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January 10, 2025 • 62 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
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Speaker 2 (00:41):
Are you ready to reach for the stars?

Speaker 3 (00:44):
Tune in to The Lost Wanderer, the number one monthly
podcast on Good Pods and Astronomy. Join our host Jeff
as he takes you on an interstellar adventure to explore
the mysteries of space and the wonders of science, from
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Each episode is a thrilling ride through the cosmos. Don't

(01:05):
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Follow the Lost wonder wherever you get your podcasts and
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Speaker 1 (01:22):
My God is really really special and I love my
dad Lack. I'm proud of him and that even though
he isn't here with us, but he died as a
true hero. I much everything about him.

Speaker 4 (01:43):
In 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 5 (01:57):
I'm Frank Sila, Chairman of the steven Sila Tunnel to
twel Foundation. Our foundation is committed to delivering mortgage free
homes for gold Star families and fall and first respond
to families.

Speaker 6 (02:08):
To not have to worry financially is a huge peace
of mind. The thought of what in the world will
I possibly do to pay the bills? How will I
possibly let the children have a life that feels normal.
I don't want them to have to quit their piano
lessons or their basketball. I don't want them to feel
that we have to move into a little apartment and
struggle financially. In addition to the emotional weight.

Speaker 7 (02:28):
There are over one thousand families that need our health
penalent of Talents is honoring those heroes that risk their
lives by providing them with mortgage free homes.

Speaker 6 (02:37):
Those who serve us and then lay down their lives
protecting our freedoms and our safety. The least we can
do is eleven dollars a month to give them that
piece of always knowing there's a home. There's that sanctuary
when life feels like it's been tipped upside down, because
it has when you lose a parent in the line
of duty, to know you can go home, you can
be safe, there's no risk of losing your home. Peace

(03:00):
of mind that I can't believe you can get for
eleven dollars a month.

Speaker 7 (03:03):
I like to ask you to contribute eleven dollars a
month to support their efforts.

Speaker 5 (03:07):
Please donate eleven dollars a month by calling one eight
four four bravest or visit Tunnel to Towers dot org.

Speaker 8 (03:22):
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Speaker 6 (04:16):
The following program contains course language and adult themes.

Speaker 7 (04:20):
Listener and discretion is advised.

Speaker 10 (04:55):
The back of my hands, I don't give it down.
Thank You's on the raid, carry the crown. Nothing can
bresh nothing can bresh me down.

Speaker 1 (05:12):
Don't even know that. I gotta town.

Speaker 10 (05:17):
I know the direction, the school, the back, the mother force.
I don't give it down.

Speaker 11 (05:30):
Man coun and Happy Wednesday evening.

Speaker 1 (05:36):
Otherwise on his chat Lives Matter, Evening night, whatever the
hell you want to say by your live on Calen
radio dot com. I am Rick Robinson. We are in
missing Man formation. Unfortunately G is not with us this evening.
He's a feeling he's been feeling a bit under the weather. Ish.
For those of you who follow him on X you
know more. For those of you who don't, it's his
story to tell, not mine. But we used to have

(05:56):
a full house this evening, so I'm gonna kick things
over next to our pole. Dude, mister Andrew, And how
you doing, man? How's things? How's things in your world?
I know you're sober in taco lists, so you're feeling
a little sad to night. We're gonna see if we
can help you with that.

Speaker 12 (06:12):
Well, I'm still waiting on the hallucinations to stop.

Speaker 1 (06:16):
Those are not Those are not hallucinations. Those are your
ancestors pissed off at you for turning your back on
their boozing and taco munch and waits.

Speaker 2 (06:23):
Sir, it wasn't by choice. Let me just say that.

Speaker 1 (06:28):
They're still mad at you.

Speaker 2 (06:30):
I know, I know I now have another hole in
my head because of it. Wait, I'm good, You're good.
You can't you can't.

Speaker 1 (06:38):
Have another hole in your head. That's terrifying.

Speaker 12 (06:40):
Yes, I did get another hole in my head, and
I'm warm. We're up to like a balmby twenty five
degrees today.

Speaker 1 (06:45):
Dude, I'm feeling like we're having a heat wave because
we got up to like forty two today. I even
when I said, I was like, damn, it's been so
been so cold. This actually feels hot. I actually turned
the heater down on my car, like I'm starting to
sweat but the tail. But yeah, so it's it's been.
It was a balmby forty two today, so I was
feeling pretty good. Of course, now we have snow coming
in in the morning, so that should be fun. Supposed
to get anywhere between seven to eleven inches Snowpocalypse twenty

(07:07):
twenty five incoming. I swear. It's like we're living in
the we're living in the last day is half the
country's freezing, the other half on fire. It's weird anyway.

Speaker 12 (07:15):
That's that's why tomorrow I'm going out on the hill.
We're getting snow, and I'm gonna stand up there with
my fur hat on and my AK forty seven and wolverines, Baby.

Speaker 1 (07:28):
Wolverines, the correct version, not the simped up version they did.
What was it two thousand and some?

Speaker 13 (07:35):
All right?

Speaker 1 (07:35):
Anyway, So up next in rotation we have he's going
by the name Abril Akbar this evening, but we know
him as the lovable alien Jeff, otherwise known as at
At a cosmic Bard. How you doing, bro? What's up
with you? You've done any probing lately. Just curious. Okay he
said he was fixed, but I'm not hearing him.

Speaker 11 (07:53):
Yep, there we go, There we go, one last up there,
Basi and Manassa caught everyone.

Speaker 2 (08:01):
And back at you and.

Speaker 1 (08:02):
Fuck you very much to you too. I have no
idea what you just said reading Earthlings. That was a
very roundabout way to say something, rather benigh and I
still don't believe you.

Speaker 2 (08:15):
He's using a made up language from a made up country.

Speaker 1 (08:17):
Yep, oh I figured that. I figured that was his
native tongues. I had no idea anyway. So how are things, man?
How are you anything new or anything exciting? I mean,
I know we just kind of did this last night
on another channel.

Speaker 11 (08:32):
No nothing, Who am I? Why am I here to?

Speaker 2 (08:36):
Uh?

Speaker 11 (08:36):
You know quote the famous famous other admiral.

Speaker 1 (08:43):
Well, at least you didn't yell it's a trap. There's that,
And amish get your words in before before you can't
get your words at anymore?

Speaker 2 (08:53):
Man?

Speaker 1 (08:53):
How you do it?

Speaker 14 (08:55):
You know, I'm not entirely certain if it's man cold
j ten or it's the smoke from the fires. But
just call me weezy.

Speaker 1 (09:05):
Embrace the power of a hand weezy. Wait, yeah, exactly,
since I'm since I'm your one of your co hosts,
does that make either meat or bread.

Speaker 11 (09:14):
George George, Yes, the answer is yes.

Speaker 2 (09:19):
Damn it.

Speaker 1 (09:22):
Oh all right, and we have our lovely bar Babe
with us, who's actually managed to secure, for the first
time in a long time, a baby in a month,
which is why we're kicking her last instead of first.
So good evening, miss Aggie.

Speaker 2 (09:32):
How are you?

Speaker 15 (09:35):
I'm fine, also trying to keep warm. As you all know,
I'm a traffic person, and this winter and I do
not get along. We observe, we respect each other, but
sometimes it encroaches terribly, and it's starting to do that
right now, and I'm not I'm not happy. We're expecting
the snow possibly later on Tomorrow through Friday, and I'm

(10:01):
hoping it doesn't stick. I'm not happy.

Speaker 1 (10:06):
Well, I mean, you're the one who moved further north
in Texas.

Speaker 15 (10:09):
I know, I know this was this was not my
idea entirely, but you know, the opportunity came up and
I could not say no to a place.

Speaker 1 (10:18):
Like that, So I mean, I've seen the pictures. I
wouldn't have said no either.

Speaker 15 (10:23):
Yeah, I actually, you know, I sent Sarah Miller a message,
you know, because she and her husband just lost her
house and the Palisades fire, and I told her, you know,
if you guys need a place to stay, we have
a guest house and it's empty, and you know, it
would be no problem. The only thing is you have

(10:44):
to come to Texas. And then I realized when she's
buried too, and I'm like, holy crap, this is possibility.
I could have James Woods and as my guest. Would
be awesome.

Speaker 2 (10:55):
That would be cool.

Speaker 15 (10:58):
Yeah, but you know, if it should come to pass,
I would not say a word to anythy. I mean
I would have I'm really strict about observing people's privacy.
I just thought that it was funny because I I
sent her the message even though I knew what she
was married to, and I made the uh, you know,
the invitation and did It didn't hit me until later
that I made the invitation to him as well.

Speaker 14 (11:21):
You know, you will if they accept you will require
required to learn the song from family Guy about James
Woods and sing it.

Speaker 15 (11:32):
Mm mm hmm okay, noted noted. But I mean I'm
keeping them in prayer. I'm keeping everybody in prayer. This
is such a horrific situation out there.

Speaker 12 (11:42):
So I'll just I'll just say it finger and will
be allowed.

Speaker 15 (11:48):
No, well, I would totally fangirl, but you know, like
I said, I would keep it quiet in private, although
I would take a video and I will send it
to you.

Speaker 12 (11:56):
Guys, you can invite him onto one of the pod,
one of your pods.

Speaker 15 (12:02):
That would be Kitler.

Speaker 1 (12:05):
If you don't. If you don't, if this happens, then
you don't at least ask I'm gonna be this. I
don't even care if it's the you can it's yours, brads, one,
I don't care.

Speaker 2 (12:14):
I don't care one of them. All right.

Speaker 1 (12:19):
So one thing I want to say is I did
actually just watch the interview with him and Laura Ingram,
and I felt horrible listening to this. This man explained
everything that they're going through out there, and it just
it pisses me off even more because it was all preventable.

Speaker 15 (12:34):
Yes, that's the part. It has always been preventable. That's
the problem. I had a friend I've spoken about this before.
I had a friend who I want to say about
fourteen fifteen years ago, there was a wilfire running through
his area, and he took the opportunity to cut away
all the undergrowth next to his house, all of the brush, everything.

(12:59):
He just cut it off the way and his house
was the only one that was saved. And the state
of California sued him for cutting away the underbrush. I
couldn't I couldn't believe it when he told me. And
he countersuits, you know, he countersuits. You put my you
put my life in danger, you know, by doing this.

(13:19):
And so they settled out of court and he won
the settlement. But yeah, I mean, that's how screwy it
is out there. Well, the state will actually sue you
for actually trying to take care of your house so
that the insurance company doesn't have to get involved. Okay,
this is weird, but okay, very very very not cool.

Speaker 1 (13:41):
All right, So anyway, without further ado, please introduce our
baby the Money.

Speaker 15 (13:46):
I managed to ask a really sweet and wonderful friend
that it's very popular on Twitter to be our baby
of the month today and it's none other. I'm sorry,
I'm so lappy.

Speaker 1 (14:03):
When are you not?

Speaker 4 (14:05):
I do.

Speaker 15 (14:07):
No I know, but her handle is right girl problems,
and I'm pretty sure that everybody knows her.

Speaker 2 (14:17):
She is.

Speaker 15 (14:19):
Yes, she's a great writer and avid reader, and she
has incentivized so many of us to get back into
the habit of writing and of reading, of doing. As
a matter of fact, she was one of the ones
that I was looking to when we started the book podcast.
She because I had become a fan of her particular

(14:43):
page and and all that stuff. And you know, between
me and Jeff, we came up with the book podcast.
But she, you know, she inspired me. So please welcome
right girl Problems to our podcast.

Speaker 16 (14:58):
Yeah, thank you, thank you. I'm very glad to be here.
I was going to make a joke about walking into
the wrong studio door and that's how I ended up here.

Speaker 15 (15:08):
But no, thank you, Aggie.

Speaker 12 (15:10):
If you were Abraham Lincoln, if she were a.

Speaker 10 (15:17):
President, she'd be Abraham Lincoln.

Speaker 15 (15:25):
And I have to say she is quite the babe
I've seen. I've seen her li I mean picks and everything.
So yes, she would be Babraham Lincoln.

Speaker 16 (15:33):
Yes, yes, thank you so much.

Speaker 1 (15:42):
And she's blushing, I can tell from here.

Speaker 15 (15:45):
Yes, I don't do compliments.

Speaker 16 (15:47):
Well, I'm glad, No, I'm glad to hear that I
that I inspired a book chat or reading or writing
that just makes me happy.

Speaker 15 (16:02):
Well, as you know, I'm also writing letters. I got
incentivised by one of your posts that you made about
the art of letter writing. I said, you know, I
used to do that long time ago. I should get
back into it. So I'm going to send you a letter.

Speaker 16 (16:19):
And I received it. It was so nice.

Speaker 15 (16:22):
Yeah, so I've been That's something that I've just decided
to do as well. It keeps up the you know,
the I guess, the manual dexterity writing and long hand.
It's just there's a certain romantic aspect of it too,
so it'll be fun.

Speaker 16 (16:38):
Yeah.

Speaker 14 (16:40):
So when you're writing letters, do you have to start
with A or can you just like change it up
and go like J or Q or something.

Speaker 15 (16:46):
I change it up every day. Every single one is different.

Speaker 2 (16:52):
I'm still working on numbers.

Speaker 16 (16:55):
You'll reach three day.

Speaker 14 (17:01):
We're hopeful. We believe.

Speaker 2 (17:08):
I like her.

Speaker 15 (17:14):
So anyway, I know that right now that you are reading,
uh a really pretty pretty hefty tone. But it is
not exactly for research, but to get yourself into the
mindset for your actual writing.

Speaker 16 (17:33):
Yes, I'm reading the Civil War Narrative by Shelby Foot.
It's well known in civil war circles and actually outside
of civil wars, worst war circles. And I'm on the
third volume. I read the first two volumes last year,
and I just love the Civil War era and I

(17:53):
enjoy reading military history. So I I picked it up
because I wanted to finish all three books. And I
have a long term series that I'm writing focused on
each of the American wars right now, starting with French

(18:16):
and Indian through probably the most recent wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan, just following one family as the different generations
go to war. So I think as I'm reading this book,
it will give me an idea of which part of
the war to focus on, because each story in each

(18:37):
character's slash generation also is in a different branch of
the military. So I as much as I love the
Civil War era, I still haven't chosen which branch I
will focus on and what my character will be doing.
But this reading this book, I know will give me

(18:59):
a lot of idea, ideas and just help me focus.
So that's why I'm doing that. And because it's just
a classic of civil war history.

Speaker 15 (19:13):
Yeah, it's considered one of the I guess the quintessential
readers for the Civil War, but I you know, I
never I never looked at it from the point of
view of having different generations fighting in that same war
and how they would be the war differently, you know,

(19:34):
you because the war only lasted what four years? Four
or five years, So you don't you seem to think
that everybody thinks the same way whether you're in the
Union or in the Confederacy. But that's not true, is it.

Speaker 16 (19:52):
No? And just with the different time periods and the
other wars that you have the Mexican War, which several
several generals had fought in on both the Union and
the Confederacy, and then you have far before that, you know,
the War of eighteen twelve. So there might be some

(20:15):
lingering officers there, but it's gonna, yeah, you're gonna have
a lot of different ideas about fighting.

Speaker 15 (20:25):
So we'll see, we'll see how.

Speaker 16 (20:26):
The the story shapes up. But there's so much research
that has to go into writing this kind of series
and one of the single any of the single stories
within the series. So I'm starting on it now.

Speaker 15 (20:46):
Well that should be really cool. Yeah, I can't wait
to see where your inspiration takes you, Like you end
up writing on because that, like I said, I never
thought of it from that point of view. We thought
of it, Oh, everybody thought the same way. If you
were in the South or if you weren't in the north.
You know, you had that pre preset idea. Yeah it

(21:11):
makes sense, you know, but I never thought of.

Speaker 13 (21:13):
It that way.

Speaker 2 (21:14):
M Yeah.

Speaker 16 (21:16):
No, there's a there's a lot too, so many varying perspectives.

Speaker 11 (21:25):
Of the time.

Speaker 15 (21:28):
I know I'm geeking out. I can't help, but I mean, seriously,
I used to be a voracious reader and I got
out of the habit for a while and I would
only read maybe four or five books a year or
something like that. And then, to be honest, the stuff

(21:50):
that was being written, I don't know it just yeah.
I was just like, because a lot of the writing
that takes place is based on current cultural norms that
are being established, you you're like, oh, I if you
don't particularly care for that, then you're like, no, well,
I'm not gonna be reading it. But if it's all

(22:11):
being written, if everybody's writing about the same stuff, you're like,
I guess I'll go back to Wuthering Heights or you know,
Jane Eyre whatever, tick one. But so I am gratified
to see that there are a lot more independent and

(22:32):
publishing going on because it has opened up a lot
of different views in each genre. I guess, for lack
of a better.

Speaker 16 (22:42):
Term, I think it makes it so that authors don't
have to fit preconceived and pre set ideas. When you're
writing in a genre, your audience is going to expect
something from that genre, So the author does have something

(23:03):
of a responsibility to kind of keep that unspoken contract
with the rear. But in the publishing I think does
allow some of the genres to push it the boundaries
and push it the edges of what that genre, what's

(23:25):
expected of that genre for sure.

Speaker 15 (23:29):
Yeah, yeah, I'm just like you know, when I know
you're familiar with Bane books when they came on the scene.
A lot of the military sci fi that came out
of that was so awesome because I was you were
limited with the military sci fi that was out. It
was there was so little written, and then there was

(23:51):
this huge explosion thanks to that particular publishing house, and
that introduced you to a bunch of other new authors
who had prior military experience but loved sci fi. So
they combined the two and I mean, there was this
huge explosion and that was really cool. You had. I

(24:11):
saw a lot of kids get back into reading. I
used to be a mentor at a high school and
I and I saw them getting back into reading because
of that particular genre exploded during that time frame. And
so with the advent of independent publishing, I think that's
actually going to open up a lot more to you know,

(24:35):
to bring people back into reading.

Speaker 16 (24:37):
Yes, and it's it's very interesting because you're watching you're
watching genres kind of be born right in front of
your eyes. It's a fascinating time. I really think traditional
publishing is going through a hopefully a rebirth regeneration, and

(25:03):
I think that I'm hoping indie publishing really does good
things for the publishing world because there's so many good
things out that traditional publishers won't look look at. And
I mean we talk about that competition is just good
for any industry, and I'm excited. I'm excited to see

(25:27):
where it goes.

Speaker 13 (25:29):
It's publishing.

Speaker 14 (25:30):
We wouldn't have Amionica.

Speaker 15 (25:33):
There's that which I'm not getting. I went to the
other day and there were some homish uh, you know,
romance novels, and I'm looking and I'm going, should I shouldn't?
I should? I shouldn't I I should?

Speaker 16 (25:48):
Yeah, Amish romance has taken over the inspirational romance publishing.

Speaker 14 (25:56):
Instead of just instead of just referencing to bodice ripping,
it's actual bodice ripping. Yeah, it's all the catch a blessing.

Speaker 1 (26:07):
It's all the it's all the butter churning in the
it's all the butter churning in the in the viewing
of ankles, it's just gone too far.

Speaker 11 (26:14):
Mm hmm.

Speaker 15 (26:18):
I'm still on the lookout for a butter turner. But
that's another that's another tale for another day. Oh there
it is.

Speaker 2 (26:34):
Now.

Speaker 15 (26:34):
I I'm who was I talking to somebody? A friend
of mine I was talking to She was interested in,
you know, writing a book. And you know, I'm at
an age where I'm like, yeah, if I'm going to
write anything, it's just for me. I'm not looking to
get published or anything. That's why I write my short

(26:55):
stories in that just throw them away. It's they're like gone,
literally gone with the wind because I burned them and
so you know, all the ashes go away. But she
was actually interested in writing a book, and she's like,
I don't know how to go about writing a book.
And I said, well, you have to do a lot

(27:15):
of research. But the research comes as you're writing. The
moment you start, you you you decide this is what
I'm going to write about. You start doing your research,
and then you'll write a little tale about your people,
whoever's in the book, and that will take you down
other other research you know holes, I guess, and then

(27:37):
you know. From there you will you will start writing
and if you like it, you'll keep doing. If you
don't like it, you'll just start from scratch. And I said,
but if if writing is something that you you wake
up wanting to do, you're already halfway there. And it's
and this is what one of my teachers told me.
I was like, if you wake up wanting to write,

(27:59):
then you're already a writer. You're not, you know, you don't.
You don't say I want to be a writer. You
say I am a writer. I just need to get started. Yes,
And that makes Yeah, that makes a lot of a
lot of difference, you know, when you look at it
in that perspective. Yeah, I'm I don't see myself as

(28:21):
a writer. I see myself as someone who has ideas
and short stories in her head, so she writes them
down and she uses Longhand to do it. I don't
even use a computer.

Speaker 16 (28:30):
Oh yeah, thanks for that.

Speaker 15 (28:36):
So, you know, and it's all about I just want
to be able to keep writing in cursive. My grandmother
wrote in cursive until the day she died, and she
had the most beautiful copperplay pantwriting, and it was I mean,
I looked forward to receiving a letter from my grandmother
just to look at it. I wasn't even reading it.
I was looking at the letters. And then I would

(28:57):
read the letter, but I would look at the letters
first because there was so pretty. And so she incentivized
me to actually make sure that my handwriting is nice
and legible and pretty and curly and all that stuff.
And then I had my English teacher in high school
that said, oh, we're having penmanship for the first three months,

(29:19):
and I'm like, what what just happened? She was really strict,
you know, and everybody that took that class to this
day still writes the same way like I do. So yeah,
it's stuck. But you know there's some people that are like,
oh no, I can't I can't write with a pencil
or a pen. It has to be on a computer,

(29:39):
and I have to be typing it, you know, and
and their their stories flow that way. And there's people
like me who do it longhand, and there's other people
who have to dictate it, which I was funk out weird,
but it works for them.

Speaker 2 (29:55):
So.

Speaker 15 (29:57):
I don't. I don't even I'm guessing that you use
a computer for yours.

Speaker 16 (30:02):
I mostly use a computer. I do always have a
notebook that I'm working in when I want to jot
down a scene. If I'm not near my computer, I
do have a story that I'm working on long hand
in that notebook. It's it's going all right. When you're

(30:24):
writing long hand, you things are a lot more compact.
When you're typing, scenes can go anywhere, and often do so.
Sometimes when I need the discipline of sticking to the
plot or to the scene, then long hand writing is
the way to go. I enjoy both. There's something about

(30:48):
putting pen to paper that's really that's what got starts,
That's really what got me started writing in the first place.
But I definitely enjoy the convenience of the technology of
just typing it on the computer and playing with paid
layouts and typefaces. I geek out on that too.

Speaker 15 (31:16):
Yeah, I don't know. I think you know, writing is
such a it's a it's a for some people. It
can be a nice pastime, a nice hobby. For others,
it's kind of like breathing. They have to write, it
has to come out. And that's that's not me. I

(31:40):
just I write for the enjoyment. But you know, my sister,
she's actually a librarian, and she was the type that
had to you know, she would wake up in the
morning and had to write, and she would write stories
and everything. And she still has them, and I've asked her,
don't you refine them and publish, you know, self published,

(32:03):
And she's like, oh, I will. I'll get around to
it after, you know, her husband retires or something like that.
And I was like, I'm remind I don't know if
you ever saw did you ever see the movie Mother
with Debbie Reynolds.

Speaker 16 (32:14):
Oh no, I haven't seen that one.

Speaker 15 (32:16):
Okay, that is about writers, and it is. It is
one of the funniest, most endearing films I've ever seen.
It was directed by Albert Brooks and it stories to
Albert Brooks and Debbie Reynolds is his mother. And it's
I recommend it to everybody who writes, who's a writer,

(32:38):
who wishes to become a writer, and people who had
its aspirations of writing that never actually they followed through.
But it's just it's an endearing it's very funny, and
it makes you realize that for some people, writing was life,
you know, it is part of their definite the definition

(33:00):
of their own character. So there are several levels of writing,
and I guess everybody is apt to be at one
level or another. You know, some of us are very
much in the one percent bottom part, you know whatever,
and others are like live, breathe, eat writing, you know

(33:25):
the kind of thing. Yes, I imagine you would be
up high.

Speaker 14 (33:31):
I do.

Speaker 13 (33:32):
Yeah.

Speaker 16 (33:33):
There's there's the people that love writing and there's the
people that want to have something written. And sometimes I
I mean, I'm on the spectrum of both. But I
do enjoy writing. I enjoy the crafting of the sentences.
I like revising, I like editing. I enjoy bringing paragraphs

(33:55):
together in the dialogue. And not everyone loves that part.
A lot of people that say they want to write,
and these are just these are you know, people that
I've met to writers things or in my life and
they have a story and they want the story to
be told, but they don't enjoy the process to get there. Thankfully,

(34:20):
I enjoy the process to get there, even though some
stories I've come up with and I just think to myself, Okay,
I just want I have this dot. I want to
magically have the thoughts in my brain put on paper.

Speaker 15 (34:35):
It's hard. Yes, that's what you should. You should have
a dictation machine, one of those old fashioned wiss just
talking to that'd be kind of cool on your desk.

Speaker 2 (34:43):
Oh, for sure.

Speaker 16 (34:44):
I have, yes, and I have several. Sometimes driving really
really brings out ideas, so I have you know, you
can dictate now on your notes app on your phone
or they make apps for that. So I sometimes do
dictate scenes and stuff so I I get it out.

(35:07):
The idea is they come out, they flow through.

Speaker 15 (35:10):
Well, you know, it's really weird that you mention that,
because I used That's how I made my spending money.
When I was in college. My side hustle was literally
proof reading and editing, and so you know everybody had
a PhD paper, master's thesis whatever it was a dollar page. Yeah,

(35:31):
I was pretty that was pretty cheap even for back then.
But I would run through and I would but then
you know, but it was like a physical you have
physical paper, and it wasn't they didn't give you a
thumb drive, okay, because there were no left there were
no computers like that. So that was my psychic and

(35:52):
I got used to it. I got really good at it.
And so you know, for me, the editing, the copy editing,
all of that stuff, that's I love to do that
rather than you know, the writing for me is like okay, yeah,
it's fun and everything, well, but having you know, sometimes
Brad Schlager will send me his columns for me to

(36:14):
proof read and I'll catch all of the all of
the mistakes and then I'll send them back to him
and then he'll have it published. And he's not the
only one that does that. So I had a friend
send me his book and I actually did all of
the editing and found all the mistakes and you know,

(36:37):
I did all the all the stuff and suggestions and
then I and I sent it back. But it was
actually you know, he sent me the manuscript itself. It
wasn't so that I could sit and read and highlight
and do all that stuff. So that was fun for me.
So if you needn't you know, if you need an
editor on the fly, I'm raising my hand right now.

Speaker 2 (36:59):
Yeah.

Speaker 15 (37:00):
Yes, So anyway, the guys are really quiet writing.

Speaker 14 (37:05):
On top of writing, and I've been watching the channel
in deep geek. I know, shocking, right, but.

Speaker 17 (37:13):
Yeah, they talked about Tolkien a lot, and I'm absolutely
amazing at how much letter writing he did on top
of like the most epic books written.

Speaker 14 (37:26):
I mean it's like in letter one fifty four with
you know, some housewife in Middlesex discussing your where the
ant wives, when I'm like, holy shit, I mean this guy,
like you're just even when he wasn't writing books, he
was writing and you know all the letters.

Speaker 13 (37:43):
Between him and Cuss and just.

Speaker 14 (37:47):
That's have absolutely a passion.

Speaker 15 (37:50):
Yes it is, and you should do the same. Sit down,
write letters, send them to be them published. He'll be famous.

Speaker 14 (38:00):
Chicken scratch. I couldn't even pass. I could pass for
a doctor lately.

Speaker 1 (38:06):
Well that bad, you got bad, dude. That's what my
Oh wow, that's what my That's what my freshman English
teacher said to my mom. She was like, your son
should be a doctor. I can barely eat his handwriting.

Speaker 18 (38:15):
I'm like, fuck you, I think because I created my
own font when I was in high school and used
it and everything, and it was really really pain in
the ass to write, especially if you weren't using a
uniball point five.

Speaker 14 (38:34):
And ever since then, I'm just like, I've given up
on just even attempting to be ledule. I can read it,
and that's all that matters. There you go, But I
gotta fix that.

Speaker 15 (38:46):
But you know, five hundred years from now, your manuscripts
will be you know, somebody will find these letters and
they'll be like, what does this mean? I mean seriously,
I mean, like what happened with Ethan Hawk. He was
looking through his great grandmother's stuff and finds the rubric.
He had to take it to a university to have
them decipher what was it.

Speaker 2 (39:12):
This writing thing is just a new fad. It'll fade
away and we'll go all back to.

Speaker 1 (39:18):
I mean, we're pretty much there now. We're already pretty
much back to hieroglyphics via text, so it will be
too much longer to ro back to Keith.

Speaker 2 (39:24):
This is true.

Speaker 1 (39:24):
This is true, all right, So believe it or not,
Folks were already two thirds of the way through. So, Aggie,
do you have a drink?

Speaker 14 (39:30):
I do.

Speaker 15 (39:30):
Actually, our beloved girl Problems is prefers a mocktail, and
I found a really refreshing one.

Speaker 1 (39:39):
So what you're saying, So what you're saying is you're
keeping and Andrews stem if can't have alcohol right now?

Speaker 15 (39:44):
That's right. It is dry January after all, too, So
I figured that's what I know, incentivized people to know
such animal.

Speaker 14 (39:52):
What do you think that's the shortest month?

Speaker 15 (39:59):
You think, well, yeah, I mean, but people look about
that too.

Speaker 2 (40:04):
I want to know how can we don't have a
wet one? We do?

Speaker 1 (40:10):
Okay, I want to know why Andrew earned one, so
I had to give you to him.

Speaker 15 (40:22):
So tonight, Flybatient is It comes via Da Garden, who
everybody knows as the Barefoot Contessa, And she came up
with this pomegranate spritzer which is very refreshing, and she
said you can actually add a little vodka to it
if you like kick. But this is her standard for

(40:43):
you know, when she's entertaining and she doesn't know if
people drink or not. You're going to take two cups
of chilled sparkling water. Like Pellegrino or whatever your favorite
brand is. Two tablespoons of pomegranate juice. Two tablespoons of
fresh squeezed lime juice. I can never stress this enough.
Don't get the don't get the green model. Get lines

(41:07):
and squeeze them yourself and you can get some. Believe
it or not, stores carry this.

Speaker 2 (41:15):
Now.

Speaker 15 (41:15):
The pomegranate seeds, they carry them in the you know,
produce section, so you don't actually have to buy the
whole pomegranate. You can just buy the pomegrand seeds and
get lime slices, and that's for your garnishing. This recipe
actually serves four or two if you prefer to use

(41:36):
tall glasses, because it's supposed to look like a little cosmo.
So you would place your glasses in the freezer for
about thirty minutes, make them really well chilled, and you're
going to pour the part the water, the juice, and
the lime juice into a large picture. You add some
ice cubes and you stir for about half a minute,

(41:57):
and then you strain the mixture into the glasses and
some you know, like I said, if you prefer in
tall glasses, you can add ice and pour that in
and then garnish with the pomgranate seeds and the lime
wheels and enjoy it.

Speaker 16 (42:14):
That sounds really good.

Speaker 15 (42:16):
It does. Actually, I'm like, do I have? And the
thing is I bought a bottle of pomegranate juice like
last week because my brother in law really liked it,
but he didn't touch it, so I might I might
do that tonight. But yes, that's our dry January drink of.

Speaker 1 (42:40):
I'm gonna say I'd adding I would be adding some
Tito's or something on of protest for this dried January.

Speaker 15 (42:47):
Well, like I said, you can add like, you know,
vodka to it, but I would add a clear, flavorless
you know, like a crystal rum or a.

Speaker 1 (43:00):
I was gonna say, unless you're doing that, unless you're
drinking actual Polish vodka. Vodka is not flavorless, man.

Speaker 15 (43:08):
I do actually drink Polish vodka?

Speaker 12 (43:13):
Or did you drink vodka like Polish?

Speaker 1 (43:20):
And the reason I mentioned Polish vodka is I figured
it was half pass segue Andrew. We got four polls
to get through in fifteen minutes? Can we do it?

Speaker 2 (43:27):
Oh?

Speaker 12 (43:28):
It all depends, It all depends. We're not going to
cover I can cover last month. But let's just cover
what we had for the year. This is peak Twitter
for the year, and we're going to have four poles
for one for each quarter for the last year. So
in the first quarter, are.

Speaker 14 (43:48):
We going to back at this down and do a
final one?

Speaker 10 (43:50):
Like?

Speaker 2 (43:52):
Yeah, excellent, excellent, excellent. I like doing finals.

Speaker 12 (44:00):
So first quarter we have civil War two point zero
out of January. In February, and this is one that
I had completely forgotten about.

Speaker 2 (44:11):
Sky net is racist.

Speaker 12 (44:14):
Oh yeah, you remember that one.

Speaker 2 (44:20):
Then in March. Then in March we had tomboys are Hot?

Speaker 13 (44:26):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (44:27):
Remember remember that?

Speaker 1 (44:30):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (44:31):
Yes, and that is the first quarter quarter.

Speaker 12 (44:39):
In the second quarter April Google employees f A f
O yeah.

Speaker 16 (44:46):
Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2 (44:48):
And then in May Naome murdered her career.

Speaker 1 (44:55):
And her dog.

Speaker 2 (44:56):
Character and a dog and a dog.

Speaker 13 (45:02):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (45:03):
And in June we had hot Tua.

Speaker 15 (45:08):
Oh god, I can't that die.

Speaker 12 (45:12):
Well, you know, so our third quarter now we don't
have three, we have four because we had a tie
in July it was the assassination attempt.

Speaker 14 (45:25):
Oh that's right.

Speaker 2 (45:27):
And then in.

Speaker 12 (45:28):
August we had RFK Junior making all the headlines and
she was installed, which was all about Harris. Yes, And
then in September, which was I think this one should
win myself. Pagers are a blast.

Speaker 19 (45:49):
Yeah, so and for the last quarter and.

Speaker 12 (46:01):
It was staged talking about the second assassination attempt.

Speaker 2 (46:08):
Trump wins.

Speaker 12 (46:12):
In November, and then we had everyone gets a pardon
for December.

Speaker 1 (46:19):
You get a pardon and you.

Speaker 2 (46:21):
Get amazing, amazing How forethought that was?

Speaker 12 (46:28):
Because towards the end of December, everybody pretty much got
into pardon, including Hunter.

Speaker 2 (46:35):
So they are all posted vote early, vote often, do
your democratic.

Speaker 1 (46:47):
Type thing, take several friends with you to vote.

Speaker 2 (46:54):
And share widely.

Speaker 14 (46:59):
Oh we lost, I am boosting them as we speak.

Speaker 2 (47:06):
Who'd we lose?

Speaker 1 (47:11):
We lost? Right, girls? She backed though, I'm back, good, good,
she good though.

Speaker 16 (47:19):
I was gone for a moment.

Speaker 1 (47:20):
What happened, you see what happened was oh, all right,
so those have been propagated. Everybody's doing their civic duty
and voting like mad.

Speaker 11 (47:36):
So I'm not allowed to vote.

Speaker 1 (47:38):
Well, that's because you're an illegal alien.

Speaker 12 (47:40):
You're allowed to vote. My poll doesn't take ID Okay, awesome.

Speaker 1 (47:47):
Are you sure there's not an age check for your poll?

Speaker 2 (47:50):
But only if you want the four polls? No? No, no, no.

Speaker 1 (47:58):
Wise guy, ain't h anyway, all right, so we got
about Actually, damn, Andrew, you did that a quicker never mind. Yeah,
I thought, yeah, I'm gonna have to give myself one
now I just earned one, damn it.

Speaker 11 (48:13):
Giggyy giggy giggy good stick around was the inspiration for
minute Rice.

Speaker 1 (48:21):
Well, I mean no, honestly, he's old enough. He was
the inspiration for minute men. Oh, it just came.

Speaker 14 (48:29):
It just came across my feet. Uh geez. Out of
the hospital now, so everybody sends thoughts on a good
recovery at home.

Speaker 1 (48:36):
I thought he was already home here. I missed a
memo somewhere because I thought he was arny.

Speaker 15 (48:43):
No, he was, No, I saw it this earlier today.
Yeah he was out.

Speaker 14 (48:48):
No, I just no, he just eight minutes ago.

Speaker 2 (48:52):
Really he he just posted.

Speaker 15 (48:54):
Oh oh because he had to he had to go back.
That's right, Okay, yeah, yeah, all right.

Speaker 14 (49:02):
So that has been the surgery that never ends with
that boy.

Speaker 15 (49:06):
I know, it's such a pain. Literally, I mean seriously,
I can't imagine.

Speaker 1 (49:13):
That literally seriously.

Speaker 15 (49:16):
And actually, yeah, all of those all of the leaves.

Speaker 1 (49:22):
Oh all right, so any final thoughts in the last
ten minutes, guys, I.

Speaker 14 (49:29):
Don't know if Jeff, we could get Jeff to quiet
down for a minute. I know, right, I'm sorry.

Speaker 11 (49:34):
I am game planning here. I'm excited about the purchase
of Greenland. So I've been game planning. I mean, I'm
so excited. Think about this. Trump mentioned he was briefed
on Aliens. Okay, this first tame first term, started mentioning purchasing. Oh,

(50:00):
I don't know, a certain island nation called Greenland. And
then like a year and a half ago, they renamed
the air base to you know, Pitifiic Space Base. So
now we have an actual space wars base in Greenland.
I mean, it's all lining up. We're gonna find something
out this next four years.

Speaker 2 (50:18):
I'm excited.

Speaker 11 (50:19):
I'm game planning. I'm finally going to get home.

Speaker 2 (50:25):
You're gonna be real.

Speaker 1 (50:30):
I think I'm gonna be a real boy someday. I
think you forget they exiled you. They're not gonna let
you come back.

Speaker 11 (50:38):
There's three stars, dammit. I can pick a base around
one of them.

Speaker 12 (50:45):
I just want to know when are we gonna have
our own Halbards in the k l r N Store.

Speaker 11 (50:51):
I'm looking at it.

Speaker 14 (50:54):
We already have them at the UH Torches and Pitchforkingporium.

Speaker 2 (50:59):
I know, but they're not branded.

Speaker 14 (51:02):
Well, yeah, that's true.

Speaker 15 (51:05):
Any branding.

Speaker 14 (51:07):
Yeah, everything at the Torch and Pitchforking Porium is already inc.

Speaker 12 (51:16):
I do wonder though, WGP could give us a couple
of titles of her books.

Speaker 14 (51:23):
Oh yes, promote yourself, damn it.

Speaker 16 (51:28):
So I have one out it's called New Creation, and
that's you can find it on Amazon or Barnes and Noble.
My pen name is Olive Swan, and that's just a novella.
It's actually going to be fifteen years old this year.
So and then I do have two short stories in

(51:51):
an anthology. When I lived in Oklahoma, I had them
published in a book called t Cozy's and Terabytes and
There and There. It's by Bartlesville Word Weavers. That's the author.
Because it's an anthology. The two in there are about

(52:11):
a young man going through Foster Home and then he
joins the Marines. That's the first part. And then the
second story in there is after he serves and he
as he's trying to get settled in life, and who
he meets that he falls in love with. So that

(52:33):
one's a little bit more on the romantic side, but
the first one you might you might enjoy. So that's
New Creation. And then t Cozy's and Terabytes has the
two the two short stories.

Speaker 15 (52:49):
Awesome and you can find them an Amazon and.

Speaker 16 (52:54):
Barnes and Noble.

Speaker 12 (52:56):
Okay, cool, Well I got I got New Creation already.
I just bought it.

Speaker 14 (53:01):
Yay, and you are that's what she said, not spending
all his money on tacos and bourbon.

Speaker 13 (53:15):
Books.

Speaker 16 (53:17):
Yeah, and there's someone else with my name out there
that has published books before that. Look like there's something
I could write. But that is not me.

Speaker 14 (53:27):
Just one of those, can we not all of Swan?

Speaker 16 (53:32):
The not is cool all of Swan?

Speaker 13 (53:34):
Yes?

Speaker 15 (53:36):
So yeah, that.

Speaker 2 (53:42):
Enjoy study of femininity art and he breaks culture.

Speaker 15 (53:46):
That is not me.

Speaker 16 (53:46):
That is the other one, the impostor.

Speaker 15 (53:52):
And the cheap think.

Speaker 2 (53:53):
Yes, let's start uh.

Speaker 12 (54:02):
Down downgrade and all her books calling her cheek and
take wow, you.

Speaker 1 (54:12):
Are an imposter. We don't know.

Speaker 14 (54:14):
You one star, not the real alive sor.

Speaker 13 (54:19):
That's for pettiness.

Speaker 1 (54:33):
The sad thing is I can actually see most of
the screw doing that. I'm just saying.

Speaker 15 (54:38):
No, maybe, maybe not, You'll never do at least not.

Speaker 16 (54:43):
I wash my hands of it. I plausible deniability.

Speaker 15 (54:48):
Ill anyway, I know nothing. So maybe we should write
a story about conquering Greenland. That would be kind of cool.

Speaker 1 (55:09):
That would kind of timely too, would probably blow up, Yeah,
I would, dude, I am the thing about Greenland?

Speaker 13 (55:19):
Does that?

Speaker 14 (55:20):
I mean, we have so many basses in the ice
there anyway, I think that we we have more structures
than the actual Greenlandians whatever.

Speaker 15 (55:30):
They are Greenlanders, Greenland, Greenland, Greenlandisland.

Speaker 1 (55:38):
Greenlandians sounds more cool. But you know, I had so
on on the fire topic. I had a thought today.
I really wish I was better at video editing than
I am, and I'm gonna start teaching myself how to
do better because when I saw the scene of the
mayor staring down at her shoes while the dude from
the press is like, what are you gonna do about this?
What are you about this? What are you gonna do
about this? All I can think was having having a

(56:00):
thought bubble open over her head. Bless the reins down
in Africa.

Speaker 14 (56:06):
You just need to have the pause, record scratch and
the uh curb your enthusiasm team.

Speaker 11 (56:12):
Oh yeah, someone say record scratch?

Speaker 2 (56:18):
Yes, yeah, we did, Okay, Okay, I.

Speaker 11 (56:23):
Don't have that one loaded.

Speaker 1 (56:25):
Yeah I usually do, but I don't either because I pulled.

Speaker 14 (56:27):
It was your time to shine, Jeff.

Speaker 1 (56:30):
I know, we teat it up from everything and you
just let.

Speaker 2 (56:34):
It amongst amongst everything else that you do.

Speaker 15 (56:40):
Because Jeff just doesn't do enough.

Speaker 1 (56:43):
Everybody's like, hey, Jeff, you got the record scratch Jeff's
over here, but I got this one. How dare you?

Speaker 15 (56:57):
Oh my goodness, I haven't thought about that girl in
a line.

Speaker 1 (57:00):
Neither has anyone else until now I know.

Speaker 15 (57:03):
She's like disappeard. That is the weirdest thing ever.

Speaker 11 (57:07):
Oh my goodness, she's like hepatitis B though she'll come back.

Speaker 1 (57:12):
No, she's so old now that it's okay to pick
on her. So now they don't let her go out
in public.

Speaker 14 (57:17):
Yeah, she aged out, just like David Hogg. They and
that's the problem when they keep getting these young activists
to be like the spokespers. Oh look they're a kid.
We've got a shield for a while. You know, they
can't they can't bash on our stupid ideas because we're
using a kid as a mouthpiece. And then the kid
ages out and they get abandoned and man.

Speaker 11 (57:41):
Child shield.

Speaker 1 (57:43):
Yeah, well, I mean, you know.

Speaker 2 (57:47):
What happened with They don't even she not in the
news at all now.

Speaker 1 (57:52):
Exactly, it's because she's she's no longer eligible to be
used as a child's you.

Speaker 12 (57:57):
She has become a bitter old crone at the age
of twenty oh Because.

Speaker 11 (58:02):
That was dark to feel seen there, Andrew, I mean
you have been seen for quite a while, but that's
because you're all so okay.

Speaker 2 (58:14):
Look, because it is my wheelhouse.

Speaker 14 (58:19):
Because I am getting asked, I'm about one hundred and
fifty miles away from the fire. I'm safe, thank you
everybody for checking and DMS. But the valley is completely
choked full of smoke, so it's like I'm there without
the danger.

Speaker 1 (58:34):
I'm not in the frying fan, but I get all
the effects of being there anyway.

Speaker 2 (58:39):
So basically you can be suffocated pretty much.

Speaker 11 (58:42):
Yes, So what I'm hearing is in about another fourteen hours,
Jeffrey Dahmer is gonna have a tremendous meal.

Speaker 15 (58:52):
Wow out, damn, that got dark.

Speaker 1 (58:58):
I do not have.

Speaker 11 (58:59):
I do not have a masculinity.

Speaker 1 (59:03):
I do not have.

Speaker 14 (59:05):
Not everybody gets it.

Speaker 1 (59:08):
I do not have. I do not have a suitable
sound effect for this conversation. So I'm gonna say, is damn.

Speaker 14 (59:23):
When I was serving in the King's Rifle African Corps,
the locals had busy tribesmen referred to human flesh as
long pig. What do you oh?

Speaker 11 (59:32):
Ricking?

Speaker 1 (59:32):
That wasn't me. I didn't. I didn't say none of this.
I'm Daniel's like oohing me and I didn't even say
any of it. What the hell I did even say it?
I'm getting you.

Speaker 14 (59:44):
Have the station email address, you get the hate meal, and.

Speaker 1 (59:46):
We're gonna get that all the time anyway. But I
don't need it to chat. I didn't even do it.

Speaker 2 (59:50):
By the way, Danielle, that's me.

Speaker 1 (59:54):
I was gonna say. I know our voices are somewhat similar,
but come on now, all right, guys, believe it or not,
that's it. We are out of time, and unfortunately, because
it is an illusion, because we've run over, we don't
even really have every time for everybody to do their spiel.
So what I do want to do, though, is for
the babe of the month, Where can folks find you, ma'am?
Because we have like nine hundred people watching us right now.

Speaker 16 (01:00:14):
So wow, oh that's I didn't need to know that
I'm You can find me at Right Girl Problems. Well
it's write g r L p R O b S.
Right Girl Probs is my handle here on Twitter, and

(01:00:35):
I have a website, the Olive Swan dot com. You
can also find me. I've written some online articles at
Ordinary Times mag and I think that's ordinary dash Times
dot com, I believe, and let's see.

Speaker 15 (01:00:59):
But most I'm on Twitter.

Speaker 1 (01:01:02):
Oh.

Speaker 16 (01:01:02):
I also have a Facebook page Facebook dot com slash
the all of Swan t A E O L I
V E s W A N. First name like the fruit,
last name like the bird, and I. On my Facebook,
I also post a lot of what I'm reading as
it relates to my writing and research. And then here

(01:01:24):
on Twitter, I shoot the breeze with whatever I want
to say.

Speaker 1 (01:01:29):
All right, folks me all right, folks, we got to
get out of here. Hang out for just a second,
Stacy and I will be back with whatever. And then
amish you got enough voice to do an hour? Another
hour to night or no?

Speaker 14 (01:01:39):
Yeah, I can probably pull it off.

Speaker 1 (01:01:41):
All right, so I know, right for both of us.
All right, so we're gonna get out of here. Well,
you know that's what happens. I knew as soon as
they said California, it was you. All right, folks, we're
gonna get out of here. We'll be back next month.
I'll be back in a minute with Stacy, back in
about an hour after that with Amish, and then we're
going to change to our syndicated content. So yeah, I'm
working till the one in the morning. Don't you love

(01:02:02):
being me? My name is Rick, I'm a workaholic. My
last meeting was from eever ago. As far as everything else,
just hang out on kalnradio dot com at kalen radio
dot com and you guys know pretty much everybody around
here because we gave it the same spiel all the time.
So we'll see you guys on the other side. Stay tuned.

Speaker 2 (01:02:17):
Bye guys, Thanks, good night.

Speaker 1 (01:02:22):
No hailing of the Hydra. We've had this discussion.

Speaker 2 (01:02:34):
That guy.

Speaker 1 (01:02:37):
Folks, all right, gang, don't forget We hot box it tonight,
so just drop whenever you're ready and much change over
to the Edge
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