Coherent Nonsense
Lifelong best friends turned brothers: eavesdrop as they catch up on their lives and dive into all kinds of topics. You never know where the conversations will go. No script. No preplanning. No coherency. No sense. Well, maybe....sometimes.
Coherent Nonsense
Wrestling with Aliens (It hurts so bad, it hurts so)
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In this episode, we talk about Super Mario Galaxy, Gibson guitar trade deals, TKO and the high Wrestlemania ticket prices, NASA, Aliens, Healing frequencies, Ella Langley's new album, and getting to meet Rittz at a mgk show......I promise it all makes sense.
Hello, hello.
SPEAKER_04Bro, I had so much fun last night.
SPEAKER_01Oh yeah.
SPEAKER_04Um, there's always a good time.
SPEAKER_00Oh yeah.
SPEAKER_01We had uh a little birthday party gathering for my son. He just turned 18. And we had the legendary clay broom come out and set up the drums and the PA system and guitars and everything. And we did some jamming. It was a very, very good time. It was very fun. And uh Johnny Loudmouth has excused himself from the table, but he will be right back. Nah, you're good. But yeah, the party was great. We got to see our sons. So uh Nico, my son, is playing guitar. At one point it was Nico playing guitar, Jet uh on drums, Jet on drums, and clay on the bass, and they were just jamming. We were just like, bro.
SPEAKER_04It was like a super surreal moment. I don't know. I took a picture, I took a video and sent it to Jet's mama. I was like, look at our son uh and Nico playing with legendary clay.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, just jamming it out. Yeah, I got a video too.
SPEAKER_04Oh yeah, I texted him once I took him, I took him back to his mom's because he came out for Nico's party. So I I took him back and uh later on I text him, I was like, bud, you did one of the coolest things I've ever seen tonight. Like I was like, I couldn't be more proud of you.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, he's got potential too.
SPEAKER_04Well, I've only ever seen him do the the band type drumming, you know? Yeah, like he played the big bass drum in ninth grade, and then he's had those, you know, that set of electric drums we got them two or three years ago. Probably three years ago, I think, uh, for Christmas. But it's a I mean it's a good expensive set, but it has all kind of like stuff built into it and where you can, you know, it helps you learn. Yeah, and I hear them in there, like I hear, you know, I hear it, like, but I can't it's just little the sounds, you know. But uh yeah, and he's been he's going for drum line like on the snare. So he's Nick, he I've been seeing him play Nick Cannon for the last couple of months, he's standing at it, putting it on his bedpost and just standing there, like going. Like, okay, my boy's got some skills, but then to watch him you know stay on time, yeah. Full drum set is so important from what I've seen.
SPEAKER_01All he needs is experience, yeah. All it is is time and experience. Yeah, maybe get him a yeah, y'all get him a real drum, give him a kid, a real drum set that way, like him and Nico can yeah, jam.
SPEAKER_04I was thinking about that earlier. I was like, What if they started a dang band? That would be cool. You never know. Yeah, what would they call it? They could both they could because they both nephews. So don't know.
SPEAKER_01Let them come in.
SPEAKER_04Like your nephew and my nephew, and then your son and my son. Like, how many people's in that band? Just two right now.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, they call Biggie Smiles.
SPEAKER_04Yeah, they them.
SPEAKER_01No. So uh I know one thing that per purposely haven't talked about because this podcast talk. So uh Super Mario Galaxy.
SPEAKER_04Oh yes, yes, we haven't talked about it, and I need to watch it one more time because it was a whole lot of going on at the movies, like like the theater or the movie itself? Not so not yeah, the movie itself, not so much the theater, yeah. You know, a bunch of little kids, they just yeah, you know, being little kids. But I don't know. I I feel like I need to watch it at home so I can I can look at it because it was so much going on, you just jump on something. The next thing you know, they're in space. But we get on, like yeah, like yo, there's so much going on.
SPEAKER_01I don't think you missed anything, I think that's just the pace and the movie.
SPEAKER_04Yeah, it was real fast. I was like, yo, this is which is a lot coming out.
SPEAKER_01What I've seen online is people is what people don't like about the movie, or they're saying they're complaining. Like the overall consensus that I've seen through uh internet people is that it's awful, that it's not good, not stuff, which I like it, but I mean I liked it. Yeah, I liked it too because I also know I'm watching a Super Mario Brothers cartoon movie, right?
SPEAKER_04So I'm not it's not there will be blood.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, I don't even expect Avengers in-game level of mystery and loops and explanation and all that, right?
SPEAKER_04Yeah. Um maybe it's just a lack thereof the storytelling. I don't know. Maybe I mean they were putting a because in the first movie, like it was more plot-driven, yeah, like linear type movie. They start out, you see, there wasn't a lot of Mario World references in the movie, and I think they kind of focused on that on this one more so than uh, you know, because the plots, Bowser Jr.'s wants to get his dad back and did it way too quick.
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_04Rosalie, what's her name? Rosalie Rosaline. She she's trout. Like this, it's not very than that. It's that, and then a whole bunch of Nintendo references thrown in there.
SPEAKER_01Which which I mean Well, the first movie from the second movie, they they had to make it quicker.
SPEAKER_04You would say that well, how can it not be that exactly? Because it was already something the first one was better, like as a movie, but the second one's maybe more fun.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, in in a in the quote unquote multiverse type way, but I think that's what they're doing. And I like that they're wanting it to be a Nintendo movie more than a Super Mario movie.
SPEAKER_04Yeah, that's what I kind of figure too. And and I'm for I'm 44, so maybe my opinion shouldn't matter as much, but we are the Nintendo generation.
SPEAKER_01Yeah. So I mean, there was a lot of references. There was a lot of throwback references that I feel that was for us. Yeah. Because how would a yeah, how would a kid know that that gun that uh you know turning them into babies was like the super scope for the Super Nintendo back in the day?
SPEAKER_04Right. And there was a couple of uh Mario 2, Super Mario 2 references in there. And if anybody knows anything about Mario or Nintendo, they know that that's a clone of another game.
SPEAKER_01They just put Mario Yeah, because Mario, the original Mario 2 was too hard for America. Idiots. That's what Japan thinks, anyways. I mean Japan's probably right.
SPEAKER_04We well, we did also Lion King was copied from a Japanese cartoon called Kimba.
SPEAKER_00Yeah.
SPEAKER_04They didn't, they just changed one letter. I mean, they put every they made him a different color and changed one letter. It was like, you colonizers.
SPEAKER_01I've always heard the greatest a great artist is a clever thief. Yeah, well, maybe they should be a little more clever than that.
SPEAKER_04I was gonna say, yeah, I think that's like a metaphor for uh artist inspire artists, yeah. You know what I mean? I think, but it's a that's a really cynical way of putting it. Like, oh, I'm not inspired, I'm straight up stealing your stupid. Yeah, well, there's a there's a difference between stealing and inspired.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, well, you cannot I think cleverly stealing chord progressions and things is when like it could be the same exact song, but you can't even detect it. You know what I'm saying? Oh, yeah. I'll give you an example. You probably don't know you don't know these two songs to even know that the same thing.
SPEAKER_04Probably do 30 examples, yeah.
SPEAKER_01Like you could play the MGK song, uh Forget Forget You, the one that's featuring Halsey. Play the chords at the same exact tempo and way, and it's exactly the same. You don't even have to stop playing the music to switch over to uh Jesus Happened, like the song, like the same exact chords and just your strumpo and everything. Your strum, you ain't even gotta change the strum pattern.
SPEAKER_03Oh, for real?
SPEAKER_01Yeah. Oh well, like all you gotta do is like add Travis Barker to MGKs, and then he makes the the those drums create the difference, but as far as what instruments.
SPEAKER_04I mean, I know what's old classic, you know, 70s and 80s songs. There's tons of them, they're all same three chords. Yeah.
SPEAKER_01Well, there's only seven chords that exist A through G. That's it. But what about your minors and your you got flats and sharps? Minors are a little that's more like the scale you're in.
SPEAKER_03Oh, yeah, you're referencing the guitar, not I just that's just music theory.
SPEAKER_04I didn't uh about like uh your octave singing and stuff, like you know, you got what C, what's that high C Mariah Carey hits or whatever?
SPEAKER_01I don't know technically. I don't either.
SPEAKER_04There's that that's what I'm there's octaves.
SPEAKER_01An octave would would be like if you're singing in C. Oh yeah, I know like you're just you're the octave is still C, C, C, C, C all the way across.
SPEAKER_04It doesn't matter about the deep erb.
SPEAKER_01A step up from C would be D. A half step would be C sharp, D flat.
SPEAKER_04Yeah. When we were younger and I was wanting to learn how to play guitar, I could read tabs like a like good enough to, you know, yeah learn a song, but never stuck with it to get good. And that's why you have a cool guitar. I was telling Jet last night, I said, but I said, look at the guitar, look how good Uncle Josh got that guitar looking. He was like, dang, I didn't even notice. I think I maybe told Lovey. I was like, I had that guitar for like 30 years for a while. I had a I got it for my 15th birthday. Yeah, Vic pay Vic bought it from um one of his buddies, um Josh Josh Meadows, his uncle, Vic bought it from his uncle and uh paid a hundred dollars for it and gave it to me for my fifteenth birthday.
SPEAKER_01That dude did not know what he had.
SPEAKER_04I think he did, like because he plays guitar.
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_04He I he just him and Vic were friends. He's I guess he I mean I was I was 15 and I turned 15 in 1996, so maybe a hundred dollars back then was like you know, five hundred dollars today. Who knows?
SPEAKER_01I don't know. It's worth like 42, 4500 right now.
SPEAKER_04When you look on reverb and stuff, especially the condition you got it back into.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, it's fully restored and all original, all original from I let's say maybe eighty the 82 model.
SPEAKER_04I was gonna say because there's supposed to be an 81 they made them 81, 82, and 83.
SPEAKER_01That's it. And they quit.
SPEAKER_04I thought I at one point I looked that one up and it was because I remember, oh, this same year model as I am, 81.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, like I thought that was a cool we're talking about a Gibson Victory MVX is the guitar that he had that uh I eventually ended up with. I think we've talked about it before in an older older podcast episode where it I traded a uh one of the At Games Legends arcade machines to Johnny for this guitar. Bro, because I can use the guitar. Well, I had my use out of the arcade machine had it for like three years.
SPEAKER_04Yeah, and I had the guitar for 30 years and it just collected dust because I don't know how to play guitar.
SPEAKER_01Yeah. And just so everybody listening knows, I have actually been plotting to get this guitar for about 12 years. Schemer. So much so that I've I had already talked to Uncle Vic and was like, I'm trying to get this guitar, but he don't want he ain't gonna let it go because you gave it to him. But I just want you to know that uh I ain't trying to get it to sell it. We try, I'm trying to keep it in the family, and eventually it'll be Nico's blah, blah, blah. So Vic Vic, yeah, so Vic was like, you know what? I would be upset if he sold it, but if he sold it to you and it you know is yours, and then because I know what you and Lightning gonna do with it, then that'd be the only way I'd accept it.
SPEAKER_04That's the only way I would have ever got rid of is because I mean it's been through 10 moves, you know what I mean? Like I've kept it, it's been right with me the whole time, even though it's just a sentimental thing. My Uncle Vic bought it. Like, bro, that's I'm this I know this thing is cool. Like, I know it's a rare guitar, like not super rare, but for me to have it was, you know.
SPEAKER_01And that was the first time Clay Broom had had seen it that I had it, uh, because my entire life, knowing Clay, he's had the gift, the bass version of the victory.
SPEAKER_04Yeah, because I think that's the popular line, and they just happened to make the guitar version for those three years. Yeah, I'm not really sure the history.
SPEAKER_03I just know I'm I'm I think that's it.
SPEAKER_01Yesterday when I handed it to Clay, he was like, Ah, I seen it.
SPEAKER_03I'm it's heavy.
SPEAKER_01Well, he was like, I uh, you know, Harper had sent me a picture of it when it was in the shop and he got it fixed. He said, Uh, kind of wish you'd have told me you was playing this today. I'd have brought my bass, we'd have matched.
SPEAKER_04Oh, that would have been big dang.
SPEAKER_01I didn't didn't think about it. I actually I didn't even know I was gonna play that yesterday until I was 30 minutes from going over there, going, What do I want to play? I didn't want to play this. And I really chose it because it's really versatile. If I want it to sound like a Stratocaster, I can I can. If I want it to get a little thick like a Gibson sound, I can.
SPEAKER_04I wish, I wish uh I was skilled enough to appreciate it. And I'm glad, you know, I'm glad you got it.
SPEAKER_01Well, me and Nico are, and we do.
SPEAKER_04Because I I definitely played that arcade machine uh more in the last year than I ever played that guitar. Hey, that's a win.
SPEAKER_01That's a win in trade, right?
SPEAKER_04Me and Rocco, there's only one person other than me in the house that can work the arcade machine. You know how taxing difficult it is to go where you want and find what you need. Like Rocco, like I taught him how to do it. Like, just we go play, and I hey, this is where you go, this is what you do. I was hey, go turn the game on. When we first got, I was like, nobody touch this.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, well, it is finicky.
SPEAKER_04I was like, nobody touch this because I got I don't even Josh confused me teaching me how to use this thing. I said, So let me figure it out and then I'll show y'all. Nobody ever plays but me and Rocco. Yeah, Jet plays every once in a while. I've never beat Ninja Turtles one and two and sunset riders more than my life.
SPEAKER_01Love it.
SPEAKER_04Uh uh Cowboy Bebop uh Cowboys. This I was I was doing uh anime, not Cowboy Bebop. Some little game called Cowboys uh Cowboys of Mesa something. Anyway, I don't know. It's like it's like Sunset Riders, that that same style of so much fun.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, it's fun. See, there's so many games on there.
SPEAKER_04I don't even I said something to iceberg about it.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, and then he was like them off.
SPEAKER_04He was like, Oh, the cowboys a Dune Mesa or whatever it is. Oh, yeah.
SPEAKER_01I was like, Of course he's gonna know.
SPEAKER_04I said, Yeah, that's exactly it. He said, Oh, yeah, I used to watch that when I was a kid. I didn't even know that was a cartoon.
SPEAKER_01Thought it was just a video game.
SPEAKER_04I thought it was a video game. We're close to the same age.
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_04Yeah. I get to see iceberg a lot more now that baseball season's in.
SPEAKER_01So nice.
SPEAKER_04That's cool.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, he's told me he's seen you down at the ball field a few times.
SPEAKER_04Yeah, love that old iceberg.
SPEAKER_01You know that's right. All good.
SPEAKER_04Yeah, that's a super inside joke.
SPEAKER_01So tomorrow, I mean, not tomorrow. Next weekend is an exciting one for me. Probably not. I'm not probably not. I don't know. You don't care at all. You can't even tell me what next weekend is.
SPEAKER_04Uh, is it something to do with wrestling?
SPEAKER_01Yep.
SPEAKER_04Uh SummerSlam? Oh, close. Oh, no, wait. WW that's not a thing anymore, is it? Yes, it is. Oh, is it? SummerSlam? Is that a thing? I was thinking that was WClam.
SPEAKER_01It just takes place in the summer. I mean, it's I mean it just makes it their August pay-per-view.
SPEAKER_03Oh, okay.
SPEAKER_01WrestleMania.
SPEAKER_04Oh, WrestleMania. Oh, I thought that was like at the first of the year, I guess.
SPEAKER_01This is kind of is the first of the year. Royal Rumble's always first in January.
SPEAKER_04Maybe that's what I'm thinking of.
SPEAKER_01WrestleMania is used to be traditionally in March. Now it's just deeper in April. But it's I don't know if it's ever been in May. I'd have to look that up. It's March or April now. So but it's April.
SPEAKER_03I had I hadn't watched anything.
SPEAKER_04Like ever since uh UFC coming up, Peacock, I hadn't watched a single one. I got Peacock. Like I was so excited that no more pay-per-views I had to pay for. Hadn't watched a single one.
SPEAKER_01Missed one last night. Yeah. We watched the, we watched one. I don't remember. It was that that big one soon as I as soon as they launched on Paramount. But, you know, it's hard for me to stay up at night because I wake up so early. So I woke up the next morning and just gonna watch it, you know, recap style or the fact, you know, Netflix style, what I say, because that's sort of how I like to watch. That's how I like to watch things. I hate how they do it. Like it's so like all the WWE pay-per-views, uh, you know, they used to always, they're on ESPN now, but they was always on Peacock for the past like three years. So I could the next morning I could wake up, let's say WrestleMania was on. I could start WrestleMania and then it's the entire event. I can just pause or fast forward, rewind as I as I want to.
SPEAKER_03As you should be.
SPEAKER_01Yeah. UFC does not allow you to do that. You can't start the event. You just have every single fight that you can like an on-demand type thing.
SPEAKER_03Oh, you can't watch it as a whole.
SPEAKER_01But check this out it's the full fight, but it's the trash part is they cut out uh between the rounds when they go and you can hear their corners. That's not there. They go to a commercial. Mandatory commercial.
SPEAKER_03Well, that's how you get it for free.
SPEAKER_01Well, that's that's TKO being TKO, which you know now owns WWE, and they are the worst thing that has ever happened to WWE. It is so it's getting so horrible.
SPEAKER_04It's like a just uh corporate more corporate money-making machine.
SPEAKER_01Money, that's all it is. Sponsors everywhere, all over the ring. Ticket sales, like ticket prices have got dumb.
SPEAKER_04I think that I think that might be Ticketmaster and stuff. Like, I'm I'm pretty sure they may have like a dang monopoly on ticket sales, uh, you know, because they charge all those uh extra fees and stuff. But there's I mean, you get Stub Hub, stuff like that. Those are subsidiaries that buy the tickets from like Ticketmaster.
SPEAKER_01But I guess that if your name is Ticketmaster, you have to be the I mean they might have something to do with it, but I think the company still sets the prices.
SPEAKER_04I know I no, yeah, I would imagine they do. I would I wouldn't think that Ticketmaster sets the price for someone else's event, but they sell the tickets and they charge all those, you know, addition $30 process, whatever the um convenience comes. Yeah. Uh so what a lot of comedian, well, not a lot, a couple of comedians, one specifically, Louis C.K. Uh, they were doing that to his ticket prices. So he he bought like a ticket company. I don't know if it was like defunct or what, but he bought his own ticket company and started selling his tickets from there for you know, whatever he $25, $50, whatever it was. But I think uh I think that might need to happen as a whole. You know what I mean? For concert uh the artist actually care about that that part instead of you know Taylor Swift and billion dollars, which I don't know how much a Taylor Swift ticket is, but I know she would I know she paid her truck drivers like a hundred grand and stuff. Like she she put it back into the people that helped her, which is what you should do.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, Taylor Swift tickets probably $250 to be sitting in the upper upper tickets.
SPEAKER_04It shouldn't be legal to have those gouging prices. Like no one should be able to do it. Yeah, big companies, you shouldn't be able to eBay Taylor Swift tickets for $3,000. You know what I mean?
SPEAKER_01Well, see now a Ticketmaster, there's a a resale thing within that. You don't eBay, you can go to Ticketmaster and like like a bot or you know, some kind of computer thing can buy up all the tickets and then resell them.
SPEAKER_03Yeah, and black rocket. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
SPEAKER_01Uh so like I went to WrestleMania 27 in Atlanta. It was in the Georgia dome, and I sat almost at the roof. You know what I'm saying? So it was crap tickets, honestly. But I bought them. I bought them kind of last minute. I paid like $30, and that was WrestleMania 27. Next weekend's WrestleMania 43. Now under TKO, they've been for three years. Uh a like like the same seat that I was in is about $400.
SPEAKER_04Oh, I was gonna say, let me guess.
SPEAKER_01Okay, well, well, let's do this then. Uh God, I was not gonna say 400. You know what I'm saying? So ringside. I was gonna say like 90. So I could tell you that let's say 10 years ago, because I'm a part of a bunch of uh wrestling fan clubs on Facebook. So ringside, ringside at WrestleMania, the tickets 10 years ago was about 2,000, 2,500. That's ringside, yeah, which where you get a you get to take home the chair you sit in and you're it's WrestleMania, all that stuff. So that's honestly for the spectacle of it, decent. Uh yeah. So what I say about 2500. So I'm gonna go to Ticketmaster right now on my phone. Uh let's do let's see what ringside is. And now WrestleMania's all weekend. It's Saturday and Sunday. They have a night one, night two.
SPEAKER_04Oh, dang, I didn't know that. Uh and that is a mania.
SPEAKER_01Oh, yeah. That started five or six years ago. Not really sure. Let's go to I'm not cool. I don't watch wrestling. Uh that's not a cool one. That's in the eye of the beholder. My phone's being lame. All right, let's go to ringside for WrestleMania Saturday, night one.
SPEAKER_04So that you said that's next month, right? So it's it's kind of last minute tickets, too.
SPEAKER_01Let's do one ticket, so per seat at ringside.
SPEAKER_04Let me guess that.
SPEAKER_01Let's see. So we're gonna go to closest as we can, because you know how it does it like row, it's like the top one is A4, row 11, but we want to get close. So we want A4, which is right by the ring. We want row two. This ain't even row one, this is row two. And also this ticket, uh, had you see where it says 25% off right there? WrestleMania Saturday, 25% off. I see it. So the price of this ticket is 25% off on top of what the subtotal says that it is.
SPEAKER_04Okay, let me guess. Let me guess.
SPEAKER_01One ticket, $2,500 10 years ago.
SPEAKER_04I gotta say $6,400.
SPEAKER_01That's actually a pretty good guess.
SPEAKER_04Good God.
SPEAKER_01What does that say for one ticket?
SPEAKER_04I I said sixty four hundred and uh it says twelve thousand thirty-two dollars and seventy-five cents.
SPEAKER_01One ticket, so two people, it's twenty-four thousand dollars for two people to sit ringside at WrestleMania.
SPEAKER_04No, twenty-four thousand dollars. I'm getting somebody singlet.
SPEAKER_01Like, and it's in Vegas, so you still you spent $24,000. Now you haven't got a hotel room, got a plane ticket, got food for the weekend, got transportation for the weekend. Wow, you're talking about a 30 grand 30 grand vacation. Man, you really that's where that's the problem with and Stone Cold's not even wrestling, man. Bro, I mean, this is for dang.
SPEAKER_04I was not I was thinking maybe I went a little high with 64.
SPEAKER_01No, I think they went a lot high. And I mean, what are they smoking? The price of that ticket. Good grief.
SPEAKER_04I couldn't really name like like a prominent wrestler either. And for $12,000, you should, I should be able to, even though I don't watch it.
SPEAKER_01Exactly.
SPEAKER_04Like I I know a lot about wrestling, and I used to watch it a whole bunch. But for twelve thousand dollars a ticket, I should be able to name somebody who's doing something.
SPEAKER_01Yeah. And they're what they're doing is when everybody's complaining, they're pricing out their demographic. The entire, you know, the family demographic that has been professional wrestling, they're are getting priced out of the building. Because that's WrestleMania. So that's like the that's the super bowl of the year. That's 12, that's why it's 12 grand. It's ridiculous. Still, the last time I went to Raw.
SPEAKER_04But is that for both nights or is just one night?
SPEAKER_01That was Saturday. You saw that.
SPEAKER_04And Sunday's the big day, right?
SPEAKER_01Yeah. So you're talking about they're gonna discount a bundle, but uh it's gonna go to what?
SPEAKER_0418 grand?
SPEAKER_01It's gonna go, let's say it's gonna go down to 10 grand a ticket. It don't matter, you still gotta pay 20 grand, 40,000 to go two nights to WrestleMania. You and usually this is this is a WrestleMania weekend. So here's what they've really, because the entire business, the entire WrestleMania structure was this entire weekend long mania, extravaganza, and even the city would always want to host it because of the revenue they would make, because they got uh so Thursday night, well actually all week WWE's in town, you know, uh Friday night SmackDown, Saturday night WrestleMania night one, Saturday night, I mean Sunday night WrestleMania night two, Monday night raw, all Friday, Saturday, Sunday, Monday, all in that city, they don't move. Boom, that's the big thing.
SPEAKER_03It's a strangle mania.
SPEAKER_01Now, how could you with those prices? Four shows? You don't go to four shows for 12 grand.
SPEAKER_03I better get four shows.
SPEAKER_01That's but then and that price was WrestleMania night one.
SPEAKER_04Dang, you don't even get to see hardly anybody win a belt.
SPEAKER_01I mean, there's a lot of belts on the line, but it ain't worth that price. So something's got something's gotta change.
SPEAKER_04$12,000. I'll give me a dang good used car.
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_04$12,000.
SPEAKER_01I've for $12,000. We probably get two crappy used cars.
SPEAKER_04$12,000. I could fund like a something that didn't involve wrestling.
SPEAKER_02Yeah.
SPEAKER_04Or for $12,000, I could fund something that involved a way different kind of wrestling.
SPEAKER_01I mean, for $12,000, we could spend a weekend in, I mean, the weekend, we spend an entire week in Florida and live like kings for a week.
SPEAKER_04God, we we spent like five days at Disney World.
SPEAKER_01Well, and you could easily spend $12,000 in Disney World.
SPEAKER_04No, I'm saying we spent five days at Disney World and stayed in a place that we already we paid for all the time. Uh and it was still like five or six grand.
SPEAKER_02Yeah.
SPEAKER_04And we only went to So you could do that twice. Yeah, we only went to three three days of parks out of the five days we were there.
SPEAKER_01Yeah. So 12 grand's a lot of money to this tax bracket over here.
SPEAKER_04That's for six people, though. So I guess that needs to be said.
SPEAKER_01Yeah. So yeah. TKO sucks.
SPEAKER_04Yeah, I heard that. They're a total knockout. Not even technical.
SPEAKER_00Bro.
SPEAKER_04Yeah, I was listening to this. Um I don't even know. I can some kind of space scientist. I forgot exactly what it was. But you ever listen to uh the Wi-Fi's? I do not. That's pretty good. Anyway, this dude was talking about uh stars and stuff, and he said something real cool that the first uh red stars, like our sun is like, you know, to call it like a red dwarf, but it's not really a red dwarf, it's more a white star. Anyway, the actual red stars in the beginning of the universe that were first formed and uh what the universe is like close to 14 billion years old. Our sun is like a 10 billion year old, like it'll last for like 10 billion years. We're you know, roughly five, five or six at the most. These he said these red uh these red stars that were formed when uh the big bang or whatever first happened can live for trillions of years. It hadn't even been trillions of years yet. It's only been 14 billion, not even 14 billion apparently, but uh I was listening to that and thinking just went like how long is a trillion years and what does space look like? Maybe you know I went all deep in my head like alien aliens I don't even know how we got here just popped up in my brain. You know how like you go into gray aliens or whatever is like the the ubiquitous alien. Everybody knows what it looks like. Yeah, big large eyes, head, you know, small mouth, small nose, no actual ear lobes. If you like if you go look at animals that live like specifically in caves here, like on Earth caves, they have like big eyes and uh seem like they're you know they're made for the dark for sure. I wonder if like gray aliens are like that same kind of thing. Like, do they live like in dark place or do they live in like a different kind of sun where they need those kind of eyes to reflect whatever I was in it? Yeah, that's why I like listening to crazy stuff like that. Well, it wasn't even crazy. This dude was a scientist, he was saying actual facts. I'm I'm the idiot that did all this. And uh that was earlier, I was cutting grass listening to it, and uh I was like, I'm gonna try to remember to mention that to Josh. I was like, because that's a crazy thought. Like then you go to hmm, are we doing the evolution of aliens?
SPEAKER_01I mean, yeah, if you're just going by, I know what you're talking about. I was trying to like the stereotypical drawing of of aliens with big eyes.
SPEAKER_04Yeah, they would have to be what do you call that uh anthropomorphic? I don't know.
SPEAKER_01I don't know. I don't even know what's gonna happen right there.
SPEAKER_04That was about to sound retarded.
SPEAKER_01I I think uh what we consider aliens are don't come from the sky, they come from the ocean. Because the aquatic creatures are crazy.
SPEAKER_04Speaking of that, you know uh Tim Burchett, like I think he I can't remember if he's like a senator or congressman or what, but he's like hillbilly like us, you know what I mean? Like he was just saying that someone in the government briefed him on the aliens. Uh that supposedly there's like some kind of factual evidence, and he was referencing the sea uh in the ocean craft as large as like a couple of football fields going essentially 200 miles an hour underwater, underwater, whatever that is in knots, but he said 200 miles an hour. Yeah, and I think our best submarines can do like 40 40 40 miles an hour. Yeah, that's crazy.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, I mean I I mean if it's fun, fun to think about. If it's anything gonna come from the ocean.
SPEAKER_04I mean, it seems more plausible than coming from space because if you think about it, I that's the one reason why you wouldn't see quote unquote aliens from outer space, because the vast di uh distances you would have to travel, like one, you would have to be able to overcome, you know, not only going faster than the speed of light, but maybe multiple times that.
SPEAKER_02Yeah.
SPEAKER_01And so like if you're logically and terrestrially, it seems more plausible they would come from the ocean because if I'm not mistaken, NASA started out as a ocean, you know, ocean oceanic and whatever they found was why they stopped and said, you know what, I think there's there might be this space thing up here.
SPEAKER_04Or maybe they at that time they wasn't capable of you know being able to go down to those pressures, like Mariana's Trench and stuff. Couldn't act couldn't actually explore it. And but it seems like uh the vacuum of space would have more pressure, yeah, or does it not because we have gravity and it's gravity's pushing all that down? I I'm not smart enough to I don't know. I need to read a book white women in a book.
SPEAKER_01I still like to subscribe to the firmament that space doesn't exist.
SPEAKER_03Yeah.
SPEAKER_04Well yeah, that's that's that's a thing. Like and not even that I subscribe to that, but I know something Warren von Braun who was like essentially the founder of NASA that is the space agency. Uh he came from Germany and Project Paperclip after World War II. He invented like the Saturn V rocket and stuff. He's like the world's most uh you know renowned uh rocket scientist. He came to America and uh started NASA's space program, but he on his tombstone is Psalm 19, which references the firmament.
SPEAKER_01Uh so if the proprietor of the space travel is referencing that, like especially if it's on his tombstone, it could be a little wink wink nudge nudge.
SPEAKER_04The 100% the grounds for a conspiracy.
SPEAKER_01Yeah. And what about all the uh bomb testing they did out in the ocean?
SPEAKER_04Oh, oh yeah, I mean uh bikini toll and stuff, yeah. What if I just watched a video yesterday of the first one they did underground uh-huh and it it rose the ground like yeah, oh yeah, I think I've seen some of those evil.
SPEAKER_01I think uh well you think of the uh oh no, you say you say oh no, I was just I think uh that's maybe what if there is aliens and they are watching or they're like, oh hold on. What y'all doing, man?
SPEAKER_04Yeah, I think that would draw attention.
SPEAKER_01Yeah. I was gonna say, what do you think of that uh that ghost murmur technology that they was using, yeah.
SPEAKER_04Uh for uh finding the heartbeat and stuff like that? Uh I would I could only imagine this 30 years old. You know what I mean? Yeah, like because DARPA.
SPEAKER_01Oh, yeah. Imagine what they don't tell us they got, man.
SPEAKER_04For sure. Because I mean we know that DARPA is a thing.
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_04So that's uh the Department of Advanced Research uh programs and uh agency or something. It used to be just uh ARPA. There was it it was its own thing before it became a military defense uh tool. Yeah. But oh yeah, they say it they say, you know, they are smart, they know everything, but they say DARPA's always at least, at least 20 years ahead ahead of whatever's, you know, that you know is plausible. Yeah, we're flying around F-35s and airplanes that are 20 and 30 years old and they're well, we're told they're king of the sky. You know what I mean? Like what are they working on that we we don't know? Like, what do they already have? Because uh F-35's a friggin' billion dollars, I would imagine the 10 billion dollars or whatever to make this awesome airplane.
SPEAKER_01I bet they got things uh planes and uh you know military aircraft, it's like the type of stuff that's like I because I think I've heard it said by some military people. It's like you won't you won't know we're coming. We're just it'll it'll we'll just be there.
SPEAKER_04I think that the you know what the TR3B is?
SPEAKER_01The tri is the triangle it's like a solid triangle, yeah.
SPEAKER_03Yeah, no, it's a full triangle. Full straight triangle, it's unmanned, right? Is this the unmanned one? I think it's multi-use okay.
SPEAKER_04But uh I I I think that that's ours. Like it's not alien, it may come from alien, you know, some reverse technology or whatnot, but uh I think it's us because I forgot Buddy's name, but he was uh like the CEO of Lockheed Martin's Skunk Works, which is like their top secret, you know, plane division.
SPEAKER_00Yeah.
SPEAKER_04Uh in the 90s, he said we have the technology to take ET home. Like, quote, unquote. That's exactly what he said. We have the technology to take E.T. home. That was in the 90s. Yeah. So I don't know, it's fun to think about. I I would like to see something cool. Like, I mean, when they whenever they unveiled that uh sound thing and the operation they did in Venezuela, like we watched that, we watched that in like the Ed uh Edward Norton Hulk movie. You know what I mean? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Like that. That so and that's an actual thing, and it was way worse than what was in the movie, apparently.
SPEAKER_00Yeah.
SPEAKER_04So I can only imagine the stuff they don't show us. Like, are they actually working on warp drives? Like, how do you even understand how that works? I don't know. Because like in theory, it's you're not you're not essentially going fast. You are going fast, but you're not propelled like from something with an exhaust.
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_04It is more of however they can focus in on an area.
SPEAKER_01You're talking about warping like Super Mario warp, like teleporting warp. Well, or more like warp speed.
SPEAKER_04Warp drive engines. Yeah, warp speed. The engine to allow you to get to warp speed.
SPEAKER_01Okay, okay.
SPEAKER_04Just thinking about what does it take? Just how how does that work? What do you how does the warp work? Are you opening a wormhole? Like or do you have like some kind of chemical reaction to where you can focus on a point in space and or time and instead of rocketing yourself to said space, you're pulled to that.
SPEAKER_01Like a real system.
SPEAKER_04Yeah, like a yeah, you're just there's no I think to for that to happen, you have to master gravity. You have to be able to uh create your own gravity field and then uh essentially make a slipstream to infinite infinite speed.
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_04Because we know that if you can do that, then you don't have to worry about like damage on your body or anything. You're you create your own gravity. We can kind of do that with spaceships and stuff, you know what I mean? Like create create atmosphere, the ship device. You have to be able to manipulate gravity as a whole, yeah.
SPEAKER_01Like manipulate it and create your own, right? Like, um so then would it react like magnets then?
SPEAKER_04I would imagine once you have no no friction, no yeah, yeah, no friction.
SPEAKER_01So like once you have your personal your personal device's source of a gravity and control it, and then you can control the gravity around around your atmosphere, yeah. Then it creates like a like a positive and is it too positive? Opposites, opposites attract, so it'd be like a positive and a positive, yeah. So it's constant constantly pushing.
SPEAKER_04And that's how the high speed rail uh works as uh superconductors. They they have uh it's called maglev, you know, magnetic levitation, and it's done with with superconducting magnets and stuff. And they usually are to work in like a real world real world application like this, like just a as a track or something, they have to be superconducted, cooled to like almost absolute zero. And then they will they have what's called tide, uh, I think it's called tidal lock, like the like the moon. Uh it could be wrong, but it's fixated at whatever height you want it, but it it pertains to it has to stay at this temperature for this to work because I think I've seen you can lock them like you know, I've seen a small demonstration where it's got the thing on a circle. That's what I'm referencing.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, yeah. And it's like smoky, like it's like it's dry ice, yeah.
SPEAKER_04Exactly. Just so I would imagine it's like that, because there's no, you know, they just tap it and it's usually yeah, and it keeps going.
SPEAKER_03I I think that's how it would have to work. Yeah, you know, I'm an idiot. What do I know? Is this all linked kind of in the same way?
SPEAKER_04Bob Lazar, I think that's like what Bob Lazar was saying with the uh uh element 115 on Pentium or whatever, it it reacted with uh like some kind of dark matter that would create this ability to manipulate a field around said craft.
SPEAKER_00Yeah.
SPEAKER_04But I don't know, I'm not smart enough to my brain's hurting right now. It's fun to think about that.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, is it in the same field as um uh whatever they call it, like free energy? Is that called perpetual motion? You use magnets?
SPEAKER_04Well, perpetual motion is just like it doesn't take anything mechanical to drive uh said motion.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, you know what I'm saying. You've seen like propellers and stuff like that with magnets and it keeps going.
SPEAKER_04One version of free energy, uh-huh, uh perpetual motion, but but it's called perpetual.
SPEAKER_01That's the right word.
SPEAKER_04Perpetual just it means it it will keep going without assistance, like outside it okay, assistance. Uh they make wind perpetual wind machines. I mean, that's what a windmill is, like and then then that goes into a uh uh generator, you know, and converts it from the revolutions create energy. They they store it, send it out, like but um I think what you're talking about is uh what's called zero point energy, where it it's derived and also tapped into from the same place, the atmosphere. Like it's uh I think that's what um people think about how the pyramids were built and stuff is some kind of zero point energy. Tesla Tesla was working on that's what his Tesla cools and stuff were they were they were pulling like static electricity. Yeah, I they used to refer to it like as the ether.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, ether used to be on the periodic table. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, they removed all that.
SPEAKER_04So it maybe it's just like a honing into a frequency, you know how like a tuning fork.
SPEAKER_01Well, because that's that's that's reality. Everything is a vibration, everything is a frequency, like literal life matter, every single thing.
SPEAKER_04Atoms vibrate, like if you can if you can match the frequency of the atoms of this table, you can go through.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, like that's how like that's called hospitals and metaphysics, like true medical, like to fix you, they could do it with sound, they could do it with light. That's why um oh church bells old that's what the bells and stuff were for. Yeah, like it was it's a healing thing.
SPEAKER_04Yeah, I've always heard uh the frequency the 440 uh hertz and is wrong.
SPEAKER_01This what's the standard throws 432?
SPEAKER_04I think is uh 442.
SPEAKER_01Is it 442 is that is the standard that's what uh they call it the uh dang devil frequency or whatever something it just it's just throwing us off uh frequency to be in harmony with the planet itself, you know what I'm saying?
SPEAKER_04Because people use like tuning forks uh for like arthritis pain and stuff. I've seen that.
SPEAKER_01Because you know how like sound will like create like with this, like if it's like sand or something or water, it creates those perfect shapes, yeah. Because it because it's everything's in balance, cymatics, yeah. So our food or our the way standard music is tuned, like all that stuff designed to keep us off frequency, yeah. It makes us sicker, keeps us dependent on the out of the structure, yeah, the medicine of yeah, the structure of uh civilization as it is pfizer, yeah. You know, because we're we're considered cattle to them.
SPEAKER_04Yeah, at least fodder. Speaking of wonder if I don't know. I think uh anybody I've always thought, you know, anybody that thought like that way always looked at them as like grungy and maybe because I was ignorant to the fact that they might know something I don't know. Like I definitely could be wrong. Yeah, I would like to I would like to experience you know something like that. The the frequency healing.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, yeah.
SPEAKER_04It's like my knee, my knee, I got a bad knee.
SPEAKER_01Like I could send you some things like tune me up. I can't send you some things that is the frequency that's gonna heal your knee. Well what I can what I can send you asking for a miracle. I can send you uh um um all of these like educational TikTok type things that'll get your algorithm, you know, where it's you know, it's fun little information. It's science stuff, it's just about frequencies and uh light and all that stuff.
SPEAKER_04Oh, yeah, I like watching uh those uh those cymatic videos where they do the sand.
SPEAKER_01You know about cobalt blue, like actual the cobalt blue. They used to have you have pictures uh that is cobalt blue, uh, and you put water and you fill up your water pitcher with that, but you put that in the sunlight. The sunlight, you know, it's got not it's oh it like alkanizes your water. It goes through that cobalt, it charges it, yeah, and like alkalines it, yeah. What you said, and it just makes it electrify your part the particles. Like in old hospitals, you know, if you felt bad, they would put you in the sun.
SPEAKER_04Yeah.
SPEAKER_01And then you uh never use cotton. It's all linen. Linen is healing. So everything was that back then.
SPEAKER_04Yeah. And then everybody l lived uh, you know, we've been living for what 400,000 years, supposedly, as this form of person.
SPEAKER_01And it seems like there's more sickness now in people than yeah, but that's cause that comes from the food we're gave. We're talking about American diet, so it's oh yeah, you can the food, the medicine, pay attention, you definitely can see and tell the differences.
SPEAKER_04It's there's data to look it up. Yeah. I mean, by this point, first of all, what is the FDA doing? Because they're not doing it's like not uh what's the word uh altruistic, like it's not for the betterment of humanity. They're like, yeah, you can have this much um rat feces in a product, like this this amount is allowed, it's fine. Yeah, or we know this causes cancer, but it's fine. Go ahead, use it.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, it's all bunch of companies making money.
SPEAKER_04I mean, it's got a time.
SPEAKER_01They gotta make it sick so they can sell it's the cure. Then it's just oh yeah, yeah, that's it.
SPEAKER_04That's the that's the um mo that's it for everything. Like everything content, a perpet a perpetual red flag.
SPEAKER_01It's a reason why me and Justin make AI music with Suna. Because people are gonna get sick of it, so I'm gonna help them get sick of it because I also have a real studio and real talent, so I can also sell you the antidote.
SPEAKER_04I can do both of them. Oh yeah, you tired of hearing that? Here's some I here's some I also wrote.
SPEAKER_01And that's uh, you know, why computer viruses uh exist. You know, Bill Gates and just created Mac doesn't have viruses whatsoever, but PC does.
SPEAKER_04Oh yeah, you need uh you need antivirus. What's buddy's name? Uh McAfee.
SPEAKER_01Mm-hmm.
SPEAKER_04Yeah. I think that's why they knocked those buildings down in Miami. They said that's where he was held up and had his stuff. Really? John McAfee. Yeah. Those two buildings or whatever just ran. We fell down like a couple years ago. I know what you're talking about. Yeah. That's uh but I don't know. Yeah, I but I I fully believe that. You everything's a false flag. You gotta you gotta get the people behind it or believe in it. It's all propaganda. Everything's propaganda. I mean from top to bottom.
SPEAKER_01Everything, the world. The world isn't is it's like real script, you know. Religion, religion's been propagandized. Holy religion.
SPEAKER_04It was like you gotta have some you gotta have some real discernment uh to not be fooled nowadays. Yeah, maybe that's what they were talking about is uh, you know, in the end times, don't be fooled by the false pro the false prophets, yeah, in many ways, and I don't know and I don't mean that just pertaining to like anything religious. Oh that can go across the board for every single thing. Like anybody telling me what's good for my future that doesn't have my best future, you know, my interests at heart as a false prophet. Like it don't matter, it don't matter if you're selling Jesus or you selling drugs, yeah, you know what I mean, like over the you know, Pfizer type drugs. Yeah. So hey, how long we've been going?
SPEAKER_03Uh about an hour, maybe that.
SPEAKER_04Yeah, I'm about out of stuff that dog do unless you bring up them old like what was them alien things at the Miami Mall that one time. What they what was that?
SPEAKER_01Oh, I don't even know. I know what you're talking about, but I really didn't entertain it. I didn't dig deep into it. Oh, I know we haven't talked about oh schnapp. Dandelion dropped. LFLas have been up this weekend.
SPEAKER_04Oh yeah, I've seen a lot of I've seen a lot of people online um chasing this this clout, this L clout. Like, I even seen ladies like, man, I wish I want to be an LFL.
SPEAKER_01Nah. We've been LFLas. I've been in L Fella for like two months.
SPEAKER_04Bro, like her first song got on my nerves because I heard it so much. Which one?
SPEAKER_01Excuse me.
SPEAKER_04I heard it every time I've my thumb moved.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, but it's like hearing her talk, though.
SPEAKER_04Oh man, I yeah, I like I like how country she is, but I like the S's.
SPEAKER_00I like the S's at the end.
SPEAKER_04I think at a certain point that's gonna get on my nerves because there's uh what's that lady's name? Uh in Man of Steel, she played the senator or whatever that Lex Luthor gave her the jar of pea.
SPEAKER_01Grandma's it's been too long since I've seen it, I guess.
SPEAKER_04Laura uh Laura Lenny, I can't remember her name. She's got that, and it just it irks me. Like the way she does it, it just annoys the crap out of me. Ella, not so bad, but like I'm aware of it, but it's okay. Yeah, like ain't she from like Tuscaloosa or something?
SPEAKER_01She's from Alabama.
SPEAKER_04I think she's out at a concert. Wasn't her and Theo talking about that?
SPEAKER_01I haven't had time to she's going on the road with Morgan Wallen, and their very first show of that tour is in Tuscaloosa, is at the stadium. It's the first uh music con the first non-Alabama football thing of that of that caliber since the 90s. Uh I think I think the 90s or the early 2000s. They said it on that podcast.
SPEAKER_04I already know I don't know, maybe one or two Morgan Wallins. Like I know that Broadway girls, and that's about it.
SPEAKER_01I like at least four. And I don't I don't know.
SPEAKER_04I seen a lot of uh people trying to get on, make uh what's her name? Megan Moroney or whatever. They're trying to give her an Ella moment by comparison.
SPEAKER_01See, I think she had her shot before Ella.
SPEAKER_04I don't even know, like I've seen her face, but I don't know any of her songs.
SPEAKER_01I don't know a single one of her songs either. And uh so nothing against her. I just don't know her songs. Yeah, she's I don't know how she is as far as blonde country.
SPEAKER_04She looks like a main girl though.
SPEAKER_01I like Averenna. Do you know who Averenna is? She's she's no she's co she's more popular now than uh Dalton, Dalton Dover, but it's at one point they were like you know uh getting into it at the same exact time. Uh what's her name? Averrienna. Averenna. She's good. Uh crazy story. One night, uh, me and Sheree was going to bed and kind of just got in bed. Dalton Dover FaceTimes me. And I'm like, he never, Dalton, he'll call me, uh, but he'll never FaceTime. He's trying to show me something. Yes, I don't know what's going on here. So then we get up out of bed, get my shirt on, and all that stuff, and then answer the phone. He's like, What's up, man? What you doing? I was like, I sleeping. Nothing, chilling, chilling, I'm doing nothing. I wanted to seem aware in case he didn't know what he needed. Uh he's like, I'm uh at the show, we're just getting ready. Uh I just I wanted you to talk to somebody. Hold on. He just hands the phone to Averyna, and I'm like, um, hey, hi girl. And she just said, Hey. I was like, All right, I'm a big fan, nice to meet you. She was like, All right, and it was like so loud where they were doing sound check, I could barely hear her. I didn't know if she could hear me. And that was kind of really it because we couldn't hear each other, but that was she put me on the spot like that. It was weird.
SPEAKER_04Yeah, but hold up. Good, thank goodness I put my shirt on. Yeah. See you, see me in my moo. I'll have to look her up. I don't, I'm not aware of her.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, I don't. I mean, you might like her, you might not.
SPEAKER_04I mean, I like country, but I really don't like uh really not the Morgan Wallen type of country. I'm more, you know, 90s country.
SPEAKER_01Uh Ella has some songs. Like Zach Zach Top, like there's some song on Ella's new album that like as soon as the song was over, me and Sherry was like, uh, that was 90s country as can be, but I don't remember what song it was.
SPEAKER_04That's what I like about Zach Top. Like, they gotta bring bring back like put some more steel guitar and stuff. Like, yeah, it's it's not it used to be overused and now it it's not it's just now becoming used again.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, too many people did the quote unquote Morgan Wallen thing, throwing 808s and all that stuff. And I think you know, I mean I like that, I mean I like but not when it's overused, like if it was just Morgan's thing and that was just and and nobody caught and nobody copycatted it, yeah. Okay, that's cool. And I think that would fit it fits jelly roll because of his past.
SPEAKER_04Yeah, like but I don't know. I I don't see like jelly as selling out, I see it more as evolving because evolution, because I've like we listened to him when nobody knew who he was. We just happened to live, you know, uh a few hours away from where he lived. Yeah, yeah. So we just happened to just how anybody knows who haystack is, like you know what I mean?
SPEAKER_01Like Lil White, like there's a there was literally a part where us and Northwest Georgia and Tennessee, yeah. Uh yeah, and us and Jelly Row was pretty much on the same underground like level of low, yeah, level of that.
SPEAKER_04We just we just we stopped and he didn't. That's that's the proof, but yeah, I mean we remember listening to that one album and he started doing singing on the hooks and stuff, and that was like the first progression to the what he evolved to now. Yeah. And those those several of those songs on that album, I think it was Whiskey, Weed, and Waffle House, they were so good.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, my favorite Jelly Rose song is a hymn and writs. Uh My Loneliness is all never known.
SPEAKER_03What happened to Ritz?
SPEAKER_04Uh I think he Like it since he's not estranged anymore, is he?
SPEAKER_01No. It seems like he he I think he went through a divorce and I don't know what personally that you know all did for him. But he's still releasing music.
SPEAKER_04He just I mean I see him on I see him on the internet. I'll look up stuff. It's weird, like how we're so like literally relatively close and met these people that we look up to that were just like doing the same thing that we were doing. You know what I mean? Like it's it's fun to be a fan as well.
SPEAKER_02Yeah.
SPEAKER_01Like a fan first.
SPEAKER_04A fan first. Like never could never do anything as cool as Ritz. I could. You know what I mean? Like but like it's weird that we met him the night he signed with Strange, like and we figured that out, like it all just happened in the moment.
SPEAKER_01That was a Tech Nine MGK show where we met Ritz. Yeah, and I couldn't even this is why I was standing in the I was standing in the crowd of an MGK show, and I don't even remember a single thing about it because I couldn't pay attention because literally Ritz is standing beside me in this crowd. Like I don't know somehow I'd met him, then I went to the bathroom, told you I met him, then you had found him and talked, but he was just there chingling I was gonna say uh commingling and chilling at the same time.
SPEAKER_04Yeah, he was waiting, he was waiting to talk to tech.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, for the show to be over or something. But I remember just all I was trying to do is get, you know how we would in the masquerade, just get a little closer to the stage. Oh, yeah. So I went to the side, the big speaker, and then you kind of start moving yourself to the center.
SPEAKER_04Go to I'm going to the bathroom, I'm gonna book.
SPEAKER_01And I'm just standing there and looked, and then I'm here I am. I'm next to Reds again. Yeah, and then he just looks at me because we'd already talked, and so I mean, he just daps me up again for some reason, and then we're just standing there at this machine gun Kelly show, and I'm like, When uh what what year was that on or 20 because we seen Yellow Wolf 2012 is the first or 2011 or 2012 first time we saw Yellow Wolf.
SPEAKER_04So it has to be after that for sure.
SPEAKER_00I'll look it up.
SPEAKER_04Maybe 2014.
SPEAKER_01Let's see. Because I know the whole niche of that tour, the Tech Nine MGK show, they were trying to um they were they were setting out to break the record for the most shows on one tour.
SPEAKER_04Him and MGK?
SPEAKER_01Yeah. Oh so you're uh that was the hostile takeover tour in 2012.
SPEAKER_042012, okay.
SPEAKER_01Um they did 99 shows in 104 days. Golly, they basically lived on a tour bus. For sure. That run is insane, averaging almost a show every single day for three months.
SPEAKER_04For real. Golly, we seen that most of the time. Yeah, you you liked MGK more than I did at that point, and we both went for Tech Nine.
SPEAKER_01Like I went for MGK. No, I'm saying, no, I'm saying I had already seen Tech Nine before.
SPEAKER_04Well, me too, but that's what I meant. Yeah, we've we've we've seen Tech Nine we're going because we know he's gonna put on a good show. Yeah, you liked MGK more than I did. It was like you the one showed me Wild Boy and yeah, no, this was uh chip off the block. That was when I was a no because he did Wild Boy.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, he did Wild Boy, but uh when I found MGK, like literally No, I'm saying that's when you introduced Wild Boy was when you introduced me to MGK. Yeah, well, I think that's when you had developed your own fandomness towards MGK was was it kind of towards Wild Boy. Um yeah, maybe so because you had the you had the shirt with the little machine gun kid on it.
SPEAKER_04I didn't have the MGK shirt.
SPEAKER_01So by then, so I probably discovered him in 2010. Maybe whenever Chip Off the Block came out, I remember uh it was way back when message boards were still a thing on the internet, and I was just a part of one. Forums, yeah, forum, yes, exactly. So I and there's just this one thread that was on there where people wanted to um it was like hey, post local artists. We want I want new music. So just wherever you live, because it was nationwide uh the community of people on this website that was like, I just want to hear local stuff, rappers, bands. I just want to hear new stuff that the radio can't show me. And it was just that a thread of that. And I even posted writs in there because I was like, you know, this he's this guy's from 40 Gwinnett County, 40 minutes away. He just had dropped um high five. So that had just came out, and then this one dude, he's like, I I live in I live in Cleveland, and there was like three YouTube link videos, and one of them was Chip Off the Block MGK. And when I clicked on it and liked the song I had seen, you know, it were oh that came out like two, three weeks ago. So you're from the start, jump like to the point that like like I said about Jelly Roll, like he I he was like some local Cleveland rapper, and I was some local Georgia rapper.
SPEAKER_04Those are my favorite artists, like yeah, so like your dad, tear myself for myself. Like I love that, I've loved that song for first time I ever heard it.
SPEAKER_01Exactly. So if anybody wants to know now why I love MGK so much, it's because I've been with him. I don't know, he's the only artist that I feel like I've I mean, I'm way older than him, but I watched him grow the in entire career, like every phase, we've seen every evolution. See, I blocked that out of my head, and you keep saying it.
SPEAKER_04I've never seen anybody do that before. Never seen anyone get in their underwear, then climb the light rig.
SPEAKER_01Like he was a wild boy back then. He was he was crazy.
SPEAKER_04Well, he made them ladies do made them twerk for everybody, and then wouldn't let them look at him while they did. Turn around, don't look at me.
SPEAKER_01This is a lot, and I get to go see him May 29th, Lost Americana tour. I cannot wait.
SPEAKER_04I know it was crazy that night. You come up to me, and your eyes was like big as crap.
SPEAKER_01I was like, that was your fault.
SPEAKER_04No, I meant the the uh the reaction from telling me to come see you just so you're talking about the uh extended release Adderall you had gave me.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, because I hey I gotta drive home, uh, so I would like to kind of be awake. So I got you, bro. And he I said, What literally my he handed me a parachute? Now I'll know that this term is called parachuted. Yeah, Adderall. We was XR. I didn't know what it was. He just I just said, I need to stay awake. And he said, Take this. And I was like, What is this? He just said, Just take it, you'll stay awake. I'm not gonna hurt you. It didn't hurt me, but uh he was awake and we made it home safely. Yeah, there was that was a lot going on.
SPEAKER_04That right that concert me and Josh have been to a million concerts together, and unless they're a rock concert, we don't stay together for some reason. Like anytime we go to any hip hop show, we barely we just you can't in the crowd because it's usually ICP, and then there's it's just a ride, fagos going everywhere, people are stage diving, and but Josh just comes up to me mid-show, and his eyes are big on top of already being big. I was like, Yeah, what happened? He was like, You'll never guess who I just met. I was like, Who? He said, Ritz, and I was like, Shut up, because we were like we had only found Ritz like not too long, uh maybe a year or so.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, enough that it was we were we were like, I'll say we were in found him through yellow wolves, but we were in Ritz mode. I was meaning we were actively listening to the listening to him, yeah. We were like, Yeah, yeah, because this was at the old the old masquerade in in heaven. And uh, if anybody knows, you know, when you come like we're usually bands set up merch booths, if they're on the side, you got those stairs when you come in. You know, it's like this big arch stairway. Uh so you got I would there's so many people in there I had to go over the over and down the steps to go around to the that upstairs bathroom. As I was going towards the bathroom, coming off the steps, he was coming like from the bathroom area. And then by Ritz, like he got so recorded. I looked and then looked down and then like double taked and was like, that looks like Ritz in my head. Yeah. And I said, Well, all in my head, I said, That looks like Ritz. Oh crap, that's that's Ritz. So I said all this in my head, but my face must have said everything because he recognized me recognizing him, and he approached me, yeah. That's not and like was like, dude, or maybe he's met so many people. He really thought, yeah, he was like, uh he thought I've met him before, like, not that he really knew it, that this guy has met me before.
SPEAKER_02He knows who I am.
SPEAKER_01I'm anxious enough to yeah, I'm not gonna uh get this rebound. I'm not gonna be a bit be embarrassed, you know what I'm saying. I'm just gonna act like I know who he is.
SPEAKER_04Oh, yeah.
SPEAKER_01That's what I think he was doing, but he did not know who me is.
SPEAKER_04Yeah, and then when Josh came and told me, I was like, I said, where's he at? He was like, he's over there by the bar. So I went, I would you can pick him out of a crowd, it's very easy.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, yucca yeah.
SPEAKER_04Yeah, yucca yeah. So I walked right up to and I I've only met ever met a handful of famous people. Uh, and none of them are really, I guess Big Show is probably the most famous. Biggest. Uh yeah, literally. I walked right up to him, and his back was to me, and I didn't I didn't touch him or anything, I just said, White Jesus. And that was just a reference that I know that he will know. Like he turned around, gave me doubt. I told him, I said, I'm a big fan, I love your stuff. And and then that was it. I left him alone, you know. But that was so cool. Like it's like uh meeting Snow the product, the same way happenstance. Uh Tez and Snow were opening up for her, and it was like, Hey, you want to go? Because they knew we liked Snow. It was like, you want to go? You can set, you know, on the side stage. I was like, absolutely. We big old dang uh station wagon or whatever they were doing. We drove that mug up there, and I got to go to the meet and greet for free, and I heard someone before she came out reference her hometown, like yeah, where she was from. So when she was coming down, I just happened to be walking up the stairs where she was coming down. And when I saw her, I don't know why, I just said her hometown. Like that it just came out of my mouth. I have no idea where in Texas this could be. Just said it. She recognized it, gave me a high five, like face to face. Yeah. And you know, oh god, I tried to not run to the bathroom. Make sure I could make sure my hand doesn't get dirty or anything. We gotta save this. I need a Ziploc bag. Like, bro, she's like, Oh yeah, put something on this. She was so hot. That was that was before she became lesbian, too, I guess, and got all the tattoos and become even hotter.
unknownRight.
SPEAKER_01She was just tattoos will do it, but she had no neck tattoos then.
SPEAKER_00Uh-uh.
SPEAKER_04She I remember she drank Hennessy and Monster together because she kicked it over mid concert and went and fixed another one. She left. She's like, I'll be back. And I'm pretty sure Dizzy Wright was like performed with her on this that tour. Yeah, he's like written. Okay.
SPEAKER_03All right. I know the name sounds familiar. I mean, we know Little White, like Yeah.
SPEAKER_04Oh Little White the second time twice. The second time we did it, he called me Johnny. And it was like, I thought he remembers it. I mean, it was only like a few weeks in between the two, but I was like, yo, I'm just uh hyping on a song. You know, I got one verse on a song or two. That was cool.
SPEAKER_03Yeah.
SPEAKER_04I was like Paul, Paul, what's up, Paul?
SPEAKER_03I know him like that. Yeah, it's Paul. That's fine.
SPEAKER_01All right, man. Well, we can call this one. Yeah, let's do it. Call it an episode. I'm hungry. All right. Until next time, ladies and gents, we will see you. Bye.