Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Lunchbox had to leave the show halfway through. Whatever his
TV thing is is today, so he left the show.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
Oh his big shoot.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
Yeah if you heard that, you know, nearest endus of
the show and he's not there. That's why he kept
telling us he had a TV show. So I was like,
take leave early, you're all good. I don't know what
it is, none of us do. He keeps saying it's TV.
But he said that the same thing, the same when
he did the Sonic commercials.
Speaker 2 (00:29):
Oh, and that was like an internal video, but that was.
Speaker 1 (00:31):
Like a video for us Instagram on our social media and.
Speaker 2 (00:34):
Yes, yes, I was the camera group.
Speaker 1 (00:37):
So he'll be back tomorrow, Not that we've been missed
him that much because he was here for a lot
of the show. But still he's probably not gonna tell
us what it is tomorrow, but we can try to ask.
There is something now, anal botox that I wanted to
spend a little bit of time interesting looking into. Hey
look there's a Rod.
Speaker 2 (00:57):
He heard he went up.
Speaker 1 (00:59):
It's like Sam Beetles three times.
Speaker 3 (01:01):
Those two don't have anything to go together, right, You said,
anal boatox and Rod?
Speaker 1 (01:04):
Oh yeah, there's Rod just walked down.
Speaker 4 (01:05):
Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:06):
Yeah. See Caesar Raza thirty one shares how anal botox
helped him overcome pain during stuff was But but it
treats anal fissures.
Speaker 2 (01:17):
I don't know what that is.
Speaker 1 (01:19):
I had. I injured my butt on a peloton. I
ripped it like three years ago. Almost impossible to heal
because you have to use that all the time, so daily. Yeah,
well no, because for a while my stomach is so bad,
like every four days.
Speaker 2 (01:32):
That's right.
Speaker 1 (01:33):
But the botox that have put into my massaters is
this which one's master?
Speaker 5 (01:39):
Masters? Your jaw temples are your top of your head?
Speaker 1 (01:43):
Yes, for me grinding my teeth, it's the same thing
they do into your your buttole.
Speaker 5 (01:50):
And it's for what why you want to relax? I
just googled it, and I don't I regret it.
Speaker 1 (01:55):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I wouldn't let everybody know.
Speaker 5 (01:57):
It's yeah, well it's well so botox. To sum it up,
it's relaxing the muscle. So if there's any part of
your body that needs to be relaxed, like some people
get it and they're trapeze as muscles because their shoulders
are really tense and they want to relax, you can
put it there. You can also put it where Bobby's
talking about right now, if the if the muscles need to.
Speaker 1 (02:15):
Relax and with like if you have injuries, or if
you want to do butt stuff.
Speaker 2 (02:21):
Oh it works, that's what I think. That's how Yeah,
that's what that Caesar guy said.
Speaker 1 (02:26):
Yes, but the whole thing started with like injuries.
Speaker 5 (02:29):
Ok.
Speaker 1 (02:29):
I just saw the headline wanted to yell out and
see where it went. And that's where it went. Weekend,
what'd you do anything?
Speaker 5 (02:35):
Amy, There's a lot of rain, so I feel like
we could do nothing.
Speaker 2 (02:40):
I know.
Speaker 5 (02:40):
I mean we had a track meet on Friday night,
and let me just say, oh boy, track meats are long, Okay, okay.
Speaker 1 (02:48):
Yeah, because all the events right, yeah, so.
Speaker 5 (02:51):
Your kids runs one part of it and then his
next event is you know, five hours later.
Speaker 2 (02:57):
Is he still doing cross country?
Speaker 5 (02:58):
He's doing cross country, but cross country is in the
fall and track track, like you know, the mile or
the eight hundred relay thing is in the spring. So
that's what he's doing right now. Cool, which is so
fun and I love it for him, but let me
tell you, it's just just it's real long. It's a commitment.
Speaker 1 (03:16):
So yeah, you hope the events are closer together. Yeah,
you hope your events are closer together.
Speaker 5 (03:22):
Yeah, yeah, so I and he of course wants to
stay and watch his people. But Friday was Ben's day
and not mine, So Ben and I were there together.
And then right when Stevenson got done with all this stuff,
I was like see yuh and Ben's like okay, He's like,
have a good night. I'm like, uh huh.
Speaker 1 (03:36):
We haven't been able to morow yard. Not that I'm
in my own yard anyway, I'll be honest with you,
but there's been no mowing's it looks like, yeah, it's
just rained non stop. And then the next day when
it doesn't rain, like, well it's too swamp, We're wait
till the next day. But then the next day it
rains again. And that's happened for like a week and
a half.
Speaker 2 (03:53):
It doesn't end. Man, it's raining.
Speaker 1 (03:55):
It's as tall as the bulldog is and he goes
out in he basically it's a long jungle. Yeah, it's
a jungle back there. And so but the weather sucked again.
It rained all freaking weekend here, So you do nothing.
Speaker 5 (04:07):
Supposed to have that celebrity golf tournament today for Walker
Hayes and the golf course thing, and they had to
postpone it until June or something because the golf course
is just too wet.
Speaker 2 (04:17):
There was a golf course in town that like they
just the storm wiped that golf course out, Like they're like,
we don't have holes really, like the greens are gone.
Speaker 5 (04:25):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (04:26):
That there's flooding into people's houses seven to ten minutes
from my house. Like that's how random that flash flooding
is and was depending on where you lived to what
part of town. How I don't know the ground like
it where your house sits, like on a plane.
Speaker 2 (04:44):
Yeah, it's like Black Creek or something.
Speaker 1 (04:46):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (04:46):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (04:47):
When I was buying a house last summer, I was
looking at this one. Actually it's the one Caitlin and
I went to look at where I saw the cardinal
that gave me the sign to move. That house is
in the flood zone. And I remember thinking at the time,
but Warner, they odd, you know, like we don't really
have to deal with it. And then now I'm like
I can rest easy because I'm not in a flood zone.
But that house was so the cardinal, you know, the cardinal. No, No,
(05:10):
the cardinal who knows.
Speaker 2 (05:11):
Pc cardinal said by the house.
Speaker 5 (05:13):
No, I was very clear that the cardinal said, you
can move and everything will be okay. The cardinal didn't
say this is your house.
Speaker 1 (05:20):
So the cardinal says what you wanted to say. No,
that's what.
Speaker 5 (05:24):
That's what the cardinals said.
Speaker 1 (05:25):
That's why.
Speaker 5 (05:26):
That's why I didn't get that house. Otherwise I would
have gotten it.
Speaker 1 (05:28):
I read a whole book this weekend, which your story
reminds me of that. I finished the book I was
reading that. I read it. There's not there was nothing
to do because you couldn't do it. I read an
entire book this weekend. It wasn't a crazy long book anyway.
It was The Alchemist. You guys read The Alchemist?
Speaker 5 (05:41):
Oh no, no, But my niece was reading it when
she was with me, and and and and a guy
that liked her wrote her a letter like based on
the Alchemist. It was real romantic.
Speaker 2 (05:51):
What's the book about?
Speaker 5 (05:52):
Tell us more?
Speaker 1 (05:54):
Well, it's mostly like finding your your purpose, Like that's
the story you're reading about a kid. But the story
about the book is crazy because the guy writes the book,
it was received terribly. The book company drops him. He
then does it himself. And it's not even like it
blew up. It's like seven people bought it, twenty people.
(06:17):
Over the years, it's turned into this massive, uh, you know,
successful book that's gone multiple languages multiple times. But it
was really unsuccessful when it was put out. But and
again it's not super long or anything.
Speaker 2 (06:32):
But and so the author found is their purpose.
Speaker 1 (06:36):
Yes, it's a it's a journey, and I don't want
to say too much about it, but it's a journey
and a purpose book. And I just stumbled across it.
I was going through I to finish the book that
I was reading, and I was like, I don't know
what I want to read next, because I like to
have something even if I'm not in it right then.
I like to have something I can go to, especially
if I can't sleep at night, because like it's such
crazy anxiety at night, and so I need a book
(06:56):
to pull up on the iPad. And I was like,
I don't know, went through like eleven stop on that
had heard like maybe Lebron or Wilson Metheris, somebody talk
about it, and I was like, let me just read it.
I read it all this weekend. It's not even one
that I want to recommend because I think if you
should read it, it'll find you.
Speaker 2 (07:13):
Oh I like that. Yeah, it's never gonna find me
because I don't read.
Speaker 1 (07:18):
That's probably you know what I mean, But it might.
But I gave them the four Agreements, the fact that
you guys won't read that, and that book's like ten
pages long?
Speaker 2 (07:25):
Is it really just ten ten? No?
Speaker 5 (07:26):
But it's like it's so my sister just read that
for the first time. Agreements. She can't stop talking about it.
She's like this book. She's like, I know it's been
around for a long time. She's like, I don't know
why I never picked it up, but she finally did,
and she's like some of this stuff just would have
been so helpful a long time ago. And she's like,
(07:46):
it's changing my life right now.
Speaker 1 (07:47):
It changed my life things and even things that I
don't think about daily. I think I've been so heavily
influenced by parts of that book. It's one hundred and
sixty pages.
Speaker 2 (07:56):
Oh you lied, that's not short.
Speaker 1 (07:58):
That's a short book.
Speaker 5 (08:00):
If you were to look at it, you'd be like, oh, okay,
that's a that's manageable.
Speaker 1 (08:06):
There's like three or four books that I think, are
I want to do a book time? But that are
like that are like yeah, but some a few do
and everybody else is like rolling their eyes.
Speaker 2 (08:17):
But oh, mister book reader, I wait for them to
become movies.
Speaker 5 (08:20):
Oh yeah, is there a movie about the Alchemist?
Speaker 1 (08:23):
I don't know, and I'm telling you, I just was
going through and I was like, I'll just do this one,
and I read it and then I just didn't stop
reading it. So the total time it takes to read
this book, the one that I gave you, guys, it
is about two and a half hours.
Speaker 2 (08:35):
For someone that can really read.
Speaker 1 (08:37):
You can read, though.
Speaker 2 (08:38):
What happens to me is I'll read a page and
then I realized, like I wasn't paying attention for half
of that page.
Speaker 1 (08:43):
That I do that too. I think everybody does that.
Speaker 2 (08:44):
Okay, then I have to go back. Yeah then I
get tired.
Speaker 5 (08:47):
Guys. There's a movie called Aemist.
Speaker 2 (08:51):
Oh yeah.
Speaker 1 (08:51):
I don't know if it's the same thing though, because
alchemy is a real thing. It's like turning, uh, it's
like changing something into something else. In this the example
has led to gold.
Speaker 5 (09:03):
Oh I guess that's not off the book whatever.
Speaker 1 (09:05):
So Alchemy's a real thing, but it's not it then, Yeah,
but it's not just this speaking out.
Speaker 2 (09:12):
Did you get your gold.
Speaker 1 (09:13):
No, not yet. I've been too busy. I haven't had time.
Speaker 5 (09:16):
You don't want to go out in the rain.
Speaker 1 (09:17):
I didn't.
Speaker 5 (09:18):
It's been they were probably closed too, because the Gold
place the rain.
Speaker 1 (09:23):
The rain place closed, the Gold Place.
Speaker 4 (09:25):
I don't know.
Speaker 5 (09:25):
You just went from like I read a whole book.
I mean, I get it. You don't want to leave
the house in the rain. Like there was a time
I had to go run an errand and it started
pouring like a monsoon, and I'm like, I just want
to go back to my house given it when it
would let up, I didn't want to go back out,
but for fear that it might just me Well.
Speaker 1 (09:41):
Also, I didn't like I didn't even open up until
like four pm on Friday, and I'm not texting the
I don't even know if he's in the office all
the time. And at four pm on Friday, I'm not
trying to go anywhere and like start something right. So No,
I didn't get the goal. The books I would say
that are like fundamental to me, and they're so cliche.
Are I'll do them quickly, the four agreements, the how
(10:05):
to when influence, how to influence people? Whatever that one is.
I've read that one a few times.
Speaker 5 (10:12):
Is that a Gladwell how to Win.
Speaker 1 (10:13):
Friends and influence people? Know? No, that's Dale Carnegie and
it's old and it still resonates like that. That book
is from like the thirties, nineteen thirties something. Yeah, so
that's a good one. There's one other one, but it
doesn't matter. And now I would put this in there.
This was good. I liked it, so book club overbody
(10:37):
go to that?
Speaker 2 (10:38):
Yeah, yeah, all right.
Speaker 1 (10:41):
Our interview with Ed Helm's coming up in just a
few minutes here on the podcast, This Dating Code shares
you're better looking than you think? Do you think you're
better looking than you think you are?
Speaker 5 (10:54):
No? Really, do I think I'm better looking than I
think you?
Speaker 1 (11:01):
Because you're you're gonna have a feeling about yourself and
you have to either be better looking you are worse
looking than you think you are, because you're not going
to be exactly right.
Speaker 5 (11:08):
So the question is it's a tricky question.
Speaker 1 (11:11):
Do you think you're better looking than you think you are?
Or do you think you're worse looking than you think
you are.
Speaker 5 (11:15):
You can be. You can't be exactly what you think.
Speaker 2 (11:19):
Oh he's right, though, you're not who you think you are, right, because.
Speaker 5 (11:21):
I feel like I don't know, I have dys morphia.
Speaker 2 (11:25):
I think so you think you're uglier than you really are.
Speaker 1 (11:29):
Maybe what about you?
Speaker 2 (11:30):
Yeah, for sure, I think I'm uglier than I really am.
Speaker 1 (11:33):
I think that's generally what most people would think. Well,
most fox isn't here. So this dating coach has the
story from Men's Journal. Even the most confident people doubt
themselves from time to time when it comes to their looks.
The thing is, we're our own worst critics. And his
name is Blaine Anderson. Six signs you're better looking than
you think. Number one, People do a double take when
(11:54):
they see you. If you see people doing this, it's
probably not because you have something in your teeth, so yes,
a little, but mostly because they're like, oh, that's the
guy from something. They recognize it, Yeah, from something.
Speaker 2 (12:07):
It's not like oh hello, never that.
Speaker 1 (12:09):
Never that.
Speaker 2 (12:11):
But yeah.
Speaker 1 (12:11):
Sometimes people be like wait, but when they do like
a triple take, that means they can't figure it out,
And then it kind of takes you down a half
notche from where you are at first, whenever they're like, oh,
maybe they're a fan of the show or something. But
when they keep looking and they and they have their
eyes kind of squinted, they're trying to figure it out.
Random people compliment you. They know that never happens.
Speaker 6 (12:31):
Never.
Speaker 1 (12:32):
Yesterday, like yesterday evening, my wife and I went and
noway dinner at this excellent Mexican place in town. I
don't want to say the name of it because the
last time I did that, I can't buy an orangejuices
to place since I mentioned the orange juice because it's
always sold out.
Speaker 4 (12:42):
Now.
Speaker 1 (12:42):
So we go to this place and it's awesome, and
my wife goes into the guacamole with a chip. I'm
wearing an open toed I'm more on like flip flops.
She drops the biggest clump of guacamole right in between
my big toe and my second toe. It was disgusting.
What do you do so you can't? Really it's gooey,
(13:04):
so it's in there, right, Yeah, It wasn't like a
it was guaca moly. So I'm like trying to shake
my foot to get it off and it won't go,
and so then I have to get a napkin and
like go into in between my toes and then you
don't want to put it back on the counter. It
was just a mess. So I went home with guacamole toe, Uh,
finish the whole meal. But yeah, no, I mean it
perfectly right up between a big toe.
Speaker 5 (13:27):
Where was your where's the table on your foot? I'm
trying to pick.
Speaker 1 (13:30):
Were sitting at the bar because the place was full,
and so it went right down under the toe?
Speaker 2 (13:35):
Why did that to you in California? Too? Right? Like,
didn't I drop a sushi? And you're like, I felt
that on my foot?
Speaker 1 (13:39):
You did, but but that was with a real shoe. One,
this was open toad and it just hung in between
my toes. The next one you get random follows and
message on social media. The next people remember you. This
is different than for us, So I think we have
a job that were public, so it's a bit different.
You get compared to celebrities and then people get nervous
around you. Those are the things that you may be
(14:00):
better looking than you think.
Speaker 5 (14:02):
Are you talking about? Like talking like really really really
really really good looking people who gets double takes?
Speaker 2 (14:08):
Like I don't know what that's like?
Speaker 1 (14:10):
I uh, the thing you get compared to celebrities is
funny because anybody period that wears dark rim glasses, not
even celebrities, but like random people. It could be like
a homeless dude on a corner or a model, or
I get people tagging me going I think I sell
Bobby Bones. It could be like the worst looking or
the best. Rarely it's the best looking, but it doesn't
(14:30):
matter if they're in dark glasses. I took. I just
saw Bobby Bones as a bar and it's like some
dudes like nothing, nothing like me because they have glasses on.
Speaker 2 (14:38):
It's better than mine. Though. Do they all say, like
picture of.
Speaker 1 (14:41):
Cheech, like I don't look like cheeach from Cheech and Chong.
Speaker 2 (14:45):
Teach and Chong, or like John Lovetts you know that comedian?
Speaker 1 (14:47):
Yeah, but now your head shaved.
Speaker 2 (14:49):
I don't look like that?
Speaker 1 (14:50):
Or do I yeah? Nah? Come on, uh they do
America's Top Casual Dining Restaurant list and so I'll a garden.
Seven year streak of being America's top casual dining restaurant
is over. So these are these are places you go
sit down, but you don't have to dress up.
Speaker 2 (15:11):
Who took over?
Speaker 1 (15:12):
Who took over? Who's your guess? Olive Gardens at number two.
I love olive Garden, soup and salad, crush it, Applebee's,
Apple Bee's at number four, Chili's three. Okay, so Olive
Garden at two, Chili's at three, Applebe's at four.
Speaker 5 (15:29):
This regional Cheddars, No Cheddars on the list.
Speaker 1 (15:33):
It's a national poll.
Speaker 2 (15:35):
Panara mm hmm.
Speaker 1 (15:37):
Panera though you can kind of get to go in
a bag though.
Speaker 5 (15:39):
Yeah, and they have a drive through sometimes.
Speaker 1 (15:42):
Morgan worked at one of the places on the list,
but yeah, at five, not number one, but at six
is Longhorn Steakhouse. At seven's out Back, eight is Cheesecake Factory,
nine is Red Lobster, ten is Red Robin.
Speaker 5 (15:53):
Oh.
Speaker 1 (15:53):
Texas Road number one, Texas Road.
Speaker 5 (15:55):
Are they have the best rolls in all the land.
Speaker 1 (15:58):
What land, all everywhere?
Speaker 5 (16:01):
And you all know their roles, right, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (16:05):
I've been there in a while. Can you throw your peanuts?
Speaker 5 (16:08):
Yes? No, they don't like to do that. Well they
used to. Yeah, that cod that was my favorite.
Speaker 1 (16:14):
What I haven't been since COVID then, because yeah, I
haven't been to a Texas roadhouse that you can't throw
peanuts on the floor. So that's how long it's been
since I've been to one.
Speaker 2 (16:21):
It's the best feeling in the world to just throw
it on them.
Speaker 3 (16:23):
They still give them to you, and I think technically
you can, but like you know how you used to
going and there's peanuts everywhere that's not there anymore.
Speaker 1 (16:31):
We were talking about the Hitler art market. Yes, remember
last week or maybe two weeks ago. I was talking
about how I'm not even sure how it came out,
but Hitler was like an artist, like a painter, and oh,
it's memorabilia, yeah, which is crazy, right, And so I
did a little oh murder bill yet that's what it's called, right, Yeah,
(16:53):
And we talked about, you know, how people are buying
like paintings from killers or different things that murderers had,
and so I mentioned that there was Hitler art and
that he was actually pretty good at drawing and pretty
good as a painter, but you can't really have Hitler's art.
And so here's a breakdown of his artistic past. Hitler
(17:16):
wanted to be a professional artist and applied to the
Academy of Fine Arts of Vienna twice and was rejected
both times. He painted architectural landscape, street scenes, and rural settings,
often avoiding human subjects, likely due to his lack of
skill and depicting people. During World War One, he continued
painting while serving as a soldier. He sold paintings in
(17:38):
Vienna and Munich for modest prices before World War II.
After the war, his artwork became infamous rather than valuable.
Collectors then began to seek out his works due to
their historical significance. Some of his paintings that sold for
tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands of dollars. A
group of watercolor sketches fetched over four hundred thousand dollars
(17:59):
at a twenty five fifteen auction in Germany. Is but
is it legal to have these? Because of the demand,
historical notoriety, Many of the paintings that were forged as
Hitler's have also resurfaced, sixty three suspected fake Hitler paintings
(18:19):
they seized. And then the question is is it a
moral to have these? Is it the glorification of a dictator?
Even though Hitler's paintings themselves are not political because again
their houses and trees and buildings.
Speaker 5 (18:33):
Yeah, but he is not moral?
Speaker 1 (18:38):
Yeah, I agree. One of the worst humans of all time.
Speaker 5 (18:42):
It just feels gross.
Speaker 1 (18:44):
But I think the general okay gross. Can you separate
the art from the artists? Not with Hitler, and it
is the ultimate because it's like the because it's like,
you're still gonna listen to I believe I can fly
by R Kelly.
Speaker 5 (18:57):
I get that, but even that, I still for cool.
This is very different.
Speaker 1 (19:03):
Yeah. No, it is like, how do you feel like
I saw because the severity of it, it is.
Speaker 5 (19:08):
Okay, like there's some thing coming to our performing arts
center here called MJ which is like a Michael Jackson thing.
Do we feel okay going to that?
Speaker 2 (19:17):
I wasn't planning on going.
Speaker 1 (19:18):
Michael Jackson was never found guilty, okay, And not only that,
the deeper you go into it, I think, the less
you feel Michael Jackson.
Speaker 5 (19:28):
Was guilty, Okay, Well, then I'm not.
Speaker 1 (19:30):
Gonna go anyway because I don't I don't care.
Speaker 2 (19:31):
I won't plan on it, but.
Speaker 1 (19:34):
I know I just had a quoted on the accounts
June thirteenth, two thousand and five from the actual trial.
But we can't be hypocritical and be like, well, OJA
was acquitted, but oj did lose a simple trial and
Michael Jackson settled.
Speaker 5 (19:45):
I believe because if I mean MJ's coming to town,
but like Oja was coming to town, I'll be like,
I'm not going to go.
Speaker 1 (19:51):
But oj oj still played golf and existed. Yeah, he
went to jail again for kidnapping. But okay, if you
like re it's tough because you don't know, right, and
then the people that accused him, there are stories and
leaving Neverland, right if you watch that, there are parts
(20:14):
of that where you go, I.
Speaker 2 (20:14):
Don't know if I believe this, that's the documentary.
Speaker 1 (20:19):
So what I think he was absolutely bizarre and weird.
You don't grow up like that and not be I
mean he was famous from five years old. Yeah, never
had an understanding of what privacy was like, wasn't able
to be a kid. Who knows what happened to him.
I mean his dad beat him, possibly so, and that's
not an excuse ever for you to do it to
(20:42):
other people. But I think.
Speaker 2 (20:44):
Weird and.
Speaker 1 (20:47):
Illegal different different there, Yes, so you can be both,
but you can also I mean, but you can be
weird and to be illegal, but you can also be
weird to not be illegal. And Michael Jackson just could
have been that.
Speaker 5 (21:02):
Okay, so cool, I can. I just seemed like a
good opportunity to ask if I.
Speaker 1 (21:06):
Could go to that, Well, you can, you can do
whatever you want.
Speaker 5 (21:08):
No, I felt I wanted Joel's opinion.
Speaker 2 (21:09):
Because it's like, it's like the Hitler art you can
that's not the same.
Speaker 5 (21:14):
It just no, it's not the same. If you all
bought that. No, if anybody in here went to m J,
I'd be like, okay, well, if any of y'all bought
this art from Hitler, I'd be like, what is wroman?
Speaker 2 (21:25):
We wouldn't buy it. But somebody out there.
Speaker 1 (21:27):
Probably That's not the point. You just said. It was
like going to the microdaction show, and it's not. It's
it's so much more severe. Now you can still have
your idea of hey, i can separate the art from
the artist, or I'm buying it because I want to
sell it, like whatever you want to do. You want
to profit off of that.
Speaker 5 (21:43):
Yes, but you don't want that dirty money. What if
it comes back to haunt you?
Speaker 1 (21:49):
Right, there are all those things like being haunted, right,
And he always worries about people.
Speaker 5 (21:54):
All of our money is a little tainted, I'm sure, But.
Speaker 2 (21:56):
Like you were asking if it it's illegal, like to
own art. I don't think that it should be legal.
You don't think what that it should be legal to
own his art. That's twisted and it's weird, and.
Speaker 1 (22:07):
I need to see if it is illegal, though, because
anytime I've seen it or seen people talk about it,
they're like, it's secretive this person has it, and maybe
they only have it not because it's illegal, but because
they don't want people to know because of how we're
reacting to it. Yeah, in the United States, it is
not illegal to own a painting attributed to Adolf Hitler
as long as it doesn't involve the promotion or glorification
(22:28):
of Nazi ideology. I guess the reason I felt that
way was because every time anyone's ever talked about it
that I've seen it, it's under it. Never personally, but
like watching documentaries or it's like they don't want you
to know they have it, And that feels like what
they do about illegal things. Just to finish this, why
selling his art is a moral one the glorification of
a dictator to the legitimization of hate symbolism. Because a
(22:52):
lot of the collectors, some of the collectors. I shouldn't
say a lot if I don't know who's collecting, but
some of the collectors they collected because they idolize him.
Speaker 4 (23:02):
That's weird.
Speaker 5 (23:03):
Yeah see, And then that's they need to be looked into.
Speaker 1 (23:06):
Well, they can't be because you don't know they have it,
which goes back to how why I thought it possibly
was illegal.
Speaker 2 (23:11):
And there's a reason why they don't want to know.
Speaker 1 (23:12):
Yes, the exploitation of history and funding hate groups. Some
of the buyers of Nazi related memorabilia, including Hitler's paintings,
are linked to far right or neo Nazi groups, making
the trade even more controversial.
Speaker 2 (23:22):
It's bad stuff, man.
Speaker 1 (23:24):
While Hitler's art provides insight into his early life, the
moral implications of selling and collecting and forging his work
are significant. And then it's an ethics question again. It's
not illegal. In many European countries, it is illegal to
buy owner sell Nazi memorabilia. Okay, So that's only that. Okay,
so in many European Yeah, listen, I won't want any
(23:47):
part of this.
Speaker 2 (23:50):
That's like, there's a place in I think West Texas
maybe that you know, those where they were tearing down
those statues of like Roberty Lee and Civil War people.
Will he bought one and put it put it in
his like I guess he owns like a resorters on
some guy in West Texas, and so it stands there
like a statue of one of those.
Speaker 1 (24:08):
Like are you just trolling people when you do that?
Speaker 2 (24:11):
I don't know, right, Like, I don't. I don't know
the reason why you would buy that and put it
up on your your property. I just don't understand that.
Speaker 1 (24:20):
Yeah, I wonder.
Speaker 2 (24:24):
Like my like my mother in law went to it
and she was like, check us out. Like, I thought
that was pretty interesting, Like why would you buy that
first off and then put that in his property? Guess
he can do whatever you want.
Speaker 1 (24:35):
Uh to a point, I guess I don't think you
could do that with.
Speaker 2 (24:37):
A Hitler statue, No, because.
Speaker 1 (24:40):
I think that would be Nazi driven, right. Uh, all right,
I don't know if there's anything else, because I will
get to the take a break here and then get
to the Ed Helms interview. Yeah. I think that's it.
We got mic. We're good.
Speaker 5 (24:57):
Oh.
Speaker 1 (24:57):
I can give you one other thing. A company selling
a stuffed animal called Dino, which will snitch on all
the things. Your kid tells it in confidence, love it?
Speaker 2 (25:05):
What fantastic one.
Speaker 1 (25:08):
It's a stuffed animal. It's basically a nanny cam that is.
Speaker 5 (25:10):
Your kid's gonna talk to it. And do you tell
your kid you can tell this dino anything.
Speaker 1 (25:14):
Have you seen the tiktoks where the parent puts the
camera up. It says, Okay, when I walk out the
bathroom and the kid doesn't know the phones recording them,
you can cuss as much as you want. You say
every curse word you want. And then she said, but
when I come back in, you can't curse anymore, and
the phones recording them and they shut the door, and
the kid's like, ef, it's hilarious because there's like three
that's it, And that's that's kind of what this is like.
(25:36):
You can tell this dino, the dinosaur whatever you want,
but then it tells the kid. It's a plush dinosaur
that comes on with the built in AI chatbot that
records your kids every word. For two hundred and forty
nine dollars, your child can share their secrets with this
knockoff Barney while you eaves drop through the app. It's
literally just a lumpy, stuffed dinosaur with the speaker of
microphone and chatbot. But the folks that Magical Toys want
(25:58):
you to believe this fabric covered survey device is the
most intelligent toy for your kid.
Speaker 5 (26:02):
Uh, this feels weird.
Speaker 1 (26:04):
From Boing Boying.
Speaker 5 (26:05):
This feels real weird.
Speaker 2 (26:07):
You want to know what your kids are talking about, but.
Speaker 5 (26:09):
What are they really going to say this? I just
need you to How about if the app just does
like a quick transcriptive there's anything alarming, like, highlight that
part for me, let me know, because I feel like
you're gonna be listening to a lot of nothing.
Speaker 1 (26:19):
Yeah, but also, the kids got to be like three
or four to want to play with this, because once
you hit five, you're you're not playing with really Yeah
yeah yeah. Like a guy does ten thousand and one
pull ups in twenty four hours to reclaim a record.
Whoa ten thousand and one? Wow, I can't even do
four hours. So breaking that down, let's just say it's
ten thousand and twenty four hours. So you go fivey
and twelve twenty five hundred and six, twelve, five and
(26:43):
three times. That's crazy.
Speaker 2 (26:45):
How many can you do?
Speaker 1 (26:47):
What pull ups in twenty four hours?
Speaker 2 (26:50):
Like, say, like before you just have it like in
a row.
Speaker 1 (26:54):
It depends on if I'm cheating or not. Do I
get to do like.
Speaker 2 (26:57):
No cheating man?
Speaker 1 (26:58):
No? No, no, So I forget what they called them where
you like swing? I used to do oh oh kIPS
like kipp kipt pull ups, so the kipping pull up
because I used to do uh what was that stupid workout?
Easy to do?
Speaker 2 (27:16):
Cross it?
Speaker 1 (27:16):
That's it?
Speaker 5 (27:17):
Yeah, yeah, the worst. Yeah, my tailbone did.
Speaker 1 (27:20):
Not like that.
Speaker 7 (27:20):
Well.
Speaker 1 (27:21):
The reason the reason CrossFit was the worst is because
you would be competing and so therefore you probably be
like not doing the form right because you're trying to
do everything fast. But like kipping pull ups are different
than straight pull ups and do I just go in
to go chin above the bar. I could probably do
dafting all the way down, I come all the way.
Speaker 2 (27:40):
Back up, because that's probably what he had to do, right.
Speaker 1 (27:41):
I probably do ten.
Speaker 2 (27:45):
Ten pretty good. Yeah, I mean I've seen him.
Speaker 5 (27:47):
I know.
Speaker 1 (27:47):
I believe I thought you under say that was low.
Speaker 2 (27:50):
No, I mean it tends a lot, dude. I don't
think I can do one anymore right now with my
arm the way it was after I broke it, Like,
I don't think I can do one.
Speaker 1 (27:59):
Because you've lost your strength.
Speaker 2 (28:01):
Yeah, like my right arm, I just can't put. I
can't pool anything really, like without my elbow herding.
Speaker 1 (28:09):
Is that.
Speaker 2 (28:12):
It's not normal, dude, I'm gonna have to go to
a doctor again. Like, it's not normal. I fear that
I probably maybe heard a ligament.
Speaker 1 (28:19):
But I mean, have you done the proper rehab on it?
Speaker 2 (28:22):
Just what they told me to work with bands and
pool and.
Speaker 1 (28:25):
Are you doing that by yourself?
Speaker 5 (28:26):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (28:26):
Yes, you probably haven't rehabilitated those muscles. Right, it's probably
not injured. It's probably listen, I'm a doctor, but on letters.
Speaker 2 (28:34):
Yeah, correct, not unbroken arms.
Speaker 1 (28:36):
Okay, let's take a break here and then we'll come
back with ed helms and then at the end of
this we'll talk about white lotus. But we will I
will not do any sort of spoiler. There'll be no spoilers.
Speaker 2 (28:45):
All right.
Speaker 1 (28:45):
Thanks, There we go on the Bobby Bones Show now. Ed,
thanks for the time, man. I appreciate you coming on.
Speaker 4 (28:54):
I'm so glad to be here.
Speaker 1 (28:57):
I just kind of want to jump in because we
were talking about your podcast, but I fascinated with prohibition
in general. I know you just did an episode on that,
And to me, I've spent a lot of time just
reading about how ridiculous Prohibition was and the fact that
it was thirteen years and it's really the only amendment
to ever be created and then turned back against itself.
(29:17):
Just Prohibition itself blows my mind whenever you finished or
while you're learning about Prohibition and even how organized crime
really thrived and came about a lot because of Prohibition.
Like what did you what did you take away from
like leadership from back in like the twenties and thirties
at this time.
Speaker 6 (29:38):
I think that the mistakes of the Prohibition era are
so instructive all for throughout up to the present. Like
we were seeing decision making and leadership that we always
need to be questioning and some of these really draconian
and like huge sweeping measures like prohibition, and we should
(30:00):
always be questioning, is this really in the public interest?
You know, of course drinking in excess is problematic, but
like is banning alcohol the answer? So yeah, leadership during Prohibition.
Speaker 1 (30:17):
Was a little flawed.
Speaker 6 (30:18):
And what's really crazy is in our season, it's actually
the whole season is dedicated to this story, and it's
not just probition itself. It's a story underneath prohibition about
how the government, also in trying to deter people from drinking,
was adding poison to the alcohol supply, which wound up
(30:39):
killing thousands of people. Yeah, and this was this is
like more just insane government activity, and it's a wild story.
It's darkly funny, and we we have a lot of
fun with it.
Speaker 4 (30:52):
Well.
Speaker 1 (30:52):
I also feel like, as they say, if you don't
learn history, you'll make the same mistakes in the future.
And again, not just harp on prohibition, but I've been
fascinated with it forever. The idea of you could pass
these sweeping laws but not actually have the people to
enforce it, Like they did not have the proper amount
of police or whomever to police the prohibition, and the
(31:15):
fact that all of the politicians were also still drinking.
They were basically part of the corruption. Even if they
weren't making money off of it, they were still involved
in not pushing the police that we didn't even have
to police it.
Speaker 6 (31:28):
So but hold on, yes, are you implying that that
that people in Congress were are hypocrites?
Speaker 1 (31:34):
You know, I think I am, I do, How dare you?
It's it's very similar to and again why I'm so
fascinated is the fact that Congress now can trade by
stocks and we've seen, we've seen them, we've seen It's
it's wild how it just so happens. They're on these
(31:54):
committees and all of a sudden they sold all their
stocking and bottomed out three days later. I mean, there's
some very fun, familiar themes with what you guys are doing.
And then what the whole theme of the show is.
Speaker 4 (32:04):
It's why I love the show.
Speaker 6 (32:06):
You're right on the money, it's you know the We're
in season three of this podcast, and each season is
a deep dive into one of history's biggest screw ups,
and they're all instructive, like we're like the lessons of
these things are just always timely, and everything resonates. Season
(32:27):
one is about a NATO military exercise in nineteen eighty
three that scared the Soviets so badly they thought that
NATO was going to attack, so they ramped up their
nuclear posture. We clocked that ramped up our nuclear posture,
and a lot of historians now believe that it's the
closest we came to a nuclear holocaust. And now all
(32:48):
of a sudden, present day Putin is saber rattling, maybe
some tactical nukes here and there. It's like these lessons
are never you can't learn them enough. We're always needing
to go back and look at what's what happened and
see how we can we can maybe do better. But
(33:09):
that was in nineteen eighty three. It was all classified
until just a couple of years ago, so nobody really
knows about that.
Speaker 2 (33:15):
It's the story.
Speaker 6 (33:17):
It's basically the identical story to the movie War Games
with Matthew Broderick, and I had him on the podcast
to talk about it. He'd never heard the story and
was thrilled a great It was a great reveal for him.
But then season two is all about In nineteen seventy one,
some activists in Philadelphia thought, hey, the FBI is getting
(33:41):
out of line. They're starting to harass people, surveil people.
They're really starting to feel like some illegal intervention in
public life and civil liberties. And so they didn't have
any way to prove it. So they broke into the FBI,
stole a bunch of files, leaked them to the Washington Post.
(34:01):
A heroic reporter named Betty Medsker.
Speaker 8 (34:04):
Published these files and exposed j Edgar Hoover for basically
all of the criminal activity that he was engaged in.
Speaker 6 (34:13):
It was the beginning of his downfall. It started a
congressional investigation. It's the only reason that we have any
congressional oversight over the FBI, the CIA, the NSA, all
the intelligence institutions.
Speaker 8 (34:26):
And it's it's a wild story. It's it's like Ocean's eleven.
Speaker 6 (34:29):
These these citizens staged the heist and and it's a
great and it had these all these epic political ramifications.
Speaker 4 (34:39):
People don't know about it.
Speaker 6 (34:40):
It kind of got washed out because Watergate happened just
a couple of years later, and that obviously is like
a major thing that we all remember. But it's it's
just it's so and now of course there's so many
questions about how the FBI is run, and you know,
like is it too politicized? And guess what, Like, we
(35:03):
have historical precedent to look back on.
Speaker 4 (35:05):
We can learn from these things.
Speaker 8 (35:06):
We can hopefully hopefully do better.
Speaker 1 (35:10):
Yeah, I think that Again, the theme is all this
stuff has happened before, but it always ends up happening
again if we're not careful and when you talk about
the Cold War, we were actually talking about that on
the show pretty recently. And I mean the Cubas missile
crisis was probably number one, but if we're ranking like
tiered almost in the Cold War, this was probably number two.
(35:31):
And this is when Reagan was like screaming that Russia
was the evil Empire. And so not only were they
doing the PR battle like they're the bad guys, and
Russia had developed the Operation Ryan, which was a system
to make sure that the West didn't launch missiles, and
so all this is out and really it's like almost
a PR Battle gone wrong, like you said, more so
(35:52):
than factually, like they weren't really planning to have a
nuclear war, but they almost talked themselves into having a
nuclear war exactly.
Speaker 8 (36:00):
Oh I love, Yeah, I love.
Speaker 6 (36:03):
We were going with this, And if you listen to
our season one, it's really cool because, like I said,
the story of season one, this NATO military exercise that
scared the Soviets, this it was all just declassified a
couple of years ago, so nobody knew about it as
it was happening, and and we in the in the season,
(36:25):
we overlay that with what's happening historically, we use a
lot of archival audio from the time. Of course that
crazy or very intense evil Empire speech. Charles Schultz was
going on the on Ted Kopple talking about things the
Secretary of State and and now we have more context,
(36:51):
we know what they knew through this able Archer story,
and so we overlay it in the podcast and you
can kind of like, oh, well, we didn't because we
didn't know at the time that they knew this stuff.
And you hear Reagan's posture shift suddenly, and it's and
it's because very probably because of how scary this moment was,
(37:13):
that he sort of backs off the evil Empire thing.
Maybe maybe there's some reconciliation between the Soviets in America
that we can we can maybe we can work together
and see a brighter future. And it's right after this
near miss of like possible nuclear winter. And it's just
(37:33):
why it's so fun. This is why history is so fun.
It's almost like true crime. You get to revisit these
things and kind of understand history in a new way,
and the deeper you go, it just it never ends.
Speaker 4 (37:45):
So fun.
Speaker 1 (37:45):
And too, it's just like when North Korea was shooting
off missiles and you're tweeting at each It just felt
similar to that or now with Putin and what Russia
is doing, and you know, are they going to talk
themselves into doing something that they regret doing nuclear which
is almost what happened then, But because again, if we
(38:06):
don't learn from our past, holy crap will end up doing.
And listen, I'm a big fan. I'm a ignored about
this stuff. It feels like you do with a historian.
I just kind of say stuff. So I think you
have a lot more credibility than I do. Ed's podcast
Snapho now in its third season. Don't you do in
a book on this too?
Speaker 4 (38:23):
Yeah? I got a book coming out in a month.
Speaker 6 (38:25):
It's called SNAFU, The Definitive Guide to History's Greatest grew Ups.
And it's also really fun, deeply researched, but kind of
a cheeky take on a lot of these disasters from
starting from the fifties and up to the present.
Speaker 1 (38:41):
You are a bluegrass musician. I know that from watching
me on the office. And we're in Nashville, so a
lot of bluegrass here. Did you ever come to Nashville
and do your thing playing music?
Speaker 5 (38:50):
Oh?
Speaker 6 (38:51):
I love Nashville. My mom is from Nashville. I grew
up in Atlanta, and my cousins all were in Nashville.
Speaker 4 (38:58):
I was in there.
Speaker 6 (38:58):
I was up there all the time a kid, and
then and then as a as a bluegrass fan. Just
always yes the station in you know. So I just
have so many friends that live there still, and it's
one of my favorite cities.
Speaker 1 (39:13):
Where did the banjo come from? Who taught you how
to play? Why a banjo?
Speaker 6 (39:16):
I was really into bluegrass guitar as a kid, and
uh and my teacher was this wonderful teacher, Sam Worley
Uh in Atlanta, and he also had a bunch of
banjos around his his studio and UH and I was like,
I want to do that. I want to learn that,
(39:38):
but I couldn't afford a banjo. So he lent me
one and UH started teaching me. And it was so
Now I'm I'm kind of both. I'm a guitar and
banjo player. But yeah, sometimes I fantasize about living in Nashville.
Speaker 4 (39:54):
I just I love it so much. It's such a
beautiful city.
Speaker 1 (39:58):
If people see you walking down the road, what do
they yell at you? Most Nard Dog and what is
your response to Nard Dog.
Speaker 4 (40:07):
I don't know. Usually just a high five or a
wave or whatever. People will yell.
Speaker 1 (40:14):
You know.
Speaker 6 (40:15):
What's funny, this woman came up to me once in airport.
She goes, she goes, I just want to give you.
She's like, hey, Nard Dog, Oh my gosh, I just
want to give you a big hug.
Speaker 2 (40:23):
Is that okay?
Speaker 4 (40:24):
Is that okay?
Speaker 6 (40:25):
Or no?
Speaker 4 (40:26):
She said do you mind? And I said yes, meaning yeah,
I kind of mind.
Speaker 6 (40:31):
I don't need a hug from a complete stranger.
Speaker 7 (40:34):
But she took it as yes, go for it. She
came in and just gave me this big bear hug.
I was like, okay, I mean it's at least it's
positive energy. I don't need hugs from strangers.
Speaker 4 (40:45):
I'm not I'm not that needy. But her energy was great.
It was really funny.
Speaker 1 (40:51):
I was watching White Lotus season two and the guy
who plays PLoP on the Office. I feel like a
lot of his character was you anger management from the Office.
Have you seen him play that character at all?
Speaker 6 (41:05):
Yeah, you're talking about Jake Lacey who played PLoP on
the Office, and then it was so great on White Lotus.
Speaker 4 (41:14):
He I think he was wearing a Cornell hat.
Speaker 1 (41:16):
He was absolutely right, that's so great.
Speaker 4 (41:20):
Yeah, there were some there were some echoes.
Speaker 6 (41:21):
Of Andy Bernard in that in that performance, but Jake
is so awesome. He really brought He brought so much
to The White Lotus too.
Speaker 1 (41:29):
I want to ask a Hangover question. The tooth on
a Hangover? Was that a real situation? Did you really
remove a tooth that had been like a fake tooth
as a kid?
Speaker 6 (41:38):
I actually was born without that tooth. I had a
baby tooth there, but when it fell out, there was
no adult tooth that came in. So for years as
a kid, I had a like a flipper with a
tooth on it. And then when I think when I
was seventeen or so, I got a permanent implant. But
an implant is just a basically a post the cap
(42:00):
on it. So when Todd the director of The Hangover,
was like, Hey, yeah, you're gonna lose a tooth in
this movie. I went to my dentist. I was like,
is there any way to take this thing off? And
he goes, yeah, sure, We'll just take it off for
the run.
Speaker 4 (42:14):
Of the movie.
Speaker 6 (42:14):
I'll give you a flipper so you can do the
scenes where you have a tooth and then well, you
won't have a tooth whenever you want.
Speaker 4 (42:22):
And that's what I did.
Speaker 1 (42:24):
Ed helms on with us. He co hosts a podcast
called Snafu, which dives into real life historical screw ups
and blunders. It's also funny. It's very insightful. As you
can tell. I'm super into history and blunders because I
think we can learn a lot from them and not
do them again. Ed, big fan of all of your
work throughout the year, from the Daily Show until now
and even the podcast. So good luck with the book
(42:45):
and the podcast, and we really appreciate the time.
Speaker 6 (42:47):
I'm so grateful. Thanks so much for having me on, Bobby,
and high five to you for your history nerddom.
Speaker 4 (42:53):
I love it. We need we got to talk more.
Speaker 1 (42:55):
High five to me. I'll accept it, all right. Ed.
Good to see you, buddy, You too, cheers this bomb
shoe Uh no spoilers. I'm gonna mention this about White
Lotus real quick, is that I did finish all the episodes.
I crammed them all in. I was like, I don't know,
seven back for my wife and she had done that
(43:16):
for me for Squid Game season two, and so I
did it for her, which she was like, I didn't
ask you, but I was like, you know, but I
wanted to have this moment, but I did. I watched it,
watched finale last night, and so it was ninety minutes long.
So prepare yourself.
Speaker 2 (43:29):
Okay, Oh okay, that's an hour and a half.
Speaker 1 (43:32):
That's an hour and a half. It's a movie.
Speaker 2 (43:34):
It is a movie. Yeah, so what do you think?
But did you like it? Do not like it? You
can say that right without spoiling anything.
Speaker 1 (43:43):
Did anybody watch it?
Speaker 2 (43:44):
I did?
Speaker 1 (43:45):
Okay? What can I say? Can I give an opinion
on anything? Yeah?
Speaker 2 (43:48):
How'd you feel about it?
Speaker 1 (43:50):
I thought it was great?
Speaker 5 (43:51):
Okay, okay, there, Okay, that helps. I mean, I'm excited
no matter what you say. I woke up this morning
pum that I'm gonna get to watch it later.
Speaker 1 (43:59):
I thought it was great. I read a lot of
people online who didn't think it was great, but I
think that's how that show was gonna go. And so
I don't want to spend too much time talking about
that show for a couple of reasons. One, not everybody
watches it. I didn't watch it till about two weeks ago,
and then two it's still so fresh although it was,
it's almost event worthy. That's how I felt going into it.
Speaker 3 (44:17):
I was like, I haven't felt this energy going into
a finale in a long time, like Game of Thrones
finale that people were like sitting down at that moment
to watch it, so that that was really exciting.
Speaker 1 (44:27):
But I would watch it soon because you're going to
have it spoiled. I've already seen like four things online
that if I didn't know, i'd been like, oh my god,
I saw this on Twitter.
Speaker 3 (44:34):
That's what I kind of wondered within with the finale
as big as this one, like what are the rules
because it's like it's.
Speaker 2 (44:40):
Like a live event.
Speaker 1 (44:41):
It felt like a live event. But I think the
rules are one, if you're gonna be nice, don't spoil
it for your friends. You can ask have you seen it?
But if you've you're trying to avoid it. It's almost
like avoiding a score of a game. You kind of
have to avoid everything that would have anything on it
that relates to it because you can't get upset if
(45:04):
it gets spoiled because it was very much an event, right.
Speaker 5 (45:06):
That's the thing. You can get upset if you come across.
Speaker 2 (45:08):
It isn't that proof though, that this is such a
good show, Like because there are finales all the time
and they're not events. This is proof that, like, this
is a really good show that people wait for.
Speaker 1 (45:18):
I would say more than a show. I think it's
a bit of a cultural I don't want to say phenomenon,
but I think that because of the change every season
and actors. I didn't know that was the Lisa from
Black Pink. Oh yeah the whole time, which.
Speaker 5 (45:35):
One, Wait, what's Black Pink?
Speaker 1 (45:39):
Black Pink? They're a K pop band. I mean they're
probably one of the top five biggest bands in the world.
Speaker 2 (45:44):
Oh, she's an artist.
Speaker 5 (45:45):
Oh well, bait. I thought this was another show I
need to be watched.
Speaker 3 (45:47):
Probably the most famous person in the show okay, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 4 (45:50):
Yeah, bye.
Speaker 1 (45:51):
I didn't realize that was her, and I was like, man,
she looks so familiar. Okay, it's like that's Lisa from
Black Pink.
Speaker 5 (45:56):
And I was like, oh my god, wow, okay.
Speaker 1 (45:59):
So oh yeah. I liked season three more than one
and two overall because I felt like it wasn't as gross,
like as gross as like people's like gross. Man, there
weren't any characters this season and again i'll move beyond this.
There weren't any characters this season, and maybe we put
(46:19):
this at the very back of the podcast, just this part.
I mean, we're not spoiling it, but I don't want
to spoil it. Yeah, there weren't any real, non redeemable
characters at all. Cool, we're in some of the other seasons.
Speaker 5 (46:32):
There are.
Speaker 1 (46:32):
They're just people you don't like. Yeah, so that's all.
I'll leave it there. And this will now be at
the end of the podcast, after the Ed Helms interview,
because I don't want to spend ten minutes talking about
a show nobody watches.
Speaker 2 (46:44):
I can't wait.
Speaker 1 (46:45):
Yeah, it's good, you'll like Wait, you'll like it regardless,
even if you don't like it. You'll like it because.
Speaker 2 (46:50):
It's so I like all of them every single season.
Speaker 1 (46:53):
Yeah, you'll like it. It's concluded. So that's what's up.