Episode title: Wake Up Classy 97 with Josh and Chantel - Friday, April 25th, 2025
Episode summary introduction:
Ahoy hoy it’s telephone day, there’s a new color that you have to have laser vision to see, Jeff Kinney shares some good news, how to not be a fake person, where did Ashton Jeanty end up in the first round of the NFL Draft, how about we don’t clean the garage & shed & storage unit, Josh is a Chantel brain interpreter, grilling happened last night and now there’s an expectation, bird songs ease your anxiety, how to nap at work, looking back at a daredevil called the Human Fly, Idaho Gives kicks off on Monday, and get ready for a baby rave!
Timestamps:
(0:00) - Intro
(3:01) - Telephone day
(7:44) - Olo is a brand new color
(13:10) - Good News to Get You Going
(16:14) - Don't be a fake person
(20:33) - Round 1 of the NFL Draft
(26:30) - Let's not organize the garage
(33:27) - Interpreting Chantel's brain
(36:46) - Josh grilled dinner
(41:48) - Bird songs reduce anxiety
(47:22) - Napping at work
(53:50) - Looking back at the Human Fly
(58:50) - Idaho Gives kicks off Monday
(1:02:02) - Would You Rather This or That
(1:05:49) - Baby Raves + outro
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Full show transcript:
Ahoy, hoy. Oh, hoy. Oh, hoy to you, sir. Landed. Oh, hoy there.
It's, AGB day. AGB? Alexander Graham. But I see what you did. Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. What's all that racket? Sorry. What are you doing?
Hi. Good morning. Good afternoon. Good evening. Good day.
It's Friday, April 25. There's a new color that you have to have laser vision to see. I don't want laser vision. Ola. O l a.
I'm pretty sure they call it O l a. I don't know why it's spelled o l o and and called O l a, but it, whatever. It doesn't matter. It's a new color, and you can't see it unless you have laser beams in your eyes. So don't do that.
Jeff Kinney shares some good news. Yeah. He made good news to get you going. Jeff Kinney is a good guy. Jeff Kinney is a good dude.
Yeah. So is Rowley. Rowley is a good dude too. Rowley and? Greg.
Greg Heffley and Steve Zahn who plays his dad in the in the movies. Hi. I like Steve. He's a good dude. He's a good dude.
Yeah. I like Steve Zahn. He is a good dude. Who plays the mom? She's good too.
She is good. And you and her dance the same. So you got that going for you. Here, we're gonna talk about how not to be a fake person. We're gonna find out where Ashton Jeanty ended up in the first round of the NFL draft.
And then, have you found it yet? I I thought we were giving up. Oh, I thought you were still looking, so I just kept moving on. Rachel Harris. There it is.
And I got an idea. What's the idea? How about we don't clean the garage, the shed, and the storage unit? But it needs to be done. But why?
Because it I'm tired of living in stuff. But why? Josh, don't be a five year old. Wow. Easy.
Easy. I apparently know how to interpret your brain. You do. You are my brain interpreter. But that also means I know how to push your buttons.
Yes. You do. Like, hey. Let's not do that project. I know, but I It's gonna be nice weather.
Why do you wanna do that? Because we don't I know. Grilling happened last night, and now there's an expectation. Yeah. What's that about?
I don't know. Cook at dinner every night. I don't Please and thanks. I don't wanna. Too bad.
You have to do it. Stop being a five year old. I don't wanna. Birdsong eases your anxiety. Yeah.
How to nap at work. Yeah. Also, a great way to ease your anxiety. That's true. Nap at work.
Looking back at a daredevil called the human fly. His name should be the human beetle, though. He doesn't do any flying. Idaho Gives kicks off on Monday, and get ready for a baby rave. It's a good one.
That was a good one. I know. Yeah. Hey. We're Josh and Chantel.
This is wake up classy 97, the podcast. It's episode 220. Enjoy the show. Hi there. Hi.
Sorry about the squeaking. Wow. That is a squeeze. I'm sorry. It's not my fault.
I mean, it's just moving around that microphone. Mine doesn't squeak. I know. I don't know why mine does. I don't know either, but it squeaks.
I'm not gonna squeak it again. Hi. Hi. Friday. Who, Hoorah.
Who's the yeah. Who was the, the guy that invented the telephone? Alexander Graham Bell. That's right. And and maybe not necessarily invented the telephone.
There's a little bit of controversy around that. What? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah. We know the story, actually. Yeah. There's a little bit of controversy around that. He certainly did make the first successful phone call on this day in 1867.
So it is, telephone day, Alexander Graham Bell day. You you imagine sitting next to Alexander Graham Bell with the phone you have today. Okay. And saying And and just showing him real quick. Look what you look what you made possible.
But there is some controversy because some might say that he stole the idea. That is correct. There is, there is, like, a an exact replica of the first phone, that was created by another person. Do you know that person's name? No.
But in another country as well, not even in America, if I remember correctly. And, yeah, it's been a long time since I've since I heard that story, but a little bit of controversy around that. Oh, Alexander. I'm not trying to take anything away from Alexander. I don't have a a dog in that fight or whatever they say.
AGB. That's what they call him. Hoodoo. People that are cool. No one calls him AGB.
AGB. Thanks for making that phone. How did he answer the or the phone the first time? Ahoy hoy. Ahoy hoy.
Now did he answer the phone that way, or did he, like, no one knew what to say? I don't think anybody knew what to say. Someone picked up the receiver, and then he was the first one to say something. It was probably one of those, like, yeah. I don't know what to say.
I'm gonna say this thing, and I'm also gonna say this thing, and it's a mishap a mashup of words. You know how that happens in your brain? Right. Where you wanna say, great job, and you wanna say, way to go, and you end up saying, great to go. Yeah.
Exactly. You got it. I know how that happens in your brain because I hear it often. You are a crisscrossed phone wire wire. I am.
Mhmm. You're right. Yeah. It's how my brain operates. Like a crisscrossed phone wire.
Oh, boy. Funny. Let's see. What else is going on today? You mentioned it is Friday.
That is a well known That is a fact. Yeah. And and, couldn't have come sooner. No. No.
I just had a website that, our threads page. Okay. It's normally in dark mode, and it just decided that, right now, it would go into not dark mode, and it's making me cranky. Why is it gotta look like that? I don't I don't know.
I don't like it. Appearance. Dark mode. Thank you very much. I fixed it.
I'm glad you did that while we all Because I'm clicking around. I was trying to see what else was going on. I was looking at our feeds. And, and, anyway, it was blinding me, and I didn't care for that in this early hour. The sun is coming up earlier and earlier.
I don't know if you've noticed. I have. Also, how did the new wake up call go this morning? You know, the new morning routine wasn't so bad. You changed the music that we wake up to.
I changed the voice of my assistant. I changed because she sounded more pleasant. And then I changed the, the sounds. Yeah. We had little birds chirping and stuff in there.
It was not bad. Yeah. It was terrible, but I don't know if it necessarily helped in getting me out of bed. No. It did not help, like, I should get going.
It certainly kept me, in bed. Correct. Yeah. It was comforting. So I don't know if it's gonna assist in that way.
Maybe I should change the music to something awful. No. Just I know. Let's not. Okay.
Okay. Well, hey. We're here. Good morning. Happy Friday.
Scientists have discovered a new color. Have you heard that? I did hear about this the other day. Yes. I was gonna talk about this.
I've I totally forgot. Yeah. I did hear about this. It's got a weird name, though. Olo.
Olo? O l o. Or is it or do they pronounce it Ola? I can't remember. It's o l o.
I know it is, but I can't remember how they pronounce it because it's it's like a cyan, cayenne thing. Like a turquoise y. Yeah. Yeah. Well, the color itself, you can't even see with your regular eyes.
Right. It's a color outside of what humans can usually see. And to see it, you have to have a laser shot directly into your eyeball. Was it a laser or was it electrodes? I can't remember remember.
This one says a laser. Yeah. Yeah. Anyway, it they you have to modify your eyeball in order to see the color Yes. Which I think is, is interesting, but we shouldn't be doing this.
I know. Let's not shoot lasers into our eyeballs. Lasers? What? Let's not shoot lasers into our eyeballs.
Is that the way I said that? Well, I mean, not as not as, like, over the top, but a little bit little bit of emphasis on lasers. But you're right. We shouldn't shoot lasers in our eyeballs to see new colors. That's it.
I like I know if I, like, squint really hard, I can see new colors. Can you? You're not squinting hard. Put your eyebrows down. There you go.
Squeeze, and you'll see new colors. You went to squint, and you eyebrows up. That's a weird way to squint. I didn't know. I whatever.
Anyway, yeah. I did hear about that. They they who discovered it? Was it somewhere in Asia? I think they discovered it.
And I think that's why it's pronounced weird. What It was a team at Berkeley. Oh, okay. It's what this article says. They might be stealing it from the people in Asia.
I don't remember where it was. Wanna see, like, a iteration of it or what it's supposed to look like? Because, obviously, you can't just see it. Right. You can look up o l o, new color.
Yeah. But you're still not gonna be able to see the color. You're gonna see a close representation, perhaps. Right. Because even with the lasers in your eyes, there were still only a portion of of the people that they tested that could even see it.
Oh, really? Yeah. So not even everybody has the capability of seeing it with lasers shot into their eyes. But there is indeed a new color that we discovered. Now here's the deal.
What? The the human eye can only see a certain spectrum of color as it is. It has limitations. K. Where, like, fish and birds and dogs and other animals exist sometimes within or beyond that scale.
And so, there are already animals, that we know of that can see more colors than the human eye can. So birds have already been seeing the color olo. Perhaps. I've never had bird eyes, so I can't tell you. I've never had bird eyes either.
And is it a brain thing? Is it I don't know. But, you know, there's something that a bird can see when they're that high up looking down at a field and they see a mouse, or they're that high up and they look at the water and see a fish. Right. Right?
There's something well beyond what the human eye can see. Because look, I've been fishing for a while. And without polarized glasses, it's hard to see in the water. Sorry about that, bud. Don't be sorry.
I'm just saying the birds don't have they're not flying around polarized glasses. No. They're not. They got that color spectrum Mhmm. Eyeball.
That's what I'm that's what I'm trying to say. Saying. Yeah. Hey. Good job, scientists.
Well, good. Figuring out a new color. I wish I could see it without having laser I also wanna know, yeah, how that process went down where they're like, hey. Let's try this out. Let me shoot this laser in your eye.
And some some guinea pig goes, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I'll be the Well, it's a paid research project, I'm sure. So they were like, yeah.
They were like, yeah. Pay me in case I go blind at this you know, it's a college research project. So That's right. They did it for free, probably. No way.
You don't think so? No. You get paid for research. Not always. Who well, who is the kid walking around campus?
They were like, that's our guy. Don't be that guy in life that's like, you know, we need to test this laser thing. Let's go get Rick. He's the guy. Come on, Rick.
Rick, we need you. Yeah. What am I doing today? We're gonna shoot lasers in your eyes. Okay.
Alright. Cool. You're gonna pay me? Yeah. Here's pizza.
Exactly. That's how they get paid. Anyway, cool new color called OLO. OLO or OLO whatever, but it's OLO. OLO.
Yeah. Go go take a look. Go check it out. Don't shoot lasers in your eyes. Yes.
Good warning. Thanks. It's time for some good news to get you going. And the name that runs around our house or at least did for a lot of years is Jeff Kinney. Oh, he wrote, Diary of a Wimpy Kid.
That is correct. He is the author of Diary of a Wimpy Kid, the book series for kids. And I would say not just kids. They're good books. Really good books.
Yeah. Do you know how many books, in the Diary of a Wimpy Kid series there are? Let's see. Well, we own maybe seven or eight of them, but there were some that happened after our kids lost interest. So I would say 12.
I will tell you that the new one will be released in October. It is called Party Pooper, and it is the twentieth installment. Really? Yeah. We don't have that collection.
Well, no. We don't. We have the first part of it. But we do have, like, first editions of those because we got them at book fairs and stuff. Is it the same characters in the books?
I couldn't tell you. I I don't know. I would assume as much. But And And are they staying the same age? I don't know.
I don't either. Okay. Anyway But to celebrate the upcoming milestone, Jeff joined forces with the charity called First Book, and they're donating 20,000 books each month to kids across the country Love it. In underserved communities. Yeah.
I think this is so great. Books. No kidding. Right? Jeff said he grew up in a house full of books and didn't realize how privileged he was at the time.
He wants the magic of books to reach as many children as possible. Of course, he does. It's what he does. He ex he explained a lot of kids have never owned a book of their own, and you can see it when a kid is given a book, that might not have a book in their house. And they can't believe that they get to keep the book and that it's their very own.
Sometimes, they'll sort of, reflexively hug it to their chest because they treasure it so much. Aw. I think that's so great. I do too. So, way to go, Jeff.
Donating 20,000 books each month to kids across America in underserved communities. That's, that's amazing. That's so awesome. Amazing. Yeah.
And it doesn't necessarily say it's just his books. It just Yeah. He's just in general getting books in the in the hands of kids, and I think that's great. Fantastic. And congratulations on the twentieth installment of Diary of a Wimpy Kid.
That's huge. We gotta Huge. Huge. Huge. Figure out what's going on with Rowley.
I know. And what's that, a kid's name? The main character. The wimpy kid? Yeah.
I can't think of his name. Yeah. What is it? I don't know. His brother is, in that band.
Load Loaded Diaper? Yeah. That's them. What is the kid's name? I don't remember.
I just know Rowley. His best friend Rowley. Greg Heffley. That's his name. Someone's yelling at the radio right now going, it's Greg Heffley.
Yeah. Of course it is. Those are great books. Yeah. Anyway, that's, good news to get you going.
I was just reading an article that said that there's 14% of people who will change the way they speak or act based upon who they're with. That's interesting. I think that I think there's some truth to that. You said how what percent? 14.
I feel like the other, 86% lied. I think so too. I think everybody is sort of put millions and into a conversation or a or a group setting or whatever. Yeah. You adapt on who you're with.
Absolutely. Yeah. I think that too. For sure. Doesn't mean a lot of people are like, this is fake.
That means you're a fake person. No. I don't think that's true at all. I think there's just different versions of yourself based on who you're with. When I'm with my best friend, it's nuts.
It's crazy. We giggle and we laugh and we do weird things. When I'm at work, totally different person. Right. When I'm with you You never laugh and giggle and do something.
I just mean, the craziest thing. I understand. I I understand. I've been around you too. I get it.
I I think the I think even just something as basic as the way you behave at home is different than the way you behave in public, is different than the way you behave in a somber, quiet, reverent setting versus Yeah. A party or a concert. You're constantly changing your behavior to adapt to the setting. I don't think people you're around and the situation you're in. And I I think a % of people and maybe that's maybe there are some people that are just the same no matter what.
And those there's there's probably a a handful of people that are just This is what you get. 100% that. Authentic people. Certainly not 86% of people. I agree with you.
I agree with you. Read the read the headline again. 14% of people change the way they speak or act based on who they're with. Yeah. Yeah.
I'm telling you, it's way more than 14%. I agree with you. Say 14% or fewer don't. Because here's the thing. When I'm with people that I feel safe with, that I feel comfortable with Yeah.
You're gonna get, like, the full, full, full version of me. Yeah. But if I'm with somebody who I'm like, I don't necessarily know you, but I maybe I know you, but you're not gonna get the full version of me because you don't know me very well. So I don't feel safe. I don't feel comfortable with you.
I see. So you don't get What kind of walls are you building? Oh, I build lots. Oh, you know? It's just some.
No. I think that, I think that is is backwards at best and definitely not 14% of people. And I also don't think that makes you a fake person. I would agree. It does not make you a fake person.
It it certainly makes you, come across as maybe wishy washy. If someone sees you in one setting and then sees you in another setting What was that? I have no idea. Things are falling from the sky. What was that?
I have no idea. Now I've gotta go investigate. Something fell. Interesting. Weird.
I'm sorry. Do you remember what you were saying? I was just saying that if you if you knew someone who was, one way and that's the only way you knew them, and then you happen to, run into them in another situation or you, were with them and you saw them acting in a different way, you might be like, who's this person? Yeah. Whether that's more personality or or whatever or the other way where it was, like, incredibly less, and you're like, why are you pulling yourself in so much?
It it probably would be interesting to see. But, again, not a fake person. Just a different person. Yeah. Just a different presentation of yourself.
Yeah. I agree. It's not a different person. Anyway, that study is wrong, and I gotta go figure out what's falling from the sun. We gotta figure out what's falling.
Yeah. It is interesting. I just disagree with the results. That's all. I'll tell them that you said that.
Good. Thank you. We watched that NFL draft last night. Well, round one of the NFL draft. Now there are, like, seven rounds or something.
I listen. I was trying to be a supportive mom. Okay. Hang out with my kid. He was into it.
Right. I asked he also was not feeling well yesterday, so I get home from work and I said, hey, buddy. How are you feeling? And he said, nervous. Yeah.
Yeah. I wasn't necessarily asking about how you felt about the draft. I was asking how you felt about your health. Right. But he had here's what's so funny about our son.
He when he's passionate about something, he is all in. So he's all in on football. This is correct. He had a whole list of his predictions. Yeah.
That's his his mock drafts. He's done multiple, and then he put together his final last night right before the draft. He's written it all out. Yep. And he was pretty close on what he thought might happen and what actually happened.
There was a There were a few surprises. There was a minute in there where we thought his least favorite team is the Browns. Right. He's He is a he is a Cincinnati Bengals fan. And when the Browns even get mentioned, he's like, And, for half a minute, there was some trading happening and some different things were going on.
And he honestly thought Ashton Jeanty was gonna be a Brown, and he was having to come apart. Yeah. He was. He was not okay with that potentially happening. He he couldn't eat dinner.
He wandered around a lot. He had a lot to say about the potential of Jeanty becoming a Cleveland Brown, which did not happen. They did not, select Ashton Jeanty. Remember where Jante even went? You can't?
Yeah. He's a Raider. Oh, yeah. He's in Las Vegas. That's right.
I do now. Which is which is awesome. Close enough that we could easily go watch Ashton play, which I think would be a lot of fun. Have you seen that stadium they have in Vegas? Mm-mm.
Really, really cool stadium. But if you get the cheap seats, you are so high up in the nosebleeds. Well, guess what? That's where we're gonna be. We gotta not we gotta not be up that high.
But I can't afford not cheap seats. We gotta not be up that high. We work in radio. We we'll do something to to not be that high. I kinda liked watching parts.
Of it was long. The draft was long. Round one is long because round one has a lot of, pomp and circumstance to it. Yeah. The the, subsequent rounds that are happening today and tomorrow are much faster.
I mean, that thing started at, what, six, five? Six. Five? Six. Six is when they started the first And it didn't end until about 09:00.
Mhmm. And then they had, like, a after show wrap up. Right. Or as I said, that's just like when you watch a reality show and then they have a reunion special. Yeah.
They're gonna talk about what just happened. But, no, we did not watch that because we had already watched the live thing. Right. It's kinda fun to watch that. There was a guy that got drafted.
They showed his family in Gooding, Idaho. That's right. That was exciting. And then, and then, one of the quarterbacks that got picked is from Kaysville, Utah, which is real close as well. So, yeah, there were several sort of regional and and even in state players that, that are now in the NFL.
There will be 257 new players that are selected through this draft process, which is pretty incredible. We saw 32 last night. Yep. The Vikings got somebody good. Yeah.
Yeah. I think you're feeling good about your team. I think my team's gonna be rocking it this season. K. Cam Ward was expected to be the first chosen.
He was, and he will go to the Tennessee titans where he is, he's a quarterback. So that was that was totally expected. While he was in college, he wore jersey number one. Uh-huh. But that number, was retired.
It was Warren Moon, hall of famer, and they retired that number, back when they were, I think the Oilers. I don't think they were the Titans at the time. But, anyway, so he's gonna have to think about what number he wants on his on his jersey. Sixth pick for Ashton Jeanty. It is the highest pick for any Boise State football player in the history of That's great.
Of, of the draft ever. So that's really cool. And did you see his studded Crocs, his diamond studded Crocs? They were very high fashion. A lot of people talking about that, that he had those sparkly diamond shoes on.
What'd you just remember? Remembered that, Christian Wilkins is on the Raiders. I'm online Christian Wilkins. Yeah. Max Crosby is also on the Raiders.
Max Crosby. Have you seen that guy play? He's a lunatic. And there was some drama involving Chidor Sanders. We expected there to be some drama because he's been a controversial player.
He did not get picked in the first round, which is very interesting. Deion Sanders' kid. And so he, is a quarterback position. There were only a couple of quarterbacks taken. You had Cam Ward, and then you had, the guy from Kaysville, Jackson Dart.
Those are the only two quarterbacks that were picked in the first round. Yeah. Beck said it was a bad draft season for quarterback. Year. It is not a big quarterback year at all.
So, anyway, that's what happened in, the first day. Yeah. I'm gonna be watching more of that draft. No? No.
Last night was the only time I'll be watching. So that's the only report you'll get from me on the draft. Well, thanks for it. You just called me unhinged. No.
Yes. You did. Call you unhinged. What I said was if I let you go, unhinged on a project, that it would be all chaos. That's what I said.
All chaos. Why would it be all chaos? Know. You're talking about, the fact that we didn't have, like, a lot planned going on, right at the moment, like, this this today. Like, after work today.
And you're like, I know what I wanna do. I wanna get in there and clean that garage out. And I went, bleh. And I said, you can't just clean the garage out. You gotta clean the shed first.
And then you said, well, then let's get in and clean that shed out. And I went, bleh. And you're like, you don't have to be involved. You can I'll just do it. And then that made my anxiety boil over.
Why? Because it isn't like it needs to be stripped out and and redone. Stuff is organized and put away. I agree with that. Just stuff that has to come out.
It needs to be swept. And then the things that need to go back in already have a home. They just need to be put away. And I'm not 100% confident that you know where everything's home is. That's why my anxiety went, ah, and I said, you can't be unhinged on that project.
I didn't say, you're unhinged. Okay. I agree with you that I don't think that I know where everything lives, but I also feel like maybe This feels like a like a marriage counseling session. I feel like My feelings are Yeah. Alright.
That maybe we have too much stuff, and we can get rid of some of them. And we do have, that yard sale coming up. Yeah. I know. I know you wanna do that yard sale.
I'm just of this mind where I just wanna give it all away. I understand. But there's a potential we've had this conversation. There's a potential to make money, and there's good stuff. We don't just necessarily need to throw away good stuff.
You know? Okay. I spent good hard earned money on stuff. I'd like to recoup some of that cost. Offended that you think that I'm just gonna go in there and just start, like, throwing things around and being like, you're nodding.
Like, I've done this before. When have I done this before? Every time there's a large scale cleaning project. And I'll go, that doesn't go there. Like, the shelf, that is in the shed or not the shed, in the garage Mhmm.
Left of the garage fridge, the one that has all, like, the dishes and stuff, that thing needs some organization. Yeah. I know. The other one, the metal one, was organized, had individual shelves with things that were designated for those shelves. It's chaos.
The one by the door? Yes. That It's absolute chaos, and stuff just gets jammed into the shelves. Well Well, nothing. I had it organized and cleaned up and designated things.
The problem is I didn't label it, so no one knows the system but me. Exactly. And so then it's like, I'll just I'll just stick this here. Or I'll say, like, this is designated for bike stuff, and it's got all the, like, different rack mounts and different things for the for the bikes. Right?
And then I'll walk by, five minutes later as things are getting moved, and I'm hauling stuff in and out of the shed. And that shelf has been disassembled, and now it's, got Tupperware or something on it. And I go, what is happening right now? My point is it's not what it was designated for. I'd already organized it.
That's what I'm trying to say. Very clear in your communication, though. It looked like it was cleaned up and nice. You should've left it alone is what I'm saying. I'm saying that your My family.
Your organization and my organization are not necessarily the same thing. No. They are not. So maybe we just need more communication when it comes to Nah. Let's just, like, try to tiptoe around each other and make it look the way we each want.
That's that's being way more healthy and effective. So when you said, hey. Let's, let's tackle that garage. I immediately went, bleh. I don't know why you think that we need to tackle the shed before we can tackle the garage.
Where's the stuff in the garage gonna go? Away out. I wanna get rid of everything else. I know you do, but it doesn't go away out. It doesn't go away.
There might be a few things that go to the shed, but I think for the most part, the things that are in there live in the garage. They just need to be put away properly. They're not put away because in the winter No. I get it. Just throw things in there because it's too cold to be bothered to put them away correctly.
But I think most of the stuff in there already lives in the garage. Have you tried to get in the shed? No. You can't. I'm not talking about this shed.
Understand. But you can't put away the things from the garage in the shed without doing the shed first. I'm saying And then and then once the shed has room, you can take the things that don't belong in the garage to the shed, and then they will not be in the way of the things that stay in the garage. There are also big furniture pieces in there. There's stuff in the garage that is, like, either being saved or needs to be stored, but the storage unit's full of stuff that needs to get unloaded before that stuff can go into it.
Wow. See? It's a whole thing. You got two of them. Why when you said, hey.
We should tackle that garage on a Friday afternoon after working all week. You're like, yeah. You know what'd be fun? That's because right now I'm, like, motivated. I'm, like, thinking about it.
Get over it. Listen. I'll go home, and then I'll Get over it. Look at it, and I'll be like, I'm gonna tackle that garage. No.
I'm gonna open the door, and then I'm gonna be like, no. Maybe tomorrow. No. Nah. It's not worth it.
I kind of I have this like, I'm in this mode where I'm like, burn it all down. Let's start fresh. I don't like any of it. Let's get rid of all of it. Start brand new.
Something's wrong with you. I know. I just get in those modes sometimes where it just why I can't leave you unhinged on a project. Of all the stuff. Because then all of a sudden, all my stuff's gone.
You can't be left alone with this project. Nothing will end up where it's supposed to be. Then I'm gonna have to ask you a hundred times where everything is. I'm gonna go, where is all my stuff? And you're like, I haven't seen that in a long time because it ended up in a bin in the back of your trunk for six months and then finally got donated somewhere.
I don't wanna do that project. When's the next time you're going on a campout? Yeah. Exactly. Scouts?
None of your I'm not putting anything on the calendar. Never. Never. That's win. One of the things that I appreciate appreciate about you, Josh, is that I will tell you a story, something that's troubling me, and you'll listen.
And now we're so far in our relationship now that sometimes you'll say, do you want me to try and help and fix this, or do you want me to just listen? Mhmm. Mhmm. We we that's because of the conversation. Because you told me straight up, hey.
Sometimes I don't need Sometimes I don't need you to fix the thing. I just need to vent. K? K. So then I will tell you that same story over and over and over sometimes because sometimes I find new angles of looking at things, and my brain needs to reprocess the whole thing again.
And so then I'll say the same thing over and over again. Never happen. No. I'm just telling you, it does happen, and, I appreciate that you at least pretend that you're listening. What what are you getting at?
What do you mean? Pretend is better than others, but the point of the matter is I appreciate that you pretend to listen. Okay. Because sometimes I'll just randomly be in my head, and then I'll just start out by saying, and then Yeah. I never can keep up with those ones because or we'll have talked about something, and you'll have jumped into a new thing in your head.
And then you'll say something that sort of sounds like it fits with what we were already talking about but makes no sense, and I'll go, what are you talking about? And then you you you say, oh, this other thing. And I go, that doesn't even matter. Like, what what are you what's going on? I don't I'm lost.
And that happens, occasionally, we'll say. Not often No. But occasionally enough. After twenty years, twenty plus years, you've done a really good job at translating my brain. So good job.
Good on you. What? Sometimes you can get in there and you're like, yeah. I get I get what you're trying to say. Here's what you're trying to say.
Yeah. And I go, yeah. That is exactly what I'm trying to say. Thanks for translating. Mhmm.
And thanks for pretending to listen. What's that? It's the easiest joke they ever made. They were lining up all the jokes, and they were like, alright. This one's pretty simple.
When somebody says, thanks for listening, all you have to do is say, What? What was that? To say? I missed that. Say it again?
Hilarious. You're right. That's hilarious. It's simple yet effective. All I'm trying to say, Joshua Yeah.
Is, thanks for listening when I reprocess and reprocess and process again my brain. See. See? So easy. See.
See? It's still funny. See how funny I am? I'm having a good time. I'm I'm we're doing good.
You're welcome. You're welcome. You did some grilling last night. Yeah. You said, at some point, I heard you say, yeah.
I could get real used to coming home to kitchen happenings, food being made I've watched the dog and TV. There was music going. Dinner was being made that smelled so awesome. I was like, I love this. I made, I did grill.
I made, little steak bites, some veggies, and smashed potatoes on the on the Blackstone, which was Awesome. It was pretty good. It was tasty. Then you made dessert. That's right.
I made, some, glazed peaches, some brown sugar glazed peaches, with a homemade, what do you call that? Crumble, I guess? Yeah. It's like a oat crumble that you would put on a pie or whatever. Mhmm.
I just made it separately and then crumbled that over the top of the peaches with some vanilla ice cream. Yeah. It was nice. It was very nice. It was very good.
And I have a a whole second can of peaches, so I can make more of that. Yes. I know. I know. I thought ahead.
My last hurrah. Yeah. How did that go? That little bit of scoop of ice cream with some fruit in it. It's no big deal.
It's all the melted brown sugar. Yeah. Yeah. Sugar and butter. Yeah.
I was going to say that I read something recently. There was a a man who was grilling, a husband who was grilling, and the wife said, I love when he grills. And then two minutes later, he's like, hey. Can I get a hot pad? Yeah.
Two seconds later I yelled into through the through the dining room window, hey, Chantel. I need a hot pad. I need a hot pad. Laughed, and I thought, what's she watching on her phone? And then you came around the corner still giggling.
And I went, what? And that's when you told me, yeah. I just run your errands while you're grilling. Yeah. That's fine.
I need a plate. It's a it's a team sport. Grilling's a team sport. Hey. Can I get the salt and pepper?
But here's why. I don't have all of those things in an outdoor kitchen. I get it. I completely get it. So if I built out an outdoor kitchen, I would have all those things, but I don't.
I was thinking I do need to get salt and pepper shakers out there. What do you need to build an outdoor kitchen? A lumber. And? Containers.
Containers for what? For all the things. Oh. Because I don't want, like, bugs and dirt and stuff getting on all that stuff out there. So it it need it wouldn't be in, like, cupboards.
No. Right. Be in, like, totes. Well, we were looking one day. They have those little, I almost said greenhouse.
It's like a canopy thing. Yeah. Like a it's like a grilling canopy. Yeah. I would like to have a cover over my grill.
I think that'd be helpful, but I would just have to build it. You'd have to build the Yeah. So I would cover? Yeah. I would just basically, I would add so we've got one post to work with.
Uh-huh. So I would add another post on the left, a little crossbar, couple more posts out by the end, and then I do a little slant roof off the top so that if it was raining, I had some more to stand on. Yeah. That'd be cool. Yeah.
Let's do that. Sure. You would still need stuff. Oh, yeah. No.
That's just the cover. That doesn't that's not the kitchen. The kitchen should have a countertop and bins and things where I can store things and mixing bowls. Favorite part is that we don't have a door that leads to our outside. You have to go through the garage to get to our outside.
We do not have, like, a sliding back door like I've wanted since we bought the house. I know. I don't know why we don't have that yet. Years ago. Because stuff keeps coming up that we spend our money on more.
But we do have a window that we open, and that's where It's a pass through. Yeah. That's where you you'll stick things on the window sill, and I'll put them away or I'll put things on the sill. Sport. Team sport.
Go, hey. I need a plate to grab these burgers. Can you hand me a plate? And you go, yep. Through the window.
I was trying to I had, like, five pages left of my book, and I was trying to finish it. And I every time I sat down to read, hey, Chantel. Can I get the salt and pepper? Needed, like, three things. That's such a lot.
And I came in and got the salt and pepper myself. Okay. Well, you asked for something. A plate and a hot pad. And a mixing bowl.
And, hey, can you rinse this bowl out and give it back to me? Yeah. Oh, and, hey That's three or four things. No. You're fine.
No. I was fine. I'm I'm not complaining because, again, you cooked a delicious dinner. I'll never ever ever complain about that. I just also really wanted to finish my book.
I Did you finish it? Three pages left. I did. Well, there you go. See?
All done. Way to go. Good job. Good job to you. Are you gonna make dinner again tonight?
I don't know. We'll see. Okay. I didn't fact check this. Oh, thank you for the caveat before we start.
Alright. Go ahead. Saw it, and I thought it sounded nice. And, I wanted to share it. So this thing that I read says that your nervous system is naturally wired to relax when it hears birdsong.
Interesting. Birds only sing when they feel safe, so their songs signal to your brain that there's no danger. So if you're feeling anxious, try opening a window or playing birdsong from a device to help soothe your nervousness. I like it. I really do.
I I like hearing the birds sing. It definitely puts me at ease and makes me feel happy every day. I'm I'm totally into that. I like it too. You had some birdsong this morning.
Mhmm. Do you still listen to bird note in the morning? I don't. I haven't listened to well, it it it airs at, like, 05:50 or something like that, and I haven't, flipped the dial, or been around the radio at the same time. But I really enjoyed, I really enjoyed.
And I could listen to it online as well. But, yeah, you learn a lot about birds with that, that, like, one minute program. It's a good one. Yeah. It's called bird note.
Yeah. It's like a public radio thing. But it's really, they have an Instagram where you can actually, like, learn about the thing they talked about that day as well. Yeah. Yeah.
That's nice. Yes. I okay. So I just fact checked this, and it does say that research indicates that listening to birdsong can alleviate anxiety, paranoia, and even improve your mental well-being. Well, what do you know about that?
It also is a natural way to promote relaxation and reduce feelings of stress. I should just have birdsong on all day long. Yes. Sure. I'd be so relaxed and stress free, wouldn't I?
Uh-uh. Yes. Couldn't I? Yeah. If you're just listening to birds all day.
That's exactly what you would be. I love it. I wanna go listen to, birdsong right now. You should. I can I can help you figure that out?
How? I don't know. Like, let's leave work. Go listen to some birds. That's how?
Just go in the woods or in a park or something? Go out into nature? My favorite part is that now it's getting warmer and lighter earlier and earlier when we walk out to our car in the morning, and you could see, like, small hints of sunlight. Right. And then you hear the birds, you're like, ah, it's gonna be a good day.
Like, even just hearing the birds in the morning, I go, it's gonna be good day. Birds are singing. And if they're happy got this. Then everything's gotta be happy. Well, and they only sing when they're feeling safe.
Right. They're cool like that. They are cool like that. Birds are the best. And they sing, to alert other birds.
They sing to, say goodnight like the robin. The song that the that the robin sings at, sunset Uh-huh. Is for no reason. Like, it there's their content. It's just a, like, a good night song Oh.
Which is really cool. Yeah. Yeah. Like, they're they're they're not telling people where food is. They're just making noise because it's sunset.
Because it's pretty. And then why not? And they like to sing. Yep. So they're like, yeah.
I like this. That's exactly right. I was outside the other night. It was dusk. Uh-huh.
And I went outside for just a brief minute, but there was a bird. I was kinda near the bird feeder that we have out there. Yeah. And there was a bird that was I think it was yelling at me a little bit. I didn't realize it at the time, but I could hear it chirping.
And I was like, hey, buddy. And then it got louder and louder, and then he eventually flew away. And I was like, oh, he was probably yelling at me to move, and I didn't pick up the bird song that he was singing. Get out of here. You get You get I want some food.
Why were you in his zone? Was it the little, the little black headed chickadee that I chickadee? I like him. I do like him too. Yeah.
He's pretty cool. Of those that we have. We've got some chickadees and red winged blackbirds. That's correct. Robins always.
Right. Doves always. Yep. Magpies hang around. Magpies.
I don't know why you're so, cranky about the magpies. They're I'll tell you what. Like crows. They're very cool. Yeah.
Except they're loud, and I don't like I don't enjoy their song. Okay. The reason I don't like magpies is because where we lived once upon a time, they were always right outside the window. Screeching. Nice.
And they would wake me up every morning. And that's not a their song is not pleasant. Their song does not reduce stress. Sorry. They're they're around all the time.
They have a really cool, iridescent kind of feather. Okay. It looks like they're just black and white, but that black feather has, like, a blue tone to it, like a turquoise iridescent. It's really cool. I do think that they're cool.
I just wish that they would stay quiet. And the way they kinda fly around and swoop and dip and dive, it's they're really fun to watch, and they're wicked smart. Like a crow. Like a crow. I like crows.
I enjoy a crow. Come hang out at my house, crows. We have a few. Yeah. They're around.
Owl the other morning. That was cool. Yeah. Wait. Who?
Stop it. Who heard an owl? Go listen to some bird song. Okay. I need some.
Alright. After that? Yeah. Okay. Have you ever slept at work?
Have I ever slept at work? Yeah. There have been times I used to do, early in my, career. I did, these forty eight hour live broadcasts, to for for, like, charity causes or, you know, to to have, like, kids adopted at the holidays or stuff like that. And so, when we would do those where we were there for two days straight, there were, like, napping shifts.
Yeah. And so so that would be the case. There were times when, well, this was early on. This was, like, in 02/2004, and it was around October. We were doing a major system upgrade, and, you joined me.
You were you were pregnant with our son, and it was around Halloween. And you, slept on the couch in the lobby while I was working. And there were times when I had to be there, like, all night long working on stuff. And so there there have been times where, yeah, I've I've been like, I should probably catch some some z's. It's not very often.
That's for sure. There's been a couple of times that I've slept at your job before. Where you've been like, I'm hanging out, but I just want I'm just gonna it's the middle of the night. Because sometimes those engineering projects and stuff that I was involved in were all night long, and you're like, I wanna be around you. Yeah.
So maybe I'll just come hang out. And and there'd be, like, two or three people working, myself included. And and you're like, I'm just gonna be around. I'm gonna hang out and, you know, and read a book or whatever, and then, you know, and then you're sleeping on a couch. I think that I agreed to join you on those adventures, not knowing how long they would actually take.
They take hours. And then it was like, I shouldn't agree agree to this. Yeah. I I could be at home in bed. I should have just taken the car and left is what I should have done.
Well, yeah. It's true. I mean, some of those were all night long projects until the next morning, but they were very few and far between, I think, is how the saying goes, because the I mean, what? Maybe four of those projects Yeah. In twenty five years?
I was trying to think if I've ever slept it. Like, I was just reading something where, like, there's a person who will take, like, a half an hour. They'll take their lunch break and take a the their half hour Mhmm. Lunch break and just take a snooze under their desk. Okay.
I don't think that well, my job my current job, this job, and my other job Yeah. There's no way that I'm gonna be able to sleep under my desk. Right. Because it's just a Well, this is not really this is a weird place. If if I had Yeah.
An office Sure. That had a door that shut Yeah. Then, absolutely, that might be a little bit easier to just, like, roll out a little mat and take a little snoozer. Yeah. I had a coworker, a fellow DJ, years ago, tell me that, like, this studio was in Blackfoot for a lot of years.
And the conference room there, the chairs that, that had were like, they weren't, like a like a chair we have now that you can change the height of. They were just like a like a wooden arm chair with a pad on the back and a seat pad. Like, you get like office furniture. Right? That was around the conference table.
But you could take two of those and lay them down on the on the ground, and the backs were long enough that you would you could make a, basically, a bed out of them. And so you could have, like, a nice soft thing. And he told me that he would sneak into the conference room, during lunch times or whatever because no one was using the space. Yeah. And so he would do that, and he'd just take a nap in the conference room.
Well, that's interesting. That is interesting. Because it's not a space that a lot of people go in unless there's a meeting or some reason to. It's a big quiet room when no one's in it, so you could really get some, some snoring in. It's kinda nice, isn't it?
Like, the thought of it sounds kinda nice. Like, oh, call. I should take a nap at work. I don't know. It sounds nice.
I I feel like if I tried to, like even if I laid out my yoga mat here on the floor, and I was like, I'm just gonna take in a couple of couple of snoozes. I feel like somebody would walk in and be like, what are you doing? What are you doing? Or they'd they'd walk in because they needed something. They wouldn't see me and then but they'd see my feet poking out.
They'd be like, is he dead? Like, like, we gotta go look. Josh is on the ground. Yeah. What's he doing?
Why are his feet sticking out from underneath the counter? What's happening? That's why you gotta go I guess you could go outside and take a nap in your truck. Yeah. Some days, you roll down the window a little bit, let the let the air come through.
And I got I haven't now I haven't even laid back there, but I got a big back seat. I bet I bet it's comfy. I need to go try that out. I need a pillow. I know what we should do tonight.
What? Strive to Burley and get my pillow. Yeah. You left your pillow in Burley. You haven't stopped talking about it for a week.
I miss my pillow. I'm I'm short a pillow, my good pillow. Well, don't leave me alone. Went to the store and bought a new pillow because I was so sad about it. Do you know that I think it's my fault that your pillow was I told you.
I told you I left it on my stuff. And you were like, I didn't even see it there. I went, yeah. I know you did. I know my pillow was left because it was moved.
I had it with my stuff. I know. I'm owning up to it. At first But now I didn't didn't when week ago when we were there. I didn't think it was my fault initially.
And then when you Marco Polo ed my sister and she showed it sitting on the bed, I went, oh, yeah. I think I probably did that. Yeah. I had it with my stuff. Alright.
We know. We heard. It's my fault. Sorry. So go back to this previous conversation about the garage and how I have things organized in a certain way, and that you get unhinged on projects, and then I can't find my things.
I'm missing my pillow all week. It's the same reason. It's my fault. I'm the problem. It's me.
Anyway, enough about my pillow. Sorry, dear. What were we talking about? My mom doesn't want napping. Hi.
Have you ever seen these, old articles that East Idaho news will post sometimes? Like, ramp like, when you say old, what do you mean? Like, it the the feature is called looking back, and then they'll post, old stories from, like, like this one article. Correct. Yes.
That's what I wanted to say. So this one is kinda interesting. I was just reading this one. This happened. The Rigby star reported this today in 1935.
Okay. There was a man known as the human fly. Okay. And he stopped by in Rigby to entertain community members. Now this man, his name is Didi Rowland.
He lived in Picks Pittsburgh. K. But he stopped by Rigby to put on a show for spectators. He climbed the front of the Rigby Hotel, balanced himself on two chairs on top of the building, and carried his wife while he was blindfolded across the edge of the roof of the building. These are scary things.
And he was called the human fly. Yeah. That's what he was known as. But he did not actually fly. Correct.
He he was more of, like, a beetle. More of, like, a climber. He's a beetle. Yeah. He should have been the human beetle.
Go on. During his years of climbing, he only had one fall. His fall was off a courthouse. Well and it was his last. No.
Oh, okay. No. He was climbing a courthouse in Iowa. Uh-huh. A pigeon flew in his face causing him to fall 55 feet.
And that accident caused him to be put out for about a year and a half, and then he recovered. His tallest climb was 74 stories on the Chrysler Building in 1934. Interesting. He didn't make it all the Chrysler Building has a hundred and two stories. He climbed 74 of them.
What? But the big claim to fame in Idaho is when he carried his wife blindfolded across the edge of the Rigby Hotel. And how tall is the Rigby Hotel? Do we know? Rigby Hotel.
I also don't know why he stopped in Rigby to do this. He was just I I don't know if he got paid or if he just did this for funsies. He was like, hey, guys. Watch this. When was this?
1935. Today. 1935. '19 '30 '5. Is it now known as I'm trying to find it.
Like, just trying to look for Rigby Hotel is really difficult. Really? Yeah. It just wants to give me a whole bunch of, places to stay in Rigby, and that is not what I'm looking for. I wanna know I wanna see pictures of this old hotel, because I'm curious if it was, you know, like, a standard height downtown building that's, like, two stories.
So is he, like, 20 feet up off the air? Is it a three story building? Was he 30 feet or so off the air, off the ground? You know, he could have been 50 feet in the air or something I don't know. Carrying his wife.
And now my question is, would you trust me to be blindfolded and to carry you along the edge of a hotel roof? Nope. I sure wouldn't. How far did he carry her? It doesn't say.
Like, a couple steps, or did he carry her, like, a length of, like, 10 feet? The edge. Yeah. But So I would assume across the length of the building, but I don't know. Yeah.
He also that happened in 1935. I just looked him up. He died only two years later in 1937 from a fall. I told you. He fell one time, and it was his last.
You said he only fell once, and I went, yeah. No kidding. And that's all it took. Poor what was his name? Human fly.
Roland. Yeah. Henry Roland. Interesting. An American daredevil and human fly.
Yeah. I still the human fly thing doesn't make sense. It's not the greatest name. A gut okay. So he fell because he was he had a trapeze, and he did a forward somersault to ankle catch.
A gust of wind blew his trapeze far from under him, and he fell to his death. That's really sad. Oh, man, buddy. You should have had, like, a net or something. That's really super sad.
Oh, Roland. There oh, okay. Yeah. That was in Greenville, Tennessee. There was no awning to break his fall.
The first time he fell, there was an awning under him, and it broke his fall. The second time he fell was his final time. Oh, well He safely fell once. This time, no awning to break his fall. For visiting Rigby in 1935, Roland.
Henry Roland. Henry Roland. Hey. If you wanna check, I love these this feature on East Idaho News. It's looking back, and it's always these old stories, which I I think they're so funny and interesting.
It is very cool. Go check them out at eastIdahonews.com. Idaho, gives is a great fundraising thing that happens every year, and it supports Idaho's nonprofit organizations. It's a really, really cool thing, and it kicks off on Monday, which is really cool, and it runs until Thursday next week. So Monday through Thursday, is this year's fundraising campaign for Idaho Gives.
There are a ton of amazing nonprofits, in the entire state of Idaho, including right here in East Idaho that you can select to support, or you can support the ones that we've chosen. Who let's reveal. Who have you selected as your cause this year? We picked the community food basket of Idaho Falls. Ah, good one.
Yeah. They are amazing. They have served over 1,700,000 meals, and they serve over 1,000 families every month. That's incredible. That's a lot of work, and a lot of food and a lot of need there.
That's a great cause for you to choose. I have selected did you pick, John? I chose the Henry's Fork Foundation as my, as my cause this year. Not surprised. No?
It's the only nonprofit, whose sole purpose is to conserve, protect, and restore the Henry's Fork and its legendary wild trout. I like to stand in that water. Those trout are wild. I spend many hours just standing in the Henry's Fork trying. Will you?
That's where I go to try. Well, the next time you go fishing in Henry's Fork, will you stand in that in that river, lake, whatever it is It's a river. And say It's a You're wild. A snake group. Trout.
You're wild. What's that from? Dirty Dancing. But it doesn't say trout? No.
Just you're wild? You're wild. Oh, right. She's saying that about Patrick Swayze? Correct.
I see. I don't think I will. Why? Because that's a strange thing. Okay.
Well, if I go with you, I most assuredly am. You're wild, Trout. Strange. That's a strange thing. Yeah.
I'm strange. I know. I'm a strange person. You're you're great. It's fine.
You can choose to support the causes that, we have chosen, or you can browse through the list and pick your own. And there's a ton to choose from. If there's something that speaks to your heart that you feel like you wanna get behind, there's everything from arts to education, to nature causes to, so many, so many, so many things. So go take a look at the list. You can tap the link in the Classy 97 app, or you can go directly to idahogives.org, and you can select an Idaho nonprofit organization to support during this year's campaign.
Idaho Gives starts Monday, but you can go check it out right now if you want. Do a little early searching through and see if there's a cause that you're like, yeah, that's what I'm That's what I'm into. Or say, hey. I gotta help out those wild trout. Wild.
They're wild. Anyway, Idaho Gibbs. All the details are in our app. Just tap the link. If you don't have the app, get it for free in your App Store.
Just search for classic 97 and install that bad boy. Bad boy? Yeah. Yeah. You're wild.
Oh, hey. It's Friday, and it's would you rather this or that? Would you rather, it's a Friday edition. Would you rather this or that? Wow.
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Anytime. Okay.
Would you rather have retractable ice skates slash wheels, depending on the season, on the bottoms of your feet, or hair that can grow and turn into earmuffs slash hat slash umbrella depending on the season. Again, it all depends on the season. So Earmuffs? Earm earmuffs. Okay.
So seasonal, hair that can turn into, an umbrella or earmuffs or a hat, like a sun hat. Yeah. Or ice skate slash roller blades on my feet. Correct. In my feets.
Yeah. They're retractable. How big are the wheels? This is important. This is a real important question.
A standard blade I can get behind. How big are the wheels on the roller blades? 10? 10. 10 what?
10. 10. 10. Okay. Do me a favor.
What? Search inline skates. Okay. And then and then look at images. Okay.
And I'm gonna show you there's see the difference here? No. So look at look at the pictures. You can see some of them have really tall wheels. Uh-huh.
Some of them have kind of, like, the kid size wheels. And then if you look a little bit further down, you'll see aggressive inline skates. There's a picture that says best aggressive inline skates, and they have small even smaller wheels. I see that. I do see that.
This is why this is an important question because how goofy are my feet gonna look is real important to my decision making process. What's I mean, you pick. What size do you want them to be? I can't really decide because they have different reasons. Like, if I'm just scooting around to scoot, I'll take aggressive inline wheels.
You're just gonna be scooting along the scoot, scooting along the scoot. But if I'm actually trying to get somewhere, I want the bigger wheels with the faster bearings. You're just scooting. Because those are like a speed skate. It's just scooting along.
It's just I'm just scooting to scoot? Yeah. Is that what's up? Yes. I'm just a scoot scooting?
Yep. Scoot scooting boogie. Well, I might take the hybrid, or the middle the middle size, the regular recreational inline skate size wheel then. Okay. Because it's gonna be it's gonna be okay for just scoot scooting, but it's got a little bit more speed than the aggressive inline skate wheel does.
They're also narrower, so it won't take up as much of my foot. Okay. So you're going with the I want the wheels. Okay. I don't want I mean, hair is great, but I don't wanna walk around with, like, a hair hat.
So no. Or a hair umbrella. A hairbrella, a hair hat, or hair mask. Hair muffs. I don't want that.
I'm going wheels, ice skates too because dope. What what size wheels are you going with? 10. 10. Bring it full circle.
That's the way to go. Just like a wheel. Full circle. It's great. I know.
Let's scoot scoot together. Scoot scoot, and let's get scooting. Would you rather this or that? Okay. Hold on.
Before before we leave for the day and for the weekend, there's something really important I need to tell you about. It's not gonna be important at all, is it? Listen. I'm gonna play you some audio real quick. Okay.
And I just want you to I want you to listen. I want you to be, open minded, and just tell me what you think about it. Okay? Here you go. Yeah.
Uh-huh. Up and down, up and down, up and down. Okay. Okay. What do you think?
I just like the original. I just like You like the original better? Just like classic wheels on the bus. That's all. Baby raves are all the craze right now.
Oh, no. Baby raves. Yeah. It sounds like that. I think it might be too much stimulation for a baby.
Okay. Perhaps. It might just might be too much. Now imagine close your eyes. Okay.
And imagine bubble machines. Too much it's too Hold on. Colorful lights flashing. Too much stimulation. And a little bit of this.
I'm overstimulated. Too much stimulation for you. I think I think little kids would go crazy. Up and down. I think it would be too much stimulation for a little kid.
I'm telling you. Do? Yeah. Just keep it classic. Just keep it easy breezy classic.
Well, apparently, kids go all out on the dance floor. On the day of the car? They're building these kid friendly Clubs? Music raves. Yeah.
Families are going to baby raves in big cities. They're like, let's go. Baby rave. What are you doing at 07:00 on a Tuesday? Baby rave.
What I know about raves Mhmm. Is there is a lot going on. There is lights and music and bubbles. Right. And they trade those bracelets.
Okay. That I'm sure there I don't know if there's friendship bracelet trading going on. I don't know. Like, I know that raves sometimes, they have, those ring pops that Sure. Have pacifiers.
Sure. Maybe there's ring pops. I don't know. I've never been. I haven't either.
It's baby raves. Wheels on the bus go round and round round. It's it's so good. Yeah. Right.
Now you're seeing it. No. Just Baby raves. Wheels on the bus go around Boring. Around.
Boring. Oh, no. Boring. That's nap time singing. Exactly.
Why are you gonna hype up that baby? Boring. Because you get all that energy out, and then on the way home, they're crashed out. Yeah. The baby's been raving.
You wanna check out my raving baby? Yeah. Cool sunglasses. Maybe, like, a macho man Randy Savage look with some fringe on it. Lots of neon.
You could totally be into that. I could not. I like it. If you were still in preschool Mhmm. Not as a preschooler, but as a a an educator, a a person who was working at a preschool as you were for many, many years.
Would it not be great to have, like, once a week, like, a fifteen, twenty, thirty minute long baby rave? Dance party. Yeah. The baby rave. I went Once a week.
Alright. Like, it's Friday morning. Everybody is you're getting everybody excited about being there. Friday morning baby rave. Or right before the parents pick them up.
Is that the only yeah. Exactly. Right before the parents die. 03:15. We're hitting baby rays.
Wound them up for you. Take them home. Right. Are there other ones? Like, it's a spider.
It means a spider goes up the well, up the well. What? Up the what? Up the water spout. Yeah.
But I couldn't fit it all in. I see. Baby Shark is already a total baby rave song. So you don't even have to do anything. Speed it up a bit.
Yeah. You could. And you could hit it with a couple extra beats in there. I'm just saying. It's all the rage right now.
It's all the rave. It is. People are raving about baby raves. I'm not. Hopefully, you get a little baby rave this weekend.
I know what I'm not gonna be doing. What's that? Cleaning that garage. No. Because I'm gonna be doing it.
No. No. Join if you want. It's getting done. No.
I gotta clean up that bird seed Yeah. That I spilled in the December. Yeah. And then you were like, oh, get it. We probably got it.
Guess what? To get, we don't. But to get to it, guess what, what you gotta do? What's that? Move all the stuff to the shed.
There's a total order of stuff that has to happen. I'll get after it. Please don't. Then help. Let's do it together.
Let's tag team it. But I don't wanna. I just wanna go to the baby race. You just wanna go fishing. That sounds great, actually.
Sounds really good. Have a great weekend. We'll be back on Monday. Thanks for listening to the show. If you missed any part of it or you wanna, you know, share any part of it, maybe Baby Rave is your thing and you wanna go, I need to hear that again.
You can. It's in the podcast. Just search for Wake Up Classy 97, the podcast. Everywhere podcasts are available. That means Spotify, YouTube, Apple, wherever you get podcasts.
We're there. We're there. We're there. K. Have a good weekend.
We'll see you back here Monday. 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.