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October 26, 2024 55 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Live from Toronto to the world. This is Josh Holiday Live.
Josh is like a snoop talker. Josh is the same
level as me.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
Like this vibe is just like strong and masculine and
tough talk that rocks.

Speaker 1 (00:14):
Got something to say?

Speaker 3 (00:15):
What do you have to say?

Speaker 4 (00:16):
The phone lines are now open Kyles six four seven
six yo. Josh operators are standing by. Raise yourself. Josh
Holiday Live starts.

Speaker 2 (00:27):
No, good morning. It is the twenty eighth of September. Oh,
September is drifting away, Summer's over, September is almost gone.
How else can this this next couple of days go wrong?

(00:51):
I'm Josh, he of the show title Josh Holiday Live,
and I'm joined as as usual by.

Speaker 3 (00:56):
Bert in the Morning Canada.

Speaker 2 (01:00):
We're in the middle of New Jersey, Yes, offering that
unmatched US perspective.

Speaker 3 (01:09):
WHOA, yeah you want that? Yeah, you don't get enough
of that?

Speaker 2 (01:13):
No, we barely do. We hardly hear anything about what's
happening south of the border here. It's almost like there's
a a firewall where hardly anything gets up here. I
did see though, the weather porn, the hurricane happening down there.

Speaker 3 (01:34):
Yeah, it's not porn. If it's washing away your town.

Speaker 2 (01:37):
No, but I think I think like we.

Speaker 3 (01:40):
Oh, we watch it and we consume it as such. Yeah, yeah,
maybe so if you're not, if you're not actually impacted,
it's easier.

Speaker 2 (01:49):
Yeah, Hurricane Helene, it's it's it's such a gentle name,
such a sort of a French Oh Helene is coming over,
but pretty catastrophic and yeah, it's weird. Like like I think,
especially in places where we're not quite as effected by
some of these major weather events, it does become a
bit of weather former. You're like, oh my god, look

(02:11):
at that, Like it's.

Speaker 3 (02:12):
Just yeah, I think I heard where a hurricane has
never hit Tennessee. Oh and how is that possible? But
or that you know, since we've been.

Speaker 2 (02:21):
Yeah, it feels like, yeah, it feels like it's in
that area where something.

Speaker 3 (02:25):
Shit enough it just has dodged it every single time
and maybe they just got a little rain here there,
but never like a direct impact.

Speaker 2 (02:32):
Huh. The last time there's a big hurricane and I
can't remember the name of it, because there's's they seem
to be more and more regular. There was one that
happened that hit pretty directly in the Naples Fort Myers area,
and that one watch I watched with a little bit
more kind of interest because for a long time, like

(02:57):
many many, many many years up until about five years
ago go my mother had a little little condo Inland.
Thankfully she's a golfer on a golf course Inland from
Fort Myers, but we would often track down to that
strip of Fort Myers Beach, which is essentially like a

(03:19):
it's really well at sea level, but even even that,
like there's you got to go over a bridge to
get there to begin with, so it's almost like a
little island of itself. And then seeing the devastation there
and being able to identify places you've been adds a
whole new gravity to the situation. So we're like, oh,
I've been in that building, and you've been to the

(03:41):
little town square and that's totally wiped out the pier.
And then we would watch YouTube channels where they would
show the cleanup and the rebuilding, and you could actually
see stuff that so even though never lived there or
or that's.

Speaker 3 (04:00):
Not that's not nothing, no, you just just being.

Speaker 2 (04:04):
Able to see, like to see known spots, it adds
more like, oh my god, like I've been in that
spot and it's it's basically torn right down and it
got a little bit more gravity. But I feel terrible
for the people who live there, and and for having
an incredibly defacy governor, governor who who not so recently

(04:29):
mandated that that the mention of climate change be removed
from from government sites.

Speaker 3 (04:35):
In Florida's right when this one.

Speaker 2 (04:38):
And also he's he's very all socialism. We don't like
the socialism. Uh. And now he's gonna have to uh
use di mastery, use some of that socialism uh to
get his uh his state rebuilt. And also another reminder
that the under Project twenty twenty five, the Trump administration

(05:02):
wants to get rid of the get get rid of
all the.

Speaker 3 (05:06):
Oh they don't want to get rid of it. They
just want to sell it to ACU Weather.

Speaker 2 (05:10):
Yeah. Well yeah, so we pay for that data private private. Yeah.
But just in general, they.

Speaker 3 (05:15):
Because there's a market for like people who fly into
hurricanes and take measurements of pressure and whatnot. I don't
think so.

Speaker 2 (05:24):
I Also I also find it odd that there's still
people a lot of people who are like, wow, you know,
climate change is went really well, it was just a cycle.
This is despite like overwhelming evidence, like they can't.

Speaker 3 (05:40):
Friend of mine, I said something about climate change. He said,
you mean weather And I was like, okay, dude, you can't.
They got guys to vote in their entire women to
vote in their entire careers to this. And you know,
did you notice that the Northwest Passage is open?

Speaker 2 (05:56):
Yeah, and that it's it's been there's been floods in California,
huge droughts.

Speaker 3 (06:04):
Like rivers, the atmospheric rivers that turned you know, that
brought you know, feet and feet of snow into the
Mammoth whatever Valley in California in the last couple of years.

Speaker 2 (06:15):
And every time you turn the channel that there's a
fire somewhere. It's like Greece is burning up, California is
burning up, Texas burned, everywhere is.

Speaker 3 (06:23):
Burning up so that you can't put that out with water.

Speaker 2 (06:26):
Yeah, but yeah, it's not climate change. It's just uh,
just it just happens, that's all.

Speaker 3 (06:33):
It is intensifying devastation.

Speaker 2 (06:36):
Well, the weird thing is it's like, especially in the
US outside of California, it's really like some of these
storms usually are battering and tornadoes and stuff are battering
red red areas like politically red areas, the areas that
are most likely to not believe in uh in science
and experts.

Speaker 3 (06:57):
So we had, you know, I saw where I kind
of grew up in Tornado Alley, as it were, But
Tornado Alley has actually shifted to the east and a
little bit to the south.

Speaker 2 (07:06):
So where where's it now?

Speaker 3 (07:07):
No longer considered to be like the incidents as they
tracked tornadoes and their devastation. Over time, it's gradually kind
of moved more towards like Arkansas, Louisiana and into the
places that it kind of hadn't been really. I mean,
there's a map you can I don't know, you got
to google it, but you know, it's just on app
There's still tornadoes in the middle of the continent, but

(07:29):
it's just kind of like the the number and intensity
has kind of shifted over time.

Speaker 2 (07:36):
Have you been in proximity to a tornado or area?
I have where not.

Speaker 3 (07:43):
Really close, but close enough that I, you know, got
my kid and the dog and the bike helmets and
the crib mattress. We lived in Oklahoma City for a
couple of years. Oh okay, you know, they they they do,
they get their share. Yeah, yeah, We're going to go
in the laundry room and wait for the lights to
go out, basically is what that was.

Speaker 2 (08:03):
But it you know, well, I was a lot. This
is a long time ago. When I first graduated university,
got a work exchange in California, and so my friend
and I drove across what was left of Root sixty six,
which a lot of it, and it was I forty
but we were in all along the way we saw
these alminous clouds, the ones where you can see light

(08:25):
above and light below.

Speaker 3 (08:26):
But we're in this small town a wall cloud of course.

Speaker 2 (08:30):
Yeah, we're in this small town. I think it was
in Kansas. And it started looking kind of gloomy, and
then the air raids I started going off, and so
we went to the better the Business Bureau whatever you
call the business air business, the public Business Office, what

(08:51):
do you call that place? The Chamber of Commerce. We
went in there and it was an old building. They
had a big stone basement. So we went in there.
You could it didn't hit that town directly, but you
could hear sounded like like like a large locomotive like
in the distance, like like you really really hear the
power of it.

Speaker 3 (09:10):
I didn't get that close to where I heard the
locomotive sound.

Speaker 2 (09:13):
Yeah, we were.

Speaker 3 (09:15):
Yeah, it was like, actually you're you're that's a little
closer than I got.

Speaker 2 (09:19):
I think, yeah, it's not not a nice place to be.
It's like I was also my car was like, oh,
it's gonna hail. It's gonna try especially on it like
on a trip, like it's not my my home? What
am what's going to happen?

Speaker 4 (09:30):
If?

Speaker 3 (09:31):
Right?

Speaker 2 (09:32):
Anyway? And I think I was caught. This is when
I was a really really young child. We were on
we had a place on a lake up there, and
we were about five hundred like a half a mile
across from our little island, fishing in this bay with
my dad and my uncle. I was a little kid,
and then we started hearing kind of thunderstorms and I

(09:52):
was like, I think we should go. I think we
should go, and they're like, nah, no, that's fine. And
then then basically like hurricane. I think just getting back
to our island from that little bay, I think we
ran over our canoe because it had blown blown away
and everything.

Speaker 3 (10:05):
Being in on the water when there's a storm coming
up is there's just there's there's so few it's just
a feeling of vulnerability. Oh yeah, it is unmatched.

Speaker 2 (10:17):
Yeah, well, I think I think the only like I
had something happened. I guess the only saving grace is
it was in the summer, so the water what you
wouldn't got a hypothermia or anything like that.

Speaker 3 (10:28):
But the thing about it is you're only going to
get that kind of intense storm in the summer mostly.

Speaker 2 (10:33):
Oh, I guess that's true.

Speaker 3 (10:34):
But you can have that atmospheric energy, that heat.

Speaker 2 (10:36):
But you do have you. I'm sure you've heard the
legendary song about the Uh I'm not. The legend lives
on from the ship from the.

Speaker 3 (10:49):
One of the greatest Canadians of all time.

Speaker 2 (10:51):
Great like they call get your Goomy the legend loom.
There's actually uh wreck of the wrack of the Evan Ficiero.
The gales of November came early.

Speaker 3 (11:02):
Really yeah right, those are just that that's just like
a cold winter storm. That's not a thunderstorm.

Speaker 2 (11:08):
The bell chime twenty nine time if you're.

Speaker 3 (11:10):
In it, I guess that's the point.

Speaker 2 (11:12):
Yeah, I like that song I have. There's a kind
of a niche Canadian band, the Rio Statics, actually play
hockey well, he's in our league, one of the main
guys from Rio Statics. But they did a cover that's
pretty cool. Yeah was that? Oh yeah, they didn't keep going.

(11:34):
Oh they did a good cover of mmfitshow a little
bit more rock, litle more guitar. Check it out.

Speaker 3 (11:39):
Watch there's somebody put together a Gordon Lightfoot documentary here
in the last five or six years, maybe like twenty
eighteen timeframe. That came out on a streaming platform. It
was quite good.

Speaker 2 (11:50):
Yeah. Oh, he's a good Canadian legend. I don't know
if you like, what is your awareness of a band
called the Tragically Hip.

Speaker 3 (11:59):
I don't. I don't know. Maybe I've heard of that.

Speaker 2 (12:02):
But okay, so very like not very little so. Through
the nineties and early two thousands they were kind of
like the biggest Canadian band in Canada, but hadn't really
got nearly as much traction in the US, Like they
would do shows there, but a lot of the people
who would show up were Canadians living in the US.

(12:25):
The lead singer, Gord Downey, his performance is kind of
like he really like it reminded a little bit of
Joe Cocker, just the way he sort of like, you know,
was so into the music and singing and the yeah,
oh you mean the movement. Yeah, yeah, just not yeah,
not the voice so much. But so the band was

(12:50):
kind of like this this the unofficial band of Canada
kind of you know, people people are really were really
into it. And he he passed away a number of
years ago and you know, even the Prime Minister was
at the funeral and it was like a major sad
moment in Canada when it happened. Now there is so

(13:15):
for everybody. There's a new documentary out. I want to
say it's on Prime. Could be wrong there, but you can.
You can try and find it. It's a new documentary
on the tragically Hip. I have a tragically Hip anecdote.
This is God. I don't know how many maybe like

(13:38):
seven or eight years ago. There is an opening at
a radio station in Minneapolis, Saint Paul. They have a
radio station there called the Current, which is part of
the Minnesota Public Radio system, and it is a what
you would call in the radio format wise triple a station.

Speaker 3 (14:00):
An adult album alternative of course.

Speaker 2 (14:02):
Adult album alternative, and in terms of influence, probably the
most influential one in North America, if not the world.
It and and probably CASEYRW in California. But they had
a morning show opening and I was going to go

(14:22):
down an interview for it on a Monday, and I
noticed that when you know, when I was checking out
what's happening in the town, there was a preseason Minnesota
Wild hockey game happening on Monday night, but also also

(14:44):
the tragically Hip We're playing at a club there, which
in Canada they play huge venues, but they were playing
like a it's still a decent sized club. But they
were playing a club in Minneapolis on the same night,
on the Monday night. So I flew down on the
Sunday and I was on the airplane. I was sitting

(15:06):
next to some dude and I noticed he has like
a tragically Hip like it has the cover of one
of their albums on the cover of this little journal okay,
and I thought I had dates and stuff. So I
was like, oh, hey, maybe it's there, like I know
they're going to play there. Maybe he's the road manager
or something. I said, Oh are you are you like
part of the road thing for It's like, oh, I'm
I'm the drummer.

Speaker 3 (15:27):
Uh. And so, so you were exposed as a.

Speaker 2 (15:31):
Well fan sort of well yeah, I mean, but it's
Gord Downing, like the lead singers, is sort of like
the the real Yeah yeah, so Canadian. I know, Hey,
Gordon gord Downey, he's going to take the mantle, so
he Uh so gord Downy is the is the face

(15:54):
of the band, and you know, the other guys are
there and stuff, but unless you're like a really really
hardcore fan, you maybe wouldn't recognize that the base and
the drummer's always like way off in the back. Anyway,
So I chat with this guy and I don't know
how we got around to it, but we were talking
about Florida and how his parents in law have a

(16:19):
little place in in in Florida. I said where and
he said, oh, it's sort of in this this hysteria
and I was it was close to where my mom lives.
And I said, oh, like what what community? And he's
like copp Relief and I'm like, that's where that's my
mom's like a little golf community. And he's married to
a woman's sportscaster here who I know lived like just

(16:44):
up the street from my mother in this little community.
And then I put it all together. I'm like, oh,
he like, literally, he lives just up this His parents
in law lived just up the street from from this place.
So then he said, oh, you know another weird thing
about that community. You know what, you know who my

(17:05):
mom golf with? And I knew. I said, Anne Murray.
Who do you know who Anne Murray is? Do? Yeah? Famous,
like a famous kind of Canadian, another famous Canadian. And
he said, yeah, my mom's golf with Anne Murray. And
and my mom had also golfed in a group with
her as well in this golf course. She also lived there,

(17:27):
so so that was that. And then I noticed, like
I started looking around the plane and across the way,
I recognized one of the guitarist because he has long,
long hair and very distinctive look, and then gored with
his his kind of his retro looking hat, and I
was like, oh my god, this is the actual band.
So I got on the the guest list, although it

(17:48):
wasn't totally necessary. And then on that Monday night, first
we went to the Minnesota Wild hockey game and it
went to overtime, but we jetted on over to this
club where the Tragically hip we're playing. And as I
went in the door, my favorite song is playing that,
which is a Leaf's theme song, fifty mission cap and

(18:14):
it was it was a cool experience. And that was
I think the last time I saw I saw them
live and it was a pretty intimate club experience and
and yeah, so that was it was kind of a
little tragically Hip story.

Speaker 3 (18:28):
But the dogs Now I've got to go, you know,
listen to some Ann Murray and Light, you know, like
I want to hear that.

Speaker 2 (18:36):
Now, Snowbirds, I think the But check out that documentary.
It's getting I think it played the Toronto International Film Festival,
and it's getting pretty good reviews. And I see some people,
some American celeb types or or figures, recommending it, and
some of them are saying, oh yeah, I kind of
knew about it before, and then some are are discovering

(18:58):
it for the first time. Yeah, I don't know. Look
up while I'm blob in here, you can look up
tragically Hip doc and you'll find the name of it.
I can't remember what it is. I'm old. I don't
remember a lot of things. The good thing I mentioned
that summer is wound down and September is almost over.
I kind of dread the winter. But the only thing

(19:19):
that makes it a little bit better is that hockey
season starts as the weather starts getting colder. I burn
away a lot of time watching Toronto may believe hockey.
I calculated at once because I watch I'll PVR every

(19:40):
game and I'll watch pretty much every game, and I
calculate it one time in terms of like if I
was doing it hourly, it would be three weeks of
nine to five watching hockey over the season.

Speaker 3 (19:54):
Oh, that doesn't sound like that much for a whole season. Well,
it's like eight seven months, right.

Speaker 2 (19:59):
Each game is about two and a half hours, and
there's eighty two games in a regular season.

Speaker 3 (20:04):
The greatest thing is that most of the time was
spent watching no scoring at all.

Speaker 2 (20:10):
It's not a yeah, but okay, but I'll say it's
not like soccer where oh it isn't.

Speaker 3 (20:16):
You're right. It's much more dynamic.

Speaker 2 (20:18):
There's yeah, there's like hitting and way fighting, and there's.

Speaker 3 (20:21):
Way more scoring than in soccer.

Speaker 2 (20:23):
Well even in football. Like like if hockey said every
goal is worth six six six points, it would be
like each game, you know, so football doesn't. There's not
a lot of like touchdowns either. I don't know how
many touchdowns in an average football game. I have no idea, okay,
but probably probably average, like total is five or less.

Speaker 3 (20:46):
I would say, oh, you made between the two teams. Yeah,
that's probably right.

Speaker 5 (20:50):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (20:50):
So an average hockey.

Speaker 3 (20:51):
You're gonna get some field goals, you're gonna get some interceptions. Yeah,
I see what you're saying. But there's an occasional run back.
There's an occasional It doesn't matter. It's it's a sport
that I enjoy in the playoffs, right and otherwise I
make fun of it because I'm a Dallas and then
we shouldn't even have hockey. It's not cold enough.

Speaker 2 (21:10):
Yeah. Well, there's talk of expanding even more, getting even more.

Speaker 3 (21:15):
I think watch them rob another one of your teams
up north.

Speaker 2 (21:18):
I don't think that's good. Like I think the.

Speaker 3 (21:20):
Team's climate like Las Vegas or Phoenix.

Speaker 2 (21:23):
Yeah, I think they'll probably be a hiatus on Phoenix
for a while since they moved to Salt Lake, until
they get their crap together. I've heard the stuff like
bringing it back to Atlanta, Oklahoma City.

Speaker 3 (21:37):
People are so bad off. They're gonna be like, look
at all that frozen water, Go get them.

Speaker 2 (21:41):
Portland. Portland is another one. Yeah, we'll see but of
water Phoenix. So the pre seasons already started, and then
things are going to get underway and that will at
least burn away some of that winter hibernation time that
I do every year.

Speaker 3 (21:57):
The NBA is my comfort food in the in the
water time.

Speaker 2 (22:02):
Is it now? I guess that makes sense, and I
guess for some like some people basketball, I think if
you were doing if if you had a separate league
of hockey in the States, it might be smart to
do it in the warm months. So people are like, oh,
damn so hot, I'm gonna go and watch a hockey game.
Cool off. Sure, Uh, clowns. You like clowns, Maybe you

(22:26):
have a fear of clowns.

Speaker 3 (22:27):
They can they can do what they need to do.

Speaker 2 (22:29):
Yeah, well, clowns can be effective, medically effect. Clowns can
be medically effective, Believe it or not. I will tell
you about that in a moment talked at Rocks.

Speaker 1 (22:40):
It's Josh Holiday Live. Need to be heard. Tell your
phone to call six four seven six yo, Josh.

Speaker 2 (22:52):
Yes, I on a Saturday morning. It's the twenty eighth
of September. I'm Josh. She's burt.

Speaker 3 (23:01):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (23:02):
That song used to be the theme of Oh my God,
I really am getting old. The Samantha Bee Show Full
Frontal with Samantha Bee, which is kind of a great,
great daily show type show. She now has a doing
a politically theme podcast on The Daily Beast that I

(23:25):
think just started this week. Uh, clowns, love them, hate them.
A lot of people have a have a fear of clowns.
They're scared. Yeah, they could actually be helpful. They did
a study that found out that spending time with a
clown can actually shorten a child's hospitals day.

Speaker 3 (23:47):
Yeah, because right they're scared, they get out, they get better,
and they just get right on out.

Speaker 2 (23:51):
Yeah, because they are so scared of the clowns, they
want to get out of the hospital, right. So they
have something called medical clowns. They're specifically trained to work
with patients and hospitals. Yeah, I have been showing to
reduce pain, alleviate stress, and anxiety and kids and their
families during medical treatment. They basically did a test here

(24:12):
where they conducted a test on kids with pneumonia. Those
who got to hang out with clowns were able to
leave hospital after forty three hours compared to seventy hours
for those who didn't see the clowns. The kids who
also hung out with clowns also required less IV treatment
and had better vital signs. So that's kind that's cool.

(24:34):
Let's keep up with Do you like clowns?

Speaker 5 (24:37):
Are you are?

Speaker 3 (24:37):
You're kind of indifferent? I mean there was a time,
you know, because Poulter Guys featured a clown that that
was kind of my first exposure to. Like, not all
clowns are good.

Speaker 2 (24:47):
I guess, and the whole it thing has made a generation.

Speaker 3 (24:51):
A little later. Poulter Guest was when I was fairly young, but.

Speaker 2 (24:54):
Just in general, there is an ouvra of clowns that.

Speaker 3 (24:56):
Are people, don't I mean, the face is painted on
smile potentially, and then you know, you don't know what's
going on behind the scenes, right, that's the problem.

Speaker 2 (25:07):
Yeah, you don't know what those clowns are up to.
I don't like I uh, you know, I was indifferent
when it was sort of just you know you circus
clowns or whatever, like, hey, look they're getting out of
a car, so many of them. But I do I do, like,
like I've gone to circus lay shows and they have
some pretty amusing like like more I think more adult,

(25:30):
more edgy, more more kind of fun fun clowns. And
then I also am.

Speaker 3 (25:35):
A fan of adult clowns.

Speaker 2 (25:38):
I guess I'm a fan of what's evolved from what
they would call Bouffont comedy, which is is basically more
buffoon comedy. It's a little bit more more, a little
bit more like body humor, and a little bit more
kind of edgy, and and.

Speaker 3 (25:57):
And talking like Wolf Barrow with a with a tranquilizer
darkness neck stumbling into a pool kind.

Speaker 2 (26:03):
Of no, I was, okay. The best example I can
use of someone who went to this, I think is
Gautier or Gothier. There's a very famous French clown instructor
in school who taught many many people, but one of
his students was Sasha Baron Cohen, and I would describe

(26:25):
most of the Sasha Baron Cohen's characters as buffoon style clowning,
right like it, Like that makes sense to me. That's
essentially sort of You know that a.

Speaker 3 (26:36):
Lot of times comedians will denigrate another comic as being
a clown, and I don't think that's always appropriate. In fact,
I think there's sometimes when that artistry and form is
very useful and should be well known.

Speaker 2 (26:51):
Yeah, I went to I also went to a show
like we have a fringe vessel here every year where
it's sort of smaller performances, and there's this famous affoon
clown from New York, Red Bastard, who did a show here,
and it was it was like one of one of
the funniest shows I've ever seen. Yeah, I there's some

(27:12):
audience stuff. He went into the audience and made me
reach inside his his essentially his butt.

Speaker 3 (27:19):
Yeah, sure of course that was going to be It
could only be one of the other his pants blow
the waist, that was.

Speaker 2 (27:25):
No, No, it's it's it's his giant kind of costume,
like like look up Red Bastard and you'll see what
he kind of looks like. It's sort of a devilish character,
but he's got these big, kind of bulbleous costume and
and uh, anyway, it was really really funny, Like I
can't get that evilish clown.

Speaker 3 (27:40):
It just looks too bad.

Speaker 2 (27:41):
Yeah, it was, it was. It was very very funny.
But I'm a huge fan of Sasha Baron Cohen and
love that style thing. I didn't have you seen my
my dumb little film yet.

Speaker 3 (27:51):
I have watched a portion.

Speaker 2 (27:53):
Of him, okay, and then you turn it off your I.

Speaker 3 (27:56):
Can only take it a little bit. Actually, what happened
was I was working my way through it in between
other things that I do at this desk, and h
you know, I encountered a restart that knocked out my
saved tabs. That sucks, It really does, because there's a
lot of things that I was just kind of getting
around to, you know, because I'm a digital hoarder.

Speaker 2 (28:16):
I hear you. I hear you. I I sort of
that's what I think, you know, obviously not nearly as
good as that, but I sort of take some inspiration
from from that from from sash Baron Cone because I
love that style of it.

Speaker 3 (28:30):
Makes sense now. I did see you cringing the people
up occasionally. I wasn't sure if she was always on
board with you. Uh she she seemed to just kind
of tolerate you.

Speaker 2 (28:39):
Yeah. Well, but I think that was part of like
the the like she she was in on it, like
she knew.

Speaker 3 (28:43):
What we were up to because you were going so far.

Speaker 2 (28:46):
Yeah, and she was sort of sort of the I guess,
the straight man. She did pretty good job normally, Like
normally that character. Steve Hammerstone is kind of this buffoonish
small town radio host and normally there's, uh, my friend
Lisa bru Is kind of the counterpart is Stephen Tawny show.
She plays a tawny sky punch and offers sort of

(29:07):
that balance. But she wasn't available for the shooting date,
and so this lady had to be the foil in
the in the you know, the straight.

Speaker 3 (29:16):
Person as in her own right? Is that not? Yeah?

Speaker 2 (29:19):
She is not not about one Anna Anna Douglas and
a bunch of stuff. And yeah, there you go. Anyway,
Steve Hammerstone dot com, you can see what we're blabbing
on about. Did you see this? There's a a game
show coming out for the sitcom Friends.

Speaker 3 (29:39):
I did not see that, but I don't know what's
necessary about that.

Speaker 2 (29:43):
Yeah, go ahead, I would agree. It's going to be
a four part competition series, I guess, honoring the thirtieth
anniversary of the show called Fast Friends. Going to be
filmed in this the Friends Experience, which is this big
seventeen thous square foot attraction, uh, all about friends in
New York City. It says, uh quote from racing through

(30:07):
Rachel and Monica's apartment to darting across Joey and Chandler's
bachelor pad and grabbing a coffee at Central Perk. Fans
will relive their favorite moments while being put to the
test with trivia, puzzles and games. It's gonna stream on
Max And uh yeah, uh I I was Friends. I
find is a good barometer of of people's like if

(30:29):
you're if you're kind of getting to know someone, getting
to know their sense of humor.

Speaker 3 (30:32):
Brilliant this, this is the most brilliant thing you've ever
come up with, because you're right, keep going.

Speaker 2 (30:37):
It's just like if if people list Friends is their
favorite show, kind of mid, like it's just kind of
like a eh, it's it's it really did it's mid.
It's mid like mid. You're right about that. It just
really is like mid at this like it was is
the term I would use what what would you use?

Speaker 3 (30:58):
Basic?

Speaker 2 (30:59):
Basic?

Speaker 1 (30:59):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (30:59):
Base, Yeah, very vanilla, Like I see that on a
dating PROFILEM Like I got no.

Speaker 3 (31:04):
It's not good. Yeah, it's not good. It's And I
figured that out when it was on Oh same, yeah,
and I knew Friends that and I watched a lot
of Friends. Yeah, because it was on after and before
other shows I watched, and you know, there just wasn't
that much choice.

Speaker 2 (31:21):
Well, it was on at the same time for for
a number of years. It was kind of not a
the same time, but basically back to back with Seinfeld.
And that's a really good barometer. Like if you say,
what's your favorite Seinfeld? Between these two, if people say Seinfeld,
then you're in the.

Speaker 3 (31:37):
Right favorite show said what's your favorite Seinfeld, which is
of course the correct thing, because Friends is say warmed
up Seinfeld.

Speaker 2 (31:44):
Yeah, well I would, I would say, and I've sort
of made this comparison before Friends is Leno, Seinfeld is Letterman.
That's fine in the same way like it would I
guess you could do it in modern parlance. Do you
prefer Jimmy Fallon or Seth Myers? And if people take.

Speaker 3 (32:04):
Persons, but you know, yeah, it's not that good of
a show. And the people who knew, even I had
I have a friend who was way into Friends in
the nineties and early two thousands, and then I saw
him again. I hadn't seen him in many years, and
he was like, yeah, I tried to go back and
watch it, and it's not very good. I don't know
what I was thinking. I was like, all right, you've grown.

Speaker 2 (32:25):
You figured it out. Yeah, And there's people who go
and like binge it on it. There's so many shows
better to binge.

Speaker 3 (32:32):
Part of it for me is like I look at
this and I'm like, there is no way any of
these people can afford to live in this city.

Speaker 2 (32:38):
Yeah. Well there's that longtime argument where they're living a
way beyond their means of people who just hang out.

Speaker 3 (32:44):
And you know, when you when you go past I've been.
I happened to be with a friend of mine who
was into friends a different friend earlier, but we were
in the city and I was like, oh, you know what,
then two blocks that way is the exterior of the
friend's house. Let's just go see that, which I'd never
been there. Yeah, but it was just like that's one
of those great things you just stumble onto. And there's

(33:05):
no little coffee shop, you know to go to what
residential now there's probably something.

Speaker 2 (33:10):
There's no perk, there's no central perk. Uh Yeah. I
I I think part of it too is I think
uh in a in a bunch of ways, it's a
little bit more of a lady friendly sitcom because there's
like romance and will there won't then stuff?

Speaker 3 (33:26):
Yeah, right, the will there won't there?

Speaker 2 (33:27):
So I do I do tend to find when people
are like super super fans of Friends, they they tend
to lean like female female seem to like that that show. Okay,
if your guy who likes Friends, I don't know what
to say the man.

Speaker 3 (33:42):
So after you get done watching them, choose something else.

Speaker 2 (33:45):
Check out parks and rec or fine, well, obviously the
office is a big one. Hey, oh this is uh.
I don't know if you've seen this show. I stumbled
upon a show called Calling from Accounts.

Speaker 3 (34:00):
Not watched the show.

Speaker 2 (34:00):
It's an Australian show. So we have the public Broadcaster here,
the CBC has a streaming service and on there there's
some kind of quirky British and Australian shows that don't
necessarily make mainstream here. And so I was searching for
another show on this thing, and then I saw Calling

(34:21):
from Accounts and I had a dog, and I'm like, oh,
what's this all about? So I watched the first episode
and then bam, I was through all ten of them
in like short order. It's a really really funny, funny sitcom.
The Dog's name. The title comes from the name they
give this dog. They name the dog Colin from accounts,
And it's kind of a kind of a romancy, funny,

(34:44):
sitcomy thing. But now I notice I watched it maybe
three months ago. In the last month, I've seen so
many mentions of it, and now there's a second season out.
Apparently I don't it's not on our stream.

Speaker 3 (34:55):
Sow your disapproval of friends. I'll check it right out.

Speaker 2 (34:58):
Yeah, calling from accounts is actually really like suck me
in and it's really quite fun cool. Yeah, calling from
accounts some some Uh, we're not all about the pop
culture here. We like to sometimes, you know, share some
valuable knowledge the Heimlich Have you ever been heimlichd or
had to heimlich before?

Speaker 3 (35:19):
Yes? I have been. I had to assist in my
own heimlick at one point, oh tried to grab a
little too high and I moved their hands to the
correct location so that could be saved. Wow, I participated
in saving my own life.

Speaker 2 (35:31):
What was what was caught in your what was it
stuck there?

Speaker 3 (35:34):
Hamburger?

Speaker 2 (35:34):
I believe well, Hamburger, Hamburger restaurants.

Speaker 3 (35:37):
It's probably some Hamburger.

Speaker 2 (35:38):
That's so Texan to have some meat caught in your.

Speaker 3 (35:41):
Well, you know it was it was just some fast
food there.

Speaker 2 (35:45):
It's been a I've seen you know, you see obviously
YouTube videos and stuff where real life examples happened. It
was introduced in nineteen seventy four. Now they're saying, well,
you know, there's other stuff you should do before doing
the actual grabbing around below the ribs and pulley.

Speaker 3 (36:00):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (36:01):
Basically, a first aid or will put their arms around
the choking person from behind and pulls upwards and inwards
on the abdomen in an effort to get something expelled.
That's the stuck in the air, right.

Speaker 3 (36:15):
Yeah, that's great.

Speaker 2 (36:16):
But researchers link the Heimlich to damage of the ribs
and heart valves, as well as stomach and food pipe ruptures.
So the lead this lady's lead EMT trainer for Saint
John Ambulance says, the first thing you should ask if
if they are choking, because it might be something like
an allergy or whatever that's caused their throat to swell

(36:37):
or a different reason. Next, ask to see if the
patient can cough, to see if the obstruction can be
dislodged that way.

Speaker 3 (36:44):
And you're asking me a bunch of questions, Well.

Speaker 2 (36:48):
You can shake your head or not.

Speaker 3 (36:49):
I mean, you know when I yeah, I mean fine,
it's it's it's it's funny because I'm in the moment
where that happened to me in my head now that
we're thinking about it. Yeah, you know, this is all
these interview questions.

Speaker 2 (37:02):
Yeah, but if you're if you but if you had
an if you had an allergy, do this if you
had an allergy, and and someone's like grabbing and I feel.

Speaker 3 (37:10):
Like this is like for the people who were just
a little too ready to heimli, like I guess, which
I don't know if there's really that many people who
were just like administering the Heimli like without check.

Speaker 2 (37:21):
Okay, okay, Well the second like the second last, uh
part of this thing is probably you know, you could
always jump to this where instead of doing the Heimlich
right away, you administer five back blows directly between the
shoulder blades, using the heel of your hands.

Speaker 3 (37:38):
Like a minister. Five back blows.

Speaker 2 (37:42):
Between the shoulder blades.

Speaker 3 (37:44):
I have powerful blows to the head. No, not that
if they wake up, No, not to No, of course,
no one should do.

Speaker 2 (37:49):
That between the shoulder blades.

Speaker 3 (37:51):
This is the back. But just the that word sounds
always the violent.

Speaker 2 (37:56):
Blows have violent or sexy? Uh? Yeah, Hey, do you
know the actor Sam Elliott?

Speaker 3 (38:04):
I do he?

Speaker 2 (38:05):
Uh? He's well, you will recognize his voice. He's the
old guy with a big handlebar mustache and a lot
of cowboy movies. And he's got a very distinctive voice.

Speaker 3 (38:15):
You have a handlebar mustache, Yeah, big mustache.

Speaker 2 (38:18):
It's a big mustache, whatever it is. And he just
got that distinctive a voice you'd hear on a pickup
truck commercial.

Speaker 5 (38:25):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (38:26):
Anyway, he he's made some people angry because he recently
made a commercial. Well, we'll talk about that in a second.

Speaker 1 (38:36):
Josh Holiday Live is in your ear. You got something
to say? Call six four seven six yoh Josh.

Speaker 2 (38:41):
Now, those who have been following Josh, Josh is available.

Speaker 1 (38:44):
On Twitter Josh Holiday and visit Josh Holiday Live dot com.

Speaker 2 (38:52):
Yes, home stretch. Here Saturday morning, we are live. I'm
Josh burt Is here right from New Jersey. So Sam
Elliott the famous for his his wars and his cowboy
he's basically a kind of iconic in that way. He

(39:15):
lent his voice to an online ad and it was
not for who. I guess all these magas thought of
one before. I think they probably assume, because he's kind
of like a rugged, kind of iconic, cowboyish type, that
he would be a maga, like a like a Trumpie.

(39:39):
But that is not necessarily the case. I'm going to
play you, play you something that he that came out
this week with his voice. It's it's act. There's a
it wasn't an audio thing. I'm just playing the audio track.
It's a visual thing. But but you get the idea.

Speaker 5 (39:54):
I can't believe we're having this conversation again. So here
we go. You know who the candidates are, you know
what's at stake. One candidate promises a divided America filled
with lies and hate, and one spands for change. Kamala
Harris has more courage, more honor, more guts than this

(40:18):
guy ever had. So you decide, are we really going
back down that same fire broken road or are we
moving forward towards hope, towards freedom, towards change.

Speaker 3 (40:32):
We know a strong middle class has always been critical
to America's success.

Speaker 5 (40:39):
There's promise that lies in change, and the time for
change is now. So what the hell are you waiting
for because if it's the woman thing, it's time to
get over that. It's time for hope, for change, It's
time to be a man and vote for a woman.

Speaker 2 (41:01):
So that's basically it. Maybe many people angry, Yeah, well,
I mean he's not saying anything new, but I think
it's just the fact that it's coming from bomb in there.
That was Yeah, it's showing how serious it is. And
I'm making me have to do an edit on my.

Speaker 3 (41:22):
Wow so that was like a web app that didn't
have a beat.

Speaker 2 (41:25):
No, no, no that I have the full things on there,
and I had to get in there with my little tools.

Speaker 3 (41:28):
And I'm letting Sam be raw raw who the or
air that's fine? Yeah, get over it?

Speaker 2 (41:38):
Yeah yeah, uh, I have a listener of I don't
even know where it came from, but it's I agree
with a lot of this stuff. It's basically a list
of things that are getting quote out of control these days. Okay,
and we'll see if you you agree or concur tipping culture.

(41:59):
Everyone agrees, but but what is that?

Speaker 3 (42:02):
Why is that a culture? Uh, that's not a culture.

Speaker 2 (42:07):
Well that's I mean, I think they use the name
for a tipping it's just basically.

Speaker 3 (42:11):
Culture after a lot of things that probably don't need
that descriptor please continue.

Speaker 2 (42:17):
Tipping for everything.

Speaker 3 (42:18):
Now I noticed tipping at the fast food joint is
now a possibility.

Speaker 2 (42:24):
Yeah. I go to the there's a subway here, and
they don't even offer you the option to like, like,
it's as soon as it comes up on the screen,
it says ten, fifteen and.

Speaker 3 (42:34):
Right, and I'm just like, let me get through this quickly.
What I just tip fifteen percent at a fast food joint? Yeah, yeah,
I've done that recently.

Speaker 2 (42:41):
The one thing I find myself doing is when I'm
ordering food on the online delivery services. If I'm ordering
something just for myself, oftentimes the predetermined tip, like the
fifteen percent or whatever that pops up is less than
I would normally tip for a delivery, Like I think
the minimum is about five five bucks for me, because
you know, these people are working hard. But then sometimes

(43:05):
you'll make a bigger order and the tip goes up exponentially,
even though in terms of the work that the dude's doing,
you know, the same driving distance, the same.

Speaker 3 (43:15):
You just bring me three bags from the car instead
of one.

Speaker 2 (43:17):
Yeah, So I sometimes will adjust down in that case
not not not extremely but but you know, down down
a little bit.

Speaker 3 (43:26):
And you can have rules like it's got to be
you know, ten is the right tip for the person
who's bringing it in from the car.

Speaker 2 (43:32):
I just sort of figure figure it out on a
bit of a scale, like a judge, based on on
what's happening with the work that has to be done.
Although I've heard that these drivers in some in some
of these services, they can see ahead of time what
the tip is, and if it's not big enough, you
don't get prioritized, unless that's like like lore that is

(43:55):
trying to make you tip higher. Right. Ah. Another thing
is getting out of control. Subscriptions for everything now, like
especially like I'm a newsperson. I love news stuff, and
it feels like everywhere you go you have to kind
of sign up to subscribe to get get the news.

Speaker 3 (44:16):
Not necessarily pay, just you just gotta sign up, yeah,
yeah some of them. Some of them may free articles
for yeah.

Speaker 2 (44:23):
And then they sell your email and they're paid that way.
I do subscribe to Apple News, uh, and I find
it makes sense because it basically you can select from
pretty much any newspaper in the world, any magazine in
the world, and for for this flat rate every month.
Through Apple News, you can you have access to all

(44:45):
of it. Although I will also say I subscribe to
The Washington Post because I find it's it's political coverage.
Is news is the best. Well, yeah, even though it's
it's basically only by Bezos, I find that they're there,
their coverage is is some of the best. And yeah,
they also have some good like other like non Newsy

(45:08):
sections that I enjoy as well. New York Times, although
I'm getting really frustrated with the New York Times trying
to normalize what's happening with with uh, with with Trump
and and there. I don't know, there's something going on
there where they're really not accepting that crazy things are
happening and trying to both sides it.

Speaker 3 (45:28):
A lot of the media is caught yea, So.

Speaker 2 (45:34):
Those I and also like I because I like the
New York Times. Games. They have a bunch of good
game not just word word all you can do for free.

Speaker 3 (45:41):
Those are very popular games.

Speaker 2 (45:42):
The cross where there's a new one Threads that I
really love. So yeah, you subscribe for everything, even like
software like like I used to be able to buy
like an audio editing software and there are.

Speaker 3 (45:55):
Now you're getting into like you know, ownership concepts and
right to pair and you know, like those the kinds
of things I find very frustrating.

Speaker 2 (46:04):
Well, I think like like Adobe has moved to that,
like you know, film editing, and there's been complaints about.

Speaker 3 (46:09):
It and they're, oh, if you use an old version,
you're you know, you're breaking the law. Yeah, and it's
just so it's just unbelievable. It's because, hey, man, profit,
you gotta come up a profit. Profit is your moral duty?

Speaker 2 (46:23):
Yeah, once you Yeah, I think they realized that you
can make more profit if we charge like all the time.
You charge what you pay one time, but charge it
every year. And uh dar.

Speaker 3 (46:32):
Trek stuff I saw the other day, which is like
I didn't realize we've gotten to where there's earbuds that
will provide translation live.

Speaker 2 (46:41):
Yeah, that's pretty cool.

Speaker 3 (46:42):
And some of them require subscription to you know, the
translation software. Others the language is built in. Yeah, so
you know, shop around well.

Speaker 2 (46:51):
Let Yeah, I think a lot of companies are discovering
that subscription is more profitable rather than friends.

Speaker 3 (46:58):
Yeah, it's rent, it's not economically productive.

Speaker 2 (47:03):
Too many apps everything requires an app these days. Deals
at stores, event tickets, parking. I'd cleaned my Like when
I got a new phone a year ago, I decided
to clean up all my apps, and I managed to
get everything down to two pages on my phone, like
two one swipe to the next page. That's it. But
now a year later, I've got a whole other page

(47:24):
filled with others.

Speaker 3 (47:25):
There just you got you get app creep, Yeah, like,
oh you want to control that? Get you here we
put an app on?

Speaker 2 (47:31):
Yeah, Well every company now has an app, like even
your local coffee shop. Hey, you download our coffee shop app.
It's all over the place. So too many.

Speaker 3 (47:38):
Apps data breach to you know, cause something to be exposed.

Speaker 2 (47:44):
Too many ads. Ads are everywhere. The ones that I
find most annoying are if you're watching like a dramatic
television show on television. Obviously, if you're watching it dramatic
television show, you do watch it on television. Uh, it's
like a dark scene. Maybe there's an interrogation happening. Then

(48:05):
this bright ad for a furniture store pops up on
the bottom third of the screen.

Speaker 3 (48:11):
Like my imaginary version was going to be a furniture
pitchman coming on with local like a local furniture store,
because a lot of times those people are in their
own commercials.

Speaker 2 (48:21):
Oh for sure, but this is like, it's just especially
when it's like a really bright kind of poppy ad
and you're watching kind of like a dark kind of.

Speaker 3 (48:28):
You know, yeah, it's just what you want really bad.

Speaker 2 (48:31):
And then the other thing that they do sometimes is
the if you're watching a show that has built in
like like if there's a language thing and there's subtitles,
it'll pop up over that or over game show questions
or answers. It's just like the Marvel Universe. Too many
movies and constant TV shows.

Speaker 3 (48:51):
Feel like the the you know, the tides going out
on these superhero movies. Frankly, they're just it's just.

Speaker 2 (48:58):
Like a like a factory that keeps expanding. They're churning
out this stuff, like it just feels like there's no
real thought.

Speaker 3 (49:04):
I think it's just I don't think it's holding its
own in at the box office anymore.

Speaker 2 (49:09):
No, well, now there's sort of I think I think
farming it out to streaming services.

Speaker 3 (49:13):
A lot of these I don't like. I think the
bloom is off the rows and we're to the point
where people just got so much that they need no more.

Speaker 2 (49:21):
I never really bought it, like I was never really
superhero watched it.

Speaker 3 (49:24):
I mean I watched you know, eighty nine, I saw Batman.

Speaker 2 (49:27):
Yeah, I saw the old like like you know, and then.

Speaker 3 (49:30):
I saw the next one and it wasn't this good.
And Valcolmer got involved in the Jim Carrey. I just
kind of like, all right, I'm over that. But then
they rebooted it. I saw one of those with Christian
Bale eventually, you know, but I just don't care. You
got any people with these comic book backgrounds that I
know nothing about. I did watch the X Men series

(49:50):
that was enjoyable. Jean luc Picard's so whatever.

Speaker 2 (49:54):
Yeah, And as we've talked about the last bunch of
weeks here, I do like The Boys because it's kind
of like an anti superhero televisions.

Speaker 3 (50:01):
Where you're at and the Boys these days.

Speaker 2 (50:02):
I think I'm in season three about halfway through, where
this is where homelanders really really like he's gotten rid
of like the board and stuff, and you know, he's
basically taking charge. That's That's where I'm at. Other things
that are getting out of control, blinding led headlights, this

(50:23):
one like I and the weird thing is I'm angry,
so I'm like, it's that guy to get his bright
synging on the stair is try and figure out if
he's gotten there and it's so bright, rather than just
looking away and being like.

Speaker 3 (50:33):
Ah, the jerk, and why is it that it's not.
It's harder almost to look away than it is to
just like be transfixed by them.

Speaker 2 (50:42):
I don't know if it's a psychological thing or what
the deal is, but.

Speaker 3 (50:45):
I find that also that I'll be like, I just
need to look away from these instead of trying to
scrutinize whether or not the brights are on.

Speaker 2 (50:51):
Well, and now I have that hesitation with like because
usually you would kind of flash someone and you know, like, hey, buddy.

Speaker 3 (50:56):
I just started running them on bright more and so
like turning them down as a reminder to them to
do the.

Speaker 2 (51:02):
That's yeah, well, because you're more on rural roads and
that correct. I sometimes we'll.

Speaker 3 (51:06):
Certainly out there in the city, it's difficult.

Speaker 2 (51:09):
Well, as I see the headlights coming around, their headlights
kind of coming around the corner, I kind of turn
mine down so they see the change in the light.

Speaker 3 (51:17):
But finally the Transportation Authority here finally allows automakers to
put in the adaptive headlights that have been popular in
Europe for a number of years, where they will kind
of carve out a spot they don't shine into the
other well.

Speaker 2 (51:31):
Oh yeah yeah. Well also some of the cars now
also have automatic dimming, like if they see a light
coming towards you, they'll.

Speaker 3 (51:38):
Get that's been around for a little while.

Speaker 2 (51:39):
Yeah when that fund that handy?

Speaker 3 (51:41):
Sure.

Speaker 2 (51:42):
Other stuff that's getting out of control are artificial intelligence.
Obviously new slang at one point where it's like cool, awesome, radical,
but now there's words like busting ris, shoogie, risma. Though
movie remakes and sequels. This is a big one, Like

(52:03):
in terms of they always they've even distilled it down
to IP intellectual property. What why are we going to
dig into this old intellectual property and make new again?
Like it feels like there's a lot less original stuff
coming out in theaters.

Speaker 3 (52:18):
Now you're saying the IP is getting out of control.

Speaker 2 (52:21):
Like even in the like the Hollywood industry, now they
talk about IP intellectual properties rather than the.

Speaker 3 (52:27):
We're gonna sell twenty three and meter talking about IP.
How about that data? All those genomes no, this.

Speaker 2 (52:35):
Is like films and stuff where they're.

Speaker 3 (52:37):
Remaking I'm taking off.

Speaker 2 (52:39):
Okay, well that too. I My stuff's on there. So
if you see, if you see a clone of me, yeah, Uh,
other things getting out of control. Entry level job requirements.
Uh they ask for degrees sometimes through the entry level
jobs that pays next to nothing, which just seems weird

(53:00):
and uh sensational news. Every story is breaking new. Well
this is an old one. Like every time Wolf Blitzer
Show was on CNN, even back in the nineties, every
time they came back from a commercial, it's like breaking news, breaking.

Speaker 3 (53:15):
News, Yes, that's true. And then when nine to eleven happened,
we got the krawl, and when Osama was captured, I
was like, can we be done with the krawl now?

Speaker 2 (53:23):
Yeah, no, they as still happening. But now almost all
the news services seem to be using the same formula
of like breaking news. Just this is just in And
it's a lot of times it's something banal.

Speaker 3 (53:38):
Like oh agains so nine times out of tennis banal?

Speaker 2 (53:42):
Yeah, And so it's basically the like it's a modern
version of the fable the Boy who Cried Wolf, Like
you can only say, oh my god, exciting, breaking news
so many times before.

Speaker 3 (53:51):
People can only break so many times before you become immune.

Speaker 2 (53:55):
Was like breaking new, Yeah, okay, it's now there's no
breaking news. It's just news. It's something that's new, and
we no longer by your headline.

Speaker 3 (54:06):
It's not even news. It's something you could have figured
out on your own.

Speaker 2 (54:10):
Oh yeah, and breaking news. And then especially it's like
especially annoying if it's about some celebrity breaking news. Kate
has been seen out in public.

Speaker 3 (54:20):
Tell me something I don't know, but yeah, we've.

Speaker 2 (54:25):
Been turned off by the breaking news. It is a
Josh Holiday ive. You're listening to bird is it down
New Jersey? I'm here. If you have a complaint or
god God forbid a compliment, you could go to six
four seven six of Yoh Josh and leave a message.
We'll play it back maybe, or you can email. If
you go to Josh Holiday dot com, you can find

(54:46):
all day out of the other chunk. In the meantime,
you have yourself a fantastic week.

Speaker 1 (54:53):
The show is over. The show is over. Lessons were learned, but.

Speaker 4 (54:57):
The conversation continues. Phone lines are open twenty four hours
a day, seven days a week.

Speaker 1 (55:02):
Okay, well, thanks for calling three hundred and sixty five
days a year.

Speaker 4 (55:05):
Donal six four seven six yo Josh at leave your message,
gott Lerenginas send a text instead. We're on the web
at Josh holidaylive dot com. Miss an episode, Download fast
shows from better podcast platforms everywhere. Need to send an
angry manifesto to the manager. Email Josh at Josh Holiday
dot com. That's Joe, it's over.

Speaker 3 (55:25):
Okay, we're all down now.

Speaker 1 (55:27):
This show is over. See you see you next time.
Talk to it bocks, Josh Holiday Live
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