Episode title: Wake Up Classy 97 with Josh and Chantel - Tuesday, March 3rd, 2026 Episode summary introduction: In today's episode, we kick things off discussing the death of customer service, we celebrate National Cold Cuts Day, Josh is over DIY projects, we cheer on 4,000 brave souls who jumped into 35-degree Lake Michigan for Special Olympics Illinois, Bluey is coming to Disney World, daylight saving time is here to steal an hour of your life, we debate 1780s vs. 1880s fashion, Josh drives in complete silence, Chantel has a screenshot hoarding problem, we play a little "I Love, I Hate", and more! Timestamps: (0:00) - Bonus: Customer service (3:22) - Cold cuts (6:52) - DIYs gone bad (12:47) - Good News (15:07) - Cheering you on at work (18:59) - "The One Piece is Real" (22:36) - Daylight saving time (28:40) - Bluey at Disney World (33:27) - Kiss count (37:56) - Screenshots of screenshots (43:26) - Common disinterest (50:26) - Old photos are neat (54:44) - Real 'pick me' event (57:36) - I love, I hate (59:35) - Would You Rather (1:02:55) - Driving in silence Visit our website: https://riverbendmediagroup.com/info-page/wakeupclassy97/ Email the show - wakeupclassy97@gmail.com Subscribe to our YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@Classy97KLCE?sub_confirmation=1 Follow us on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@classy97klce Follow us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Classy97klce Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/classy97klce/ Follow us on Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/classy97klce.bsky.social Follow us on Threads: https://www.threads.net/@classy97klce Follow us on X/Twitter: https://x.com/Classy97klce Full show transcript: Well, Chantel, I saw a video that I thought was very, very fun and interesting. You have an issue with some of the customer service you're receiving these days or not receiving. And specifically, your complaint is that when you finish a checkout, you expect the person who works there to say, hey, thanks for coming in today or something to that effect. Yeah, I just, they give me my change back or they give me their receipt and I say, thank you. And then I expect, thank you. Like it should be a mutual thanks given. Right. And so you struggle when that doesn't happen because younger people aren't necessarily thinking about work in the same way or whatever. Right. And so I saw a video where a barista is in training and the person training her says, let's work on how you would react to a regular customer coming in and she has some of the most awkward interactions you've ever heard. Where she says like, I've been waiting for you. Or she looks at her watch and says, right on time. I love it. I really love it. Really awkward. Like if you walked in and were a regular somewhere and this girl was like, oh, you're right on time or I've been waiting on you waiting for you. It's better if you're not a regular and you're just a total stranger. Yeah. First time you've ever been there and the person at the counter goes, we've been waiting for you. I'd be like, I'm out. I'm leaving. Okay. But if you were a regular somewhere, right? And you and you had like been a loyal customer for let's say three years and it was like your spot and you were going to go in and you have like the same thing you ordered. Like I'm a creature of comfort. Yes. So my order, you'd be like, are you having this or this? Okay. And I'd go, I'm having that today. Right. And they'd be like, I know how he likes it. I know, you know, if I was a real regular. So not that I would have an expectation of that type of service, but if I had been there every day, Monday through Friday, for a few years, then I'd really built up a reputation. A normal thing would for them to, first of all, they'd know my name and they'd go, Hey Josh, what's up? Welcome in. Yeah. That'd be enough. Yeah. I don't need a, we've been waiting for you. I think it's better if it's a stranger that you say that to them. Yeah. That's hilarious. So you tell me what, what is the thing that you would say to a regular or not awkward to a regular? Well, I have regulars at my job all the time. Okay. And I just say, Hey, in their name. So and so. Yeah. But you recognize, Hey, how are you? Hey, how's it going? Yeah. Hey, good to see you again. Yeah. Normal typical stuff. You got to watch this video. I sent you the video. It's ridiculous. This, this poor girl, she'll get it. She's just not there yet. No. But, but it was nice to see. And I think you'll appreciate that they're working on teaching customer service. Okay, good. I think you'll like and appreciate it. I do appreciate that. All right. Shall we start today's show? Let's do it. Hey there. Good morning. Hey there. Hey there, buddy. I have a question for you. I have an answer. How you feeling? Tired. That's not the right answer. What's the right answer? I don't know. You can't tell me how to feel. That's very true. I cannot. I cannot tell you how to feel. I can tell you that today is National Cold Cuts Day. Have yourself a little luncheon. Yeah. Now, obviously a sandwich with cold cuts. But if you're thinking about carbs like I am, and that's going well, by the way, thinking about carbs. Listen to me. Okay, go ahead. You go. No, I just am saying you could eat, you could eat cold cuts without the bread. You can. You can roll them up and around a pickle. You sure can. So what you're going to say? I was going to say that. Yeah. With some cream cheese. If you want. Or you could take a slice of cheese and cut it in little slivers and wrap it around the pickle with the meat as well. Little strips. Wow. You sure can. It's a sandwich. If you like, we used to do that when we were eating better. I used to do that around a pickle, but then I would put some sprouts in there. Oh, sprouts. Sprouts. Yeah. Nice. Yep. Yeah. I had a really good couple of pickles yesterday. Did you? Do you feel like having a pickle this morning? Okay, time out because I saw that you had posted a video and then I had to swipe it away because I didn't have time to watch it. Yeah. And I was like, why are you posting a video of you eating a pickle? Okay. I didn't post the video and then I couldn't find it later. Oh, it's a mystery video. Yeah. Yeah. So Katie over on the Z103 had some pickles in the fridge and she said, you got to try these pickles. And she had a spicy one. It's in its pickling juice, whatever it's called, with jalapenos and stuff. Oh, yeah. So good. Is it so good? So good. Did she make them herself? No. And then the other jar had classic dill pickles. Vlassic? No. Classic. And they were delicious. Delicious. Real delicious pickles. Yes. Very good. And they're like a nice big cucumber slice. Holy smokes. I'm telling you right now, you got to go try those. We'll go down there. Okay. You got nothing like a 6am slice of pickle. Can I wait? Because I've also just brushed. I know. The toothpaste will really contribute to the flavor. I'm going to wait for a couple of hours. Let's not forget though. I won't forget about the pickles. Because you got to try them. Okay. Delicious. I'm telling you. They go great with a cold cut. On national cold cuts. Cold cut? Yeah. Is that it? That's it. I have nothing else to say. It's just cold cut day? Well, no, there's other stuff. Oh. You know. Cold cut. Cold cuts top of the list. That's really what it comes down to. Is it like there's other stuff, but really, let's talk about them. Cold cuts. Have yourself a luncheon and get yourself some cold cuts. Good morning. What's the worst I can fix this myself moment you've ever had? Oh, man. I'm trying to think of a DIY gone wrong that I've had to been like, I should have just paid somebody to do that. I know there are things that not necessarily gone wrong, but there's like one project in particular that took me forever. Which one? Because I lost interest, because I didn't know the skills I needed, because I didn't want to ask for help, because I didn't want to pay somebody. So it's being stubborn. The baseboards? I built a wall. Oh. The baseboards aren't done. They aren't? Downstairs? No, no, no. I was talking about upstairs. No, I hate that too. Okay. I don't like doing finish work. I don't. I don't care for it at all. None of the measurements make sense to me. If a wall is a certain amount of inches long, and the inside of my 45 degree angles is the same, how come they come out short? It doesn't make sense to me. So, I don't like baseboards and finish work. I really don't. It's way too precise a thing for me to spend too. I overthink it, and I can't deal with it. But the wall that I built downstairs for the theater took a really long time, because I framed it, which was kind of the easy part, really. And then stood it up and built the wall. Then I had to run electrical. Then I had to sheet rock. And then I had to learn how to do mud and tape and patch where I had to run electrical and make it all look seamless. And then, you know what's still not done? The door. Any of the trim work. The door's in. None of the trim work's done, because I hate it. I don't like doing it. I don't like the finish work. Okay. I need somebody to come over and go like, I'll just knock that out in about 10 minutes. Yeah, because that's really all it would probably take for someone who knows what they're doing. Right. And I'd be like, super. Paint it to match. Throw it up, and I'll move on with my life. I don't care to do it. Okay. Good to know. I don't like it. So if you want to learn how to cut 45s and knock that out, go crazy. No, I just can't be bothered. No. Because I don't like doing finish work. I've heard. So what about you? The worst home I can fix is myself project. I'm trying to think. Let me think about something. Can you think of one for me? No, I also know I'm not a big fan of plumbing. I hate it. I don't have any big home improvement projects that I've tried to fix, but I have tried to fix a lot of things with tape and thumbtacks, tape and thumbtacks. No, thumbtacks I just hang stuff with. Yeah. I've never tried to fix anything with a thumbtack. You tried to affix things. You can try. You can fix so many things with tape. Okay. There's all kinds of tape you can use. Oh, I've got one. When I was in college and I was very, very poor and I couldn't afford new glasses. I tried. There was many times I tried to fix my glasses with tape. With tape. Yeah. Do you ever lose a screw? Yeah. Oh, yeah. Not just have like the piece break, but you lost a screw. That was the piece that was broken on my glasses. Yeah. I'd lost the screw. Because if you just lost a screw, you can get a replacement screw pretty easy. I was poor, remember? I guarantee it's like two cents of even. You go to the optical place and go, you have a spare screw. And they'd be like, yeah, let's get you so you can see. But you can also take a staple, put a staple in there. Oh. Or a little short piece of wire. Clever. And then twist that up. If you're just missing a screw. Where were you 25 years ago when I had broken glasses? I don't know. Not around. No. You could have helped in a lot of ways. Yeah. Instead I took electrical tape. You know why? Because my glasses were black, electrical tape was black. And I said, no one will notice. There's a giant glob of sticky electrical tape on the side of my face. Why doesn't anybody talk to me? I know. I was, why doesn't anybody ever want to go on a date with me? I had lots of dates. My bad. Sorry. I couldn't even convince myself of that. It's okay. Hey, you're doing a good job fixing things yourself. You're doing it. I just don't enjoy a lot of it anymore. I'd rather, now I'm to the point where I'm like, can somebody else just come do that? You really are. When we first bought our house, I was like, yeah, I'll do all of this. We can do this ourselves. You wanted to buy a fixer upper, remember? Yeah. And I said, no. 13 years ago. Yeah. 14 years ago. I don't want to do this. Matter of fact, 14 years ago in just a couple of days, we bought our house. So yeah, 14 years ago, I wasn't 44, was I? Settle down. Hey, let's do some good news. What do you say? I say. You say go for it. I say, let's have some good news. Let's have some good news. Here you go. On Sunday in Chicago, more than 4,000 brave souls jumped in the water of Lake Michigan. Burr? Yeah, they call it the polar plunge. And they raised more than a one and a half million dollars for Special Olympics Illinois in the process. 35 degree water. That's insane. That takes your breath away. Oh, 100%. I feel like I've been in some lakes at different camps that have felt like they were 35. They were probably 60, which is still not warm. And I had trouble breathing. I can't imagine 35. No. It's insane. I mean, I can because I've done it. You've seen it. I did it once. And my cousin gives me a lot of flak for not going back and doing it every year. Dude, I couldn't stand it. Yeah, you had to push the ice away. It was so bad. I get the sentiment of it. Like we're kicking off a new year. We're jumping in. We're washing off all the bad stuff. And it's supposed to be good for you. Dude, I was cold. I couldn't do it. It was nuts. No, no, no. And every year he's like, we doing this thing. And I go, I got something else to do. It's so bad. 35 degree water in Lake Michigan where they did this. They splashed around. A lot of them had different colorful costumes and outfits on. The fundraising for this event will continue through the end of the month. And then all eyes will be looking forward to next winter for another romp in the chilly waves of Lake Michigan, they say. Burr. Yeah. Burr, burr, burr. More than 4,000 people. Would you do it for a good cause, Josh? I mean, doing it alone is a good cause. Like I said, I like the sentiment of it. That's not the problem. What's the problem? It's cold. It is cold. Your body essentially goes into shock mode. Yeah, I didn't, I did not care for that. So anyway, burr. Cold thinking. Well, good for those people for helping a good cause. That's right. And it's good news. I saw a very, very fun video that I think should happen to everyone in any profession. There is a place, a pizza place that has a window that's on a street. And when you look in the window, you can see the guys making the pizza. And outside of the window were probably four or five college aged dudes who were very vocally cheering on the pizza making guys from outside of the window. And they're just doing their job. But they were watching it like it was a sports in action. And when the guy went to spin the pizza, they lost their minds. And when he went for the big handful of cheese and put it in the middle, and then he went for a second handful of cheese, and they went, two cheese, two cheese. And it was, I mean, it was very, very fun. And I think everybody should have a cheering squad for their job. Not necessarily every day. But you should have a moment where you get like, you get like, you're doing awesome. Like, they're standing outside of a window watching you do your job, cheering you on. Yeah, but okay, big time, a pizza job is more action. Yeah. If they were watching my job, they'd be like, Whoa, yeah, put on your headphones. That's right. Here we go. You're getting ready to talk. That's a good one. Yeah. Yeah, I could use with a little cheering squad every now and then. Right. It's, it's kind of fun. It would really peppy up sometimes, wouldn't it? Yeah. Other days, you might be like, I can't, I can't today, just leave. It might cheer you up a little bit. Maybe. I mean, it would get old or it might be obnoxious. Right. So maybe you get like, half an hour, half an hour, once a month, you get your cheer team. Yep. And you're like, to be there. What's up? You guys ready for a good one? We're putting on a good one today. The guy reached for different toppings and they didn't know what pizza he was making. So they were like, what's it going to be? And they're making guesses. They're like, sausage. But then they only did it on half and they were like, wait, it's a half and half. Like they were very excited about the whole process. It reminds me of, there was a video I saw a while ago and it was a bunch of high school students that were waiting at the drop off. Yeah. Maybe they were middle schoolers or something. They were waiting at the drop off, excuse me, point where parents were dropping off their kids. Yeah. And they were like, welcome to school. They were like, kiss your mom, goodbye. Same, same scenario. Right. Big level of hype. Everybody needs a good hype up. It was like welcoming everybody. Yeah. It was fun. 30 minutes is probably appropriate. And then you got to be like, I got to get to work. Yeah. I didn't want to really got to do something. Yeah. And that's probably all the cheering squad has. Yeah. And they can move on to their next motivation for like that would be a good like singing telegram business. Yeah. Like we hired a cheer squad of like five frat dudes to stand here and cheer you on while you're doing your regular job. Though you answered the phone. Your customer service. Top notch. That's funny. Cute. She's updating the spreadsheet. Hey, I give my own self props for that. I love updating a spreadsheet. What's color code? This box. Big night last night for Scout troop group. Uh huh. We got two ceremonies in one. Two ceremonies in one. Because why just have one ceremony when you can have two? Right. You know? Yeah. We should have just stacked on a third and stayed all night. There was food. You guys, I was actually impressed because you did the two ceremonies in a little over an hour. I was like, we're going to be there all night. It was a couple. No, it started at seven. Yeah. You got finished about eight-ish. I mean, we hung around and mingled for a little bit, but. Oh, okay. I think it was closer to like 845 or so when we wrapped up. Maybe the first one was under an hour. Definitely. I can't remember. Okay. Anyway, sorry. Anyway, no, you're, it's all good. We welcomed a whole bunch of new youth into our, into our scout troop, which is awesome. Uh, one of them, uh, I'm sure they're all very excited, but one of them is extremely excited. His name is Jackson. He's awesome. J-Doll. And he's been around. He's been around, uh, Scouts for like, since he was born. Uh, he's been around. Yeah. And so he's finally, uh, moving into the troop. So he's very excited to get to do the camping and the backpacking trips and all of the things we've got planned, which I'm very excited to have him along. It's been a long journey for him to get to here. Yes. To now be able to participate in all this stuff. Right. He's very stoked. He had a special message for you. He did for both of us, for everyone. Well, the one piece is real. Okay. I still don't know what that means, but sounds important. So glad you passed that on. It's, it's, it's code word for something. Yeah. He said, you got to say this on the show. So good job. If you happen to be a kid who knows what that is, yeah, maybe an 11 year old kid or older, that means something to some folks. He also had a book in his hand. That's right. Maybe it has something to do with the book, which is called one piece. That's right. He's reading one piece. The one piece is real. Everybody. Now you've said twice. Code word. Also, yeah, the hawk flies at dawn. Oh, does it? That's my own. Eagle has landed. It's my own code word. The hawk flies at dawn. That's important. Write that down, kids. Get your decoder rings out. Be sure to drink your oval tea. Oh man. Anyway, I'm excited. Congrats to these, to these youth. It's really exciting to, to have a nice big group welcomed in. And then we also had his older brother was recognized for his Eagle Award, which was really cool. So yeah, it's, it was a big night. Big night. So big achievements. Yeah. And then I was like, you know what, it's been a long weekend and I am a tired guy. And I finally was like, I got to get out of here and go to bed. And that was my night. And we did. Yeah. I made a bunch of tacos and went to sleep. Pretty wild. Pretty wild night. Anyway, I congrats to those guys. That's fun. And now we, we have a whole new herd to work on. All these new scouts. Yeah, very cool. Yep. It's alive and well. Good stuff. The one piece is real, everyone. Three times. Daylight savings time is on Sunday. I think just singular. Daylight saving time. Yeah, which sounds weird, I know, but it's what it is. Daylight savings is the time. Yeah. Savings with a, an apostrophe. It's possessive. Spring forward, everyone. This is the bad one. I know. This is the one where we lose an hour. Daylight saving time. We'll begin on Sunday at 2am. We spring forward an hour. And then it will last until November 1st, 2026, when we will fall back. British Columbia has announced that they're switching to permanent. So when they spring forward, they're not falling back again. Correct. Yeah. See, that's the, that's kind of the crazy thing is if you, if, if, if we as a country or whatever decided that we were going to eliminate it, they would be in the spring forward time. Why? Because I think that's the standard time. Okay. Well, they wanted to do it alongside California, Oregon and Washington, but they got sick of waiting. So they said, we're just going to do it. And hopefully these other states will follow suit. Yeah. So they wanted that whole, I mean, state by state, they can do it. It'd be like, what's the point, right? Like it had to do with agriculture and time zones and whatever back in the day, but what's the point today? Why? For fun? Because, because it's something that's always done. We've always done it this way. Let's keep doing it. Yeah, I don't necessarily, I know that it helps with, you know, light. Sure. But I don't know if it's necessary. Here's what it says. It says it was primarily introduced to maximize natural light during evening hours, reducing the need for six artificial lighting and the need for artificial lighting and conserving energy. So that was, you know, historically it was for that, but why now? I know that Arizona doesn't do it, but I just learned that Hawaii also does not observe daylight saving time. It is saving. I always thought it was saving. I know. There's no S. It's singular. It's daylight saving time. Save the daylight. Daylight saving time. It's like that old lady in Back to the Future. Save the clock tower. Yeah. Save the daylight. Yeah. Daylight saving time. Just, I mean, look, if you take nothing else away from today's show, take away the fact that it's singular, because you're running around saying savings, like you're storing it up and collecting interest. Look at all my daylight. Look at all my daylight savings. It's just daylight saving time. All right. Well, I didn't know that. I certainly don't think that we can't do without it. What now? I think we can be fine if we never did it again. We spring forward and stay there. And yeah, it never moved again. I think it'd be okay. I'd be fine if I never had to touch a clock again. That'd be great. Well, you'd have to in the batteries, Dye. Right. But if I never had to do it, like how many clocks do we have that we actually have functioning right now? Not how many historically have we had in the house? Because at one point you had an entire wall covered with clocks that was right. Each one of them at different times of the day were correct. Because the batteries would die. And sometimes I got sick of moving and when daylight saving time came around. Okay. But did you know also that all of them, all the clockwork in them was different? None of them were, they were not synced up at all. I know. Okay. Right now currently in our house. Yeah. Counting the microwave in the oven. Sure. So two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine. Seriously? You're serious right now? We have nine clocks. Yeah. That's absurd. Why is that absurd? I like clocks. I just love twice a year having to touch them. I don't like that part, but I like, I like a clock. Yeah. Well, neat. Daylight saving. I might have more than that. Those are the ones I can think of right now. At least nine. We have at least nine. Do you count the cars? No. My, mine changes automatically, but yours does not. You are so fancy. I know. And every time I have to change it, I can't remember how to do it. And then I go, wow, what do I do again? And then you, in November, when we had to fall back, you were like, you're an AM when it should have been PM. Right. I don't even care. Is it still an AM? Couldn't tell you. Cool. I mean, it should be AM now, but when you get in the morning, you just look and it says like five, whatever. And you go, okay. Yeah. I don't pay attention to the AM PM. He even knows what that means. I just mean, I don't know what it stands for. I know that it means day and night. Okay. But AM and PM are, it's post meridian and anti meridium, I think. AM stands for anti meridium and PM stands for post meridium. Come on. Let's go. This guy. Look at me. Good job. I know what AM and PM stands for. Good job. Before I looked it up. Good job. I'm impressed. Look at me. Look at me. I'm so impressed. And there's no S on daylight saving time. Daylight saving time. Sounds so stupid. Daylight saving. Don't forget to set your clocks forward on Sunday. A lot of people don't believe me when I've said I've never been to Disney, but I've never been to a Disney park. I've never been there. Same. Never. Same. And I'm debating on whether or not I like really want to go have a Disney experience. And then I saw something that was announced late last year that I just missed, I guess. And then I saw it earlier this morning and I thought, you know, I might be poll enough to get me to go. I want to go see the Star Wars stuff. I think that's awesome. I want to go stand there with the full size millennium falcon. I think that's all cool. I think that's great. But Bluey's going to be there. Bluey? And now I'm kind of like, I want to go see Bluey and play some KiPiPi. Because you can play KiPiPi. You can play KiPiPi at home, though, for way less money than it would cost to go see Bluey. You can't play KiPiPi with Bluey at home. I mean, it's pretty cheap at home. It's opening this summer at Disney's Animal Kingdom. Raffiiki's Planet Watch is where it'll be. They will have the opportunity for you to dance, play games like KiPiPi and take photos with the characters. Surrounding areas will feature Australian animals to match the show, which is super fun. But you'll be able to see Bluey and Bingo at Disney World. Okay. Here's what happened. There's been times where we've been like, ah, should we go to Disney? And then I think about the temperature. I think about the people. I think about the cost. And then most recently, I found out that if you don't know what you're doing when you go to Disneyland, you're lost. If you don't know how to work the apps and the wait times and the fast pass and all this insider information. And I was talking to somebody who was like, I saw a young family who just didn't know the ins and outs and they looked completely lost. And I went, well, now I really don't want to go because I'm not going to spend the time to learn all the exclusive things that you have to do to be, I don't know. It makes me feel, yeah. I get that. So apparently there will be a Bluey ride as well. You're still talking about the history. And it looks like it's themed around the grannies. Is that correct? I'm just trying to see, yeah. It's the ride is Here Come the Grannies, a family-friendly roller coaster set to open this spring inside of Sebebe's land. Sebebe's land? I love the Bluey grannies. I know. It's the golf cart situation as the beginning of the roller coaster with all the cars behind it. The grannies roller coaster. Here come the grannies. I really like the grannies. I know you do. I know. Oh man, oh man. I might just have to go to New Zealand to ride the granny ride from Bluey. See, there's hooks. I'm just here for the grannies. This is how they get you. Anyway, new info that I found out about that just now. There you go. I don't know. Maybe, maybe we have Keepy up at home, you said. We do, and guess what? What? You don't have to have an exclusive app to find out where the ride is. That annoyed me. Did it? That annoyed me. Oh, these people didn't know how Disneyland worked. Because you order all your food on the app. Like everything runs through the app. Yeah. Like I know that much. Like it isn't like you just wander in and go, let's go ride something. Like you can queue up and you can, you know, do all that stuff on the app. And I think you can, yeah, I think you can wait. Like you can check in for a ride. You don't necessarily have to stand in the line. So I don't know. I don't need there. I've never been there. I don't need there. And now I don't want to go because now I go, I'm going to be one of those people who doesn't know the ins and outs of Disney. And then all the real Disney heads are like, look at these noobs. Yeah. And then I'm going to be like, well, now I'm out. Terrible experience. Yeah, I don't want to be part of this. Happiest place on earth. Yeah, right. I don't feel it. I, I, I get it. I get it. But I've never been. Maybe one day. Maybe. It's a maybe, I said. California or Florida? Good question. This is in Florida. We knew some people who used to work there. I know. We never took advantage. I know it. They knew the ins and outs. I know it. They worked there. I know. Way to go, slick. How many people have you kissed? I said you were going to ask this and you were like, no, I'm not going to ask. I don't know a few. Why? And I'm not talking, um, platonic kisses. Those don't count. What is that? Like friends. I've never kissed a friend. Or like family members. Those don't count. Yeah. I don't. Like if I kiss the kid on a forehead, like our kid and I go, I can like. Yeah, that doesn't count. Okay. I've kissed six and that is the most popular answer. Five to 10 people is the most popular answer. I feel like that's, it's somewhere in that range. I feel like I'm lower. Lower than. I feel like I'm on the five end of it. Lower on the, you're on the five. Two to four is the second popular. Two to four. People. Two, three or four. Yeah. 26 or more people is the third popular answer. What a drastic change. I know. It's like, you know, a handful, one or two. I know. 26. That 11 to 15 people and then only one person and then zero people. Wow. No. Well, I'm glad that zero is like the lowest. Yeah. Right. Agreed. About 3% of people have only kissed zero people. Wow. So you're in that. What'd you say? I think I'm around the five without giving it too much thought because I don't, it doesn't matter. I don't like dwelling. You know, I do know. Yeah. So yeah, I think I'm around the five. Okay. Good job. But not six. You're number six. Look at that. Wow. Six out of six. I mean, it ends at you. That's good news. Likewise. That's probably the good news is that it ends there. Let's not go trying to get that 26 number. You know what I mean? Bro, can you even? How would you even, I think those people are lying. Like, oh, 26. Yeah. 26 to how many? 26 or more. Or more. I don't think that you, I was having a struggle just coming up with the six. Yeah. Well, yours was easy. So it would have been the other five people I would, I was struggling like, wait, what was that guy's name? So I can't, these people that are like, yeah, I think it's 26. You're just making up numbers. Yeah. But does it feel right? What do you mean? When they go, 26 feels accurate. Like, that's the number I like. I like, I like 26. What did I say was next? Oh, the two to four. Right. Okay, we're going to make a list when we get off of yours. I want to know. I don't want to know. I do. It ends with you. That's all that matters. Because then I'm going to Facebook stalk them. Oh, good. Great. She's coming for you. No, I'm not. I really could care less. Could or couldn't? Could not. Okay, just checking. Don't roll your eyes at me. Just helping you out. It's daylight saving time. Right. And it's could not care less. Because if you could care less, you care a little bit. Yeah, you're right. Right. When you mean could not care less or couldn't. That's all. You do not. We're just helping folks out today. Six. What? Your number six. Your number six. No, I'm saying your number is six. Yeah. Yeah. I bet. What's your number? Five. Five. What? We're gonna, two, one. Just you. One. It's one. I've got a bad system happening. What is it? Well, there's, I've got screenshots and I've got a lot of screenshots. Okay. And sometimes when I go through the screenshots, I take a screenshot of the screenshot so I can move that screenshot to the front of the line. You got to be kidding me. I don't, I'm not. You need a better system. How many screenshots do you have? I don't want to tell you because then you're gonna get all judgy. I'm not gonna get judgy. Yeah, you are. I'm just gonna compare. I don't need this comparison. How does it tell me? So you go to your camera thing and then you go to collections at the bottom and you go to on this device and then you go to screenshots and it'll say right underneath screenshots how many items in that folder. It doesn't actually. You're in a weird view. Hit that, hit that little square in the top right. And I want to. It still doesn't tell me. Right below screenshots? It says backup off. Oh, weird. Mine says 23 items. Are you kidding? If you open the album, open the album and then, and then you can't just do a quick select all. I don't know. I have 23. I used to give me a total, but I don't, maybe it stopped counting. Dude, dude, dude, dude. Scrolling, scrolling. Dude. That's not bad. Actually, that's not bad. I got to the bottom of that list fairly quickly, but it had a scroll bar. Yeah. Mine doesn't have a scroll bar. What do you have all these screenshots for? Things that I want to remember. Uh-huh. Books I want to read. Okay. Let me ask you, if you could scroll to the bottom so fast, why are you screenshotting screenshots? Because they get lost at the bottom. But you were easy to get there. It wasn't like it took you a month. Yeah. I don't know. You need a different organization. I know. Because I don't know what it is. I'm just saying, what are you, like, are you screenshotting like craft ideas, recipes? All of it. And, and when you're screenshotting, are you screenshotting it as, hey, don't forget to go check this thing out? Yeah. Or is it the actual thing? Yeah. Well, I screenshot stuff to both. I do that both ways. Because the screenshot doesn't save the link to whatever it is you're looking at. No, I totally know. I know. I screenshot things to remember. But here's what I was just realizing as I was scrolling through stuff and trying to get rid of some space. Yeah. I was like, oh, I wanted to go see that. That's over. Deleted. So I don't even check the screenshot thing. Like, I screenshot things to remember to do them, but I don't check it to remember to do the thing. It's not an effective system. No, I'm full aware. It's not an effective system. Like, look, I'm right now deleting. I just deleted 10 screenshots I didn't need. Remember, I saved all those things on my birthday, deleting all those. What? Why'd you save things on your birthday? Delete that. I am now down to one screenshot. I deleted 22 that I don't need. Cool to be you, I guess. And one of these I have saved for a very specific reason, because it's an event that I want to go to in a few days, and I don't want to miss it. And so I have it. It's the one screenshot I have, so I don't forget to go to that event. Okay. Are you going to remember to go? I really hope so. Are you going to put it on the calendar? That's an easier way to remember. Probably. Believe me, I know. If you're taking screenshots to remember a thing, it's not going to work. You're not going to remember. Take it from me. I'm trying to see if there's even, I don't even know how to even do this. You have one screenshot is what you're saying? I have one single screenshot. That's crazy. Look, here's a whole section of books. I can't get rid of that screenshot. No, it's important. That's a nice quote. Can't get rid of that. Good. That's a quilt I want to make. Okay. That's a recipe. Yeah. Is it the actual full recipe? Yep. That's an art project I want to make. That's a pair of jeans I want to buy. There you go. It's important stuff. So when you screenshot a screenshot, what did you screenshot to move higher? I screenshot at a quote, but I was like, oh, that's a good quote. I'm going to put that higher on the list so that it's at the front of the line when I go to my screenshots. Sure thing. My life is chaos. I've never done that. I know. I know. That's why you're better than me. No, that's why I'm not as good as you. You're way cooler than me screenshot and your screenshots. You're doing it. It's a good system. Not. What year is it? What is something you're glad we're both disinterested in? I'll go first. Okay. I'm glad that we're both disinterested in waking up early on the weekends. Yeah. Unless there's like a real good reason to wake up early. I like it. We've never been morning people. Neither one of us. Yeah. How do we end up doing this? I don't know. I know. But I like that about us. Yeah. I mean, look, 7.30, 8 o'clock is fine. I don't mind that. I don't mind even waking up at 7. I'm okay with 7. What is 5 anything? Exactly. And why? And why? Why is that even like a thing? Yeah. I gotta wake up at 5 something. And I know there are people that have to hop on a bus and drive out to a desert and they gotta wake up way earlier than that. Yeah, I know. And good for you. And some people wake up that early because they like it. Yeah. And they like to go exercise that early. Good for you. I'm glad you're not interested in doing that. I would need to go to bed at 8. I know. Which, listen, one of these days, that's gonna be the norm. I know it is. I'm gonna be an 8 o'clock bedtime guy. I know. I know. And I'm gonna be like, hey, it's time. And then when that time comes, I'll be like, hey, I'm glad that we're both going to bed at 8. Right. But then I'm gonna be up earlier. That's fine. For right now in this moment of our lives, what's something you're glad we're both disinterested in? Harley Davidson motorcycles. Not really into it. It's not my scene. You don't want me to be a biker chick? No, no. Okay. No. All right. I'm gonna leather jacket. That's okay. You have a leather jacket that's sporty for when we are riding my motorcycle that is not a Harley. Yeah. It's an old cafe racer style. I could get a black leather jacket with fringe. Yeah. And like leather chaps. I don't like that. Okay. Okay. Same. I'm glad about that too. Right. Yeah. Yeah. Do you have anything else? Oh, I'm sure I could think of some things. Okay. I'm glad we're not into, like we're not super into, like they're all kind of in the same realm. Like I think I'd like to own a cool classic car, but I think that like the big classic car fanatic folks is a hobby. I'm not interested in it. I'm disinterested in being a classic car guy. I do want to own a car from the 60s or 70s. Very specific car. But again, it's my style. It's the style of the thing. You know, it's funny though. Like I never thought I'd be interested in fly fishing and not that I am. Are you? Come on. But because of your high interest in it, then I'm like, well, I have to be somewhat interested in that because my husband. Because you're adjacent to it. Yeah. Yeah, I get that. But that's probably the same reason why you go, hey, I'm building quilts and I go, I'd like to make one and made one because I was curious about the process and one was enough. You don't see me rushing out to go, hey, let me make more of those. And to be fair, you had a quilt or a kit. Oh, my fault. No, no, no, no. I'm not saying that that's not in and of itself a thing that you did. It's pretty amazing that you did. It was gifted to me. No, it was a kit, meaning that you didn't have to pick the pattern. You didn't have to pick the fabric. Right. It was all put there together for you. Correct. You had to cut it and piece it and sew it. You had to do all of the work, but all of your fabric, everything was already put together for you. True story. I'm not saying that that made it easier. Right. I'm just, I don't know. I don't know the intention of why I even said that. It felt a little elite. Like, you got a kit. Okay. My bad. You didn't have to actually think about how many yards of fabric you would need for that pattern. Well, the pattern tells you how much fabric you need. Right. I know. I'm aware. Okay, okay. You're not interested in quilting. Got it. No, I'm not anymore. I built one and I like the one that I made and I'm good with it. Okay. You built it. Yeah. Isn't that what you call it? Yeah, I think so. Block by block. I built that quilt. See? Look at what I built. Quilt builders. That's got to be a thing. It's got to be. Yeah. With hard hats, with a little quilt square on them. Quilt builders. Oh, Josh. Look at, it's a marketing whole thing. So anyway, what else are you disinterested in that we are both disinterested in? I'm trying to think of like popular TV shows that we both are like, nah, I can't get me yellow. Ultra running. Oh, yeah. I'm not into ultra marathon stuff. No. No way. No way. Yellowstone, the TV show. We're not interested in that. We tried and I couldn't. Save. And I've been to Darby. We really have. We passed by the Yellowstone estate. Multiple, multiple times while we were over there. And then we said, let's give that show a go. And about 30 minutes in, both of us said, yeah, I'm not into this. I just can't. High five to that. Yeah. See. Oh, oh, cute. All right. Good times. Hang gliding or I've never tried it. I might be interested in it. I'm disinterested. I'm disinterested in skydiving. I'm disinterested in pretty much jumping off anything tall. Okay. I am too. But not because you said that. Yeah. Okay. I was just thinking about it. No, because I'm my own person and I don't want to be a part of that either. I was just thinking about it and I went, yeah, that kind of sounds scary. I don't want to do that. Yeah, for sure. Well, I'll keep thinking of more. I'm sure there's lots of things. Common disinterest is a cool, cool thing. Yeah. Yeah. Something you hate, something your partner also hates. I mean, hate's a strong word. Something. That's why it's disinterest. Come on. I really like old photos. Yeah, you do. Like if we're ever out checking out the antique shops or anything like that and somebody has like old black and white photos, you think it's fascinating. I'm fine. I'll be like, where'd she go? And I'll find you over there with a shoe box full of old photos, thumbing through them. It's fascinating. What is it about it? I don't know because those were all real people. Well, yeah. And so then I like try to imagine the life that they led and what year it was and what prompted the photo. And what's really cool is sometimes you can find some old postcards that have handwritten messages on the back of them. And I like those too because it's, you know, somebody writing a postcard to a family member or somebody writing a postcard to a friend. Now you never purchase any. You just thumb through them. What would you do with them if you did? I can't bring those into my house. They're haunted. No way. I can't have those old photos in my house. No, those and the eyes would follow you. What are you talking about? Those photographs just stay at the thrift store. You don't think you can get a spiritual attachment from looking at them? No. They stay in the photos and they stay at the antique store. Righto. Is that seriously why you don't buy any? Because you're afraid to take home those souls captured in the photos? Kind of, but also because what am I going to do with them? Well, I don't know. I mean, we're trying to figure out what to do on like the wall down the stairs. Like it might be really interesting to have some of those just old random photos of people because you're fascinated. And if people come over you go, who's this? I go, oh, that's Billy. No, you don't have to make up stories. I could. It's just a cool old vintage wall of photos. No. No, no. It's not that. Okay. I don't want those people in my house. I don't know those people. What if they were weirdos? Maybe they're not. But what if they were? Maybe they're like, I'd really love to be hung on a wall for me. But all she does is pick us up and put us down. Well, that's the saddest part is like somebody discarded those photos, which means that everyone who remembered that person has perished. It's no more. Yeah. Well, and that's what they say about the two deaths, right? Once when you physically pass on and second death is when the last person that remembers you passes away, which is terribly sad. It is very sad. So there's a Facebook group called YouGrewUpinIdahoFalls if you remember and people can post old photos. So there was, they found a bunch of pictures in the old Oe Bell building, which is now Alturas. And so there's been this group of people that have kind of been collecting and organizing, and they've been posting all of these pictures from, I mean, there's pictures from 1930, there's pictures from 1960, just stacks and stacks and stacks of books. And it's fascinating. And I love, love, love looking at them. I just like to look at what life was like in the 60s or the 30s. Yeah. Well, and I've seen, you know, people take the photos I like when they know where they were taken, and they'll hold them up, they'll recreate some of those shots and stuff. I think that's really fascinating. I like that too. It's just fascinating to see how much it's changed, like old cars and how they used to plow the streets soon. Yep. It's fascinating. And that's what you have to say about that? Yeah, yeah. Okay. Well, I'm glad that you have decided not to decorate the house with the captioned souls. They don't come home with me, Josh. Okay. That's creepy. I just thought I'd ask. I didn't know. I didn't like, I don't know. I don't know what you do with your photos. No, I just look at them and then imagine their life. Okay. And then I go, okay, well, have a good day. Put it back. Do you say that? Sometimes. You talk to them? No. Well, I sometimes I pull them out and I go, oh, hello. Well, that's nice. And then I look at it and then I turn it over to see if there was anything written on the back or if there's a date. And then I go, hey. See you later. Back to the shoebox with you. You know those, like those videos you see of like people that are in a big room, there's a lot of people in a big room and they claim that it's an adoption, a pet adoption facility and the dogs are picking their owners. Right. It's AI. I know. Right. I'm full aware of that. I'm just telling you. I liked those videos until you said those are fake. Yeah. Well, there was a shelter. Emery sent me a video yesterday. There was a shelter that did this for real and it wasn't necessarily a pick me event, but they had, they had a bunch of people. Like the families of the shelter, they came, they sat down in a big room and they let the dogs kind of one at a time go into the room and get loves and pets. And they said, this is a, it's a pick me event, but it's not AI. And so it was real. And the dogs necessarily didn't get adopted, but they were just there getting the loves and the pets and they were running from person to person to person and getting there. And they were very excited about it. Of course they were. Did they ever like just stop at somebody and be like, this is where I'm going to sit for a minute. For a minute. Yeah. And they didn't stay long. Each dog didn't stay there long because they were like, there's too many people. I got to say hi to everybody. So it was like. It's a lot of excitement. A brief like, okay, you can pet my ears. Okay. Now I got to go talk to this person. Yeah. And that's how it works in real life. Right. And that's how we know that AI isn't real. Because yeah, they're not going to go, you are my human. Yeah. Did I sit in the car and watch that video all by myself and cry in my car alone? Yes, I did. That's sweet. Good for you. And then did I feel foolish because. Because why? Because I was sitting alone in the car crying about pets. Don't feel sad about it. That's a nice thing. I'm glad you saw it. And I'm glad somebody made the real one. I'm glad they went, you know, this is a good concept. Let's put it into action and see what happens and film it the right way. That's good. Instead of just being a weird AI video. I hate AI videos. Let me just say that right here now. I know. I know. I don't like them. I don't like that I'm getting buffalosed by them all the time. And they're getting harder and harder and harder. I know they are. And I don't like that because I used to think that I'd be like, that's AI. But now I go, I can't tell. I really cannot tell. And I don't like, I don't like being lied to. Yeah. Me neither. Don't lie to me. I didn't say it like that. I know. I'm just giving you, giving you grief. When I was in college and I had a roommate, we were poor and broke all of the time. And so we would invent our own kind of entertainment. And there was a game that we made up that I, we used to play just when we were bored and we would just sit around. We would just be watching TV or something. And it was called the I love I hate game. And the idea was that you could complain about something. But you also had to follow it up with a I love this thing. I see. So it's a I hate I love more than I love I hate. Whichever. It doesn't necessarily matter. Okay. And were they about the same thing? Or completely disconnected? Whatever it could be, whatever you wanted it to be. All right. So it would be something like, I hate the sound of somebody chewing bubblegum. Right. I love the smell of rain. Like that kind of thing. I see. And then it would be her turn to go. Yeah. And then it became silly. You could make it as silly or serious as you wanted. Sure. So yesterday, something happened at work that was frustrating. And so I sent my friends a text and I said, I hate this thing. And then I followed it up. I remembered that game. I haven't played that game in a long time. And then I followed it up and I said, but I love this thing. And then it balances it out. Yeah. Were they excited? Had they also forgotten the game? I don't think that they knew that I was playing the game. Got it. But that's fine. Because they responded. They both did a grumpy face and a thumbs down to the things I said I hated. And they both did a love for the thing I said I love. Oh, well, they really agreed with you. Yeah. Well, that isn't that fun. It is fun. And that's what friends are for. So much to write a song about that. Would you rather this or that? Would you rather have lived in the 1780s or the 1880s? Let's see. Now, if you'll remember from Hamilton, 1781 was the Battle of Yorktown. OK. So in 1781, British surrender at Yorktown, 1783, the Treaty of Paris, 1787, the drafting of the US Constitution, 1789, the start of the French Revolution. OK. So that's all happening. That's the time period you're in. What's in 1880? Key events in 1880. 1883, the Brooklyn Bridge opened. Oh. The Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882. The Washington Monument was completed in 1884. The Haymarket Square Bombing was in 1886. Karl Benz patented the first gasoline-powered car. Thomas Edison introduced electric Christmas lights in 1880 and opened the first commercial power plant. The first Kodak camera was introduced in 1888. Let's see. What else is going on? Brazil abolished slavery in 1888. The Cologne Cathedral was completed in 1880. That's the one in Germany at the Christmas market. Oh. I believe that. That is correct. Is that correct? OK. I'm looking just at outfits. Yeah. So I looked up outfits from the 1880s and outfits from the 1780s. The 1880s had bustles. OK. In 1880, Rutherford B. Hayes was president and Thomas Edison was patenting the light bulb. Yeah. What else is happening? 1880s fashion, a lot of top hats. You mentioned the bustle. That's the big tail thing. OK. OK. OK. OK. This is like Doc Holiday and Wyatt Earp time in 1880. Sure. Yeah. This would be westward expansion. A lot of that was going on. Yeah. I'm going to pick 1880. You are? Yes. But are you going to pick western expansion or are you going to pick the New York lifestyle? New York lifestyle. So you want the New York lifestyle of the 1880s. Yes. Yep. And now I want to see fashions of the 1780s. Oh boy, is it colonial. I know. I also just feel like plumbing might have been a little bit better in 1880. Not great. That's true. But a bit better. But there was such a French influence on everything in fashion in the 1780s. Not that Paris isn't like a big fashion influence today. You would have to wear a wig. It's just, yeah, the big powdered wig, the little stockings, the little buckle shoes. So cute. Yeah. Now I'm going 1880. Yeah. Just fashion alone. Plus to be there for the opening of the Brooklyn Bridge. Yeah. Very cool. First time you get to have Christmas lights. Very cool. Yeah. 1880s. Good. Would you rather? That's what you're picking? Yep. We're both interested in that. How about it? Are you ever driving in a car with somebody and you're listening to a song, a song that you really, really like, that you like to sing along to? And then the person in the car with you starts talking and then you have to go, hold on. You have to push pause because you're going to miss the part of your song. Is this an issue you have? Or because you can't push pause, like maybe you're listening to the radio. Yeah. Then you can't push pause on your song. You have to say. I can pause the radio in my truck. You can? Yeah. Your truck is so fancy. It doesn't have heated seats, so it's not that fancy. But I have a backup camera. Sometimes I have to listen. I'll not even pause the song. Yeah. I'll let the song play. I'll listen to the story, but then I have to skip to the beginning so that I can restart the song. Oh, boy. Oh, boy, what? What's going on that you just have to hear the song? I like listening to music. I know you do. But you can't just be like, I'm okay with whatever else is going on. Because again, I will drive in silence. I will listen to nothing or I'll listen to different people having conversation or I'll listen to some podcasts here and there. But I do quite enjoy listening to just being in a vehicle, no interruption. I do not. I like listening to music. I like singing along to music. Especially in the car. But then I feel like when other people get in the car, I have to put it back on the radio every time so that people have that noise filler. Do you ever notice that? When you get in my truck, it's silent. And I do not. And then I have to go turn on the radio. I did not know that. You don't have to. No one has ever said anything about it. I know, but I feel like you all expect to have some sort of music or something. And so I turn it all back on. Well, the kids usually have their earphones in, so they're already listening to their own thing. But I just drive. Most often, I'm driving in silence. The next time we get in your car, don't turn it on. Let's see what we do. Just so that you see what it's like. It's just going to be quiet. See how long it takes for somebody to notice. Well, you'll notice right away now. Well, I will now because I know the secret. I just, I hear noise all day. So do I, but it's not noise I've actively picked. But I also create noise. Like I'm in here all day making noise. So it's really nice to be like, hey, silence. It's quiet. Sometimes in the morning, I like to drive in silence. But sometimes this morning I was listening to, I didn't necessarily want to sing along this morning. And so I just picked a song in a different language. Oh, interesting. So that I didn't, I couldn't sing along because I don't know the words. Was it bad bunny? Yeah. I figured as much. All right. Well, hey, let's wrap up today's show. We'll be back tomorrow on your Wednesday. Bright and early. We'll see you then. Okay. Bye. 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.