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June 1, 2025 • 99 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
Hello friends, you have a moment so that we may
discuss our Lord and Savior minarchy. No, seriously, I'm just kidding.

Speaker 2 (00:12):
Hi.

Speaker 1 (00:13):
My name is Rick Robinson. I am the general manager
of Klrnradio dot com. We are probably the largest independent
podcast network that you've never heard of.

Speaker 3 (00:23):
We have a little bit of everything, and by that,
what I mean to tell you is we have news, pop, cultures,
special events, insure attainment, true crime, mental health shows, drama.

Speaker 1 (00:34):
Productions, and pretty much everything in between. So if you're
looking for a new podcast home to grab a little
bit of everything that you love all in one place,
come check us out. You can find us on x
under at klr and Radio. You can find us on
our rumble and our YouTube channels under the same names.
You can also find us at klrnradio dot com and
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(00:56):
free to come check us out anytime you like at
KLRN Radio.

Speaker 4 (01:06):
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(01:30):
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Speaker 5 (01:48):
My God is really.

Speaker 1 (01:49):
Really special and I love my dad law.

Speaker 3 (01:55):
I'm proud of him and that, even though he isn't
here with us, that he died as a true hero.

Speaker 6 (02:05):
How much everything about him.

Speaker 5 (02:08):
And the moment that the officers and I had to
come see the children. My biggest reaction was, I don't
have seven arms. I have seven children who just lost
their father, and I don't have seven arms to wrap
around them.

Speaker 7 (02:22):
I'm Frank Sola, chairman of the steven Sila Tunnel to
Talis Foundation. Our foundation is committed to delivering mortgage free
homes for gold Star families and fall and first respond
to families.

Speaker 5 (02:33):
To not have to worry financially is a huge peace
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I don't want them to have to quit their piano
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Speaker 8 (02:53):
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Speaker 5 (03:03):
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when life feels like it's been tipped upside down, because
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(03:25):
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Speaker 8 (03:29):
I like to ask you to contribute eleven dollars a
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Speaker 7 (03:33):
Please donate eleven dollars a month by calling one eighth
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Speaker 9 (03:45):
Hi everyone, this is JJ, the co founder of good Pods.
If you haven't heard of it yet, good Pods is
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it's different, and it's growing really fast. There are more
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(04:05):
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Speaker 10 (04:21):
KLRN Radio has advertising rates available. We have rates to
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radio dot com.

Speaker 1 (04:39):
The following program contains course, language and adult things.

Speaker 2 (04:44):
Listener and discretion is advice. Welcome everyone to another episode.

(05:12):
If he said, she said, I am one of their
hosts for the evening Maggie and with me is the
very awesome Rowdy Rick. How are you doing tonight?

Speaker 1 (05:22):
I'm alive and it's summertime. I don't know. I have
to admit I have been a little down in the dumps.
Yesterday was my last day as Papa bus driver, and
I was looking forward to it all year. And now
I'm like, but that means that means I don't get
to take her to school anymore.

Speaker 2 (05:40):
Oh I do. I get that. I get that very
much because I did that for two of my nieces
and then when I had my kids, I did the
same thing, and I'm like, they don't need me anymore.
I was I was like, I can't believe I have
to do this so early in the morning. And then
it was It's like in tears. I totally get it.

Speaker 1 (06:08):
Life is so confusing because on one hand, I'm like, whoa,
I have more time to do all the work that
I've been falling behind on. I can rearrange my schedule
and make everything fit now. And I was like, but
now we won't be doing dried the school karaoke and stuff.
And I'm just like, why why am I sad about it?

Speaker 2 (06:29):
Now? Well, you know, you could do what my sister did.
She actually, when they were old enough to go on
the school bus and everything, and she missed that morning
ride and everything. She would actually do a really early

(06:49):
Saturday morning breakfast because you know, her girls were up
at the crack of dawn. If not before. So she
took advantage of that and they would go to I
Hop before everybody else was and they would have their
karaoke time in the car or whatever in the car.
So you can do that too. Have a have a
date with Gracie every every weekend.

Speaker 1 (07:11):
Because I'll figure it out eventually. It's just it just
hit me because I was like, dude, like I've been
looking forward to because because yeah, same thing, grumbling every morning.
I mean not that I don't normally get up early
early anyway, but I'm like I and it's not even
it wasn't even the morning one so much, but through
the routine off was because morning was easy, dude. You
got there and you waited in line for like five

(07:32):
minutes or so till the line started moving. She got
out of the car, she said, she said, love you,
and we're gone, and I'm home and I'm starting to
try to get work done. It was the afternoon one
because because the drop and I hadn't done it at
this school before, because by the time my kids were
old enough when we transferred here, only my youngest was

(07:54):
still in school and he was already riding the bus,
and by then he was in ninth grade anyway, so
I know were messed with any of the elementary school
stuff before. So with the smoothest pickup, which the smoothest
drop off was, we left here. She's supposed to get
out of school by three, and we live maybe eight
minutes from the school driving, so and that's that's that's

(08:17):
a conservative estimate because I drive a little faster than
I should until we get into the town. Sh don't
tell anybody, but so I'm thinking, well, by the time
we get there, it'll be twenty minutes. That'll be plenty
of time. Dude. We were parked down the street and
around the corner waiting for the line to start moving,
and I'm like, yeah, I'm not doing this again. We're
gonna have to get earlier. So, I mean, as soon

(08:38):
as I was getting done with the afternoon show, I
was basically running out the door to go get in line.
So we didn't, so we weren't sitting in the middle
of the street and fighting traffic. So that's the part
I was kind of looking forward to. And then it
hit me yesterday I was like, this is the last
time I'll be doing this. I don't know I feel
about it anyway, I'm done being for CLEMPT now, so
how new how stig.

Speaker 2 (09:02):
They could be better, but you know, they're okay for now.
So it has been a trial with my main line.
I've not said much about this line, but we had
a serious water leak and it had to be fixed.
And of course it's not on the east Mond side,

(09:23):
it's on my property. But what a lot of people
don't understand is that my home is fully almost no
it's over a quarter mile away from my house, so
that means that there's a lot of areas where the
leak could occur, and we had to spend time trying

(09:48):
to find it. Once we located the leak, we had
to dig and had to be careful because, as y'all know,
the water lines and the electrical lines run kind of
parallel to each other, so we had to be very
careful with that. Once it was Once we saw where
it was coming from, we had to shut off the
water and we, you know, because we live so remote,

(10:13):
the water company actually told us how to get one
of those things that turns off the water at the
meter in case the company couldn't get there in a
timely manner. So we did that, but we have well water,
so we switched over to well water and that was fine,

(10:34):
So we were not in dire straits or anything. But
it was problematic because I have to travel next week
and I needed to get this fixed. And I called
five or six different plumbers. Only one of them called
me back, and they they took a long weekend, so
they never got here, and I was leaving messages and

(10:59):
then the shee was no longer picking up. I left
messages yesterday and then it wasn't picking up today, so
I said, okay, So it started a long weekend, so
they're not coming and I'm gonna be gone. So what
I had wanted to do was called the original pulmer
who had been here when we were having the house redone,

(11:20):
and for some reason, someone in the house was very
reluctant to do so because he lives rather far away,
and I'm like, we're far away from everybody. It doesn't
matter where the plumber is coming from, they're all far away.
But he got here and he had the problem fixed
within forty five minutes. So I'm sitting here fighting the
urge to say I told you.

Speaker 1 (11:40):
So, oh, okay, come on, Aggie, it's you.

Speaker 2 (11:48):
I can't. I can't because I mean, he worked. My
husband worked really hard to locate that and he did
so much of the digging and the work and everything
that the plumber was actually able to come out here
and was not labor intensive. So that was a big break,
you know. And so but yeah, the plumber said, why
didn't Y'll call me? I was like, biting my lip.

(12:11):
What I got this too, But at least that's done
and over with. So I am warning our beloved audience
that I may be traveling next week and will not
be around. So there's I'm going to be going out
of town. But I'll keep you updated. I'll keep you

(12:32):
updated in case something happens.

Speaker 1 (12:35):
This is unacceptable.

Speaker 2 (12:36):
I know it always is, but at least I'm not.
I'm not for clemped over. You know, I get it.
I know what this was feeling like for you. I
feel so bad for you.

Speaker 1 (12:54):
I already started making up board today. I took her
to a I made it the kindergarten lunch today, so
it was fun.

Speaker 2 (13:00):
Oh get there.

Speaker 3 (13:00):
Oh yep.

Speaker 1 (13:03):
I kind of decided I was taken like it wasn't
really a planned vacation, but I just kind of decided
I wasn't doing the daily show for this week because
we had a bunch oft going on anyway, and then
when I come back on Tuesday, it's starting at a
different time. I was like, you know what, I'm just
not doing that one this week. And then then today
I was like, just pop up, Hey, let's go to lunch,
and everybody's like, you want to do one now, Like,

(13:25):
let's go to lunch. They're like, okay, go. So this
is the thing, right, So I live within twenty twenty
five minutes, not counting the two closer ones of free
of what I consider the best places to get chicken
fried state in my state, and my favorite one is

(13:45):
almost right down the street from my house, and that's
where we went today and it wasn't good, and I
was so sad. I was like, what is you because
it's been a minute since I've since I've eaten there
because we haven't been eating out a lot lately, and
I was like, you know what, screw it, we haven't
been in forever. We're going to go do this because
Greasy can get her favorite things she likes to get
there for her lunch, and then we can get stuff.
And it was great because we were hanging around and

(14:08):
playing and everything else, and then the food came and
and then I started diving in and I'm like, I'm
I have to use the knife to cut the chicken fry.
I never have to use what I don't ever have
to use the knife to cut the chicken bread. So yeah,
even my son who used to get the exact same
thing that I get, I got until I started changing

(14:29):
up my side was like, yeah, mine wasn't that good either.
I was like, I guess we'll go back to the
other one for the chicken. So yeah, it's it's it's
been a week. But anyway, And the funny thing is
because this was my idea to do this topic because
you had mentioned something and I was like, you said something,

(14:49):
and then I was like, we should do a show
on bucket list. Problem is I've figured out I've I've
done a lot of the things that I used to
have on my bucket list, and we'll get into some
of that too. But I was like, this is gonna
be harder because I've done it.

Speaker 2 (15:02):
It was hard. I mean even even though I have
I have a I've had a listence that was about
seventeen one hundred things I want to do, and I've
done about forty of them so far, and weirdly, I
haven't done more of the simpler ones. So I decided
my bucket list is more of a geriatric bucket list. Okay,

(15:26):
so it's stuff you can do without hurting yourself.

Speaker 6 (15:31):
Yeah, I know you updated yours to like a Jerry Jerry.

Speaker 2 (15:33):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (15:37):
I'm still going all in on mine. You qualify yours.
I listen.

Speaker 2 (15:41):
I did some stuff when I was younger that most
people were like, why was that even on your bucket list?
And I'm like, yeah, because I could you know that
kind of thing. But yeah, I'm at the I'm at
an age where I'm like, yeah, I can't no no, no, no,
no no no. There's some base jumping, but it's not a.

Speaker 1 (16:02):
So keep in mind, this is him saying it's not me.
Better be back for spirited books.

Speaker 2 (16:10):
I should be. I should be bad God willing. So
I'm already reading my book for spirited Books. It was
a very interesting. It was actually recommended to me by
my Canadian friend and it has been extremely elucidating. And
that's all I will say about that.

Speaker 1 (16:30):
Very cool y.

Speaker 2 (16:35):
So anyway, yeah, my bucket list. Also, I want to
say these items, only three are actually on my one
hundred bucket list items list. The other seven are stuff
that I thought of to do, juriatic, you know, to

(16:57):
do that weren't too bad, just tough, that wasn't almost nice.

Speaker 1 (17:04):
So so yeah, I like you have had a bucket
list for a while. And then I started putting together
some of the things that I wanted to talk about,
and I'm like, and one of them, believe it or not,
has been on from like the time that I started
doing and building this network and the one prior and
I just got to scratch something off my bucket list

(17:26):
starting in May, which was get a movie star on
the network. I was like, damn it, that would actually happened.
I wasn't expecting you to.

Speaker 2 (17:36):
You did it. Totally scored and and he's he's such
a lovely person, he really is. So that was a
that was a good score. And I'm not saying that
because I've had a crush on him since before Parker
Lewis So yeah, moving on, no.

Speaker 6 (17:52):
No, no, no, no no.

Speaker 2 (17:57):
But I hope he's not listening.

Speaker 1 (18:00):
Oh he probably is.

Speaker 2 (18:02):
Oh I'm gonna just crawl underneath my better shiit No,
I can't do that because it's full of jock, So
I'll crawl somebody in somewhere else. Check.

Speaker 1 (18:10):
Just kidding that he's actually off and on a shoot
this weekend, so you'll probably hear this eventually, but not
right now.

Speaker 2 (18:17):
Yay, Okay, he's he's doing.

Speaker 1 (18:20):
Probably with things this weekend, so we don't actually come
back with this show until next Sunday, which which works
for me because Sunday is my birthday and I get
to not work that day, so I'm kind of cool
with that now.

Speaker 2 (18:31):
That's great.

Speaker 1 (18:33):
But anyway, so yeah, so I guess my first question
because you said you and so before we get into
what is still what is still on your list? And
I know you have like a billion of them, so
I'm not asking you to give me a lot of them,
but you'd mentioned on your original you know list I've
had since you were seventeen, that aie hundred things on him.
You've done like forty What are probably your two favorite

(18:53):
things you've accomplished on that list?

Speaker 2 (18:59):
Let's see, I stayed in a castle. That was one
I actually you know stayed you know, like I was
staying there for a few days. So I did that
that was kind of cool. I actually swam with sharks.
I wasn't a shark cage, but it was a rather

(19:21):
primitive shark cage because it took place when I was sixteen,
and it was it was one of the first things
that I had written down to do, and I happened
to do it when I was visiting family in Puerto Rico.
I don't know if you guys are familiar, but the
straight between Santo Domingo and Puerto Rico is well basically

(19:44):
as soon as you step into the water, you're part
of the food chain. I mean, it is invested with sharks,
and a lot of people who study sharks actually come
to Madaguest to study the sharks that are there. So
a friend of my uncles actually had a boat that
had a shark cage. And when I say shark cage,

(20:05):
it was like red decky like they took like they
took you know, regular lead piping and kind of put
it together. And my uncle was invited to go, and
he was so chicken, so I said, yeah, go I
took and I am honestly shocked that I actually it

(20:29):
was really cool because there were so many different sharks
and they were all swimming around me and everything, and
there were some that were small enough to actually go
into the cage, but they were just you know, they
were curious. They weren't hostile or anything. So that was
a really cool experience. I would not do it again.
I would not do it again. I am sorry. I

(20:49):
would not do it again, but not for the reasons
you think. I can no longer wear a face mask.
I can't scuba dive anymore. It drives me crazy. I
get this clauso phobic feeling and it's really weird, so
I can no longer but enjoy that.

Speaker 1 (21:05):
See, that's that's kind of me, right. So I always
wanted to and granted, you know, issues kept me from
doing it, But I always wanted to become a pilot,
and at one point I was really keen on trying
to join the Air Force and becoming an actual, like
fighter pilot. And I'm so glad that I didn't now

(21:26):
because I have developed some of your claustrophobia as I've
gotten older, Like I can't even like it's so bad now.
I can't even sleep with something covering my feet because
I go nuts if something's covering my feet and it's weird.
But I would like to point out that two things.
I think. I think we may have a serial killer
in the chat. And I don't mean I don't mean

(21:46):
Laura because according to Grateful Calvin, mind you, if there's
a person on my bucket list, this could be a
bad or good thing.

Speaker 2 (21:53):
So yeah, he's got to dream and I am all
eyes for this. Okay, sod Dan has a story and
I'm all eyes for that. So yeah, since them's aren't
working again ya as.

Speaker 1 (22:09):
Such me I saw her, she was like and I
stayed on a fifty million dollar yacht once and through
up I would have been my look. But yeah, one
the so one of the and again this is one
of the things on my bucket list that I've actually accomplished.

(22:29):
One of my favorite scenes from the movie Iron Eagle
was when he was chilling out in the simulator. Oh yeah, yeah,
I actually got to do that when we were staying
on it when we lived on Air Force Base. My dad,
my dad's friend was the one in charge of the
simulator when we get these like bring him up, let
him check it out, because he knew how much I
like to play video games and ship that was. That

(22:50):
was amazing. It wasn't quite as cool as they made
it look like in the movie, but it was pretty
damn close.

Speaker 2 (22:57):
Well, I've been on a simularlater when I lived near
San Antonio. I was in proximity Randolf Air Force Base,
and I do quite a few of the pilots, and
I managed to wrangle simulation type. Of course I wasn't.
I just wanted to be in it. I didn't want
to actually do anything, so I never got got to

(23:19):
do that. But that's that's kind of cool.

Speaker 1 (23:24):
Shows. Well, you know, Jeff, I'm being cremated. No box
for me, Well except for the one my ashes are
gonna wind them because nobody's gonna want them. So there's that.

Speaker 2 (23:36):
Oh that's kind of cool. All right, Well, I guess
we should kick off our what how many did you bring?
I brought ten?

Speaker 1 (23:43):
Hey I did? I've I brought ten?

Speaker 2 (23:45):
Okay, you go first, so ten ten to one? So
from the number ten.

Speaker 1 (23:50):
Number one, Well, my my number ten is actually one
that you've already done. And I think, and I think
unfortunately I may have aged out of this one. But
it's stille my list anyway, to see if I can
figure out how to do it, because I really do
want to swim with sharks, And I'm kind of saying,
I'm kind of jealous that you've done that, But I wouldn't.

Speaker 2 (24:10):
Call what I did with swimming because I was just
hanging inside a shark gage. But I I'm not sure
if they still do it, but the Texas State Aquarium
actually had a dozen thing whereby they would train you
to be in the shark dead so that you could

(24:31):
you know, get them used to their habitat and you know,
having a person in there to clean, you know, and
everything because the tanks do need cleaning periodically and whatnot.
So you know, I want to look into to see
if one of the you know, if one of the
aquariums actually has something like that, maybe then.

Speaker 1 (24:52):
You can do that. Yeah, I'm always kind of not
even so not even necessarily just sharks. I would like
to like chill out with some whales too, Like the
scene from Star Trek four when he's like in the
in the tank and everybody's like, how did that man
get in their holes? I was like, that would be cool,
that would be awesome.

Speaker 2 (25:15):
Now, I think swimming with sharks is completely different than
being in a shark cage, but I would imagine that
the adrenaline from swimming with sharks would be a lot
higher probably, And I.

Speaker 1 (25:31):
Am an adrenaline junkie. That's why I'm like, yeah.

Speaker 2 (25:34):
Yeah, see I'm not. When I get a hit of adrenaline,
it's actually extremely painful, like I'm doubled over in pain.
I've actually had to be given a sedative because of it.
So it for me. I don't like adrenaline. I'm a
very calm person. Well, you know, until somebody pisses me

(25:57):
off and then the chocolate comes out.

Speaker 1 (25:58):
But I was gonna I was gonna say whatever we can,
whatever we can.

Speaker 2 (26:04):
We know, but anyway, well my number ten is pretty sedate,
and I know you yes, and there's a little bit
of explanation. I want to learn to paint. Now, you
guys may think, well, you already paint rocks and stuff,

(26:26):
and I'm like, yeah, those are very cartoony and very
more dimensional and everything. I want to learn to paint,
you know, like Bob Ross and over level. You know
that kind of thing where you learn the techniques for,
you learn what each brush is used for, you know,
the differences in mediums, the differences in types of paint

(26:46):
that you're using, you know, all of that stuff. So
I want to I want to take a few classes.
And I actually found a place, believe it or not,
in my little hamlet, that actually teaches you how to paint.
So I'm going to be picking that up sometimes this
summer when the classes start back up again, so I
can scratch it off. This will be exciting. I'll be

(27:07):
able to scratch something off of my geriatric bucket list.

Speaker 1 (27:12):
Stop saying geriatric, but.

Speaker 2 (27:15):
For me, this list, believe me, there is nothing exciting.
I'm looking at it. Yeah, there's nothing exciting in here.

Speaker 1 (27:23):
I mean, well, you're you're awfully excited about getting the scratch,
aren't off your bucket list? So I wouldn't say there's
definitely nothing exciting.

Speaker 11 (27:35):
Okay, that's true, alright, but yeah, I just I think
it would be kind of neat to be able to,
you know, I go to all of these asyllow estate
sales and whatnot everything.

Speaker 2 (27:50):
Every so often you find wild paintings that somebody had
made and they're beautiful, and you know, they're roses or daisies,
or it's a landscape, a sea scape or you know,
and sometimes it's not you. They don't use brushes they
actually use palate nize to paint like Vango used to.

(28:11):
And it's just to me, it's just really cool to
see the effects and how the paint is used and
how the brushes are the strokes are are done, and
you know, you can't use just any brush for all
of the different strokes that you're going to be using.
So I that's why I'm just very curious, and I'll

(28:34):
probably suck at it. I mean, the box thing is
one thing, but the you know, painting on a canvas
is quite another. I've been doing that but it's very cartooty.
But you know, I want to see how that turns out.
I think it would be kind of fun to do that.
So yeah, okay, how about how about number nine?

Speaker 1 (28:54):
So number nine number nine for me, and interestingly enough,
is actually an artistic thing I I and I started
taking steps to do this, but I still have never
found the time. I have a guitar now now I just.

Speaker 6 (29:08):
Want her to play it. Sorry, oh sure, laughing at
my pain, I see how I do.

Speaker 2 (29:18):
No, no, no, no, that's I totally get it.

Speaker 1 (29:27):
I realized I'm just messing with you, and I figured
you were not laughing about me trying to learn how
to play the guitar. If you heard my attempts, then
you would be laughing. But if you haven't heard.

Speaker 2 (29:37):
Those, no I have not, so okay, but.

Speaker 1 (29:42):
Yeah, so that's so that's my number nine. Everybody asks
me on the cover that I recorded, which which is
on my uh bucket list of things that I've actually accomplished.
That were on the list, was that you playing. I'm like,
I wish, no, that's that's that's that's Somebody else like,
oh you still sound good though, thinks.

Speaker 2 (30:04):
Oh no, but it's true. You do have a really
good voice. So you know, there's that. I used to
be able to sing soprano at church and everything. And
you know, after my surgery, the when I was intubated,
they cut into my focal cord. Now I can't hit
those notes anymore. And but I did find, to my chagrin,

(30:27):
I could hit some of the lower tenor so. So
the choir the only girl on the side, Oh nice, No,
I stand out like a sort though.

Speaker 1 (30:48):
Anyway, bit bit that was almost perfect. Next time you
tell this, though, you have to. You have to do this.
So I have a bachelor's and guitar performance which entitles
me too seeing Ding Fraser done, Ding Fraser done.

Speaker 2 (31:05):
That's gonna be in my head. Oh no, earworm?

Speaker 1 (31:12):
Oh yeah, okay, what do you go for number nine?

Speaker 2 (31:19):
Well, my number nine is to actually see Yosemite, Yellowstone
and the Grand Canyon. I've lived here since nineteen seventy
six and I have yet to see those three areas,
and I would be extremely disappointed if I were to

(31:40):
die not seeing enough. So I mean seriously, I'd be
there in perpegatory really ticked off. And I'm sure some
angel would be like, yeah, you got all these tours
to do, and I'm like, yeah, but you know what,
I never got to see this shit, so that should
count for something. So yeah, I would be very very
put up if I left the Mortar Coil and did

(32:02):
not see these three places, because you know, they're I mean,
it's part of our Our country is so diverse and
its geography it's it's incredible, it really is. I mean
a lot of people say, oh, well Australia is No,
Australia is not diverse and it's geography. It really isn't.

Speaker 1 (32:20):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (32:20):
Neither is Canada. Mexico, believe it or not, is not
that diverse either, even though the Mountain Range goes all
the way from Canada all the way to you know,
the southernmost type of Chili. It's not that diverse black me.
I've been through western Mexico. But there are there are

(32:43):
reasons why some people never leave the United States. They
don't need to. There was so much to see here
and so many different things to see, and so many
weird things to see that I understand why some people
just don't travel the world and just decide to travel
US because it is that diverse.

Speaker 1 (32:59):
So that's yeah, you.

Speaker 2 (33:01):
Know, that's hot. That's hot, that's on my list. I
need to see those three places. They all tied. So
I just said, you know what, because they are pretty
much natural you know parks. You know, I'll just natural
parks right there.

Speaker 1 (33:19):
Yeah. No funny thing about that is I've actually, uh,
I know, some naturalized bricks. And they were like, they
were like, you realize that in where where I'm from,
to see everything that's here, I would have to travel
pretty much all of Europe to even get half of
what you guys have here. Yeah, I know, but yeah,
they're like, it's it's no wonder that American Most Americans

(33:41):
never leave America. It takes them days to get across
their entire country. I can, I can be in another
country in Europe in ten minutes.

Speaker 2 (33:52):
Oh no, I had. I had my girlfriend and her
family visit us from Germany, and they only they came
to see us when we were living in San Antonio,
and I took them to see all of the sites
in San Antonio. And I also took them to see
some sites in Houston, and I took them to Austin,

(34:15):
and then I took them to Corpus. Christie and her
husband asked me, we're still in Texas, and I was
like yeah, I'm like, let me know if you want
to leave Texas, because then that's you know, from Even
though I was centrally located, I mean any pretty much

(34:36):
in any direction northward, it was still ten hours to
get out of the state, I said. But I told
them I could take you to Mexico's it's five hours,
but I could take you to Mexico. Actually three if
we go to Laredo, but I cannot guarantee your safety.
That's what I told them. I literally said that, we're like, no,
it's okay.

Speaker 1 (34:58):
I just want to make sure that I heard something correctly.
Did you say Australia was not that diverse or did
I mishear you?

Speaker 2 (35:05):
No, I met from geographically.

Speaker 1 (35:08):
Well that's what I meant.

Speaker 2 (35:10):
No, there's a lot of diversity in don't get me wrong,
but I knew.

Speaker 1 (35:15):
You mean geographically. I would only like to point out
one thing. I don't know how diverse it is, but
the entire continent wants to kill you. Need I need,
I need.

Speaker 2 (35:24):
Anything season Oh yeah, everything wants to kill you. And
you know, And it was funny because I, uh, one
of my best friends said, he's on on Twitter at
roman stoicism one. Uh, he is from Australia and he
just became an athuralized citizen here. But when he first

(35:46):
came here, my first question was, is that funnel web
thing is? Is that funnel web spider thing real? And
he was like, you mean the one that swims And
I said, oh my god. He's like, yeah, it's totally real.
I'm never going to Australia, it's not I'm not even joking.

(36:09):
I was literally picking him up at the airport and
I had the first question, is that fun old spider thing?
I didn't even say hi.

Speaker 1 (36:22):
Before you one question the spider thing dude. That freaked
me out because there was like a ten minute section
during one of the times I was sitting in on
kokc that I that I hadn't figured out how it
was going to feel because I had a guest who
was supposed to come on and they didn't make it,
so that left like a ten or fifty minute hold.

(36:44):
So I just started pulling up articles. One of the
first ones I saw was Americans talking about how they
had gone to Australia and how they were going into
an area that they thought it was odd because how
warm it was. It looked like there were snow all
over the ground, and as they got closer they realized
it with spider ReBs, Yep, nope, I'm out ever going
into that. Nope, yep, I'm out.

Speaker 2 (37:06):
Yeah done, I'm done, Thank you done? Okay, So what
is your number? Eight?

Speaker 1 (37:15):
It's weird we're kind of like in the same general
ballparker the stuff we're talking about in order because for me,
like I I've already been to the Grand Canyon. I
as much as I think Yellowstone would be amazing, I
have an aversion to being standing on a caldera just
in case, because I'm one of those so I probably, however,

(37:38):
I would love to, and I'm so mad because I've
actually been to DC a couple of different times, and
I never could carve out or near d C a
few different times and never could car carve out the
time to do it. I so want to go see
like the Lincoln Memorial and stuff that. That is something
that is on my list, and I will be making
sure that happens before I take my last breath. I
want to go see all that stuff, and I haven't

(38:00):
been able to manage to do it yet.

Speaker 2 (38:02):
So I can honestly tell you I've been through the
Lincoln Memorial. I would go to visit my husband when
he was stationed out in Bethesda, and since he was working,
I would take the Metro and I would go to
all of these places on my own. And the time

(38:24):
that I went to Lincoln Memorial, it was very busy.
It's a very popular destination, not just for every single
fucking school kid, Okay, but I was surprised with the
diversity of languages I heard while I was standing there
for ten minutes. It was incredible. I helped out a

(38:49):
German couple who were trying to you know, they were
you know, they were trying to read the plaque and everything,
so I translated that for them. There was a Japanese
family that I helped. I took pictures with them standing
next to Lincoln. There was there were quite a few Hispanics.
There was a couple from Mexico, a family from Santo Domingo,

(39:13):
and somebody from South America. So you know, all of
the Spanish were it was different. Spanish was completely different.
So uh, and it was it was really neat because
everybody went there to see this great man. You know,
they had heard so much about this particular person. And

(39:36):
I I was talking with the German with the Germans,
and I asked them, I said, what drew you to
come to see this statue? And they actually said, we
have read so much about him, we don't have anything
like that in Germany. And I was, I was stupefied,

(39:58):
and I'm I'm not a big Lincoln fan. But then
I started remembering what I did learn about German history
and everything, and the closest they ever came to getting
somebody like him was literally out of bumpus mark. That
was pretty much. And he wasn't even close. But you know,

(40:21):
it was kind of weird to see somebody from another
country appreciate something that we take for granted. So I
hope that you make it out there and you you
get a taste of what I did when when I
was there, because it was really cool to see some
so many people appreciate our history because they compare it

(40:44):
to theirs, and they actually appreciate our history because of it.
It was really it was humbling to see.

Speaker 1 (40:53):
Well, it's one of the things that I love to
throw back on little liftist arguments about how much the
country sucks. I'm like, if it's country sucks so bad,
why is every I mean not only coming here just
to try to get here, but a lot of people
are coming here to basically be able to touch parts
of our history. They don't. They don't ever usually have
an answer with that.

Speaker 2 (41:14):
Nope.

Speaker 1 (41:14):
Interesting, okay, all right, So what about you? What's your number? Seven?

Speaker 2 (41:23):
I thought we were on eight.

Speaker 1 (41:25):
We did we just did eight?

Speaker 2 (41:27):
You did it. I haven't done it.

Speaker 1 (41:29):
Oh wait, that's right, I forgot you.

Speaker 2 (41:34):
I'm not the only drunk here, Okay.

Speaker 1 (41:37):
I'll have you know. I'm sober. That makes us worse.
But I thought you. I thought you went first. That's
why I was confused, No, you went you.

Speaker 2 (41:45):
Went first, So because I'm nice that way, so shut up.
I'm kidding, totally kidding. Anyway, Number eight. Number eight for
me is really stupid and really silly, But I got
to do this, y'all. I have wanted to do this
since I heard this town existed and this province existed.

(42:06):
And I need to take a picture at a sign
that has both words on it. I need to go
to Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. I need to take a picture with
a sign, a city sign that says welcome to Saskatoon,
Saskatchewan or whatever. I don't care, as long as both
words are in there. I want to do this. I

(42:29):
have wanted to do this since I was like ten.
It is silly, it's in the middle of nowhere, but
I need to do it.

Speaker 1 (42:41):
So first of all, I've tried not to die hysterically
because I've spent the entire afternoon watching the grown up movies.
So all I have, all I have to say is
his entire everything about him was on steroids except for
his voice. Gotcha too, m h, I'm.

Speaker 2 (43:13):
Doing not choke h Yeah, But I know, like I said,
it's silly, but I've wanted to do that since I
was like dead, I I can't. I don't know what
the fact I've never seen well I've seen a few
pictures of Saskatoon, but i've never I mean, there's I

(43:36):
don't know what's there. You know there's I can't say
that I'm going there for a specific historical purpose. I'm
not going there for a geographic thing. I'm not going
there because it was there's you know, a Hallmark movie
being filmed there. No, it's just the name. So that's
among one of my sillier things. But it's pretty harmless,

(43:59):
and it has been under my skin since I was ten.
So I gotta get that done because pretty soon it'll
be fifty years and it's got to happen.

Speaker 1 (44:09):
Nice, all right. So for my next one, it's kind
of sort of on the had to scratch it off,
but not completely, so it's still on there. I really
really really wanted to go to Area fifty one. Now
I just want to go to wherever they've moved all
the Area fifty one stuff too, because yeah, the.

Speaker 2 (44:28):
New the new Area fifty Oh no, that's an Area
fifty two.

Speaker 1 (44:37):
I knew that they were starting to move things around
when it started showing up in movies together that that's
not as top secret as it used to be. So
they'll make a new one soon.

Speaker 2 (44:46):
Yeah. I mean you remember ID four, right, that came
out in ninety six, and it's like, trust me, it's there,
and I'm going, oh, okay, So now we're divulging one
of the biggest secrets, and then that may I've made
I paused, Wait a minute. That means if they're divulting
the secret, that means the secrets no longer there. That's

(45:07):
why much.

Speaker 1 (45:12):
Yeah, everybody, everybody forgets that even though we claim to
have free speech, there are bureaus in Hollywood attached to
the military and everything else to make sure that certain
things never get divulged until they're ready to have them divulge,
and to also make sure that certain alphabet soup agencies
are put out in a positive light as much as possible.

Speaker 2 (45:31):
So very true, very true. That would be I mean,
even going to the current area fifty one would be
kind of cool, crossing the Utah South South Platts and
all that stuff. That'd be an adventure.

Speaker 1 (45:46):
Yeah, I mean, it would still be fun. But now
I want to know where the aliens are. I mean,
besides our besides our programming director, because you know.

Speaker 2 (45:58):
See now I want to watch you in that movie
Hangar eighteen.

Speaker 1 (46:02):
I do, yes, Actually I was kind of I.

Speaker 2 (46:04):
Want to watch that again that that would be a
fun watch. Yeah, it would be. Wonder if the guys
we're ever gonna be like, don't get disasters of the
baking of it Capricorn one.

Speaker 1 (46:19):
So kind of surprised they haven't because it would qualify.
It's still a fun watch, but it is, you know,
it's one of those ones that's kind of like it's fun,
but you know it could have been better.

Speaker 2 (46:30):
Yeah, yeah, it could have been. It could have been, Yes, definitely.
All right, So I guess because that was your number seven.

Speaker 1 (46:41):
Yep.

Speaker 2 (46:42):
Okay, so my number seven is actually kind of hoity
toity and I actually have to travel just to do this. Yes,
I actually have to travel just to do this, and
it doesn't but it doesn't count as travel, but it
is travel. I want to have afternoon tea at the
Rits in London because afternoon tea at the Ritz in

(47:06):
London is a huge, huge deal. You're there for like
two hours and it's awesome and for me, tea with
all of those little finger sandwiches, with all of those
cakes and the crumpets and the stones and the clotted
cream and the Devonshirt cream and every all of that.

(47:29):
I want to sit there for two hours eating all
of it, and I want to have somebody come and
get me a fresh pot of tea, and I will
just take my time and really enjoy it in this
very posh, very beautiful setting. And I just want to
do it just once. And it makes absolutely no sense

(47:50):
for somebody that you know most of the time is
dressed in clothes that have paint and they are born.
But you know, I that is something that I have
always wanted to do. I don't think I'll ever do it.
I came very close to doing it, and unfortunately I

(48:14):
had to cancel plans due to family issues, so I
never actually got around going to England and sight seeing
in all these places that you know, when you're growing
up and you hear all the blood thirsty things that

(48:34):
the kings and queens did, you want to see all
those places. I wanted to see where they hung people
at Tower London. That would have been cool. They never
got on to it, but that afternoon tea at the
Ritz Oh yeah, I definitely want to do that. And
if I'm ninety eight and I finally get the chance,
you damn skippy. I'm getting on a plane and I'm

(48:54):
going to fly out there just to have that tea,
and I could die happy at that table.

Speaker 1 (49:00):
By then, they'll be transporting people back and forth anyway, So.

Speaker 2 (49:04):
Well, yeah, where is that stupid you know transporter?

Speaker 1 (49:10):
Actually, the scary thing is, with some of the quantum
entanglement theories they're cracking, it might not it might not
take much longer.

Speaker 2 (49:18):
Well, I hope, I hope. You know what, we have
been stagnating technologically for a long time. I need them
to step up because I'm tired of waiting and AI
is not cutting it. I don't count AI. So AI
is a totally different ballgame. I don't like AI at all,
but I understand that there are some applications that are

(49:38):
really cool and I can respect it. But my fear
is higher than my respect. So but yeah, let's get
let's get this transporter stuff going, all right? How about okay?
Number six?

Speaker 1 (49:52):
Well that's just it though, So it's not really that
we're stagnating technologically speaking, it's just they're not letting us
know all the things they could do now like and
again this goes back to stuff finally making it into
the realm of television. The new show Watson on CBS,
they they talked about using crisper technology to get rid
of sickle cell disease. And I'm like, if they're talking

(50:15):
about it in a TV show, that means they've pretty
much already figured out how to do it. Because it's
not it's not it's not a science fiction show. But
the one thing I will say, because you're like, I
know this is weird for somebody who's constantly wearing clothes
covered in paint. You are like the biggest Royals junkie
that I know, So this is not a stretch.

Speaker 2 (50:34):
I am not that that that title beyond tomorrow. LEI
we both know it.

Speaker 1 (50:40):
I said that I no, no, no, no, no, no, you
guys might be tied.

Speaker 11 (50:49):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (50:50):
For those of you who are not familiar, the podcast
that I have with Brad Slacker and The Cocktail Oute
actually had a prime in contention incantation. It was called
a Pod Divided, and my first co host was Laura
Lee uh may Nick, and she and I would talk

(51:12):
about that it was It started off as half an
hour and then we extended to an hour. But we
would talk about Texas sports, and then we would talk
about a few things that were politics, and then we
would talk about chief men, like the Royals, and you know,
all of the celebrity gossip and all that stuff. It

(51:33):
was a lot of fun. But she and I are
both Anglo files.

Speaker 12 (51:37):
So yeah, anyway, I remember y'all anytime if there was
any Royal Watch stuff going on, y'all, well, we're all
over the eggs is going to see this?

Speaker 2 (51:53):
Oh you don't think that. I get on Twitter and
I do a first search of Megan Markle just to
see what what they're talking about. Act It's what's new.

Speaker 1 (52:05):
I loved her characters so much in suits. I cannot
stand the person so sad.

Speaker 2 (52:10):
But you know this, and this is this is what
I tell everybody. You know. I admire Al Pacino, I
admire Robert Dennier. I think they are fantastic actors. But
that's what they do. They act, and you can admire
the characters that they bring to life without having to
like the person at all. I mean the same thing.

(52:32):
Can we argue with Chris Evans? He did great job
as Captain America outside of Captain America. I don't like
him very much.

Speaker 1 (52:40):
So on screen Captain America, off screen Atmalcami pretty much.

Speaker 2 (52:46):
Yeah, so you know anyway, So okay, so what is
your number six?

Speaker 1 (52:52):
My number six? The hell is a hang on them
number six? And this one is just one that's kind
of come up over the last few years. I really
wanted to take my children to see some of the
places that I lived in when when I was a kid,
because after fifth grade I started, I spent three years

(53:15):
in the Seattle area, and then I spent a year
in eastern Maryland or as everyone else calls it, Delaware
and uh, and then then came back home again. So
I've always wanted to kind of show them some of
those places because my kids, other than a trip down
to Padre, I have never left Oklahoma before, and I'm
trying to work on fixing that.

Speaker 2 (53:39):
Uh par cool. Sorry, I was still thinking. I'm thinking
of food. I'm still stuck on my after tea.

Speaker 1 (53:57):
Trust me, I know. The one thing that's always the
one thing that's always tripped me out about you know,
the whole English tea thing is you know, I get it,
but at the same time, you know, clotted cream just
does not even sound appealing.

Speaker 2 (54:13):
It's it's just a for me, it's like it's a butter.
It's it acts just like butter. It's just not it's
more whipped than butter. Is. That's all it is really
to me anyway.

Speaker 1 (54:29):
Yeah, it's just the name. It's kind of like my
step My step mom has a total aversion to the
word coagulated. And she made the mistake of making sure
we knew that when when I was younger and my
dad and I were just randomly work into conversations. So, yes,
we were. We were those kind of assholes.

Speaker 2 (54:56):
All right, So diem, I turn down. Yes, Okay, my
number six is actually a really cool one. And this
is one of the ones that is actually on my list,
on my actual list, and that is to visit the
Canary Islands. Most people don't know, but the Canary Islands

(55:18):
are not named for the bird. They're named for the
explorer that found them, whose last name was Canary. But
a lot of people don't know that. Most of my
family actually hailed from three different areas in Spain, and
one of them was in the Canary Islands. I still

(55:38):
have family that lives there and my godmother, when she
was doing a lot of genealogy work, went to Canary Islands,
found our family and they're not that distant. So her

(55:59):
one week sojourn turned into a three months stay because
they insisted my godmother's day for the upcoming nuptials of
several of people that we were related to. There were
two weddings that were going to be going on within
that three month period, and so she ended up staying

(56:22):
for three months and she absolutely loved it. So I
found them and we communicated, you know, we send emails
back and forth and stuff, and they expect me to
go visit sometime in the near future, and I told them, yeah,
you know what, maybe next spring I will do that.

(56:43):
I'll possibly be able to go, so we'll see. But
that has always been on my list for that reason, well,
since my godmother told me that we do have family
members that lived there, and ever since we made that
connection and we started communicating and everything, it has been

(57:07):
so much fun, especially since I speak Puerto Rican Spanish
and they speak actual Cataline Spanish, so sometimes things get
they get misunderstood. But yeah, that's my number six.

Speaker 1 (57:26):
Oh so my list is not a geriatrical list. So
there are still some dangerous things online. This one I
wouldn't necessarily count among the dangerous ones, but it is
something that I've always wanted to do. I've never been
in a helicopter. Not only do I want to go

(57:48):
up in a helicopter, I'd also like to learn how
to fly one, because one of the things I love
to do. When I was a kid, because I spent
so much time on Air Force baces and everything else
and around air Force stuff as family members, et cetera,
I used to love to play all the flight simulator games.
So I'm pretty sure if you set me in a cockpit,
I could probably fly it, because that stuff was actually

(58:09):
fairly damn realistic, even though yeah, well yeah, I mean
it really was. The only thing that's different is, you know,
the controls are different, But as far as the actual
you know, the science that goes into making and work,
how it works, those kind of things, I don't think
it would take much for me to get things figured out.
I think the biggest thing for me would be the pedals,

(58:32):
because on a helicopter, the pedals actually are how you
push the pedal one way or the other, and it
causes the tail roader to shift enough where it turns
for me that learning how to keep it straight would
be probably the hardest thing for at least a little bit,
because you know, one foot works a little better than
the other now. So other than that, I think I

(58:55):
could probably figure it out. But yeah, I've always wanted to,
you know, go up been helicopter, would love to learn
to fly one. You know, like I said, grew up
doing flight simulators and computers and actual flight simulators at
an air Force base, and grew up watching shows like
movies like Blue Thunder and TV shows like Airwolf. Yeah,

(59:16):
I would definitely love to fly.

Speaker 2 (59:18):
Look up, Blue Thunder was great too, but the TV
show Blue Thunder wasn't that great.

Speaker 1 (59:27):
Yeah, Blue Thunder was an awesome movie. Airwolf was a
much better TV show. Because I was I wasn't even
aware that around the same time that CBS had launched Airwolf,
some a competitor had tried to make Blue Thunder a
TV show, and it was really just nothing but a
vehicle to recycle some of the cinematic stuff from the
movie like this is that.

Speaker 2 (59:49):
That was pretty much where we sorry, but you know,
they had an air Wolf had an edge that nobody
else had that was Jan Michael Vincent.

Speaker 1 (59:57):
I knew he was.

Speaker 2 (59:58):
He was a heartthrop back then, so that was a
big draw for the females. And if the female was
watching it in the house, that guy was gonna be
watching it too, So you knew that there was there was,
there was you know, a lot of couples were watching
this together. It wasn't just a guy's show. When would
tune in just for Jan and Michael Vincent. Don't ask

(01:00:21):
me how, I know, like you can. It's because I
didn't ask me.

Speaker 1 (01:00:28):
Oh, I know, like we already know how, we already know.

Speaker 2 (01:00:33):
But yeah, and you know, again, not that great of
a person, but he was a pretty good actor.

Speaker 1 (01:00:41):
So yeah, I rewatched all that stuff not too long ago.
I was actually kind of on a kind of wanted
to rewatch Night Ride or Kick and I can't couldn't
find it anywhere, so I but I did find finally
Find a Wolf, and yeah, I as much as I'd
loved the show back then, parts of it are just like, yeah,

(01:01:01):
that's a yeah. When you're a kid, you don't realize
how repetitive the plot is. I guess is the same
yeah thing every week? Save yeah, thing, and it was
always so much. It was cool when I was a
kid because it was also it was you know, but
now I'm like, dude, it's like and the same thing,

(01:01:22):
like when because when The Flash first came out on CW,
like Arrow is always going to be the better of
those shows for me, it started all of it once
it once it ended the pretty much the entire Erroverse
on TV started dying. But and eventually even it got
to the point where it was, you know, like with
the Flash, Barry encounters New Villain, Barry struggles for the

(01:01:45):
first forty five minutes of the episode on how to
defeat new villain, and then it became then it became
this whole long running theme of for you know, two
thirds of the episodes, the Flash is getting zast kicked
by a new villain until there's an a fIF any
moment then they finally know how they're gonna to stop them.
And I was like, yeah, this is you know anyway

(01:02:08):
that that's that's the bless that's the kind of the
blessing and the curse of the shorter seasons. They don't
they don't have to do as much filler shit now,
but it annoys me that we get you know, most seasons. Now,
I've noticed regular, like regular regular TV is not that
much different than it used to be a lot, even
though they split it up. They do like a fall
season and then a spring season with a couple of

(01:02:30):
week break instead of run on reruns. They do eighteen episodes,
but streaming is usually anywhere with eight to ten. And
for only getting ten episodes, and then like, and I'm
pissed off right now because Paramount Paramount plus you know,
Paramount's been going through a big ass shakeup, been part

(01:02:52):
of it's been sold off, blah blah blah, yahda YadA YadA.
So they finally decided when Strange New World Season three
is coming out. They ended it on the cliffhanger. It's
like eighteen months ago and it doesn't even come out
until July. And I'm like, by the time this starts,
somebody's gonna give a shit anymore? Yelled, unfucked up anyway?
TV rant over?

Speaker 2 (01:03:15):
Okay, I get is it my term for number five? Yes, doll,
I'm gonna laugh. I will say this. This is my cabat.
I don't care to go to Spas. I don't I
don't like strangers, you know, giving me a massage or anything.

(01:03:36):
I've capitulated a couple of times due to medical reasons.
But that's about it. And I didn't find them bad
or anything. I just I'm a very shy person. I
won't even wear I won't even go to a public
swimming pool because I refuse to show myself in a
paving suit. I'm that shy, right. But but that said,

(01:04:01):
minup Er five is actually having a day at the
Chocolate Spa at Hotel Hershet in Pennsylvania and having every
single freaking chocolate treatment done. And I'm not even joking.

(01:04:23):
It's all chocolate. You can have a chocolate fondue wrap,
you have a cocoa facial, you can have a massage
with coco cocoa nibs you have. You can have a
chocolate immersion like a mudbath, but it's chocolate. I am
all about that. I would prefer chocolate over mud. Why

(01:04:45):
because chocolate.

Speaker 13 (01:04:50):
Of course, I'd run the risk of like, maybe I
can eat some of it. But I mean they just
have you, I mean they have so.

Speaker 2 (01:05:01):
You can even have a whipped cocoa bash. You can
have chocolate and sugar scrub. You can have all of
these things. They're all chocolate themes, and they are they
use cocoa, They do use their cocoa for these things.
And you know, for me, that has always been like

(01:05:25):
such an indulgence. And yeah, I admittedly it's ridiculous and
some of these things probably extravagant and out of my leak,
but it'd be so cool to be a giant bat
of chocolate.

Speaker 1 (01:05:39):
So apparently has already done this.

Speaker 2 (01:05:45):
I am not surprised.

Speaker 1 (01:05:47):
According according to him, the cocoa hotub is wild and
Calvin asking if off the menu items, all I have
to say to that is is giggy, giggy.

Speaker 2 (01:06:04):
It was like I had heard about. I went to
Hershey Pa. I had a meet up with some friends,
some an online meet up with some friends of mine
who are still friends, dear friends to this day, and
we decided to meet up in Hersheypa because I wanted

(01:06:27):
to go see where they made Hershey chocolate. I had
always wanted to know. I mean, you see the stuff,
you know, you see the Hershey chocolate bar, and admittedly
it's not it's it's not a extremely refined chocolate like
you would find in Belgium or you know, Germany or
Switzerland or whatever. But it's a solid chocolate bar and

(01:06:49):
I Am never going to turn it down. So it
was my suggestion. We all agreed. We went over there,
we took a tour and it was so much fun.
And this was right before the Dove was coming out,
the Dove Chocolate, so we all got free bags of
the dark chocolate, the ones that come in the pink wrapper,
and that was like six months before it hit the stores,

(01:07:12):
and it was it was so much fun to see
the whole the whole stuff and everything. And as we
were leaving, we see the sign for Hotel Hershey and
then the sign below it said the Chocolate Spot, and
I'm like, I am so sorry my friends. Had I
know we had a chance at a chocolate spot, I

(01:07:33):
would have booked that.

Speaker 4 (01:07:36):
Nice.

Speaker 2 (01:07:38):
But yeah, I've always been intrigued with I mean, chocolate
has I don't know, more benefits than mud for the skin.
It protects a skin barrier a lot better because of
the the the oils and the cacao. So and you know,
I'm just I'm being out of my ass, but I

(01:08:02):
just want to just.

Speaker 1 (01:08:07):
Alright, So this this entire the Aggie's bucket list moment
has inspired the following comment, Violet, you're turning violet.

Speaker 2 (01:08:19):
Yes, let me tell you something. The first time I
saw we walk in a chocolate factory with the Jean
Wilder and I saw acoustics glute fall into that river,
I was like, why couldn't it be me? I admit.
When I was little, I I well, you know, I

(01:08:41):
was introduced to chocolate. I think I was a wrong
maybe ten or eleven, because it's it wasn't something, you know, candy.
Back home, there was not a lot of chocolate candy.
We had a Zuka gum chicklets, you know, and the uh,
the candy gum lollipops, you know, blow pops, you know,

(01:09:06):
that kind of thing, and that's pretty much the standard
stuff that candy wise, we had access to growing up.
Chocolate was kind of not well known to us. So
when we came to the States, that was another thing
that I remember my dad buying. It was hersh chocolate
bars and we had chocolate and we were like, this

(01:09:27):
is like the best thing ever. And so you know,
it's a it's a it ties into a very pleasant memory.

Speaker 1 (01:09:37):
So just so you know, we've hit the O'smobile stage
of the program. Our current watchcount is four four two.

Speaker 2 (01:09:52):
But yes, it was. It was. It's it's been a
dreamifine to go to the chocolate spot, and I am
hoping sometimes i'm in the fall, I might be able
to manage it to go back there and have a
weekend to myself be dipped in chocolate.

Speaker 1 (01:10:10):
Okay rules, Sorry, giggy, giggy, no.

Speaker 2 (01:10:21):
Anyway, So moving on.

Speaker 1 (01:10:25):
So Andy would also like to point out he was
completely kidding and had no idea you could be dipped
in jugglins.

Speaker 2 (01:10:31):
Oh no you can't. Oh yes you can. And when
you get rinsed off, you go into the next session
and then you can have the cocoa sugar scrub and
then you can go kit your wip cocoa bath. Seriously,
the whole thing is chocolate. It's Can you imagine how

(01:10:51):
wonderful it must spell there? I can't get over those
I need to go.

Speaker 1 (01:10:58):
Apparently you do. So yeah, so my number four is
still on my list. I probably would not do it
in a in a smaller submersible now, after what happened
to the last group that tried to use a very
small one.

Speaker 2 (01:11:17):
Boy, I think I know what you're talking about.

Speaker 1 (01:11:19):
I still still want to go cruise around under the
ocean and the stuff. That would be awesome. I really
really want to see what else down there, because you know,
it's funny. Roden Berry always talked about space being the
final frontier. We still only have explored about ten percent
of what's in our water, so I don't think we
can get I don't think we should be focusing on

(01:11:42):
the so called final front theory yet until we have
mapped out everything else. Which is an interesting thing because
I was reading something that Shatner was talking about again
the other day, because you know, he's you know, he
said it. You know, I spent most of my career.
Everybody knows me for playing this this starship Captain. And
he said, when I finally got to go to space,

(01:12:02):
I expected this all in wonder feeling looking out at
everything that I was able to see now that you know,
it wasn't being shielded by our atmosphere. And he said,
I kept finding myself turning around looking home for for
for him to come to that realize, you know, and
start talking about, you know, how important it is and

(01:12:25):
how amazing our planet is, and how as somebody that
has you know, inspired hundreds of thousands of people to
look to the stars. He said, when I finally got
a chance to go to the stars, all I was
doing was looking back home. That that that was kind
of a light bulb moment for me.

Speaker 2 (01:12:44):
That's very profound and so true.

Speaker 1 (01:12:47):
There's nothing wrong with finding a mermaid. They're they're hot,
at least I think they are.

Speaker 2 (01:12:53):
Maybe those women are bitches, trust me.

Speaker 1 (01:12:58):
I mean, you could just say, oh.

Speaker 2 (01:13:00):
Oh, okay, we got yeah, okay.

Speaker 1 (01:13:02):
Fine, there's the company excluded.

Speaker 2 (01:13:05):
No, no, I'll own it.

Speaker 1 (01:13:10):
It's like you you often tell me every time I've
been complaining about things that have happened since my divorce.
Even women don't like women, Rick.

Speaker 2 (01:13:19):
No, they don't. They you know, it's like al Bundy said,
you know, we will never understand women. Women understand women,
and they hate each other. So just just don't don't
don't try to understand women. Okay, So number four right

(01:13:42):
for me? Yes, number four was actually it is actually
my number four in my list. And I have wanted
to do this since I read the book and since
I read about I got to Christie. But I very
much would like to take the Orient Express Paris to

(01:14:02):
Instant and for a time it was offline. I want
to say there was a time that they were not
running it anymore, but they since started doing so a
few decades ago and they've since brought it back. It
has to be for me, the most romantic way of travel.

(01:14:24):
And when I say romantic, I don't mean you know,
love w or anything like that. It's just the area,
the throwback, the historical all of that, you know, the
true romance of the history. To take that. I have
alluded to wanting to have accuracy as one of my

(01:14:45):
dinner companions because I want to ask that woman where
the hell she was for eleven days, because she disappeared
for eleven days. But one of the things that she
did do that inspired her to write Murder on the
Audience Press, she took the ort Express. She actually did
a lot of traveling, you know, to learn about that

(01:15:11):
minutia that she puts in her books. You know, she
that was her way of researching. She did a lot
of travel. She became so obsessed with learning things that
she was going to put into books that she became
expert at those things. When she was writing Murder in Mesopotamia,

(01:15:33):
you know, she started learning a lot about Persian history
and archaeology and all that stuff. And she had a
question about something and she called up someone, She made
a trunk call and as I need somebody you know

(01:15:53):
who is the foremost expert in the stuff. And they
surprised her and said, well you are, and she was
like me, she gets so she would get so obsessed.
But she has been for me as far as travel goes,
she has been a big inspiration, and that for me

(01:16:15):
would be the ultimate. To be on the Orient Express.
It's by no means inexpensive. It's extremely luxurious. It does
cost quite pretty many and I'll probably never I'll probably
never do it. But having taken a tour of the

(01:16:37):
train and having seen some of the things and the
accoutrement that they have, their the menus, the cocktail menu,
the different bars, the different carriages, the different you know,
everything it is. The attention to detail is so exquisite.
And that is to me. If I were honestly, if

(01:17:02):
if ever I wanted to take a trip by myself
so as not to be bothered by anybody and just
be alone for eleven freaking days, that's what I would do.
I would take the Ord Express. But like I said,
it's a dream it's a bucket list. But I don't

(01:17:24):
think this was gonna come to fruition. It's a little
it's a little outside of my leap. Would it'd be
kind of cool?

Speaker 6 (01:17:32):
Now?

Speaker 1 (01:17:32):
See here, I am trying to play a bit pay
bit a compliment, and then he makes it all weird.
I was impressed. He's like one of an odds deep
cut from the end of the movie, and I'm like,
that's awesome. He's like, yeah, I'll just imagine Shatner saying

(01:17:54):
it while he was clicking his heels together and his
ruby slippers. I don't like you anymore. Nobody understands how
my memory works. Don't do this to me. That was
a visual I did not need because yeah, but no,
just just because nobody understands it. This automatically put young

(01:18:15):
Shatner green tunic did always look gold on TV, full
starfleet uniform with red slippers, clicking his heels together right
as he was being transported. I hate all of you.

Speaker 2 (01:18:28):
It's better than Bill Clinton wearing the blue dress and
red shoes.

Speaker 1 (01:18:32):
Oh damn it, Aggy, I win.

Speaker 2 (01:18:35):
I so win. Okay, moving on, what's your number three?

Speaker 1 (01:18:43):
I don't even remember anymore because I can't get that
image out of my head.

Speaker 2 (01:18:46):
I hate.

Speaker 1 (01:18:50):
Oh oh ugh uh number three. Oh, this one's kind
of a mundane thing. But I've always wanted to do it.
I have. I've never managed to get to any of
the cool, you know, start sci fi conventions. I really
just want to be able to go to one before
everybody that I that I admire and enjoy and science

(01:19:11):
fiction is kicked off the planet. I just want to
go once. I was kind of bummed because Korn was
doing one in Florida this past weekend, and I was like,
that's too far.

Speaker 2 (01:19:22):
I don't know, he needs to let us know when
he's when he's doing one in Texas totally. If he
does one in Dallas, that would be awesome.

Speaker 1 (01:19:30):
Yeah, if he does one in Dallas, I'm gonna how
to get down there.

Speaker 2 (01:19:33):
Yeah, that would be doable. I mean we I get
as suite and you know, we could all stay there
and everything. That'd be great because you know, I would
be the only one I'd have to drag all my
sci fi people.

Speaker 1 (01:19:48):
I would have. I never forgot the quote to begin with,
but yes, now I'll never be able to think of
it without gagging.

Speaker 2 (01:19:54):
You are correct, that's funny, but yeah, as I a
sci fi coon would be oh boy, I don't think
I'm trying to remember the last time I went to one.

(01:20:15):
You had to have been the one in Houston, and
that was several decades ago. I've been to comic cons
which were, you know, just as fun, slightly different obviously,
but a true sci fi con. It's been a while,
and yeah, they we do. We we need to do that,

(01:20:38):
we really do, because there's so much fun and even
if you don't dress up, it's still there is such
a what's the word camaraderie? Is that the way you
pronounce it? Okay uh, and it's it's amazing to me
it was, it's always been that way. You don't see politics.

(01:21:02):
You just see this love for this particular genre, and
you don't see you know, everybody's everybody's the rest the same,
even though they're all different, you know what I mean. Yeah, yeah,
we should definitely do that. Let's be on the lookout

(01:21:23):
for one.

Speaker 1 (01:21:24):
We'll figure it out, all right.

Speaker 2 (01:21:26):
So my number three, I've mentioned this one before several times.
It's under my skin and I do not know why,
but I need to go visit Shackleton's grave. I know,
I know that's that's like so out of left field.
It's out of the park and into somebody else's left field.

Speaker 1 (01:21:50):
You forget. We're all aware of your your anthropology things.

Speaker 2 (01:21:56):
I just you know, reading the story of Edward Shackleton
and everything that he went through, the losses that he suffered,
and the I guess, the attempt to erase that what
he had accomplished, and you know, people realizing later on

(01:22:17):
after his death just how much he actually did for exploration,
and how he managed to survive and how he thrived
in those environments and everything. His entire Again I use
this word not in the you know, hallmark sense of
the term, but his life was very romantic. It was incredible,

(01:22:41):
and there was so much intrigue, and there was mystery,
and there was it's it's he lived an amazing life.
He really truly did, and he did not get the
accolades for his efforts until well after his death. So
I remember when they found the ship that had gone

(01:23:02):
down then he had been on in the South Pole,
and they brought back the film that had been taken
during this trip, and it was so well preserved they
were able to make prints out of it and It

(01:23:23):
was amazing, do you It looked like a gap ad,
you know, the way they were standing with their khakis
and stuff out there in the middle of the snow
and stuff. It was there were such awesome, beautiful photographs
that had been taken and they had been waiting there
for almost a century to be found. So for me

(01:23:45):
going to see his grave and just seeing that would
actually close my circle as far as you know, my
favorite explorers go. I've been to several of the graves
of several explorers, but I think his would be for

(01:24:08):
me the be all and end all, because as we
all know, it's a fuck south of here. So I
kind of go to Argentina to go see those things.
And then once I'm in Argentina, I have to go
to you know, Ushuiyah, and from Ushuia, I have to
catch a boat from Ushuia, which is the southernmost town

(01:24:31):
in Argentina, and then go to the Wailing station where
his grave is at. So, but you know, it's a
neat dream and it would be the culmination of my geekiness.
I suppose.

Speaker 1 (01:24:51):
You made this cool, ma'am.

Speaker 2 (01:24:58):
Yes, I know, does bring up a good point. They
will not let me dig him up just to look
at a skull, which is too bad because from all
accounts he had a really nice skulf.

Speaker 1 (01:25:11):
But anyway, okay, now it's just weird.

Speaker 2 (01:25:15):
Edward Edward chuckle. I believe yes, So anyway, okay, so
what is your number two?

Speaker 1 (01:25:24):
My number two would be to manage to hijack a
ride on one of these rockets that keeps going up
with normal people in it. I would love to go
to space just once.

Speaker 2 (01:25:35):
Oooh that would be cool. Not gonna lie. I'd be
freaking out all the way up there, but once I'm
up there and looking down, I'd be okay.

Speaker 1 (01:25:46):
Or you know, if with heart's desire, go hang out
on the moon, because I wouldn't be a fat kid there.

Speaker 2 (01:25:54):
Interesting, now that would be You know that. It's funny
because that's actually on my list, but it's not on
my geriatric list. So that's why I didn't make it
to my list.

Speaker 1 (01:26:10):
You had to put you had to put your you
had to put your list in buble wrap or something, yes,
a bucket list. If you're going to wrap your bucket
list in bubble wrap.

Speaker 2 (01:26:20):
Come on whatever. Anyway, I don't, I don't, I don't
want to, you know, it's bad enough I get out
of bed all of a sudden, my ball's hurt. Okay,
I'm not a risk anything, so anyway, so I guess

(01:26:41):
my turn. This one's gonna seem kind of weird. Everybody
wants to do this, and I think everybody should. I
would like to write a book. I don't know the subject.
I don't know how long, I don't know the type,
I don't know the sean, I don't know anything. I

(01:27:02):
just want to be able to write it. Say that.

Speaker 1 (01:27:04):
I've written a book that was on my list, but
I've had to cross it off because I'm actually working
on one.

Speaker 2 (01:27:10):
See, Okay, there you go. And this is something I
encourage everyone. You need to write a book, it doesn't
matter what it is. My sister is actually writing a book.
Her book is actually DIY stuff for people who are
not used to doing DIY, so you know that kind
of stuff. My other sister was honestly thinking about doing

(01:27:36):
army recipes, like recipes when you're you know, the canned
food that you can throw together and do the kind
of stuff. So and I've been encouraging them to do
that because that would be kind of cool. And like
I said, I have no idea what I would write about.
Although apparently my comment about my grandmother and my grandfather,

(01:28:03):
a lot of people are saying, you need to write
a book about best. I just mind. I didn't think
people could actually pay attention to that, But here we
are anyway.

Speaker 1 (01:28:17):
So according to bit, he's written several books.

Speaker 2 (01:28:21):
Yes he has, so I know he has because I
have them.

Speaker 1 (01:28:29):
So the one I'm working on and I actually have
the think about me. I've had a couple of different
projects in book form that some of which have been
hanging around for forever. Some of them have completely shelved,
others I'm still kind of working on. So I have
two or three different projects going on. But there's a
new one that kind of came into my head about
a month or so ago, and I reached out to

(01:28:49):
Jeff for help with illustrating it. I am making Gracie
the subject of a children's book, The Princess in the Carey.

Speaker 2 (01:29:02):
I'm excited.

Speaker 1 (01:29:05):
So yeah, I talked to Jeff. Once I get the
overall arc finished and the manuscript part of it done,
I'm gonna send it over to him and have him
work on some illustrations. And it's it's it was an
idea I had because she went to school one day
wearing one of her favorite like I think it was
Belle from Beauty and the Beast, because it was dress
up day, but she insisted on wearing her boots, and

(01:29:30):
the whole story idea came, you know, from her traveling
to all these like cool, you know places and talking
to animals and her introducing herself as a princess and
they're like, but princesses don't wear boots. Yes, they do.
So yeah, that's that's that's at least kind of the
arc of the book right now. I'm still working out
all the different places she's going to go to and stuff,

(01:29:52):
but yeah, she's gonna have a children's book with her
being the main character when I'm done.

Speaker 2 (01:30:00):
How sweet. I can't wait, honestly, start start writing. Thank
Chop chop.

Speaker 1 (01:30:05):
Oh, that's that's actually on my list of things to
do this summer. While I'm not having to spend an
hour and a drop offline every day, I figured out
I could put that hour towards the book and probably
have it out and at least ready to send over
to Jeff by the end of the summer. But anyway,
so where does that put us.

Speaker 2 (01:30:23):
Now number one?

Speaker 1 (01:30:25):
Number one? Of course my number one. Everybody else is
gonna Now again, this is probably something that has passed
its expiration date, but I refuse to wrap my bucket
list in bubble wrap. I'm like some people skydiving. I
still want to do that.

Speaker 2 (01:30:44):
Uh yeah, you, and only you, because not me.

Speaker 1 (01:30:49):
I've always wanted to. I've always wanted to be able
to fly, though, and at least for at least a
little bit, it would kind of feel like I was flying. Now.

Speaker 2 (01:30:56):
Of course, I guess I would qualify as No, what
was it that buck like buzz light there said, this
isn't flying, this is falling with style. But I think
if you do the helo thing, yeah you could be flying.

Speaker 1 (01:31:17):
Yeah pretty much. Yeah no, But yeah, I've I've always
wanted this guy dive, and I remember. And the funny
thing is, because i've you know, mentioning being in a
journal and junkie, I kind of got out of that
phase for a while, you know, because I spent my

(01:31:37):
twenties and thirties running towards gunfire. So that kind of
makes it to where eventually you're just kind of like, yeah,
maybe I don't need the adournaline anymore. So interesting little
side note though. Several years ago I got I got
volunteered to be hypnotized at a at at the State Fair,
and then me and one of my brother in laws

(01:32:00):
immediately because we were both hypnotized, and then and they said,
you know, after hypnoty, after hypnotism, you may actually do
some things that are outside of your character. For a while,
we both went and got in the thing that had
like the giant sling shot with the little metal ball
that shot you opened down and everybody in the family
was and I was like, we were nuts and it
was like the funnest thing I had done. And that

(01:32:22):
was when I was like, yeah, no, I definitely want
a skydivee because this was really fun. And my my
now wife was looking at me like I had grown
a third hit.

Speaker 2 (01:32:37):
Well that sounds fun for you, not me.

Speaker 1 (01:32:40):
Nope, never whatever, whatever, bubble reverl.

Speaker 2 (01:32:50):
Okay. So we're a little over. So my number one
is really quick and really simple, and believe it or not,
you're going to be part of it because miner one
thing in my geriatric list is to have a kailer
and tweet up so nice that is going to happen,

(01:33:10):
and hopefully I'll be the one hosting because you know,
I got the room and the view, so you know,
all anybody has to do is get here. Once you're here,
I got you covered for booze, I got you covered
for food, I got you covered for bed, I got
you covered for taxi. I got to cover for everything else.

(01:33:33):
So but we need to start planning this. We need
to start getting this on the road because I really
like this to happen.

Speaker 1 (01:33:42):
And yet, yeah, I know, and they make you tandem
jump for forever, so probably Honestly, once I got to
the Worro, I was doing a tandem jump that would
probably be just about enough for me.

Speaker 2 (01:33:52):
I yeah, pass again, No, not for me, never happening,
but chick in totally check it. I am so chicken
I cluck.

Speaker 1 (01:34:10):
Nice. Yes, Taylor and meetup definitely needs to happen.

Speaker 2 (01:34:15):
Yes, that's yes.

Speaker 1 (01:34:16):
And I'm still trying to figure out if Seapack is
doing a Dallas thing this year, because if they are,
we might be able to make that happen sooner rather
than later.

Speaker 2 (01:34:25):
I know that they had one last year, but I
haven't heard anything about this year, so.

Speaker 1 (01:34:30):
I thought it was the year before and I couldn't.

Speaker 2 (01:34:33):
Oh, that's right, it was twenty twenty three. It was
twenty point three. You're right.

Speaker 1 (01:34:37):
But yeah, I'm hoping because because that's the other thing
now that I'm doing this full time. When I was
wanting to do this full time years ago, there was
like six or seven different political conventions all over the
country throughout the year. Now there's like almost none. I'm like, damn, I.

Speaker 2 (01:34:51):
Remember when Red State had Red Steak Gathering. I remember
the Sea Pack. I remember, Yeah, there were several, there were.

Speaker 1 (01:35:01):
It's it's like all of the conventions went through the
Highlander face. There can only there can be only one.

Speaker 2 (01:35:06):
And I guess I wish Red State would actually bring
theirs back up because that one was just a more
subdued seapack. It was less hectic, and it was it
wasn't as formal in certain aspects, and they did concentrate

(01:35:28):
on more you know, it wasn't big names, like you know,
the President was not going to show up for Redstick Gathering.
Big senators would not show up, but state senators would
and congressman would, and you know, you would have big
conservative voices show up and have talks and everything, and

(01:35:52):
it was, Yeah, it was. It was a slower pace
and it was less hectic, but it was still a
lot of fun. And then of course the big schism
happened in State and Erickson left and Cruisa left and
everybody left and huff and then they didn't never brought
it back. But I think it needs to come back.

Speaker 1 (01:36:13):
Yeah, maybe some smaller groups will start getting together and
figuring out how to do things like that now that
we're not quite so small anymore.

Speaker 2 (01:36:20):
So maybe we can be the catalyst.

Speaker 1 (01:36:25):
That's that's kind of on my plan too, because I've
been I've been being hit up here locally to start
some political action groups and stuff, and I'm like, I
don't really know much about how to do that, but
I can find out.

Speaker 2 (01:36:37):
Yeah, yeah, definitely. Well I guess we're a little over,
but uh, we did have a good time with our.

Speaker 1 (01:36:48):
Lists and our entire audience imagining you being dipped in chocolate.

Speaker 2 (01:36:58):
Oh goodness, I I will say I thank you all
for thank you me laugh Tonight. I really needed that sor.

Speaker 1 (01:37:08):
On so many levels.

Speaker 2 (01:37:10):
Yes, all right, Rick, I wanted to tell us what
we can find.

Speaker 1 (01:37:15):
You don't look for me to trap, you can find
me on x at Rdyick seventy three. You can also
find the station at kaylor and Radio. You can find
me tomorrow pushing buttons for the Front Porch Forensics Crew
first starting at eight pm Eastern. Then Amash and I
do a deep dive into time travel and alternate timelines
Tomorrow night on Duxtaposition, and then I am off Sunday

(01:37:39):
because Birthday, and plus Nimick is off doing a shoot,
so he's off doing like one percent or Hollywood type stuff,
so he'll be back next Sunday, and then I am
I back doing America Off the Rails Monday night, and
then Tuesday the Rick Robinson Show returns now in it's
earlier start time. It now runs from ten Eastern until

(01:38:01):
one in the afternoon. So freeze me up to get
some riding done because i've been I've been bereft in
those duties lately. And uh also hopefully some time to
do some fun stuff like take kids and grain kids
to the lake and the splash pads and all those
fun things during the summer. Other than that, you can
find me as an occasional contributor, hoping to change that

(01:38:23):
soon to twitchy dot com, Misfits, Politics dot com and
the loftus Party dot com and I also produce a
Lofice Party podcast through my production company that drops on
every Tuesday. So anyway, where can folks find you, Miss Aggie.

Speaker 2 (01:38:38):
You can find me at at the Weekend and at
Aki the barkeep. Those are over on x to find
me a thirty pm Eastern Tuesday nights during the Cocktail
Lounge with the ever Swamp Brad Slagger at thirty pm
Eastern Friday nights doing he said, she said it would
be awesome, Rick, awesome, you know I'm talking about it.

(01:38:59):
The second Wednesday of every month at APM, the guys
get together for Toxic Masculinity, where we host a baby
of the month that I bring the drink at the evening.
And the first Monday of every month, Jeff and I
get together and do Spirited Books where we review books
and match a libation to our current book that we're reviewing.

(01:39:22):
So stay tuned for that. And I think that's it
for me. So thank you very much for joining us tonight,
and we hope you have a great evening.

Speaker 1 (01:39:33):
Enjoy the rest of your Friday or the rest of
your Friday. Enjoy the unofficial start in the summer, and
please don't forget Monday's not just about cookouts and booze. Okay, wow,
it's not
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