Episode title: Wake Up Classy 97 with Josh and Chantel - Tuesday, April 22nd, 2025
Episode summary introduction:
Happy Earth Day, did you know Chantel sings a Barney song while she brushes her teeth, Pope Francis passed away yesterday and there’s a lot to tradition & ceremony on display, Josh gets to fix Chantel’s car some more, it’s day two of the the last hurrah, our daughter was very mad at Josh for being a parent, we read topographical maps for fun, Chantel almost fell out of the car and Josh almost drowned in a jet ski accident, would you go to a wedding that had a guest dress code, this new app shares our whereabouts, the Boston Marathon results, and the Oscars have some new rules.
Timestamps:
(0:00) - Intro
(2:02) - Happy Earth Day & Chantel's Barney song
(6:53) - Traditions around Pope Francis
(12:04) - Good New to Get You Going
(13:46) - There's a new light on Chantel's dash
(18:22) - Day two of the last hurrah
(24:02) - Our daughter was very mad at Josh
(28:10) - It's dandelion harvest day
(31:40) - How to read a terrain map
(36:49) - How did you almost die as kid
(41:58) - Dress code at a wedding
(48:05) - The location app we're using
(52:21) - Boston Marathon results
(56:55) - Would You Rather This or That
(59:01) - The new Oscars rule + outro
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Full show transcript:
Hey, Josh. Hey, Chantel. What's under us? What's under us? Yeah.
Earth. Earth. Earth. Happy Earth Day. Happy Earth Day to you, bud.
Yeah. We'll kick things off with a little bit of happy Earth Day today, and I learned something I didn't know about you. Would you like Inside your head, you sing little songs while you do things. Yep. I do.
You know that about me. Well, I sometimes I hear them out loud. Exactly. But I didn't know about this one Nope. And the fact that you only know, like, three of the words, and that's what you sing over and over, apparently.
Mhmm. Well, that's neat. That's a good time. Let's see. What else is going on here?
We talked about some of the traditions and ceremonies that are the passing of Pope Francis. Right? You need to fix my car? You can fix your own car. I don't want to.
You know about it more than I do. Please. How's your last hurrah going? It's day two, and it's going great. Alright.
You wanna know how to make our daughter really upset? You tell her she has to do something she doesn't wanna do. Bingo. Works every time. Works every time.
We read topographical maps for funsies. Yeah. And I apparently get to teach you more because you didn't pay attention. And now that I know that, I'm really gonna watch you as I explain it this time. Look at me in my eyes while I explain these maps to you.
Look at me in my eyes Yeah. With falling asleep. We talked about ways we almost died as kids, and that was pretty neat. Have you ever had a dress code when you've gone to a wedding? This new app we have shares our whereabouts.
I don't know if I love it. We will love it eventually, though, I think. I think. I think eventually. Yeah.
The Boston marathon results. And the new rules of the Oscars. I know so much more. There's more in the show than just all that. Oh.
Rules. Rules. We are Josh and Chantel. This is wake up classy 97, the podcast. What episode is this?
Two hundred and twelve? Seventeen. Two hundred and 17. That's right. Episode two seventeen.
Enjoy the show. La dee da. Happy Earth Day. Hey, Earth. How you doing?
What do you mean, hey, Earth? Hey, Earth. How you doing? I like Earth. Yeah?
I think I need to take better care of her. Okay. Such as? I need to recycle more. I agree.
I could definitely use less water. Okay. I could help out with the kids more. I I I like helping the bees. Where do you feel like you're using the most water?
In my bath. Yeah. % bathtub. I know. You don't I already know.
I already know. You don't need to tell me that I'm wasting water when I take a bath, but I like taking a bath. It's nice. Okay. It's relaxing.
It's comfortable. Alright. Where else? Where else do I feel like I'm wasting water? Mhmm.
I feel like we're pretty good when we're doing food prep or dishes or brushing teeth. I don't think we're real No. Because there's that Barney song when I brush my teeth. You sing a Barney song? Yeah.
Do you? Nope. I never let the water run. Uh-huh. I think that's how it goes.
I never let the water run. And then what does it say? I don't know. That's the part you sing? Yeah.
Just that one line? Yeah. Oh, you don't have to look it up. Let's just explore your imagination about it. What do you remember?
I just remembered that you have to turn off the water while you're brushing. Mhmm. And then you turn it on if you need some, and then you turn it off. Uh-huh. Same goes with your hands.
You turn it on to rinse. You turn it off to lather. Yeah. I think, at home, it's a little bit different, but the automatic sinks made that, Correct. Made that work.
Although, if I remember correctly, sometimes they don't see you, and you feel like you're a ghost. I am a ghost. Yeah. Well, Earth Day today. Earth Day.
Yep. And, real quick here, the top five greenest states on, on America's soil on Earth. Let me guess. I'm gonna say Minnesota. No.
It's number six. I'm gonna say Oregon. No. I'm gonna say Washington. Number nine.
I give up. Okay. Good. Number five, Maine. Number four, Maryland.
Number three, New York. Surprise you. Surprise you. Yeah. Number two, Hawaii, and Vermont is number one.
And this ranking is done by the number of factors including air, water, and soil quality, renewable energy consumption, climate change contributions, green building practices, and eco friendly behavior. Bottom five? One, two. Yeah. What?
One, two, three, four, five. Wyoming is number seven on the worst list. That's why. Wyoming. Not good.
Alaska is number eight on the on the list. Alaska. Texas. Texas. Mhmm.
And then Arkansas. Arkansas. Yeah. Arkansas is the worst. I'm scolding you.
Do better. Arkansas. Fifty out of 50 on, on those factors. Oh, man. I don't know how much of that's Arkansas's fault.
Why? Whose fault is it? I don't know. I just you you said Arkansas like it was the whole state's fault. It it's probably some people.
It is. It's some people's fault. Arkansas. You come up with your own name even. Cheated off of Kansas.
You did. You're like, what did he write for this name of his state? Arkansas. Kansas. Or or I'll I'll pronounce it different.
That way it's not plagiarism. Arkansas. Which came first? I don't know. Let's find out.
Exactly. Okay. You're doing some research on that? Yeah. K.
Because, Kansas, came after Arkansas. Really? So Kansas is the cheater. Yeah. Why didn't they call it Kinsaw?
Kinsaw. Yeah. Good point. Kinsaw. If Arkansas was already there, why didn't they call it Kinsaw?
That's my question, and no one knows the answer. Yep. Be like a magic trick every time. Oh. Good one.
Thank you. Good morning. It's It's Josh and Chantel. Yesterday, the news broke that, pope Francis Yeah. Had, had passed away at the age of 88.
Right. And, there's been a lot of things going on, at the Vatican, since that news, arrived. It's really interesting. There are so many traditions and ceremonies, around the passing of of a pope specifically. And I'm sure there are many other religious individuals where this is the case.
But I'm I'm just learning a little bit about this. They have, the, apartments. They get sealed, which is interesting. Like, where the pope lived gets sealed with a with a ribbon and a wax seal. Really?
Uh-huh. So no one can go in there Right. Again? I I don't know if it's again or until a new pope, is, is chosen or selected or whatever that process is like. Yeah.
The pope, is, there's a lot of funeral service. The pope right now is, in a casket, and I believe they're, lying in wake, I I would assume, is is what that's called. Mhmm. And there will be a large, large, mass for the funeral service. And there's, again, a ton of ceremony in that as well.
It's just really interesting. I mean, it takes days and days. Fifteen to twenty days after the pope's death, and sooner if all the cardinals are in Rome, they will gather for the conclave, where they will have all of the cardinals, and there's, like, 250 of them Woah. Who will vote in the election of a new pope. Really?
And that's where they have the pipe with the smoke. And then once they've come to a conclusion, the the smoke changes colors and all that stuff. It's it's wild. I mean, so many different things. Old traditions.
That have been probably in practice forever and ever and ever and ever. For centuries. Yeah. So it's really, really interesting to kinda see, all of this play out. And I'm trying to remember, when the last time this happened.
But, anyway, there's a ton of information online about kind of how this all takes place. And I'm learning a lot because I I I don't know a lot about it, but there it's really interesting to watch. Like, the ceiling of the apartment thing was really Yeah. I've never heard of that. Fascinating.
Yeah. Big red ribbon, goes across the the handles, and then they pour wax seal on the knot that they tie and they press it. And then several officials, come up and make sure the doors are locked and check the wax seal Really? As a as part of it. Yeah.
They have three or four or five different, different people do that to make sure that it is indeed sealed before they walk away from it. It's fascinating. Really, really interesting. Interesting. I was just reading some different things about some of the front runners that they have that are kind of in line to be the next pope.
One guy, this is an Italian guy. He's a 60 year old Italian. His last name, I'm no joke, is Pizzabala. Pizzabala? Yeah.
Yeah. Woah. I don't know how you pronounce it. Well, so that's an interesting thing too is when when you become Pierre Battista Pizzabala. Pizzabala.
When you become pope, you take on a different name. You become pope. Right. What what have you. Right.
Anyway Interesting. Yeah. What a fascinating little traditional old old old old traditional thing. Somebody somebody on here is talking about the the burial procedure, and said it is absolutely crazy to watch. They they saw Benedict's, burial, and they said it it is like sealing uranium the way that that the popes are Really?
Buried. Yeah. Yeah. Fascinating. It's really interesting.
Anyway wanna know, like, all of the, like, whys behind it all too. I'm sure there's plenty of documentation about that. Is true. You could read. You could ask somebody.
I'm sure people would be delighted to tell you all the Internet. Want a quick like, I just want a quick debrief, though. I don't wanna read I know. Chapters and chapters. Right?
Just give me a quick why. Yeah. That's all. Two sentences. Yeah.
Break it down. Quickly. Pizza balla. Pizza balla. Did you look him up?
No. I didn't, but I'm kind of into that. I think, I think that'd be fun. It But he should keep it. Pope Pizza balla.
Pope Pizza balla. I think that's cool. Anyway, that's what's going on. There will be many days of ceremony and, and, a lot of news coming out of the Vatican for sure as we progress through, the things that have to happen now. But, for now, rest in peace, to pope Francis.
Oh, it's good news to get you going. Okay. It's about Kyler Valdez. He's a high school senior working to become an Eagle Scout in Lubbock, Texas. We like Eagle Scouts.
I know. Well, we like non Eagle Scouts too. This is true. We're part of scouting. This is all true.
As part of his Eagle Scout project, Kyler donated 65 care packages to women's protective services in Lubbock to support abuse survivors. And each package includes, socks and toothpaste and deodorant. And Kyler chose the project to help women regain confidence and rebuild their lives after abuse. He said, I have a passion for helping other people out and helping other people gain the strength to go out and live their lives to the fullest, which is really, really cool. Steven Garcia, he works with the women's protective services.
He praised the effort and said Kyler's work shows that anyone regardless of age or gender can can help make a difference. For a young man to wanna step up, it really shows as a leader that we can help, make a change, and I love it. So That's great. Yeah. I think that's I think that's really cool.
It's a great, great project, a great, beneficiary of of a scout eagle project. I think that's awesome. So, well done to Kyler, and hopefully all the rest of your paperwork gets done and you get your, get your eagle. That's Yeah. That's a great deal.
Keep on keeping on, buddy. Yeah. You're doing you're doing the right thing. And since you're a high school senior, you're working up to the end here because I'm sure your eighteenth birthday is coming up real quick. So get your stuff done.
Yeah. Get your stuff done. As parents of somebody who waited till the last minute, really, get your stuff done. Get your stuff done, Kyler. Alright.
Good news to get you going. I have a lot of lights on my dashboard in my car. Yeah. You took a new one. Yeah.
You took my car out last night and came back and said, oh, hey. There's a new light on your dashboard. Mhmm. What is it? It's a light.
Now I have a light out. Yeah. You have a tail light out. I have a lot of lights happening right now in my car, and it's frustrating me because one is a tire pressure light. Tires are fine.
I don't know why that's there. I check the tires all the time. Yeah. They're fine. That's a a tire pressure sensor Yeah.
That has to be replaced. That's what that is. Go on. Then there's What else you got? I don't know what it is.
It's a throttle body. Oh, yeah. That's yeah. That one's and then you've got your, parts part tick particle filter particulate filter, whatever it is because it's a diesel. Yep.
Yeah. And that thing's got too much junk in it. Then there's the other one, like The glow plug. That one's related to the, the other thing. The throttle body?
No. The other thing. The particulate filter. So that's four. Four lights there.
But you you don't typically have the particulate filter and the glow plug going on at the same time because they're related, and so they kinda bounce back and forth. It's a cool thing to watch all those lights turn on. No. I hate it. I know.
It makes me nervous. I understand. There's nothing I hate more than car trouble. I know. I hate car trouble.
Yeah. I've I've had my car broke down a lot, especially when I was in college Right. Without a cell phone. I get it. That is stressful.
Yeah. And people are honking at you, and people are like, get out of the way. And you're like, where am I gonna go? No one yelled get out of the way. Not one person.
That's your own anxiety, freaking you out. But they honk, which is essentially saying get out of the way, isn't it? I don't know why they honked. You probably had your four ways on, I would assume. I probably didn't because I probably didn't know what to do.
Done that. I know I should have. But, also, if your car is dead and it's not moving and you're standing outside of your car, obviously, I'm not going anywhere. Doug, what are you doing? Your four ways aren't on.
That's what those are for. Don't honk at people. It's just rude. It's just rude. So are you saying you want me to get these lights fixed or what?
Yes, please. You just want me to disconnect the lights? How do you want me to go about it? Just clear the codes. That's what do you how do you want me to handle this?
Well, the one, you can at least fix the light one. Yeah. That one just came on. I haven't had a chance. No.
I know. I'm just asking. Please fix that one. You know that men do better typically when they go to The dispensaries. No.
Everyone. No way. You can totally handle this. I know I can handle it, but guess what? They're gonna totally tell me stuff that I don't need that I'm gonna be like, well, I probably should get that.
You know that's true. Please. Please don't even. Okay. So you need to call them and say, I need this time to find this call.
I see. Yeah. Uh-huh. Yep. Alright.
Please end. Thank you. Well, great. Now I need to afternoon is shot. No.
I didn't mean today. Oh. But it has been those lights have been happening for a while. Yeah. True statement.
I need to the tire pressure one, I can do that part. Yeah. You just gotta take it into the place and say, I got this light on, and, I think it's a sensor. And they'll go, okay. I know.
I know. And then they'll go, that's $4,000. Thanks. I bought my tires there, so they should help. Right?
They will. Yeah. Absolutely. K. I'll take care of that one.
I don't know what to call the mechanics about the other one. If I call them and say, hey. Something's wrong with this throttle body, and they're gonna ask me questions about it. And I'm gonna say, that's all I know. I've given you all of my information.
That is the end of my knowledge. What I know. Okay. And then they'll say, okay. It'll be $4,000.
Exactly. Yeah. Then what happens? And then I say, oh, no. Thank you.
Right. And then I'll just deal with these lights. So just deal with the lights. Alright. I guess I'll keep dealing with these lights.
I'll I'll call. Thanks, dear. You're welcome. So you know how I've been talking about a last hurrah for weeks and months and And even yesterday. Even yesterday.
Was yesterday I said it? We've been talking about last hurrah for a long time. Last hurrah, if you're new here, is the last sweet treat that I get to have before I start my diet. And that's been I've been having a last hurrah for What? Months.
Oh, okay. Years. Sure. So you you said that your last straw was happening yesterday. How'd it go?
There was some sugar cookies at work. Yeah. I said, no. Thank you. That's good of that's really good.
Yeah. Last week, there were some donuts. Okay. And I wasn't able to say, no to the donuts. Alright.
So I had a donut, and I said, it's my last raw. And then I asked another woman in the office, hey. Did you know that there's donuts here? And she said, oh, yeah. But I had a donut two days ago.
So she wasn't gonna partake in the donuts. And I went, two days ago. You had a donut two days ago. That's not today. You're you could have a donut daily if you Yeah.
I mean, you you're you're an adult. You can make your own decisions. You can have a doughnut for lunch, breakfast, and dinner if you want it. Admired her willpower to say, oh, I've had a doughnut this week. So did that help inspire you to say no?
Kind of a little bit. Okay. Good. But I am on my new game plan. I did some yoga this morning.
I yeah. Yesterday, I ate very, very healthy. I got a little snacky right before dinner, which is typical of me. And I made myself a cup of tea, and I said Alright. This will suffice.
Thank you. Okay. I heard that, like, having some water helps Curb your appetite. Uh-huh. I've been drinking water all day, though.
So I was like, I don't want more water. I'm just saying if you feel that, like, I gotta have something. Drink some water and see what happens. Yeah. I heard if you drink some tea, that's supposed to help too, which is just flavored water.
Right. Flavored water. I can't even put normally, I put a little bit of honey or some sugar and some milk in my tea. Sweetener or anything? Nope.
Wow. Just drink it by itself. Wow. It's a new me. Look at it.
Look. I really did have my last hurrah. Where you're at. That's a good time. Here I go.
Day two. Okay. Day one's under my belt. Okay. It's only, it's only forward progress from here.
Yeah. I know. On day seven, that belt will be getting tighter and tighter. Just you wait. Just you wait.
Okay. I'm I'm here for it. Yeah. It really was my last hurrah. No doughnuts for me.
Not even a sugar cookie. Right now, though? No. It doesn't. Oh.
Nope. You know what? Sounds good. A delicious apple. Oh, no.
That that's not it. How about a rice cake? Why are you picking the loudest foods, and you wanna eat them near me? Because the loudest foods are the healthiest. That is not true.
I don't know how true that is. It's not. You just like the loud ones. Because they're good. Loud I like crunchy food.
Get used to it. Yeah. No. I won't. I go, well, I'll be leaving my headphones on so I don't have to hear the crunchy food.
I had a rice cake yesterday. You had to turn up the music because you thought it was so loud. It is. It's very loud. It wasn't that loud.
It's pretty loud. It's pretty loud. I know. I'm sorry. I don't know how to make it quite loud.
Apples are loud? Yes. Are you Rice cakes are loud? You're just gonna name loud foods Yes. Now?
Okay. What else is loud that's also healthy? Celery Yes. Loud and other loud foods. That's all the loud foods.
You named them all. That's not all of them, I'm sure. And there's probably loud, not healthy foods. Potato chips. Yeah.
Correct. Correct. You tried those golden Sriracha I like them. Potato chips. I'm not a fan.
That's more for me. And the taco ones I didn't care for those. Taco seasoning. Lot of taco seasoning. Why do they make food that tastes like other I thought that was the other quest I thought it's where the question was gonna why do they make food?
I was just thinking about because we had those peeps that were flavored with something different. Churros and rice crispy treats. Uh-huh. If I want a churro, I'll just go eat a churro. Okay.
Why do I need a churro? Peep. If I have a rice crispy treat, peep, why don't I just go eat a rice crispy treat? Marketing. Yeah.
I know. That's why. Know why they're making food that tastes like other food. Because they know people like rice crispy treats, and people like peeps. What if we make Peeps that taste like Rice Krispies Treats and then bada bing, we'll sell more Peeps.
Like, Doritos should just taste like Doritos, not Golden Sriracha Doritos. No way. I didn't care for those. I didn't like those. They're good.
Do you know it is interesting. I don't know that I have seen, any ladies that like that chip. It's all been dudes that have been like, yeah. That chip is good. That's interesting.
Now you're gonna have to run around the office and give everybody a taste just to do a poll. But I might say, hey. Do you like this chip? Blind taste test. Do you like this chip?
It's okay, but I prefer a regular Dorito. Your mom thought it was the spiciest thing she'd ever had in her life, and they're not that spicy. No. They're not that spicy. Oh, last year.
Day two. Let's go. Go. You made our daughter mad, mad, mad. No.
I made her accountable, accountable, accountable. That's what I made her. Yes. But that also made her made her angry. Mad, mad, mad.
Yeah. She did not want to, participate in practice yesterday for track, and I, said no, dude. You made a commitment. You're not ill. You just don't wanna go, and that's not gonna work for me.
And so I made her fulfill her commitment as a member of the team and to show up to practice, and that made her angry. She'll be better for it, but it was not a fun car ride. My, favorite part was that she was in a text group with the both of us whining about going. Right. And then you said, I'm on my way home, so be ready.
Yep. I'm on my way to pick you up. Yep. And then she sent me a separate text It said, I don't wanna go. Yeah.
She said, I'm gonna talk to the pushover Yeah. And see if I can get away with it. Yes. She did. And I did.
Did you reply or no? Just ignored her. Yeah. Because I'm like, you've already got your answer. You don't need me to say no or give you a different answer.
You've you've already gotten your answer of what you should do. And then I watched on the camera because I got a notification that somebody had Right. So I went, oh, Josh is home. So I watched. She got in the car.
She angrily opens the door. She was not happy at all. No. She wasn't happy when we picked her up either. She's After practice.
Silent spewing us the whole night. Until the dog made her laugh. And then things got a little softer after that. Oh, in the car? Yeah.
And and then she started breaking down some walls. Kind of. Yeah. We ate dinner. She was still a little bit quiet.
Still giving us the silent treatment, kinda. And then when I left the house, everything got better. Well because I had I had stopped and talked to her. Not initially. Because you need to gotta know you've got a teenage daughter, you gotta know when is the right time to go talk and when isn't.
And it was probably not till about 08:00 that I was like, I'm gonna go see what's going on. So I went in and talked to her for a little bit. Not about practice. I kept that on the back burner. But talked about some other things going on, and she slowly opened up.
Okay. Slowly started to be a little bit normal. And then I said, okay. We're gonna joke about this a little bit. And I said, you were mad.
Dipped a little bit. Okay. And she was like, well, it was the dumbest practice ever. Doesn't matter. I know.
You gotta show up. You're on a team. You made a commitment. You gotta follow through. And it's hard sometimes.
And life's filled with those things where you made a commitment, and then you'd later on go, why did I do that? Yeah. But you gotta do it. You gotta follow through. I just loved watching from the camera at work when she angrily opens the door.
And I said out loud to my coworker, my daughter is mad. Yep. I did not envy you in that moment. No. It was fine.
It was just a real quiet drive. But then I tried talking to her about some other things and whatever. It didn't it didn't matter. She was not having it. So Just ignoring you.
Yeah. It's the way it goes. Oh, funny. She did it. Good job.
She did. And she was fine. And she'll be better because she practiced. That's right. Good job.
Thanks for not being a pushover. What? Okay. Because I absolutely am. I know.
Because sometimes it's easier just to give in than to have the fight. And she knows that about you. Yes. She does. But she knows a different thing about me.
And so next time, I won't be included in the beginning text, watch. Yeah. You won't be. You're right. So I ask dad.
She'll go, no. I'm not gonna do that. Why isn't dad in this conversation? Yeah. Because he's gonna tell you to go.
That's gonna be your answer from now on. What'd your dad say? And then I'll say, you know what the answer is. You're going to practice. Good job, Josh.
No. Thanks. Good dad work. Weeks ago, I told you that I had a dandelion bread recipe. Right.
And your bread recipe looked like a burnt roll. Mine looked like delicious lemon bread, had a glaze on it, looked so nice. Mine looked good too. Burnt roll. Okay.
I'm gonna make both of them. Uh-huh. I need a cup of dandelions for each recipe. So that means I need two cups of dandelions. Correct?
Yeah. It's been a little touch and go with the dandelions lately. Like, I I didn't know if I had enough in my yard to have two cups. Right. We only had, like, eight dandelions.
You're like, there's enough. And I went, no way, dude. Because you're taking just the yellow part of the dandelion flower. Right. Everything else gets discarded.
I came home yesterday from work, and the entire yard was filled with dandelion. The edge a little bit, not the entire yard. It isn't that bad. So I think it's ready. Dandelion bread is ready.
Well, get get to talk to actually gonna make some last night. I was like, today's the day I'm gonna do the dandelion bread. And then I took a bath, and then I got all warm and toasty, and it was windy outside. And I said, oh, I'm just gonna lay and relax. I'm not gonna do anything other than just lay here.
But today, maybe today is the day. Maybe. Or tomorrow. No. It's not today.
No. Because we've got plans today. Not today. Tomorrow. You might need to harvest the dandelions, though, because you're gonna lose them.
I know. But I don't know how to keep them fresh. Well, you're gonna have to, just harvest the yellow parts and then put them in a ziplock bag in the fridge or something. You can put them in the fridge. Okay.
Today, I'll harvest. Uh-huh. Tomorrow, it's the baking for sure. I'm probably just gonna make one bread. Two breads is a lot.
But make mine then because it looks way better. No. I think mine looks good. No way. Yeah.
Way. With some honey on it? No. With the glaze on it. It's got honey in it.
It's got a glaze on top. So good looking. It looks like that lemon bread. It does look good. Yours looks good, but mine looks good too.
Why'd you say mine looked like burnt? It looks like a burned roll. No. It looks good. If you like burned rolls.
I do sometimes depending on the level of burntness. Nobody likes a burned roll. How was your burned pizza the other day? You made some burned pizza. You I ate my mistake.
I I wanna talk about it. We talked about it already. I know you were so mad. We were giving you so much teasing. I don't wanna talk about my burned pizza.
Harvest your dandelions. I am. Yeah. Today is harvest day. K.
And while I'm harvesting the dandelions, I can sing what's that country song? International harvester. Oh, good. Yeah. You could.
Yes. You could sing that. Like, you yourself are the tractor. Yeah. Okay.
Good. This is the only words I know from that song. It's all you need. Two words. Or isn't there a John Deere song too?
John Deere country song? Sure. Yeah. John Deere green. That's right.
I'm gonna be a farmer today. Alright. I'm gonna harvest those dandelions. Last night, I'm laying there trying to read in my bed, quietly trying to read. Here comes Emery.
She wants to have let me tell y'all about my day. Oh, good. Cool. It's fine. I like hearing about her day.
Sure. And at night is when she wants to talk about it. That's fine. She leaves. I get back into my book.
Here you come with a map, and you say, hey. Do you wanna learn how to read a terrain map? And I go, sure do. Please tell me how to read that terrain map. I'm not trying to read at all.
Nope. Not at all. That sounds like it's so out of left field. It's not. No.
It's not. There's there is context because I'm trying to, I'm I'm trying to help you, feel comfortable going on a hike this summer, and I wanted you to understand how to read the map so I so that when I showed you the terrain that is on this hike, you would understand and say, oh, yeah. That makes sense. I can I can do this hike? K.
That's the the so it isn't just totally out of left field. This hike is a hot topic right now because I'm trying to I'm trying to get it planet. I get it. You know, as a part of it. So I was reviewing the trail, and I was showing you the the route and the loops and and all of the pieces to this thing and the destination and the campsites and all that stuff.
Hey. You wanna read this terrain map? Yeah. Nope. No.
I never do. I never ever ever do. You should. It's fascinating. There's a lot of information on that.
Was, have I ever taught you how to read a terrain map? That's what you said. And I went, sure haven't. Let's learn right now. What you what you could have said was, oh, yeah.
A long time ago. I should have said that. Yeah. And then lied. And then that would have made me feel worse.
Worked because you still would have explained it because you've done that before, where you'll say, hey. Do you know how to do this? And I'll say, yeah. And you'll say, I'm gonna show you anyway. Mhmm.
And you Because I don't believe you. Yeah. But there are times where it's true. And they go, no. I have done that before.
And you're like, it doesn't matter. I'm gonna show you anyway. Yeah. I'm helping. And no.
I know. It was nice. Thanks for teaching me how to read that terrain map. Do you remember? Yep.
No. You don't. Yes, sir. You said if they're closer together, that means it's more steep. That's correct.
See? If the lines are closer together, that means they're steeper. Correct. Yeah. See?
Fact. I learned. I listened. I paid attention. And how many miles was the trail?
Depends. Because you said there were four from this point to this point, and there was one and a half from this point to this point. Right. Total, I think you said 15? No.
It wasn't quite. Oh, okay. It was it was kinda less than that. Quite quite a bit less. Oh.
But that's fine. Okay. That's fine. I'll get the map out later and show you again. Yeah.
That's it. There it is. I'll get out a compass too, and I can show you how to orient the map with a compass as well. That's real that's real map and compass stuff. Do you do that?
Yeah. Ugh. Not like when I'm just reading the map, but when I'm when I'm navigating with the map. Yeah. You do, Yeah.
That's kind of cool, Josh. That's a nice skill that you have. It is a nice skill. It is a nice skill. Good job.
But I'll just rely on you to do it. I don't need to learn how to do it. I'll just follow you. What if my leg's broken and I can't? Then I'll I don't know.
I'll figure something out. You gotta read the map? No. I can't be bothered. How are we gonna get to safety?
We'll we'll be with other people who can read a map. That's true. See? No one's gonna rely on me for problem solving techniques. But And that's okay.
But they could. You could learn these skills. I don't want to is the point. Okay. Because then people will have to rely on me.
No. They won't have to, but they can. They'll be like, Chantel, you know how to read this map. Yeah. You need us lead us away.
And I was, ugh. It's just It's a clearly marked trail. It's not gonna be super hard. The hardest part is gonna be like, you're not taking bearings and trying to bushwhack your way to the destination. It's a it's a clearly marked trail, but you have to know which forks to take to get to where you're headed.
That's the that's the part you need to be prepared for. Salad fork. And and then if you wanna figure out where you are on the line, you need to be able to read the map to find your, Directions, bearings, compass, lakes, rivers. What? What are you saying?
Points of interest. Like, you need to be able to find your landmarks so that you can triangulate your location on them. It's a pretty big deal. I'll teach you how. I don't know.
You'll love it. Okay. I'll pretend to pay attention. Great. That's that's all I could ask.
I was reminiscing with my sister over the weekend about how we almost died as kids. What happened? No seatbelts in the car? Yeah. No.
That was absolutely it. Yeah? We had a station wagon. Uh-huh. And I, on one lucky instance Got to ride in the barrier.
Ride in the no. By the window. Oh. I normally had to sit in the middle. See?
So I got to sit by the window. I don't know how that happened. But we didn't wear seatbelts because it was the eighties, and there were no rules. Uh-huh. And we turned the door.
I don't think it was latched all the way. And we turned the corner, and the door opened, and I almost tumbled out. My sister reached over, grabbed Saved your life. Saved my life. Wow.
Yeah. Yeah. How did you almost die as a kid? Jet ski accident. Really?
Yeah. What happened? It was an Island Park, and I was on the jet ski with my dad. And, we were cruising. Meow.
Meow. Hitting those wakes. Meow. Meow. Meow.
Meow. Meow. Meow. Meow. You know, how the jet ski does.
And, having a great time. And, somehow we leaned the wrong way. And, when you lean the wrong way, you immediately go in the water. Both of you? Uh-huh.
Did you have a life jacket? I had to have. Right? You had to have. If you did, that's I was little.
Foolishness. I mean, not like toddler or anything. I was I was in elementary school when it happened. I had to have a life jacket on. Right?
Would have been so Here's what I know about, about this this whole incident. What? Settle down. Arctic Circle, the restaurant Uh-huh. Did slap bracelet watches for a while.
Okay. It was very cool because you could change out the bands, and you got the, the watch face, and you smack it, and it wrap around your wrist. Yeah. I had one of those on when I tumbled into the water. I did not have one on when I came out.
Oh, no. And I was very upset. Oh, no. Doesn't matter whether or not I almost drowned. The the real deal is that I lost that slap watch.
My slap watch. Yeah. Super, super sad. And you never got a new one. Never got a new slap watch.
What river was it in? It was in the Island Park Reservoir. Let's go look for it. No. It's been decades.
It's it's long gone. That thing is part of the riverbed now or the reservoir bed. How did you get out of the water? Who saved you? I don't I I had to have had a life jacket on and popped back up out of the water.
I did feel like I was underwater for a long time, though. But we weren't that far from shore. We weren't, like, out in the middle or anything. Like, we were just off the dock, when it happened. But, anyway, my dad's boss at the time, he had a cabin up there that we were staying in, in in a trailer and and hanging out in the cabin, and he had all kinds of jet skis and boats and toboggan things you pulled behind the boat and all kinds of things.
So it was a good time. Scare you from going back on the jet ski, or were you like, let's go back out there. On a jet ski since. Really? Because of that instance?
I just haven't had the opportunity. But you would. You take one. Think I would. I'd go ride a I'd go ride a jet ski.
Traumatize you? No. Well, I was traumatized from riding in station wagons after that. Like, I want the middle from now on? No.
It was just station wagons. I was like, I'm never riding in a station wagon again. We used to have a wagon. I know we did. And you drove it.
Yes. Seat belted in. Yeah. Kaching. Because it was in the February, not the eighties.
So it's that. Well, fun. Glad you, didn't tumble out of that car. Me too. Thank my sister for that.
Yeah. I think she that was just reflex for her. I think maybe later in the day, I was probably doing something annoying because she even told me this weekend. She was like, you're so annoying. I hated you.
So I probably that later that day how she talks? I've met her, but I don't think that's how she talks. She does. Have you ever met her? Hated you.
Yeah. I've never heard her talk like that ever. My name is. Okay. And the elder sister.
That's how she talks. Yeah. Wow. She should have that looked at. There's gotta be another one.
I can say this because she doesn't listen. So that's all about listen. But later that day, she probably would have said, you were annoying. I shouldn't have saved your life. Yeah.
It checks out. She what she said, I agree with, not the context. I'm saying she did say that. Yeah. How she said it, I disagree with.
Why do you think she talks? Normal. Not like this. You I should've let you fall out. I'm your oldest sister.
I hate everything you do. That's that is I mean, that's a spot on impression. Have you ever been to a wedding where there was a dress code? No. I've I've only gone to weddings where I've either been a guest dressed nicely or I have been, a party in the wedding.
And then you're, you know, dressed in, like, a tux or whatever the other groomsmen are are wearing or in the wedding that we had when I was, the groom. Those are those are my wedding experiences. Okay. So not necessarily like a like a requirement, or is that what you mean by dress code? Like Have you, like, on the invitation, has there been a please dress like this?
No. Me neither. We wanted to keep things pretty casual for our wedding, and so we were like, we didn't as you are. Yeah. We didn't specify that in our invitation, but it was really like, we don't care.
Just show up. People, I think, typically, you know, will wear, like, a, like, a nice business cash or a think so. Or a Sunday's best or something like that. They'll wear the the people people dress nice My typically for weddings. Sister recently got an invitation, and the bride and groom on their invitation said wear black clothing.
That's interesting. Yeah. And I think it has to do with their it has to have something to do with their pictures. I can only imagine. Right?
Like, they've got a color scheme. They want the flowers to stand out. I think that was the thing that my sister said was they want their flowers to stand out. I don't know what their color scheme is or anything more than that. And I went, well, I just feel like that's a lot of that's a lot of thought I know.
Going into going into, the look of photographs I know. That that you're gonna post on socials and that you're gonna print anything in your house. Right? Like, right? Is that what we're talking about?
Gonna be for the gram, I feel. It has to be. It has to be for the show, for the look. Right. I don't know.
I would so much rather, like, you just wear what you want. Just wear what you want. Come as you are. Because what shade of black? What is it?
Satin black or a matte black? Is it like, I could totally screw it up by wearing, like, a, like, a full on shiny leather jacket and pant combo. They they be like, woah. What if I don't have anything all black? What if I just have black with, like, white flowers?
Or or black sequin? Or polka dots. You know? Yeah. Does it have to be solids?
What if I think it's black, but I show up and you're like, that's navy blue? Yeah. Or that's that's like a weird brown. What is that color? Now you've ruined my It was black when I bought it, but when I washed it, it got lighter, and it's now it's that weird, like, inside of the black licorice color.
You know the color. You take a bite and you go, that's it's black outside, but inside, it's kind of a dark bright real dark brown. Inside is black licorice. That color. Yeah.
I know. I know exactly what color you're talking about. Not black. Nope. Sure isn't.
I so then we started talking about weddings, my sister and I, and I was like, if I could do it again have you seen those videos where people will say, hey. We're having a party. Come dressed up. I think it was, like, toward Halloween, and they had everybody come dressed in, like, a costume. Okay.
So everybody showed at their house in a in a Halloween costume, and they said, surprise. Thank you all for coming. We're actually getting married. Oh, that's fun. All of their wedding photographs are like Dracula and That's great.
What? Beetlejuice and all of these Halloween costumes, which I think is hysterical. I think that's really funny. If I ever got married again, I think I might have that. Silly?
Yep. Yeah. That's a funny little thing. I mean, look. There's always renewing vows.
This is twenty years. Maybe in five years from now, we do something silly like that. That'd be fun. That would be fun. For twenty five?
Yeah. I mean, assuming you still like me in five years. Well, I don't know. Yeah. I know at this rate.
Working together. Living together. It's I don't know. It's taking its toll. What are you talking about?
Just last night, you said, are you sure you're not bored of me? Uh-oh. Hey. Don't say that. Clearly, I'm not bored of you.
I still show up every day. That's true. You do. I mean, it's kinda my job, so I have to. But even if I didn't have to, I'd still show up.
So nice. You know? I said one nice thing. That's not really even that nice of a thing. It was a nice thing.
Thing. It was nice. Mediocre thing. I I said one mediocre nice thing. Half nice.
Is it one half nice thing? Well, anyway, that's a fun idea. I like that. I don't know what to say about the the all black thing. That seems I mean, it's your wedding.
Do what you want. But Whatever. Are there gonna be more rules when you arrive? Those flowers better look amazing. They sure better.
That's if you if you get the photos back and the photos and the flowers are, like, wilty and just look bad, you know, like, well, that was for nothing. Made everybody stress about wearing black, and they they could've just worn whatever they wanted. Just wear what you want. Yeah. What if you did that?
What if you showed up in white? Oh. Like, I'm sorry. I misunderstood. It'll be like that dress where, like, some people saw gold and some people saw blue.
There was no gold and brown or whatever. Wearing purple, and you're like, this is this is black. To me, this is black. Right. Or Arkin is colorblind.
I don't think black and white are hard to hit, but but I get what you're saying. I'm just playing devil's advocate. Yeah. For sure. Our daughter has been begging us for months to get, an app that will tell everyone's whereabouts.
Yeah. I don't necessarily know why she wanted this other than she is desperate to know where we are when we're on our way to pick her up That's right. From any thing that we pick her up from. Right. So she'll send us a text and say, hey.
I'm done. And then we'll get three or four phone calls on our drive there. Where are you? How close are you? Where are you at?
I'm freezing. You're like, dude, I'm driving. I think she just desperately was like, I think you guys are lying. Like, I need to know where you are. So we got this app Yeah.
That will now tell where everybody is. Right. You can see people driving. Yesterday, she was home because she doesn't have school on Monday, so she was home. And she said she told me that she had been having a dance party, and then she saw that I had left work.
I had an eye doctor appointment. So she saw that I had left work because it'll notify If you tell it to. Yeah. And so she was having a dance party at home, and she was like, oh, mom's on her way home. So she stopped her dance party.
Oh, she did. And then she said and then Beck, she got a notification that Beck was on his way home to have lunch. And I said, I didn't even come home. I just went to the eye doctor. And she said, I know, but it notified me that you were driving, and so I just assumed that you were coming home.
I'm like, you don't have to stop what you're doing. Right. Do what you, do what you want. She goes, I just really like being home alone. And so when I got the notification that you and Beck were on your way home, it ruined my whole day.
Oh. Well, so sorry. Yeah. Or bad. I mean, you weren't even doing anything other than just, No.
I went to the eye doctor Yeah. And went back to work. That's what I'm saying. Big woo. Big woo.
Big woo? Yeah. I thought it was whoop. No. For me, it's Big Woo.
Big woo? Big whoop. I don't know about this app. Do you happen to like it? I don't know.
I don't I don't really have an opinion at the moment. It will kind of tell me how low everyone's phone battery is. Does that just depress you, or does that bug you? It kinda bugs me. I don't need to know how low everybody's phone battery is.
I also you got a notification this morning that said she had a risky drive. Yeah. That but she was a passenger on the bus, and that's because she was using her phone while on the drive. And so once I designated her as a passenger and not a driver, it was like, oh, safe drive. Oh, okay.
Yeah. Because he said, Emery had the three minute risky drive. I went, she's on the bus. Right. What's that bus driver doing?
Yeah. She's just, she's just a passenger. And it was safe. Using her phone. And it was safe.
Yeah. It was a safe ride. Bus driver's fine. Everything's fine. Yeah.
No big deal. I don't know. I think it'll be great when she starts to drive. That's kinda the big benefit for me as I look at it. I was definitely looking at it from the the perspective of we're gonna appreciate this technology when she's driving because it it'll it can do crash notification stuff.
It can do a bunch of different things. And I think that people will go, yeah. This is good. How risky a driver she is. That's correct.
Oh, you were using your phone while you were driving. Correct. Uh-huh. Yeah. That's exactly right.
K. I'll wait until that time to then appreciate the app. Yeah. For now for now, it's just silly. For now for now, it's weird.
For now, I go, I don't I know Beck's phone is at 10% battery. He never charges it. I don't need a reminder about that. That's true. That's absolutely does it at 5% right now?
I don't know. Okay. I turned that I turned off that notification. Yeah. Yeah.
Don't I don't need to know about that for sure. But anyway yeah. Cool. Cool. Cool.
Are you across the street yet? Because, a while ago, your location was over in the trees. Did you arrive at the studio? I I don't know. I didn't look.
We'll have to check. Okay. Alright. Yesterday was the, what, one hundred and ninety second, I think, running of the Boston Marathon. Okay.
And, we talked in good news to get you going about Ralph Carmona. He's the guy who was running, for Alzheimer's, research and stuff. Seventy four years old? Yeah. Yeah.
74. Yep. And, he's he himself is living with Alzheimer's and, decided he was gonna run the marathon, 74 years old, 26.2 miles. I have been trying all morning to find his finishing time and, and to get details on that. All I can find is a million people talking about him running for Alzheimer's, which is great, but I wanted to find out when he finished.
Right. So I've been I've been, like, feverishly trying to figure out how to look for finishing times and stuff for it. Hang on. I might have found something. I'm hanged.
I'm hung. Okay. I I'm hanging on. I don't know what a word is to say. Like, I'm holding my breath.
I'm waiting. Here I am, just anticipating. What do you got? I can't. Give me what you got.
It's gonna take me a minute. I'm gonna find it. But here's here's the deal. What I did find is that it was a very, very fast run race this year. A Kenyan named John Courier won the men's side with a time of two hours four minutes and forty five seconds.
That's Insane. 26 miles in two hours four minutes and forty five seconds. Viral. It is the second fastest winning time in race history. His brother, Wesley Courier, won the race in 2012.
So their family has two Boston marathon winners. And what did I tell you they got as a prize? A hundred I thought it was a hundred thousand dollars. Dollars. I think so.
Yeah. So I think you might have even said a hundred and $50,000. It might be. It's kind of a big deal. On the, women's side, Sharon Lochetti of Kenya, so that is now two Kenyans that won this year.
She put in a crazy last final mile and beat the women's defending champion, Helen O'Biri, at a time of two hours seventeen minutes twenty two seconds. Out. Shattered the course record by more than two minutes on the women's side. Oh my gosh. That's incredible.
You're insane. American, Susanna Scarone won the women's wheelchair division. And positive. It looks like Des Linden, who is her final professional marathon, former champ, She finished seventeenth at the age of 41. Hey.
So that's kinda amazing. Year olds racing. Yeah. I like that. So, yeah, kinda cool.
I was I was hoping that I would be able to, like, just check out the, the standings of what happened, but I'm I'm having a hard time. 20 this year. So, anyway, pretty cool. Job to have those runners. Way to go.
And I I really was and still am gonna try to find more information about our About Ralph. Buddy Ralph, because I wanna know if he, if he finished and how he did and all that stuff. So I'll I'll I'll see if I can find it and get an update. But, anyway, that's what happened at the Boston Marathon. So congrats to all those runners.
Athletes. Okay. Really briefly here. Ralph Carmona. He was running in the '70 to 74, division, which is correct.
He's from Maine. This is our guy. Okay. There's only one of them in the results. Okay.
So this is our dude. He placed in the overall race 13,301. In his group, 87. Hey. Not bad.
Not bad at all. Yeah. Not bad. And the most important thing is that you competed and you finished. That's right.
And his total running time, four hours fourteen minutes and forty two seconds. That's not that is still pretty amazing. Yeah. That's nonstop running for four hours fourteen minutes and forty two seconds. That's incredible.
It's better than I could do, and I'm half his age. Yeah. He did, he did that. So Good job, Ralph. Ralphie.
Yeah. Anyway, 74 years old. Way to go. Congrats, buddy. And that's the update on Ralph.
Would you rather this or that? It's gonna be a weird one today? They're always weird. Yeah. They've been getting real weird lately.
But go on. Let's hear it. Would you rather need to be held and burped to, like, a baby after every meal Not. That's weird. Alright.
Or have to clean up after every meal no matter where you are. Burped? And I don't have time to be held and burped. I just don't clean up after every meal? Yeah.
I wanna be held and burped like a baby. I bet it would be nice. And listen. If I'm eating a meal with you, it's gonna have to be you that burps me. Nope.
But if you're not around, it's gonna have to be somebody that I'm eating lunch with or dinner with. Or Every meal. Yeah. I'm not dealing with that, dude. I'm not gonna or I get all colicky.
No. Thank you. No one would ever eat with me if I had to be held and burped. Strapped. Plus Strapped.
I mean, there's a good chance I'm gonna do that spit up thing, and I don't need that. No one needs that. So I'm not gonna be the held and burped guy. I'll just clean up, I guess. I'm not cleaning up, so I'm gonna be burped.
And like I said, it's gonna be you that's does No. It's not. Yeah. It is. Veto.
Sorry. That's your that's your job. No. You're just gonna sit there and be all colicky and cry about it. Nope.
It's what you signed up for, champ. No. It is not, chief. I didn't sign up to hold and burp you. Yeah.
You did. Mm-mm. It just wasn't in my vows. Yeah. Should've been, though.
No. Rewriting my vows. No. Let's not. No.
You honored to burp me after every meal. No. I did not. You pledged. No.
I did not. No. Still taking that one. No. This has been Would You Rather, This or That.
Hello. Hello. The rules are changing, apparently. I saw a thing online today that said that the Oscars are now going to, require everyone who is on the judging panel to watch all of the films in the category before they can judge those categories to which I said, this isn't already happening. Right.
Right. You don't have to actually consume the media you're judging. That you're judging and ranking. And then I thought, this makes a whole lot of sense as to why everyone goes, why is this movie winning? Yeah.
Exactly. Who is on eve in charge of that? Who is on that Oscar panel that chooses what wins and what doesn't? I'm sure it's nameless people, but how do they get chosen? Oh, I don't think it's nameless people.
You don't? You think it's actual people that The Academy Awards are the Oscars voted on by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Membership in the academy is open to film artists working in the production and theatrically released motion pictures. Each category has a specific voting branch with some categories open to all members. Blah blah blah.
Most categories are voted on by eligible voting members of the corresponding branch, which are fellow actors and filmmakers that vote. Hey. How about you watch what you're judging? What I'm saying. All of them.
But I can't be forced to watch that. No. That's obnoxious. It explains a whole lot. Right?
But, also, I would wanna recount on if I was up for best something in the Oscars and I'd lost, I would say, hey. I demand a recount because who am I to say that you watched my movie or not? Yeah. Take that Oscar back from the woman who won and watch all of them again and then make a decision. Oscar voters voters will no longer be able to skip watching some of the nominated films.
The Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences yesterday announced that members will, from now on, be required to watch all nominating films in each category in order to be eligible to vote in the final round of Oscar voting. So you have to have watched the movies in order to vote on the movies. I'm gonna say that That's crazy that they haven't been doing that. It's crazy that they weren't doing that. Yeah.
Up until now, Oscar voters had only been encouraged to watch the nominees and vote in the categories they felt qualified in. Crazy. I wanna be on the Oscar panel. I'll watch all of the movies. I'll take diligent notes.
I'll make an informed decision. I'll do it. I mean, this this rule should have been in place from the very beginning. You think? Right?
Like, that's crazy. However That's crazy. How are they going to enforce that? Is there an exam you have to take? No.
They should all they should line them all up in theater and say, hey. We're watching this movie. We're gonna take a break. We'll watch this second movie. In attendance, you cannot do it.
You're disqualified from the board, from the panel. Yeah. Interesting. You give them notes, a little notebook so that they can take notes and say, I like the performance because of this. I like the Sure.
Sure. Sure. Because of this. I like the costumes because of this. Get out of here.
I'll do this job. So somebody said that, this explains a whole lot, and then somebody else is saying that probably not as it probably doesn't explain as much as you'd think. The categories that this will affect the most are going to be short films, foreign films, and the technical categories. For the most part, academy members were watching the films in the big categories. But For the most part?
For the most part. Yeah. Nothing. For the most part. I don't care.
You still have to watch the short films. You still have to watch the foreign films. You still have to watch the I know. If if you are going to be judging those categories, you should have to consume the material you're judging. Cake eating competition and being like, I like the lemon one Yeah.
Without even trying You didn't even try any of these cakes. How can you judge? Get out of here. Now we're all mad at you, Oscar panel people. Yeah.
It's weird that that wasn't a requirement already. But, anyway, it is now. Good to know. That's gonna do it for our show. Hope you have a great rest of your, Tuesday.
We'll be back tomorrow morning. Make sure you follow us on socials, Classy ninety seven k l c e everywhere. We're on TikTok. We've got a YouTube channel. We're on Facebook, Instagram, blue sky everywhere.
You're gonna get so sick of us. We're everywhere. I know. Yeah. Yeah.
You probably already are. No. With that, I'm sorry. No. Just follow us.
We'll give you lots of fun on the Internet. And then you can also, listen to the show again on demand. If you missed any part of it, you wanna revisit part you wanna share parts with your friends and family, that's fine too. Download the podcast. It's available everywhere podcasts are available.
Just search wake up classy 97. If you know my sister, share it with my sister because I made she doesn't listen. Spot on impression of her today. Yeah. Yeah.
You did. It was very good. It was not even close, but it's in the show. It is. There you go.
Have a great day. We'll talk to you tomorrow. Goodbye. Thanks for listening to wake up classy 97, the podcast. If you enjoy the show, please share, subscribe, and rate the podcast.
Wake up classy 97 is hosted by Josh and Chantel Tielor and is a production of Riverbend Media Group. For more information or to contact the show, visit riverbendmediagroup.com.