Wake up with Josh & Chantel every weekday from 6a-10a on Classy 97! Missed the show or want to revisit your favorite moments from the show, enjoy Wake Up Classy 97 - The Podcast!
Episode title: Wake Up Classy 97 with Josh and Chantel - Tuesday, March 24th, 2026
Episode summary introduction:
Today's show starts with a mysterious lip scrubber that somehow migrated to the wrong side of the bed overnight, then spirals into things they'll never do again, hot yoga opinions, a very passionate case for choosing wizard over superhero, a missing Sublime CD that's been the cold case for 3 decades, a birthday shoutout to Josh's little sister, Travis Kelce news, long forgotten apps that need your attention, apologies for having feelings, The Madison has caught Josh's eye, is The Breadwinner just the same old dad tropes as the 1980s, Chantel is still hip and cool, Josh is a walking wallet, the radio industry is a lot easier these days, and more!
Timestamps:
(0:00) - Bonus: Lip scrubber
(3:16) - Once is enough
(7:59) - Good News
(9:42) - Travis Swift-Kelce
(14:55) - Saddest tom cat
(18:44) - Sorry for crying
(26:07) - Sword yoga
(33:16) - Late-night movies
(38:09) - The Breadwinner vs Mr. Mom
(42:33) - Old lady tickets
(49:08) - The Madison
(53:40) - Walking wallet
(57:22) - Past inconveniences
(1:05:19) - Would You Rather
(1:08:02) - Little sister birthday
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Full show transcript:
Hey, as soon as you're done wiping your nose, if you want to start the show, we can start the show. I'm ready.
Okay, go ahead. There is a lip routine that I do. Wait a minute. You're going to talk about that weird lip scrubber?
Yeah. That thing's strange. I don't care for it.
I don't like to watch you use it. So basically you put, it's a two step process and you put a scrub on your lips. Does the scrub have little pebbles in it? Is it exfoliating? Yes.
Oh, nice. And then you take the little scrubber, it's plastic. It looks like a teething thing for a kid. Yeah, it kind of does. But it's small.
Yeah. So it's about the size of a baby spoon. So that's, imagine holding a baby spoon sized teether to your lips and rubbing it on.
That's exactly what it looks like. Yeah, it's got really fine little bristles. Yeah, like a teething thing. And so then you scrub with the scrubbing brush on your lips to kind of exfoliate your lips. And then you put a mask on and then you flip the little teething ring thing over and it's got like bigger like ridges. Yeah.
Yeah. And then you just use that on your mask. You just sit there and rub it for like 45 minutes. I don't actually. And then I look over and go, you're still doing that.
I don't do that. That's how it feels. I woke up this morning.
Yeah. And then my little exfoliator thing was on the floor. Ew. On your side of the bed.
How to get there? I don't know. That's very strange. Very strange, right? Did the dog move it?
I don't know. So then I picked it up and I looked at it like, ugh. Has it been in the dog's mouth?
I don't know. So now I have to get a new one. Why?
I don't think that you can just buy those by themselves. It's silicone so you can boil it. Ugh. Yeah, I'm going to have to. But because I'm not putting that back on my lips. Why?
Because I don't know if the dog had it. 100%. Ugh.
How else would it have gotten on my side of the bed? I know. What I think though, maybe.
What? Is I did it last night in bed. I did the lip thing in bed. You did?
And then I think maybe I placed the teething ring part on your side of the bed. Why would you do that? That's gross. I don't want that on my side of the bed.
Too bad. And then I think when you got into bed it got kicked out on the floor. That's possible.
That's what I think happened, actually. So I don't think the dog actually got a hold of it. I'd still boil it. I know I have to because it was on the floor all night. Oh, not all night. Yeah. That's way more than five seconds. I know it.
Oh. And all of the bugs were just waiting. They were and they were like, we're on it now.
And then as soon as it fell. Because that's our house. Our house is floors covered in bugs. We are not clean people. We are filthy dirty humans. And we have bugs that are just waiting to get on your stuff if you set it on the floor. That's our house. That's just the way bugs work.
They wait for something to fall and they go, attack. That's it. Anyway. Well, boil your lip thing. I'm going to have to.
Because it's gross. Yeah. Oh man. Hey, here's today's show. Woo hoo. Hi. Hi. Good morning.
Good morning. Have you plugged in my headphones this morning? No. Would you like that?
Please do that. Thank you. Ta-da. How's that? Great. Much better. Yes. Excellent. Is there something that you've tried only one time that you will 1000% never ever do again?
Ooh. This is a question from the internet. And there are several on here that I think are fine examples of things I know people around me have tried. Does it have to be a food?
No, no, no. What is something that you have done only once that you will definitely 100% never do again? Snowboarding. Next question. What? Josh, I did not have a good time. And I know you didn't have a good time either.
So why would you want to go through that again? I always have a good time when I'm with you. Stop. Stop.
Too much butter on that biscuit. No way, Jose. I'm telling you. I had a good time. And I was excited for the day to get you up on his other run. I know you were. I absolutely know you were. Super disappointed when I got down at the bottom of the hill and you had your gear off. I was super let down.
But I understand. Too much, too fast. It wasn't for me. Anyway, never again. Never again. No. I don't even have any of the equipment anymore. Yes you do.
What does the internet say? I tried to trim my own bangs. I look like a medieval peasant child for three months.
Yeah, never do that. Do you have something that you've tried once? I've been trying to think.
I really don't know. I'm trying to think of a food because I absolutely know that there's some food that I've tried that I'm like, oh, calamari. You would never try it again? No. No.
Because it was bouncy? Yes. You don't like a bouncy food?
No. Somebody said bungee jumping, worst feeling of my entire life the second I stepped off. Somebody said hot yoga, made it 25 minutes before I had to leave with zero dignity and extreme dehydration. Oh no. Yeah. That's wild.
We did hot yoga. I didn't mind it. I didn't either. I would go back and do it again. I didn't even feel that hot.
I could have had hotter yoga. You didn't hear what I said? Yeah, I did.
Right at the fair called the zipper. I've heard of that. That's fine. I don't care for that. Really? The one that goes around while it's going around.
It's like the big one like this. Are you sure? I'm positive. What's the one I'm thinking of? I don't know what you're thinking of. But it's like, there's like a big stand-up part.
I see. Yeah, and you're in a little bucket. You're in like a cage.
Yeah. And first of all, I'll tell you why I wouldn't ride the zipper again. Because it's been. You're on it for 45 minutes. You are on it for a very long time.
It's the longest ride. What's that one that goes around and around at the same time? The Tilt-A-Whirl? No.
That's in the little bucket that you spin. The Gravitron? No. Bumper cars? No. I don't know.
I don't know. I'm going to find it. Okay. I'll look it up here in a second.
Sure. Spin City, someone said this one is called. Spin City. Yeah. That's the one I'm talking about. This one at the Wisconsin State Fair is called Spin City.
Oh, that's just what they call their carnival. There you go. Get it out.
You know, you got to learn these things. Oh, what is that ride? It's fine. You've got a picture of it.
What does the internet say about some other things that people have tried? All right. I'll go back and look. Yeah.
Red Eye Flight, eating a Carolina Reaper just to see how it really was. Oh, I got one. Uh-huh.
I won't go to a nine o'clock movie on a school night again. Oh, we got to talk about that later. We will talk about that later. Oh, it's too late. That was a bad idea. Don't. We'll talk about that later. Here's some good news.
Let's hear it. 87-year-old Dorothy Linsen, better known as Miss Dot in her community in Melbourne, Florida, will be honored this week by the Congressional Medal of Honor Society for her decades-long work providing free, fresh cook meals for children, seniors, and others in South Brevard County. Uh, Mrs.-Miss Dot, excuse me, Miss Dot's annual Thanksgiving meal and summer gatherings for local children have touched the lives of countless thousands over the years.
And on Wednesday tomorrow, she will receive the 2026 Citizens Honor Award for service in Washington, D.C. This is kind of a big deal. And this award ceremony is a huge affair. She, along with other citizen honor award recipients, will be flown to Washington, D.C. of a three-day event, and then they will receive this award, this National Honor Award for service, which is huge. She said she's overwhelmed by all the attention.
She said, you know, I still can't explain how I feel. I'm just happy and overwhelmed. I would never dream that someone would think enough of me to notice what I've done and put in for me to get this kind of recognition. That's sweet.
She's been for decades and decades and decades feeding people warm meals in her community. It's huge. That's a huge thing. That's a big deal.
Yep. And she is now 87 years old. Her name is Dorothy Linsen. Miss Dot is what they call her.
Miss Dot, you're doing good stuff. No kidding. Yep. Way to go.
Cute. It's good news. Not to worry.
Travis Kelsey has resigned with the Chiefs. I know you were panicking. You didn't know if he was going to retire. You didn't know where he was going to go. Don't worry. He's resigned.
I'm really surprised you even want to talk about this. For another three years. For three years, I expected that to be a one-year deal on him to retire at the end of this year. Listen, he hasn't been playing well the last couple of years. Right. So you would think that he would be like, you know what?
I'm going to probably just take my losses. No, he can't. The love of the game. He can't quit.
I can't quit you. He is the deal is worth up to 57 and just over a half a million dollars. 12 million in guarantees. Yeah. With year-to-year evaluation.
Yeah. It's not a solid number. I mean, look, I say that I wouldn't mock at 57.7 million, but that seems low compared to some other players. Now again, his position, he's tight end. He's not the quarterback.
He's not the big wide receiver. You know, so maybe that's why maybe there's a number that makes sense. And that's still, it's a ton of money. Yeah. Not as much as his girlfriend.
No. Fiance. Oh, you're right. Excuse me. Didn't mean to offend.
So there you go. Now what would be hilarious if he resigns and Mahomes does not? If he's too injured, I'm sure he'll be back. He'll be back. We can't get rid of those two.
They just never go away. What would Chris Collins worth do if he didn't have a guy like Patrick Mahomes? Who would he compare every other player? Right. Now there's a guy like Patrick Mahomes. That's him. It's actually Mahomes. Yeah, I don't know.
It does say that it's reported as a three year deal, but the structure of it allows the chiefs to treat this as a flexible deal, depending on his performance and future plans. Yeah. No, I see that.
And the annual evaluation means, dude, if you're playing under par, if you're not feeling it, like it sounds like he's got a pretty good out. Yeah. I think so too. His agents worked that deal.
Okay. So the full value of his deal, if realized, he would become the highest paid NFL tight end. Oh, serious.
In terms of average annual value. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. George Kittle had the previous market record before that. So his new deal is enough to make him the highest paid tight end in the NFL if it reaches its full potential.
Three years. Lower guarantees. That means. And it's basically, it could be a one year deal. He could totally retire at the end of this next season. He absolutely could. He should have this year. Well, you know, he had a chance to make another 12 million guaranteed plus however long he plays. But anyway, here we go.
Do you have a stamp seed? You know, he'll be back again. I don't know if this is a good number, but in the last season, he caught the ball 76 times for five touchdowns. He scored five touchdowns the whole season.
The whole season. Yeah. How did other.
I said, I don't know how it compares to other. Oh, I'll tell you, he was great. It is the 18th tight end in the, in the. Who's number one?
I don't have that information in front of me. Trey McBride. Who? Trey McBride.
Maybe. I can't remember what team he's on, but he was on my fantasy team and he did a great job until he got a little bit injured and I had to drop him. That was a couple of years ago. I didn't get him last year. Oh. Trey McBride is.
Number one. I think so. Oh, it's like, I know what I'm talking about. Like, I know stuff.
I could actually like really dig into this. Trey McBride, then Kyle Pitts, then Juan Jackson, Travis Coles, he's listed the number four here. Tyler Warren, Dalton Schultz, Hunter Henry.
It goes on from there. George Kittle was cleared out at number 12. Brock Bowers was number 10. Interesting.
Yeah. Whoever I drafted for my fantasy league, that's down there at number 21, just in case you were wondering. No one was.
Thanks for bringing it up. Well, good for Mr. Kelsey. Yeah, so good.
So excited to keep watching you. Is he going to hyphenate his name, you think? Oh, I hope so. Swift Kelsey. It's not a bad name. Okay. You have rediscovered some childhood toys and memories in the past, not like recently, but that's happened.
Likewise, I have discovered a Teddy Ruxpin behind the bookshelf once. Yes. That was a big day. It was a big day. Yeah, that was kind of fun.
I just saw a post online, someone had found their tablet from eight years ago, plugged it in and charged it up and then turned it on. Yeah. What do you think they found? I think they found probably a bunch of old apps that they loved. Yes. Probably some pictures.
Sure. A picture spree. How old were they? It doesn't really say, but you could assume they're probably maybe early 20s.
And so they found it from eight years prior. So, okay. I don't know.
Just tell me. Remember that game Emory put on your phone, your tablet. I was just thinking about that. Talking Angela?
Talking Angela and talking Tom. Yes. Here's the notifications after turning on the tablet after eight years. I'm so hungry. Please feed me. Oh no. Did you forget about me?
The saddest looking Tom ever. I really have to go to the bathroom, please. And then the last notification, why you no take care of me. Oh no. That's so sad. Talking Tom and Angela were, for those of you who don't know, they were, it was an app where you had to feed a cat.
That's right. The cat's name was Tom or Angela. You had to feed them. And then you could buy like clothes for them.
But you had to take them to the bathroom. Yeah. Oh no. Poor Tom. So that got me thinking, what's your Tomagachi up to?
I didn't ever have a Tomagachi. You didn't? Nope.
I did. I wonder what it's up to. I don't know. You got to check on it.
I have no idea. You got to think. You got a pet. You got a responsibility.
Yeah, that's true. I should have checked on my Tomagachi sooner. I don't even know where that thing went. Oh, I can't believe it. You just throw it in the garbage.
You take care of it every day and then one day you throw it away. Yeah, well. And remember how many times your phone would make that little meow noise? Yeah, because it was installed on my phone.
That's right. And I go, why is your phone meowing all the time? You're like, because Emery's got this cat on here.
That cat needed constant care. Yeah, well, apparently when it gets real sad, it gets real sad. Well. Real sad.
Why, you know, take care of me. I have a tablet somewhere in the house. If we, if we found it and charged it, I'm sure that cat would be on there. I bet you're right. I don't think it charges anymore though.
Oh. Because I did try not too long ago, maybe a year or two ago. I had dropped it too many times.
You can't do that. It's not good dropping your electronics. I know, Josh.
I know. I actually had dropped it and then we got it fixed. I remember I replaced the screen.
And then I dropped it again. Yeah, I know. So it really doesn't work now. So my talking Angela is probably real not taking care of. That's sad. I know it is sad.
Super sad. It's not even mine. Actually, it's Emery's. I know.
Why you know who will take care of me? Oh. I was watching a show and somebody started crying and then immediately started crying because they are apologizing because they were crying. And I went, oh, why do we apologize when we are sad? And for showing emotion when we're sad?
I don't know. We don't apologize when we laugh. We don't apologize when we get angry and lash out at people. That's true. Some people need to. That is true. I thought that was interesting. What an interesting retrospective.
Yeah. Maybe because you think that, I think it has to do with you being an empath. Like if you have the ability to take on those emotions, you might apologize for putting someone in a position where they might feel like they also are conveying an emotion that someone's going to pick up on and replicate. So they're like, I'm sorry. I'm upset.
I'm crying. I'm sorry because maybe they think that's, you know, they're sort of taking that internal feeling of like, if someone's crying and upset, I also feel that upset. And so I'm trying to apologize for making you potentially feel that if you are, I'm deciphering it, but you wouldn't feel bad about a positive energy. And so you might be like, oh, I'm laughing. We're laughing. There's nothing to apologize there because that feels good. Everybody feels good. Right.
But I don't think you need to apologize for crying. You don't. If you're feeling that emotion, feel the emotion. That's correct. No need to apologize. That's what I say. That is what you say.
Right. Except for when I do cry, you always just look at me like, are you crying? And then I go, now I have to cry and I have to hide. Why? I have to hide and cry. I have to see if you're having an emotional moment that I need to intervene in. No.
Yeah. It's not necessary. Why would you need to intervene? What's an example?
I don't know. Not like a movie or something. Like if you're crying at a movie or a TV show or something, I'm not going to be like, are you okay? You never say that.
I know. You're mostly just like, are you crying? I don't say, are you crying? I look over and I go, are you crying?
Because I'm curious. This is an emotional moment for you. Yeah. I want to understand. Everything is emotional for me. I'm asking to understand. I don't think that's it. Why do you think it is? That's not the vibe that you... No, that's not the vibe you read.
What are you reading? I'm not making fun of you. That's the vibe I get. I'm not like, you're crying. No, no, no.
It's more subtle than that. Are you crying? Do you need a tissue? Are you okay?
And then I go, it's fine. That's what I'm asking. I haven't handled.
Yeah. Just look away. You don't say any of that. You go, like that.
And then you cry some more. And that's fine. I'm not judging you.
I'm not making fun of you. I just am witnessing an emotion. So I look at you and I go, I was just crying. Look away. Why? Look away. No, stop. Why?
Answer the question. Why look away? Why what?
Because I don't want anybody watching me cry. I got it handled. I let my emotion out. Why can't I watch you?
And then I move on. Because it's weird. Why? It's weird. It's not like I'm getting all close, like right next to your face to watch a tear fall down or anything.
No, I understand that part. I'm just like, look at you. You're having emotions.
Yeah. Look at you. I'm having emotions. And I'm not going to apologize for it. You don't need to.
How about that? No one said, you should apologize. You're making me uncomfortable.
Maybe that's what I'll say. Are you crying? Because it's making me very uncomfortable.
Go ahead. If you say that, then it's going to make me cry harder. I'll be like, oh really? Let me make you more uncomfortable. Like that?
Yep. Like a public place. When was the last time you cried? Like a big good cry? It's been a while. I have found that as I've got to say, I've got to say, I've got to say, I've got to say, I've gotten older, things are much more emotionally triggering than they ever were.
I don't know what that's about. Maybe just because the kids are older and there's like, you know, life ahead of them and stuff. And I go, man, like there's all these roads we're going to cross in the next handful of years that they're going to be crazy roads. I don't know if I'm ready. Okay.
I'm getting, watch ya. But those are big emotional roads. And when you start to shed one little tear, I'm going to say, you apologize to me right now. Apologize to me for crying. No. No, I would never have your emotion.
Let it out. Right. That's what I'm saying. That's what I'll say.
Let it out, big guy. Oh, is that right? That'll help. That makes me want to just cry it out right now. Let it out, big guy.
Hey, big guy, just let it out. No, I don't care for that. There's one little pat on your back. Just one.
Just one. Let it out, big guy. And then I'll just keep my hand there awkwardly. Yeah, I don't need that. Or maybe I'll get right in your face. I will not be showing any emotion for you. I'll get right in your face. I'll say, hey, big guy, let it out. I don't like the big guy thing. I'm not a big fan of big guy. Come on, big guy. All right.
I'll take that part out. What would you like me to say? Nothing.
How would you like me to comfort you when you're crying? Not at all. Sound familiar? You said, you don't offer condolence?
Yeah. Should I? You just go, are you crying? And I go, yeah. I don't even ask every time. Sometimes I know you are.
Sometimes you just look. Because I hear this. I don't do that. And you do.
And then I go, okay, we're having a cry. It's fine. I'm not making fun. I just am observing emotion.
And it's neat. I don't do that. I really do not.
Maybe some sniffles, but I don't go. No, not that exaggerated. It's subtle. It's light. But there's a, yes, there is. There's a tremor.
You can shake your head all you want. Small, but it's not. Small tremor. And that's how, that's when I look over and I go, oh. I'm not going to apologize for it.
Never asked you. My emotion is my emotion. Yep. Don't apologize. Don't apologize for being sad.
No. Don't apologize for feeling feels. Unless you lash out in anger toward somebody. Then you, it might warrant an apology.
You might need to apologize for that. Depending on the situation. Take that case by case. Yeah. Agreed.
You know, people can't just do yoga. They've got to add all this stuff to it. Unnecessary stuff. Puppies and goats and stuff. Puppies and goats and snakes. We talked about snakes last week. That's right.
I think that was a couple weeks ago. Now there's sword yoga. This sounds cool. It mixes yoga, Tai Chi. Yes. And kung fu style movements.
Just flowing through your poses while you're holding a sword. No big deal. Yes. You like this one.
Not the snakes. I'm kind of into the sword yoga. There's a woman and the video I watched, it's just all women doing it. But the one woman said it's a tool of self-expression and freedom. When I hold the sword, I feel like a force of femininity, beauty and strength.
Classes can burn up to 500 calories and build strength and confidence. And somebody says it looks quite intimidating, but I watched a video. It didn't look that intimidating to me. It just looked like a bunch of women holding a sword and just doing like three pose. Yeah. With a thing.
So I was just trying to see, like if you were going to do hot yoga, you could burn 300 to 600, something called power yoga, which is a high intensity yoga that can burn between 450 to 600. Hmm. Hmm. So that's pretty decent. It's pretty decent. Sword yoga. Sword yoga is pretty decent, you say?
Yeah. Restorative yoga burns between 100 and 175. So sword yoga is pretty decent, like 500 something calories. It's up there with power yoga and hot yoga. I understand, but I don't also think that the sword adds anything to it.
You're still going to burn that 500 calories, whether or not you're holding a sword or not. Here's what it adds to it. Say.
Sword. That's not what they're doing. While you pose. And you hold and you breathe.
And then you go. Sword. Yeah, that is kind of what it is. It is pose, sword.
That's what I'm saying. Pose, sword. Right. Like the he-man. You got to make sure that you're far enough away from your neighbors that you don't accidentally slice through them when you're practicing a. Great point.
A move. And also how do you do cat cow? Can't. It's got different names. Does it? Yes.
What's the name? Or pigeon pose? How do you do pigeon pose? What's pigeon? Oh, that's my favorite one.
That one really works. It really stretches out your hips. In fact, I'm going to do that today in the studio, you'll guess that. Oh, pigeon pose. I'll tell you how you do it. With the sword? You listen to me. Yeah.
With a sword. Because your leg is back. Yeah. That's the side that's going to have your sword sheath on it. You don't have a sheath. Listen to me. While you're in pigeon pose, you reach back with your hand and you pull your sword forward.
Pigeon pose with sword. That's dumb. It's so dumb. But it's called Valkyrie pose. Yeah, it is.
That's what I'm saying. They all have different names. Right? Like cat cow. This one I saw.
It has to have like a cavalry kind of thing because you're kind of like a horse is what I'm getting at. Okay. I see. This one pose I saw, they're kind of, you know how like in Black Widow, when Scarlett Johansson is Black Widow and every time she drops out of an airplane or something, she does that like.
Yeah. The superhero pose when you land. Hand on the ground. Right. One leg bent, one leg out.
Yeah. They're doing that pose, but they have a sword. Why did you pick Black Widow who never does that pose? She always does that pose. Who else does that pose? She never does that pose. She does. Because if you know anything about Black Widow, she's not good at falls. Apparently I don't know anything about Black Widow. You should know that fact. Why should I know that? There's some Marvel Avenger folks who right now are going, wow, he said that out loud.
Is that common knowledge that everyone should know about that? My point is like Iron Man does that. Captain America does that. Like Captain America does it more than anybody else. It's the Captain America pose. Time out because I just looked at Black Widow superhero pose and it's picture after picture of her doing this.
So there. So don't say she doesn't do it. Hers is not after she falls out of an airplane. Hers is the end of a ninja move.
With a sword. Okay, that makes sense. That's fine. That's different one. The one you're thinking about is the one Captain America does. I'm just looking at Captain America. I don't see that one. I don't see that pose at all. Typed in the same thing, got zero results.
Typed in Black Widow, got all of the results. I think somebody's wrong here. Go look at Iron Man superhero pose and then you'll say, oh yeah, there's one. You said Captain America. I know he does it too. But Iron Man for sure does it. Every time he falls. Yeah.
And the earth cracks under him. Every time. I'm going to start doing that. Just whenever I walk into a room. You should do it to get up.
Like if you're on the floor and then you get into that pose and you go superhero pose and then stand up. You know how to even say it? You just. And then look up. Yeah, but you're looking down and then you look up slowly.
Oh man. Where are you looking? Look at me. Look at her. Why is your head a robot head? Because you look around the room like. Like you're scanning like a terminator.
Crazy. I'm going to start doing that. Every time I enter a room. Every time. Every time. I enter a room like a superhero. You kick open the door and stand there with both hands on your waist.
I have arrived. Then do that weird head look around thing you did. Well, yeah, you got to scan.
Yeah, I know, but you're scanning with your eyes separate from your head. You're doing this. You got to make sure there's no danger. What? Okay. I see none in this room so far. We're safe here.
Good deal. You know, it's not a good idea. You talked about it real early this morning.
It's not responsible to do bad things on a school. It wasn't a bad thing. It just was a great thing. But it was it was a bad choice on a school night.
Yes, it was. So any night that we have work in the morning, we call a school night and because you know, it feels like that. Oh, it's a school night.
You got to go to bed early. It's a school night. Lay out your clothes for school night. It's got school tomorrow. You got to get ready to go to school tomorrow. Pack your lunch. Yep. Yep. So nine o'clock late night movie, not a good idea. Listen.
On a school night. I wanted to see Project Hail Mary. Yes, likewise. Everyone was talking about it. I was tired of getting spoilers about it.
And so I said, we're going to go see that movie. We weren't able to over the weekend. So our only options were last night at six, which is right when Beck gets off of work. And I knew he would not be happy about that. We also needed to eat dinner and nine or 940.
So none of you is the better option than the 940. Now, Project Hail Mary is two and a half hours long. That's right. It is two hours and 36 minutes run time.
And if you're used to going to bed at 10 every night, like we are. Yep. I was struggling there at the end. Were you?
Oh, yes. I was not struggling at all because the movie was fantastic. The movie was great, but I really was like, okay, the story has been told. I wanted more story. I was hoping it wasn't going to end because I wanted to see more story.
I get in the mood to where I'm like, I'm done. And I really liked the story, but I'm done. So end the movie. Roll credits.
So my body was, my eyeballs were shutting just like this. And I was like, oh, nope, he's got more to do. He's got, he's got more. And I was starting to get really annoyed by him. Ryan Gosling that is.
Right. Because I was like, stop the story has been told. I had so much. I have so many more questions. I have so many more things. I want to see more movie. I really enjoyed that movie. I want to see more.
Yeah. What questions do you have? I just want to know how it all went down after everything. I just want to know.
I want to be part of it. Well, read the book. I don't think there's more to the story.
There might be more to the characters. I have the audio book. I need to, I'll go through it. But, but anyway, I just, there's more to the end. I want to know what else goes on. It's fine. The movie can end.
I just want to know the rest. Bad idea to go on a school night. Bad, bad idea. Especially that late. An hour before you took the photo bed. I was still like pretty alert at the end of the show. I was pretty, but my, my brain's pretty awake. I was crashing in the movie theater. My body went, no, you're done. And then I got home and I was like, couldn't fall asleep.
Right. Cause you had like a weird half power nap. I didn't. That was, I would not call that any kind of nap. You didn't feel rested. No, no, I did not.
It was a great movie though. Highly, highly recommend. I really, really recommend it. Ryan Gosling did a great job.
Yeah. Great, great movie. Even at 9 o'clock at night, you can still have a good time watching Project Hail Mary.
It's a good show. And I did stay awake. There was a couple of times I did get a little drowsy, but I did stay awake for the whole thing. So that was a big achievement for me.
And that says something about the movie when I can stay awake through the whole thing. You were just saying you were bummed out that he wasn't done. There's still more to do?
Oh my goodness. Yeah, bummed out that he wasn't done. I was bummed, yeah. What? Yes. What? You were bummed out that he had more to do? That's what you said. He wasn't done.
And so you were like... But he didn't even have more to do. It was just nonsense stuff. And I went, no. It's not nonsense?
Yeah, it was nonsense. It's all what's made me want more. Want more of that movie. Maybe they'll make a sequel. I don't know if there's a need for that.
There isn't. I just want to know more. I want more detail about the rest of it. I'm trying not to say anything too much. I know. But you're going to have to talk to me after we get... Okay. ...because I want to know what you want to know more of. Okay.
Questions have been answered. I know that, but I just want more store. I just want more. Okay. It's good.
It's a good show. At the movie last night we saw a trailer and I went, no, this is just Mr. Mom. They just stole the plot from Mr.
Mom. The movie is called The Breadwinner. It stars Nate Varghetti and Mandy Moore, who by the way didn't look like Mandy Moore. I thought it was Chloe Feynman from Saturday Night Live. It was not. It is Mandy Moore. And it is designed as a modern day update to the classic 1983 comedy Mr.
Mom. Is it really? Did somebody say that? I knew it. Both films revolve around the incompetent dad trope where a traditional patriarch is suddenly forced into the role of a stay-at-home parent resulting in comedic chaos. Oh, so comedic. Listen, this movie has already been done and it was done by Michael Keaton. So you're not going to do it better.
And I really like Nate Varghetti, but you're not going to be Michael Keaton. You want to know why they remade it? Why?
Because no one is going back and grabbing a copy of the 1983 Mr. Mom with Michael Keaton. And they said there's a new updated story to tell here because teens today and kids today that need to stay at home parent and so forth in the household have a different life than kids in the 1980s.
And so it's a whole new opportunity to make the movie again. Is it necessary? No. But is it a way for them to go, hey, this story has new jokes to tell? Yes, it's exactly why they do it.
That's right. Somebody was watching Mr. Mom, an adult, an older person was watching Mr. Mom and went, we got to remake this movie. There's good jokes.
I've got teenage kids. This is hilarious. This could be so funny in today's time with the internet and phones and new problems. But it doesn't have Michael Keaton. And that's your biggest.
You don't know that. He could make a cameo. He could be a neighbor. I wish my cookie.
An old grouchy neighbor. No, I wish my cookie was my neighbor. Wouldn't that be something?
It would be something. Who lives next to Batman? Josh and Chantel.
That would be awesome. So it does update the scenario for modern times in the new film, Nate Barghetti's character, also called Nate, must manage the home, and three daughters while his wife, Katie, played by Mandy Moore, lands a huge shark tank style deal that takes her on a business trip. Okay, time out. I was going to Google does Michael Keaton have a cameo and then upcoming breadwinner movie?
Sure. That's what I was going to Google. But you know how sometimes you start typing and then Google's like, Oh, I know what you're looking for. Suggested thing. Yeah.
The first thing. Does Michael Keaton. Does Michael Keaton have a lisp? Oh, I don't know. Does he? I just find out.
The new film is described as home alone meets Mr. Mom. Yeah. So hijinks. Yeah. Are you going to watch it? Yes.
It looks good. I do like Nate Barghetti. So I'll probably watch it just because of him. And will Forte has a small role in it too. I saw that similar to Michael Keaton's character and Mr.
Mom Nate's character struggles with daily tasks, including laundry and childcare, resulting in hijinks and weaponized incompetence. Now there's a trailer. There's no official confirmation or evidence that Michael Keaton has a cameo. That's right. Doesn't mean it won't happen.
Just means there is no evidence as of now. That's how cameos work. And all of a sudden you're like, wait a minute. Oh man. That old neighbor.
I know that face. This movie. Hijinks with laundry. What is going on?
Laundry hijinks. That's what they're going to say. Is it? Yeah. Oh man. Mom does this so much better, dad.
Make that a movie. I've got movie tickets yesterday and it was supposed to send me an email. I consider myself a pretty technologically savvy person. Sure. I buy tickets to stuff all the time. Okay. I get those tickets in my email. I scan my code from my email. Things are fine.
Things are good. I got movie tickets yesterday and it did not go. I did not get the email with the QR code with my ticket. And so I got a little nervous and I printed out the QR code for the ticket.
And then I went, oh no. I'm one of those old people that does that. And the kids were making fun of me because I said, you printed out your ticket. And I said, yeah, because I never got the email.
And then when I went to scan in, even the young woman behind the counter kind of chuckled at me like, you got your printed ticket? And I went, listen, and I told her this. I said, I promise I'm not old.
I'm young and hip and cool. I didn't get the email with my tickets. So I had to print out the QR code. And she just went, yeah, sure. And scanned me in.
And I went, lady. So I was sitting there waiting for the movie to start and they were like, download our app. And then I thought, I bet if you had the app, I do have the app, Josh.
And guess what? Is there a QR code in the app? I looked because there's a thing that says my purchases.
And I went under my purchases and it did not show my movie tickets. So yes, I took all of the steps. You settle down.
I'm telling you that I did every necessary step. Were you logged in when you purchased the tickets? Yep, sure was.
Are you sure? Yep, because it won't let you go further than buying the tickets until you can log in. And I was annoyed because I couldn't remember my password. And then I had to request a new password and I was like, our seats are going to be gone.
This is taking too long. So yes, I did log in. Thank you very much. Okay. Any other questions? Nope. Okay, good.
I feel like you got it under control. So you know how like you buy the tickets and then it gives you your confirmation like it's like success. You've got, you know, here's your tickets. And I keep that tab open until I get the email or the text message because sometimes I have the things go to my text. And so I keep that box open just in case I don't get the email. And I waited and I waited and I waited.
I waited for about a half an hour. And I never... Do you know which email is attached to your account? Yep. Are you sure?
Because that's... Did you double check it? That's the email I had to log in to get the tickets. You didn't have a username instead? Nope, it was an email.
Okay. Did you check your junk folder? I sure did.
Your spam? I did. I sure did.
Multiple times? Do you want to keep asking me questions about this? I'm just trying to help you troubleshoot.
Here I am right in here. Just like you asked me to do. I didn't ask you to troubleshoot. Are you using the Yahoo one? I handled... Our Gmail. The situation.
Didn't I? Are you using Yahoo or Gmail? I'm using Yahoo because it's an old email. That's the problem. Why is that the problem? Because it's too old. People use Yahoo all the time.
It's not that old. In Gmail, they add their address to their Gmail and then they check it there. That's how I do it. I do. That's what I do. Yeah?
I do that. Okay. Are you logged into your Yahoo now?
Correct. Are you logged into the Gmail thing of Yahoo? I'm logged into my Yahoo. Do you see it there? See what there?
Did you search for it? If you could feel through the room, the eyes that just looked at me in the slowest, slowest way turned your head with eyes shut and rolled them open like haunted house doors creaking. But do you want to keep asking me questions like I'm some kind of idiot? Is that what you want to keep doing? I was trying to help. I didn't ask for your help. I'm just telling you a story about how I didn't want to roll up with my printed ticket because I'm cooler than that.
I know how technology works. Did you check all the spam folders? Is there a chance it went to a different email spam folder? I'm just asking. I don't know, Josh. I checked my email, the one that I used to log in on. Yeah? It never arrived. Did you check your other one just to see? Yep.
Yes, I did. I'm just trying to help. That's all. I don't need help. I solved the problem myself. Thank you. I'm just telling you a story about how the woman, the young woman, at the movie counter didn't believe me when I told her I was young and hip and cool. And she went, okay, okay, old lady, ticket's have been scanned in.
There you go. Go and get some popcorn. And I went, no, I'm young and hip and cool. Your machine was broken. See, here's the email right here from the movie theater because I had to reset my password because I forgot the password. Okay, well that's a good start. Got that email just fine.
So I know emails are coming to me. Not my tickets. Maybe if, did you buy them in the app or on the website? On the website. So maybe buy them in the app next time and see if that helps.
I don't like there. Is your app logged in? Yeah. Are you sure? I don't like their app.
It's not user friendly. Oh, call in shots. Okay. What?
Nothing. All right. There is a new show here that I think I might be interested in watching.
Okay. It's a Neo Western television series. That's what it says. What's a Neo Western? Neo-Western. Okay. You're going to look that up?
Yes. What is that? A subgenre that applies to themes, archetypes, and gritty atmosphere of traditional Westerns to a contemporary setting. Okay. So it's like the old West of lawlessness in a modern day setting.
Okay. That's what a Neo Western is. It's called the Madison. Okay. It's got Kurt Russell, Michelle Pfeiffer, Matthew Fox, Bo Garrett.
It's got a lot of people in here. Okay. It is created by... Matthew Fox. Yeah. Jack Shepard. That's right.
It's created by the guy who did Yellowstone and all of those. Okay. What's his name?
Taylor Sheridan is his name. And I think it's interesting. I don't know that it necessarily directly relates to Yellowstone. It says that it was originally developed as a Yellowstone spin-off, but it is more of a standalone show. Meaning that you don't have to watch Yellowstone to watch this one. You want to know why I want to watch it?
Why? You know what the Madison is? No. Oh, it's a fly fishing river.
Oh, man. So the story, I guess, and I barely know anything about this. It's a New York family navigating grief and rebuilding their lives in Montana's Madison River Valley. So it's got that old West feel, but it's also got fly fishing with Kurt Russell. How do you know it has fly fishing in it? It's literally called the Madison. And there's a poster for it with Kurt Russell and waiters. Okay.
So that's still... Okay, hold on. I just asked if the Madison will have fly fishing and it says, yes, the Madison River offers world-class year-round... Yeah, no, I know about the river. Yes, there is fly fishing in the show. You didn't fly fish that river when we first said... I have not fly fished the Madison. Do you want to go fly fish the Madison?
Absolutely. Where's that one located? In the park.
Well... In Yellowstone Park? In Yellowstone, yes. You have to get a special permit. I know.
So fly fishing Yellowstone. I'm well aware. Okay. I just wanted you to know.
Hey, I know that you're thinking about doing the Wyoming cutthroat slam. That's true. Which is when you get different fish in different rivers. Yep. Does Montana have a cutthroat slam?
I don't believe so. Okay. We were talking to some people because you said, why doesn't Idaho have a cutthroat slam? Yeah, I was actually having a conversation with that over the weekend, about that over the weekend, yeah. And you learned some information about that.
Well, I think there's several different reasons, but I think there's a lot of hypothesis about it. Montana does not have a state-specific cutthroat slam program like Wyoming and Utah, but you can target Montana cutthroat subspecies throughout what they call the Western Native Trout Challenge. Interesting. I don't know what that is. I don't know either.
Nobody told Josh about that. I'm researching it already. I'm already on it. I just looked up the Holy Grail of fly fishing. Do you know what the Holy Grail of fly fishing is? Is it the Blackfoot in Montana? No, it is like the Holy Grail of saltwater fly fishing. That's not it. That's not it.
Is the permit? Oh, I know that. As far as the fish? Yeah. Yeah. Oh. I thought you meant the river or the salt?
That's what I thought it was going to be too. Yeah. I want to catch permit and tarpon and bonefish. All of that. Got to catch them all. Two days in a row. Pokemon.
Wow. When you're around, I don't bring my money anywhere. I mean, sometimes I do, but most of the time when I know that you're going to be there, I go, I'm not going to take my purse. I don't need my money.
And then we get to pay and I go, I don't have any money. And you're nowhere to be found. Sometimes.
Usually I'm right there next to you. Josh, I need some money. Pull out the money, Josh.
I need the money. Like last night, for instance, when we went to the movie. Yeah. And I said, I want this snack and this snack. And the kids want this snack. And she said, okay, it's going to be this much money. And I said, I don't have any money. Right. And I went, I'm carrying my wallet all over where I go.
Here we go. Just thanks for always being there with the money when I don't have it. It's the one thing I can do, I guess. It's just be the money guy.
There's lots of things you can do. Got the money. There it is.
All the time. It's got change in it right now. Oh, it's heavy because of change. You never have change. Why do you have so much change? Because I haven't taken it out of here to put it in my little owl. Oh, in your piggy bank?
Yep. Half the time I'll get in the truck and I'll say, I don't have any money. Do you have money? And you go. Yep. Yep. Just like always. Yep. Yep.
I do. Now, when you're not around, I always, I always have the money. I always take my purse everywhere, but it's nice not have to worry about that when you are around. Because then I go, Josh will take care of that. I'll just, I'll just be a little.
I don't have any money. Exactly. I'm a baby. Yeah.
I'll just say, Josh, sometimes I'll snap. Hey, money. Hey, money guy. Wow.
Pronto? I don't care for that one. I haven't ever seen you go pay the, pay the lady. No, I wouldn't ever do that. I feel like you want to. Kind of a little bit. I don't like it.
I've, I just said I won't. Like I'm like the, the jeeves like pay for my things. Please, please to pay the lady. Right.
Like that's how it feels. And I don't like the please to pay the lady thing. That is not my favorite. I would like to be able to be entrusted to be prepared. So I appreciate that. But I think the snap has got an attitude to it. Okay. I won't do the snap.
My apologies. Or a whistle. Don't do that either. Like a, you know, like a dog. Hey, hey, I don't. Care for that.
Yeah. The girl last night behind the counter when I ordered my popcorn and she told me how much it was. I go, Oh, I don't, I don't have any money. And she looked at me like, well, somebody's got to pay for this.
And I go, well, you're, you're looking at the wrong person. I go, you got to find somebody else to pay. But I don't, I don't have money to pay for all of this. I don't have a money. Why do you need a money? I have this QR code you can scan. Yes. Get this QR code. Does that give me snacks? Anyway, just thanks for being there with the money, Josh.
I don't have it. That's, I'm a walking wallet. Preach. I appreciate it.
You're welcome. What's an inconvenience from the past that you wouldn't be able to handle today? Uh, boy. Do you have an example?
Yes. I'm trying to think. I'll give you an example. Okay.
Taking four hours to download just one song. Oh, could you imagine? I did imagine. I lived that life. I know, I know. But today. Today. So in. I get cranky when my video has to buffer for just a split second.
I go, oh, I can handle. I think in today's world in this industry, specifically, if I had to do things manually still, and I'm talking about everything from magnetic tape that we used to have to have like real to real machines to do production. Like we use digital editing now. It's, I can edit stuff very, very quickly in digital editing where on magnetic tape, it took a lot longer.
And if you made mistakes, it was way harder to correct. There's no undo button. If you, and literally you had the real to real machine and you had a grease pencil that was white and you would mark your edits where you need to take a breath out.
For example, you're reading a script and you go, and then you say the next line and you don't want that breath in there. So you have to mark, you have to roll the things and listen to it go. And then you would mark it and then you'd roll it forward and then you would mark it and then you would loosen the tape, pull it out. You would use a razor blade and cut the mark out and then use tape to hold the two pieces together.
And that's how you would remove breaths and stuff. No kidding. No kidding. You do it. Now you highlight it and hit delete on a keyboard.
Yeah. So then after you did all that stuff on your magnetic tape on the real to real, you would then play it all back and record it onto a cart, which looked like an eight track. And then your whole wall in the studio was covered with cards. And so when you wanted to play commercials, you wanted to have sound effects or you wanted to have music under you while you're talking.
All of that had to be on carts and then you would load them up and you had to hit buttons to make every single item play every time because we didn't have automation. So there's a lot just within my profession that I would be like, no, no way. I can't deal with that. No. I always think about driving and I just plug in an address on my GPS and I get there.
Okay. And I think about people who used to drive and they had physical maps or they just remembered by memory. And that always floors me. Like I drove to another city in another state without GPS. I didn't have it. Yeah. And I just made it.
I got lost and I stopped and asked for directions. Yeah. Like how in the world? And I said, I mean, this was early 2000s. Didn't have a cell phone even. And I said, I had a cell phone. I need to find the Bangorter Highway and the nice lady at the gas station was like, oh, okay.
Go here and here and here. And I went, thank you so much. And I just hope for the best. You found it. Clearly.
You would drop some folks off at the airport. Is that right? Correct. Yeah. Yeah. I drove to a tiny little town in Colorado.
No idea how. I know. That's always crazy to me. We didn't have smartphones. Did we have smartphones when we drove to Toronto? No. Uh-uh. We did not.
Because that was, well, maybe. I did not get my first smartphone until... Because that was like 06. I didn't get my first smartphone until 2012, I think.
She was born at 09. I know, but I didn't get it after that. Anyway, because I remember... Because we old. Because we old. We've been around since before smartphones.
Yeah, on the internet. How about your bank account when you had to check your bank account? You had to call in the bank to see your bank account.
What does that mean? When you say check your bank account, what do you mean? You mean you didn't just write checks and hope for the best?
That's what I did. You mean keep a ledger? What? Balance your check?
No. Oh, Josh, what? You know what's more fun? Writing a check and hoping it doesn't bounce. You're brave for the best. I hope I don't get mail in a week. And that's why a lot of people don't check checks anymore because of you, Josh. It's not because of me. Solely.
They weren't like, we can't do it anymore. How about waiting for someone to write a check? Oh, and the machine? When your check's flying around and around and around. It has to go around the loop and back again. And then they pop open the cash drawer and they flip all the things up and put your check in. Unless they were cool and had the little check slot in the front and they'd go, there you go. Or if you paid with a credit card, they had to get the big old machine out and carbon copy.
Yeah, and they had to have raised numbers on there. Now you just tap. You don't even have to.
You can do it with my phone. I know. My watch. Crazy. Everything is so quick these days.
I know. We've waited and waited and waited for things. I think we're better for it. People need to wait.
People need to learn a little patience. Oh, really? Yeah. Do you want to try and order something and see how much patience you have? I'm waiting for a package right now.
It's driving me nuts. I bet it is. It's sitting in Phoenix, Arizona.
Thanks for asking. I got one yesterday of the two because they came from different places and I thought it was the other one. I was excited because I was like, yeah, I got a package, but it was the wrong one. Now I'm like, oh, man.
It's in Phoenix, Arizona, but I'm still waiting. At least you can track it. You used to just be able to order something, not be able to track it at all and just hoped for the best. What were you ordering? I wasn't ordering anything. Stuff from catalogs?
My mom ordered a lot of stuff from catalogs. Yeah. And then she just hoped it would show up in four to six weeks. It took that long?
Yes. I don't think it took four to six weeks to get a package. I think we are spoiled by two-day shipping or next day. Yeah, I know. Or order it online and go pick it up at the store an hour. I know.
Or just walk in and get it like old times. We're spoiled by a lot of things. Yeah, interesting. But as far as work goes, man, have I got some convenience these days.
You really do. Oh, Moly, how did anybody get anything done back then? Yeah, I know. And then everything had to be done that way. Everything.
And that's, like, I learned how to do my job in that environment where everything was analog like that. So these new kids running around that don't have an appreciation for the old ways. They don't know how easy they've got it, I tell you. Why don't you go tell them? Because there's nothing kids love more than old persons. I'm going to go gather all of the mid-40-year-old dudes in here and we're going to go tell the young people how good they have it. They'll love it. You guys are going to make so many friends.
Yes, I know. So many. Oh, would you rather this or that? Would you rather be a superhero or a wizard? Ask it one more time.
Would you rather be a superhero or a wizard? You didn't say it the same way. What did I say? A wizard. A wizard. Or a wizard. A wizard. I'm going to pick wizard. Why? Because I find out anything from watching Molly Weasley. She can make her dishes do themselves.
All right. And I'd rather be a wizard. Plus also you live longer. Superheroes die pretty quickly.
They can die multiple times. So I had to do some research because I really wanted to understand if women could be wizards. No, they're witches.
That's actually partially true. Witches traditionally used for women practicing magic and wizard for men. And the terms are interchangeable in modern fantasy and fiction where wizard frequently refers to any skilled magic user regardless of gender. In Dungeons and Dragons, wizard is a non-gendered character. So absolutely you can be a wizard.
Yeah, I always knew I could be. Harry Potter uses witches and wizards. You can and can't do. I'll be a wizard if I want to be a wizard. Okay. I just wanted you to know. I wanted to look that up because I'm comfortable with you being a wizard.
I just wanted to make sure. So the options are what? Superhero or wizard. Wizard. Wizard. I think I want the wizard.
Yeah, same. Plus also you can grow a long beard and then everyone's like, you're so knowledgeable. Oh. You think the beard equates to knowledge? Oh, wise wizard.
Tell me something good. Toward that the case, there's one big long beard in this building. That's not the same. That's okay. Everyone knows he's not a wizard. Everyone. Everyone.
Everybody already knows. I think I'd like to be a wizard. Not because of the dishes. I just think it'd be fun. Because even Merlin has his dishes do themselves. Yes. Yeah, he does.
And when Mickey's a wizard, he makes the brooms and mops, sweep and mop. Sure does. And that's a big time. They get a little out of control. He's got to control them a little better. And they have buckets. That's where the bucket dance comes from.
It's from Fantasia. Good job. Okay. It's a wizard.
Wizards. Shout out to your little sister. Yeah. Because it's her birthday today.
That's true. How much younger? Three years.
Three years. Did you guys get along? Fine.
I guess. So long as she wasn't taking my stuff. I was going to say, I know that there's a history of little sisters taking older brothers things. What did she take the most of?
My sublime seedy. All the time. And I currently think she has it.
Because I have an empty case. You're never getting that back. I am 100% positive she has that seedy. Okay. Well, I'm just here to tell you that's not, that's gone. You're not getting that back, buddy.
If I do get it back, I can only imagine the condition it's in. I'm pretty sure. Did she have her still at even your clothes? No. Or just any of your video games? No.
Okay. No, I was just mostly that seedy. Was she good about putting stuff back exactly as she found it? Clearly not.
Because I have an empty case. My brother was very, like he had a very specific way he liked his stuff. Like specifically his CDs. And, and his tapes.
If he came home and saw that one of them was not the way that it was supposed to be arranged, he knew exactly. Oh yeah. So I had to be real good about looking at what it looked like and putting it back exactly how I got it. I got really good at stilling his stuff. Yeah. Well, hopefully for her birthday, she got me a new seedy.
I think that's outwards, right? I can't prove it was her. I can't not prove it was her. The last time I saw the seedy in its case, I lived at home. Oh. I just literally the other day I was like, oh, I'm gonna, I want to listen to that thing.
I have it on vinyl too. So you. But I literally, I went, oh yeah. And I pulled it out and there is no seedy in that case. You have moved that blank seedy case how many times? Enough.
Empty. You've moved that. It's still in my shelf where it lives with no seedy in it. Moved it a million times. I haven't moved a million times. You've moved at least six times.
Maybe. We've moved that empty seedy case six times. Because I would have moved it to Arizona and back as well. Yeah. And then to our first apartment and then to our second apartment.
Yeah. And then there are six times. You've moved that at least six times.
Empty. I didn't notice until a couple months ago. Just maybe it's not all that important. If you didn't notice it was gone in 20 years.
Listen to me. She has it. I also think she has my panic at the disco jacket.
I want that back too. Nothing like calling her out. I mean on her birthday. You know. Don't be a little sister so much.
Be a cool person. Did we get along? She said yes. Just fine. Okay. As well as little sisters and big brothers can. Yeah I suppose. You saved her from drowning once.
That is correct. And by saved her from drowning I reminded her to stand up because she could reach the bottom and the water was only waist deep. But that was a big moment. It was a big day. She also saved me from getting swirly's.
So that was a big deal too when we were very little. Oh. Who was going to give you a swirly? It was just fun for my parents to make her crazy about it. So they would say they were going to give me a swirly and pick me up and then she would be very upset and go sit on the toilet so they couldn't. Oh.
No. So she was very protective. That's nice. Yep.
So we're even I think. She saved me from fake swirly's and I saved her from drowning and she has stolen from me. You can't prove it. You cannot prove that. You're right. I can't. But it is her birthday.
Happy birthday. There you go. Wrap up the show. Let's do it. All right. We'll be back tomorrow morning. Thanks for hanging out with us on your Tuesday. Check out the show on demand.
It's available everywhere you get podcasts. It's a beautiful day outside. Yeah. You said it was going to be windy. There should be some wind today. Lucky us.
Yep. There's usually some wind. Wind again tomorrow. Little rain next week on the way.
You love it when we talk weather. I do. Please continue. It's in the 70s today. Enjoy it.
But then it'll cool off into the 50s as we move through this week. Okay. So.
Sounds good. Thanks meteorologist. Just doing my part. See you tomorrow.
Thanks for listening to Wake Up Classy 97, the podcast. If you enjoy the show, please share, subscribe and rate the podcast. Wake Up Classy 97 is hosted by Josh and Chantel Tielor and is a production of Riverbend Media Group. For more information or to contact the show, visit RiverbendMediaGroup.com.