
I Tell Stories
I Tell Stories Podcast covers a wide range of topics discussed by Colt Draine and Owen "The Mic" McMichael. From the scourge on humanity of violent business hippies and Scott Baio to peculiar Serbian Mother's Day traditions,the boys offer their unique perspective. Revolutionary artists,legends of folklore and bizzare following of fast food items are just a few of the subjects touched on. I Tell Stories aims to bring attention to individuals and occerrences that are too interesting to be forgotten. Two long time friends who keep each other laughing give listeners their take on the world. Everyone has a story, these are ours and those of many others.
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I Tell Stories
Rock and Roll: Hilarious Song Review
Ever wondered how a song critiquing consumerism ends up in a commercial or why a children's author would write a rock anthem? Join us on a whimsical journey as we unravel these peculiar tales of rock history, inspired by Amy McCarthy's comedic insights. Discover the unexpected twists behind Janis Joplin's "Mercedes Benz" and our chuckles over Steve Miller Band's "Abracadabra" being sampled by none other than Eminem. With a dash of humor, we blend personal memories with newfound musical trivia, sharing stories like the genius behind Dr. Hook's "Cover of the Rolling Stone" and its surprising link to beloved children's books.
Get ready for a nostalgic stroll through music’s quirkiest corners, where satirical genius and eclectic soundtracks reign supreme. We reminisce over Iron Butterfly's intriguing history, laugh at Pee-wee’s antics with "Tequila," and dive into the clever satire of Randy Newman's "Short People" and Frank Zappa's peculiar advice in "Don't Eat the Yellow Snow." With anecdotes and admiration, we celebrate the bold lyricism of Queen's "Fat Bottomed Girls" and the timeless impact of artists like Randy Newman. Join us for a delightful blend of humor and appreciation, as we toast to rock's lighter side and the unforgettable tunes that shaped our past.
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uh, wait to you, my friend, on this. I don't know, it's starting to be fall type day, guys. The heat waves are starting to finish up. I feel, uh, it's that time of year to think about weird music. I think owen said and he sent me this fucking yard marker article um 18 of the most hilarious songs in music in the history of rock music, and I'm sure this is open to debate, wouldn't you think?
Speaker 2:probably so, but I think she did a good job.
Speaker 1:Apparently, amy McCarthy was the writer of good job on giving some credit she had some good points.
Speaker 2:So, yeah, definitely want to give her credit, that's. You know, we're just giving our take on it.
Speaker 1:And.
Speaker 2:I hadn't heard all these songs, I don't think called out either. You actually got a chance To listen to some of them, so I'm going in. Okay, kind of rookie On some of this.
Speaker 1:But I yeah, there's a couple that I haven't heard, but most of them I'd heard.
Speaker 2:Actually, yeah, actually yeah. Most of them I had, but some of them I'm like what yeah?
Speaker 1:Anyway, my friend, anyway, lead off, be the lead off. Hitter, batter up, bro, let's go.
Speaker 2:Janice Joplin, mercedes-benz, yeah, which.
Speaker 2:I had heard, and I do remember it was kind of a. I took it as like it's sort of a shot at materialism and just how ridiculous it is that people. And then good old consumerism in the U S, I think it was 1995. Mercedes Benz actually used her song. Yeah, so good old. I'm sure her relatives were just like well, I'd be dry. I don't know how that went, but still like I don't think she would have been thrilled with. Well, somebody got paid, you know? Yeah, exactly, exactly, and incidentally, due to Mrs McCarthy, sorry, but I was unaware that is the last song that Joplin recorded before her death. Oh, wow, yeah.
Speaker 1:I see that Dang. No, that's the thing. Janis Joplin, yeah, she wouldn't have probably been on board with the Murder Sadie's Benz commercial. You know, though, you think, like certain people, you didn't see their music in commercials for a reason, until after they died, dmx being one of them. Now, on the other hand, hey dirty bastard, Well, yeah, but I think ODB would have been very up for the hey dirty in a laundry commercial. He just seems like he would have been very up for the hey dirty in a laundry commercial. He just seems like he would have been like cut the fucking check, guys. Like you know what I'm saying, like I don't think he would have been against it.
Speaker 2:True, but it was long after he passed that. That was a. Thing.
Speaker 1:Correct. I hope Barson got a piece of that. That'd have been legit, Anyway, nonetheless. So do you want to keep going or do you want me to throw one out there? Yeah, go for it. Okay, Abracadabra, Steve Miller Band. I don't really remember this song, actually, and I did listen to it and then it hit me and it's like the single lead-off for Eminem's album, the latest one, the Abracadabra. So this is where that sample comes from, my friend.
Speaker 1:Oh wow, yeah, and to be honest, when I listened to it I didn't read this before I listened. I actually went through and listened to some of these songs and refreshed myself before I even read the article just by looking at the stuff. Anyway, so it is kind of like weird to like it's like kind of a sex song, it's whatever you want to say, but then at the end of the day it's like very weird to repeat abracadabra over and over again during a sex song. And I kind of tend to agree with Amy here on this one, because that does how she puts it is. There's something funny about singing abracadabra over and over in a song. That is absolutely about more x-rated behavior than the typical magic show. Okay, people, uh, yeah, dang, this is a pretty good one, man, I do. I do enjoy the take. It's like our reactionary. So this is kind of a first for us. We've never quite done it this way um, no.
Speaker 2:And then here's one that this is really interesting. I knew the song. I didn't know that the cover of the Rolling Stone was by Dr Hook and anyone listening. If you can look at this on Yardbarker and look at the picture, wow, it's decided that you know the least sketchy guy Might be the guy with the eye patch, I'll just put it that way.
Speaker 2:So like they look like drugged out muppets, it's yeah no offense to dr hook, I'm just saying but fun fact again, I learned from from miss amy. Uh, it was written by shell silverstein. Okay, you don't. You don't remember the show, like the children's book, like where would the sidewalk end? No, there was a bunch of stuff, oh wow.
Speaker 1:Yeah, wow, that's amazing. I'll have to look into her too. I did Sorry to be so oblivious of that. Oh him, oh him.
Speaker 2:See, look at that.
Speaker 1:I don't know, like Shelly, I don't know, wow, deprived views here.
Speaker 2:That was like I thought that was a huge thing, like in school and everything, even when you were a kid.
Speaker 1:Yeah, I did read some. The only children's books that I remember were very old. My grandma was an English teacher and so she had school books from like the 60s probably. So the true like first, like run, spot runs, are the ones that I do actually remember a lot of that style of stuff and then into the storybooks, but they were all very old, my friend. So I don't know, I must have just missed out part of I don't know. I don't know, maybe I'm lucky, I don't fucking know. Who knows man. Um, I will say something about this band, uh, and this picture. I'm sure if they look up the band it'll come up. It just seems like one of those pictures. They look pretty happy and high and the guy on the left has the shiniest fucking hair I've ever seen on a man, like he has the Farrah Fawcett hair or something like that. I don't even know, I just know that's like a thing people say back in the day, but that's more 80s Nonetheless, holy shit.
Speaker 2:The guy in the middle kind of looks like John C Reilly.
Speaker 1:Yeah, oh no, he does. Oh, my God.
Speaker 2:I think one of the guys from Hanson's grandpa yeah.
Speaker 1:Okay, look it up people.
Speaker 2:It's worth a gander.
Speaker 1:Last one, okay. So imagine if you were to take the guy on the right of the guy with the eye patch and like, crop it and it would look like a school photo. Just School. I want to go too. Yes, for the gifted. Nonetheless, that's amazing, hey. So I have a fucking gripe with this list. Yard Barker Alright, they do have one Tenacious D, okay, amazing, they belong on this list In multiple levels. Alright, because it is like funny rock songs and such.
Speaker 1:But she chose to put tribute on there Out of all their songs, which is funny. Man, it is cool. It's a good song, you know, because they're battling a demon, as they do sometimes and, uh, you know they're talking about it, but then they they're trying to explain it and play the song for the recording, but they're like we forgot the name of, or we forgot how to play, the most amazing song ever so. This is a tribute song for that song we played before. You're just just going to have to take our word for it, but we played the most amazing song ever made, like kind of deal, which is cool. But I like Beelzebub Let me double-check the name on that. I might even have that fucking title wrong because I'm a smart guy, but it's from the Pick of Destiny where they like, where they battle the devil guys. You know what I'm saying? Do you know what I'm talking about?
Speaker 2:I've heard it, but not extensively. So yeah, I'm aware, but I'm certainly no expert.
Speaker 1:Wow, dang. That kind of surprises me that with all the movies you watch, have you ever watched the Pick of Destiny? No, funny, and part part of the reason I want to like play a clip of it, but I don't even you know people. You guys should just look it up on, like their spotify and stuff, because I feel like these people should get plays. That song is so funny I don't even know how to explain it, but that's my one gripe. I feel like bl's a boss should have been on this list instead of tribute.
Speaker 1:I do like the song tribute by tenacious d as a comedy rock and roll uh type thing, but you know nonetheless also. That being said, kyle glass from tenacious d? Uh has been said to be one of the greatest guitar players in the world. On a few times I've read in the rolling stone and such things like that. You know nowadays that's kind of fallen off because you know they're old farts and they were a comedy rock group not like a major rock group, I guess, but he is known to be a one of the best, so that's a fun fact. Sorry, I got all in this on this, uh, tenacious d kick. I really think that that's pretty cool. And I don't even really know fans jack black, I mean, you know whatever. But like I don't always care for his humor, but I do think that that music's pretty good for comedy, shit. Uh, anyway, god, I just went off on a tangent. Where am I, where are you at?
Speaker 2:I'm glad you mentioned werewolves of blundit. I actually like it and then I remember Adam Sandler doing it and it basically just sounds exactly the same. Yeah, I forgot she mentioned the werewolves drinking pina coladas at Trader Vic's after attacking old ladies. Oh my gosh, that's pretty, but yeah, just the ow, is that big Werewolves of London? Price of admission yeah, dude, yeah Great, yeah, yeah, dude's legit Lawyers, guns and money. Another wonderful track.
Speaker 1:Oh, okay, I'll have to check that out. You know, I definitely have heard that song. I think any more. If you're like you know, in this age, if you're like, hey, play a halloween playlist, it's gonna be on there, guys you know, hey, alexa play hold on.
Speaker 1:Hey, alexa, play a halloween playlist. I wonder if anybody's shit will keep on. Probably not. Does that work anymore? I remember when south park came out with an episode where they said alexa, like 9 000 times in it or some shit, just to like fuck with people, or it was somebody like Sal Parker, family guy, pretty sure Sal Parker, though guys. Um, yeah, so good one on that one, my friend, hey, and it got a DeVita that one.
Speaker 2:Yes, I'm glad you brought that. I think most people probably heard this, but it's still classic.
Speaker 1:Oh my gosh. But go ahead, man. I want to hear your take on it actually, because I got something about it as well.
Speaker 2:That it was supposed to. The lyrics are actually in the Garden of Eden. Yeah, but he was so drunk that it just became that, and then that's how I heard it every time. I mean, I think that's how they played it live, Like he didn't, or maybe he was just that drunk every time.
Speaker 1:Right. Well, when you look it up, that's the name of the song. I mean, that's what it is right. Yeah, okay, okay, I was just making sure I was right, it's 17 minutes long.
Speaker 2:I knew it was a long song, apparently, yeah.
Speaker 1:Yeah, back Back in those days, back in our day, five minutes was about standard for a track, but yeah, that's long for anything.
Speaker 2:Or like a Misfits song. That's like 36 seconds, oh my.
Speaker 1:God, of course. Well, yeah, that's how they roll guys. Not really that short, yeah, nonetheless. Hey, not bad hair on these guys either. In this picture it seems to be. That was how it went back then.
Speaker 1:I do have a thing on them, though, from Iron Butterfly their bassist actually was murdered. Did you know that? No, we could do a whole thing on this. But briefly, like in 99, he was reported missing and then they had found his body, and it is kind of a weird story. I have actually listened to some stuff on it before and seen it. But they found him, I think without his head or like his body was in a weird way from the van. But he was a genius, is what it was, and he ended up working for some computer science stuff and I don't know if he got into government shit or something, but there's like a whole. Oh yeah, he was working for the US Department of Defense in the 90s Damn yeah. So he pioneered high-compression video technology.
Speaker 1:This guy, so that guy from the band Iron Butterfly, where they were so drunk that the name was pronounced wrong was actually a genius and worked for the US Department of Defense and was murdered, and they don't know. Still Craziness. Yeah, he may not have been drunk. The singer is definitely drunk. Oh, I'm sure they were all something or other. I don't know if, like yeah, yeah, I mean I don't know. Sobriety was a league, it was legal back then. It just doesn't seem like a thing now, you know. I mean like, yeah, it just seems like take whatever pill. You see, you do this, do that and the other thing, but nonetheless okay.
Speaker 2:Sorry about that, guys. This is taking a dark turn. Yeah, jinx, here's a much happier Thanks on tequila yeah, like in peewees, that's like TV's big adventure. I think we all remember it featured in Pee-wee's Big Adventure. Yeah, I actually do remember that. That's where I first remember hearing the song.
Speaker 1:What a weird song for a kid's movie. Yeah, think about that For you guys that are younger. Pee-wee Herman and Pee-Wee's Big Adventure and Pee-Wee's Playhouse was a very popular children's TV show in the 90s 80s, I don't know Anyway.
Speaker 2:Yeah, the movies came out in the 80s Tim Burton's first movie actually, I believe. Really I'll be damned.
Speaker 1:Uh-huh, yeah, no-transcript. The actor who played Pee Wee Was also in the movie Blow, did an amazing job, by the way. Um, there we are. We don't want to talk about the other stuff that happened With Pee Wee, herman. Um, nonetheless, go ahead. I want to hear more about this tequila jazz mambo.
Speaker 2:Uh same, oh, just you know it's a very happy Jazzy Song and it was on the Simpsons apparently.
Speaker 1:I'm sure it's been on a lot of stuff, man, yeah.
Speaker 2:And she mentions that it would be especially funny after a few shots of the namesake beverage. Right, but I'm too old for that mess anymore. Yeah, no thanks. Staying on the same time period as Pee Wee Herman, you remember Whip it right by Devo.
Speaker 1:Yeah, I do, unfortunately, I'm sorry. Yeah, it's traumatic, those hats. I think we've covered that enough. Yeah, thanks, thank you. Thanks, I can't. I don't know that shit still comes on the radio. Sometimes I'll throw on the radio, the radio on I don't know whatever, right. So like, I'll throw on the radio when we're driving in the car and I usually put it on like soft classics kind of deal, because it just sometimes it'll play. Like Rick James, it plays all sorts of stuff. Sometimes it's just straight garbage, but like, yeah, that stuff like that. Yeah, cyndi Lauper, stuff like that. Pat Benatar, you know all those things. Dude, CL is the business. Yeah, lopdiggity, that's what her friends call her. I think it's CL. Yeah, her hood name's Lopsided yo, let's see. Nonetheless, guys, there was a song on here that I actually like. I know it's a stupid-ass song, but Love Shack by the B-52s I think is a pretty cool song, dude, I don't know. Remember the video? Yeah, of course I do. What the fuck are you talking about it?
Speaker 1:like came out when I was a kid. You know that and like, yeah, the Love Shack. This is not the first time I've sang Love Shack on this show. It may be like the third or fourth time. This like shows you the fcc is gonna be pissed. Yeah, I've been hopping my christ flores as big as a whale yeah, something, something, grab your honey and get your jukebox money.
Speaker 1:Yeah, back then they had jukeboxes. People when me and me and Ellen were kids, okay, even into our Plenty of drugs. Yeah, I remember sitting in a bar when I was a child and like there would be like putting money in a jukebox next to a cigarette machine. You know, it's like there's a lot of people that can relate to me. They're from a lot of areas, not just Montana people I'm sure that's how that was in general in the 80s, but nonetheless. But you could go into some of them bars when you were a kid and play pool, because a lot of these towns they didn't have nothing else. So the bowling alley was the bar and the fucking. You know all these things.
Speaker 1:So, anyway, the B-52's Love Shack I think is a classic. So anyway, b-52's Love Shack I think is a classic and I often like tell you how much I like it on this show people.
Speaker 2:Now we know.
Speaker 1:How do?
Speaker 2:you feel about the Pina Colada song. I don't really know. That's one I didn't. That's all I know is if you like Pina Colada, I like really. The rest of it is just yeah. I don't think I've ever listened to yeah, I'm getting caught in the rain.
Speaker 1:Oh, there you go.
Speaker 2:Yeah, is that it apparently, yeah, it's about the the singer like dumping his girlfriend and then going after some new woman.
Speaker 1:Well, yeah, that's a happy yeah, yeah apparently, this woman is not a fan of yoga. Why is that even like a thing so, in which a woman who loves pina coladas apparently just loves them, but isn't a huge fan of yoga seeks to find the love of her life? And even though it involves a protagonist dubbing his girlfriend for this new flame, this song does actually have a happening ending? I don't think so.
Speaker 2:I don't think that sounds great For who? Yeah, she's like oh, thank God, this dude's out of here.
Speaker 1:He's a fucking pain in the ass. What a fucking yeah if that's the case.
Speaker 2:I guess it was the 80s, Like there was cocaine everywhere, so everyone at least thought they were happy.
Speaker 1:Yeah, Cocaine pillows people.
Speaker 2:Hey I imagine that's an 80s one. I 80s one. That's an assumption. I'm not familiar with the works of Rupert Holmes much, but it sounds very 80s, all right.
Speaker 1:So one of the most clever songs on here, I think, or actually cool, which I didn't even realize. I was like I've heard this song before and I even believe I've teased Nicole with this song because she is only five feet tall, or five one, as she likes to argue with me about, but Short People by Randy Newman, one as she likes to argue with me about, about short people by randy newman. All right, uh, it's, it's fucking like. I'm just gonna read this and I don't want um, I don't want to catch any any hate mail from short people, because this isn't like you know, I didn't write this song, guys. But uh, uh, they got little hands and little eyes and they walk around telling great big lies. They got little noses and tiny little teeth. They wear platform shoes on their nasty little feet. Why nasty guys? Okay, uh, there's more to this. They, they just, uh, they got little voices going peep, peep, peep. They got grubby little fingers and dirty little minds. Why short people? Okay, there's a lot, of, a lot of.
Speaker 2:I think, as Miss Amy points out, that he was. It was satire, you know, suggesting that any type of bigotry or prejudice is insane, and that would be, you know, if that was how something. You know that's the same thing as hating any group of people just because they're. That it's pretty clever. I don't think he's out like fucking kicking midgets and like Well, yeah, yeah, no, I get it Tossing primordial dwarves into the ocean.
Speaker 1:I don't Randy Newman, don't start that. That could be. You know that might mar his name something like a gerbil. And what's that guy's name? Richard Gere. You know that was just a rumor. I was listening to the BHB members feed, british History Podcast, which I fully support people, by the way, listen to it. I'm not affiliated with them but it's great. But on their members feed, which is a subscription thing, they were trying to compare how certain things that aren't true. You can just say one thing and automatically something will come to mind, like if you just randomly were to say richard gear. Like automatically people from our era are going to think of hamsters and gerbils and we don't even have to go any deeper than that people okay, yeah nonetheless.
Speaker 1:So like like Point being is yeah, but damn, this little people song Is pretty clever guys. I don't know how we got there From From there. Do you have anything else On this fine day?
Speaker 2:Uh, which I do remember Hearing this as a kid. I think it was actually One of the first times I smoked weed and Dude's mom had it on. But Don't Eat the Yellow Snow. By Frank.
Speaker 1:Zappa, yeah, that guy.
Speaker 2:This would be like culturally insensitive now, because I think he uses the term Eskimo, which is not a preferred, but I don't think Frank Zappa was like trying to be racist. No, it was 1974, so no, and I don't think.
Speaker 1:But I didn't know that until I was like well into adult, being an adult man like I would have never even fucking knew. As far as I know, I knew there was inuits and I I assumed that like what is that? Just like the, the their term. They call them or they want to be called. That's as far as I knew it.
Speaker 2:So until not too long ago. I agree that it is solid advice to not eat yellow snow yeah, for for sure, dude, like it's not lemon flavored.
Speaker 1:I don't know if people really like to sell those snow cones, do they? I don't know, guys, it does. But isn't the line something? You know the line, don't you? It's about huskies.
Speaker 2:I can't Watch out where the huskies go. Don't you eat no yellow snow? Something like that it's been. I haven't heard it.
Speaker 1:You nailed it. I just want yeah, no, you had it right, bro I just wanted people to hear you sing and know how talented you really are. But yeah, that's correct Because they listened to it beforehand. You know, this was pretty fun. This is a cool little list and there was songs Like I do kind of like that. That that makes that short people songs legit man, and it's brandy newman. I have an appreciation for him, like I was talking to you about earlier, because when you listen to him at first you're like, oh, it's kind of hokey and whatever and sounds like everybody else like that or whatever, until the moment you fucking realize that no, he's the one, he's the only one that truly sounds like that. And you're like, damn, randy newman's killing his game with all this toy story, money and loving la and such and all these things, right. So nonetheless, uh, do you have another one that you're particularly fond of? I know we we almost went through all of them, holy shit.
Speaker 2:This one again. It's like I really only I know I've heard the song, but she mentions more in-depth on the lyrics, which is Queen's flat-bottomed girls. Yeah, and I had no idea that there was, as she points out, freddie Mercury's characteristic strut while melting out idea that there was, as she points out, freddie Mercury's, freddie Mercury's characteristic strut while belting out lyrics, like left alone with big fat fanny. She was such a naughty nanny and I'm just like, uh, okay, right, funny, but it's up.
Speaker 1:I know his power was in his mustache, I think you know, but nonetheless, fat Bottom Girls, queen's amazing. What a good group though, or band, I don't know Whatever you want to call them. That made me think of that Brick House song, because I never even realized that that was like that until I listened to it not too long ago. It just came up in like a a funk playlist I was listening to and I had heard the song so many times but I didn't even register because I wasn't really listening to the lyrics. Guys, I'm sorry, I admit to that, but she's a brick house and I was like oh, what the fuck? I didn't even know that. Anyway, stupid song on here, pretty fly for a white guy, kind of funny, I don't know, not really funny.
Speaker 2:I've never even heard it, I know of it, but it says it's like making fun of some you know, yeah, I get it Some you know, suburban spoiled kid basically probably trying to act like he was like down with the hip-hop. I don't know Right, I don't know. I remember Karis1 just saying when he saw white people that liked the music. He's like, hey, they probably feel just like I do. They're pissed off about this stuff and like you know, like I thought it was cool that there was different people into stuff. So, yeah, I don't know, it depends.
Speaker 2:There are people faking the funk? That's for sure, oh for sure, and then there's people that are just you know, down with a certain Right and I totally get the premise.
Speaker 1:Man, I really actually do. I mean, like that's not even my problem with it, actually, it's just that, like it was kind of a stupid song, like I do, like what is that one fucking Offspring song that came. What did they get big? There was the first song. I remember the album cover was like an X-Ray.
Speaker 2:Do you remember? Yeah, and I forget the title, but the like, keep them Separated. That was like the most famous, but they had better ones than the. Oh God, what is it? I like that Self-esteem, hmm, and the kids aren't all right. No, they have some cuts for sure. It's yeah as it got, I don't know Right Later. Yeah, I liked the first couple albums of them. I didn't really listen much, but yeah, yeah, the other one.
Speaker 2:Punk at that time was turning pretty poppy and whatever. Yeah, yeah, it was far cry from before. I mentioned Misfits, right, you know Dead Kennedys stuff like that Correct.
Speaker 1:If you watch punk, it's a precursor to what happens to hip hop all the time. Isn't that kind of weird?
Speaker 2:I just thought of that it is, and it is interesting that really, like hip hop, got me into punk, you know, because it's the same message really. At least it was back when we were youngsters. But, anyway, we could go on and on as we do. Sorry, podcastlandia.
Speaker 1:Well, my first show was with a punk rock group, ryan Spooner, friend of the show, friend of Boogie's Bodega, cold Smoked the Shop there. Indeed, yeah, I was 16 with his band, I I just yeah, that was my first show. I rapped with the punk band guys. Just shows you how oddly, even though that was in the 90s, punk and hip-hop have a very like they're. They're very closely tied together.
Speaker 1:People don't these days, I don't think, understand that. Maybe they do, maybe there's more knowledge on this and I'm just out of the loop. Sometimes I'm unsure what people well, I mean not like I'm going to know what everybody fucking knows, but sometimes I don't know what is general knowledge for the younger generation, as much as I would like to admit you know what I'm saying and I don't want to assume that they don't know shit, because my kids listen to like all sorts of music, man. So, like you, never know, I guess. Anyway, thanks for this, bro. This was fun, I loved it, oh, yeah. So out there podcast land. Yeah, don't forget. I pitlock supplycom. We got shirts, we're pretty cool, I think I don't know for old farts right on something. No, they Something. No, they're dope for sure. Yeah. Anyway, I'll talk to you soon, my friend, and all you out there in podcast. Landia soon as well.
Speaker 2:Much love everybody, Thank you.