Episode Transcript
Transcripts are displayed as originally observed. Some content, including advertisements may have changed.
Use Ctrl + F to search
0:00
Trying to figure out what to eat for
0:02
dinner yet again? With NorSides and bullion as
0:04
your not-so-secret ingredient, you can skip the drive-thru
0:06
and do dinner at home. Nor
0:08
Taste combos provide a menu of delicious,
0:11
affordable, and well-balanced meals that you can
0:13
prepare in 30 minutes or
0:15
less. Visit nor.com to get
0:17
quick and easy recipe ideas for your
0:19
home-cooked weeknight dinners. It's not fast food,
0:21
but it's so good. We
0:30
are. Hey. We
0:32
are. Come on. Hey. Aren't
0:35
you the same? Welcome to Who We Leave, the
0:37
podcast where you'll learn everything you need to know about the celebrities
0:39
you don't. I'm Bobby Finger. I'm
0:41
Lindsay Weber. Quickly buy
0:43
tickets to our live shows. Tour
0:46
is still happening. Who We Leave are us. We're
0:48
coming to the Midwest. We're coming to the West. We're coming to
0:50
the South. That's going to be great. My
0:52
voice sounds terrible because I have a cold. Future
0:54
Lindsay here, it was
0:57
not a cold. More importantly, there's nothing
0:59
I can do about it. There's nothing I can do about it. I
1:01
just sound like this to there. No one's
1:03
trying to be you. Live
1:05
your truth. But I really want to play
1:07
this clip from Tyler Henry, the medium. The
1:10
medium. Doing a read of Jerry
1:13
O'Connell. Oh my God. That's so real.
1:15
He went from doing readings to doing a read. It's
1:19
a read, sweetie. It's a read, sweetie. Here's
1:21
Tyler Henry, who is a scam artist.
1:24
No, stop. Telling Jerry O'Connell.
1:26
Say allegedly. Allegedly. You
1:29
don't have to say that. Here's Tyler Henry, who
1:31
is allegedly a total
1:33
fraud and scam artist. Reading.
1:36
Allegedly lies about every single fucking thing that
1:38
he says about these people. Here he is
1:40
reading the House Down Boots, Jerry O'Connell. This sounds
1:42
so left field, but any tragedies around
1:45
trains or any situations I'm hearing, choo,
1:48
choo, choo, choo, choo. I
1:51
sound like a lunatic, but it keeps coming good.
1:53
No, you're absolutely right. This is... Does that... Do
1:56
you want me to elaborate on this, or do you...
1:58
You know what the choo-choo thing is? I do. The
2:01
only way to describe it is this feeling of
2:03
this death. I hear choo choo and the feeling
2:05
of how do we move forward and family forever
2:08
changed, not being able to have the tools to
2:10
really bring closure to the situation. People
2:12
moving on with that person who passed that
2:14
way. There's just kind of a sense of
2:16
taking things down or not being able to
2:18
like... He always uses the same phrasing.
2:21
Like, such a liar. How
2:23
do I get a sense of family not being able to move
2:25
forward, changes being made? Closure, closure, closure.
2:27
The way that he speaks is so
2:29
unique though. I know you really don't like
2:32
him. I like him more than you. And
2:34
I also am like total fraud, but I
2:36
have a real fondness for him because I
2:38
do think that he, between the scribbling... I
2:40
think he's really created his own language of
2:42
this, which I find very charming, where he is
2:45
able to... It's even hard to do an
2:47
impression of because it's so unique, where
2:50
he's like, I'm getting a
2:53
sense of like, ah, woo, God,
2:55
can you let me know? Like
2:58
a woo, like a woo, God. Like a
3:00
woo, God, and like a, oh, low, low,
3:02
low, low. Was a grandfather,
3:04
a great grandfather
3:07
killed by a
3:09
giant coyote that was driving a
3:12
Model T, perhaps? I'm just, I'm feeling
3:14
kind of a heaviness, almost like a giant anvil
3:17
has fallen on my head. I
3:19
know that's so silly and like I might be off
3:21
track, but like it's because, you know, like John Edward
3:23
Ducell only be like, the name starts with J. Tyler
3:26
Henry is giving a full sequence
3:29
of events. He's giving sounds and
3:31
smells. They're doing different things. John
3:34
Edwards was doing the, what do
3:36
you call that? Cold reading? He
3:39
was fishing. Yeah. He was going, J, J, anyone
3:41
with a J? Anyone with an L? L, M, P, Q, R? Death
3:44
by anvil, death by piano, death by tongue.
3:46
What? Tyler is like
3:49
typing into google.com, Chrishell
3:52
Stow's tragedy. Yes. He's,
3:55
I do believe though, because I, I did
3:57
this when Tyler Henry show was on TV.
4:00
I would watch the clips and then I would google
4:02
to see how much was publicly available And
4:05
it wasn't always Publicly
4:07
available often it was but with Jerry
4:09
O'Connell's Grandfather's brother who was killed by
4:12
a train and apparently that created some
4:14
sort of horrendous generational trauma that exists
4:16
through this day choo-choo
4:18
choo-choo Oh my
4:20
gosh, I could not find any
4:22
stories about the choo-choo killing it
4:24
But that doesn't mean anything that
4:26
just means that Tyler Henry has
4:28
a really really dedicated research team
4:31
They're going to libraries. Okay, however, he
4:33
did it getting Tyler Henry to say
4:35
choo-choo Does that mean anything to you and then it does
4:37
and then Jericho I was like, oh
4:39
my god My grandfather's brother was hit by a
4:41
train a terrible train accident that changed the nature
4:43
of our family I mean that is and you
4:45
know Jerry O'Connell's
4:48
grandfather was the mayor
4:50
of Jersey
4:52
City, how'd you did you find this
4:54
out? That's on Wikipedia Oh,
4:56
so he's a prominent up the rest a
4:58
prominent person Yeah, so you can just go
5:00
into the archives and like Jersey City and
5:02
find out that his brother died I
5:05
found his brother's grave site. Okay, he died in
5:07
his 30s. You don't need to do the research
5:09
Tyler already did it he's I just
5:12
want to know how much is just there for the
5:14
taking no cell on my body Believes that he's speaking
5:16
to a ghost. I'm just like I need to know
5:18
how you're doing this What if I told you I
5:20
believed it? I think we'd have to have a long
5:22
conversation off Mike Lindsay Have
5:26
a long conversation off Mike
5:29
What if I was fully on board and believing everything? That
5:33
you're not listen, I just think his
5:35
flourish and his con artistry is Talent
5:38
and that's more what I'm kind of like looking
5:40
at tragedies around trains or any
5:43
situations. I'm hearing choo-choo My
5:45
gosh I
5:47
sound like a lunatic, but no you're absolutely right
5:50
This is you're listening to who's there with the
5:52
call and show we take your questions comments and
5:54
concerns at 619 who them Let's
5:56
start with some comments. Oh my god
5:58
the number of people who called about Survivor, I was
6:01
like, well we gotta play one of them. Hey
6:04
Lindsay Bobby Timmy, I
6:06
am of course calling
6:08
about the new
6:10
It couple, Amanda Probst, and Austin
6:12
Lee Coon. I just
6:15
wanted to give some more context
6:17
for the statement from them
6:20
that you guys read. When he
6:22
says, I'm sure this
6:24
is a surprise given how season 45 ended,
6:28
that is because that season
6:31
ended with Austin coming in
6:33
second to D. Valladares, who
6:35
he was in a pretty
6:37
steamy and adorable showmance with.
6:39
The two of them were a
6:41
really dominant duo in a very
6:44
strong alliance of four, and
6:46
I think many
6:48
would agree that Bull on
6:51
the jury chose D over
6:53
Austin because he really
6:55
didn't have any secrets from D, but
6:57
she made a few strong moves without
6:59
including him that he wasn't even aware
7:01
of until the very last moment. It
7:03
was a very dramatic reveal that she
7:05
made. They really gave the
7:08
sense that they were really into each other
7:10
on the island and it was really cute,
7:12
but as soon as the season aired, in
7:14
all their exit press they were being pretty vague
7:17
about they were still together and it was kind of
7:19
just giving we don't live in the
7:21
same state and we respect our
7:23
privacy with their vibes, but D
7:25
is really cool. All the gay
7:27
guys that I watch Survivor with would agree she's one
7:29
of the strongest, most well-rounded
7:31
players and winners of the new era.
7:35
Mostly I wanted to say I feel like Austin,
7:37
as someone who was in
7:39
a pretty popular showmance who came
7:41
in second and is also hot,
7:46
I feel like he had a really good shot
7:48
at playing again.
7:50
Season 50 is going to
7:52
be all returning players, but
7:55
I feel like dating Amanda Probst
7:58
probably disqualifies him. interesting
8:00
if he is willing to
8:03
sacrifice another shot at a million dollars. He
8:06
must really care about
8:08
her and that's really cute. But anyway,
8:10
showing whole Leanne Cuisine. That last bit
8:12
was not mentioned by a lot of
8:14
the callers and I think it's one
8:17
of the more important aspects of this,
8:19
which is that like I was like trolling some survivor
8:22
message boards and Reddit's and
8:25
people were talking about Dee in Austin and like they
8:27
had this showmance and then he's
8:29
dating the niece now or whatever. A lot
8:31
of people are like, oh he's trying hard to get
8:34
on survivor 50. He's trying hard to get on survivor
8:36
50. Now he's guaranteed to be on survivor 50, but
8:39
this caller is like this may in
8:41
fact disqualify him because he's dating the
8:43
host's niece. It's true. So he's not
8:45
trying that hard. So he's not trying that hard. He just wants
8:47
love over money. Anyways, I'm watching this
8:49
season. I mean I am. I
8:51
haven't watched yet, but I am watching this season. I'm
8:53
getting involved. It's time for me to
8:56
get involved. It's time for me to get involved. I'm
8:58
stepping up. Okay,
9:00
next call about a television
9:02
show. A long-running television show.
9:04
Hi, Bobby. Long time, long
9:06
time. Sorry, I'm walking. I
9:09
don't know that there's like a... I don't
9:11
even know if you care about this. I
9:13
don't know if there's scientific answers here about
9:15
leaving SNL early, but as an SNL megastan,
9:18
I do think that three seasons
9:20
is the dividing line. Like I
9:22
think if you save for four or more
9:24
seasons, it's not considered early and there is
9:26
a reason. And that's because the
9:28
first two seasons you're there, you're a
9:30
secret player and then on your third
9:33
season you're generally upgraded to a repertory
9:35
player. So only being a repertory player
9:37
for one season would be kind of
9:39
considered an early exit. You have to
9:41
put in your time to get promoted to the main
9:43
cast. But again, this
9:45
is not a science. This is not a theory. Okay,
9:47
Cribs friends, love you, bye. I love a theory like
9:49
this just because like I
9:52
love an opinion that's so fun
9:54
to me. So this person is
9:56
like I'm an SNL superfan and the
9:59
reason why leaving... being early after
10:01
one year is so kind of, it's
10:05
a break in the make or break, it's
10:08
because you leave as a day player versus
10:11
being a repertory, I forget what she
10:13
used, there's technology, but you don't get
10:16
like bumped up to being main
10:18
cast. So like you kind of do leave
10:21
with a blip. My thing is
10:23
like, in my mind, SNL
10:25
doesn't make you famous if you leave
10:27
early, it's just that their casting is
10:29
really good, so therefore they catch people
10:31
who were already on their way up.
10:34
So like in the case of, let's say,
10:36
Jenny Slate, where it's like she left after
10:39
one season, I don't think like SNL probably
10:41
helped, but I think she would have gotten
10:43
there no matter what, because of their, and
10:45
the way that they found her was because
10:47
she was already in that trajectory. So it's
10:49
hard to say whether somebody who's
10:52
been on one season of SNL and then gets big,
10:54
it's because of SNL, because it's just like, it's
10:58
not a fair scientific assessment. There's just, it's
11:00
not, you know what I mean? Because
11:03
then you have people who like almost made it
11:05
there, like I think about Tim Robinson too, sorry,
11:08
where it's like Tim Robinson was a
11:10
huge flop on SNL, but now he's
11:13
making moves all over Hollywood, you know? A
11:15
huge slay, right? Netflix, HBO, like independent
11:18
film, like it's all happening for Tim Robinson,
11:20
but it took a while, you know? Post
11:22
SNL, it took a while. Well, it wasn't
11:24
like the right fit for him or whatever,
11:26
but yeah, I mean, I just think like
11:28
there's, it's hard to say like, you
11:32
need to be there for three years to make any
11:34
sort of impact. I totally get that. Or
11:37
totally, but the right amount of fame. You still
11:39
might not make an impact, but yeah, totally, totally,
11:41
yeah. Let's move on
11:43
to normal questions. Hey
11:46
BLT, long time, long time. I have
11:48
an Emmys question for you. So
11:50
I was thinking about it, and really
11:53
my question is, can
11:55
winning an Emmy make
11:57
you a them anymore? I feel
11:59
like it... It did at one point, but especially
12:01
with streaming and just the amount of television there
12:03
is out there, it seems
12:06
to me like you're either already a them
12:08
and winning an Emmy might increase
12:10
your prestige, but it doesn't move you from
12:12
who to them or you're a who and
12:14
you win an Emmy and you're a them
12:17
to people who watch your show, but you're
12:19
still a who more broadly. So
12:22
is this no longer a
12:26
path to graduation? Was it ever a
12:28
path to graduation? We'd love
12:30
to hear your thoughts. Crunch crunch. No,
12:33
winning an Emmy doesn't make you a them anymore. Uh-huh.
12:35
Did it ever? Well, I was
12:37
looking through the history of the Emmys, obviously, and
12:39
then I was thinking about how television is fractured
12:42
over the many, many decades of the Emmy's history
12:44
where it's like, whatever. And
12:46
I think that back in the day, typically, if
12:48
you won an Emmy, you were already a them.
12:51
Because there were like three TV shows. There were
12:53
four shows that were all Seinfeld. Right. So
12:55
it's like, but no, I'm thinking about like the sixties and the
12:57
seventies too, but there just wasn't much. Right.
13:00
That's a very good point. Like the TV landscape
13:02
wasn't so varied. So it's like, it wasn't like
13:04
you got to watch a beef. Like it was
13:06
just like, we're all watching Seinfeld. Yeah, exactly. Exactly.
13:08
But the other thing is like, if
13:10
you win an Emmy these days and let's say
13:12
you're a them now, let's look at, I'm just
13:15
thinking top of mind, Jeremy Allen white. He
13:19
didn't need the Emmy to become a them. That
13:21
show was already really, really popular
13:24
and broke through the sort
13:26
of like the, the
13:28
noise of streaming and the noise of television
13:30
and already made an impact. Oh, are you
13:32
watching the bear? It's vindicating, I guess, but
13:34
I think it has nothing to do with
13:36
them dumb or them status or achieving. Certainly
13:38
getting nominated for an Emmy does not them
13:40
you at all. Even close. That
13:43
doesn't matter. We'll talk about these,
13:45
um, some of these people like, um,
13:47
not, you know, to the audience one,
13:49
right? Like, we'll talk about these people
13:51
from, um, some of these specials
13:55
and TV shows. And it's just like, I
13:57
don't know that they are them just because they want.
14:01
because these shows are still relatively small.
14:04
Right, well it's also like some
14:07
of them are not even the star of the show
14:09
or not even the show's not even something that is
14:11
like on a streamer that is popular. You know, it's
14:13
like there's so many elements of, I
14:16
don't know where to watch this or a
14:18
lot of people are not watching this. It's
14:21
just like loved by critics. I think that's
14:23
the main thing where now it's like the
14:25
critical and the popular are so far separated
14:27
versus it was always that case. Now even
14:29
more so because of the nature of streaming
14:32
and how it's so siloed. Like now
14:34
like you hear about shows that critics love and you're
14:36
like where the fuck am I supposed to watch that?
14:38
And he's on like Showtime and that I can only
14:40
get if by a sub screen. You know, it's not
14:43
just something that's added onto my cable package. I have
14:45
to go like find it or it's like on Roku
14:47
or it's you know, that's it's not crazy
14:50
for these shows to kind of come out
14:52
of the left field and be like critical
14:54
darlings and maybe they'll get on Netflix in
14:56
like three seasons. But like that's the issue
14:58
is it takes it takes a while for
15:01
sometimes a random thing to like come to the mainstream.
15:03
Like how Schitt's Creek worked, you know, like Schitt's Creek,
15:05
no one heard of it for its entire run. And
15:07
then it's last season was like on Netflix. Somebody was
15:09
like, oh my God. Oh my
15:11
God. So I don't know. Like
15:14
I think it has to do with those two
15:16
things. Meanwhile, winning an Emmy for your career as
15:18
an actor is huge. Maybe doesn't
15:20
make you a them, but it makes you a
15:23
them to every single person in that industry because
15:25
I do think that it's like in
15:27
Hollywood, your job is to know who's won an Emmy. Oh,
15:30
for sure. And you become an industry them. Absolutely.
15:33
Your number one concern is to be, you know,
15:35
Matt Bellamy and like know like the freaking football
15:37
stats of all these people, like the RBI is
15:39
like you got to know what they've won and
15:41
when they won and what they want it for.
15:43
So I think that to that, like to get
15:45
you in the room with people changes your life.
15:47
Yeah. Changes your life. I
15:49
think actually my parents watched Shogun so they will know
15:51
who these people are. But let's go back one year.
15:53
Like when Sarah snook won the Emmy for succession last
15:55
year, I don't think my parents were something like, Oh,
15:58
who's this Sarah snook woman? and we keep hearing
16:00
about like, no, that didn't happen. But it did
16:03
happen with her being on succession. But also, here,
16:05
Yuki Sonata was already very famous. Jean Smart,
16:07
already famous. Jeremy Ellen White, already
16:09
famous. Sure, sure. You
16:12
get what we're saying, come on. If
16:14
you do an interesting speech, if you have an
16:17
interesting moment, if you, and you know,
16:19
like, we're gonna get to Alex Edelman, but
16:21
like, if Alex Edelman had like this kind
16:23
of like interesting moment up there, like that
16:25
can make a difference. Cause like, you're getting
16:27
the screen time of television. Your award is
16:29
being presented on live TV. So like, you
16:32
do have that. We'll get there. Wait,
16:34
let's play the first. We'll play the first,
16:36
I like this one. Hi here
16:38
weekly. I'm sure you're getting
16:40
a ton of Emmy's calls, but
16:43
I'm just calling to say that
16:45
I'm obsessed with Lorraine
16:48
Newman's absolute hatred for
16:50
the bear. And I
16:53
think I might agree with her. Anyways,
16:56
crunch crunch. First of all, do people
16:58
know that Lorraine Newman, who is an
17:00
SNL cast member in the eight seventies,
17:02
eighties, early. She's in the original
17:05
SNL cast. That's why I'm to be in here.
17:07
She is a character in the new movie. Oh,
17:09
she is. She's played by Emily Farn. Oh my
17:11
God. That's so funny. Emily Fairn, who plays Lorraine
17:13
Newman in the new right man, Saturday night
17:15
movie plays the Michelle
17:17
Williams character in Brokeback Mountain. And
17:19
Michelle Williams, iconically says, Jack twist,
17:21
Jack nasty. You don't go up
17:23
there to fish. So she plays
17:25
that role. Twist.
17:31
Jack nasty. Jack nasty. Okay. Shout
17:34
out to Emily Farn. Good for
17:36
you. Lorraine Newman, again, comedian. She
17:38
is the mother of, drum roll
17:41
please, Hannah Einbinder. So
17:43
Hannah Einbinder, we've talked about giving, it's giving
17:45
an Eppow baby. We've talked about
17:47
this before. I think she's like broken free of that
17:49
a little bit because people don't seem to really know
17:51
or put that upon her. Well, here's the issue. What's
17:53
the antidote to being called an Eppow baby? People have
17:55
to like the shit that you're in and people like
17:57
Hacks. They like it. People like Hacks, they think she's
17:59
good. et cetera, et cetera. So
18:01
when the bear beat her, when
18:04
she didn't win, she's now been
18:06
nominated what, two years in a row and hasn't won, three years in a
18:08
row? Two years in a row, maybe. Who
18:10
deserved it? Because the actress from the bear wasn't the only
18:13
good episode of the bear this season. Sorry, don't talk about that.
18:15
I just, it was like they did a, what
18:18
do you call it, bottle episode? Liza Colonzias. Okay,
18:20
everyone was talking about her. So she was
18:22
nominated with her Carol Burnett, Hannah Einbinder, Janelle
18:24
James, Cheryl Lee Ralph and Meryl Streep. What
18:27
is Carol Burnett being nominated for? We
18:29
love Carol Burnett. Paul Royale. The show that cost
18:31
$100 million on Apple TV. One.
18:35
That is like. Watched. Crazy. So
18:38
Lorraine Newman tweets as Emmys are alive,
18:40
she tweets, fuck the bear, deletes it.
18:43
And then she tweets, I think the bear is a
18:45
great show, but in my honest opinion, it's not a
18:47
comedy. Not even a dark comedy. And
18:49
this is not the first time she's tweeted
18:52
about this. Every time I think about the bear being
18:54
in the comedy category for the Emmys, I can feel
18:56
an ulcer developing. So obviously there's two reasons. One, you
18:58
think of this woman as a comedian. Two, you think
19:00
of her daughter losing an Emmy two years in a
19:02
row. Three, I get the sensitivity on the bear not
19:05
being a comedy thing, because not just
19:07
like, oh, is the bear a comedy?
19:09
Well, it's not funny. That's basic. What it is is
19:11
that Hacks is a comedy and it's about comedy. And
19:13
I think that makes it even more, I
19:16
think that's what I think gets people more riled
19:18
up because it's like. It's literally about comedy.
19:20
It's like if 30 Rock was competing against,
19:22
what's another show that's like The Sopranos?
19:25
And people were like, The
19:27
Sopranos is actually funny in so many ways, which is true. The
19:29
Sopranos is funny. The Sopranos can be funny. But
19:32
if it was going up against 30 Rock, I would
19:34
be like, that's not even fair. Because
19:36
the 30 Rock is like pumping out the
19:38
jokes. It's like a joke a second. It's
19:40
like a totally different format. So like, I
19:42
do feel like they're not in the same
19:44
category. These shows are probably more closer in,
19:47
these are probably more closer connected because the
19:49
Hacks while being a comedy is also kind of
19:51
dramatic. There are dramatic moments. There's dramatic acting, whatever.
19:54
And the bear has funny moments, funny characters, also
19:56
dramatic acting, whatever. I mean, personal opinion.
19:58
Also, it's just like. to me,
20:00
so fucking funny. Like, it's just so
20:02
funny. It's so
20:05
funny. So people kind of got mad because they were like, can
20:07
you like get your mom to stop, like tell your mom to
20:09
stop tweeting, but also she's a comedian, so I'm kind of
20:11
like- She's a comedian. She's old, it doesn't matter.
20:13
It's funny. Yeah, like, it's funny. And
20:15
also she's old and I'm just like, let
20:18
her live. But the worst thing
20:20
is that now it's like journalists are
20:22
going around asking actors. I believe- Is it
20:24
better comedy? Is it better comedy? The like
20:26
TikTok video that the LA Times released of
20:28
their journalist walking down the red carpet, asking
20:30
everyone, is the bear a comedy? What do
20:33
you think about the bear being a comedy?
20:35
And they're asking like the cast of hacks.
20:37
I was like, this is so cruel. It's
20:40
so shady. I would never think about it. And then
20:42
the only people who said the right thing were like
20:44
Josh Jackson. And I was like, yeah, he's not on
20:47
the show. He doesn't have a dog in this fight.
20:49
What was he in, fatal attraction? He doesn't give a
20:51
shit. Yes, it is played straight by the
20:53
actors, but the scenarios are absurd or
20:55
heightened and geared towards calling out
20:57
the absurdity of the situation, which to me is
20:59
a comedy, as opposed to playing into the pathos
21:01
of a situation, which is then a drama. His
21:03
shows are hilarious. He's about to be in Doctor Odyssey. He's
21:06
about to be a doctor on a boat.
21:08
That's directed by Ryan Murphy. Doctor,
21:16
welcome aboard the Odyssey. Whoa, in
21:18
the ice. This
21:21
ship is heaven. Do it
21:23
together. Our mission is
21:25
to preserve the dream. And
21:29
that's why you're here. I'm in. Keep
21:35
these dreamers safe. Oh my, I cannot
21:37
wait for that show. People are now just like normal
21:39
people. Like our friends are now like discovering that that
21:42
show is happening. Like especially during the Emmys when they
21:44
were playing the ads for it. People were like, what
21:46
is this, Sean? I was like, welcome. You don't
21:48
know about Doctor Odyssey? I was like, welcome. You
21:50
don't know about Doctor Odyssey? Don
21:54
Johnson's there. You're like, Josh Jackson
21:56
is literally gonna like, cure a
21:58
man's like, scene. sickness like scurvy
22:01
Josh I'm like you have scurvy I bet
22:03
the first episode someone gets scurvy or something
22:05
all sorts of things can happen on a
22:07
cruise ship literally everything you could fall you
22:09
could hit your head you could go overboard
22:12
you could I around to diarrhea it's everything
22:14
it's literally everything but what if you're such
22:16
a reaction oh you're gonna you're gonna get
22:19
involved in so many weird funny little miscommunications
22:22
and mishaps oh it's gonna be great someone on
22:24
reddit wrote this won't be popular based on the
22:26
comments but Joshua Jackson's response that everyone is crazy
22:28
is just been painting the comedy definition with the
22:31
daily broad brush to encompass the bear and I'm
22:33
just like I felt the same way I'm like
22:35
he was eloquent he was articulate yeah but like
22:37
he wasn't really saying anything which is an actor's
22:42
gonna say it's not a cop no one on
22:44
my carpet is gonna be like I don't support
22:46
the people that are not if that's just bad
22:48
form you gotta be tweeting from home you're not
22:50
gonna be on the carpet being a bitch so
22:52
it's like and I still haven't seen the bear
22:54
so I don't know you'll never know one day you
22:59
will watch the bear and you'll be like damn it's good
23:01
but it'll be like in 30 years you'll
23:03
you'll have no one to talk about because we all
23:05
will have forgotten the show god
23:07
what is that oh it's an episode of
23:09
the Simpsons the itchy and scratchy movie comes
23:12
out and Homer doesn't let Bart see it
23:14
and he bans him from seeing the itchy
23:16
and scratchy movie and the episode ends with
23:18
them like old and he takes
23:20
his dad to go see the itchy and
23:22
scratchy like retrospective like 50 years later and
23:24
it's very sweet and I'm just like that's gonna be
23:27
me watching the bear me and you going
23:29
into the night hawk and being like now's the
23:31
time they're showing season
23:33
one and one go my
23:37
last words are gonna be that fucking sucked and then
23:39
I'm just gonna fly no I think
23:41
you're gonna be like I should have watched
23:43
it sooner so I could have a conversation with my
23:45
friends for my number one
23:48
show didn't win anything really so slow
23:50
horse no the morning show
23:53
I'm kidding I'm kidding I'm kidding I'm kidding I'm kidding how
23:55
did you missame it my cat is very
23:58
particular especially since the pandemic now that he's
24:00
get so much attention. Oh boy. For the past
24:02
four years, just more attention than ever. He's become
24:04
pickier than ever. He's become needier than ever. It's
24:06
hard to find him a cat food that he
24:09
likes. And we've started using Small's and he is
24:11
kind of gagged for it in a good way.
24:13
Old cat food that we used was really stinky,
24:15
gross. Every time you had someone over to like
24:18
watch your cat while you're gone, they're like,
24:20
oh, I hate, if they're not familiar with
24:22
cats, they're like, I'm so disgusted by this.
24:24
That's not the case with Small's at all.
24:26
Stinky, bad, wet cat food, disgusting kibble. That's
24:28
the thing of the past. Small's cat food
24:30
is protein packed recipes made with preservative free
24:32
ingredients you'll find in your fridge. And it's
24:34
delivered right to your door. You take them
24:36
out of the box, put them in the
24:38
fridge. That's why veterinarians.org rates Small's 10 out
24:40
of 10 for ingredient quality. My cat's favorite
24:42
flavor is the chicken one, which is very
24:44
weird. You'd think that cats would all be
24:46
about fish, not mine. He loves chicken. It's
24:49
actually very strange, but fortunately there's a chicken
24:51
recipe that he loves. Small's was
24:53
started back in 2017 by a couple of guys
24:55
home cooking cat food in small batches for their
24:57
friends. A few short years later, they've served millions
24:59
of meals to cats across the US. At this
25:01
point, you might be wondering, why can't I just
25:04
be my cat kibble? Believe it or not, your
25:06
cute kitty descended from a ferocious desert cat who
25:08
hunted live prey for food. And your cat isn't
25:10
any different. They need fresh protein packed meals to
25:12
be at their best. And this is the best
25:14
time to switch to Small's. Head to smalls.com/who and
25:17
use promo code who at checkout for
25:19
50% off your first order, plus free shipping.
25:21
That's the best offer you'll find, but you
25:23
have to use my code who for
25:26
50% off your first order. One last time,
25:28
that's promo code who for 50% off your
25:30
first order, plus free shipping. I'm Jean Marie
25:32
Laskus. I'm a journalist. I spent my career
25:34
helping Americans understand the lives of other Americans.
25:36
Coal miners, gun shop clerks, staffers in the
25:39
White House mail room. In my new podcast,
25:41
Cement City, I tell the story of an
25:43
entire town, a dying town that you
25:45
have absolutely no reason to care about but trust
25:47
me, you will. Listen to and
25:49
follow Cement City, an Odyssey original podcast
25:51
in partnership with Cement City Productions. Available
25:53
now for free on the Odyssey app
25:56
and wherever you get your podcasts. I
26:00
got the Lola V in the mail and I was
26:02
so excited because I put it in the outdoor shower
26:05
right and people were down and they were using the
26:07
outdoor shower and they said
26:09
Lindsay I used that Lola V scalp
26:11
scrub what a scalp scrub they have
26:13
a scalp scrub they used it and
26:15
it and it felt so good the
26:17
lather it like brings up this big
26:20
beautiful lather and I was like damn
26:22
is that not the endorsement of a
26:24
of a lifetime like it's great after
26:26
the beach using your Lola V it's incredible
26:28
it's so good for your hair it feels so nice
26:30
in your hair you gave me your I
26:32
already had some myself but you gave me your
26:35
styling cream because you don't use it what do
26:37
you know I have to I think it's great
26:39
because you don't want styling cream that's too like
26:42
thick and weighty I like the texture of this it's
26:44
not too heavy on the hair I was talking
26:46
about the perfecting leave-in which is a conditioner
26:48
and I was also talking about the exfoliate
26:51
and detox scalp shampoo a leave-in conditioner
26:53
a leave-in conditioner makes me feel like a celebrity
26:55
like a celebrity I use the Lola V leave-in
26:57
I'm like Jennifer Aniston uses
26:59
leave-in conditioner I'm like Jennifer Aniston check
27:02
out all Lola V products at your local
27:04
Ulta Beauty location to experience the luxurious scent
27:06
for yourself or head directly to their website
27:08
at Lola V comm as our loyal listeners
27:10
you'll get an exclusive 15% off your entire
27:12
order when you use code who at checkout
27:14
that's 15% off your order at
27:16
lol a vi e comm with promo code
27:18
who please note that you can only use
27:20
one promo code per order and discounts can't
27:22
be combined after you purchase they'll ask where
27:24
you heard about them so please support our
27:26
show and tell them we sent you your
27:29
hair will thank you how
27:34
much of this same it hey
27:36
Lindsay Bobby and Timmy longtime longtime
27:38
who is Alex Edelman he
27:42
is halfway to an e thought I figure
27:44
we got a note about him crunch crunch me
27:46
at home oh and
27:49
the Emmy goes to Alex
27:54
Edelman This
28:01
is the first Emmy win and
28:03
nomination for Alex Edelman. You must do
28:05
my own thing, Andrew! Whoo!
28:18
Okay, hi, Steve. Um,
28:21
okay, um, thank
28:23
you so much for this. Uh, this is...oh, God,
28:25
you're crying in front of Carol Burnett. Fantastic. All
28:28
right. What's cool about these
28:30
variety specials is that it now includes
28:32
stand-up comedy and theater stuff that's transferred.
28:35
And now that stand-up comedy that is now kind
28:37
of like storytelling, Mike Prabiglia style, The Moth style
28:39
is now more popular. A lot of these shows
28:41
are like either going to Broadway or going to
28:43
Broadway and getting like picked up
28:45
as specials, and then they get nominated for
28:48
Emmys because they're technically on television, like, televised
28:50
or whatever. That rocks. Like, in
28:52
this category, you literally had Alex
28:54
Edelman with Just For Us. You had Jacqueline Novak,
28:56
which was one of the best shows I've seen
28:59
in a long time. And you had John Early,
29:01
whose show also fucking rocked, was on HBO. And
29:03
Declan's was on Netflix. So it's like, that's
29:05
really cool. Like, that, to me, is awesome.
29:07
I mean, who is Alex Edelman? That's what's kind
29:10
of crazy. He's just like a comedian guy. He's
29:12
Hannah Einbinder's ex. That's also
29:14
crazy. He's Lorraine Newman's daughter's ex. He
29:17
literally dated Hannah Einbinder for a long
29:19
time. And if you're wondering, I thought
29:21
she was queer. She is. Yeah,
29:23
she's queer. You could be queer and date Alex Edelman,
29:25
please. You definitely can't. You
29:27
definitely can't. You could be queer and date
29:29
Alex Edelman, I'm sorry. This show was good. I liked
29:31
his show. I have a high bar to,
29:34
like, watch comedy specials. Like, I really need to be locked in,
29:36
and I need to be a fan of the person. I
29:38
saw it off Broadway. I saw it live. I think that's,
29:40
for me, the kind of, you know, the big
29:42
bit. Because I liked, I already, well, you had pressed
29:44
me on Jacqueline Novak for so long, and I was
29:46
familiar with her, and I like her. Love that. It's
29:49
giving kind of like, what's their face? Hannah
29:51
Gatsby. Where's Hannah Gatsby? Where are
29:53
you? Where is Hannah Gatsby? We haven't
29:55
heard from Hannah Gatsby in a while. Remember when the
29:57
name on everybody's lips was Hannah Gatsby? Truly. on
30:00
everybody's lips was Hannah Gatsby.
30:03
I'm sorry, I just went to Hannah Gatsby's, hold
30:06
on, I went to their Instagram. They're
30:08
doing stuff, aren't they? No, their username
30:10
is Hannah underscore Gatsby. Sure.
30:13
And then the bio says, Dr. Hannah Gatsby,
30:15
where have I been? Okay, so
30:17
they got their literal medical degree while we
30:19
were like, where's Hannah Gatsby? Doctor of what?
30:22
Why did they get a doctor in it? I mean, whatever, if
30:24
I had an honorary doctorate, I'd ask everyone to call me doctor.
30:26
So I allow you to do this Hannah
30:28
Gatsby. So there really is nothing else to know
30:30
about Alex Edelman. It's funny, because a lot of
30:32
the things I know about him are from the
30:34
special, like from the show. So it's like, if
30:37
you watched it, you learn, his brother is a
30:39
bobsled Olympian. If you watch it, you learn, you
30:41
know, he's from Boston. Like those are
30:43
the things, you learn all these things about him.
30:45
One time I saw him at a party. Like
30:47
there's nothing else to know, it's kind of boring.
30:50
Me leaving Alex Edelman on
30:52
Broadway. Wow, I can't believe he's from
30:54
Boston. Can
30:57
you believe he's from Boston? He's
30:59
from Boston, and I saw him at a party. Who
31:02
is Nava Mal? That
31:04
might not be how you say her name,
31:06
but I don't know. But
31:09
who is that? Please tell me. Aviat
31:13
Yungen, hi-hi. You watched
31:15
Baby Reindeer, right? I did, yeah, I did, I did.
31:18
And so Nava Mal is the- She's
31:20
good in it. She's dating Baby
31:23
Reindeer. Wait, in the show? While he's
31:25
getting stalked, yeah, in the show. In the show,
31:27
he- Because this is a show I kind of
31:29
can't bring myself to watch. It's hard to watch.
31:31
The show he's getting stalked, that is a very,
31:34
but part of it is his own identity
31:36
because he also experienced
31:38
sexual assault, so he's also kind of figuring
31:40
out how he exists in the world and
31:42
what his sexual expression is
31:44
and whatever. And so it's like he's dating
31:46
a trans woman, and a lot of it
31:49
is his shame, his own shame, and reflecting
31:51
it on her, essentially. And she's like, I don't have
31:53
shame. I am not letting you- Why are you making
31:55
me feel uncomfortable? Totally. So I feel like a
31:57
lot of people talk about this show and they just talk about the
31:59
stock. aspect. And yes, that actress is really good. And
32:01
she did win an Emmy, the woman who played the
32:03
stalker. She was very good. But like, the
32:06
there's like, there's like B plots that
32:08
are also kind of like compelling and
32:10
interesting and different. And it's like, that's
32:13
usually not the conversation. So I'm glad that she
32:15
was nominated because it did make it did make
32:17
her character like, more important on
32:19
the show kind of in retrospect. Well, I'm
32:22
glad that you said that because I was feeling
32:24
the same thing. Because I was
32:26
like, wait, I thought this whole thing
32:28
was about a scary stalker. And like, it's a level
32:30
of darkness I didn't want to watch. And
32:33
I didn't know that there was like all this other
32:35
shit going on. And like, I didn't
32:37
know about the novel Mal character. And I was like, okay,
32:39
maybe I will watch baby reindeer. Yeah, I watched it because
32:41
I really wanted to see and I'm not seeing it. I
32:43
don't know where how to see it. But I want to
32:46
see his his one man show that what inspired it because
32:48
like, this was another kind of God
32:50
what's her face freaking jumpsuit lady. Wait,
32:53
what? Fleabag,
32:56
what's her name again? Oh, Phoebe Waller
32:58
bridges. Okay. In my mind, it's
33:00
like that jumpsuit. Okay. Yeah. That
33:02
show that I that her show that
33:04
inspired inspired Fleabag. I got
33:07
the chance to see live
33:09
like, randomly was very
33:11
lucky and like, or the show show. Yeah.
33:14
And like, loved the kind
33:16
of seeing the like adaptation of the show into a show.
33:18
So it's like, okay, cool. I want to like watch this
33:20
because I want to go back and like see a show
33:22
and like see how they did it and like what what
33:24
came from where and like how because that the
33:27
TV shows are good. But the but kind of
33:29
the one man aspect of telling a story that
33:31
is so rich and good that it ends up
33:33
being able to be made into a show is
33:35
so much more to me like impressive.
33:38
I've also never watched Fleabag. You know
33:40
this. It's fine. Let's just like, let's
33:43
just not that to me is like
33:45
even crazier than the bear. Like Fleabag rocks.
33:47
My TV consumption has been so wonky my
33:49
whole life, but especially lately. Like I know
33:51
I watched all of a perfect couple of
33:54
over two days. I was sick, but the
33:56
dumbest shit I've ever seen in my entire
33:58
fucking life. And I watched six episodes. Do
34:00
you wanna know who did it? No, actually I'm gonna make it a Patreon
34:02
thing tomorrow. I actually have a game plan. Okay, let's talk about it tomorrow. Cause
34:04
I do know who did it cause I watched one episode, said I will not be
34:07
watching this and I looked it up. So fucking funny. So
34:09
fucking stupid. Okay. So okay, but I'm
34:12
saying Fleabag is so good. Nava Mal
34:14
was nominated alongside Jessica Gunning, also from
34:16
Baby Reindeer. She won. Then Dakota Fanning
34:18
was there. His speech was so
34:20
good cause he was like, it's so crazy
34:22
that this show like even got here. And
34:24
it's like, that's true. It is crazy, considering.
34:26
They are all so random. The show
34:29
is random. Like Nava Mal, her biggest
34:31
thing before this was being
34:33
on Generation, which was that HBO flop.
34:36
I know, it really was. I wanted to
34:38
like that. But she's like not a them
34:40
by any means. So she's like working her
34:42
way through the industry and
34:44
is acting and stuff. She's producing and
34:47
stuff. She's like doing like production assistance
34:49
on stuff. Well,
34:51
what's cool is that she was a production fellow on
34:53
Disclosure, which was that big documentary about
34:55
trans people being more in media. And
34:58
she's from San Antonio, which I love. Has
35:00
sort of been like chugging along in
35:04
Hollywood for over a decade.
35:07
I was crying when I was reading this profile
35:09
of her in Elle cause it was like
35:11
after completing work on a few short films,
35:13
Mal was couch surfing in Los Angeles when
35:15
she received a suspicious DM on Instagram from
35:17
a random account offering her an audition. The
35:19
message included a typo. So she figured it
35:22
was spam, but like many hungry actresses, she
35:24
was eager enough for a lead that she
35:26
sent over her email address and
35:28
as it turns out the message was more than
35:30
legitimate. It was an offer to audition for the
35:32
HBO Maxo Generation. And I was like, that says
35:34
a lot about Generation and why that show didn't
35:37
last as long as it did. Who
35:39
was the creator? I felt like that that show I
35:41
got really excited about and then it was bad and I
35:43
was so upset. It was
35:45
the Nepo show member, father, daughter,
35:47
duo, Zelda and Daniel. Yes, Zelda
35:50
Barnes and Daniel Barnes. Oh,
35:52
it wasn't Justice Smith in it. And we were
35:54
like, we stand Justice Smith cause of Detective Pikachu.
35:57
Daniel Barnes was like a show runner or like a
35:59
TV writer. directed that movie Cake with Jennifer Amiston, which
36:01
people thought would give her Oscar, but
36:03
then everyone was like, what are you talking about this movie, Seth? She was like,
36:05
I'm ugly. Yeah. Generation
36:08
comes out. He co-created it
36:11
with his daughter. Do you remember this? We
36:13
talked about this in 2021. No, truly. Because
36:15
people did think this was gonna be a thing. And also this was like post-Euphoria. This
36:19
was like a euphoria. And they brought up, it was like they
36:21
were trying to do a new euphoria because
36:23
they brought in Martha Plimpton. They always are. They
36:26
had Timmy's Fave, Chase, Sweet Wonders was there. Of
36:29
course. But Nava Mal was one of
36:31
the leads of the show, along with
36:34
Justice Smith. To go back to the conversation that we
36:36
started with, which was does winning an Emmy make you
36:38
a them? No. No.
36:41
But obviously what it does is make Nava Mal a
36:43
them to everyone in the fucking- Gets you cast in
36:45
the new season. Just the nomination. And she didn't win.
36:47
Of you, one episode of the new season of you.
36:49
No, I think obviously she was in
36:52
this episode before she won this Emmy, but she taped
36:54
it. And now that I know that she's in
36:56
it, I'm actually intrigued to watch Baby Reindeer. So, yay.
36:59
They'll never watch Fleabag
37:02
or the bear, but you will watch Baby Reindeer. I- Whatever.
37:05
Let's just move on. Hi, Who
37:07
Weekly. Long
37:10
time. I'm Dawn
37:12
of Time. Charlie
37:16
Puth is married. A
37:18
few questions here. Is Charlie
37:20
Puth, who
37:22
are them? I saw the pictures and
37:25
I didn't even know that that's what he looked like.
37:28
I'm thinking who. And then
37:30
second question, who's his wife? Is
37:33
she anyone of note? Hey,
37:37
love you guys. Bye. Listen, we've
37:39
talked about Charlie Puth's new
37:42
wife, Brooke Sansom, AKA Brooke Puth.
37:45
Say- I can't believe she's Brooke
37:47
Puth now. Brooke Puth. There's something kind
37:49
of, the way that we're so used
37:51
to Charlie Puth's name being Charlie Puth,
37:53
that a new person's name being Puth,
37:56
it reminds you of how crazy
37:58
his name is. Brooke Puth. Brooke
38:01
Puth, Mrs. Puth. Miss
38:03
Puth? Miss Puth? That's Mrs.
38:05
Puth to you. That's Mrs. Brooke Puth to
38:07
you. They got married shockingly
38:10
in Montecito at his family house.
38:13
His house, yeah. And what's cute
38:15
about them, but also makes it just kind of boring,
38:18
is that they've known each other for a long time. Their whole
38:20
lives, basically. We talked about her.
38:23
I guess they were friends for a long time. Then
38:25
one day it was like, oh, damn, we should date.
38:27
And then they dated. And then they got engaged. And
38:29
now they're married. And they're both from New Jersey. And
38:31
literally that's it. It's like, it's
38:33
so boring. Like, she's beautiful. She's
38:36
kind of model-y. Again, not really sure what
38:38
her job is. Didn't someone pull
38:40
up her LinkedIn? We found her LinkedIn. She's a digital marketer
38:42
and PR coordinator at Butter and Aginters. Or she was at
38:44
one point. She was.
38:46
Maybe she doesn't have to work anymore, just to guess. But
38:49
like, there is like a funny old
38:51
tweet of her dad being like, my friend's son Charlie
38:53
Puth on the red carpet at the Grammys. Very cool
38:55
stuff. And then they were like, oh, I'm a great
38:57
kid. This was in
39:00
2014. So it's like, it is kind of like, oh, we went on
39:02
vacation together so many years.
39:05
And these kids were always like fated to get together. And
39:08
they just like kind of never did. They're
39:10
very much the stuff of romance novels. But they got
39:12
married. It was in Vogue. What I
39:14
loved about the Vogue piece was it was all her talking. Like,
39:16
even though she's clearly the not kind of like,
39:19
she's great, but she's not Charlie
39:21
Puth. Yeah, of course. The reason why it's
39:23
newsworthy. You are. It's Charlie Puth.
39:25
It's just like her, her voice, her
39:27
interview, whatever. So I thought
39:29
that was kind of interesting. It's very
39:32
like, how do I know I'm going to be
39:34
like, it's the bride's wedding. She planned it. Yeah.
39:37
I went to her Instagram and I found involved.
39:39
Do you see that thing on the cat on
39:41
the screenshot that we have that says like her
39:43
bio is just another Instagram account at the closet
39:45
next door. I was like, oh, is this her
39:47
business? But it's just
39:49
like, what is it? Well, she rebranded her
39:51
Instagram to Puth Brooke. Yeah,
39:54
it's Puth Brooke. It's weird.
39:57
It's just like a basically outfit in
39:59
spout. it's sort of like a mood board
40:01
for like outfits you can put together, like, here's
40:04
like well curated outfits. And then she links out
40:06
to where all these things are. But it's like,
40:08
are you making money on this? I don't know.
40:10
Anyway, he's off the market. Love
40:13
him. He's hungies no more. He's
40:15
been satiated. I saw a viral
40:17
tweet of someone retweeting Charlie Puth, like a
40:20
wedding announcement from Pop Quave or something. And
40:23
they added, they quote tweeted
40:25
with the iconic screenshot
40:27
of Britney Spears finding out that
40:29
Ryan Seacrest isn't gay. And I
40:31
was like, no. I
40:34
was like, where have you been? No, Charlie Puth is not gay.
40:36
No. And I'm the first person
40:38
to call someone gay. You really are. Yeah,
40:41
he does not give that energy. No, not
40:43
at all. He's a soft
40:45
boy for sure. But he
40:48
gives, oh, my wife. He really does.
40:50
Like he does. No,
40:52
totally. My girl. No,
40:54
he is being so nice to you at a party, but then
40:56
being like, my girlfriend, I've dated for 25 years. And
40:58
you're like, oh, what? You
41:02
know? And you're like, oh, OK, then. Yeah, you
41:04
meet him at a party. And you're like, is this going
41:06
somewhere? And it absolutely is not. And then you're like, well,
41:08
of course, am I a fucking idiot? Of course, I wasn't
41:10
going anywhere. It's Charlie fucking Puth. Right.
41:13
No, it's of course. And you're like, where's Brooke Sansom
41:15
tonight? And he's like, you mean Mrs. Puth. And
41:17
I'm like, OK. Oh, Brooke, who's my wife? Where's
41:19
Mrs. Puth? Brooke Puth, my
41:21
wife. Can we? Hi,
41:24
BLP. Long time, long time.
41:27
I am just calling to see if you guys can talk
41:29
about the dare. Who
41:31
is he? I feel like I have
41:33
seen him online, but I keep
41:36
seeing his suit and tie everywhere. And would
41:38
just love if you guys could talk more
41:40
about him. I think he's reached two of
41:42
them now. So just
41:45
don't want to Google. I'd rather hear
41:47
you guys talk about him. But anyway,
41:50
Tim Tebow lesbian, crunch, crunch. Bye.
41:52
I want to really, very much
41:54
lived through, Bobby did too, the
41:56
kind of indie sleaze era as
41:59
almost. I was like a 18 to 24 year old person, which
42:04
is kind of like the ideal age. And I went
42:06
to NYU, that wasn't really my, I wasn't that cool,
42:08
but I'm saying like, all
42:10
the bands and all the vibe and
42:12
like the skinny, the skinniness and the
42:14
small, the little tie and like all
42:16
that, it is wild to see like
42:18
this pastiche back in action
42:21
from someone that is so
42:23
like, that's cool
42:25
again, basically. That's cool. And without
42:27
irony, it doesn't have as much irony
42:29
as you would think. I think that's kind of like what
42:32
makes it. That's what makes it tolerable. And
42:34
he's getting the right like name checks
42:36
and like shout outs from people who are
42:38
cool, like Charlie, who are seeing it as
42:41
like, not embarrassing and seeing it
42:43
as like a full circle and being like, it's just
42:45
people having fun and like people just want music. They
42:47
can have fun too and dance too and like rave
42:49
too. And this is like what this is. Cause this
42:51
guy essentially like was in
42:53
a kind of, Bad band.
42:57
He went to Lewis and Clark and started a
42:59
band called Turtleneck. And if you listen to their
43:01
music, you're like, oh, this is so funny because
43:04
this is what the music that he like kind of really wants
43:06
to make, but like no one wants to hear this. And there's so
43:08
many bands like this. And then as a
43:10
joke, he like wrote a silly song and
43:12
then was like, oh, I have a persona.
43:14
Oh, now my persona is the dare where
43:16
I like wear sunglasses and a suit.
43:18
And a black suit with a skinny black tie.
43:20
And every song sounds kind of like the
43:23
same, but if you see it live, it's
43:25
hype. Yeah. Not
43:27
that I have, I've seen him live, but I will
43:30
say a friend of ours whose music tastes I trust
43:32
so much and works in the industry about it a
43:34
year or two ago, it was the night that I
43:36
saw Titanic. I asked her like, who are the artists
43:38
that you're excited about? And she was like, oh, the
43:40
dare. And I was like, okay. Like you're, you
43:43
don't even like, oh, everybody. She was like, basically everybody wants
43:45
to sign the dare. Right. There
43:47
was a bidding where he writes about this in his, or
43:49
he spoke about this in his GQ profile. He's like, the
43:51
person says, I asked him what it was like to be
43:53
pursued by record execs. Quote, it was really crazy. Smith says
43:55
again, his name is Harrison Smith. I went to a lot
43:58
of lunches. I think I went to every single key. McNally
44:00
restaurant twice. Republic Records ended up signing
44:02
him and they released his first EP
44:04
and his first album which just came
44:06
out like last week. This guy has
44:09
been bubbling up for so long and
44:11
now the Charlie getting big and him
44:13
producing the guest remix. The guest remix.
44:16
That then had Billy, that then went number
44:18
one because of Billy, Let's Not Lie and
44:21
that is what's getting him now this new and then he
44:23
has a new album out and I think people are very
44:25
much like who the fuck is this? Fair. ["I
44:28
Like The Girls Are Too Drush"] I
44:51
was resistant to like the dare because I was
44:53
like this is so irritating to me like whatever
44:55
you're doing. Knowing that it's essentially drag and knowing
44:58
the background of like oh I was in this
45:00
band and then I did this as a gag
45:02
and now I'm kind of stuck doing it. I
45:04
was like I don't like this but
45:07
when you listen to the music it is so, like
45:09
Lindsay said, I think we are just in
45:12
the perfect sweet spot of having
45:15
like come of age when the rapture was big. So
45:18
like I listen to this and I'm like at
45:20
a very cool party when I'm 19 years old.
45:23
Like in a co-op building in West Campus. I
45:25
can't hate it because it makes me feel young
45:27
or something. It does. It makes
45:29
me think of like the bands that I loved
45:31
in college and like loved them so like unironically
45:33
and I'm just kind of like cool. I'm glad
45:35
that like early is good to have that experience
45:37
too or something. You know like that's
45:39
fine. Like I don't need to go to the party where
45:41
this is playing but I'm like you're probably having fun. It's
45:44
like we still live in New York. I can't be mad
45:46
at this. Like I still live here. It's like I didn't
45:48
even move. Like I can't be mad. Like
45:50
it'd be one thing if I was like yeah and fuck NYU,
45:53
fuck New York, I got out of there, whatever. It's
45:55
like no I'm still like here. And
45:57
people my favorite thing in here that I didn't know until.
45:59
you or Timmy put it in here was that people
46:02
make fun of him because he sounds so much
46:04
like James Murphy of LCD Sound System. And just
46:06
LCD Sound System generally, that people call him STD
46:09
Sound System, which is a good one. It's a
46:11
good one. That's so funny that he was like
46:13
a substitute teacher in Williamsburg, like just being a
46:15
normal kind of guy. And then he like put
46:17
on a suit. He was being interviewed
46:19
by Zane Lowe. I watched his ass
46:22
interview the day, which is so annoying. But
46:24
then he was just like, yeah, for a
46:26
while he junkled both things. He was a substitute
46:28
teacher and then he would DJ. For you, what
46:31
drew you to teaching? I know we had talk
46:33
about music, but I'd love the transition you've made
46:35
from education to art. And I see a commonality
46:37
in both, obviously. Yeah, I don't know. I guess
46:39
there's just like a few teachers or professors that
46:41
I've had that were both
46:44
artists and educators and were
46:46
also just really cool. And
46:49
I always kind of looked up to them for
46:53
guidance and just as like a model
46:55
of somebody who can help
46:57
other people either through making art or
46:59
just imparting those skills on other people.
47:01
And yeah, so there's a giving to
47:04
it. Yeah, and I received that at
47:06
a young age with music and with
47:09
English literature and whatnot. How did
47:11
you receive it? My
47:13
lamp broke. I bought this lamp, this
47:15
old lamp. It was
47:17
cute. I looked at some antique shop in the neighborhood and I
47:19
was like, this is a cute lamp. But guess what? It broke.
47:22
Oh no. It was like old electronics inside it.
47:24
It just stopped working. You know where I got a new
47:27
lamp for my nightstand? From Wayfair. Amazing.
47:31
Wayfair has folding tables, long games, coolers,
47:33
grills, but also great things to make
47:35
your home a little warmer, a little
47:37
cozier when you start having people over
47:39
indoors. So when someone's
47:41
like, where am I gonna get this new table for
47:43
entertaining? Oh, where am I gonna get a nice chair
47:46
I can put outside that'll like survive in the elements?
47:48
Wayfair. I'm like, just go to Wayfair, okay? Oh yeah.
47:50
And I'm using Wayfair to kind of get inspired too because I'm
47:53
just typing in like cool chair and I'm
47:55
like scrolling, scrolling, being like, that's a cool chair. Okay,
47:57
that's a cool chair. And then it's leading me to
47:59
other cool chairs, you know? Yes. Wayfair
48:01
is the go-to destination for everything tailgating, no
48:03
matter your style or budget, from fan headquarters
48:05
to the fortress of the Grill Master. Make
48:07
your space truly yours. You can get grills,
48:10
patio furniture, cornhole sets, and more go-tos for
48:12
game day. And if you don't really deal
48:14
with game days like myself, you can just
48:16
get a really nice lamp or a nightstand.
48:18
Well, it depends on the game. It depends
48:20
on the game. What game are we talking
48:22
here? Yeah, exactly. So pick
48:25
your all-star lineup of tailgating
48:27
essentials at wayfair.com or get
48:29
the Wayfair mobile app. That's
48:31
wayfair.com. Wayfair. Every style. Every
48:34
home. Vet
48:36
bills can be expensive, but spot pet insurance can
48:38
give you up to 90% cash back on vet
48:40
bills, so you
48:42
can worry less about high vet bills.
48:44
Yep, up to 90% cash back on
48:46
vet bills for unexpected accidents, illness,
48:48
and even routine care. And with spot pet insurance plans,
48:51
you can go to any vet you want in the
48:53
U.S. or Canada. There's no
48:55
network you need to stick to, so
48:57
visit your favorite vet. And you can
49:00
save money on expensive vet bills. That's
49:02
spot pet insurance. It's no wonder spot
49:04
is America's favorite pet insurance. Visit spotpet.com
49:07
for a free quote today. For all
49:09
terms, visit spotpetins.com/sample-desh policy. Spot pet insurance
49:11
plans are underwritten by either Independence American
49:13
Insurance Company or United States Fire Insurance
49:16
Company and produce spot pet insurance services
49:18
LLC. This is an independent ad from
49:20
spot pet insurance services LLC. Rakuten
49:24
is the smartest way to save money when you
49:26
shop, because you can earn cash back at over
49:28
3,500 stores. We're
49:31
talking fashion. We're talking beauty. We're
49:33
talking electronics, home essentials, travel, dining,
49:36
concert tickets, and more. When
49:38
I bought some new socks on Nike, I didn't
49:41
have a code. I bought some new socks. Yeah,
49:43
they had a sale. What kind of socks? Like
49:45
high or low? Ankle,
49:47
because they're for the gym. Oh, they're low socks.
49:49
Okay, interesting. I know that the high socks are
49:51
very trendy, but I always feel like I look
49:54
like a total freak show when they're high. I'm
49:56
not sure that's true. I think
49:58
low socks are almost worse. Because they really define
50:01
you as a millennial. Oh my god. But
50:03
at least you saved money on them. At
50:07
least you saved money on them. That's all that matters.
50:10
It's totally true. Because with Rakuten,
50:12
your favorite stores, like as I said,
50:14
Nike, Adidas, Zappos, buy some new Birkenstocks
50:16
for the summer. They pay
50:18
Rakuten to send them shoppers and then Rakuten
50:20
passes on a part of that payment to
50:22
its members as cashback. The cashback is deposited
50:24
directly into your PayPal account or Rakuten will
50:26
just send you a check. You
50:28
can even maximize your savings by stacking cashback on
50:30
top of other deals like store sales and coupons,
50:32
which is what I did. If you're already shopping
50:35
at your favorite stores, why not save while you're
50:37
doing it? It's a no-brainer. Membership is free. It's
50:39
easy to sign up. Any generation can get the
50:41
Rakuten app now and join the 17 million members
50:43
who are already saving. High sock,
50:46
low sock, whatever kind of sock. No show sock. Cashback
50:49
rates change daily. See rakuten.com for
50:51
details. That's R-A-K-U-T-E-N. Your
50:53
cashback really adds up. I
50:57
want to be famous. Hi,
50:59
who did Diana Agron go to Greece
51:02
with since he's a lesbian?
51:04
I love this call because you can hear someone laughing behind them.
51:08
You know who she went to Greece with if
51:10
you're asking us this question. Diana
51:13
Agron, by the way. We found it. It's
51:16
Agron. Diana Agron, who is kind of a star of one of
51:19
my live pieces. Let's answer the question before
51:21
we get into the Agron. Thank
51:23
God Diana Agron Upstates continues their
51:25
journey on Instagram because they are
51:27
Brazilian so they were kind of
51:29
kicked off Twitter, but they
51:31
are going strong on Instagram. So I need to
51:34
make that kind of public announcement because I think
51:36
they're kind of like, everyone, I'm still here. I'm
51:38
still doing the work. I would
51:40
argue they're going stronger on Instagram. I'm
51:43
seeing their content more and more on
51:45
our Instagram. Are you? Well,
51:47
I follow them. Diana Agron went viral. That's what this
51:49
is kind of about. Let's forget
51:51
about the Greece thing for a second. She went
51:54
viral because she did this event for completed
51:56
works for London Fashion Week. Again, don't know
51:58
what any of those words mean. I mean like. It's
52:01
a jewelry brand. Great.
52:03
And so she did this interview with them. It's like sustainable jewelry.
52:05
It says their website. Yeah. Hi, I'm Diana
52:08
Agron. And you're here with Grazia in
52:10
Gordon Square in London on a beautiful,
52:13
sunny, and warm day we're having.
52:15
So warm. Here with completed works. Sort
52:18
of a powerful one. But if you had
52:20
a warning sign, what would it say? Caution,
52:24
pleasure seeker. And
52:28
people were like, first of all, I didn't know how many.
52:30
I didn't know this many people knew what Diana Agron was
52:32
supposed to sound like, basically, which is funny. It's
52:34
like you tweeting this and being like, what is this
52:36
accent? Is the kind of assumption that you knew what
52:39
she's supposed to sound like, which like, I don't know
52:41
what she's supposed to sound like. I haven't heard this
52:43
woman speaking forever. She's barely anything. That's the whole journey
52:45
of her. She's always like not doing stuff. And that's
52:48
Diana Agron's number one problem with Diana
52:50
Agron. She's not in anything. Diana Agron,
52:52
you're saying Diana Agron updates main problem
52:54
with Diana Agron is that she's always
52:57
unemployed. In Gordon Square in London on
52:59
a beautiful sunny and
53:01
warm day we're having here
53:03
with completed works. Yeah, it's giving I absolutely
53:06
loathe hydrangeas. Yeah. Do you hear when I
53:08
was in Toronto, I found
53:10
their cadence very catchy. And I
53:13
found myself doing it. Oh, the Canadian
53:15
cadence? Yeah. Just the kind of way
53:17
that a lot of Canadians speak, I found
53:19
very alluring. And I kind of like would
53:21
hear myself speaking that way back to them
53:23
and being like, whoa. She's
53:26
from Savannah, Georgia, by the way.
53:28
She's from a place with a
53:30
very famous and obvious accent.
53:33
But she lost that accent long ago, I'm sure.
53:35
I'm sure she's kind of a neutral accent. I'm
53:37
just saying she's from a place that has an
53:40
accent, that has a notable American accent, like deep
53:42
south Savannah, Georgia. Sure, sure, sure. So who
53:44
was Diana Agron in Greece with? I don't
53:46
really know. But if you go through Diana
53:48
Agron updates, it's like
53:50
everyone. Chloe Wise, Fotis Evans,
53:53
Hedy Stanton. Camille Charyar. You
53:56
know who was in Greece with Diana Agron, which I
53:58
love, Maggie Rogers. I'm like, these two are friends. Okay,
54:00
because you know, Dinah Agrón's thing is that she also sings.
54:02
So she's like, I'm a singer. Well, she used to sing at the
54:04
Cafe Carla. I remember that we've talked about this before. You know,
54:06
she dated Mumford and Sons guy or was married to her.
54:08
Are they divorced now? Did she divorce Mumford and Sons? They're
54:10
divorced. Yeah. She did because he went crazy. Yeah. They
54:13
divorced like right at the beginning of the pandemic. Great caption
54:15
here. Did you see this last caption? Always in
54:17
Greece and never beating the allegations that she kept Mumford
54:19
and Sons on the divorce. Dinah Agrón, partying
54:22
with friends recently. But who is she with? The
54:24
easiest answer to your question is that she's
54:26
with a bunch of influencers. Right. Like she's
54:28
with a bunch of people whose job it's
54:30
also whose job it is also to
54:33
go around the world and party with friends.
54:36
You know, like Dinah Agrón is making money
54:38
during these travels. Like don't forget that part.
54:40
But what I like about following up with her,
54:42
like kind of keeping in touch with her through
54:44
Dinah Agrón updates is you're also getting updates or
54:47
I'm also getting updates from them about Twitter and
54:49
Brazil. So they posted Twitter changed its server in
54:51
Brazil so they can escape
54:53
from the ban. So everyone has access right now.
54:55
But TBH is not worth getting back because
54:57
the timeline ain't really working. You can't see any
55:00
images or videos. Also, because Leon Musk is a
55:02
piece of shit. So hope this backfires and he
55:04
gets sued again. So it's like, if you're wondering
55:06
what's the update on that, it's not
55:09
going well. Like people are finding ways around
55:11
it. They're still figuring out how
55:13
do you ban Twitter in an entire country, whatever.
55:15
I mean, I guess China has figured out how
55:18
to ban internet stuff before. It's not the first time,
55:20
but like it's messy. So you're going
55:22
to see some stuff. You're going to not see
55:24
some stuff. But Dinah Agrón updates is not back
55:26
on Twitter. They're saying like, this is bullshit. And
55:29
I'm not leaving. And then they posted this on
55:32
top of that. They posted texts. They wrote also because
55:34
we have nothing else to post. Dinah left London is
55:36
back to wherever she's hiding. We're not getting anything before
55:38
next week. So they're like, don't worry.
55:40
You're not missing anything from us. Our
55:43
girly is still giving unemployed. I
55:46
love them. I love them so much.
55:48
Let's play a couple more calls. Hi,
55:51
Lindsey Bobby, to me. Medium
55:53
time, medium time. I'm just calling because
55:55
my sister and I were chatting about
55:58
peace. and the
56:00
Tooth Fairy, and she brought
56:03
up the idea of your two
56:05
front teeth being the most famous
56:08
teeth because there's a song about
56:10
them, and I was wondering if
56:12
you could rank from who
56:14
to them the different teeth.
56:18
I guess your front teeth would be the
56:20
most famous, but I feel like wisdom teeth
56:22
are also pretty famous,
56:26
and so would be your molars, maybe your
56:29
canines. I don't know, I would love
56:31
to hear your input. Thanks so much. Bye.
56:34
We're ranking teeth. We're ranking teeth.
56:36
Okay, there are four, okay, I had to look up how many
56:38
types of teeth there were. There are
56:40
32 teeth, and the teeth
56:42
may be divided into four categories.
56:45
We've got incisors, canines, premolars, molars,
56:47
and a wisdom. Yeah, I just added
56:49
wisdom because I think wisdom are actually
56:51
technically molars. Wisdom are molars? Okay,
56:54
so can we see molars slash wisdom? They
56:56
are technically molars, but let's call them
56:58
wisdom because I think they are so
57:01
iconic. I do think that they're
57:03
the most themmy tooth because wisdom teeth are kind of
57:05
just like the teeth that we're talking about that
57:08
are causing us the most drama. I agree.
57:11
They're the most themmy. If you have to deal with your teeth, you do
57:13
have to deal with lots of your teeth at all points, but the main
57:15
teeth you'd ever have to deal with if you had no teeth issues in
57:18
your whole life, you'd still have to deal with your wisdoms, which
57:20
are your molars. I think molars is the themiest.
57:22
I think the whoiest is premolars because I never
57:24
think about those. What are those though? I don't
57:26
even know. I get it. I get
57:28
it grammatically, but I don't really... Between the
57:30
canines and the molars. I'm going to have to ask
57:32
Dr. Dan next time I see him. Oh, Dr. Dan. Molars
57:35
are. After wisdom, are we going molars? No,
57:37
no, they're the same. They're the same. Wisdom
57:40
slash molars. Well, wisdom slash molars, but I think if
57:42
we're going to separate them, I think it's actually a
57:44
wisdom. We're not though because they're the same
57:46
category. But a molar isn't a wisdom, even though
57:48
a wisdom is a molar. It's like a square and a rectangle. Wisdoms
57:51
are molars, but molars aren't wisdoms, which is why I think we just
57:53
have to make maybe one... One
57:56
bullet point A is molars. Okay,
57:58
that's fine, but to me they're wisdom slash molars. because
58:00
we're not, you know, if wisdom teeth are molars, then
58:02
they're the same category to me. Well, that's the
58:04
problem. Wisdom teeth are molars, but molars aren't
58:06
necessarily wisdom teeth. That's fine with me. Molars
58:09
are up there with thems too. After
58:11
that, do we do incisors or canines? I
58:13
think canines are way themier than
58:15
incisors. Really? Yeah. I
58:18
always think about incisors because they're the right, they're the
58:20
front, they're the sharp ones. Yeah, but I
58:22
think about canines because people are always getting their
58:25
canines fucked up or sharpened or my canines, they're
58:27
like, there's always something. That's tough. Because the two
58:29
front teeth are incisors. Like when people say the
58:31
two front teeth. No, I do know
58:33
that, but I'm just saying, I feel like canines are more
58:36
in the conversation. If
58:38
the incisors were called front two front teeth,
58:41
do you think they'd be themier? Like if it was
58:43
two front teeth versus canines or incisors versus canines. I
58:45
mean, I guess if you're seeing any teeth, you're seeing
58:48
your two front teeth and then that way they're really
58:50
front and center in terms of like somebody's teeth health.
58:52
If you're like, oh, you have nice teeth, you're gonna
58:54
see the front teeth first. Let's just
58:56
do canines. Canines,
58:58
incisors, premolars.
59:01
Canines barely edge them out. They
59:03
are the sharp ones. They're the sharp ones. They
59:05
help you really like get a bite. Incisors
59:07
are kind of deceptive because you think they're
59:10
helping you, but they're kind of there for
59:12
you to knock out. They're dangerous. My
59:15
incisors what cracked, you know? Yeah,
59:17
I also have a chip on my incisor. I have a chipped incisor that I
59:20
had to put a fake tooth on and now I can't even bite
59:22
into an apple. I haven't been able to for years because they're like,
59:24
it might pop off. Well, they're always like, And
59:26
you can. I have an apple that's gonna pop off. And I
59:28
was like, well, damn it. I also have a chip and
59:30
it's not big enough to get replaced. I fell after drinking
59:32
too many margaritas on a curb. Oh my God. I
59:36
think I was on the way somewhere where you were. I
59:38
didn't, wait, when? Was this a long time ago? Yeah.
59:41
And it's got a little chip. And then like, I kind of
59:43
realized that I was in denial and then I went to the
59:45
desk and they were like, you know, you chipped your tooth. And
59:47
I was like, what? When did
59:49
that happen? I knew exactly when it happened. Mine
59:51
was, I- But it's kind of dulled down.
59:53
I fell in front of my apartment after like
59:56
meeting up with our dentist friend. And then
59:58
I got home and I was like, like, damn,
1:00:00
can you fit me in tomorrow? Didn't you go?
1:00:02
Right, you went right to him, and he had
1:00:04
to accept. He was like, LOL, just come in
1:00:06
tomorrow. He fit me in. That's why it's good
1:00:08
to have a dentist, right? I know. OK, so
1:00:10
wisdom slash molars, canines, incisors, premolars. Great.
1:00:13
Sure. You know what we should do? Why
1:00:15
don't you text this to Dan? Oh, I'll text him. I'll ask
1:00:17
him next time I see him. Actually, I think I'm going to
1:00:19
the dentist in like a week or so. Oh, good. So maybe
1:00:21
I'll bring this up. Don't be scared. I've
1:00:24
done this before. Show
1:00:27
me your teeth. Show
1:00:31
me your teeth. Show
1:00:37
me your teeth. Shout out to
1:00:39
More Famous Birthdays, our game that a wonderful
1:00:41
hooligan turned into an actual game that you
1:00:44
can play online. What's the URL for that?
1:00:46
We'll link it in the show notes. OK,
1:00:48
great. And what we're going to do is play
1:00:50
the game next week. Next week, for sure. So
1:00:53
everyone who hates that game, tune
1:00:56
in for that. With that, we can end.
1:00:58
Thank you for listening to another episode of Who's There. Thank
1:01:00
you for suffering through my cold voice. It's
1:01:02
not cold, but it's just cold. Future Lindsay here
1:01:04
once again. And I'm just going to have to
1:01:06
repeat myself. It's
1:01:08
not just a cold. Feel
1:01:11
better, Bobby. Support us on patreon.com/WhoWeekly for bonus episodes,
1:01:13
a Discord server, commentary tracks, and more. You can
1:01:15
also get the audio only, audio only, by clicking
1:01:17
Subscribe within the Apple Podcasts app. While you're there,
1:01:19
rate and review us on Apple Podcasts. We love
1:01:21
your ratings and reviewings. Thank you to Katie and
1:01:23
Eric of The Who's for providing our Read the
1:01:26
Themes segment on Tuesdays. Thank you to Timmy, our
1:01:28
research and editorial assistant for researching and editorializing. Oh
1:01:31
my God, we'll see you Tuesday. Keep listening
1:01:33
for Cold, you're doing amazing, sweeties. Bye. Bye.
1:01:37
You will drive us. Yo, yo,
1:01:39
yo, they wanna know. Hey. Mia.
1:01:43
Hey. Mia. Come
1:01:46
on. Hey. I want to be
1:01:48
famous. Hi,
1:01:50
Bobby, Lindsay, Timmy. I
1:01:53
was walking through SoHo
1:01:55
with three of my Gen Z employees
1:01:58
yesterday. we saw Louisa
1:02:01
Gummer and obviously none of
1:02:03
them knew who she was.
1:02:06
So she's definitely still a who, but
1:02:09
I had to explain to them who she was. And
1:02:12
then this one of my direct reports was
1:02:14
like, oh, I
1:02:16
think I met Meryl Streep's nephew at my
1:02:18
gym. He was telling me the story. And
1:02:21
then I had this story
1:02:24
unlocked in my brain, which is that I went
1:02:26
to summer camp with Meryl
1:02:30
Streep's niece, this guy's sister.
1:02:33
And she stole all my friends because she
1:02:36
was boy crazy and I wasn't. And
1:02:40
I cried calling my parents all the
1:02:42
time, and they let me leave early.
1:02:45
So started on a high, this
1:02:48
story ended on a low. Crunch
1:02:50
crunch. So
1:02:52
I just learned that the
1:02:55
longest sentence written by
1:02:57
a monkey was
1:03:00
written by a monkey named Nim
1:03:02
Shimsky. The
1:03:07
sentence was, give orange me,
1:03:09
give eat orange, me eat orange,
1:03:11
give me eat orange, give
1:03:14
me you. Do we
1:03:16
think that Noam Chomsky knows
1:03:18
who Nim Shimsky is? Hey,
1:03:22
BLT, I'm listening to a week's
1:03:24
episode, and I get a text
1:03:26
from my sister-in-law. And
1:03:29
she said that she's taking
1:03:31
the kids to see Megan Trainor tonight. The
1:03:34
kids are four and six. So
1:03:38
whatever that means, I will
1:03:40
report back on how much
1:03:42
they enjoyed it. OK,
1:03:44
good for both, or crunch crunch showing
1:03:47
whole. Bye. Hi,
1:03:49
Lindsay Bobby. I am just calling
1:03:52
as your chicken salad chick correspondent
1:03:54
from the greater Nashville area. I
1:03:58
realize I've never been to a chicken salad. after
1:04:00
listening to your episodes. So I brought it
1:04:02
up to my husband, who actually had an
1:04:04
infection to one. So I think
1:04:07
that's where we go while we were
1:04:09
running errands on Saturday. We
1:04:11
did, and I don't think based on your
1:04:15
description of your meal
1:04:17
that you ate it in situ in the
1:04:19
chicken salad trick. So I do wanna let
1:04:22
you know what you were missing in
1:04:24
the bathroom. So I went to the bathroom before I
1:04:26
left, it's four signs, and this is
1:04:28
the one I want to read. If
1:04:31
your husband or boyfriend brought
1:04:33
you here today and you have a question about
1:04:35
how much he loves you, dot, dot, dot, let
1:04:38
us put it into perspective for you. There
1:04:40
are plenty of barbecue joints in the area.
1:04:43
He is sitting here amongst a sea of
1:04:45
flowers, wooden and salad. Now
1:04:47
get that broccoli out of your teeth, feel gorgeous
1:04:49
and have a great day with that rock star.
1:04:52
So I went back outside to my husband and I said, I
1:04:55
know you had no intention of going through that
1:04:57
thing before we left, but I need you to
1:04:59
do some recording on what the signs and the
1:05:02
men's rations says. And there are four signs and
1:05:04
the men's restrooms of similar tenor, but I will
1:05:06
just read this one. Gentlemen,
1:05:08
dot, dot, dot, the
1:05:11
porcelain pegs, rusty pails and washboard decor,
1:05:13
your barbecue joints, and just a bit
1:05:15
of Narfum and entity. So
1:05:17
we don't think it is too much to ask of
1:05:19
you to say the stupid names and sit in a
1:05:22
few flowers for an hour. Thank you
1:05:24
for understanding. It means a lot to us. Anyway,
1:05:27
I have the one with
1:05:29
the onions, which is problematically called the
1:05:32
glitzy kiss, but it was indeed delicious.
1:05:34
And we will be going back. Thanks
1:05:36
crunchy crunchy. I
1:05:39
also wanted to call and tell you
1:05:41
that Ann Adelvie did something similar during
1:05:44
the pandemic where if you
1:05:46
subscribe to her Patreon, and
1:05:48
she was like, what do you get if
1:05:50
you subscribe to my Patreon? You got the
1:05:52
opportunity to be able to buy like an
1:05:55
NFT or something like that. Like it was
1:05:57
like a similar type of scam.
1:06:00
It was so silly and crazy. And
1:06:04
then also, per the Helena Bonham Carter thing,
1:06:07
is there was this famous
1:06:09
Goya portrait of this woman naked.
1:06:14
And they were like, we think this might be
1:06:16
like this famous princess. And it would be so
1:06:18
crazy if Goya painted
1:06:20
this princess naked. So
1:06:23
they dug this princess up and measured
1:06:25
her bones to see if they're the
1:06:27
correct ratio. But it turns out what
1:06:29
happened was he painted the princess, but
1:06:31
he just imagined her naked. Anyway,
1:06:35
so crazy. Kind
1:06:37
of reminds me of the Helena Bonham Carter
1:06:39
thing, of like they're trying to manufacture, or
1:06:43
not manufacture, a scandal, but the painting could
1:06:45
apply a scandal. And so then
1:06:47
it kind of generates its own height,
1:06:49
like this Goya portrait. OK, crunch, crunch.
1:06:54
Hi, Lindsay and Bobby. I'm a little behind. And
1:06:56
I just heard you guys talking about laundry and
1:06:58
how much Lindsay hates it, and Bobby loves it.
1:07:01
And I have to say, I also love
1:07:03
doing laundry, because that is almost exclusively the
1:07:05
time when I listen to your
1:07:07
podcast. So I get a little
1:07:09
fun treat of hearing from weekly
1:07:11
when I get to do laundry. So that's
1:07:14
all. I'll be a T. onion. Crunch, crunch.
Podchaser is the ultimate destination for podcast data, search, and discovery. Learn More