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October 10, 2025 24 mins
Today is about music.  My Co-Host is Kelly Marie Faulkner,  a music aficionado and the Host of  "On the record with Kelly" podcast.  She talks music, big acts, up and coming artists, some you haven't heard of, and some you have forgot about. Definitely listen to her on everyone who plays podcasts, and http://www.ontherecordwithkelly.com/  she is also on on instagram and tiktok , both,   @kellymariefaulkner
We also talked
National angel food cake day. Entertainment from 2019. Deadliest Atlantic hurricane, Susan B. Anthony silver dollar, Billiard balls that explode. Todays birthday - Earl Dixon, Helen Hays, David Lee Roth, Tanya Tucker, Eric Martin, Jodi Benson, Mario Lopez, Mya. Orson Wells died.

Intro - God did good - Dianna Corcoran   https://www.diannacorcoran.com/
Angel food cake song - Cynthia A. Todd
Truth hurts - Lizzo
One thing right - Marshmello  Kane Brown
Birthdays - In da club - 50 Cent      http://50cent.com/
Running with the devil - Van Halen
Just a gigilo - David lee Roth
Delta Dawn - Tanya Tucker
Just to be with you - Mr. Big
Case of the ex - Mya
Exit - Country Coutre - Cali Tucker    https://www.calitucker.com/
countryundergroundradio.com
 History & Factoids about today webpage
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:19):
Hi, everybody. I am Jeff and welcome to History and
Factoid's about today. Today is August the tih Now my
co host, let's just put it, she's just flat out cool.

Speaker 2 (00:27):
Now.

Speaker 1 (00:27):
She's definitely got a podcast. You want to listen to it,
so we'll hear all about it and where she's going
with it. Kelly, why don't you go and introduce yourself.

Speaker 2 (00:33):
Hi, thank you so much for that amazing intro. My
name is Kelly. I have a podcast called On the
Record with Kelly and I talk about music. I interview
musicians and music fans and just kind of talk about
what's new, music history, concert recaps, and basically anything that
people who like music would want to hear.

Speaker 1 (00:54):
So, if you've always been into music here ever since
you were low kid.

Speaker 3 (00:57):
Yeah, I really have.

Speaker 2 (00:58):
I was thinking back, like where did I start really
liking music? And I think it was ever since I
was little, you know, just being introduced to playing music.
I played the clarinet when I was little, the keyboard.
My grandpa was in a barbershop quartet, which was kind
of fun, just to be around that type of environment
where there's you know, those creative juices flowing. So yeah,

(01:22):
I think it's just kind of like been ingrained in me, right, and.

Speaker 1 (01:25):
That's starting out with that kind of stuff. You're probably
pretty diverse in the kind of music you like.

Speaker 2 (01:28):
No, definitely, I love pretty much everything classic rock, country,
you know, pretty much everything cool.

Speaker 1 (01:39):
Hey, do you know what we're going to celebrate today?

Speaker 2 (01:41):
Yes, we are celebrating National Angel Food Cake Day.

Speaker 3 (01:45):
Angel food Cake, Angel food cake.

Speaker 4 (01:48):
The best darn thing, ken mad on my birthday, made
no mistake Angel for angels case, the best start thing, Mamma.

Speaker 1 (02:06):
That's right, it is Angel food Cake Day. Those light, fluffy,
hairy cakes. Now they got to mean that name because
they believe that's what angels would eat. That's gotten cute.
They were actually created in the United States in the
mid eighteen hundreds. No one gets credit for making them out.
Now they're low on carve, so it's got that going.
So that's been pretty good. They're pretty simple, just beaten
egg whites, flour, sugar, no butter. Now they're baked in

(02:27):
that pan that has the hole in the center, you
know what I'm talking about. Yeah, and that have to
be baked that way. See, if you don't cook them
in that pan with the hole in the center. You
just put them on a regular pan. All you're gonna
get is a big Angel food cookie. They won't rise
if they're not in that pan with the hole in
the middle. Are you a baker?

Speaker 2 (02:44):
Uh? Yeah, Actually I want to start making those now.
No no, no, no, it has an actual day. Well.

Speaker 1 (02:50):
The fun thing about angel food cakes too, because you
can do I mean, you can just put whatever you
want on them. I mean, so you can't. Really, I
can't say you don't like angel food cake. That's your fault.
You topped it wrong exactly. Oh man, So are you
into rocker guys? Haven't mett? I guess you don't have
to be rockers. They could be anybody. Do you like drummers?

Speaker 5 (03:09):
Uh?

Speaker 3 (03:10):
Yeah, I haven't.

Speaker 2 (03:11):
You know, I haven't met too many drummers in my life,
which is funny because I feel like I've been to
a decent amount of concerts.

Speaker 3 (03:16):
But I'm sure they're wonderful people.

Speaker 1 (03:20):
Well I hope so too, because today is National Hug
a Drummer Day.

Speaker 3 (03:24):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (03:25):
So if you're at a club or something, you might
ask them before you just walk up and hug them.

Speaker 6 (03:28):
Though.

Speaker 1 (03:29):
That's a good idea, especially if they're like the sweaty
rocker guy. So do you play any other instruments than
when you were a kid.

Speaker 3 (03:39):
I do have a guitar.

Speaker 2 (03:41):
Yeah, I've been learning and it's a Fender, and yeah
I love the guitar.

Speaker 1 (03:47):
Cool, all right, less, he's going on entertainment. On October tenth,
let's back to your twenty nineteen, the number one album
was Hollywood's Bleeding by Post Malone. The number one song
was by Lizzo. Truth hurts.

Speaker 5 (03:58):
Right, sir, I got them right. Don't text me, tell
us play the moth face. That's friend, Send me down
on the san Ship, shall hold brack get.

Speaker 4 (04:08):
You out of my hell fresh photo with the ball.

Speaker 5 (04:12):
Lighting No man on the Minnesota Mighty Games.

Speaker 1 (04:16):
True, you're a Lizzo fan.

Speaker 2 (04:20):
I am a Lizzo fan. Actually, interesting about that song.
It was the longest running Billboard Hot one hundred chart
topper ever by a solo female rapper.

Speaker 1 (04:31):
Well that's pretty impressive.

Speaker 3 (04:32):
And it was actually.

Speaker 2 (04:33):
Inspired by a heartbreaking voicemail from a guy.

Speaker 1 (04:36):
Lizzo was seen a voicemail that's dumpling. That means that
guy's a guy's gonna break up. Yeah, I know, guy's
going to use a voicemail and breakup for Yeah, he's
no good for you, I know, but she made it
work for her. Yeah, she's definitely on top on that situation,
all right. Marshmallow and Kane Brown, they had the number
one country song with one Thing Right.

Speaker 3 (04:56):
It's in all the wrong Things life and every kind
of lost that you came from.

Speaker 6 (05:01):
Ude, I got wine thing right.

Speaker 4 (05:04):
Been the count of guy girls, Mama's don't lie run
away with the wrong crowd.

Speaker 5 (05:08):
On the wrong nights because I've been wrong.

Speaker 4 (05:10):
About a million times.

Speaker 6 (05:12):
Lude, I got wine thing right.

Speaker 1 (05:17):
Now, I'm serious. That's country. So are you a reader?

Speaker 4 (05:23):
I do?

Speaker 3 (05:24):
I like to read?

Speaker 4 (05:25):
Uh?

Speaker 3 (05:26):
Do you like to read?

Speaker 1 (05:27):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (05:27):
I do.

Speaker 3 (05:28):
What's your favorite book?

Speaker 1 (05:30):
I like the Lee Child's books. You know the reader books.
Read your books?

Speaker 6 (05:35):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (05:35):
Yeah, those are good.

Speaker 1 (05:37):
Well, this is October tenth, so I'm twenty nineteen. I
think people were ready for Halloween because Stephen King had
the number of book with the Institute. Did you ever
see the movie Maleficent Malice?

Speaker 6 (05:46):
I did?

Speaker 1 (05:47):
I did? Well here? How do you say that? Okay,
Maleficent Mister Evil, the sequel it came out. It was
number one today in this one. Maleficent and her Goddaughter
are they questioned, their family ties up buying them, and
then they're being pulled in different directions by impending nuptials
and unexplained allies. And then a new dark force comes

(06:09):
into the picture. Did you see that one? No, I
didn't see that one, Angelina, Joe Lee el Fanning, Michelle Pfeiffer.
So well, we know you like rock music. This was
way before your time. Nineteen seventy seven, Aerosmith, they were
playing a concert in Philadelphia. Well, someone throw an M
eight on stage. Then when it exploded, it hurt Stephen
Tyler as cornea and it her guitarist Joe Perry's hand,

(06:31):
So the concert was over. They had to be taken
to the hospital and treated all that. So the next year,
just to show that there were no hard feelings stories
the people of Philadelphia, Aerosmith, they came back and played again.
In that concert. Steve fen Tyler, he got hit in
the head with a beer bottle.

Speaker 3 (06:42):
Oh my gosh, geez.

Speaker 1 (06:45):
What was your first concert?

Speaker 2 (06:48):
First concert was Backstreet Boys. I was in the eighth grade.

Speaker 3 (06:53):
What was your first concert?

Speaker 1 (06:55):
My first concert I think was Holland Oates. That's probably
about in eighth grade.

Speaker 3 (07:00):
That's a good one.

Speaker 1 (07:01):
So, I mean, you can definitely tell the genre or
the age gap there.

Speaker 4 (07:05):
You know.

Speaker 1 (07:06):
I love that though, But it's not like either one
of us said like Aerosmith or def Leppard or something.

Speaker 3 (07:11):
I know that would have been really cool.

Speaker 1 (07:13):
Alright, And you want to see what happened in the
history on the world in October the tenth, Yes, I do.
Seventeen eighty, the deadliest hurricane everybody hit the Atlantic Ocean happened.
It was called the Great Hurricane in seventeen eighty. Remember
they didn't name them yet. So it hit Barbados with
windspeeds over two and a miles an hour. Then it
told them he destroyed Barbados. Then it took out all
those other islands around it, Grenada, Saint Vincen, Saint Lucilla,

(07:34):
all those kind of moves. Yeah, and then when it
came up and it was heading for the United States,
then it veered right veared into the ocean.

Speaker 6 (07:40):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (07:40):
I never did make manfall in the United States, which
is kind of good on that part. But this is
how destructive was in those ill little islands. Remember this
is the seventeen hundred, so when the huge population still
killed twenty seven thousand people.

Speaker 3 (07:52):
WHOA, wow, that's a lot.

Speaker 1 (07:55):
Eighteen forty five the US Naval Academy. Yeah, it was
founded out there in Annapolis, Maryland. Do you like shooting pool?

Speaker 3 (08:01):
Yeah? Always fun.

Speaker 1 (08:03):
In the eighteen hundreds, billiard balls they were made from
ivory from elephants tusks, so they were really expensive and
kind of hard to get on. In eighteen sixty five,
up in all been in New York, this guy John Hyatt,
he solved that problem. He took this band new invention
called plastic. Now he modified it into what's called celluloid. Now,
if you looked at those billiard balls and you felt him,
you cannot tell the difference between the celluloid and the

(08:23):
ivory balls. They became really popular all around. Then they
figured out there was a difference between those balls the
celluloid balls. Yeah, they were flammable. He hit them just right,
they'd actually blow up.

Speaker 4 (08:36):
I know now.

Speaker 1 (08:37):
I think it would make pool a little more exciting
to myself with the balls. If you're wonder and today
pool balls they're made out of a penelic reson or
something like that.

Speaker 3 (08:46):
Okay, we're sife.

Speaker 1 (08:48):
In eighteen eighty six, Griswold Lorillard. He was a rebel. Yep.
He wore a short black dinner jacket to a ball
in Tuxedo, New York. So when he walked in, everybody thought,
what a goofball. Nobody had ever seen anything so ridiculous
in their entire life. Now, as people watched him throughout
the ball, he would talk and dance with the ladies
and he just had a great time. By the end
of the night, everybody thought that that jacket was pretty cool.

(09:09):
So tuxedos, they've been worn to fancy events ever since then.
It's cool now, this would have been embarrassing. In nineteen
fifty seven, President of the United States Eisenhower, he had
to apologize to the finance Minister of Ghana. See the
finance Minister of Ghana. He was visiting the United States
on official business.

Speaker 6 (09:25):
He was.

Speaker 1 (09:26):
Refused service of a restaurant in Dover, Delaware. Yeah, because
he was black. That wouldn't be fun to have to
sorry about that, dude.

Speaker 4 (09:33):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (09:35):
Nineteen seventy three, US Vice President Sparrow Wagne he had
to resign. Now everybody thinks it was because of Whitewater
or Watergate and all that kind of stuff. No, he
was under investigation for tax fraud. Also, I just that thing.
That's how Gerald Ford replaced him. Seventeen, nineteen seventy eight
Congress they approved the silver Dollar with Susan B. Anthony
on it, you know, the lady who was really big

(09:56):
on trying to get women the right to vote and
all that kind of sting.

Speaker 2 (09:58):
Ye.

Speaker 1 (09:58):
Yes, So when it came now, they put it on
there and what didn't go over so good? Everybody's got
that replica of Susan B. Anthony just looked like a
really ugly Benjamin Franklin.

Speaker 3 (10:07):
I had to look it up.

Speaker 2 (10:08):
I had to google it, and yeah, I feel like
they could have done her a little bit better.

Speaker 3 (10:13):
Oh yeah, they.

Speaker 1 (10:14):
Didn't do any props at all, you know. Okay, so
now got that awesome podcast out now, but your experience,
you've been doing podcasting for a while. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (10:23):
I started podcasting in twenty twenty with two of my
friends and three girls one pod, and then I started
my own podcast. It was called Imperfectly Purposed And now
I have on the record with Kelly, so just kind
of navigating the whole podcast world.

Speaker 1 (10:41):
Well, that's good. Where do you see it going? What
do you want to do? I mean, would you like
to concentrate on concerts or artists or just all the
whole music industry all together.

Speaker 2 (10:50):
Yeah, definitely the whole music industry altogether. I really liked
doing interviews, and I really like having the solo episodes.
As I'm sure you know too, it's sometimes it's to
just be able to like recap what's going on in
the music industry. There's so much every single day there's
something new going on, so I feel like it's always exciting.

Speaker 1 (11:08):
Yeah, and there's always definitely there's always something to talk
about in the music industry, right because we're kind of laughing.
I mean, you have bad Bunny going on. And then
I don't remember, there was a bus crass or some
band I don't know here in Colorado not too long ago.
I don't think they're a huge band, but they were
on the radio.

Speaker 3 (11:25):
Oh I don't know if I heard about that.

Speaker 1 (11:28):
So yeah, Okay, your dream guest, who is it?

Speaker 3 (11:31):
Dream Guests?

Speaker 2 (11:32):
Oh, that's a good one. I'll have to get back
to you on that. I feel like I have the
list is too longer right now.

Speaker 1 (11:39):
Now, remember Taylor, she's going to go on her fiances
so you can take her out right off the bat.

Speaker 3 (11:44):
Yeah, oh, mark that down.

Speaker 1 (11:48):
Plus it's kind of like, yeah, ever, okay, we see
who was born on October the tenth.

Speaker 3 (11:53):
Yes, joke joke showed just shibb day. He left this shiver.

Speaker 5 (12:03):
We simple just shibts day.

Speaker 2 (12:06):
And you don't do.

Speaker 1 (12:09):
You have those girlfriends who are just kind of klutzy.
You know they're gonna trip and stumble and bump themselves
all the time. It's me, how was that?

Speaker 4 (12:16):
You?

Speaker 1 (12:17):
Well, you would have got along just right with Earl Dixon.
See he was born in Grandview, Tennessee, in eighteen ninety two. Now,
Earl's wife, Josephine, she was a real klutz around the house.
I mean she was constantly hurting herself so much so
that by nineteen twenty Earl he ended up inventing the
band aid. Yeah he was. Yeah, they before then, all
they had for first daid was basically cotton cotton swabs

(12:39):
and tape that really didn't stick. And he couldn't do
that for Josephine anymore, so he invented the band aid.

Speaker 3 (12:45):
Wow, I had no idea.

Speaker 2 (12:46):
I did not know that.

Speaker 1 (12:48):
Now, Josephine klutzingess made those two a lot of money.
Love that now, Earl. He died night when he was
only sixty eight years old. Josephine, she actually outlived him,
all right. The first of American theater Helen Hayes. She
was born in Washington, DC in nineteen ninety. Now, she
was the first actress, well, the first woman to win
the Oscar Emmy and Grammy and the Emmy? Did I

(13:12):
say that? The egot basically?

Speaker 4 (13:13):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (13:14):
So yeah, she was a second person overall. Some composer
was the first one. But yeah, she got that. Are
you into like theater and stuff like that too?

Speaker 3 (13:21):
Yeah, that's amazing. I didn't know that about Helen Hayes.

Speaker 1 (13:24):
We'll get this. When she won her first Oscars in
nineteen thirty one, she didn't win again. She won her
second Oscar nineteen seventy. Really that was for the movie Airport.

Speaker 3 (13:33):
Wow. It's never give up on your dreams.

Speaker 1 (13:34):
You never know right, time's changed and then they can
sip clearer and you can come back and win it.

Speaker 3 (13:40):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (13:40):
She was married Ellen, Yeah, she was married once for
thirty years and they had two children when they divorced.
She died nineteen ninety three, at ninety two years old
from heart failure. Okay, Now everybody, I think you're gonna
agree with me. Everybody, this is a rock star.

Speaker 4 (13:55):
My life.

Speaker 1 (14:00):
All of guys.

Speaker 6 (14:03):
See he start only stuck brow he sound living, had
us sad.

Speaker 1 (14:15):
Now this is not a rock star.

Speaker 5 (14:17):
They very damns.

Speaker 1 (14:19):
He's selling etro.

Speaker 4 (14:20):
Men wanted to say, then will come in when you
will to swing? What will they say about me when
he comes out?

Speaker 6 (14:35):
Still?

Speaker 1 (14:37):
So do you concur was I right?

Speaker 3 (14:39):
Yeah, I'd say van Halen's a little bit more rock
right out.

Speaker 1 (14:42):
David Lee rock seventy one today. He's born in Bloomington, Indiana,
in nineteen fifty four. Of course, he was the lead
singer for Van Halen from nineteen seventy four to nineteen
eighty five. Now you know how he got the lead
singing gig for van Halen.

Speaker 3 (14:54):
I don't he.

Speaker 1 (14:55):
His dad had some money and so David had a
whole bunch of sound equipment. So the van Halen brothers
they said, well, he said, I'll bring that if you
guys will hire me. So they made him the lead
singer just because they didn't have to buy a rent
any of their sound equipment.

Speaker 3 (15:07):
Wow, right place, right time, right money.

Speaker 1 (15:09):
It worked out good because with van Halen with David
selling Singing lad they sold fifty seven million records. Sammy
Hagar they only sold twenty seven million.

Speaker 3 (15:18):
WHOA, that's very interesting, David.

Speaker 1 (15:20):
He's only six solo albums now. Van Halen they screwed
him over a few times though. After they got after
they broke up, they would get him and let's say, hey,
we're getting back together and make all the press conferences
and all that, and then they'd back out the last second.
They did that a couple of times to him. Now, David,
he did retire in twenty twenty one, but I think
it was right when Eddie died and all that kind
of stuff, and he was like, I'm done, they're not

(15:40):
bringing back and all that. So he said this year
he came back. He goes, this is my second retirement.
So he actually toured this summer.

Speaker 3 (15:47):
That's awesome.

Speaker 1 (16:02):
Say he was a mean you.

Speaker 6 (16:07):
T who is man chum danos Yay?

Speaker 2 (16:12):
That was thirteen year old Tanya Tucker and her first
hit song, Delta Dawn. Tanya was born in Seminole, Texas,
in nineteen fifty eight and she's sixty seven. She is
one of the few child singers who was able to
be successful as an adult. Some of her number one
songs are just another love, one love at a time,
I'll come back as another woman and it don't come easy.

Speaker 3 (16:34):
She has a son and a daughter, and she.

Speaker 2 (16:37):
Won her first Grammy, well her first two Grammys at
the age of sixty one. She won Best Country Song
for Bring My Flowers Now and won Best Country Album
for While I'm Living Wait ChIL.

Speaker 1 (16:50):
Who cares about little boy that talk too much?

Speaker 6 (16:54):
Half saying it all so down?

Speaker 5 (16:57):
Came over for Sovereignda to come on, bab, come on
out the be The one.

Speaker 2 (17:05):
To that was Eric Martin, singing lead for Mister Big.
Eric is sixty five. He was born in Long Island,
New York in nineteen sixty. He started out singing in
punk bands and joined Mister Big in nineteen eighty eight.
I Only Want to Be with You is pretty much
their only hit here in the States, but Mister Big

(17:27):
is huge in Japan and most of Southeast Asia. Mister
Big played their last show in February in India. Mister
Big is no more, but Eric has started a new band,
the Eric Martin Band or emb for short, and will
be touring with them. He's married. He was married in
two thousand and two.

Speaker 1 (17:45):
Like eighties little before you? Did you like eighties rock?

Speaker 3 (17:48):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (17:49):
I feel like those are always like special memories of
like driving around with my parents and they would always
have that kind of music on.

Speaker 1 (17:55):
That is So, were you a fan of The Little Mermaid?

Speaker 3 (17:57):
Yes? I love The Little Mermaid.

Speaker 1 (17:59):
Actor Jackie Benson. She's sixty four. She was born in Rockford,
Illinois in nineteen sixty one. Guess what she was the
voice a Little Mermaid?

Speaker 3 (18:06):
Oh, that's awesome.

Speaker 1 (18:08):
She was Ariel and all those She also voiced Barbie
and all those Toy Story movies. Also, and did you
receive Thumberlina? Yes, she was Dumberlina also.

Speaker 3 (18:17):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (18:18):
Yeah, her voice is like just pure childhood memories for sure.

Speaker 1 (18:22):
She got married nineteen eighty four and they have two kids.
Mary Loupez he's fifty two. He's born in Chula Vista, California.
In nineteen seventy three. Got famous for playing Slater on
Say by the Bell and then of course what a
thousand different reunion shows that they had something like that.
On Dancing with the Stars, he got second place. He
lost to Emma Smith, the Hall of Fame football player.

(18:42):
He's pretty much been a host on TV. He's most
have done a lot more than acting. He was on
Extra for nine years. He's been on Access Hollywood since
twenty nineteen.

Speaker 6 (18:50):
Now.

Speaker 1 (18:50):
He married actress Ali Landry for two weeks. That's when
she found out that he cheated on her at his
bachelor party and she was done.

Speaker 3 (18:57):
WHOA not cool, Mario No, So then he.

Speaker 1 (19:00):
Didn't have a basket party. So he married his second
wife in twenty twelve and they actually have one daughter.
In two seconds.

Speaker 3 (19:06):
Oh man, he learned his lesson.

Speaker 1 (19:08):
I guess, oh, I hope.

Speaker 6 (19:09):
So she welcome?

Speaker 3 (19:17):
Then is that you just welcomed me?

Speaker 2 (19:21):
Sho?

Speaker 5 (19:26):
You'sig y'all going.

Speaker 4 (19:29):
Up in on?

Speaker 2 (19:31):
He just goes by Maya. She was born in Washington,
d c. In nineteen seventy nine, so she's forty six today.
She started out training as a dancer, and she switched
to singing, which was a good call for her. As
popular as she is in the United States, she's also
bigger globally. She sold over twenty million more records outside
the United States than in it.

Speaker 3 (19:52):
Some of her hits.

Speaker 2 (19:53):
Include It's All About Me, Moving On, Case of the
X and Lady Marmalade with Pink Christina and Little Kim.
Maya married in twenty thirteen, and get this, she married herself.
She says, it's not weird, it's self love. She does
not think all men are bad. It's all about her
own self work.

Speaker 1 (20:11):
That's right. I hate to tell her, but it is weird.

Speaker 2 (20:16):
I know. I guess it was like a spiritually she
married herself, which it wasn't legal.

Speaker 1 (20:23):
But she made sure that she did put it out
there though, that all men aren't bad.

Speaker 3 (20:26):
Yeah, they're not all bad.

Speaker 1 (20:28):
So one, but you know one made her marry yourself.

Speaker 3 (20:31):
Yes, definitely, there was a one. There was a bad one.

Speaker 1 (20:36):
There's so you want to hear all these, you know, Herod,
we just kind of like give you that little here
it is. Here's Maya. She married herself and have had
a couple of hit songs. But if you rarely want
to get into music, man, you got to listen to
Kelly's podcast, and she did want to get into the details,
won't you.

Speaker 2 (20:49):
Oh definitely, I love asking the musicians that are on there,
you know, questions, all the questions.

Speaker 3 (20:55):
If I had Maya, we would get deep into that.

Speaker 1 (20:58):
You'd want the dish.

Speaker 3 (20:59):
Uh oh oh, yeah, that'll be a goal, Well, the
goal will.

Speaker 1 (21:02):
Be to have my on and the podcast is on
everywhere I'm assuming.

Speaker 2 (21:06):
Yeah, it's on Apple, Audible, Spotify, you can find it
pretty much anywhere.

Speaker 3 (21:11):
And it's on the record with Kelly.

Speaker 1 (21:13):
So if you can't remember on the record with Kelly,
well then you've got problems. But if you can't and
today's show notes, we'll put it on a link on
the bottom so you can get right over to our
website with no problem at all.

Speaker 3 (21:23):
Well, thank you.

Speaker 1 (21:24):
All right, we end with a quote of the day.
Our quote of the well do you know Orson Wells
was oh, oh he is a really bad actor.

Speaker 3 (21:31):
Yes, yes, yes, yes, okay.

Speaker 1 (21:33):
He died to day in nineteen eighty five at seventy
years old. His quote is, my doctor told me to
quit having intimate dinners for four unless there are three
other people there.

Speaker 2 (21:42):
Oh no, I know.

Speaker 1 (21:44):
Well, thank you for being here today. You've been great.

Speaker 3 (21:46):
Thanks for having me.

Speaker 2 (21:47):
I really enjoyed talking with you, and I love listening
to your podcast and all the different facts that you know.

Speaker 3 (21:52):
And yeah, you're really good at.

Speaker 2 (21:54):
What you do.

Speaker 1 (21:55):
Well, thank you, as do you. So that's why they
need to make sure they listen to on the record
with Kelly. Yes, go listen, all right, and thank you
all for listening to me and Kelly today. It's been awesome.
And make sure you follow follow both of our podcasts.
Listen to us back to back every day.

Speaker 3 (22:08):
That's a plan. The better take that, Bice.

Speaker 1 (22:12):
Okay, So all you people out there who listen to
the Country Inderground Radio, you know that we always end
with the one of our artists that we play on
the station. Well today in honor at Tanya Tucker. If
you've been listening, you know that we play her niece,
Kelly Tucker. This is Callie song Country Couture. You guys,
have an awesome day and we'll talk tomorrow.

Speaker 5 (22:30):
They called me and Bobby hold down, hoty.

Speaker 1 (22:37):
Got the lane of things?

Speaker 3 (22:39):
Did you know?

Speaker 5 (22:40):
I was a beauty clink live in the Highlight by
in but on live.

Speaker 1 (22:50):
But if I get be the deal?

Speaker 4 (22:55):
Jeez, you put me in a Vegas scene.

Speaker 6 (23:00):
He's a staff.

Speaker 5 (23:01):
I'm seeing the same massors his up in my pickup truck.
Didn't really even go some monag didn't quiet down on
cod im up visited and he's but I don't read

(23:23):
up and.

Speaker 3 (23:25):
Never of the post stake.

Speaker 5 (23:28):
So don't walk about the Garlan Rings kind of thig deal.

Speaker 1 (23:33):
My co wasn't high used.

Speaker 5 (23:36):
Their bushi was a my intent, but the pigre as
a gomble on me.

Speaker 1 (23:42):
You know, PA jeans.

Speaker 5 (23:44):
They should put me in a magazine to be the
stuff I'm seeing the same Baser in my pickup truck
didn't really even go some mertage. I didn't an EQUI
out it down on gosh.

Speaker 6 (24:03):
So not
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