Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This After Hours podcast is brought to you by Chalk Supplements.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
New Baby Need Energy. Subscribe to Chalk along with your
monthly diaper order.
Speaker 1 (00:08):
Mama's gonna thank you Choq dot com.
Speaker 2 (00:17):
Welcome to after Hours, our little easter egg podcasts that
we drop into the Klay and Buck feed from time
to time. I'm producer Ali and I'm producer Greg. You
never know what you're gonna get in the After Hours podcast.
It's kind of random, but that makes it fun, right Greg.
Speaker 1 (00:32):
It does, It does, And it's appropriate that this is
an Easter egg because Easter is right around the corner
and you don't have to hunt for this one.
Speaker 2 (00:39):
That's right, It's right in the Kalaimbuck podcast feed. Well,
on this episode, we wanted to focus on Buck having
his first child because that's a big deal. We're gonna
air some talkbacks that didn't make it on the show
because Greg, how many did we get?
Speaker 1 (00:51):
I can't even count. I stopped counting at a certain point.
There were just so many.
Speaker 2 (00:55):
Ditto on the emails, we heard from so many people
that wanted to send in their care congratulations, but also
give Buck and Carrie, well mainly Buck, some advice. We
also heard from a couple of our Clay and Buck
podcast network hosts. Carol Markowitz, who has two podcasts in
our feed, the Carol Markowitz Show and also Normally, which
(01:16):
she hosts with Mary Catherine Hamm. Tudor Dixon of The
Tudor Dixon Show also sent in a message. Let's listen
to that one first, Greg.
Speaker 3 (01:24):
Hey, Buck, this is Tutor Dixon, and I wanted to
share with you what I know about being a parent.
First of all, it's the best job you will ever have,
so enjoy those baby snuggles and that beautiful baby smell.
Every phase of your James life will come with beauty
and wonder, but also some challenges. So focus on the
beautiful parts of parenting when you're in the midst of
(01:44):
something tough. Remember each phase is fleeting love, the sweet smell,
and sleepy afternoons of babyhood. Soak up the puddle splashes,
frog jumping and hand holding of the toddler phases. Never
turned down reading a book together in elementary school and
step away from everything to help build that horrible Roobe
Goldberg machine in the eighth grade science class. Go on
(02:07):
as many failed trips as you can and try your
hardest to make every single sports game. Do these things
because you love James with everything you have, and be
intentional with your love because you won't notice the last
time they ask you to read that book a night
until that phase is over, because you being present in
every phase will shape james life more than you will
(02:29):
ever know. And then one day he's going to look
at you and he's going to say he had the
most wonderful childhood because he always knew you were there
for him, you were safe, and you loved him. Enjoy fatherhood, Buck,
It's the best and most important job you will ever have.
Speaker 2 (02:47):
Tutor Dixon with a mama, Mike drop. I just love
that message, Greg.
Speaker 1 (02:52):
Tutor Dixon's a mom, she's got four kids, so she
knows and any kind of wisdom like that is always perfect.
So it's nice to hear someone from the podcast network
like Tutor Dixon.
Speaker 2 (03:02):
Always And you know what, it occurred to me, Greg,
one day, when sweet baby James is all grown up,
Buck can play this podcast for him. How cool will
that be? Like an audio photo album? And it would
be advice to him as he becomes a parent. And
let's listen to what Carol Markowitz said.
Speaker 4 (03:22):
Hi, Buck and Carrie. It's Carol Markowitz. Congratulations on the
new edition. I cannot wait to meet him, my baby.
Advice is actually more like relationship advice. Always remember that
you're a team. There will be hard times when sleep
is scarce and emotions are fraught, But the best way
(03:42):
to be a good parent is to nurture your own
relationship first. Prioritize each other, support each other, love each
other openly, hold hand, kiss at red lights, let your
kids see that, and all of that will help you
be great parents who come to parenting from a place
of stability and sanity.
Speaker 5 (04:02):
I love you both.
Speaker 4 (04:03):
Congratulations again, You're going to be amazing at this Best
luck Greg.
Speaker 2 (04:08):
I really love this because it kind of reminds me
of the whole oxygen mask thing when you get on
an airplane. Put it on you first before dealing with
everybody else.
Speaker 1 (04:17):
Absolutely, that is great advice, because your relationship with your
spouse can fall to be secondary because you're so focused
on intently on the child, and it's become such a
focus of attention that you sometimes, with all the best
of intentions, end up neglecting one another. And you can't
do that. It really is important to maintain that relationship,
(04:39):
that spark that you had before the child arrived. And
that's not taking anything away from the child, because the
child is going to get so much love and attention.
And look how much love and attention this child is
getting already from the listeners, from us, from everybody else,
the families, and it's the baby's not even here yet,
So that's true.
Speaker 2 (05:00):
Well, Greg, you're recording this.
Speaker 1 (05:02):
The baby's not even hear yet. I should say that's true.
Speaker 2 (05:05):
Greg, you're a parent. So what piece of advice would
you give Buck, And in addition to your advice, what
are your top three book recommendations kids book recommendations.
Speaker 1 (05:16):
Well, I think, and I've actually said this to Buck,
the best advice I ever got was sleep when the
baby sleeps, because the baby's on its own schedule and
it's going to do you know, sometimes it'll sleep for
three hours and especially once until it gets on the
circadian rhythm where it's dark and it sleeps, and then
it's light it's awake. So if the baby goes down
(05:39):
at two in the afternoon, you go down at two
in the afternoon as well, because Lord knows, you might
be up at four in the morning or one in
the morning and you might be up for six hours
at that point too. So sleep when the baby sleeps is.
Speaker 2 (05:50):
That's very good advice. I've heard that from people as well.
And what about your favorite, Like, I mean, there's so many,
but what are your top three kids books that you
remember from childhood?
Speaker 1 (05:59):
Yeah, things that I remember from raising my own child.
Good Night Moon is probably one of my favorites. It's
we had to read that every night, it didn't matter
what all other books we chose, good Night Moon was
always one that we have.
Speaker 2 (06:13):
That's a classic. It's a classic, and they've done so
many iterations of it. Now there's all kinds of good
Night Moons out there.
Speaker 1 (06:19):
There are there are. It's gotten fun. Another one that
I really liked and we still refer to my wife
and I and it's it's a book and I don't
remember the author. It's called Where's the Green Sheep? And
it's just teaching you about different animals and finding colors
and that sort of thing, and oh, there's the blue sheep,
and there's there, you know, the red sheep, But where's
(06:41):
the Green Sheep? And it's a good way. It's just fun.
It's just a nice, simple way of getting the child
to understand what the colors are a little bit. And
I think my favorite though, is probably Where the Wild
Things Are. Great one I always related to Max, you know,
having a little bit of imagine and have your walls
(07:02):
disappear in your room and having the jungle appear, just
something I always related to. It was always a lot
of fun.
Speaker 2 (07:07):
I would agree with you on those two. Definitely Good
Night Moon, Where the Wild Things Are. I had not
heard of The Sheep one. I'm gonna have to check
that out. But I would also add and this one
is sort of it's one of my favorite books, but
it's actually very sad but beautiful. And it's The Giving Tree.
Speaker 1 (07:23):
Oh yeah, Overstein.
Speaker 2 (07:24):
Yes, I mean I try whenever I read it. I
literally cheer up every time, and I'm like, I know
how where this goes, but I'm still going to cheer
up every time. One of my all time favorites. And
another one is called Frederick the Mouse.
Speaker 1 (07:39):
Oh I don't know that one.
Speaker 2 (07:40):
Yeah, Frederick the Mouse Leo Leone. Oh really, Yes, It's
all about finding your place in the world, and it
doesn't have to necessarily be what is expected of you
or what everyone else is doing. Oh that's about individuality.
I really like that. That's great, and I think my
advice would be for Bucking Carry is to just give
yourself grace because everything is going to be a first
(08:03):
and you've never done this before, so no one expects
you to be an expert, so don't put that pressure
on yourself. And as cliche as it sounds, every child
is different. That's what makes them unique. The guys kind
of talked about that on the show on Baby Day
about Clay was saying how he was amazed how each
personality was dramatically different from the others. So you kind
(08:26):
of can't control that. Your child's going to be your child,
So just give yourself grace, love them, and that would
be what I would say.
Speaker 1 (08:34):
I think that's great, and we're going to play some
of your talkbacks as well. One of the talkbacks that
came in that I definitely want to include, that we're
definitely going to include is one from a listener who said, Buck,
the best advice I could give you is to stop
asking for advice because and just have faith in your abilities,
(08:54):
your instincts, your instincts exactly and you'll figure it out
and you'll, you know, it goes along with what you're
just talking about with picking up on the different styles
of each child and that sort of thing. You'll figure
out what's right for you. And again that's the best thing.
I think You're going to hear a lot of different advice,
and that would be the other the second piece of advice.
(09:15):
You're gonna hear a lot of.
Speaker 2 (09:16):
Different advism of it unsolicited.
Speaker 1 (09:18):
Take what works for you and leave what doesn't.
Speaker 2 (09:21):
And also, I just think people want to give advice
because it's such a connection point and they want to
share their experiences. It as a common thing to bond
over for people. And I mean, you're gonna make mistakes too.
Speaker 1 (09:34):
So we're only human. Absolutely, We've all made our share.
Speaker 2 (09:38):
Be patient with yourself too, is the other thing. I
would say, Hey, Greg, you want to hop into the
wayback machine and revisit some Clay and Buck archival content.
Speaker 1 (09:47):
From the first year or so of the show, if
I'm not mistaken, right right, they.
Speaker 2 (09:52):
Were talking about Tony Dungey and some comments he made
on fatherhood and how if someone else had made them
they would have been received much differently. I thought it
was a really important conversation.
Speaker 1 (10:03):
I'm a big fan of the coach, and his post
football focus has been on fatherhood and that sort of thing.
So yes, it was an excellent conversation.
Speaker 2 (10:11):
Yeah, let's take a listen, Buck.
Speaker 6 (10:12):
One of the things that is probably the most frustrating
about the power of social media is when there is
an effort made to disallow things that everybody knows to
be true, right, and you're not allowed to say them somehow.
And Tony Dungeee, former coach of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers
(10:35):
as well as the Indianapolis Colts. He was with Ron
DeSantis at a press conference. We played that press conference
audio I think yesterday about seventy million dollars being given
to help forward fatherhood initiatives, and Tony Dungee spoke about
the importance of fathers and how so many kids who
were in prison did not have strong father figures at home.
(11:00):
And he said he tweeted out this morning two days ago,
I spoke on behalf of a Florida bill that supports
dads and families, and it offended some people. Fourteen years ago,
President Obama said the same things, almost verbatim. I'm assuming
people were outraged at him too. I'm serving the Lord
(11:20):
so I'll keep supporting dads and families and buck. What
he cited here was the statistics are and this is
from Obama, which is basically what Tony Dungee reiterated, is
that kids who grow up without a father are five
times more likely to live in poverty and commit crime,
nine times more likely to drop out of schools, and
(11:41):
twenty times more likely to end up in prison. We
have a crisis in many families around the country when
it comes to father's relationships with their kids and responsibilities.
And Tony Dungee, credit to him, credit to Ron DeSantis
for being willing to say that because it is one
of the primary causes of so much of the crime
(12:04):
that exists in this country.
Speaker 7 (12:05):
You know, the Left takes an approach that almost tries
to replace the father with the state, or maybe you
could say the state as father. The state sends checks,
the state steps in and says that they're going to
provide for you, they're going to do things for you.
But there is no replacing a father, right, There is
no replacement for one's father that can exist. And all
(12:27):
of the data, all of the actual research you can
compile on this shows that it's very damaging to children
of any race, of any religion, of anywhere to be
abandoned by a father at the earliest stages. And anything
that we can do is a society to try to encourage.
I mean, it's from all over the place, right, I mean,
(12:48):
Rhonda Santis is trying it with government policy. But also
you know, culturally, you know, there should be a real
celebration of being a dad. Yeah, there should be much
more effort to me, you are a dad. I'm not.
But I know what it's like out there for people
who have grown up without fathers. I know what it's
like for people whose fathers left when they were very,
(13:08):
very young. They have challenges for the rest of their lives.
And a lot of people overcome it and deal with it.
And we've all got our issues and our hurdles. But
dads who stay around, I mean, that's who wasn't I
think someone very wisely said first rule of being a
good dad is stay beyond there. It's true.
Speaker 6 (13:29):
It's one hundred percent true. And I've got three boys
and buck. What the data reflects is that boys are
far more impacted in a negative way by absent fathers
than girls are, which is kind of a fascinating study,
and it's not even close. Young girls who grow up
(13:49):
in single parent households do infinitely better than young boys
who grow up in single parent households. And by the way,
there are people out there listening to us right now
that are raising their kids in single pay households.
Speaker 8 (14:00):
Good for you.
Speaker 6 (14:01):
I know how challenging that is because I've got three
kids and my wife and I can't imagine being a
single parent how challenging it was. And it doesn't mean
that your kids are not going to grow up and
be successful. The larger statistical numbers, though, are true, and
we don't talk enough. I don't believe as a society
about the struggles that boys are having right with absent fathers,
(14:26):
but also schooling. Go look at any elementary school. We
got a lot of teachers, got a lot of moms
and dads out there. Girls are dominating when it comes
to educational levels over boys. The percentages of people who
are graduating from college now, buck, it's right, around sixty
percent of all college graduates are women. Doesn't get talked
(14:46):
about a lot. Men are not having the same level
of success in modern education environments as women.
Speaker 8 (14:54):
Why is that? What's going on.
Speaker 7 (14:56):
There's a war on manhood that the left is Remember,
there's a war on gender. Of course, the separation of
gender is the distinction between men and women that we
all know exists.
Speaker 1 (15:04):
We're all very aware.
Speaker 7 (15:06):
All of human civilization, all of history has known about this.
Biology proves it as a reality. But there's a war
on gender that's going on. There's also a war on
manhood and masculinity that is weighed by the left. They
talk constantly about toxic masculinity. What's always fascinating is if
you ask a leftist, and I've unfortunately been on a
few dates with leftists in recent enough years, not recently,
(15:28):
but in recent years, where this will occasionally start to
veer to the conversation and masculinity that is defined as
describing yourself as a male feminist who announces his pronouns
and cries a lot and is a huge proponent of
soy milk. Yeah, I said it, Libs, I said it.
Come after me on the soy milk. That's actually not
(15:49):
constructive for society. Masculinity that's focused on honor, keeping one's word,
keeping one's obligations, prioritizing one's family, treating women as way
of treating on ones, you know, creating a family, being
a good husband, being a good father. Those are all
ideals that people almost suggest to Clay that it's not
(16:11):
only old fashion, that it's out of date, out of touch.
That's what the left says, and there is a movement
against us. What Jordan Peterson is an international phenomenon because
he talks to people about what does it mean to
be in an actual relationship and be a good person,
and what does it mean to be a dad.
Speaker 6 (16:27):
He talks to boys who are lost. I mean, I
think that's a lot in young men who are lost,
and I think there's a huge number of those people
out there.
Speaker 8 (16:35):
Buck.
Speaker 6 (16:35):
I'll just point this out. You're talking about toxic masculinity.
Have you ever heard the tray the phrase toxic femininity?
Because we get so used to using the phrases that
have become popular, and there are a lot of people
out there who have bought into the idea that toxic
masculinity is a huge thing. But there's never the flip side, right, Like,
there's no suggestion that femininity can be in some way toxic.
(16:57):
It doesn't even exist. It's an attack on men.
Speaker 7 (17:00):
I mean, toxic femininity usually displays itself with somebody who
has blue hair, a nose ring, looks to be perhaps
in need of some basic grooming and you know, meeting,
you know, brushing up one's hair and stuff, and hates men.
Toxic femininity look.
Speaker 6 (17:17):
Could also be the view if you were having to
summarize in media toxic femininity, you might say, it's the
lady's on the view.
Speaker 2 (17:24):
Wow, that was really powerful, and I'm I'm glad he
has the guts to stand up and say something like
that because it was very unpopular at the time. He
received a lot of flak for that.
Speaker 1 (17:34):
He did, And I'm glad that Clay and Buck were
willing to talk about it as well. And I think
Buck will be able to now look back on that
and just be able to maybe, you know, take a
piece out of that and say, you know, I didn't
have any kids then, and he might be able to
draw on that at that point now on what he
was talking about.
Speaker 2 (17:53):
Then.
Speaker 1 (17:54):
That's all I'm trying to say. And Rachel Campos Stuffy
came in to talk to Clay. One of the things
that he taught talk to her about. It turns out
she has nine kids. Yeah, I didn't realize she had
that many, so she's an expert in being not just
a parent, but a mother and motherhood. So Clay talked
to her about baby Sexton.
Speaker 2 (18:14):
And wanting to get some advice from her about that,
and he also, we don't have this part of the clip,
but he also reminded her that she was part of
the reason Buck and Carrier together in the first place.
She played matchmaker early on, so in a way, this
baby by proxy is her doing too.
Speaker 1 (18:29):
Auntie Rachel is always going to be very important to
little baby James.
Speaker 2 (18:33):
Yeah, so let's listen to that conversation.
Speaker 8 (18:35):
What advice would you have for new parents?
Speaker 6 (18:38):
I've got three, my wife and I obviously you've got nine,
so you've been through this a ton of times.
Speaker 8 (18:45):
What advice would you have for new parents out there?
Speaker 9 (18:47):
I always tell new parents that the first one is
the hardest, and it is the first one. So don't
don't stop because it was hard, Because the first one
is the hardest. It interferes with like I mean, it's
just your whole like freedom thing like ends right, and
that's a hard adjustment. And you're learning how to do
things with a baby for the first time, and how
(19:09):
to figure them out. Once you get past three, it's
so easy. It's great. And you know, obviously every kid
has challenges everything, you know, nothing's ever perfect, but as
far as the baby phase, that gets easier. And I
would say this, this is the best advice I ever
(19:30):
got clips and I give this to every single mom
I talk to, and they always want to ask me
about how many they should have, and how do I
have so many? I have a lot because I'm Catholic,
I'm Hispanic and Catholic, and Sean is Irish and Catholic,
and the number just happens. But the best advice is,
don't plan how many you want right now. Don't think about,
(19:53):
oh my god, I'm going to go into diapers right now.
Think give yourself a pause and think twenty years forward.
How many do you want around the Thanksgiving table.
Speaker 6 (20:05):
That's great advice, that's great. That's how we ended up
with three. My wife was like not. I managed to
convince her to go for three, and I think she
would say that that's the best decision she's ever made.
Speaker 8 (20:17):
So I think that is great advice.
Speaker 2 (20:21):
I really like what she said about thinking about everyone
that's going to be around the Thanksgiving table.
Speaker 1 (20:26):
Yeah, and deciding how big you want your family based
on that, and I thought that that was a great
decision or a great great way to judge on how
you want to proceed. It worked for her, and it
sounds like it worked for Clay as well.
Speaker 2 (20:39):
Absolutely, well, why don't we end this Greg kind of
like rolling the credits, Let's just string together a whole
bunch of audience talkbacks. And like we said, we got
so many of them that we could not possibly air
them all on the show, much less even on this podcast.
So we're just gonna pick out a whole bunch and
just roll them, and we'll kind of let the podcast
(21:01):
end with with you, our audience.
Speaker 1 (21:03):
Thank you for all of you who sent in the
talkbacks and the emails and the calls, And I'm sorry
if we didn't get to yours. It's just the nature
of things. Unfortunately, everybody was so interested. It was so overwhelming.
Speaker 2 (21:17):
Yeah, and the volume of what we received was really
heartwarming to Buck, And I know that meant a lot
to him that everyone was so excited, enthusiastic, and I
think it kind of maybe even calmed his nerves a bit.
He's got his big extended Clay and Buck family rooting
for him.
Speaker 1 (21:31):
And Carrie absolutely. And if you want to send in
your favorite book suggestions for kids books and that sort
of thing on the talkback, go to that iHeart app.
Mash that little microphone button on the Clay and Buck
portion of the iHeart app and send us that talkback
and who knows, it may get included next time. You
never know.
Speaker 2 (21:51):
And you can even include one for Ginger. We can't
forget about Ginger.
Speaker 1 (21:56):
Send Ginger some love.
Speaker 2 (21:57):
Yeah, I already told Clay Or I already told Buck
that he should him and Carrie should bring a blanket
home from the hospital and let Ginger sniff that thing
all over the place, so that Ginger becomes used to
the smell of the baby before baby enters the house.
It's a great idea, kind of get her used to it.
Speaker 1 (22:14):
That's a great idea.
Speaker 2 (22:14):
Grace.
Speaker 1 (22:15):
One thing I would suggest for Buck because he's going
to need a lot of energy before we wrap this
up and head onto these talkbacks. He's going to need
some chalk. I don't know about you, but as a
new dad back in the day, I could have used it.
I could have used that extra boost of energy. And
he's already doing the Chad Mode for his workouts anyway,
But I think a little extra energy for Buck wouldn't
(22:39):
necessarily be a bad thing, and it could help you too.
So check out chalk dot com c choq dot com.
Speaker 2 (22:46):
You can put clam Buck's name in for a discount
as a prescription.
Speaker 1 (22:49):
They've been a long time sponsor of the show. We're
really big fans of theirs, and I recommend heading on
over there and checking them out, because if they can
help out Buck, they can certainly help help you out
as well, so.
Speaker 2 (23:02):
I would concur all right, well, Greg, I think that
is a wrap on our random after hours podcast, actually
Buck Baby edition, we can call this one and until
next time, you never know where we're going to end
up or when we're going to end up in the feed,
so you got to check back from time to time.
Then checking We will try to keep it entertaining.
Speaker 1 (23:22):
He'll go those talkbacks. Thanks again, Thank you, Hey Buck.
The fact that you think you're going to sleep through
this is hilarious.
Speaker 7 (23:30):
Good luck with the new baby, but I guarantee there
will be no sleeping.
Speaker 10 (23:35):
Just make sure you stock up on your crack of
coffee because you are going to need it. My friend
you ain't going to be sleeping very much, and just
make sure you're very supportive of your wife. That's the
biggest thinking SAE. So one is going to have to
do the hardest parts of everything from feeding to obviously
giving birth. So good luck, you'll be good.
Speaker 11 (23:52):
I'm telling you if you put in that air in
that mattress in the labor room, you'll be in trouble
the rest of your life. What you need is a
bit of nails and that might come close to what
your wife will be going through.
Speaker 6 (24:05):
Look, the main thing you need to know to become
a master swaddler, the master swaddler of wrapping the baby
and that little cloth nice and tight and snug. You
can wrap that baby up tight, you'll be the man
of the house.
Speaker 12 (24:20):
This is Dan calling from North Texas, a huge fan
listening to you guys every day. Buck. I just wanted
to tell you, as a new dad that the number
one piece of advice I can give you is to
do the sleep training around five or six months. Absolutely
do it. I'm an older dad. I'm fifty years old
and I haven't about to be four and about to
be two year old, and both my kids sleep through
(24:42):
the night. And it's glorious. Absolutely, make sure that you
do the sleep training, and good luck to you and
your wife.
Speaker 1 (24:48):
I wish you the best with your baby healthy and happy.
Speaker 8 (24:53):
I'm rooting for you. I'm rooting for you.
Speaker 2 (24:54):
Man.
Speaker 13 (24:55):
Hey Buck, I just have to say, when I gave
birth to my first child, my husband put all his
focus on that baby afterwards, which is normal, but after
a day or two, you need to kind of embrace
your wife. So don't make that mistake that your whole
focus is the baby.
Speaker 14 (25:15):
I mean, mom just went.
Speaker 13 (25:16):
Through a whole lot. So that's a little postpartum information.
Speaker 5 (25:21):
Hi Buck, congratulations on this coming baby. This is Randy
from Tucson. What you're not going to believe is when
it's time to leave the hospital and you're going to
think to yourself, they're letting me take this baby in
my car and you're just not going to feel prepared
and it's going to be the scariest drive of your life.
You're going to be so careful and nervous, but it's
(25:44):
going to be so great. It's a great blessing. Congratulations.
Speaker 1 (25:48):
Best advice I can give you for your new little one.
She's fussy, give her to mama. Just give her to
Mama and run.
Speaker 15 (25:54):
The only dad advice you're going to need is just
take it easy, you know, take a little bit of time.
Speaker 8 (26:01):
Relax.
Speaker 15 (26:01):
It's really not that hard. You're just it's a.
Speaker 8 (26:04):
Kid, you know.
Speaker 15 (26:06):
Don't cut the umbilical cord too quick, do some skin
to skin. Other than that, you know, just relax and
enjoy your kid.
Speaker 2 (26:15):
I mean, it's.
Speaker 15 (26:15):
Really that simple. It's not hard or anything. It's gonna
be fun though.
Speaker 14 (26:19):
Hey guys, love the show. Congratulations Buck. The best advice
I can give you to get through the next ninety
days is stop asking everybody for advice. You will be
just fine. You're gonna be great at this. I think
you've gone through enough life that none of these things
are going to be difficult for you to deal with.
(26:40):
Please enjoy it. It does not last long. It goes
by so quick. Just be there and have fun.
Speaker 10 (26:47):
Man,