Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:29):
Until sun.
Speaker 2 (00:53):
And and and all right.
Speaker 3 (02:02):
Good morning, and welcome to the aired out podcast from
Flying the Wall. Productions on Facebook and YouTube are streamed
everywhere you get your podcasts. And yes we're on the web.
It AIREDOUTVT dot com. Today's National Sardines Day. We're not celebrating.
Winter begins Friday. Bing Crosby is on the radio, and
(02:26):
Rusty Dewease is on the couch right next to me.
That could only mean one thing. That that means that
we're just a couple of days away from Thanksgiving, is
what it means for USS Welcome its almost here man.
Thirty one days to Christmas is thirty one?
Speaker 4 (02:45):
Yeah, that's uh, I know it go yeah, it just
it just happens. It's it was summer and now it's
not summer. I know.
Speaker 3 (02:53):
Only thirty seven for the high today and from Mount
Clouds to start yep, bit of sunshine to finish, maybe
a flir or two. We're looking at twenty five and
clouds tonight, Tomorrow, cloudy forty five, Wednesday, Russky clouds rain
fifty Thursday, which of course is Thanksgiving Sunday, to start
(03:15):
cloudy in the afternoon forty Not that it matters because
you're going to be taking your your nap, your turkey nap. No,
no walk to get the balls moving.
Speaker 4 (03:26):
Well, the balls move, which is good. No, I'm going
to a friend of mine is they're actually well friend
of mine is wife's house and he's monthillar. Yeah, small
gathering there, but I won't. I won't. No, no, no, no.
Speaker 3 (03:42):
What are you bringing with the agela mold?
Speaker 4 (03:44):
I'm bringing apple cake. I make an apple cake. I
think I've had it. Then it'll knock your hat in
a crick Yeah, probably, you're probably, I'm pretty sure. Have
it's fun to make too.
Speaker 3 (03:54):
Facebook question today? Oh ahead, have you put your snow
tires on yet? Oh?
Speaker 4 (03:58):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (03:59):
Really you see him?
Speaker 4 (04:00):
Did you get him off? Yeah? I see that studied.
Speaker 3 (04:04):
What'd you get? When did you get those put on?
The nineteenth? Okay, so the studied they're beg listen, you
need studded tires for where you live? Man.
Speaker 4 (04:18):
Yeah, you know it's funny people. I have this kind
of a steep type thing. But you've been up there
many times. But what when I when I got these
studied tires last year on that rig? I so I tried.
I always try to go up without it in four, Yeah,
just to see if the studyed tires will do it,
and they usually do.
Speaker 3 (04:35):
Really no kidding, Ross. We have a lot to talk about,
a lot to get to. First of all, birthdays today
and I know you always like it when we do
the local birthdays, so very important. But we have a
we have a guy that's eighty four years old today.
See if you see if you know who it is,
I bet you do. Pete Best?
Speaker 4 (04:55):
Yeah, I know he is.
Speaker 3 (04:57):
Who's Pete Best?
Speaker 4 (04:58):
I don't know him. He was there as they say
he was the original drummer for the Beatles. Yes, yeah,
eighty four and he I don't know the story there, but.
Speaker 3 (05:07):
Anyway, inducted into the prestigious All you need is Liverpool
Music Hall of Fame. Yeah, kiss that ringo. Yeah. Local
birthdays Kevin Foster, Guy welch Annette Beauvaire, Tiffany Bates, Mark
mast Eluis Reed, Sandra la Bounty, Alyssa sever and Chris
(05:27):
gruin Is on birthday list.
Speaker 4 (05:29):
Has some good names right there.
Speaker 3 (05:31):
Yeah, it is so Russ Triple A is saying eighty
two million people are going to be traveling at least
fifty miles from home over the Thanksgiving holiday, eighty two
million people are going to be sitting around a Thanksgiving
table together, mostly families, some friends, some strangers, and a
heap of relatives that they really don't mind if they
(05:55):
wait another couple of years before they see again it's happening.
But here we go Thanksgiving, Thanksgiving, buckle up time.
Speaker 4 (06:03):
All right.
Speaker 3 (06:04):
A lot of people ask me something just they they
look they very much look forward to it. It's and
a lot of people don't.
Speaker 4 (06:12):
It's a construct. You either do or don't. There's no
reason to do it. The only reason to do it
is because it's been you've been doing. I don't know
when that holiday started. But there's these holidays are constructs.
There's no there's no reason, there's just nothing. It's we
created and it's created for for commerce. And yeah, everybody gathers,
but listen, if anybody that I care about, well no
(06:35):
that's not true. Some people that fire, but gather with
them anyway, gather gather, gather with them anyway. Does it
have to be turkey, Well, it doesn't have to be turkey,
but it does also doesn't have to be that you
eat so much that you hurt after.
Speaker 3 (06:47):
I was gonna I'm gonna ask you about that.
Speaker 4 (06:48):
There's that whole thing. I don't you know. I don't
subscribe to that so much. I couldn't even walk them
like when you dumb.
Speaker 3 (06:55):
There's so much there's so much research out there about
you know, the the the positive impacts that that being social,
being with others can have. But I think that there's
also a lot of stress that goes with that. Okay,
now a lot, I mean rest. We got a grocery shop,
(07:18):
organize it, plan the attack, cook all the food, serve
all the food, make sure it's hot, make sure it looks.
Everything is so pretty and beautiful. Take the pictures.
Speaker 4 (07:29):
My god, buddy, when you when you listen back to this,
you'll see how ridiculous all that is. You say it's stress.
You'll say it's stress. There ain't no stress you talk about.
You talk about going to the grocery store. That's not stress.
Having people over, that's not stress. Cleaning the house that's
not stress. Stress is if you've got some little kid
(07:50):
that and it's her kid, and then you gotta get
the kid and you gotta work and you can't. These
things aren't stress. It's in people's mind. It boggles my
mind that people look at this as you know, and
it's it's fed out there pun as a big stressful time.
The most amazing thing to me is that number eighty
(08:13):
three million, I can it's just amazing to me that
it's eighty three million, exactly.
Speaker 3 (08:20):
It's eighty one point two.
Speaker 4 (08:23):
How did it come to that? They don't like eighty
one point two, five, six, seven, eight nine point And
then there's a couple in the oven? Where did they
get these numbers? That alone tells me that it's all fake.
You can't go out and go eighty one point two
million people will travel. Who's figuring that out? And it
always comes to it like an even thing eighty I
(08:44):
just googled it. Eighty one point eight, I know, but
it ain't eighty one point eight seven five coma three
nine to two? Right, So who's really doing their homework there?
They're dropping the ball because it's always even. Seventeen million
people voted. I can't believe that it comes to those
(09:04):
even numbers anyway.
Speaker 3 (09:05):
There's no stress. The awkwardness though, of sitting around, sitting
around the table and staring at others that you really
don't really have a lot in common with or maybe
haven't seen for a long time. Then you throw some
indigestion in there, some heartburn, maybe some alcohol, and then
(09:27):
maybe even you know, some awkward conversation in some body odor.
Speaker 4 (09:32):
Well, don't go. If anyone's sitting around going, oh my god,
I gotta do I the thing and the thing, that's
just them wanting to hear themselves talk. Because if you
really are going, I gotta go shop it, and then
I gotta do the bird, and then it don't do ish,
don't do it. Oh and then well old uncle Joe's
(09:54):
coming over and he's gonna talk politics. Don't invite Uncle Joe.
Speaker 3 (09:58):
Uncle Ron always get hammered.
Speaker 4 (10:00):
Well let him get I mean, if you don't like
that Ron hammered, don't.
Speaker 3 (10:03):
Serve moods and Aunt Betty.
Speaker 4 (10:06):
We create our own problems here. There's no problem. Get together,
by the way, I think that's that's all built up too.
Most people are gonna get together and have a good
old time. What do humans do? We talk about other humans? Yeah,
so the people that show up and they're driving away
in their car, the husband and wife wife, husband and
husband husband or whatever they and even if the kids.
(10:26):
You're talking about the people that were there. But did
you see so and so that was funny? Oh boy,
that's what we do, is humans.
Speaker 3 (10:34):
Yeah, but you get the bad breath and the bad
body odor in there, and.
Speaker 4 (10:38):
Don't get near him.
Speaker 3 (10:39):
Jeez.
Speaker 4 (10:40):
Sit at the kids table. Sit at the kid's table. Listen.
Speaker 3 (10:45):
I was gonna ask you that question this moring. I'm
not kidding. I was gonna ask you would you rather
sit at the kids table or sit at the adults table.
Speaker 4 (10:56):
I'd rather sit at the adults table because I can't
fit by them card tables. Sure, but where I'm going
the guy and the lady, there'd be also one, two, three, five,
I think five other people.
Speaker 3 (11:10):
Any kids.
Speaker 4 (11:11):
There might be one. Yeah, that'd be a little younger
person there running around. Kids sit still, like seven or
eight years old. But anyway, then afterwards, me and the
guy that owned the place, we go. He's got a
big barn like mine, yeah, newer, it's really nice. And
he's got a and you got a woodstove there. I'll
puffac you guy there, sit there, me and him, ha ha.
(11:32):
Then you go back in you have dessert later. It's
all it's just one. It's just fantastic.
Speaker 3 (11:36):
I want to ask you about that. Go ahead, We're
gonna get to the dessert this morning, and I'm going
to ask you about your your favorite uh dessert for Thanksgiving.
But let's go right for the jugular this morning, Ross,
as we do every year, things to to not talk
about at the Thanksgiving table the first three right out
of the shoot politics, money, and religion and sex. Okay,
(12:01):
I forgot about that. It's a good one.
Speaker 4 (12:04):
Yes, that's the inappropriate.
Speaker 3 (12:06):
Yeah, yeah, those are the things have you been and
don't talk about? It's always the mom or the aunt
think have you been? Intimately?
Speaker 4 (12:16):
Do they say that? Jesus Gron, I don't know about
that one. But the money, the people, and then what
are they gonna do. They're gonna talk politics and money
and appear in relision or something.
Speaker 3 (12:27):
Gosh, have you looks like you put on a couple
of pounds? There you wearing the uh you wearing the
elastic waste pants.
Speaker 4 (12:34):
Yeah. Some people, that's is funny. They become inappropriate.
Speaker 3 (12:37):
I guess I think you've put on good ten pounds
in I saw you last year.
Speaker 4 (12:40):
Especially if they drink right is what you're saying? Oh yeah, yeah,
how do you deal with that?
Speaker 3 (12:45):
Ship? Well, you mean you get up and go for
a walk every five minutes.
Speaker 4 (12:50):
But oh no, no, the way you deal with that
is you know, going in, what what to expect in
these situations. It was like the guy I was talking
two years ago. I was at the Barn doing a
barn event and he was He was the Vermont's head
corner Corner I think that's what they call it. State
(13:12):
is a medical examiner. And he was there at the
barner s somebody and he rode bikes. He was a
bike rider, like on the highway and he got into
as someone was there and they asked him a question
about bike riding, and he was saying, well, these people,
he's like these people that pass you in the cars,
you know, and then you know you could get hurt
on your bike. And I basically said it ain't the
(13:35):
person in the cars fall all totally. And he would
look at me like I'm crazy, Right if a guy
runs you over. He looked at me like I'm crazy,
because he said and I said, man, if you're riding
a bike on the road where there's thirty five hundred
pounds in my big mactra are passing you with a
(13:58):
foot or six inches, then you gotta take responsibility for
some of that. If you get run over, you got
to you got to. You know, if somebody gets run
over and it breaks their femur and breaks their skull,
run and then they're like, oh my god, these people
are texting. I think he was. He came over the line, Yeah,
you run a bike on the highway, motorcycle. No, I'm
(14:22):
talking about the bicycle. I'm talking about the people that
ride the bicycle.
Speaker 3 (14:27):
Okay, you don't see what I'm saying.
Speaker 4 (14:29):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (14:29):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (14:30):
And when they're the complaining all the trucks, oh, the
big trucks, when the big drive a good friend that
does it, he doesn't complain.
Speaker 3 (14:38):
He just kind of says Jesus. So this guy was
a corner.
Speaker 4 (14:41):
He was the state medical examiner. His name was Stephen Shapiro.
He's not anymore. He's the highest paid state employee that
we have, the state, our state medical examiner. And I
had him come over and talking. But yeah, no, that
is the point. So then if you go to Thanksgiving dinner,
you have to understand it. If there's gonna be other
(15:01):
people there, these things can happen. So who's false is
the person asking you the thing about how much weight
you gained or you're is it your fault for going
so the way you deal with it if you answer
but probably I.
Speaker 3 (15:15):
Think you've said to me in the past, go in
with a pocket full of stuff that's light subject matter.
Keep it light. Yeah, don't go in there with any
personal struggles or stories or anything. Just keep it light.
Speaker 4 (15:32):
Well I do what I do is I don't.
Speaker 3 (15:35):
I don't.
Speaker 4 (15:35):
I don't have the need to speak. So I would say,
so you just don't go. So how are you? You go?
You go, You sit down at the table and they
do the grace. You say, so, Steven, what anything outstandingly
exciting happened and the last that last year for you
or anything? And then that person wants to talk.
Speaker 3 (15:56):
Oh they do.
Speaker 4 (15:57):
Everybody wants to tell you their story. Man. Yeah, so
you let that roll and you give it off to
them because everybody wants to talk. They don't want to
hear you talk. So if I sat down and the
blessing was gave it and I go, hey, you know what,
I was on JD's show, and you know what else
I'm doing. I'm doing this, I'm doing that. Ohnt darn Trump,
(16:20):
Then the people ain't liking you always ask them, so
is that a new car that I saw in the
parking lash. Hey, that's awful nice. I like the color.
And then they go on and they tell them.
Speaker 3 (16:34):
They might come back with, yeah, it's a new car.
It's it's green. I like the color too, But what
do you think about the Epstein files?
Speaker 4 (16:39):
Huh? I would say, what the dog over there? I
would say, you know what I do say, which is true,
I don't follow it. I say, I don't follow What
do you mean you don't follow it? Yeah, I would say, yeah,
I do, I do, I actually do. I don't even
know what the Revolutionary War was, honestly, got listen. If
(17:02):
you play, I can play dumb with the best of them,
and people don't care. People want to be smarter than you.
So I think that reaction is going to be not
very often. More often you'll get you don't well, so
what's going so? Then now we go so no, what,
I don't follow that? So what's going on? Like you're interested?
Then now go whoa And then I go is that right?
Speaker 3 (17:28):
Really?
Speaker 4 (17:30):
Oh my god?
Speaker 3 (17:31):
I might say to you if we were having Thanksgiving together,
I might say, ross, say, see, you got a show
coming up in a couple of weeks. Yeah, getting in December.
How's that? What's that all about?
Speaker 4 (17:42):
That's December fifth and and Patrick Ross will be there
with me and you get on the Jena's Promise and
it's for Jenna's Promise, which is a great organization that
helps the women, probably say younger ones, but they don't
have to be young if they're having a trouble n time.
You go over there to Jenni's Promise and you get
(18:04):
involved in their program, which would include getting you would work,
getting you a job, and you have housing and the
organization is run like a top. I did a benefit
for them last year. I I m seed yes about
a year ago, and that went well, and I was like,
why don't I do a show here for you folks.
(18:25):
It's a great little space. It's a it's an old
church in Johnson. So that's what I'm doing December fifth. Yeah,
open to the public. Oh well tickets. Yeah, you gotta
get on the go to Jennie Promise on the website. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
be good. It's December fifth. It's unbelievable to think, you know,
how long ago me and Jenna's Promise we're talking about
(18:47):
that and now it's yeah, I look ahead and I,
oh my god, god. I had a rehearsal with Patrick
a couple of days ago, and then i'll have it
the day before Thanksgiving.
Speaker 3 (18:56):
I'll have rehearsal with Patty saw that rehearsal. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
sound good, sounds great.
Speaker 4 (19:04):
I'm getting pretty good.
Speaker 3 (19:05):
So if we're yeah, I want you to I want
you to play something. Obviously, don't use the guitar close by.
Yeah all right, but you know we're having things. We're
at the Thanksgiving table right here. Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah,
So well that's wonderful.
Speaker 4 (19:20):
Rusty.
Speaker 3 (19:22):
So your brother that you don't have telling me that
you've been down at the animal shelter doing some volunteering.
What's that all about?
Speaker 4 (19:34):
Yeah, I I I volunteer at n col n c
a L North Country Animal League, which is true. And uh,
we're play acting here, but it's true. Yeah, I do
what you call. You know, I had two orientations, JD.
What you gotta get orientated. One thing you can do
is you can do the laundry. There's a laundry room downstairs.
(19:55):
They got blankets and blankets and blankets. You do the laundry,
and you can the laundry. But you know what you
do before you go down to the laundry. You get
a dog, goes down with you, stands there and then
you can clean the toilets of the cats. I don't
clean the toilets. You can go in and pet the cats.
Sit with a cat in a room that's called pet enrichment.
(20:19):
And today, twelve thirty, I think I'll be doing dogs.
They got a large room. You take the dog out
of the pen, you put the collar. They teach you,
and you open the pen and a dog basically walks
right into the collar. Yeah. And then I sit there
with the dog for supposed to do it like ten minutes.
I do fifteen twenty each dog.
Speaker 3 (20:39):
Have you fallen in love? No, that's surprising.
Speaker 4 (20:44):
There was one I liked a lot, like her love
like okay, But there was a woman there, grandmother, e
woman with her grandkid, and they were taking it. I
wasn't gonna take that dog. I don't. I can't get
a dog that has too much ambition, you know what
I mean, because I don't want to jumping all over
the house and reckon it. I want one of them ones.
Maybe somebody has a dog and it's like a six
(21:06):
year old dog and it's a relaxed dog. Now you
know that. Once you see you're like, how did that
dog turn out like that? People are just the word
it is, that's what I need. And then a woman
can't take it or something and then she puts it
into n cow. Yeah. I would take one of those.
You save short hair, short hair, that's the way to
go clean.
Speaker 5 (21:27):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (21:28):
If clean. If the dog gets dirty, they're gonna clean
up fast. Oh, hair mats, tangles.
Speaker 4 (21:36):
What's this thing about? If you let them out walking
around in the snow, then you gotta clean this. They
get snow things in their.
Speaker 3 (21:41):
Feet sometimes, Okay, depends Yeah, depends on the dock. You
like the little crusties.
Speaker 4 (21:47):
Yeah, somebody's telling me every time my dog goes out,
we gotta clean their right snow out of their foot.
Speaker 3 (21:53):
Well well yeah, I mean buddy had that too, get
all crusted up. Depends how much hair is between their
two Do you have hair between your toes? I want
to ask you about go ahead the Thanksgiving dress code.
First of all, I know I asked you, but I
will ask you again. Belt or elastic waist pants for us.
Speaker 4 (22:17):
I'm trying to think, now, what I will wear. I'll
put on the dog a little bit. Talking about depends
on the pants. Well, for me, I got a belt
on right now. Okay, I know you very well could
wear these pants, but have.
Speaker 3 (22:29):
Any does resty de we's have any elastic waist pants?
Speaker 4 (22:33):
I have probably one or two. You know what? I have?
Very cool as heck. I got some, yes, sweatpants. They're
those ones that make noise, you know, those kinds. And
it's got the it's got the four white stripes down
the sidet and they're elastic. But I wouldn't wear those.
(22:59):
And they have it. They're they're not wicked warm. I
could have worn them today, but god darn, they must
be thirty years old.
Speaker 3 (23:03):
I know, I love those. Yeah. I know someone who
just moved into their new home a few months ago.
It's their first Thanksgiving and she wants to ask the
guests to please not wear football jerseys and sweat pants.
I mean, she's excited, she wants everything to be perfect,
(23:24):
and I get it. But a dress code for Thanksgiving? Again,
I say, I wouldn't feel comfortable saying there's a dress code.
Speaker 4 (23:36):
No, No, that's your prerogative. I mean, yeah, yeah, yeah,
if someone's saying, hey, come to our Thanksgiving wear certain stuff. Yeah,
that's the that's there. They can if they want. But
on the other hand, inversely, yeah, I think if someone
asked you over to the house, I don't know if
you want to wear sweats and it. You know, you
(23:57):
know what I am. I'm a man that don't hear
what you're wearing. Songs is kind of clean.
Speaker 3 (24:02):
Yeah, right, well, I don't.
Speaker 4 (24:04):
Care what you wear anyway. But yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yea.
I may were gonna show up at somebody's house. They're
making all this food. Yeah, and you're gonna wear a
cruddy clothes.
Speaker 3 (24:11):
No sweatpants, okay's lungs they're clean, sure, logger sweatshirt yeah, okay.
What about decorating for Thanksgiving? No for Christmas? Oh before Thanksgiving.
We've had some really intense conversations about this over the
(24:33):
last month here on aired out. Oh, really very intense.
What's say you about it?
Speaker 4 (24:39):
Well, I say, I have a couple of things around
my house right now, but I don't go a whole
hog till and it all start. I'll start off to
Thanksgiving here and there, a couple of things here and there,
here and there, trees, I'll have too in a house.
Speaker 3 (24:54):
Real or fake?
Speaker 4 (24:56):
What do you saying?
Speaker 3 (24:57):
I'm asking you the question. Real.
Speaker 4 (25:00):
Real, They're sitting there with tags on them right now
and pains Christmas tree firm them. Babies will be caught
around the sixth or seventh, putting the garage still bundled
fron probably probably around the tenth or eleventh. I'll put
them up start tenth or eleventh. Yeah, of December, maybe
(25:20):
maybe the eighth. All right, so you're waiting till after Thanksgiving? Yeah,
I do that. I mean because but does it drive
you nuts?
Speaker 3 (25:28):
In the two weeks before Thanksgiving? You driving around and
see people with the Christmas trees in their house, the
lawns are decorated, don't drive me nuts. The Christmas lights
are up, doesn't bother me. It's all over the stores.
Speaker 2 (25:45):
Me.
Speaker 4 (25:46):
You gotta understand that this world is not run because
on your rules. You people who are getting upset, don't
be bothered. It's just the way it is.
Speaker 3 (25:56):
It's getting sooner and sooner and set.
Speaker 4 (26:00):
Of course it is. Listen, I'll go one more for you.
Speaker 3 (26:03):
Can we have one holiday at a time? Please?
Speaker 4 (26:06):
I'll go one further on you. You're you're these people are
missing the point. Who get upset it it ain't starting early. No, No,
you're talking about other people. Uh, it's not that it's
starting earlier and earlier. Christmas is all year round. You
people who have kids, the kids. Hey, you know it's
(26:29):
like July seventeenth. Yeah, you're just calm down, you want,
I'll put the Grinch in. Hey, it's year round. Now
you can stream this stream that you can see Christmas
stuff August, you can May. There's no, there's no things.
(26:50):
And why because we're a society of non working, non
producing sons of bitches. No, there are a lot of
there are a lot of people that work really hard.
But overall this is the most lax, the daisical, lackadaisical
time of the years of the world. For not I mean, what.
Speaker 3 (27:14):
Is it, one hundred and nineteen thousand jobs available unemployments up.
Speaker 4 (27:19):
What I mean by that is way up. My father,
as you know, was born in nineteen eleven. Well, so
let's say he's thirty. No, no, let's say he's twenty
five nineteen eleven, nineteen twenty one, twenty thirty one. It
would be thirty six nineteen thirty six. All he did
(27:42):
was work and then go home. That's nineteen thirty six.
Speaker 3 (27:45):
That's my father.
Speaker 4 (27:46):
He didn't work, go home and put on tombstone or
yellow stone. He didn't stream. There was no TV.
Speaker 3 (27:56):
You can have a tombstone and a yellowstone.
Speaker 4 (27:58):
When he was when my father was twenty five, no TV.
Why don't I eat between meals? Because my father didn't
eat between meals? Why didn't he eat between meals? There
was nothing to eat between meals. You understand, you didn't
stop at maple fields and get a croissant. There's no
(28:18):
So this is what we have to return to, a
disciplined way of life.
Speaker 3 (28:22):
I understand we don't let a few of us have that.
So this what do you expect? Something different?
Speaker 4 (28:30):
Sure, somebody's going to have their tree up right now,
let them have it, don't don't let them bother now.
My only thing with that, I put mine up a
little bit later, just because I get all this stuff around,
I get other stuff around. But did they try.
Speaker 3 (28:44):
Out a little yeah? Yeah, eighty three percent right now
of people according to the American Christmas Tree Association, there
is such a thing. Eighty three percent according to this
stud what I prefer fake tree now? And it's trending up.
I have I have that going up.
Speaker 4 (29:05):
I have heard people I know say to me, look,
They'll say they'll no cleaner. They'll say, well, you know,
we went to a fake tree.
Speaker 3 (29:14):
No watering, no needles all over the place, the vacuum
cleaner's running for three months.
Speaker 4 (29:20):
Yeah, I don't think they look better, you know. The
part of the yeah, they're more consistent. Part of the
whole thing about me again, it's about our age. That
was the whole tradition to go out and cut your
tree and smell. I can I can harken back going
I was five six years old in Philadelphia. My parents
would bring me and my sister to this place to
(29:40):
get a tree. And it was like a basically like
a nursery, you know, Yeah, turned over into Christmas trees
and oh sure, and there was sawdust on the ground
and all those trees, and there was a warth. You'd
go into place and there was a warm because so
they heat with those trees. It made it smell. So
that was a whole thing.
Speaker 3 (30:00):
You know what you do now with your fake tree,
You unscrew I'm serious, you unscrew this little cap thing
and you pour your balsam scented liquid into the center
of the tree. So it's do you have a faki No?
Do I have a faki rus? Don't ever ask me
(30:21):
that question. I am one hundred percent real.
Speaker 4 (30:25):
So yeah, so now that now the tradition is faking.
Hey Joe, Hey Sosie, you want to go up into
the attic there and bring down the tree the box there,
it's right next to the area are. So that's the tradition.
I see, that's it, and it's up in a jiffy.
And also I think there are people, you know, financially,
(30:47):
it's a better thing thy right, exactly, it's not a
hundred I know what the winds are.
Speaker 3 (30:52):
I know that, I know no water. You know, you
spend you know, a couple of hundred bucks. Some people
spend a one hundred bucks and you got a tree
forever and it looks beautiful. Now they've got these these
trees where I can't remember what the website is, but
I'm going to be talking about it soon as we
get into December. But you get the tree in you
(31:16):
you pull up that, you pull up the top and
the whole thing, oh falls right out. All the lights
are already on it.
Speaker 4 (31:23):
Yeah, plug it in, no adjustment, You don't have to
adjust a few of them.
Speaker 3 (31:27):
No thirty seconds and it's done. Same thing packing up,
it's like an accordion. I don't know, man, that's just
not my thing. I gotta go out. We cut the
tree down. No matter what. We'll go out raining, snowing, blowing,
doesn't matter.
Speaker 4 (31:46):
It's fun as heck.
Speaker 3 (31:47):
Yeah, it's been a tradition for a long time.
Speaker 4 (31:50):
Well, me and Emily we tagged mine. Uh three weeks ago.
We go out into the christmastore and I've done it
before in the summer. Really, Oh, come on, I'll go
out with the puff of Seagar Mountain. That tree fire
mayre panes all by myself and I'm puffing, I'm looking.
Ain't nobody cussing around? And you get to that's when
I used to get a twelve footer, and there weren't
(32:11):
that many twelve footers. So I'd like to get ahead
of it.
Speaker 3 (32:14):
You know when when you know, you know, when you
see the tree, do you feel this this aura?
Speaker 4 (32:22):
No, I'll see one that can work, and then I'll
put my little surveying tape on that one. But then
I'll keep I get two, so then that's what me
and Emily did. We saw one and then we saw
another one that was definitely and then we went that one.
That first one wasn't up to par, and then we
found another one that was good.
Speaker 3 (32:40):
So it's in our decision or like the three or
four hours.
Speaker 4 (32:49):
That whole thing this year is a forty five minutes. Wow,
fifty minutes.
Speaker 3 (32:53):
Maybe cotton hauled out.
Speaker 4 (32:56):
We didn't cut it yet.
Speaker 3 (32:58):
Oh that's wow. I tagged it just taking all right,
Thanksgiving pie. I want to I want to ask you
about the I want to ask you about the pie.
Seven thousand Americans just surveyed about their favorite pie to
eat on things. All right, Number one gotta be what.
Speaker 4 (33:18):
It's got to be.
Speaker 3 (33:19):
Pumpkin, Of course it is. Number two apple. I want
to throw I'll throw some here. I want to let's
let's do this. Let's say that Rusty only has room
for one piece of pie. I'm going to list them off.
You've got one piece, that's all you've got room for.
(33:39):
You can't do too, you're too full. I list them off.
You tell me which one you ready? Here we go, Pumpkin, apple, pecan,
sweet potato, chocolate, key line cream pie banana cream pie,
(34:00):
peanut butter pie, cherry or BlackBerry?
Speaker 4 (34:04):
Okay, so get it in your head. Which one you
think I'm gonna do? Get it in your head? Don't
say it, because I have one. I have a real answer.
I'm gonna go for you. No, no, no, don't you
say it. I'll say it. And now you tell me
if you did it, if you said, ye's the one.
Speaker 3 (34:18):
Hold on, let me write it down, all right, let
me write down my answer.
Speaker 4 (34:22):
What I go? Ahead? Yeah, anybody ever get run over
in the street when you were doing a show? Here?
Like you hear? And then okay, I wrote it down. Okay,
here you go. This is this is the true answer.
If those were available, I'd say, I'll have the banana
cream pie. Place you went for pre can, didn't you?
Speaker 3 (34:45):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (34:45):
See, I know what you think I would say. You
see what I'm saying? That so gotten done? Good of
a guest.
Speaker 3 (34:54):
Banana cream Huh? How that's a good pie?
Speaker 4 (34:57):
Man?
Speaker 3 (34:58):
You You can't just have one? But I do like
the peak camp pie. You've ever heard of the shoe
fly listen, shoe fly pie.
Speaker 4 (35:05):
That's what I used to get for my birthday. My
mother made it. That's a Pennsylvania. She swore it was
a Pennsylvania Dutch situation and the last she used maple syrup.
What dick damn shoefly pie was unbelievable. She'd make two
of them, come on for my birthday. I'm not kidding you.
(35:25):
I would love I'm not kidding you. She would make
probably the last two decades of my life. Now listen
to this. You know where? You know where it gets
its name?
Speaker 3 (35:36):
Please tell me?
Speaker 4 (35:37):
Are you serious?
Speaker 3 (35:38):
You don't know your shoe and the flies?
Speaker 4 (35:40):
Do you put the pie on the windoorsill? It's cool?
Get them flies away from it, really because they like
the molasses. Flies like, Hey, you know where you ever
heard that one? What's it called? John pea soup and
john cake? You ever heard that? No? You never heard
(36:02):
Johnny cake?
Speaker 3 (36:03):
Well Johnny cake. Yeah, that's like a corn bread.
Speaker 4 (36:06):
You know. You know what that really is the name
of it? It was, It's it's an accent that makes
it Johnny cake. It's journey cake. You make it for
the guys when they come back from the journey, and
it's called journey cake. But they used to sit where
(36:26):
they were from Boston. Hey, Johnny cake, you want some
Johnny Cake. I'm serious. I've heard and read that. I
don't know that that.
Speaker 3 (36:35):
So the shoefly is molasses pie topped with cinnamon spiced crumble.
Tell me if I'm right. Part of the crumble sinks.
Speaker 4 (36:44):
It gets in there to the So the top is
like when you're skiing and it's icy this much down, Yeah.
Speaker 3 (36:51):
With the gooey molasses at the bottom.
Speaker 4 (36:53):
Yeah, and my mom had this like nice flaky crust.
I'm sorry to.
Speaker 3 (36:58):
God, Rush, let's talk. Go ahead, Black Friday versus Cyber
Monday versus Giving Tuesday. What are you saying about this?
Because Black Friday is that's the time to flip things back.
We're going from red to black. It's a people freak
(37:19):
out over Black Friday. People finish their Thanksgiving dinners and
right in the car on the way to the store.
Because it's not Friday anymore. It's Thursday. Now, it's gray Thursday.
It's Black Friday.
Speaker 4 (37:37):
What do they do? They can jop on Thursday?
Speaker 3 (37:39):
Yes?
Speaker 4 (37:40):
Oh, is that right?
Speaker 3 (37:40):
Because the Black Friday deals are going earlier, and because
you got to beat the next guy, you got to
go sooner than the next the next guy. What do
you what do you say about it's all of this again.
Speaker 4 (37:54):
I guess I'm a living let live guy. I mean,
I don't care if if if if someone's like, hey,
we gotta go that we can eat with your rush. Thanks,
but we're gonna leave and say, yeah, fine, go go shopping,
I don't hear. I mean, that's what I think about that.
I think if people are getting deals, let them get deals.
And then by the way, we're talking about our little
traditions and piece you know, god damn you fly play.
(38:19):
This is what some people's traditions are. They go shopping
on Black Friday. It's a tradition. They eat it lums lunch,
you know what I mean. You know what I mean.
So and they eat lums that have their they get
their traditional thing there and everything else.
Speaker 3 (38:38):
That's it.
Speaker 4 (38:39):
Let it be.
Speaker 3 (38:40):
What do you think about this? This? This pizza pizza
rheas that are doing a Thanksgiving pizza. They're making Thanksgiving pizzas.
Speaker 4 (38:52):
When we got turkey on there and gravy, I know, well,
I guess it'd be just it'd be like just like
a biscuit, you know, but a big flat biscuit and
all that haw's our eyes on top of it one shot. No,
I like to segregate my freaking food there. Yeah, I
don't like to mix them in.
Speaker 3 (39:12):
Yeah, pizza's pizza.
Speaker 4 (39:14):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (39:15):
But the gas that comes from the turkey flatulence. Flatulence, Yeah,
everybody gets it. Everybody has.
Speaker 4 (39:24):
Some people probably do it more of a degree than others.
I mean, it depends on what you're eating. I think,
you know, my dad used to call them colorabas and uh,
Brussels sprouts. Oh, the Brussels sprouts will blow you up
if if you know what I mean. They can.
Speaker 3 (39:39):
Some people are going for a walk to digest, to
get some fresh air, well to get away from Aunt Betty.
Other people are going for a walk to rip.
Speaker 4 (39:48):
I had bet you did. She was great Betty and Walt,
Uncle Walt and Aunt Betty. They were my godparents. Uh yeah,
Well I told you I'm going to the place I'm
going to. He's got a big byron out there, and
you woulds don't. We'll go out there after the path, well,
path will be off from the table. That'll be five
or six other people that are left behind.
Speaker 3 (40:08):
Now do you ever do you ever worry about you know,
trip to fan affecting your you know, it's supposed to
make you sleepy. You know, it's an ensign in the
turkey and trip to fans in in bananas too, I think.
But do you ever worry about the trip to fan
(40:33):
maybe affecting uh, you know, desire performance?
Speaker 4 (40:39):
Oh that's trip to fan thing now, the biggest bunch
of malarkey. Yeah, because if it was true, setting down
eating three four slivers of turkey made you sleep, if
it was trip defan, if it was true, then people
(41:00):
who have trouble sleeping would be getting what's the doctor
do that prescribe to eat turkey? Who do you know?
Of your friends? And your whole life is getting to
be quite a free years. It's come up to me
and said, you know, Jesus, how you doing? You say
(41:21):
to him? How do you? Oh? God name, I had
a rough spell. I wasn't sleeping. Oh yeah, why not?
Well I got you know, everything's on my mind and
we're getting a crappy tree this year. I just wasn't
sleeping JD. And well, how are you doing now? Doing
good now? Because the doctor told me I should eat
some turkey before I go to bed, because there's trip
(41:42):
to fan, isn't it. No one does that there's no
trip to fan. There's nothing in turkey meal that makes
you sleepy. You're sleepy because you got up, you loaded
the car with a bunch of hazar eye, which is
the Yiddish word for junk. You drove over, You ate
way way way too much. The house you drove to
(42:04):
is way, way way too warm. You eat, and then
what do you do? You sit down. That's why you
fall asleep. It's not tripped the fan or instead of
prescribing dummies to these people that don't sleep good, all
the gold darned doctors be doing is say go get
(42:27):
a couple of hanks of turkey needed every night. There's
trip the fan in there to put you're right to sleep.
You see, that's a fallacy.
Speaker 3 (42:38):
What about uh? Speaking of of meat, I.
Speaker 4 (42:40):
Get right up after Thanksgiving dinner and run right over.
You run up a tree, shout out to the world, Hello, Hello,
I don't get tired speaking.
Speaker 3 (42:51):
Of of of of turkey is in meat? Have you
ever had a fried turkey?
Speaker 4 (43:00):
Have?
Speaker 3 (43:00):
I never have?
Speaker 4 (43:01):
I've heard of him?
Speaker 3 (43:02):
What about a smoked turkey?
Speaker 4 (43:04):
I've had smoked turkey, but not per se Thanksgiving me.
My mom used to smoke when we ate the turkey. Yeah,
back in the sixties.
Speaker 3 (43:16):
Are you shitting me?
Speaker 4 (43:19):
I don't think she had cigarettes at the table. No, no,
but she was smoking them when she was cooking it
back in the sixties.
Speaker 3 (43:26):
Sure, did your mom ever smoke a turkey?
Speaker 4 (43:31):
Oh? My parents weren't hunters.
Speaker 3 (43:33):
Okay for you, ross personal question.
Speaker 4 (43:41):
But you gotta love that. Go ahead. I had a
girlfriend didn't like that.
Speaker 3 (43:50):
Really, I love it.
Speaker 4 (43:54):
She didn't like shit her hurt her ears, so then
I would do it low and then and then she's
started to do it. She couldn't whistle, this girl, so
she ended up doing this and I thought that was
so goddamn cute, and then she dumped me twice.
Speaker 3 (44:08):
So go ahead, let's pretend I'm getting a prostating sam.
Ready you do it. Here we go.
Speaker 4 (44:16):
We don't want to talk about prostates. I know all
about that.
Speaker 3 (44:20):
For you, very personal question. Light meat or dark meat?
I like the dark.
Speaker 4 (44:34):
I really do prefer the dark. Yeah. To me, it's richer.
I like the way it's you cut it. It's not
there's something to it. Yeah, And an added bonus is
most people don't like the dark meat, so I can
(44:54):
go a whole hog on that. I do like the
dark meat. I'm not even kid you. It's hard like
a turd, you know. The white meat just a flimsy, flimsy.
Speaker 3 (45:09):
I want you to, uh if if you don't mind,
just give a shout out to Glenn prummert he got
his first year in a long, nice long time.
Speaker 4 (45:19):
Well we know.
Speaker 3 (45:20):
Eight point buck hasn't been hunting in hundreds of years
and he finally got out and he got an a pointer.
Speaker 4 (45:30):
He won't have to worry about no turkey man.
Speaker 3 (45:34):
And uh a shout to Rex. Rex is going to
be doing the the the Thanksgiving uh pizza.
Speaker 4 (45:45):
And I yeah, yeah to me that yeah, I mean,
I okay, I just a little do it.
Speaker 3 (45:54):
Yeah, yeah he is. Because who's putting grave and turkey
and mashed potatoes on their pizza? Rex?
Speaker 4 (46:03):
Apparently Rex, geez, the other guy's the other guy got
the deer. He's putting deer on it.
Speaker 3 (46:09):
Well, yeah, that that I would I wouldn't mind that.
Speaker 4 (46:12):
You know what, That's funny. Some uh some pizza place
around Vermont or whatever ought to have venison pizza.
Speaker 3 (46:20):
Interesting.
Speaker 4 (46:20):
Yeah, they have to they have to get the venison,
you know, And that would be funny. That would be
kind of a novelty thing. You know what's going on
over in Stow? You're you're over at the Artisan. What's
happening is a coffee and tea wholesalers I have. In fact,
I warmed me up some tea and before I come
here Artisan, it was a ginger lemongrass makes the cash
(46:44):
smell good. And they have a big warehouse in between
Waterbury and Stowe and Root one hundred. If you're going
towards Stow, it's a big red building and on one
end of it they do coffee glasses and everything. You
learn how to make coffee.
Speaker 3 (47:00):
Yeah, they learn how to be barista, yeah, and.
Speaker 4 (47:03):
How to do pour overs at your house. Anyway, I'm
doing a writing writing performance class. I teach that now
for six years at People's Academy in Morrisville, and now
Artistsan and I are teaming up and we're going to
offer it for the general public and there'll be notifications
on it, and maybe I'll give a shout out on here.
(47:24):
Mid February through mid March. Seven classes. You go home,
you write a poem, say, or comedy or some a
dramatic piece. Then you come into the class, you get
up on stage and you present it, you perform it,
so it's very I did it one time a long
time ago for the general public, but for the kids
(47:46):
at school, it's sort of like a therapy thing. It's
very uplifting. It makes you feel good, you know how
it is when you're on stage and you do something. Sure,
so there's folks and then I don't I'm not critical.
But after you you've done it and then we work
on it. You're standing up there still in front of
the other seven students or whatever, and you're like, did
you hear you say that word? Again? I'll take notes,
(48:09):
say the say the world's ferret line? You hear that line?
Did you hear it? There's seven people here and they
all laughed, so you know that that's funny. So right now,
one down, keep that one yeah, and you know that
type of thing, or it could be a poem. And
then the seventh class there's a performance. You have Lily
and Sherilyn come. You stand up on stage. There's a
(48:31):
beautiful place in their warehouse to have a put sixty
chairs down and have a really yeah yeah, and then
during it you can have the artists and coffee. You'll
be served and little little pieces of shoe high. So
that's what's going on. Yeah, that'll be on my Instagram
(48:51):
is Rusty dot Dewez and you'll be able to get on.
You'll be able to register for that class. It's gonna
be dirt ass cheap. I think it's gonna be twenty
five bucks a person.
Speaker 3 (49:01):
Why yeah, wow? All right, and maybe get I'll keep
an eye in your social media and you should sneak
back in here. Man, Christmas. Are we doing Christmas together?
Speaker 4 (49:13):
Well, we ain't doing Christmas together, but I'll come over
here and we'll do show.
Speaker 3 (49:20):
It's always fun. You want me to I do want
you to play? Yeah? Yeah, anything you want? Man, all right,
tell me how Yeah, no, that's that's fine. Rusty dew
Ease the logger in the studio with a russ. How
many years have we been on the air together doing Thanksgiving?
Speaker 4 (49:45):
Wow?
Speaker 3 (49:47):
Wow, it's it's gotta be.
Speaker 4 (49:53):
Well, just in general, how when did you start at Froggy?
Speaker 3 (49:56):
When did you started? Started at Froggy in two thousand,
so that's twenty five years. But even before that, in
the late nineties over at WDEV you were on the air.
That's right, that's right, that's right. God Man.
Speaker 4 (50:08):
So I'd say between twenty five and thirty years. I've
been doing knots the logger for thirty one years.
Speaker 3 (50:19):
Unreal, amazing. And you're self taught on the guitar.
Speaker 4 (50:38):
Yeah, well, yeah, I've taken some lessons. I mean, when
you're playing with people that are better than you, you're learning.
It's not like they're saying do this, do that.
Speaker 3 (50:47):
So tell me about this guitar. Did you get it
from Walmart?
Speaker 4 (50:52):
Guy named Mark Birds, he's twenty six year old luthier
down and he's making me another one. Did you know
that out? It's going to come in December. It's a
couple of wells, well Fred so a guy made this
and it's a beautiful guitar. In the backing sides are
what you call sinker mahogany. That means it was in
(51:15):
the bottom of a body of water for one hundred
and fifty years, seriously, and then the top is spruce.
Speaker 3 (51:26):
Mm hmm.
Speaker 4 (51:41):
I wish I was down on some blue by who
with a bamboo cane.
Speaker 6 (51:55):
Stuck in the sand. But the road I'm on don't
seem to go there, so I'll.
Speaker 7 (52:11):
Just dream keep on being the way I am.
Speaker 4 (52:19):
I wish I enjoyed. What makes my leave do what
I do m hm with a willing hand.
Speaker 5 (52:38):
Some would run, but they have might like them.
Speaker 8 (52:50):
I'll just dream, keep on being the way I have,
the way I don't fit my shackles h.
Speaker 4 (53:09):
Way, I mm.
Speaker 8 (53:15):
Reality.
Speaker 4 (53:18):
I can know most that Barber days. I'll just keep
on dreaming and being where I am. I haven't played
(53:42):
it for a while. I didn't know those chords, but
I found them. Wow, dude, you like that.
Speaker 3 (53:46):
I like that you're doing that with h with Patrick.
Speaker 4 (53:50):
Good chance will start out with that one.
Speaker 3 (53:52):
December fifth Jenna's promise.
Speaker 4 (53:55):
Yeah, good Chance will start out with that one. Yeah,
we'll do that for This guitar is handmade for me specifically.
It's the size of a Martin D twenty eight dreadnought.
So the body, it's a big whip. It's a big
bodied guitar.
Speaker 3 (54:12):
Just put your foot on that. But if you can't, Yeah,
I see that.
Speaker 4 (54:17):
It was just beautiful.
Speaker 3 (54:18):
It's beautiful. Any any murtle can you do? Some murle.
Speaker 4 (55:00):
Anvis covered cabin in the crowded labor came stand out
in this memory. I revise.
Speaker 7 (55:16):
Cause my daddy ess the family there with too hard
working hands tried to feed my mama's hungry eyes.
Speaker 4 (55:33):
She dreamed of something better. My Mama's faith was strong
in us kids, was just too young to realize. Got
another class of people put us somewhere just below. One
(55:59):
more reson son for my mama's hungry eyes. Mama never
had the luxuries she wanted. But it wasn't cause my
daddy didn't try. She only wanted things she really needed.
(56:33):
One more reason for my mama's hungry eyes. M Oh,
I still recall my mama's hungry eyes at the morrow.
Beautiful buddy, Wow, it's early in the morning.
Speaker 3 (56:58):
Jeez, sounds great. God, yeah, incredible. This is such a
treat for so here. I listening thing for you.
Speaker 4 (57:09):
It's called maple sugar. Maple sugar, that's what you're gonna
(57:54):
put right on your yams? Did you write that? That's
an old to Christ? Is that classic?
Speaker 3 (58:05):
Wouldn't surprise me if you did, right?
Speaker 4 (58:06):
Got some songs are rip, but we ain't gonna do them.
I'm going racing mom and Dad, but I will soon
be back. I'm pretty sure tonight won't be the night
I tame that thunder road track. Mom said, no worry, Sun,
No worry Rice, So we don't care if you place one,
(58:27):
two or three. The dad said these words I live
by now, and he spoke okay to me.
Speaker 7 (58:44):
M hm.
Speaker 4 (58:50):
He said, it's the close to the bench rise. It's
the fastest way around. Don't run so hard back in
Starcus line. If you let phone gas, you're gonna beat
him to the line. I wage your dang near every time. Russe,
sty're close to the fence to past his way around Dad.
(59:11):
Just to say, Russ money, it's easy to get you say.
All you're gonna do with Russ is work. You'll have plenty.
See look cross the streets. See that fella over there,
he'll pay you to Mo's loan just because you don't
want to muss his hair? How does that work over you?
And you'll have to come to December fifth to hear
(59:34):
the rest of that song.
Speaker 3 (59:35):
She's buddy, I love it man, fantastic. I want I
want you to, if you would, I want you to
take us out this morning with your guitar. But before
you do, final question for you, because I I and
I have to. I always ask you this when we
(59:58):
do our annual Thanksgiving show, and it's I'm not going
to miss it. I'm just not going to miss it.
Which football games are you going to be watching on
Thanksgiving Day?
Speaker 4 (01:00:16):
If they never play another game of football, I'll be content.
It's the most violent, vicious, bullshitted ass bunch of god
darned huzer eye. And what do we do? Every Sunday
used to be the Sabbath. We'd go worship whoever we
(01:00:39):
might worship. We might be a Jewish perer, we might
be whatever. We might be Christian, we might be Catholic
or Protestant. We would worship, we would we would commune.
Now what do we do? We sit on our fat
asses and watch a bunch of feathers run into each
other with the intent of harm while we see the
(01:01:03):
stands full of eighty to one hundred thousand people who
are basically three sheets to the wind. And my last
thought on that is everybody's going around over divided. We're divided. Oh,
things are awful, things, You're awful. I don't buy it.
First of all, we ain't divided. Second of all, if
(01:01:25):
things are so awful every Sunday, when you got I
don't know how many games you got, sixteen twenty games
of football every Sunday and there's sixty eighty one hundred
thousand in them stands, and nothing bad's happening other than
might be a guy old blaster, another guy in the head,
or something we ain't hearing on the news regularly. You're
(01:01:47):
not doing the news regularly. There's a goll daring this
or that happened. I don't even want to say bats
at the the so and SOO Stadium and a one
hundred th I go flying to Europe, I go into
the airports, get hear god damn bendrop. I look around.
(01:02:07):
People are toting their thing. You're on the phone. I'm
sitting there. You good hit. You're getting the plane. Nothing's happening.
Nobody sits down and then the thing letch, you get off.
Oh there's a couple of inconveniences here and there. Nothing wrong.
But I ain't watching no footballer, Thank Kevin.
Speaker 3 (01:02:27):
Eagles. Chiefs are rams for the Super Bowl Eagles.
Speaker 4 (01:02:32):
So that's the way you say it. If you're from Philly,
the Birds they call them. You said, what now rams?
Speaker 2 (01:02:39):
Uh?
Speaker 3 (01:02:39):
Rams, Chiefs or Eagles.
Speaker 4 (01:02:45):
I ain't slept in seven days, having eighty and three,
I don't know. I will say I like that Josh
Allen Teller. Yeah, whenever I see him. And here's what
I like about him. Oh he's saying he don't watch
football house, you know so much because you know, I
ingest what is simply there to to see on the
(01:03:07):
Facebook or whatever. After the games, I like to go
with my one friend Pete's house and sit with him
and Linda watch a little. I watch football pre Christmas
because I like Christmas commercials. But Josh Allen's cool because
he'll be interviewed, you know, after the game or whatever.
And do you know what he always does at the
end of his interview.
Speaker 3 (01:03:26):
What's that?
Speaker 4 (01:03:27):
He always does this? Well, with a few exceptions, Go Bills,
So Josh, Well, yeah, we're gonna work hard. We're practicing hard.
So Josh, that's gonna happen to the score. Well, you know,
I scored pretty good last year weekends. So you guys
all and healthy. Yeah we're healthy this Yuesdays. Do well anyway,
Thanks Josh, and good luck at the game. Yeah, thank you,
Go Bills. He always says that I'm serious.
Speaker 3 (01:03:50):
I'm serious, Russ. I want you to take us out
with whatever you got.
Speaker 4 (01:04:00):
Darling. You can't love one darling. You can't love one.
Speaker 9 (01:04:06):
Whoa, whoa Wait one, darling. You can't love one, darling.
You can't love one. You can't love one and have
any fun.
Speaker 4 (01:04:26):
Darling. You can't love one. Darling.
Speaker 9 (01:04:31):
You can't love to, Darling, you can't love too. You
can't love too and still be true. Darling, you can't
love to. Riding on that new river tree, riding on
(01:04:51):
that new river tree, that's sing old tree brought me here,
gonna carry me away you again.
Speaker 4 (01:05:02):
That same old train brought me hey gone and carry
me away again