me all week. We're gonna go.

Speaker 1 (47:57):
You guys fight not at all, not at all.

Speaker 2 (48:00):
Actually during work we are okay, no, because I don't
want to get punched in the mouth. Uh, So I'll
find with.

Speaker 1 (48:12):
Listen, we only have a few minutes, and I want
to close out by saying this. Six hundred and seventy
thousand furloughed federal government employees began returning to work yesterday.
Congress passed the bill late Wednesday to end the longest
ever government shutdown.

Speaker 2 (48:28):
Yep. So but wait a minute, you can't. No, no,
We're not ending this show without talking about the shutdown.

Speaker 1 (48:35):
We're going to the shutdown. The shutdown costs the US
economy and estimated sixty thousand private sector jobs and an
estimated fourteen billion dollars per week. That comes down to

(48:57):
eighty four billion dollars in all, eighty four billion dollars.

Speaker 2 (49:04):
What do we care? We went a trillion dollars in
debt in seven months. Seven months we added, we added
a trillion dollars. Never in the history have we ever
added that much debt to our economy. We are spending
like idiots. Meanwhile, when did you ever think that our
conservative party in charge is going to spend as much,

(49:26):
if not more money than the Democrats.

Speaker 1 (49:28):
We're also spending a lot of money at Starbucks. Roughly
one thousand Starbucks workers began to strike yesterday and this
is very serious, Rex.

Speaker 2 (49:37):
No pumpkin Lotte for me. The day, sixty five stores
across more than my thirty six dollars coffee.

Speaker 1 (49:46):
They have targeted purposely the Red Cup Day, which is
one of the one of Starbucks' biggest promotional events of
the year when customers get a free reusable cup with
a holiday drink. And now we've got Starbucks employees protesting
that they're they're starting a stress.

Speaker 2 (50:05):
Is weird?

Speaker 1 (50:06):
What are we gonna what are we gonna do this?

Speaker 2 (50:09):
Go across the street to McDonald's and grab a black coffee. Capitalism, Baby,
somebody else will come in, So wait a minute, we
will Epstein? Go ahead? All right, all right? Did you
see the emails?

Speaker 1 (50:22):
Of course?

Speaker 2 (50:23):
All right? Did you see the one where he talked
about Clinton?

Speaker 1 (50:26):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (50:27):
What did he say?

Speaker 1 (50:28):
Go ahead?

Speaker 2 (50:29):
Rack? No? What it is.

Speaker 1 (50:33):
That they spent a lot of time together?

Speaker 4 (50:34):
No?

Speaker 2 (50:34):
No, no, no, no no no. What did he specifically
say about Bubba? Did you read that email that just
came out late last night?

Speaker 1 (50:42):
I guess they did.

Speaker 2 (50:43):
Oh my god. Okay, So you ever see the picture
of Bill Clinton and he's sitting on his desk and
it says nobody would ever known there's two people here. Well,
now they've changed the meme and it says nobody would
ever know there's two presidents in this picture. So Epstein
is talking with his I think it's his brother. And

(51:08):
because he was blackmailing him all the way.

Speaker 1 (51:10):
The hints to Hindustan Times.

Speaker 2 (51:13):
No, this is the emails that were released from the estate.
All right, the email chain talking about he tells him
because uh, they found out Epstein was like still trying
to blackmail Trump in two thousand, like twenty eighteen when
he was running. And so one of the things Epstein's
brother says, he goes ask Bootin, yeah, if he still

(51:35):
has the picture of him blown blowing bubbah, my god,
this is blowing up man.

Speaker 4 (51:46):
Public by the House Oversight Committee on Wednesday contains shocking
exchanges between Epstein, Galline Maxwell, and others, painting a troubling
picture of what may have happened behind closed thoughts. Among
the most striking revelation is an email Epstein sent to
his co conspirator Glain Maxwell back in twenty eleven, where

(52:06):
he wrote, and I quote, I want you to realize
that the dog that hasn't barked is Trump. Epstein went
on to say that one of the young women later
identified by Democrats as a victim spent hours at his
house with Donald Trump. In her reply, Maxwell said that
she had been thinking about that as well. The emails

(52:26):
also revealed that in twenty fifteen, when Trump was seeking
the Republican nomination for the White House. Journalist Michael Wolfe
wrote to Epstein.

Speaker 3 (52:35):
I hear CNN is planning to ask Trump tonight about
his relationship with you, either on air or in scrum afterwards.

Speaker 1 (52:44):
If we were able to craft an answer for him,
what do you think it should be.

Speaker 3 (52:49):
I think you should let him hang himself. If he
says he hasn't been on the plane or to the house,
then that gives you a valuable pr in political currency.

Speaker 4 (53:00):
Years later, in twenty nineteen, Epstein reportedly wrote to Wolfe
saying that Trump had asked him to resign from Maro Lago,
although according to Epstein, he was never a member of
the president's exclusive club in Florida. In the same email,
Epstein added that of course Trump knew about the girls,
and even claimed that Trump had once asked Maxwell to stop.

(53:22):
But the emails go beyond accusations. They showed that Epstein's
inner circle continued tracking Trump's movements long after their friendship
reportedly ended. In one message from November twenty sixteen, Epstein's
pilot informed him that Trump was scheduled to depart on
a certain flight. The files also show Epstein's associates regularly

(53:43):
forwarding news stories about Trump, suggesting the disgraced financier kept
a close eye on his one time friend.

Speaker 2 (53:50):
All right, okay, so do we do I think we
know why he suicided himself. He had his roommate was
the New York City cop that murdered all them people
and buried him. That one minute, that's gone out of there.
He actually happened to be friends with Trump, that New
York City cop that killed them people. He had. He

(54:12):
had connections with Trump too. But the problem is, I
think that Trump thought that he would make that problem
go away, and it ain't going away because now you
have the estate. So what happened was in November of
twenty twenty three, the estate finally settled. They were still
in litigation. Because everybody's like, well, why didn't they release
the files, Well they couldn't, and the estate was still

(54:36):
in litigation with the victims still November twenty three, So
this is not you didn't even get. Those were just
the beginning emails. You should see the ones that came
out last night. They are so bad. They talk about
him blowing Bubba, they talk about him, the connections with

(54:58):
him and Russia. How putin has dirt on him. Also,
there's a those emails are bad. Those are really really
and now they're gonna now with the vote with that lady.

Speaker 1 (55:11):
The house is voting, right, when are they vote?

Speaker 2 (55:14):
When?

Speaker 1 (55:14):
One of the next week. Okay, that's gonna be a
that's gonna be a big, da big story next week.

Speaker 2 (55:21):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (55:24):
Yeah, how do you think they're gonna vote?

Speaker 2 (55:28):
Oh? Oh I I they have to put their name
on it, so I'd be pretty hard pressed to say
no at this point. I think, I mean, the only
one that doesn't want it released. It's kinda kind of crazy, yes,

(55:49):
it is.

Speaker 1 (55:50):
So listen, buddy, thank you for slipping in here every
Friday and having some fun with me. Conspiracy theories and culture?

Speaker 2 (56:02):
What's the conspiracy community? Talk conspiracy theories all the time?
All the time? What yees? Cool?

Speaker 1 (56:15):
They are cool, especially you know, Yeah, hey, what are
you doing?

Speaker 2 (56:22):
I'm Oh, it's widow's weekend. My wife's in Florida. Se No,
we're not gonna talk about that. Okay, we won't talk
about why Julie is not in Florida. Oh with my
wife already.

Speaker 1 (56:44):
Then have a wonderful rest of your day and weekend.
And can we say this what I'm gonna say it.

Speaker 2 (56:58):
You say any you want to lose a sponsor over it?

Speaker 1 (57:01):
But enjoyed the week No, enjoy the weekend, but be safe.
Don't risk your life for somebody else's this weekend. If
you plan to drink, please don't drive.

Speaker 2 (57:13):
Please. Hey, you know what I know?

Speaker 1 (57:16):
Did you hear what I just said?

Speaker 2 (57:17):
Yeah? I don't drink and drive, dude, I've I've learned
my lesson. It took me a few times, but I
definitely learned my lesson.

Speaker 1 (57:24):
Just please, do you know what else?

Speaker 2 (57:25):
Let you know. The other lesson I learned is how
beneficial it is to advertise with aired out podcast. We
My daughter came to me the other day because we
were like, hey, donny Brook, we didn't have a ton
of money to advertise with for donny Brook because we're
in the litigation with that other promotion whatever, blah blah blah.

(57:47):
And we walked into that auditorium and it was packed,
and I was like, Taylor, I was like, just we
have an organic We have just this amount of people
that just show up to the show every time. He goes, No,
we don't, she goes. I looked at the analytics, those
people came from aired Out. I was like, are you so,

(58:08):
I'm not going to get into your business on what
it costs to advertise, but for what it cost compared
to what you get. I remember when I first did
my construction company. My construction company is different. We do
big number of kind of things like that. But the
first job, someone called me and they're like, hey, I
saw you on aired Out podcast. I saw some worker

(58:29):
you're doing. Kid, you come do a bid. Dude, is
a twenty thousand dollars job. One job? So how many
years of advertising did that pay for? So I just
thank you, buddy, Yeah, absolutely, thank you man. Thank you
for helping us get the word out locally. That's like
a huge thing. Especially you know, my business is local.

(58:52):
Donnybrook is local, and we spend so much money, and
it's so hard to get the local word out to
the people that are in this area. It's really hard
to get that word out even through print advertising or
expensive TV advertising. Dude, I've done that. Oh we want
thirty adds on the TV. There's eighteen hundred dollars. We'll
probably play a couple of them at three o'clock in

(59:14):
the morning when nobody's up. So it's nice to have
your podcast here locally, to get that shit out beyond
the advertising, because now people know about Donnie Bruk. Yeah,
people know about Barslow Construction.

Speaker 1 (59:29):
Well, thank you buddy, and listen. Thanks for tuning in today.
Thanks for liking and following the aired ap podcast. Don't forget.
Please drop a comment, share any episode that you enjoy.
We're always live, we're always local, We're never edited. We're
seen and heard on Facebook and YouTube from Flying the

(59:50):
Wall Productions right here on North Main Street and Perry.
Thank you Rex, thanks for coming in now, all right, Bubby,
we'll talk to you soon. All right, Yeah, next Friday.
Remember story time I had forgotten And thanks for reminding.

Speaker 2 (01:00:04):
Where somebody put in the messages there where I could
get a cardigan sweater. Yeah, you need to get I
definitely need a cardigan sweater and a corn cut pipe.
I'll get the pipe, all right. I won't bring a bong.

Speaker 1 (01:00:17):
I'll bring a pipe that doesn't doesn't surprise me that
you'll be able to get a pipe at all, and
it won't be glass him Data
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