MAHD House Bar Talk

Tragic Shootings and True Selves: Cussing, Crime Visibility, and Joint Pain Journeys

September 08, 2024 James Tucker & Santiago Lopez

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Ever wondered how cussing can reveal an intriguing honesty about our true selves? Or how modern media is shaping our perception of crime? Join us for an emotional rollercoaster as we kick things off with a spirited conversation about striving to be the best and the raw truth behind colorful language. We then face the harsh reality of recent tragic events, delving into a shooting spree in Kentucky and a heartbreaking school shooting in Georgia, drawing haunting parallels to past incidents like the Washington D.C. Beltway sniper attacks.

The conversation takes a critical turn as we scrutinize the impact of video recording devices on crime visibility and debate the responsibility of parents in the context of school shootings. We revisit the mysterious motives of Stephen Paddock, the Las Vegas shooter, while also sharing personal anecdotes about managing joint pain and considering lifestyle changes for better health. The episode gets personal and political, touching on the complexities of family dynamics, international trade, and the mental health crisis tied to technology use.

Nostalgia and humor blend as we reminisce about growing up in the 30th Street Projects, plan a clam bake, and explore the deception rampant on social media. From political controversies to sketch ideas and clam bake plans, our candid discussions offer a unique blend of humor and serious reflection. Get ready for an engaging and thought-provoking episode that navigates the tumultuous waters of current events, personal stories, and societal issues.

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Speaker 1:

we're number one. Jimmy isn't being a cheap ass. You know I'm like damn. You heard it here first right right, right, we're the best you know. They say people that cuss are more honest, so I'm an honest motherfucker. Put the fish away, reggie. It don't even hurt to give birthday, not for me. Nothing to it, let's do it.

Speaker 2:

Come on, I'm ready. I'm ready, I want to do it. I wear a thong. You got one on right now. You want to sit there being geek? Mad House Bar Talks baby.

Speaker 3:

Mad is a bunch of shit, if you ask me. That makes no sense.

Speaker 2:

Good morning. Good morning madhouse bar talk sunday morning. Was you up late last night?

Speaker 2:

no no, you wasn't watching anything about that whole uh ordeal going down down in kentucky. No, I didn't see none of it. No, I was just trying to look and see if they found them. I ended up going to bed.

Speaker 2:

They said they were still looking for him at the time. He said nine vehicles were shot. Total anybody shot? Yeah, oh yeah, there was like. I think they said it was like five people. I think have been shot at least five or seven, but at last I seen it didn't say anybody had passed away yet that were in the hospital, some in serious condition. They said some of the accidents and the reasons they were in the hospital were because of car accidents too, because he was shooting them on the highway. That's crazy. Yeah, he's like that was wild. Yeah, he's like that was wild. And they said he went and bought the AR-15 and 2,000 rounds of ammo that morning. That's what they said. Yesterday morning he went and bought 2,000 rounds of ammo and an AR-15 and then he was like in the woods or something, or elevated or something, just shooting at cars on the highway so they know who got it, who went and got the gun right yeah, they know who the person is.

Speaker 2:

It's like joe uh, what the heck is his name? Joe joseph, something? Let me see if it says on here yeah, they said they were searching for a joseph. They had his picture up and everything last night. Yeah, they, they knew who it was supposedly. And then they had like said something about being in no shirt and gray sweatpants or something like that. I don't know, but yeah, they know who it is for sure. That doesn't stop anything, always. You know, 32 year old joseph couch is his name. But they did according to this. It doesn't say they've got him yet, so they're still looking for him. That's freaking crazy. It gave me the vibes of those like washington dc, the beltway murders or whatever. They were those kids that, the kid and the stepdad or whatever right gave me the like the thoughts of that that was.

Speaker 2:

That was a lot different I mean that's like it's not really, because who knows what this guy did. Now, if they haven't caught him, I mean he could be in our area, right now, yeah, but they didn't know where these people were for a while.

Speaker 1:

Remember.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, they had no clue because they were doing one and done. They were doing it, one disappearing, yeah, and they just got it right. And because of the way he was doing it through the trunk or whatever, he was like nobody could see or tell you know what I mean that, or tell you know what I mean that, uh, he was doing it or whatever, because he was taking his, his spent casings and everything were staying right in the trunk with them.

Speaker 1:

Right, they couldn't, they didn't have no evidence yeah, it was wild.

Speaker 2:

It was pretty crazy that whole thing when it happened. But I I feel like this was on par with that. It felt like it anyways, like it has that vibe that it could be at least. But yeah, they knew who it was, they. They said they talked to the family and they or talked and said he said he was going to shoot the family and all kinds of crazy shit. So he's like five I think it said five, eight or five, 10, 150 pounds. It's like a little skinny ass fucker what'd you say?

Speaker 1:

but yeah, um, don't take a big man to pull a trigger. No, that's a fact?

Speaker 2:

yeah, it definitely don't. Look at that 14 year old, that whole thing, you know they I seen yesterday they were saying that the 14 year old in, uh, well, what was it called? Uh, it's in georgia, right, I think. But the school was called, uh, appalachian high school or whatever.

Speaker 2:

That kid, I guess his mom called the school in the morning to tell him like well, I guess about a half hour before all of it went down, that she thought he might be doing something like that and it's an emergency, go find him. And then, and she had talked to the counselor, and the counselor went and found the wrong kid, like, like mixed up the names or something I don't know. And by the time they actually figured out who it was, it was, he was already, it was already in action or whatever in motion. They said that kid took that gun in his pants, like wore baggy pants and just slid a ar-15 or whatever right down his pants. And that whole thing is messed up because now they arrested the dad, they're charging him with murder why, because he bought him the gun for christmas and he's only 14 years old.

Speaker 2:

But it's not only that he bought him the gun. They're saying, like a year ago, that they came out because of threats that were going on online and all that stuff. Like all these threats were going on from this kid on social media. They came out and talked to him already about it at one point, like a year ago, the same kid. So your son is threatening that and you go get him an AR-15 for his Christmas present.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, he should go to jail then.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I don't think he should be charged for murder, though I'm a little. The problem is they kept showing those first pictures they kept showing of that kid was like the kid was. He was like normal, a little odd looking, but normal. But now they're showing like his mugshot. Have you seen it yet? Oh yeah, he was like. He was like a transgender, he had like his hair was all long, even like on his social media has listed himself as a transgender and death to MAGA stuff like that. So he had some serious issues going on.

Speaker 2:

I don't think that's the kid you go and buy a gun for. And even if you do, like I bought Alexa a gun when she was living in the house, but she wasn't a kid, she was an adult already. But I put it in the gun safe. She didn't have just full access, it was her gun, but she didn't have full access. I mean she does now it was moved out, now I gave it to her and they keep it in their gun safe at their house, but I mean it wasn't. I didn't just have a gun there for her to have full access to. You know what I mean, and she was an adult at that point.

Speaker 2:

So I mean, I definitely think you feel like he should be charged with something. But charge him with murder? I don't know. So there's, and because a mom's like a drug addict and was stealing, the mom was in all kinds of trouble, the mom and that whole thing is just a just looks like society failed the whole, the whole family all the way through. You know, you don't think so, I just don't get it I mean, I know, I don't know.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I don't think he's charged with murder. He didn't physically do it.

Speaker 2:

That's what they charged him with, though that's what he's actually been charged with is murder, you know, which I think is a little ridiculous, you know.

Speaker 1:

It's just Well. That doesn't matter what they charged him with. It really doesn't.

Speaker 2:

Once his lawyer gets involved in it, it'll all get dropped down. Yeah, I mean he still might end up doing time. There's been so much going on. There was another shooting too that happened like in a. Like a 16-year-old shot a 15-year-old in the bathroom at school, just like an argument. That was kind of crazy.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

It's not a school shooting, but like year old just has a gun in the middle of an argument like what the fuck? It's? Just I don't know it's, it's, it's, it's wild. All these like shooting and anger and everything. And you know, I I feel like a lot of it is all because of the bullshit that goes on with the politics, like how everybody, everybody's so, like my side's right, your side's wrong, country's really divided.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and I feel like all the stuff that's always out there it gets in those kids' heads or people's heads in general.

Speaker 1:

You know, and everybody's like you, just hear all this friend of mine talking about her grandkids going. You know I don't want to go in there. You know things are going crazy and I'm like you look at the charts and stuff and population is always growing but the crime's going down so I don't know, yeah, you told me that before and I didn't believe it.

Speaker 2:

And you're right, it is so I'm like the 90s were like the peak of it.

Speaker 1:

Basically, here's the thing. We got that media. You know you got it right there at your hands. You never seen all the stuff. You know I'm saying so. You're seeing stuff everywhere, so it's programmed into you more, you know. I mean, yeah, like you're seeing more of it yeah, you definitely do.

Speaker 2:

I mean that could be said, though. I mean we had tv. I remember, yeah, we had tv, that's it no, but I remember like I remember just like camcorders like when we all had camcorders all of a sudden they were catching shit like the whole thing. All the riots that went on in la and all that were all because somebody caught it on on on a regular video camera.

Speaker 1:

But everybody not like you know.

Speaker 2:

You say no, it's, you're right I mean it's everybody at catching every havoc has a, has a video recorder on them like on demand. On demand, yes, I mean from like and, and not only just every single person like I'm talking from 12 years old out or something you know I mean whenever you start right right. Dylan's 11. He's got a phone with a video recorder.

Speaker 1:

So I'm like you're seeing a lot more, so your program thinking it's a lot more, there's more crime, blah, blah.

Speaker 2:

There's not, it's going down it's an awful lot of shootings going on right this minute though like I said it's.

Speaker 1:

I think it's more of that. You've seen it now, that's all I don't know.

Speaker 2:

There's a lot going on. I mean, in the last week it's just been way too much that johnny newman posted on there. He said that you're responsible to your kids till they're 18 for their actions I mean I know that that's not a hundred percent true, though I mean I know they say that like, but that's not a hundred percent true. Like I did stuff when I was a teenager and I got in trouble not my mom, so I mean how does that make sense?

Speaker 1:

damage something you would, your mom would have to pay for it.

Speaker 2:

So possibly, yeah, yeah I mean, and, but she wouldn't. She would have made me pay for it. I gotta figure that shit out, she would have been like nope, not happening.

Speaker 2:

But initially she'd had to pay for you, yeah right something yeah well he's, he's writing a point he is writing a point, but I have never heard of any other school shooters parents being charged. Well, maybe there's more to it. I mean that that's the well there is like said he bought him a gun after they came to his house and told him his son was, you know, having these issues or something. I don't know it's. It's the whole thing is like.

Speaker 1:

That's like if somebody is always talking about suicide and you give them a gun Right and they kill themselves. Yeah, maybe that is kind of they should have charged them.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and it was school shooting specifically. I guess, man, my throat don't want to clear out today. The uh, the other thing I was like because I, because I was watching that last night, all of a sudden I came up across and I hadn't heard it anything about it in a while. So then I ended up watching this whole thing and like I read like a bunch of different articles all on um, that steven paddock we were talking about him just the other day and said we hadn't heard nothing about it. Do you remember that? The one that that shot in vegas, shot into that concert or whatever? And it was funny because we were both talking about it and then I was at home.

Speaker 2:

And Mike brought it up, and Mike brought it up.

Speaker 1:

Did he bring it up because he wasn't listening to the podcast?

Speaker 2:

I don't know. Yeah, it probably had something to do with it, but I started looking at it and it's like you know, that guy was like because I hadn't heard anything since it happened. That guy was like a millionaire, like a self-made millionaire. Morning, brian Shay I saw something on Shay said that, but both parents. But I saw something that said that the mother was arrested too. But I don't see how they possibly could, because she called the school and said hey, get my son. I think he might be trying to do something. So how they could arrest her is beyond me. She was. She called him prior to it happening. You know what I mean. But yeah, that guy was like a self-made millionaire. He's like they said he was always odd and he was a gambler like he. He had all this like real estate development and all this like made big money.

Speaker 2:

His brothers and everybody brought in big money millions, like he was worth millions and millions of dollars, and never explained why he did that or anything. He just all of a sudden freaking and I don't. And the other thing I don't understand about it, like when I was watching it because, like I said, I hadn't heard anything about that since it happened, because it was the the, it was the concert that, while Jason Aldean was playing, I think is what it was, what Mike was saying. But they said that some like I don't know security guard or something at the jail, or at the jail at the hotel no, at the hotel found one of the doors like to the stairwell was screwed shut and like kind of figured out that something weird was going on and he ended up shooting through the door at him in the hallway and he still like was alive and called and radioed in like five minutes before he opened fire on that crowd. He shot for like eight minutes total or something like that, but they didn't get in a room for like. Or maybe he shot for 10 minutes total or something, but they didn't get in a room for like eight minutes after he shot himself already. So I don't know what. And he had plenty of ammo and guns, so why he quit shooting.

Speaker 2:

It's the whole thing is just odd. And he never explains himself and no. So I'm looking, I'm like is it all bullshit? Is the whole thing bullshit? Is that guy just set up? I mean, it seems like he might be like I don't understand like some random guy like just that's made him millions for himself, millions, had a girlfriend and everything Like literally sent his girlfriend like 100 grand, like maybe a week before that while she was visiting her parents in Philippines or something Like had money, like lots of money, living his best life just gambling at the casino every day, living his best life just gambling at the casino every day, and he just like decides to go shoot up a fucking festival and has no media background.

Speaker 2:

That's something don't add up. And then you never heard nothing else about it. I kind of that's what we were just saying Like you never hear about it. It just kind of faded out and it just disappeared. That's weird, dude. That's very weird. I don't understand how it could be that this guy like there's nothing, that no sign of anything with him other than I guess his father was a bank robber back in the day, like his father like got arrested for robbing banks when he was, you know, I mean when he was like born, basically a kid. But yeah, that story's crazy, that that whole thing I don't add up, dude, and you and your conspiracies. It's like how did you not catch this one? That doesn't add up. There's no reason, and he doesn't, he doesn't ever give a reason, he just he just shot a bunch of people for no reason. That don't add up.

Speaker 1:

I don't get it maybe he just wanted to go out in a blaze of glory but he didn't.

Speaker 2:

He shot himself. And before he shoots himself, before he even got caught, like he's, he opens fire on the security guard it's in the hallway or whatever and then starts shooting into this crowd, into the, into the, where the concert's going on, and then, eight minutes before they even get to him in the room, he stopped shooting and kills himself. What kind of sense does that make? Or did he think he was gonna dip and get out of there? I don't know, dude, there's something wrong with that. That story don't add up. And if it don't add up, something ain't right. It's all I'm saying. Just don't get it. None of it makes sense. And then that the height, the school game too, that don't make sense. That was yesterday, or what? Friday night, the football did you see that or no? You didn't see that? Like 11 kids got hypothermia no, I didn't when it's 60 degrees outside.

Speaker 2:

They all went to the emergency room and got treated with hypothermia 62 degrees or something, outside. Oh, he said he met terminally ill. He said terminally ill, maybe he was terminal. I saw thermion, I was thinking of the hypothermia, and it says, because he typoed it, but yeah, these kids. So I'm like, can that be possible? Like I mean, first of all, everybody watching the game was in the rain. All the players playing football were in the rain. The only people that ended up going to hospital were 11 band members. That's so weird that just doesn't add up. But then they said, well, they were dressed in their summer gear. Okay, no, that was lorraine high brian. So they're dressed in their summer gear. And i'm'm like man, I start looking into it and it's like it's pretty possible. I guess. Like they're saying that hypothermia, just once you get wet and it's cold enough that your body starts losing heat faster than you can create it, apparently. So if you're cold and it's 60 and windy out there and you're in nothing but shorts and a t-shirt, you ain't running around the field. Yeah, I mean, even a football player is in full uniform, though I mean at least he's got something to like kind of hold the heat in. So I mean, yeah, that that happened. Actually, same happened in McDonald's. People were passing out, yeah, these kids were like passing out and stuff, and it was like hypothermia.

Speaker 2:

I never and that was I never. When I first seen it I went what the hell? That don't make sense. But then I, you know, I started reading how hypothermia happens and that's what I came up with and I'm like, wow, that's unbelievable. I'd have never guessed that one, never, ever would have guessed that one. What did you have going on this week? Nothing but work. Nothing but work at all At all. You know, it seemed like I was busy as hell this week, just trying to get stuff caught up and get done, but not 100% busy, it seemed like I was just always behind the ball.

Speaker 1:

Should you have been adding off work till seven.

Speaker 2:

I think I did find out that I'm allergic to alcohol, though Allergic to alcohol.

Speaker 1:

Uh-huh, probably a good thing for you.

Speaker 2:

Literally. So remember I told you I thought I had gout last week. And that still might be what it is, I don't know. So I went all week.

Speaker 3:

Everything stopped hurting that swelling all went down.

Speaker 2:

All that stuff went on. No, I don't know what alcohol, I don't know, I don't know. So, all this alcohol, you know, I didn't drink anything for the whole week and I sat down and had a burger. Was it Friday or something? Yeah, friday.

Speaker 3:

Or.

Speaker 2:

Thursdayursday might have been thursday. I sat down and, no, I had wings. I sat down, had wings on thursday and I'm out there. I'm like you know what? I'm gonna have a beer. So I go ahead and get a beer and, uh, I drink one. I drink the other one, a half of one, two of them. I drank one and a half total, but I I got two beers with my wings delicious wings at madhouse park. Yeah, oh yeah, garlic parm. I've been killing it.

Speaker 2:

I can't help it I really like that garlic parm sauce and I, I like the all.

Speaker 2:

All the sauces are pretty good, but I never was a big fan of garlic parm, but now with that sauce we put in like whatever that was like two years ago. Oh my god, I love that stuff, but anyways, so that one and a half beers I freaking my knees. The joints started hurting. My freaking ankle looked like it swelled up a little bit, not a lot, I mean. It was only one and a half beers, though, but it lasted like two days and I, my joints, have been killing me since I bought the bar.

Speaker 2:

I mean, it's just, I've had joint issues and pain. I just assume it's because I'm getting older and all this stuff. When I don't drink, I don't have joint pain, none, like literally, I could run up and down steps right now. So all this time that I'm always like having joint pains and stuff, it's because I'm putting alcohol on my body and I'm literally it. I guess it's like inflammatory arthritis is what it is. I guess because it flares up when and it says alcohol, kick it up that's why I said you can switch the titos yeah, well, that's still alcohol.

Speaker 2:

Why would that?

Speaker 1:

I don't know everybody switches to tito's. When they got alcohol related issues, I told amanda I could start I could start smoking pot.

Speaker 2:

You should see how nervous she got. I go, I guess I'm gonna have to smoke pot. And she, she got so nervous she started like she, she's like I, I like stuttering and shit like I I don't want to be with a potluck head, get your sugar levels checked out, but it's it's only happening with, with, with alcohol.

Speaker 1:

So it could be sugar it could be.

Speaker 2:

I guess it could be sugar, I don't. I don't. I don't know, I don't. I think it's all I gotta do is cut alcohol out and I don't have any issues. So joint pain anyway. I never heard of anybody having joint pain from sugar, though. And when I looked up joint pain and stuff, that wasn't one of the things that showed up for joint pain.

Speaker 1:

Look up symptoms of sugar diabetes.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, nothing like that happened with that, anyways, nothing that I looked up anyways. I mean, I'm self-diagnosing, you know what I mean, but but I'm typical like that because I'm not going to take medicine when all I gotta do is just not drink. I don't drink that much anyways, it doesn't matter I could just not drink. It's not a big issue whether you drink or not no, I have one or two, and that was it, you know they could tell today I can't never have another drink in my life and I'll be like all right.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's that's how I feel about it, like it doesn't even matter, Like whatever. And if I do have a drink or two, I just know I'm going to have some joint pain for a couple of days. You know, whatever, I can live with that.

Speaker 1:

I never drank enough anyways, they switched to Tito's when they're diabetic.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, chantel, yeah, that's it.

Speaker 1:

Just switch to Tito's.

Speaker 2:

Just switch to Tito's, they solve everything. Yeah, and go to Bud Light, just switch to Bud Light. Yeah, bud Light. And Tito's yeah, you're fine, but no, it's literally one and a half dude. And I was like in serious pain again, like serious pain.

Speaker 1:

Well, you need to drink a couple today. Why happens tomorrow?

Speaker 2:

no, I did that.

Speaker 1:

That's what I did when I did it one more time, just to make sure, no, hell.

Speaker 2:

No, there's no reason to. I just start smoking weed. It's legal anyways be a pothead, I could do that. No man, he got nervous. She's like, uh, she don't want that why I don't he got nervous.

Speaker 3:

She's like, ah she don't want that, why I don't get it? What's the big deal? I don't know.

Speaker 1:

I don't what are you an asshole when your high is open?

Speaker 2:

I don't get highs. Nobody would know, I don't. I've never gotten high, I'm just saying same you're gonna eat a lot and chill on the porch that's all, and chill, relax.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, start vibing out. Yeah, start wearing flower uh, shirts and shit.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, let my hair grow long, look like yeah, you came from hawaii.

Speaker 2:

Hawaiian shirt out on the porch, that's all I mean, it could be what it is, I don't know, it's possible hey, you just asked I don't know why she freaked out, so much, she's just like she just like, had no like she's like oh, he's gonna grow hair like I don't know what it was, she's just like. She's just like. Like you should see her. Her face flipped, dude, like she lost her damn mind, like that's not cool yeah, I don't know, I have no idea.

Speaker 2:

Speaking of drugs, do you see? Hunter biden pled guilty to tax fraud 17 years. He's facing for that and biden says well then he's just gonna have to do it. There's no chance. How do you do that? Nobody could do that to their kid. In fact, I'll go this far. I'll say I don't respect joe biden as a man if he did do that. Nobody could do that to their kid. In fact, I'll I'll go this far. I'll say I don't respect joe biden as a man if he did do that, if he left his son in there, when he can pardon him on his way out the door, what's it gonna hurt him? Right, he'll be dead before his son got out of. You know what I'm saying?

Speaker 1:

yeah, yeah, I'll be. Like, looks like a dumb ass. I'm gonna do this for you one time and that's it yeah, I mean, it's the only time he can.

Speaker 2:

His political career is over anyway, so it doesn't matter. It's not like he's I mean, his career in general is over. His life's like at the end of its course. He has no reason to go back to work or anything. Yeah, why possibly would you not pardon your son? But he claims he's not going to. He has to, right, Dude, could you imagine if your fucking dad did that shit? You'll be in jail like yeah, you voted for Trump, didn't you?

Speaker 3:

mother fucker yeah, that's what you get. He shit himself now you can shit yourself in prison go sit in prison, dumbass, do 17 years.

Speaker 2:

I told you you're a dumbass oh my god, that's freaking hilarious, that, but yeah, that. But I, I I don't even know why he's bullshitting like he has to do that, right, you can't leave your son in prison for even two years, right? I mean, for no reason.

Speaker 2:

I think I make him sit a little something well, I don't know when that happens, like I just I just know that he pled guilty to it. So I don't know if that, if they, he was arrested that minute, or if he's out now, I don't know well, let's tell us yeah, let's put it like this he's facing what?

Speaker 1:

17 years, that's what it said, yeah so they're gonna go in the thing, they're gonna give him three years probation and jail time served.

Speaker 3:

They ain't going to give him that kind of time.

Speaker 1:

They ain't going to give him any time.

Speaker 2:

Even if they do like I said, he's got to pardon them, right.

Speaker 1:

They ain't giving him shit.

Speaker 2:

You don't think so.

Speaker 1:

Nope, I bet he don't do another day.

Speaker 2:

I mean tax fraud is a pretty big deal. I don't know. Watch, okay, we'll find out. When is it? I don't know. He pled guilty, like this week, so I don't know what happens now. They're gonna give him probation and maybe he's gonna have to pay some money back but I would think like I, like I said, I mean, if he thinks like the america is gonna think less of him, I think we'd think less of him if he didn't get his son out. In my opinion, I think.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that's what you're in positions for. Go ahead, son, get out of here. Yeah.

Speaker 2:

I mean you could pardon your son once, or you're allowed to pardon your son, right?

Speaker 1:

I would assume right. Pardon yourself, or you're allowed to pardon your son, right? I would assume right.

Speaker 3:

Pardon yourself.

Speaker 2:

I mean, I would think right that you could pardon your kids.

Speaker 1:

I don't know. Yeah, it's not you, what the hell.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I don't know I would do it. There's no way I'd leave my kids in prison, I mean, unless they were like if they did something nasty, but like like if it was drugs or tax evasion, like whatever. You know what I mean. It's like whatever it is, what it is, I guess yeah, let's straighten your shit out.

Speaker 1:

Just give me that one break, that's all, uh, everybody deserves a break to some degree.

Speaker 2:

But then there's like, there's like that, the whole thing, like that's what me I was telling my mom yesterday like Danny, that's staying at the house.

Speaker 1:

You still there.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, and he ain't. Motivated no, he's freaking. Worked there For how long? He's making 30-something bucks an hour. He ain't got a penny, doesn't save a thing, he's just kicking it staying at the house. You know what I'm saying like?

Speaker 1:

you're really gonna tell his business on here?

Speaker 2:

well it just I'm aggravated, like when are you gonna go? Like I, I mean, and I gotta amanda's not happy about it. I mean it's every day I gotta hear about something you know what I mean, brian.

Speaker 2:

You started, and then we'll follow every day I gotta deal with something or hear something about it, and that's, it's just frustrating, it's just that there's no reason for it there's. I mean, he, he's been there months. Just you go ahead, go find your own place. I mean, you've made enough money. You know, just I don't know, just I, I. But I think that's because of my grandma. My grandma gave them too many chances all the time. They let them do. Both of those boys got to do whatever they wanted. They were the babies, all them kids. You know, bobby and danny were the babies, so they just got away with everything, 100 all the time. My mom sent me a picture of titties yesterday not hers, but some woman's, I hope she did.

Speaker 1:

He's a picture.

Speaker 2:

We were talking about that and I'm complaining about it. And then she sends me this picture of some naked hippie chick. She's like. She's like don's new neighbor like don is her friend that lives right by my dad down in west virginia and I guess he just had a couple moving next to him. They're hippies, and she's like. So she sends me a picture of her titties. A man a man that goes the fuck.

Speaker 2:

Now I gotta worry about your mom sending sending pictures to you because I got a picture from my one buddy and then now my mom this titty pics coming in for no reason, randomly. What can you do? But I didn't expect that I open. I go, what the fuck?

Speaker 1:

take a good look and delete it no, I why.

Speaker 2:

I know why would I delete that's like if that would be, if you're doing something I didn't save it. I just don't delete. I don't want to get caught in like, oh you deleted something, why did you delete it? That would be like that's even more mischievous. Did you put it in your?

Speaker 2:

uh picture safe your vault, the photo vault, the photo vault. I don't have one of those, no more. No, no, and you know why? Because I had a photo vault years ago and then whenever I updated, like different phones, it jumped in a couple of the phones but then one of them it didn't come with it and I'm like what the fuck? So those pictures are just somebody else has that somewhere and I can't even access it or get to it or nothing.

Speaker 1:

Yours is, yours is incognito it says, it says business folder or something.

Speaker 2:

What's that?

Speaker 2:

no, they have a lot of iphone you just have hidden pictures. You can just hide stuff, so like stuff that I wouldn't want dylan to see in there or whatever I'll just put in there, and then it just you have to hit a code to get into that, but it's just, uh, it's an album that says hidden folder folders. So, iphone, you don't have to deal with nothing like that. You don't have to have like that old school, like you used to have a photo vault. There used to be a calculator. Did you ever have that one? What there was, a calculator that was they had years ago. It was badass. You would go to the calculator that was some like, definitely like you're cheating on your lady type shit.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you'd go to a calculator and you hit a certain number program or whatever, yeah, and it would unlock it.

Speaker 3:

It was a photo vault.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you never had that, huh yeah.

Speaker 1:

I've been single.

Speaker 2:

I was like I don't yeah, you don't give a shit. Yeah, yeah, that's not. It doesn't much, man, but yeah, that was. I mean I didn't have it because I was doing dirty shit like that.

Speaker 3:

I think it was just for your kids messing with the phone.

Speaker 2:

That's even like now, my phone. It's like do you just worry because of Dylan? Where to get into it, or whatever.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you don't want to see pictures of his grandmother's boobs. His grandmother Put him in shock.

Speaker 2:

My mom's a hippie. If her boobs looked like that 20-year-old lady, she'd probably be a nudist by now. Yeah, she'd be running around here oh hey, mom, you can't do that here. Did you see that? Did you see that whole thing that came out with that DOGA chief?

Speaker 1:

What do you?

Speaker 2:

say so, it's that. What the hell was it Braggs? It wasn't Braggs that said it. There's a footage of this guy at the bar and he's in the office of the doj that that went after trump or whatever, and he's in the office and or connected with them for essentially basically, and he's in a bar and some chick just starts recording him. You didn't see that. Yeah, did you see that?

Speaker 2:

that is freaking wild under the table facing up oh yeah, and he's like basically just calling it bullshit, dude, like that's, like that, that is crazy.

Speaker 1:

And then they, and then they see pelosa's daughter got her and limo talking shit yeah, I seen that, yeah, yeah, I wasn't sure what I seen with that.

Speaker 2:

She was being shitty, though, for sure, but like she definitely was like setting the pace of how she wanted it to go out and all that stuff. But this one was like oh, because then when he first says it, he says something, something like, you know, oh, it's definitely just him trying to make his career and the democrats want to just take him out and they just want to be able to say he's a convicted felon and it's all bullshit and all this stuff. And then when they ask him about it, when the video comes out, he's like oh, I was just trying to impress that girl and I kind of said, shit, I shouldn't have said I guess I was just, I didn't feel that way. I just was trying to impress the girl like the fuck out of here what I don't know.

Speaker 1:

I've said some crazy shit.

Speaker 2:

You sell us all down the river. That's funny, but yeah, that's pretty crazy. That video, that's that's like uh, I don't know, I, I, I just I don't know. That's pretty crazy. Yeah, I seen it that was.

Speaker 1:

Uh, it was almost like black and white kind of the way she had it because it's so dark.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, it's like real dark on the lower end facing up, so he couldn't see let me see if I can find it here real quick. It's steven crowder. Right, it was. Yeah, steven crowder. Yeah, here's. I don't know what I'm looking at here, though hold on, let's see, we'll go ahead and play it real quick. It's wild, though, I mean it's charges and rearranging things just to make a case.

Speaker 3:

Make the case that he's not a perversion of justice. To make him a convict, a convicted felon, maybe that's his galaxy. If he's a convicted felon, it's a travesty of justice, a mockery of justice. Let me be clear about something on the outset the person you'll be watching today is not the bad guy here.

Speaker 2:

Unwitting whistleblower. Yeah, nicholas Biasi is the chief of public affairs for the.

Speaker 3:

Department of Justice case is nonsense.

Speaker 2:

State levels are wild.

Speaker 3:

They're like idiots.

Speaker 2:

They don't care. He is the chief public affairs for the Department of Justice. That's his whole thing, but yeah, but when they actually question him about it, he says that it's it's just. Uh, it's just him trying to impress a girl while he's out at the bar I don't know could you imagine you're fucking throwing something such a big it's.

Speaker 2:

It's just, it's just sad, that just sad that this is like our justice system is. At this level. It becomes something like at a bar being discussed so you can try and get in a girl's pants. The guy wants to make his career. That's what he was basically saying. Braggs, he said had you heard about him before this? You heard about him now, didn't you? He's trying to make his career. He's not happy being the attorney general. Braggs is the attorney general of New York County, I think. So they're saying that he basically wants to be like either the attorney general the us or new york attorney general, or whatever it is which isn't that leticia, isn't she the attorney general that? Leticia, james, is she the or no? I thought she was just the kind of speaker I don't know.

Speaker 2:

I think she's like the attorney general that went after him. Yeah, I think so. Or maybe she's the prosecutor for New York, maybe I don't know, something like that. She's a trip, though. She just wants Trump, no matter what the cost that one for sure, there's a lot of them.

Speaker 2:

That's all she wants Trump, trump and more Trump. She just wants to tear his life up, ruin it, and I don't understand why it's so like, so like, why trump is the one they go after so hardcore, like, is he doing that much that we didn't notice? Because he was in office for four years and I didn't notice him making too many people's lives? Hell, did you like I didn't see?

Speaker 1:

I mean, I never looked into it like what is he trying to get signed or anything like that, like what it's yeah, I didn't see him like, because now he's talking about like shrinking government stuff.

Speaker 2:

Now I kind of get it like that's what he wants to do. Now he wants to shrink government big. He's even brought up. He's even brought up he's even brought up no taxes. That's what he's brought up. That's his recent thing. He brought up no income taxes at all and then compensate it with tariffs against other countries that are bringing goods in.

Speaker 1:

Tariffs causes a lot of problems too.

Speaker 2:

It does and it doesn't To me. I like the idea of tariffs because I think it makes the market fair.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, well then we pay the taxes, because then they'll just elevate their prices and we pay the taxes on it, or we'll just manufacture them here. That'd be a good option.

Speaker 2:

I mean, that's the thought that I have when I think of tariffs. It's to make it fair.

Speaker 1:

The problem is there's stuff we can't make here, just like there's stuff they can't make there that we got to ship there. You know what I'm saying? I don't know what it is, but I'm saying you put tariffs on everything. You're going to have to raise the taxes on it, and who's going to pay that? They that, and we'll pay the taxes on it. So it's just. It doesn't the tear. The tariffs, though, are like I get it. They tax the people sending them in. So well, they're gonna charge more for the product and we're gonna have to pay the difference they're not gonna charge more for the product.

Speaker 2:

They charge more for the product. They'll even really price themselves out, so that it's just cheaper to make it in america well, if you can't make it in America, is what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

There's nothing we can't make in America. Maybe there's something we can't mine maybe, but there's not much. What do we get? What do we get from them? Everything, yeah, but the problem is that it's to me the way I see it and I don't know, maybe I'm wrong, but the way I see it is, it's china and the philippines and all they. They don't have the regulations. That's the biggest problem. We have all these regulations and we have to do everything. I mean, we talked about it. What two weeks ago? We were talking about just the safety issues. When we're fucking building a place, how retarded it is and it's the same with everything, they don't have that shit.

Speaker 3:

They're just rolling out right fucking throw a little lead in the paint, pollute it, dump it.

Speaker 2:

They're probably still squeegeeing oil on the river, right, you know what I'm saying like it's just right. They just dump the trash so to me it's almost, it's almost, it's almost better for us to just go ahead and and imply the tariff so that they, you know, unless they change that type of stuff and bring that up to a fair, you know, I don't think that just the wages that they're paying people causes the cost difference. I don't believe that Because so many things are machined and automated it doesn't much matter.

Speaker 2:

I mean in America, half the shit, anything that I've built in the last 10 years, industrial wise, it's very little workers going in there. It's all like robots and shit going in there. It's very little. I mean there are, but it's definitely a lot of robots going on oh yeah they go into warehouses where they just pack and ship.

Speaker 2:

everything gets made. I mean I find it hard to believe that labor is the causing factor that causes the difference in cost. I mean it could to some degree, but I think adding a tariff to the products we buy would be well worth it.

Speaker 1:

I think Over income tax personally personally, I think everything should be taxed yeah, except people.

Speaker 2:

yeah, that's how I feel. Yeah, I feel like everything should be taxed and those taxes for those items should go towards that, like, for instance, the taxes that you, when you purchase a cell phone, should go for mental health. That's what I think I really do. I honestly believe that. I think that the taxes on a cell phone should go to the mental health industry period. That's how you should pay for mental health, because those cell phones and computers are causing the mental illnesses that are going on today. I think a lot, I don't know.

Speaker 1:

I think a lot, I don't know. I think there is no accountability in the uppers, like in Congress and government and everything like that. There's no consequences when they do something fucked up.

Speaker 2:

Well, I think that's the whole world that we're in. I think that's the way it is Everybody. I think that's the way that's the way it is everybody. I should get to do whatever I want, right, I mean, unless you're a white male, you, you, you're an asshole and your masculinity is too oppressive and you're, you know, ruining the lives of every single person around you. But that part's's true. But if that same one decides he's a woman, he's not the same, no more, he's. His masculinity disappears, he's, you know. But yeah, I mean, that's the society we live in. That's the whole thing is that everybody has to bend to you instead of you having to adjust to the way of the world. I mean, that's the whole, I think, one of the biggest problems in America I'm not saying that there's anything wrong with anybody. I accept everybody for who they are. I don't think that the whole world should have to spend and adjust their lives to you, though I don't know.

Speaker 1:

I think like in Congress and all that, that, where all the people are just like when they're getting at uh, all lobbyists and all that shit and it's all crooked in there. They ain't doing for the people, they're doing for themselves right, yeah, that's a whole, nother, that's a whole different thing.

Speaker 2:

That's definitely there, but all that I'm saying that needs to change I'm just talking about the mental state of the country in general, outside of politicians, like the whole, like everybody has to do what I want them to do. Basically, I have you got to do what I'm doing. That's it like. That's how it has to be, it's like. It's like. It's like these they want, like these all-black colleges and stuff like that. They want this all.

Speaker 1:

But I mean that's segregation, that's what it is.

Speaker 2:

All over again, just I mean starting it all? Yeah, like it's, that's exactly what it is and it it makes no sense to to want that. Like it's like you fought so hard to not have it, like you people were dying, marching and everything else, everything that went on so that that didn't happen yeah, people actually died to change that yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Now you're just trying to put it back. You know what I mean the way it is or the way it was. Basically that's just how you're trying to do it, like I want to do it the way it was. I mean, I'm not saying I'm. I'm not saying I'm mad because it didn't work when we tried to do it. I'm not saying that. That's not what I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

I don't want that misconstrued these are all touchy subjects that you just but they're not, though I mean, I don't think they're touchy.

Speaker 2:

What's wrong with it to say that, that they want that, that that? There's people out there trying to get, because not not everybody feels that way, but there's definitely a segment that's trying to do that, like certain things like that where they want all black, you know of all black college or an all black month. Basically, it's all segregation. I mean it doesn't make any sense, it's backwards. It's moving backwards is what it is.

Speaker 1:

Oh, that's a definite, I don't know. Depends who wants to do it.

Speaker 2:

I feel like there was this short lived time of like maybe 10 years of my life where racism just kind of faded away and disappeared and you didn't have to worry about it, you didn't deal with it. There was a few assholes here and there, but it wasn't like anybody was being held back. Everybody was being judged by their character.

Speaker 1:

Everybody was I feel like that's how it was in my life Before our time was really bad. Before our time was really bad.

Speaker 2:

Oh, yeah, yeah, and I think that maybe even in other cities. It was really bad when we were kids.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Like when we were kids it was. I mean, there was some of it that went on. Most of ours was just fighting with the kids in the neighborhood racism, that's it. You know what I mean. Your friends were all different races, but if you were mad at them they were all kinds of names. You know what I mean and you know you just go for what is there. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

There was a lot of racism here when I was younger.

Speaker 2:

Was there? Hell yeah, with our age group or our parents it was our parents' age group Right, but not us, not our parents age group.

Speaker 1:

But right, but not us, not our group was. There was very few in our group. They existed, but they, you know, but there was their parents, when you would meet them and so you'd see it.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, oh yeah, my dad was one of them. My dad was, but he claims he's not like. He's not like that. It's like yeah, you were definitely racist as shit I mean that as mike acosta, he'll tell you mike coming out, he goes.

Speaker 2:

Like you know, I don't let those people in my house but yeah, that's, it was there for sure yeah, from the older people, but I'm talking our generation, like like I feel like when we became adults like that 10 years after I became an adult it seemed like everything was cool, like everything was just cool for a little bit, I mean in this area anyways, yeah, but you're kind of outside looking in.

Speaker 1:

so it's kind of different. What do you mean? You're not Puerto Rican, You're not black. You know what I'm saying? It's a little different. You're on the outside looking in.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, maybe it could be, I guess. Yeah, I mean they did burn down LA during that time, but I'm not talking people older than us. Our parents were worse than I mean our parents were bad. I mean real bad. Our parents' generation, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, my parent in general, but yeah, our parents' generation was that. They were real bad. I mean they even like but and some of it was just good natured, like it wasn't like they hated anybody, but they'd talk shit about each other. You know what I mean To each other, though I mean it wasn't like they were hiding and doing it behind their back.

Speaker 1:

You know what I mean yeah, it's definitely faded, and then I'd hate to see it go back into the I feel like that's where it's doing. Yeah, I feel like that's what it's doing, like it's coming, but it depends, you know if they want a black college or something like that, and they that's what they want, so that they could teach the whatever history they want to teach. You know what I'm saying. Maybe that's a good thing. I don't know. Depends who's doing it, who's who's trying to do it I still feel it's segregation.

Speaker 2:

It doesn't there should. They shouldn't be out there with a separate education, different doing the same job as you're doing with a different education.

Speaker 1:

I don't think it benefits anybody that way what if it's private and they want to do better for them wanted private, whatever I don't think it's good, I think it builds.

Speaker 2:

I think it builds segregation in your life, like later on in life. Because you look at my brother, like with the kids he went to college with their friends well, he's not around but they were friends till he died and my sister's friends with all of them still to this day. They stay in touch, all of them. I mean that's the people they went to school with and they're different races, they're different. You know, whatever they're, they're all, they're all mixed up and out in the world, but they're friends and communicate and I don't think that it's to benefit you that you stick.

Speaker 2:

Your whole life starts in in in that, that that segregated community. And now, when you spread out, you're still only in your segregated communities because that's where you're comfortable or that's who you, because I mean that those, the way you are when you're young and I think that's how, like, because the way we grew up I mean it's the international city or whatever we, our friends, were everything. I mean it didn't matter what you were, we were all the same, we were just all friends. And when I go out and no, I mean I can't relate to louisiana or nothing, or texans or right here, but here and the people that live in this area, in our area.

Speaker 2:

I can relate to them because their struggles are the same as mine. We were the same, basically, we're just different, different races. Now, like you say, I might have looked that way because I was white and didn't see it. You know what I'm saying. But I mean I think I seen it, I think I saw what they went through whenever they did have those type of issues. You know what I'm saying. I did see it go on. But I mean I was in the actual projects, like I was. You know what do you consider the projects?

Speaker 1:

Where was it 30th street projects? We mean 30th street. I was in the actual projects, dude, I was like, right, when you say projects, you think 21st street or how was it?

Speaker 2:

30th street is definitely the projects 100 okay, I'm just asking no, that's probably was the worst of them was 21st. We spent a lot of time there because Herman's family lived over there. We'd go over there a lot, but we actually, you know, and I'd go get weed there too. Brian remembers that. Brian remember when we used to go to the projects on the west side. You get a rolled joint for a buck and a quarter. He remembers, I guarantee he remembers.

Speaker 1:

He went with me a couple times I was going to say something.

Speaker 2:

I don't even know how we knew them people, but we'd go over there and get them. I'm certain Brian remembers it. But yeah, I lived in the 30th Street Projects. Yeah, he remembers it. Buck and a quarter rolled joint, smoke it on the way home. That's $5. Now, is it? A rolled joint is $5? I don't know, your girl.

Speaker 1:

What Do tell more? Yeah, let's hear.

Speaker 2:

Oh, oh, oh, not your wife, you're talking about your girlfriend or your whatever. He didn't really have girlfriends back then, did he? I don't know, I don't think he did whoever, whoever, whoever he met up with at skate world that weekend.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but yeah, that was, that was. Yeah, it was. The 30th street was definitely 100% the project. I remember fricking. I was coming because Herman was my mom's boyfriend and the Benjamins lived in the projects and Tyrone lived with him. Tyrone was kind of thugged out he was in fact, he just went back to prison again just recently but uh, he was a big boy. Tyrone was like a all-star athlete in high school. He's got all kinds of trophies over there. He was a bad dude and uh, uh, the uh.

Speaker 2:

Hold on brian, the um kids call me over to. One day I'm coming down my bike. You know, I was like 12, I don't know. And these teenagers, older kids, you know, call me over. I go over there and tyrone come over, he goes, I'll beat every motherfuckers at because they were gonna steal my bike. I didn't know that, I didn't even realize. Tyrone was like come over there and save my ass. What is that? Fuller, 30th and Fuller, I don't know. It's right where Lowell is. I live one street over on 30th. That's where I lived. That's the project, for sure. 100% what you thought I was bullshitting.

Speaker 1:

No, that's when you think projects, you think 21st Street.

Speaker 2:

No, I didn't live over there. I never lived over there, but 30th Street was just the same. It was the same exact thing, just wasn't as big Is that?

Speaker 3:

true.

Speaker 1:

No, that project on 21st Street is pretty big.

Speaker 2:

Well, there's two sections too, right, yeah, isn't there two sections?

Speaker 1:

on 21st. It's big.

Speaker 2:

There's one on 21st and there's one that's down, like across right Somewhere. That was like behind Admiral King or something. They were kind of the same, I think so. I think there's like two. Yeah, you're probably right, I think so. I think there's like two of them. Yeah, you're probably right, they are bigger. But yeah, but you had all the I don't know because the thing is because, yeah, I don't know if they're bigger. They might be, but I mean you're talking 29th, 30th, and then you got like the, I mean all connected. You had all the stuff on Fuller Homes. You had the Berkshire court apartments over the 28th street, like there's a lot of different apartments over there yeah the marshals.

Speaker 2:

Where's the marshals? Is that what that was called on? 21st the marshals?

Speaker 1:

that's over there by. Yeah, that's over there by uh, behind the other, behind them yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

yeah. See, that's two different To me. I think of those as two different ones. I don't think the 21st was bigger. I've been in both of them and I've spent a lot of time and 21st I don't think is bigger than South Lorraine. Honestly, I really don't. South Lorraine, you got a lot of yeah, but there's sections that are different, no, there's just one.

Speaker 3:

You know what I mean.

Speaker 2:

It's one building, but it's still the same. It's their four units in a building, I think, or eight units in a building, but they're townhouses. The ones on 21st they're the same. They just don't look as nice. Probably. Well, they're old they do. Now Now they look nice. They redid them, but back then they're old. Yeah, 21st was worse. Yeah, I'm not saying they weren't. I'm not trying to say I was in the worst project. I didn't say I was in Cabrini Green.

Speaker 1:

I'm just saying I was in the fucking projects, jesus Christ. Ain't, nobody said any different, I just asked when did you say the project?

Speaker 2:

Your voice insinuated that I was front and that I grew up in the projects.

Speaker 3:

I didn't want to grow up in the projects. In fact, I tried to stay the fuck away from them.

Speaker 2:

I went over and stayed at my grandma's house most of the time anyways, what else you? Got. We were lucky to get in there that way we had money. That's what people don't understand. Like we were broke before we went in a pride. Like it was rough, like real rough, because we had to pay, like rent we had to. You know what I'm saying. Like it was rough okay it was real rough.

Speaker 2:

We was struggling, um. I think the only other thing I brought up was that, you see, they arrested a canada and, coming in from canada, they arrested some palestinians that were going to go kill jews on october 7th in new york. They just did yesterday, I guess they found them and, uh, they were trying, they were planning on going to like some synagogue or something. They just did yesterday, I guess they found them and they were playing on going to some synagogue or something, I don't know, in New York. They wanted to take them out on October 7th. They wanted it to be one year from when they went into Israel with the paratroopers and shit and were killing everybody. They wanted to go in and do the same thing, but I guess they thwarted it supposedly.

Speaker 2:

But I bet you they didn't. I think they just got one cell. I bet you there's more. You know all these people that are just coming over the border when you think there is, I don't know, I don't like that whole thing. That's a little scary, that that's going on. They get clever, you know. I mean they could send somebody out there just to be a um, you know, like a uh decoy. You know what I mean because why?

Speaker 2:

come across canada when you know they're checking that border right you know what I'm saying? It just doesn't add up. Brian, I lived in north central when I got divorced. South central, south central. I owned, and I owned one of those over there. Actually, I moved into one of my empties yeah, it was bad when you got it.

Speaker 2:

You fix it up pretty nice yeah, yeah, I mean, but you didn't buy them for shit. Back then they were. I think I paid 14 000 for that building, something like that, something, something in that nature. What about that much in? You know? Oh, I put 70, you know something like that 70 grand. I think I had to put it back. Then you did that same thing, what I did now, though that you'd put 140 into it, now maybe 150, even. Yeah, you put all new windows, what everything? Cabinets, windows, flooring, doors, carpet um refinish the floors um roof uh appliances appliances, yeah, yeah, yeah, all that stuff.

Speaker 2:

Not washers and dryers, though I made them get those themselves. Remember when we moved that lady in there? Were you there? You weren't there, were you the one woman. She called me. She got a hold of me. She gives me this tiny tim story and you bit it, huh, you bit it.

Speaker 2:

Well, she was in a battered woman's shelter and my mom, with Herman, used to do that shit and we used to have to deal with that when I was a kid, a little bit, and it hit my soft spot. You know what I'm saying. It definitely hit my soft spot. So this woman, she's in the battered woman's shelter, she's got rent money but she don't have security deposits. She don't have this. So I'm like, okay, fine, I basically waive her security deposit, you know. And then we give her a hand moving in.

Speaker 2:

That was like me and I forget, like maybe Anthony and Randy, I don't know. But we're moving her in and her fucking box starts vibrating.

Speaker 3:

Oh, we were fucking. Box starts vibrating.

Speaker 2:

We were fucking dying laughing but then, like a fucking like, a month later her dude's living there with her. Their fucking holes in all the fucking walls. Like I wish I'd have never gave in to it. I was so fucking mad. You know what I mean Just fucking up my place and all the shit I just once you let her go in there.

Speaker 1:

You can't tell her what you can't have in.

Speaker 2:

There she was, and that was brand new. Then, too, it was like everything was brand new, you know, oh man, I was so fucking mad.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, she fucked it up moving him is that the one that had the dog and just?

Speaker 2:

let his shit all over. No, no, no, no. This was that. She wasn't there. I kicked her out after that, like shortly after that she was. I don't know, she was a big girl.

Speaker 3:

She definitely was a big girl.

Speaker 2:

That's not the one who had the dogs and shit everywhere. That was another girl, the younger girl.

Speaker 1:

That girl was young, I can't remember how that went down. We was up on the roof. We had a ladder set up.

Speaker 2:

We climbed up and she was in the shower. Big girl, yeah, the big girl, that's the one. Yep, that's the one. Yeah, like, oh, yeah, not good. Yeah, not good. Johnny, that same building sold for a hundred and what did? He sell it for 125, like Like four years ago I think, right, three years ago, something like that. But I sold it for whatever 50. Six years ago, took a deal and then that's why I didn't want to sell him this place. He got enough deals out of me. That was, that was, uh, that was. I mean I did good on that, but I didn't. I didn't like having a Reynolds without the big construction company behind me where I could go and have people go and help me do stuff like getting calls and having to deal with shit and do it on my own.

Speaker 2:

I just I'm far too lazy for that. I think you know what I mean. Tired, yeah, you work all day and then you get that phone call yeah, and it doesn't matter, they'll call anytime in the night well, and the thing is they, don't they?

Speaker 2:

they like they act like you were just sitting at home watching tv waiting for them to call, waiting for them to call, like you know. I mean, it don't matter how tired you are, nothing, you got to go do it, and then it would be shit. That wasn't even your fault, like that. There was, like I had in all my leases that it wasn't up to me to unclog drains, because you know I'm not doing that, that's you're doing shit to it. You can unclog your own drains or pay for the service to have them unclogged. I shouldn't have to unclog the drains, but every time they'd fight and swear to god it was fucking.

Speaker 1:

You know you must be the drains underground and this and that, a lot of toy yep, yep fact, chuck had one on the east side and the kid would sit there in the utility room and he'd throw forks and spoons down in there. So he done sent a plumber out there like three times and he's like I ain't paying for it no more my lease right in it it was uh fork spoons.

Speaker 2:

He just sit in there and drop them in the thing mine was like a doll, like a tall ass doll within the one that the woman was throwing a fit like. I'm like it's that, it's right in your lease, it's your problem, this is not my problem. Oh, we can't use this that sure, sure as shit. That's what it was. One of the kids flushed an action figure. How the fuck they flushed an action figure is beyond me.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, another time I had to flip a toilet over and there was a toy stuck in there. You know what I'm saying. Push it back out the other way, yeah horrible.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's the worst.

Speaker 1:

All right, anything going on in this ball.

Speaker 2:

Well, we had that whole incident went on the other night. No, I'm talking about anything coming up.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

What you got the clam bake. October 6th, october 6th I'm picking up the tickets tomorrow morning for anybody who wants them. $35 for the tickets. And you got your clams chicken dinner, all that stuff. We're going to do it on October 6th at 1 o'clock for the Browns game.

Speaker 3:

Wow.

Speaker 2:

Good one. Oh yeah, Last year was probably one of the best clam bakes we've had. Joe goes on and on. He said that it was his absolute favorite one that we've done so far. I feel like that every year, Like every one's the best one, you know.

Speaker 1:

Well, we're definitely going to top it this year. I hope so, yeah.

Speaker 2:

It depends on the weather. Well, I mean Clambake's one of those things that can still be good in cool weather, like that's something you don't mind.

Speaker 1:

No, I'm just talking rain or anything.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, even that's okay as Well. Yesterday morning was cold, this morning was cold shit. It wasn't as bad as yesterday, really. I think yesterday, I think this morning was like, I think the overnight was supposed to be like 45, they said I don't know.

Speaker 1:

I wasn't up that early outside.

Speaker 2:

No, that's what they said. Overnight was supposed to be 45. I thought that was going to be ridiculous. It's supposed to be nice today, though, right yeah, all week.

Speaker 1:

Supposed to be in the 80s, not today though what's today supposed to be.

Speaker 2:

Let's see. But yeah, that clam bake, that's what's coming up and the tickets will go on sale this week. We'll have them. I got, I'm picking them up tomorrow morning. He got him. He finished them up saturday it's only 70 or friday, I mean 70. Yeah, that's good that's nice. Yeah, that's perfect actually I like it. That's good weather there, that's that comfy, comfy weather, and then, uh, I don't know what to do about danny, though I don't bye-bye.

Speaker 1:

What can you do?

Speaker 2:

I don't fucking know, dude, I can't do it anymore, though I can't. I get every day my wife's bitching at me every day. Hmm, give him a pardon. A pardon, yeah, that's that's the problem, though, honestly, like that's that's the problem when you do that for your kids, though, I think, because I think my grandma just let him get away with way too much shit.

Speaker 1:

I guess it is your problem though.

Speaker 2:

I mean it shouldn't be, though I mean and it always seems like it always is, because everybody knows I'm not going to just leave people stranded but it's not fair to me that you come and stay at my house and then you don't put any money away in months, five months you haven't put any. You're making 30-something bucks an hour, haven't charged you a dime and you can't put a penny away to go for it. I mean that don't seem right. I mean, at what point am I just and I am fighting with my wife over it Like I have to argue with my wife to do this? This isn't like you know, it's just like easy to do. You know what I mean. The wife said she wants to come up for the clam bake but don't want to hear. Is she with you? I don't know what that means.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, redo that one.

Speaker 2:

I don't know what that means. The wife said she wants to come up for the clam bake but don't want to hear Is she with you? Who's Johnny? Was I making fun of him once? Oh, I might've been. Yeah, I know who he is now. He comes in all the time. What he we were. I think he's talking about his wife, cause I was messing with him the one time. He's a, he's got an, he's got a nice looking wife. He's not, he's, he's the tall guy. He's the tall guy. You know who he is. He comes in all the time. The tall, lanky guy. Just click on his picture, you'll see who he is.

Speaker 1:

I won't do it, I tried it.

Speaker 2:

Really, yeah, click on his name. I did. You're like dealing with a fricking 80 year old. I can't deal with this damn thing. Do it, it's like a fax machine with a waffle iron on it. You got the computer. Why are you on your phone?

Speaker 3:

I like it.

Speaker 2:

I gave you the computer over there so you could go and do it that way. It's supposed to be doing it on the computer, not the phone. Of course you can't do it on the phone. It's actually faster. What do you mean? Like it's actually faster, what do you mean?

Speaker 1:

like it catches up faster.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I know, yeah, I wonder why I don't do it on my phone yeah, yesterday when they came in, I got their drinks and she was sitting in the back. But he came up to the bar never seen him at the booth. But I'm like, is she with you? That's what it was. Now I see why he said that Okay, yeah, I didn't know who. I mean, she was just sitting back there and I I'm like, do I need to go take care of her? Is basically what I was getting at. Do I need to go wait on her too or not? Is basically what I was getting at. Do I need to go wait on her too or not? I wasn't the bartender.

Speaker 2:

I just was like seeing you guys there and you seemed like you needed a drink. You seemed thirsty, that's all that was. But yeah, the clam bake. So I'm pretty excited about that. I always, like Joe always does something like really cool. You know what I mean. So I'm kind of excited to see what he brings in. That's going to be good and delicious. So he's got something special, different.

Speaker 1:

Always Look at that, that seafood down.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, he sure does, Well he's been in what Second third generation?

Speaker 2:

of it. Yeah, his dad grew up with his grandfather doing it and he grew up with his grandfather doing it and he grew up with his dad. He said he told me when he was in here, remember he said something about his dad was real good about sitting at the table and they didn't talk about work or whatever. He said like at work, that was work stuff. You did that. Whatever he goes when you got home. None of that ever got brought up. It's like, yeah, we had different dads for sure.

Speaker 1:

My dad was like freaking holy shit, stupid ass. When I asked you for the hammer, you bring the hammer yeah, right, right.

Speaker 2:

You'd be like can you pass the mashed potatoes? Can you figure out what mashed potatoes are? You're gonna think it's a fucking screw. You know, we definitely had different dads, for sure 100% 100%? Yeah, I don't know. The only thing I wanted to talk about today was basically that all these shootings that are going on which I think are the mental health issues- yeah, it's got to be something, that's definite.

Speaker 2:

It's mental health, that's definite. It's mental health, that's just. I mean you, every time you see one of these people, they're like they've had like all kinds of like stupid shit getting bullied, getting this, getting that and I think there's like a false reality with them that everybody isn't going through the same shit, that they are people that get in that mode because they watch facebook and everybody kind of puts their best foot forward on Facebook.

Speaker 1:

I've been over friends' house where him and the wife was going crazy at each other, Stupid bitch, blah, blah, blah. And then I'm literally leaving their house and I see, um, I love so-and-so so much. Like what the fuck man?

Speaker 3:

I just left your house.

Speaker 1:

Get the fuck out of here.

Speaker 2:

I damn near got caught in a crossfire. I was like man, I just left your house, Get the fuck out of here.

Speaker 1:

I damn near got caught in a crossfire. Yeah, I was like shit. I seen that slipper fly by. I was like whoa.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, everybody puts their best face forward.

Speaker 1:

It's so fake.

Speaker 2:

I think that these kids go on there.

Speaker 1:

They get depressed because they're like my life ain't like this. Everybody's is perfect. No, and it's not real. Yeah, everybody, yeah, everybody kind of, is dealing with the same type of shit. You know, and they got it all. And, like even me, I wouldn't put my negative shit on facebook. No, no, no, nobody's going to nobody's got.

Speaker 2:

I mean, nobody wants to put their shit out there like that it's all fake. I mean people do put their shit out there like that. The bird are real weirdos, we can't deal with them, right, yeah, yeah, they're too, much Fuck.

Speaker 1:

That Motherfucker makes me want to cry. Fuck, depressed motherfucker Shit. I ain't listening to that shit. I'm here for positivity.

Speaker 2:

Shut the fuck up.

Speaker 1:

I want to see the fake shit. Everybody talk about how amazing their life is. That's what I want to see you got somebody in there.

Speaker 2:

oh, she loved me again. But they're trying to, they're trying that that, uh, because twitter, you know twitter's he's been dealing with that with brazil, did you see it? Twitter? Brazil is telling twitter basically, like, if they don't start adhering to blocking what they want them to block, basically what they're telling them to block, because Brazil is supposed to be a free country, supposedly, you know, I mean, they're supposed to be similar to what we are. You know what I mean.

Speaker 1:

But they want to censor it.

Speaker 2:

They want to censor it. Yeah, they want to, and Europe's already censoring everything that's going out, and they want them to do it. And there's a lot of people saying that that's going to become the new norm, to where the US just ends up doing it too which they already were to some degree but they think they're going to actually set it up to start censoring what goes out. That's horrible, dude. That's the thing that made america great, that that you're not being censored. But I mean, you almost understand, because it's like god damn, there's so much shit out there that you just can't tell what's what right, you can't you can't.

Speaker 2:

That's I. You know what. All this time's gone and I still couldn't tell you if the shit in Colorado happened like New Jack City or not. And Aurora.

Speaker 1:

I seen another thing on that. These other gang members went up there and was telling them on megaphones to get out and stuff like that.

Speaker 2:

Oh, really, yeah, I mean, I just don't know, because I've seen it both ways. I've seen people saying, yeah, it's not what they're saying it is. I've seen people going, oh, it's miserable, I've seen it.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so you don't know.

Speaker 2:

I just don't know. And it's all this information's out there and they're just not putting out the right information. And that reminds me. There was something else I was going to talk about too. It was medical results. Else I was going to talk about too it was it was medical results we were talking about. All right, so we're talking. We were just talking about the spin on politics essentially right, but there's a spin on all. Everything gets spun to, whatever it is.

Speaker 2:

And do you remember when we were young, like 17, 18, the whole, like secondhand smoke is worse than regular smoke. Common fucking sense tells you that's not true. Right, I guess I don't know. I mean common sense will tell you that's not true. I mean it's not true that if you walk past somebody smoking, it's as bad as the guy that's smoking it. That's just common fucking sense. Now, if you spend a lifetime in a basketball arena that looks like they used to look when Bill Russell played, yeah, okay, maybe that might affect you. Still, I can't believe it'd affect you as much as the guy that's actually smoking.

Speaker 2:

You know what I'm saying? Yeah, and because of what we were talking about doing with that, I'm like, well, let me go look. And I started looking and there is, it's astra. It's crazy, dude. They they literally have like 20 reports that say there is no effect from secondhand smoke. Right, they have one guy, just one, that the cdc uses, that stole millions of dollars from the CDC and is on the run now. But that's the fucking one that said that, that's the one that's in their paperwork, that's the one that they agree with, that's the one that and it's the one they paid to do the study to find the results they wanted essentially.

Speaker 1:

And then he just wrote down whatever and then walked out the door with their money.

Speaker 2:

On different things he had. He robbed them for all kinds of money. He's on the run, he's literally on the run, and that's still the only one that they'll publish. Why? Why would that be the one? And there's so many reports? It's crazy. It's like this doesn't make any sense.

Speaker 2:

Because that's the way the lobbyists wanted it for this. About the secondhand smoke? Probably. Yeah, I don't get that either, because tobacco companies seem like they had the most money. So how did they not like freaking? But they say they all went into the food industry now yeah, they're putting shit in foods that's what they're saying. Yeah, but you would think they would have been the biggest lobbyists with the most money, right?

Speaker 1:

yeah, but they made them stop doing the commercials and shit. Remember the Marlboro man, mm-hmm.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, they weren't allowed to do them on TV, but they can put them in every magazine. They can put them on every billboard.

Speaker 1:

But you know what?

Speaker 2:

I bet you they can advertise on the internet and I don't see them doing that. I've never seen them. But yeah, remember the commercial. There was a lot of oh yeah commercials. Oh yeah, you had the winston like cowboy guy or whatever, or not. The cowboy, the worker guy right was the winston guy. The winston guy was like the construction worker, the cowboy was a marble the camel was the camel yeah, yeah I remember all that wasn't his name, joe that was even after they weren't on tv. Joe the camel, that was that.

Speaker 1:

That was the big thing, even after that was a bad sweepstakes all kinds of shit. They had cool ass little things too. They sent out lighter. Then remember newport had a, a book you get and you could save up your, your uh proofs. You don't remember that. You take all your proofs and you rip them off and you save them and you could buy stuff from that category, uh catalog from that. Marlboro had that.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, marlboro had that, and newport had that I didn't know newport did. I didn't smoke newports, but maybe one year of my whole life maybe, or something I didn't newport was. I never liked newports. I never liked the fiberglass. I was always told it was fiberglass in the filters. I was always told it was menthol, so I stayed away from it whatever scared me. I was like no, I'm not, I'm good with it just smoke two packs of marlboro.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, yeah, without the fiberglass, yeah.

Speaker 2:

I mean it's hard for me. I mean, my grandma's still kicking, dude, she smokes. She smokes a lot every day, but she claims it's the filter that gets you. She cuts the filter off of them. Maybe she's right. She smoked palm oils forever and now she'll get them. And then she'll just take a razor knife and just cut the filter off and smoke them without the filter hey you know she swears, that's what it is.

Speaker 1:

Is the filter that gets it people say all that weird stuff old people do.

Speaker 2:

I'm like shit well, that's like covid. They said smokers like were protected better from it because of that. But that's what they said everything got, yeah, everything got. That shit was bullshit and covid oh yeah, that shit drives me nuts everything it was nuts we were were no mask. Don't wear a mask. Do not wear a mask. That's the worst possible thing you can do is wear a mask. Everybody needs to wear a mask. Everybody's going to have to wear a mask. You're protecting everyone else Six feet.

Speaker 1:

If you don't protect it.

Speaker 2:

You're being selfish.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

That was the worst one that they could do of all the bullshit stories that they told that saying that them not wearing a mask is protect, because that put people against each other. Right like immediately, like that that you're not wearing a mask yeah, selfish bastard right, you're supposed to be wearing it for me, right?

Speaker 2:

you know, like that, like they pinned you against each other, right then that's what? And there was somebody who was it? That said that, like they, that you always think you want to be on the right side of history, like if something were to go down, like you look at, like you know what went on in germany with hitler, and you think who would do that? How could they? Possibly?

Speaker 2:

you would have been the person right that you would have been the person that was you know, stood up for and didn't allow it, or you would have done this, or you would have been the person that. You would have been the person that was you know, stood up for it and didn't allow it, or you would have done this, or you would have been the person that didn't have a slave, or you would have been. But then you watch what happened with covid and the mask and how people fucking got weird and yet there's no chance they wouldn't have went right along with them. They would have never went with.

Speaker 1:

You know what I'm saying they had a march right with them. The funniest shit is watching them. People drive in the car by themselves with the mask on. I'm like, oh my god, this is so stupid. Like who's?

Speaker 2:

gonna affect you who are you gonna affect? Yeah, and you could smell too, like through the mask, so how could you not right?

Speaker 1:

that's what I always said if you can smell stuff through the mask how could it not be?

Speaker 2:

yeah, what's it stopping.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, what's it stopping nothing? I don't I don't get it, but you know what? There was different masks. You had the real ones and then you had the cheap little pieces of shit that they were just mass producing and charging crazy money for yeah, you had the what was it like?

Speaker 1:

n97 or n9 or n something, whatever, yeah so you had the one that what would just say the one that protected you. So you had the one that would just say the one that protected you, and you had the right one. People was getting them out of t-shirts, remember, and then he was making those little foam ones. All that bullshit, just it's just horrible. Yeah, it is horrible, it is definitely about cheese and all kinds of shit now around that, because they were like he just made half that shit up.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and you know what, and I'm going to say something I probably shouldn't even say it this close but how come they always like blame everything that went wrong with COVID on Joe Biden and Kamala, when he wasn't even in charge. Trump was in charge? Huh, trump was in charge during all that, but everything that went wrong they blame on the Democrats? It's crazy, and I'll be the first to admit it. I said like I didn't like the way Trump handled COVID. I didn't like it. I wasn't happy with it at all. I mean, I really didn't. I didn't like the way he handled it. I really didn't, didn't like the way he handled it. I, I really didn't. I mean I and I would suspect that if, if he ended up losing the election and written it was real and not rigged, but I don't believe that, even a little bit, just because of the numbers, the voters of numbers, like just the numbers that are out. There is like 157 million votes cast in in our country of 360 million, which a lot of them are under 18. So I mean it's the percentages just don't add up to the rest of every vote that's ever happened. So I don't believe that that happened by any means, but I definitely never liked for the way that that Trump handled it.

Speaker 2:

I always thought that he was uh, I think that he got political, political, not political, what's the word? I felt like the Democrats fucking played them that's the word. They played them, they had it, they were. They were putting him in spots where he like like, almost like if he didn't care if he didn't do this or that, and he wasn't. I don't think doing like, like I didn't care if he didn't do this or that and he wasn't. I don't think doing like like. I like the way that that florida handled it. I thought he handled the covet properly. I didn't like the way that we handled in ohio. I didn't like the way that trump handled it as a nation and I felt like pelosi and them were just, they were just playing them all the way through and he was falling for it all of it. That's how I felt about it. But yet when you hear all the election shit, biden claims he's the one and he, he goes along with it and everybody blames him for doing it's like he wasn't even fucking in charge until we were reopened.

Speaker 1:

I I mean honestly, he wasn't well, that's calling it how it is, and I mean I'm just being honest and I mean I want Trump.

Speaker 2:

I think that Trump's the best answer for this country. I think that if COVID wouldn't have happened, this country would have voted him in the second time, hands down, loved him to death and everything would have been great. I think that if I think that the COVID caused most of the problems, that that anything that comes, I think that the COVID caused most of the problems, that anything that comes. But, all that being said, I honestly I didn't like the way Trump handled it. Honestly, I really didn't. I didn't care for the way it was handled.

Speaker 2:

I think that Ron DeSantis did it the best. You know Florida. They just rolled with it and they weren't any worse off for it. That's what the rest of the country should have done too Just rolled with it and you wouldn't have been any worse off for it. Not saying people didn't get sick and weren't going to get it, just saying you're not worse off for it. You know what I mean. You ruined a lot of people's lives. You spent a lot of money. You I mean there was a lot of shit that went on with that. You know what I mean. That that just has still hasn't been recovered from. You know what I mean. As far as kids that weren't in school, you know there was kids that was their senior year. They spent it at home behind a computer. You know what I'm saying. They're senior. You get one senior year in your life and you took it from them the big thing was where they took it.

Speaker 1:

They closed the beaches, remember it was mad about that, and it was like why would you take the sun, the sun from them? You know I'm saying that's, that would help, right, right and uh, being out in the fresh air, in the open, where you ain't gonna get it right, right, yeah, it was yeah, it's, it was they got that that fauci's and all they got all kinds of things on him and that. What is it? Congressional shit?

Speaker 2:

yeah, they got. They got that. Tim Walls too. There's some shit going on with him too. I guess he was doing something crazy with the money. I guess that was coming in like the COVID money. There was some like money going to people it shouldn't have went to or something that he was involved in with all that. I don't know about that. They said he was involved in something with China too, but he was going back. He constantly talks about going back and forth to China. He talked about that all the time. Oh, I'm, I'm, I've got a great relationship with China, I go there all the time and this and that like that. And they're saying, yeah, he was going there cause he was involved in the, in the Wuhan virus and all that stuff that was going on. That's what they're saying anyways. But again, you never know what the fuck to believe. You can't tell, you don't know.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, there's a whole other story to that. Somebody else go and tell us.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, and it's like they showed us that video, remember in New York, with all those people getting sick in the hospital, like all these hospitals overthrown, and it like all these like hospitals like overthrown, and it was like all those, and then it turned out to be it was in Italy.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, remember that.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, yeah, I remember that Dude how.

Speaker 2:

I mean you, yeah, yeah, that's propaganda there. That's beyond, probably. That's horrible, dude. That's like some of the worst shit that they could have ever done, in my opinion.

Speaker 1:

Opinion yeah, it really is just a lie.

Speaker 2:

It's flat out lie.

Speaker 1:

Like it's, it's I mean we were opening up plants to make uh respirate. What was it? Ventilators ventilators and they're gonna go changing this plant to make ventilators changing this one and doing all this bullshit?

Speaker 2:

and the ventilators were a waste because people anybody went on them die. But I think that they were putting people on ventilators that were already almost dead anyways. You were dying anyways. The ventilators didn't help, is all I'm saying. They're like oh, you got to have them For what? To have them live a little longer and not have their family come see them.

Speaker 1:

What's the point of that?

Speaker 2:

That was horrible. They're alive in a hospital a little longer. Who cares they were going to die? They're better off to do it with.

Speaker 1:

They can't see their family anyways, yeah, better off to die with something not down your throat right, probably was killing them.

Speaker 2:

Honestly, who knows, you never can tell. Yeah, but yeah, I don't know well, anything else that you got. You ain't got nothing else. No, nothing, you're good, good, he's good. He didn't do anything. What do you think about my idea about these skits, though? What do you think about that?

Speaker 1:

We'll do a couple.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you got an idea. I got a lot of ideas. You got a lot of ideas. We going to write some down. We got to write them, get it set up, because we'll have to make the stage thing for it and all that, like you know.

Speaker 1:

I mean whatever we need for props or whatever we'll have to get all that wigs today.

Speaker 2:

Where did he have a place where you can buy wigs and shit now I know, no, no, I'm sure they do, because they used to have that place right here, but it's closed right by the mall. I could, I could, ask my cousin fernando, I look down and he's on here.

Speaker 2:

Oh, that was wrong. That was wrong on many levels. All right, well, everybody, go ahead and click and subscribe to our youtube channel and uh, facebook or tiktok, and uh, you can see any, uh any, of the video, the stuff that'll notify you. I mean, it's not, it doesn't charge you anything, you just go subscribe so that way, whenever we do go put a video out, you'll be able to see it. And uh, make sure you like and follow us on facebook, twitter and all those things and look out for our skits to come.

Speaker 2:

And don't forget, this week you can come in and start picking up the tickets for the clam bake. So come on in and I'll have some. Uh, joe bennett will have some and uh, keith marsh will will have some. So, uh, anybody, if you guys know one of them and you're going to come out to the clam bake, go ahead and uh, get ahold of them and grab some tickets. Or you can just come right into the restaurant and grab them at any time. All right, we're out of here. Peace, what's that? What are you playing? That's just our ending music that I always put on.

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