February 19, 2025 | Wake Up Classy 97
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S1 E177

February 19, 2025 | Wake Up Classy 97

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Episode title: Wake Up Classy 97 with Josh and Chantel - Wednesday, February 19, 2025

Episode summary introduction:

We sound so good & healthy today, Doug’s party was a big success, Chantel went to bed early and didn’t do her usual routine, we didn’t tour the utility room last night but now we’re also going to tour the attic, how to lose your significant other at the grocery store, what was the first online purchase in history, we’re bringing back family reading night, sharing the bed is hard, Cherry Coke is 40 years old, charcuterie around the campfire, we prove we’re old, and old people hobbies are so hot right now!

Timestamps:
(0:00) - Intro
(2:00) - We're in the froggy zone
(5:55) - Doug's party was a viral success
(8:57) - Good News to Get You Going
(12:18) - Chantel was unprepared this morning
(16:44) - The utility room tour update sort-of
(21:36) - It's easy to lose your wife in the store
(26:15) - The first online transaction
(31:44) - We're bringing back family reading nights
(36:54) - Chantel's a bed hog
(42:38) - Cherry Coke is 40 year old
(47:14) - Campfire charcuterie sounds delicious
(49:18) - We're old people
(53:53) - Would You Rather This or That
(56:42) - We have old people hobbies

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Full show transcript:

It's gonna be a froggy kinda start to the podcast today. Yeah. How come? Because because we were froggy? Because our voices, they sound a lot better now because we're recording this four hours after we started the show.

Almost normal. I'm still a little stuffy. Yeah. And you do have a little bit of a nasal thing, but my voice finally kinda warmed up. It kinda sounds normal.

Little bit better, but it took me a while to get here. And I'm telling you, the beginning of this podcast, not so smooth. It's a rough. Hey, it's Wednesday, February 19. Today on the show, we sound so good and healthy today.

I'm telling you, real froggy. Doug's party was a huge success. I wish we would have tried to throw our own or gone or something. No. Yeah.

I went to bed early and didn't do my usual routine, which created a mess the next morning. This morning? This morning. This morning was a bit of a mess for me. It was frantic.

Okay. Well, you did fine. We didn't tour the utility room last night, but now we're gonna tour the utility room and the attic. Yeah. We're gonna take you all the way through the attic, all the way to the back.

I don't want to. What do you think's back there? There might be hidden treasures. I haven't really spent a ton of time. There's no termites.

What do you think is going on in our house? How to lose your significant other at the grocery store? It's real easy. I do it all the time. What was the first online purchase in history?

I now know. We're bringing back family reading night. Because you you miss it. I do. And you love it.

It's probably just gonna be me reading to myself. Well, read out loud until we can all hear it walking by. Okay. Sharing the bed is hard. Oh, but you're gonna be okay.

Cherry Coke is 40 years old. Happy birthday, Cherry Coke. Charcuterie around the campfire. Doesn't that sound nice? Yes.

We prove we're old. Yeah. Yes. We do. And old people hobbies are so hot right now.

And we are ahead of the curve, you and I. Yeah. Yeah. I know. We always are.

That's right. We are Josh and Chantel, and this is wake up classy '97. Hope you enjoy the show. Hi. Oh oh, hey.

What have you done to me? I'm sorry. I didn't mean to. It was not my intention. I'm sorry.

It's, it's it's froggy. I know. It's froggy in here. I know. It's foggy outside.

It's froggy inside. Sorry about your voice. This is this is not my voice. This is not my voice. No.

Yours is yours is kinda cute and a little bit, like, stuffy nose. Mine is real not good. It's kinda cool. It's like I wouldn't use that word. Like dangerous.

You you feel like my voice is dangerous? Deep and dark. Oh. Like an alter ego. Harvey Two Face.

Harvey Two Face. Isn't that his name? Harvey Dent? Yeah. Yeah.

I like Harvey Two Face. It's the same guy. I knew what I was talking about. Harvey Two Face. See?

Yeah. Because if you don't have to do the voice because it's already there. Well, he just had a regular voice, but then after the accident, he got a little scratchy. See? But Batman, Christian Bale, he got, like, he got real low and whispery, and it's it almost feels better to talk like that.

Then do that? Yeah. All day. Hey. All day.

Good morning. Good morning. No. Sneak up behind people. Peekaboo.

Have you seen my batarang? Yeah. You know where I park my bat mobile? So, anyway, it's gonna be a weird morning because I sound like this. And I sound like this.

Who who gave it to you? I don't know. I don't know, but it's lasted a while. It's lasted days. I don't care for it.

And I went to bed. What time did I go to bed last night? Seven. Seven o'clock? Yeah.

I made dinner. You ate dinner. You went to bed. You took some medicine and went to bed. Yeah.

You made me take that medicine. Did you take it? Yeah. I took it. It knocked me out Well as it was supposed to.

Right. Did it stop your nose from running all night? It actually Yeah. Did. It did.

And I didn't cough all night either, which was nice A little bit. Couple of times, but not all night. And I still feel tired. Well, yeah. You'd think that if I went to bed at seven, that I wouldn't be tired, but I I could've kept sleeping.

I went to bed at ten, the normal time. Uh-huh. Fell right asleep, and then, spent much of the night going. Oh, no. Yeah.

I'm sorry. So I didn't hear that at all. I was snoozing away. I should've I should've, days ago, just moved to the couch. You should have, probably.

But I did not. My fault. I'm sorry. Again, did I miss anything when I went to bed at seven? No.

Anything exciting happened in the house? I tied a dozen flies. Our daughter practiced and rehearsed. That was a noisy situation. I didn't even hear that at all.

I was in the basement below her room. There was a lot of stomping. So that was happening. And, and, I believe our son, was yelling into his headset. So I heard none of that.

Yeah. Never I didn't hear any of that. The dog was the dog. Everybody went to bed. Missed all of that.

Yeah. Well, cool. Sorry that you're sick, bud. Thanks. Thanks.

Welcome to the sick club. Alright. It's it's not a fun place. I I wish I wasn't here. I know.

Me too. How do we get out of this club? Easy to get in. Terrible to get out of. Mhmm.

You saw that video on TikTok where there was an an older man who was going to his neighbor's house and inviting them for his party. Yeah. Doug. Doug. It was Doug's party.

He was an 87 year old man in Pennsylvania, and he was going to his neighbor's house and giving them handwritten invitations to a neighborhood party at his house. Yeah. It was gonna start at four and go until the cops showed. Until the cops came. Yeah.

It was gonna be a rager, as they say. Did you follow-up on this thing? I did follow-up on this thing. See all of the parties that happened this weekend? All the part there were part other parties in honor of Doug?

So Doug's party was insane, and, people sent packages, companies sent stuff. That's what I was gonna talk about. The the postal guy posted a video of all of the packages. He's like, I'm gonna have to go rent a U Haul and have so much stuff to take to Doug's. He's like, it's crazy the amount of stuff I have to deliver to Doug's house.

And then there were a bunch of proxy parties all over the world that were held because people couldn't travel. Wow. So they were they were other people that were saying, oh, it's Doug's party. We're doing it. And we're here, and this is our party with Doug.

And they they live streamed the whole party. It was a big deal. That is a big deal. Yeah. Good for Doug.

Doug's party was was a banger. There was I just watched the video. They recorded him and his neighbor, the one who initially posted the video. Right. Posted a video of them live from the party.

Yep. Looks like a fun time. Now they had a party. And then they went on to the Today Show to talk about it. Of course.

And the wholesome of it. Cops never showed up. I saw a video where one officer showed up as as a, like, hey. Keep it down. We're here, but not to shut it down.

They they just showed up as a, we know what you're doing, Doug. That's awesome. Yeah. I love it. It's such a good story.

Yep. I need more of that in my life. And it was, it it was a good couple of weeks before. Like, he he did good on on save the dates. Did he?

I mean, it was a it was a good amount of time, and that's how the Internet kinda blew up about it, which I don't think Doug expected. I think he really just wanted to get to know some of his neighbors. So too. I think Doug was just lonely, and I think Doug was like, I'm gonna have a party. Mhmm.

Oh, he did. He did. Doug, you had a party. Yeah. Well done, Doug.

Well done, Doug. Now I kinda wanna have a party with my neighbors. You do? Kinda. Let's wait till the summer.

Yeah. That's a good idea. Because then it could be outside. We can barbecue. I know.

A street party. Do a street party. Okay. Get to organizing. What do they call them?

Block parties? Yeah. Except for we got a long block. We live on a long stretch. Yes.

You're gonna have to set boundaries. Boundaries? What do you mean? Like, who can come and who can't? Right.

Who's invited? Everyone is invited. I see. That's a lot of hot dogs. It is a lot of hot dogs.

It's okay. Hot dogs are cheap. For now. Tell swine flu. Oh, no.

You know I'm a sucker for a good world record. I I do. I do know this about you. I'm gonna need your help on this one, though. To what?

To Or complete it? In order to get this world record. You wanna do this one? Let's hear it. I'll help.

It's it's low risk. You don't really have to do much. What is it? A couple in Brazil have set a world record for the longest marriage. K.

How long? How long do I have? Married for eighty four years and seventy seven days. We're about to this year, we hit 20. How old are they?

Great question. Let me give you a little history on these two. They met in 1936. They were married four years later in 1940. They have raised 13 children.

13 kids. Uh-huh. And they're still married after 13 kids? Yeah. They have over 100 grandchildren, great grandchildren, and great great grandchildren.

The husband is a hundred and five. The wife is only, in her words, 101. That's kind of amazing. Isn't that wild? Wait.

How long have they been married? Since since she was 16. I was gonna I was gonna do the math. That's correct. What's her name?

Her name is Maria de Susadino. Oh. And his name is Manuel Angelim Dino. Okay. So he's four years older than her.

That's correct. Manuel. Yeah. Manuel. She was only 16 years old.

Well, listen. This marriage almost didn't happen. When they were dating and considering getting married, Maria's mother objected to the relationship. She's 16. And Manuel had to, earn the trust of the family and soon began building a home for the future that they would share.

And his hard work and dedication paid off as they have enjoyed so many decades together. When asked about the secret to the long lasting marriage, Maria's answer is very simple. What is it? It's love. Oh, is that all?

I thought she was gonna say separate bedrooms No. Separate bathrooms. No. Sometimes people say that. It's love.

That's all you need. Love is all you need. That's right. Okay. So you wanna surpass that world record.

Of eighty four years, which which means we've got sixty four years from now. Sixty four years from now. I mean, it's bad. Like, a hundred and eight. Oh, okay.

Okay. No problem. That's what I said. I'm in it. You don't really have to do much.

Just Just survive. Love me. So love you and survive. That's right. No divorces.

Correct. That's it. Okay. I'm in it. I'm in it for the long haul.

Sixty four years from now. I mean, they're still they're still adding to it. Every day that goes by, they add more to it. True. So we got work to do.

K. A minute. It's love. That's the secret. We got that.

It's good news Most days. To get you going. Most days. Tuesday. Hey.

So I went to bed at seven last night because I wasn't feeling well. Right. And, normally, the night before I wake up, I set out clothes that I'm gonna wear Oh, you do any of that. Prepare my lunch, and I help prepare help Emery with her lunch. Right.

No. I did none of that. You did nothing? None of it. So this morning was a scramble then for you to try and do all of those things?

And I wake up this morning and going, oh, I don't have any clothes. What am I gonna wear? Yeah. I don't have any lunch. What am I gonna wear?

It was nuts. Don't do that. Do not recommend. If you're going to be sick, you're saying you should probably then, go ahead and do the usual routine and fight through it? Honestly, I no.

Because I did not feel up to it last night. I was like, I can't even be bothered to put out the clothes that I'm gonna wear. I don't know how to help you. I don't either. Because I I could have done the things, but I didn't know the things.

You could have done the things. Plus, you imagine ask you to do the things. But I didn't know. I didn't even think about the things. And could you imagine if I laid out clothes for you?

Yeah. This is what you're gonna wear. What would I pick? That's interesting. What would you have picked?

I don't know. Something that you probably never wear. Yeah. You probably would. And I'd say, I'm not wearing that.

Right. So it would have been a waste of my time. It would have been a waste of your time. But you could have prepared me lunch. No.

I well, I could have done that or I could have made, you know, lunch for our daughter. I could have done those things. Yeah. Sure. Why didn't you then?

I was not in the frame of mind of doing those things. I was tying flies and listening to listening to music in the basement. That's what I was doing. Good for you, buddy. It was it was actually very nice.

What I noticed was I was we're out of some things for some lunches. Yeah. And I was gonna go to the store yesterday. Oh, that didn't happen. That didn't happen.

No. I could've done that. Uh-huh. You could've. I didn't.

Mm-mm. But it could've. You knew what we were missing too. Because I said it out loud during dinner. Yeah.

You did. When she said, hey. Do we have all this stuff? And I went, we don't have that. And I don't know if the lunch meat's still good.

It is. There was one package in there that was unopened. We had two packages. One was open. That was not good.

I threw it away. There were some weird white spots on it. I don't care for that. You're not supposed to have white spots on your lunch meat. No.

Your turkey shouldn't have bubbles. No. I'm not I am not a fan of bubbly turkey for sure. There was one package unopened. That one was fine.

Yeah. But there is no cheese. Now we had a big block of Muenster cheese Right. That I could've cut. Yeah.

But I am a terrible cheese cutter. What does that mean? That means that it's either gonna be It's gonna be a wedge. And thin on the bottom. Uh-huh.

It's not gonna be evenly proportionate. Or we had some shredded cheese. And I went, Do you no. I could put some shredded cheese on there. You know how ridiculous that would be?

You open up a sandwich, it's got loose shredded cheese on it like a taco. And that's what I thought. I went, that's gonna stink. And then I thought, well, I could grill it really quickly. You know, already, I'm stressed about the time.

Yeah. Let me heat up a pan. Let me heat up a pan and melt some of this cheese. And then I went, no. That's gonna suck too.

Yeah. Well So she's got no cheese this morning. No cheese on the sandwich? Cheese. Sorry, Emery.

Well, I told her I was gonna do the I was gonna cut up the Munster last night, and she said, no. I'm not a Munster, she said. And then laughed. I don't think she would have liked that cheese anyway. Well So just saying That's good grilled cheese.

Ham sandwich. What'd you say? This is a good grilled cheese cheese. Yeah. We talked about grilled cheeses yesterday.

Need to make some. I want some. Oh, okay. You just want the jelly to dip it in. The jelly?

Yeah. Have you not like, people monocristo their their grilled cheeses, and they dip them in into different jellies. I just want tomato soup to dip it in. That's right. I remember that.

I'm a tomato soup. I remember that. Alright. Well, maybe tonight. I made enchiladas instead.

Yeah. You did. Those were good. I ate some of those, and then I went to bed. That was it.

Promptly to bed. Tuck you in 07:00. Enchilada. Had big plans for you yesterday. I know.

They got you cramped my style. I know. You probably didn't even remember. Of course, I did. Did you?

Yeah. You're gonna take me on a tour of the utility room. I know. I was real excited too. Yep.

Yep. What were you gonna show me? What? No. I what were you gonna show me?

Because that was what we had come to the we'd come to the terms of you were going to show me what you knew about the utility room. That's right. And then I was gonna blow your mind with what you didn't know. I bet you'd be I bet I'd blow your mind about what I did know. I bet.

And I would be excited. I I'm I want I want you to show me all the breaker box stuff, you know. Breaker box stuff. I know where you I know you know where it is, but I want I want you to show me what you know about it, And then I want you to show me what you know about it. Furnace and the water softener k.

And all the plumbing and the the dual filtration system and the water main. There's so many things. The Internet. There's so many things in the utility room. I know.

I put it on the calendar and everything. Yeah. Because we talked to the did we talk about it yesterday? Yesterday? Uh-huh.

You only went to bed at seven last night, not seven days ago. Yeah. It was it was yesterday. I know. My mind has been a little foggy the past couple of days.

Why were we gonna take the tour? What did we talk about? Oh, the things The things that we own that you don't know what they do. I own this. I know.

What does it do? What is this? This is part of my house. I own this. What is it?

Yeah. So that didn't happen. I put a tamper on the utility room tour. But that's alright. We can do it tonight.

Maybe. Why? Maybe. I might wanna go to bed at seven. That's true.

You might. I might also wanna go to bed at seven again. I'm already feeling a little sluggish. Are you? Right now?

You're like, I could I'll just go back to bed. Yeah. I absolutely could. Don't, though. I won't.

I mean, you're at work. Come on. Got Get it together. I know we've got a utility room door to take. That's right.

Okay. The breaker box is not in our utility room. That's correct. So is this gonna be a multi Yeah. Step tour?

Yeah. We'll do the attic too. I don't wanna go in the attic. It's a good time. Here's the thing about the attic.

We don't have a ladder tall enough to get to the attic. Yeah. You gotta hoist yourself up there. You every time you have to go up there, you have to hoist yourself up there, and then you have to kinda jump back down on the ladder. Yeah.

I don't think that's a safe game. Oh, you'll make it. I don't want to even try. But but you've never been in the attic all the way to the other end of the house above our room. I haven't.

Can you stand up, or is are you hunched? You're kinda hunched because, like, we don't have a big open attic like you see in movies. Mhmm. We just have the the roofing, joists that are in there, and the insulation. And you have to walk, on the boards that have been placed across the joist because scary.

It's only sheetrock in between. And if you step on that, you'll fall through the ceiling. So don't do that. I'm not gonna even get up in the attic. How big are the boards?

Like a two by four? No. They're they're wider. They're wider than that? Yeah.

Okay. How do you know the boards aren't rotten? Why would they be rotten? I don't know. If the boards are rotten, we've got a major problem.

How come you've been in the attic all the way across the house? How come you haven't? No. Really. How come you have?

You don't go up there to just check things out? Mm-mm. Oh, I do. There's nobody living up there? No.

There's no one living in our attic. Quit watching crazy movies. No one lives in our attic. I just hear stuff sometimes. Aren't rotten.

What do you think is going on up there? Oh, lots of things are happening in my imagination. Yeah. Also, the shingles are held on by nails, and those poke through. And so I always end up scratching my head.

Do every time you go up there. Every time I go to the attic. Other than this last time, I avoided the screws this last time Good job. With the nails. Bud?

Yeah. But every time I go, and it hurts. It's that's a that's a pain you don't forget. Maybe you should take a hammer next time you go up there and just kind of bend the nails a little bit so that they don't poke you in the face. No.

And I'll tell you why. Because we eventually have to have the roof replaced. Oh, yeah. Then they come up to scrape it, and all the nails are bent. That's terrible.

That is terrible. That's terrible. Alright. You're that's fair. It was a bad idea.

Sorry I said it. I just there's a reason for everything. There sure is. Now what I could do is go in with little chunks of pool noodle and stick them. Hey.

No. I'm not gonna do that. I'd be up in the attic for a month. Crazy. I've got to talk about a TikTok that you sent me, and it was about a man who was in the grocery store Yeah.

And he couldn't find his wife. Right. And I said, why are you sending this to me? And it Explain yourself. Because, here's what happens.

I go to the grocery store with you or really any store, but especially the grocery store. And and you'll mumble something about something you need from a different aisle Uh-huh. And you'll go, no. And I'll go, I don't know what that means, but I'm gonna keep shopping on this aisle. I'm sure it's not possible.

Second later, I turn around, and you are gone. I told you where I was going. I didn't hear it. Exactly. You weren't listening.

I was. You went you went like this. You thought it in your head, and you went like, and you turned away as you were muttering it under your breath of where you were headed. And then, I mean, it takes seconds, and you've disappeared. And then I go, well, now I have an armful of stuff, or I've gathered the things I was here on the side of the aisle.

True. I always leave you with the cart. I'm the one that's gathering stuff. Sometimes. Most of the time.

So then then I you turn around, and you're gone. And then I go, well, she couldn't have gone far. And then I wander every aisle, and I can't find you. And then I've got arms folds of stuff. That's not true.

And then the phone rings, and I go, I can't answer this. Where and and this is gonna be the phone call. Where are you? Yeah. And I'm gonna go, where I was when you left and abandoned me.

Where are you, wanderer? That's what happens. Here's why I leave. Because you are a shopper, and I am not a shopper. That's right.

I have a list of things to do. I get in. I get out. And I know in my brain the fastest route in and out because I don't like to meander. I'm an in and out person.

If there's new items? I don't care about the new items. Oh. You like to, oh, let's dilly dally. Let's dilly dally on this aisle.

Let's look at this thing. Let's look at this. And I go, I can't I can't do this. Right. And so then you go finish shopping.

Blah blah blah blah. And then you're gone. Yep. How many miles Because I like to maximize my time. Right.

I can't be bothered dilly dallying. By looking at what's might be new. I don't care about that stuff. Maybe there's a new flavor of something that you might wanna try. Maybe there's a new item and you go, hey.

I've been wanting to try that recipe that calls for that thing I didn't know they sold here. I'm gonna go get them. That's never happened to me. I go, here's the listed the things I need and want. I'm gonna go get the things we need and want so we can get out of here.

And you go, okay. Great. And then I leave you with the cart, which is always a mistake. And every time I do it, I go, why didn't I bring the cart? Next time, I'm taking the cart.

Because I wind up with stuff in my and then I go, I can't find him. I'm dropping all the stuff. Mhmm. I can't even call him on the phone because I don't have a free hand to call him because my arms are full of stuff. Weird how this flipped around.

Because that's how it is in real life. Is it? Yeah. Because I feel like it's more my story where, I have the stuff and you have the card. You're so wrong.

Mhmm. And then employees will say, can I help you find something? And they go, yes. My husband. Ah.

Where is he? And they're like, would you like us to page him? And they go, oh, it's probably where you left him. I go, no. Did they say that?

He's probably where you left him. No. That's where I am. No. It's not.

Because you wander too. Yeah. In in mad search for you. Mad search. Yeah.

Up up every aisle, turn of my head. Like, I walk and I go, okay. She's not in front of me. Not down that aisle. Not in front of me.

Not down that aisle. Not and then I get to all the aisles, and I go, how am I not seeing this other human being? No. And then I work my way back. And I and I go, nope.

Not on that aisle. Not on that aisle. That looks like that's not her. That's a different person. Next aisle.

Not her. And then I'll go, how did you end up four aisles away clear down at the other end? And then I start walking towards you, and then you scoot around the corner, and I go, okay. Stay put. We'll put you in the cart.

Buckle you in. That's what's gonna happen. I finally see you, and they go, I've been looking everywhere for you. Stay put. I can only look at new gravies for so long.

Okay? Wanna play a game? Sure. Okay. What's the game?

The game. I they have every so often, there's a thing that pops up in some of our show prep, and it's, like, random facts. Oh, I know. And I kind of think it's interesting. Okay.

So I'm just gonna talk about one of the random facts. This was the first thing anyone ever bought online. Oh, that's interesting. Your retail transaction. This happened in 1994.

Nine that's when the first online purchase was made. Yeah. Was it made through eBay? No. It was made from a company called NetMarket NetMarket.

In New Hampshire. So the guy from Philadelphia bought it from NetMarket in New Hampshire. Was it a domain? Was it something to do with the Internet? No.

It had to do with music. Had to do with music? Uh-huh. And and then 1995. My next question is gonna be, how did how did he send payment?

Because taking payments online wasn't a thing. That's no. No. No. That's what happened.

He bought it online. No. I know. But do you do you know what I'm saying? Like, I feel like he he would have had to have sent credit card information just through the Internet.

Like, I don't do you they didn't have online payment stuff for a while. Like, PayPal brought that kind of the forefront, with eBay. Okay. But I don't think that was in 1994. I think that was later.

I don't know. What was what did he buy? Okay. This is all the information I have. I tried to find more information.

So when you start asking questions I know. I don't know how to answer them. That just says the first thing anyone bought online in a secure retail transaction was Sting's CD 10 summoner's tales. So he bought a CD from Sting. That was the first thing sold on the Internet.

Yeah. In 1994. Interesting. Yeah. PayPal didn't pop up until 1998.

How So So maybe he called That's do you know what I'm saying? Like payment in I'm just trying like or he just emailed it and went, hope nobody takes it. Delete this email when he ran. You know what I mean? Like, that's what I wanna know is how did he Interesting.

Yeah. I I would not have bought Singh's CD. How old were you in 1994? Twelve? Something like that.

Yeah. 13. You know what I was not doing? Buying things online. He he okay.

Do you have more information? So Dan didn't buy it. Dan sold it. I didn't say there wasn't I didn't say anything about Dan. Well, who was the guy?

I don't know. Well, the guy's name is Dan. Okay. And he he was an economics grad student. Okay.

And he sold the CD for $12.48 to a friend who was 300 miles away. Oh, okay. Okay. He did it by and, again, he was an economics grad student, and he encrypted his friend's credit card information via a crude website. So but that was the very first ecommerce.

So he did build a form and said, I want you to put in your credit card information. It will be encrypted. So I'm not even gonna be able to see it, but the banks will be able to talk to each other through this thing, and we'll see if this works. And it did, and he sold him the Sting CD for $12.48. 12 dollars.

Why did he 48¢? Why did he just do it? Because the shipping. He probably sold it for $10, and it cost $2.48 to mail. Oh, you're probably right.

And so he just made him pay for the shipping as well and then sent it to his friend 300 miles away. That's really interesting. I thought you might like that. Yeah. Net market, as you said, was the website.

That was the crude website that he built. Crude. What a crude website. That's funny. Meaning funny?

Meaning barbaric, meaning underdeveloped. I get it. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.

Not that it had inappropriate crude things on. No. I got I got it. Okay. Also, you know what I learned from this random facts?

What's that? Walt Disney did the original voice of Mickey Mouse. I think I knew that. He stopped after seventeen years when he got too busy, and he had to turn it off. After seventeen years.

I know. Can you imagine how difficult that must have been for him to be like, I gotta turn this over to somebody else. I bet. I gotta delegate this project to somebody else. Hey.

Did you want, to know about things I bought online recently? No. No. I thought it would be a good segue to tell you that packages are in transit. All items have shipped.

Are they expected to be delivered today? I'm checking. Please. Please. Please.

Please. Please. Please. Not that one. I'll I'll have to do some checking.

I've got there's three different packages, so I'm gonna have to do three different tracking things. And then I'll let I'll let you know. Oh, good. I'll get I'll get you that update. I know you wanna know.

You say, don't tell me. I don't care. It's your stuff. Just wait. It'll show up when it shows up.

But, really, I know you wanna know. I don't. I really don't. So I hope that they come soon for your sake and mine. Yeah.

I'll let you know here shortly. Oh, goody. Yeah. You know how they say there's one day that you'll pick up your kids for the last time? Oh, there's a lot of those.

And they're they're terribly sad. They are really sad. You don't even realize that, like, this is this like, the next day, your kids go, hey. I I'm gonna do this myself. And you go, but but no.

I I still wanna do that. But at the time, when you're in the throes of those young parenting moments, you're like, okay. Do it. Like, you're happy to kinda let them do it because you're tired of tying their shoes and carrying them everywhere. Sure.

I think only until years later that you miss it, and you go, oh. Yeah. Somebody should write a song about that. Somebody should. I'm sure there's millions of songs.

It's a country song called You're Gonna Miss This. Okay. What I was thinking of the other day that made me kinda sad was reading to my kids for the very last time. Yeah. When I and look.

You can still read to them. It doesn't mean they're going to enjoy it or listen. Or listen. Just pick up a book and just start following when I'm around reading it. Right?

I'm reading to you. Listen up. Settle down. I mean and I used to read to the kids until they were probably 10 or 11, and we would take turns reading. We would read Magic Treehouse.

We would read Junie b Jones. Right. We would read I'm trying to think of what else we would read. Nate. Great people.

Snicket. Yeah. All of those. Do we are we still missing two of those books? Yes.

We have them. They're just paperbacks, not hardbacks? Yeah. Correct. I should go on a mission to get those, hardbacks.

Good luck. I was finding them. I could find them at the DI. Yeah. You'll find them in the thrift stores for sure.

And then the show got popular. Well, there's that. Nobody was giving them away anymore. I'll have to look at which ones. Anyway, doesn't matter.

Anyway, so I was thinking about that the other day thinking, Cal, that's really sad. That used to be, like, a nighttime routine for us, for me and the kids. Right. And I would I would read to them together. We would share a story together.

So we would read Lemony Snicket together. And then we would I would take turns with each one of them individually, and they would read me a story that they wanted to read. Right. And I'm sad about that. I missed that the other day.

Bring it back. They might miss it also. You then they don't even know. They might they might be like, yeah. Actually, I do wanna take my earbuds and my headset and put them on the side and listen to mom read a book.

Yeah. Oh, I'm sure. My 15 and 20 year old. I remember Or go get the rocker glider, and they can sit on your lap. We got rid of it.

That's long gone. I'm just saying. We can we can bring it all back. We'll just we'll we'll take over their rooms, turn them back into nurseries, and then we'll put the rocker glider in there. And you can have your giant 20 year old sit on your lap, and you can read them a book.

Never what we did. They would just we would just sit in their bed. Well, I know, like, later. I'm just saying, like, I got that I've got that picture of Emery and I reading. Uh-huh.

That's what I'm that's in what's in my head. Oh, I see. I see what you're saying, Josh. I remember when I was a kid, my mom, my sister and brother, and I would all pile in her bed, and she would read us a book. The book was Five Little Peppers and How They Grew.

Mhmm. I was kind of it was about five kids who had been orphaned. Okay. And their last name was Pepper. Oh, I love that book.

I gotta find that book. Five Little Peppers and How They Grow. Oh, it's it's online. I'm looking at other books right now. I was looking up the Series of Unfortunate Event hardcovers, because there are there are only two that we don't have hardcovers.

I think it's nine and thirteen. I've I made a list somewhere. I know. Let me see if I can find it. Because I you can get the hardcover books for, like, $5 online.

Yeah. The hardcover Mhmm. $5 online? Yeah. Let me look and see what we need because I made a note.

There's also there is a I don't know that they're new, but there is a a pre owned used bookstore in town too. Oh, yeah. That we should we should check out. I don't know. I can't find my note.

So I'll just have to go down in our library and make another note. Yeah. I'm pretty sure it's nine and thirteen. But, nonetheless, it could be four now that I think about it. I think it might be four.

It might be four. Four and nine? Four and nine. Or four and thirteen. Something.

No. It's four and nine. Yeah. We'll get it sorted out. The library needs the right books.

We've got the paperbacks. Books. I know. But we we don't have the full Okay. I have it right here.

I found it. Yeah. It is 49. 4 9. That's pretty great.

4 is, yeah, $5. See? Easy peasy. No big deal. Get it taken care of.

Okay. Then you can read them all. I don't think did you guys finish the whole series? We didn't. Start it again.

I know. How sad. I wanna know how it ends in the books. Too. K.

I'm gonna bring it back. Family reading night. Let's go. Last night, when you went to bed at seven Yes. And I didn't come to bed for three hours after that Uh-huh.

It looked like you made yourself pretty comfy. Oh, okay. Here's what you need to know. I, most of the time, enjoy sharing a bed with you. Uh-huh.

You keep it nice and toasty. Yeah. We only have a queen-size. Only. Only.

Because it's what will fit in our bedroom. Yeah. Because we have these small nineteen seventies '10 by 10 rooms. Yeah. Sometimes I think maybe a king-size would be great, but our definitely fill the whole room.

Most of the time, a queen is fine. When you're not in the same bed with me, it is lovely. Do you know? I think we could probably fit it, but it would have to we'd have to turn the headboard toward the window. Like, we'd have to have the bed go that way Okay.

To fit a king bed. And I don't know if we'd have room for the dresser, and that feels weird. Yeah. That does feel weird. I need that.

Anyway, point of the story is that I I made that queen bed my very, very own last night when I went to bed. And then I was worried that I took up all of the space this morning. When I woke up, I said, I don't remember Josh coming to bed. So I hope You were you were definitely more than two thirds occupied when I came to bed at 10:00. And I had basically enough for my body to be in the bed, and that was it.

Why didn't you scooch me over? Because you weren't feeling well, and I'm a nice guy. I know. But you could've still scooch me. I lifted up the blanket to get in there, and I scooch in on my little, like, three feet, maybe, maybe three feet wide little area.

And I got situated, and I turned on to my side. And right after I turned on my side, you moved over to your side of the bed, and I went, yes. Okay. So I must have jostled you just a little bit that you you gave me more space. I woke up let's see.

I went to bed at seven, took up most of the bed, and then when I woke up at one to use the bathroom Yeah. I noticed that you had come back to bed. And then I was happy because, again, your body heat is much appreciated. But I was also sad because I just then had half of the bed to work with. I know.

Poor thing. I know. A whole half of the bed, not a whole half. Well, let's be real. It's mostly a sliver.

What? Because you can you spread out when you get into bed. You're a spreader. I don't know what that means. I like to I I I will agree there's probably some angles to my sleeping That's the thing.

Where, like, my feet will cruise over to your feet area. Yes. But my my upper part, my torso and head stay on my side of the bed. That's not always true. That is very true.

That's not always true. And then I noticed the snoring. Ah. Oh, man. Yeah.

Just like normal. It was fine going to bed by myself at seven. What happened? I think honestly, Josh, I really think that you need to get tested for some sleep apnea. I don't I don't feel like I'm not rested.

I don't feel like I'm trying to choke myself to death in my sleep. Maybe let's just do a test. I don't, I don't feel like I have a lot of the signs that go along with it. Like Well rested. I don't feel like I stopped breathing.

I don't think you stopped breathing either. Snoring is a thing. I know I snore, but I don't believe that I have apnea to the point of, like, you stop breathing. Like, that's what happens. You're not getting enough oxygen to your brain.

I know. It's very, very bad. People have very bad health conditions I get it. That put them into that situation. So I I I'm definitely not saying I should not, but just for the sake of doing it feels silly because But I don't believe that I I don't believe that I have the issues involved with apnea.

I snore. Yes. For sure. Yes. But I still have my tonsils.

Get those out. Why? Let's maybe I don't know. If you do a test, it's not gonna hurt anything. It's just gonna tell you My oxygen level when I sleep.

Uh-huh. Yeah. But have you seen have you have you seen the devices? And and this is where, frequent frequent listener Becky is gonna go, you don't have to wear the mask. You can get the thing implanted in your body.

That's true. They take out your uvula? I don't I don't care for that thing. That's uvula? No.

I I don't care about a uvula. I don't want the implant thing. That scares me. Putting Why? Putting technology in my body.

It might be okay. I don't know. I don't know about it. Let's look into it. I don't like the idea.

To somebody. Who? Just so that you you snore too. I just don't complain about it. Let's try that.

Maybe you should go talk to somebody about Maybe I'm living with someone who snores. I'm only snoring because I can't breathe through my nose. That's not true. You're snoring because you're asleep, and that's what it sounds like when you're sleeping. So maybe you should go get checked out.

Maybe I will. Yeah. Yeah. Take that. What did we learn today?

Neither one of us are going to do that. No. You're right. What's gonna happen. You were just gonna Alright.

You made me play a game at the beginning of this hour k. That had to do with 1994. Yes. I'm gonna play a game. It has to do with 1985.

Okay. So on this day in 1985, something was introduced for the first time. I I told you before that it was a consumable. And you had questions. You you asked, you said, was it Tresemme?

And I said, oh la la no. Yeah. I don't know why that was the first thing that popped into my head. And then I asked if it was Rice Krispie treat or rice And I feel like rice krispies have been around forever. How long Feel like that might be as nineteen forties.

Rice crispy treats. Not just treats, but the cereal. Okay. The cereal, has been around Rice Krispies. This is a consumable.

Then I said Oreos. Yeah. I said no not Oreos. Oreo's. Is it a is it Rice Krispies Treats were launched in 1939.

Nineteen '30 '9. The cereal. Yeah. Rice Krispies. Okay.

Nineteen eighty four? Eighty '5. Eighty '5. Nineteen '80 '5. On this day, 02/19/1985.

Introduced. Is it a Wonder Bread item? It is not. Is it a little Debbie item? No.

Is it, hot cocoa in a pouch? No. I feel like that was a long time. I feel like that would have been the sixties. In a pouch?

Oh, yeah. I don't. Hot cocoa in a pouch. I I don't know, Josh. I I've when were Oreos?

That was the seventies. Oh, really? Hot cocoa in a pouch was the seventies. And when were Oreos introduced? Oreos 1912.

No way. Yeah. Oreos are older than Rice Krispies. Mhmm. Oreo.

Wow. Look at your longevity, bud. I don't know, Josh. Let me let me tell you that the parent company that introduced this new flavor of their original product, what year? Eighteen eighty six is when the original was released, and it was released at a pharmacy.

I don't know. I really have no idea. I've given you all of my ideas. Alright. Do you know doctor John Pemberton?

No. He was a pharmacist in Atlanta, Georgia. Oh, yeah. Doctor Pemberton. Yeah.

Yeah. Doctor Pemberton, a pharmacist in Atlanta, Georgia Yeah. I know him. Sold the first glass of I don't know. Coca Cola Oh.

In 1886. In 1985, cherry Coca Cola hit the market Oh. In bottles and cans. It's cherry Coca Cola. Okay.

There you go. Yeah. I didn't think that it was have guessed that. 40 years old. But today, Cherry Coke is 40.

Happy birthday, Cherry Coke. Which I thought you might be excited. Coke is almost the same age as me. That's almost. Me and Cherry Coke Just about.

Savesies. You're older than Cherry Coke. Hey. Get that on a shirt. I'm older than Cherry Coke.

But we both look great. Yeah. Yeah. You do. How many different, labels has Cherry Coke had?

I don't know. Quite a few? Oh, yeah. Yeah. Oh, look at the the one I the that one was cool.

The one where they actually had the the o in Coke was an actual cherry, that's a good choice. That's a good marketing thing. You're just going on and on about Cherry Coke. I just it's 40. Happy birthday.

Happy birthday, Cherry Coke. They went away from it. They just now use the regular Coca Cola logo, but they have a cherry below it. Oh. They should put the cherry back in the o.

Maybe you should tell them. That's good marketing. That was genius. Evidently, it wasn't if they took it out. Well, they've done some weird ones.

They did, like, one that was all crazy in the nineties, and then they they did the one that was just stripes and said Cherry Coke. It was boring. But the one with the cherry in it, smart. Smart. Yeah.

Good advertising. Yep. Go back to that. Anyway, happy birthday. Happy birthday, Cherry Coke.

Wow. Wow. You didn't even know. I now I do. S'mores are.

I I've had a s'more. I've had one or two. Okay. You can tell by the shape of my body. Okay.

Listen. I just saw these things. First of all, they make little brie bites is what they're called. So they're tiny little brie's. The cheese.

The cheese. What's that gonna do with the brie? It's a brie s'more. Listen. Oh.

So then you take a Okay. Okay. You melt your little brie bite over the fire. Put that on your cracker, then you take, like, your thing of salami or meat or whatever. Uh-huh.

And then you put, like, your fig jam. Okay. So you take it's a charcuterie s'more. Yes. Here's the thing about brie.

I don't really like it. I do. I know you do. So I'm all in. I think it tastes a little fishy.

Well, I don't. You don't you don't pick up on fish? I mean, maybe, like, the outer coating of it. So I can can. Maybe that's what And the texture of it is a little fish skinny.

So maybe that's what you're picking up. That's why. It it it's like a cheese filled fish. That's what I think about brie. And I get it.

People love it. People dip sourdough in it, breads, and all kinds of things. I and I've had it, and it's okay, but I always feel like I'm squishing fish on bread. My problem with brie is that it's always large, and so I can't eat the whole thing by myself. Oh, but you can try little brie bites?

Yeah. Oh, mama. Let's make some of those. I'm all in. Where where do you get the little brie bites?

We gotta find some. Uh-huh. Because you're gonna make charcuterie s'mores. Yes. I mean, look.

I'll I'll snack on, like, the regular charcuterie while we're sitting around the fire jumping. That sounds great. I don't need to roast the cheese. You do you, boo. No.

Okay. Okay. I will. I will. K.

So figure out where to find those because that's gotta go in the, camping checklist of things as we get ready for nicer weather. We can just do it outside in the backyard too. That is true. It's covered in snow right now. I know, but when it starts to melt, we can do it in the backyard.

So June? Sure. Okay. Good. Okay.

Are you ready for another game? Oh, sure. Oh, sure. Sure. Okay.

This is, kind of, what generation are we? Well, so they they created a sub generation for us because we were We're Gen X millennial hybrid. And it's called Xennial. So it's it's the end of millennial, but spelled with an x. Okay.

So this is, give yourself one point for each thing that you've never done. Okay. If I don't if I've never done it, I mark a point. Correct. Alrighty.

Here we go. Used a rotary phone. I have done so. Used a floppy disk. I have done so many times.

Used a typewriter. I have done so. Fun fact. I used to write my high school notes in on a typewriter. A lot of my friends had computers.

We were one of the last of my peers to get a computer. Yeah. And Even So I was still typing. Computer. Like, I we got a computer in, like, '94, but I still, like, for years and years and years, used a word processor Uh-huh.

That that then also had the eraser ink. So you could you could erase Yeah. The mistakes. Yeah. Okay.

Ready? Yep. Taking photos with a film camera. Yes. Listen to music on a CD.

Yeah. Listen to music on a cassette tape. Many times. Listen to music on a vinyl record. Many times.

Listen to music on a Walkman? Yes. Listen to music on a boombox outside? Watched a video from a VHS tape? Yes.

Sent or received a fax? Yes. Recorded music from radio to cassette? Many times. That's how I got my start in the biz.

Rented a video from Blockbuster. Yeah. I I probably still owe them money. Access the Internet via dialogue. Of course.

Used a phone book. Yeah. Sent a postcard. Used a phone book just to sit on or looked up an app No. To look up an app for?

I get it. Yeah. What was the last one? Sent a postcard? Postcard.

Oh, have I done that? I I probably have. I'm trying to think of a time that I have. I'm I'm sure at some point, I've sent a postcard. Used a paper map to get somewhere.

Yes. Owned a dictionary. Yes. Owned an encyclopedia. Yes.

Paid with a paper check. We had Funkin' Wagnalls. T two. Yeah. Which you could get at Albertsons.

So every time we went to the grocery store, we'd pick up a new addition, a new letter. Oh, we got n. What was the next one? Paid with a paper check. Yes.

So far, I have zero points. Zero points. Me too. Yeah. Look at us.

Now I'd like to give the same test to our kids Oh my gosh. They're they're gonna have thousand points. And see what they I they've let's see. I would say that they've listened to music on a CD, and they've listened to music on a vinyl record. Yes.

They both have vinyl collections. But I think that's the only thing they've done. Cassettes? No. I don't think they have.

That's fun. Our kids have only done two things on this list. Isn't that crazy? Yeah. I have a, a little cassette player.

Uh-huh. We could have them try to play a cassette. I don't think they've done that one. I gotta just set the things there, and I'll go make music happen out of this thing. K.

And I could, we could definitely do that. And then, I also want them to skip to the next song. I also That will be part of the task. That's awesome. Get to the beginning of the next song.

Now go back to the song that we just listened to. Yeah. Start that song over. I wanna hear it again. I also want them to find a number in a phone book.

I don't even have a phone book. I know. I don't either, but I can I wanna find some? And I wanna find an old phone book, like like, back from the nineties. I bet my parents have one.

You think they have a nineties phone book at your house? Probably. Probably somewhere. That that's a that's a cool find. I know.

But it's in Burley. It's not gonna be that big. It was big. Hey. Settle down.

I'm not personally attacking you. What I'm saying is, like, when we got the the combined yellow and white pages in the nineties, that thing was Massive. I know. Thick. And then they they quit doing the white pages and just doing the yellow pages, and they kept leaving it on the step.

And finally, I went to their website and said, stop it. Quit making this. I don't want it. They also Internet now. Still also have a rotary phone.

True story. So Does it work, though? I don't think it does. Yeah. I don't think so either.

Is it still on the wall? Yes. Uh-huh. Hey. You know what'd be fun?

What? Would you rather this do that? A good one. Would you rather have an endless library of your favorite books or books that you want to read or unlimited access to the best new movies and TV shows? Best determined by who?

Yourself. Like, whenever you have an inkling to watch something, you're like, there it is. Okay. Or whenever you wanna read something. Oh, there it is.

Alright. I'm going, but I knew you would. And and I'm not gonna say books are bad because books are great, and I know you're you're a big reader. I'm not a big reader, although I would like to be, but, but it makes me so tired. That's what I feel about movies.

Right. You turn on a movie, I'm out. I'm asleep. Yeah. I Good.

I get that. Nice nap. So for me, I'm definitely gonna say the movies and TV shows, because here's where I found myself last night. I'm sitting downstairs on my fly tying bench, and I just wanna turn on like, I wanna watch people fish, and I wanna watch people do it in, like, areas that I fish. And I wanna be able to say, like, show me people being successful in the waters that I like to fish.

And so I try to find those videos that don't exist. Ah. See? I see. And they don't exist because I haven't made them.

Then go make them. Or because they do exist, and what I appreciate about certain creators on YouTube is that they keep fishing spots secret really well. Mhmm. So then I have to play this game of, do I recognize this place? And I don't like playing that game.

So if I could just have my own curated videos There you go. You can watch it. Show me people being successful and showing me tips and tricks for fishing areas I fish, that was what I wanted to watch last night and couldn't find. Okay. Well So I'd want that.

That's good. Or I'd want, like, a cool documentary about something or a nice wildlife film. Like, this is my world these days. That sounds awesome. I know.

Yeah. A nice wildlife documentary. When I'm tying flies, I I like the music and the sounds and the nature of it all. That's good stuff. Wildlife documentary.

Yeah. You seen a good one lately? Nope. Oh, I should show you a couple. I'm okay.

I got one about fish and the spots that they have. Mhmm. Yeah. It's actually a parasite. Did you know that?

Tell me more. There for just a second that we weren't there, but we're there. We're here. We're there. We're we're at the end of the show.

But before we go, I do wanna let you know that you and I are super cool. We are super cool. We are super cool, and we've been cool because we like old people things, and old people things are super cool right now. Are they? What's Listen to this.

Okay. Gen z, which is our kids, are being super nostalgic right now. K. And we know this because we've talked about they wanna do, like, film camera stuff. They wanna have vinyl collections.

Like, they're they're doing what they're calling grandma hobbies. Oh. What did our daughter just get into this last weekend? She just was crocheting this weekend. Right.

Crocheting, top of the list right now for Gen z Really? Hobbies. Crocheting is so huge. 18 to 34 year olds love crocheting right now. I love it.

I know. There's so many we thought that maybe some of these hobbies might die. Well and here's the thing. Let me be clear. Quilting is not on this list, and neither is fly tying.

Oh. And I think that, both of those things, sewing in general, I think is taking a hit Oh. Because it's way more convenient for people to just buy textiles than it is for them to make stuff. Crocheting is, is sort of, think about Gen z grew up with fidget spinners. Oh, that's true.

This is these these are repetitive motion, brain stimuli type activities that they can continue to do without having to really process a lot. So it fits right in. That's my take anyway. Okay. That makes sense.

Scrapbooking is on the list for gents. Scrapbooking? Yeah. They're doing, get this, junk journals. Weird.

I am a doing junk journal. You do journaling. That's what you do. With photos, they're taking stuff, concert wristbands, ticket stubs, dried flowers, pieces of napkin, whatever it is, and they're putting them into journals to sort of remember things. They're technically scrapbooking, but it's journaling.

Yeah. Right? I'm doing that. I know. So that's on the list.

Bird watching. Come on. I've been talking about critters for years. Bird watching for years. I've been doing bird watching and critter watching for a long time.

We are so cool. I know. Baking bread on the list. I don't bake bread. People love baking.

I don't. Our daughter wants to bake. She's all the time. Loves baking. That's what I'm saying.

I don't enjoy baking. This is huge. This one a bit surprising. Letter writing. People are writing physical letters Oh, I like that.

And, and mailing them. A couple of times a month, people are writing letters. I have a friend who will randomly mail me a card. Yeah. And it's a card that she's handmade, and she'll put a little a little note in there.

She handwrites it, and she kinda little doodles on it. And I love receiving those messages. That's a big deal. You ready for the next one? You're gonna have to get on board with it.

What is it? Jigsaw puzzles. Nope. Yes. Nope.

Yes. So good. No. I'll do all the other stuff, but not that. It's a big thing for Gen z to unplug, have some, break from screen time, stress relieving.

No. Puzzles, man. No. I talked about vinyl record collecting. Gardening is big.

I like gardening. And reading and book clubs are are big. And you know that. BookTok is huge. Yes.

So books, of course, are are a big deal. Whether they're reading or collecting, bookTok is a big deal. Again, quilting and fly tying, not on the list. Love those hobbies, and I think more people need to think about those because I don't wanna see those go away. Quilting's great.

Quilting's awesome. And quilting is a lot of math, so you have to brush up on some math skills in order to do it. Sometimes, if you're not very good at math, you have to think about it seven or eight times That's okay too. And go Measure seven or eight times cut once. I do.

And it still sometimes comes out wrong. I know. But that's okay. I get it. But, anyway, I I think it's great.

Old, what they're calling grandma hobbies are getting a big resurgence. I think they grandpa hobbies. They are. But I'm just I'm just saying, we are ahead of the curve. We are so hip with the Gen Z crowd.

We are so cool. We always knew we were. I know. I know. Gen Z, look at us.

Look at us. Just look at us. We're so cool. Have a great rest of your Wednesday. We'll be back tomorrow morning with more of this.

Hopefully, we sound a little bit better tomorrow morning. I could go for that. That'd be great. Be normal. That'd be great.

Yeah. And check out the podcast, Wake Up Classy 97. The podcast is everywhere. So if you missed any part of the show, we don't expect you listen to all four hours. But if you wanna recap it, you wanna hear the whole thing in about an hour, you can.

Or you wanna jump around and listen to your favorite parts or just the parts you missed, you can with the podcast available on Spotify, Apple, YouTube Music, and everywhere else podcasts are available. Have a great day. Happy Wednesday. Alright. Bye bye.

Bye bye. Bye. See you. Bye. 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.