Beef And Dairy Network - Episode 15 - Eli Roberts Goes Legit
Episode Date: September 27, 2016Mike Bubbins joins us for this month's episode in which we hear how Eli Roberts has started a new business.  By Benjamin Partridge and Mike Bubbins. Thanks to Sarah Morgan, Tonya Prewitt, Randall Co...oper, Jamie Bradley, James Garrison, Nathaniel Metcalfe and Fred Nickl.  Featuring ∂f/∂xi by The Fucked Up Beat, with permission of the artist.  Stock media provided by Setuniman/Pond5.com and Soundrangers/Pond5.com
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Hello and welcome to the Beef and Dairy Network podcast, the number one podcast for those involved, or just interested, in the production of beef animals and dairy herds.
The Beef and Dairy Network podcast is the podcast companion to the Beef and Dairy Network website and printed magazine, brought to you by Steel Hoof Deluxe.
This month, we listened to something rather strange that came through on the Beef and Dairy answerphone.
But first, it's time for our big interview with Eli Roberts, formerly of Roberts Slaughterhouse. After a revealing interview that
he gave to this podcast last year, his slaughterhouse was shut down by the Food Standards Agency,
and last time we spoke with him, he was dogged by claims that he'd been slaughtering animals
in his back garden, and in a most unforgettable encounter, he kidnapped me at gunpoint.
When we received a fax from Mr Roberts
asking if he could appear on this episode, we were reluctant to speak to him again,
but he assured us that he has put his past behind him and he is now running a legitimate business.
And it is in the spirit of forgiveness and second chances that I recorded this interview
with Mr Roberts last week.
last week.
The last time that we spoke on the podcast,
things ended a little bit acrimoniously
between us.
And to be honest, I was
quite reluctant to have you back on the podcast.
But you got in contact and said that
you've got a new business that you'd like to
talk about, and you were quite insistent
in the facts you sent.
Well, I mean, you know, if you don't ask, you don't get.
You know, in the modern day and age, if you don't ask,
you don't get. I mean, you stitched me up, yes.
You made me look like some sort of psychopath
on your podcast there.
But I don't bear a grudge.
And I felt, actually, this was a good opportunity to
let bygones be bygones, try and build
some bridges and let you
come on and talk about your new venture, which I believe you're leaving the slaughterhouse past behind you because
obviously you were banned from doing that what kind of business have you gone into i mean have
you found a way to sort of move laterally use your skills transferable skills somewhere else
well this is exactly what i did yeah it's like you read my mind to be honest what are we going
for i'm known for my philanthropy.
I'm known for my happy-go-lucky nature.
I'm a family man.
You know, I haven't seen my own kids for years and years.
But I mean, I am a giver.
I thought, how can all Eli give a bit back?
You know what I mean?
And as luck would have it, within a couple of weeks of being shut down
and threatening the prosecution,
the local butterfly farm, not far from me,
went into liquidation.
Very fortuitous, really, for me, I mean, timing-wise,
you know, the serendipity,
that's what I just found out about now,
which just sums it up beautifully with serendipity.
I had a lucky happenstance.
All his butterflies had died essentially
he claimed it was something to do with pesticides and and uh untreated awful waste and christ knows
what else from my farm but i mean i don't ever like to stand on so so hang on this this butterfly
farm you're talking about which had to go into liquidation the person who owned that farm
was making claims
that the reason
all his butterflies died
was because of
something you'd done
he said there was
various pesticides
and you know
very nasty chemicals
he claimed
they'd all come
from my farm
which is a nonsense
you know
I'm a very
very organic
and I mean
old fashioned organic
not this new stuff now all these bloody people with beanies on saying oh this is organic this and I mean old fashioned organic not this new stuff now
all these bloody
these people with beanie's on
saying oh this is organic this
and oh try and make organic that
I mean organic
proper organic
you know what I mean
what's the difference between
what people would think of
as organic
as you describe
and what you think is organic
oh this bloody arty farty
organic stuff now,
you know what I mean?
Oh, yeah, it grew on a farm.
It's been grown on a farm where it's had no pesticides.
Well, that's bloody rubbish.
You're asking for trouble, are you?
Well, that's the dictionary definition of organic, isn't it?
I don't care.
I'm not giving you the dictionary, he says.
What are you made of?
What am I made of?
Carbon.
What's that? Do me a favor i'd go
and have a periodic table out with that i don't familiarize yourself with it there's nothing new
in this world sunshine right nothing new 13.7 billion years ago everything came into existence
in a blink of an eye so so your argument really is that the the chemicals that you would use on your property is made of the same molecules and...
Yes, everything is organic.
It doesn't matter if it's bloody dynamite or malaria or carbon dioxide fumes or whatever you want to...
Everything is organic.
So there's nothing on Earth or indeed in the universe that isn't organic?
Nothing. No.
How can it be?
So let's just go back to what you were trying to tell me.
So the butterfly farm that was near your residence...
Next door, it was, yeah.
Just downstream.
Of the old Black River, we call it.
And the butterfly farm shut down because the butterflies had died,
maybe because of something you had done, but maybe not.
Let's not dwell on that.
No, no, no, nothing.
And what happened next?
The old owner there, Mr. Davis.
We haven't been the best of neighbours.
I mean, you know,
I ran over his daughter once by mistake
and he's never let her go, you know.
But I saw this for sale sign was up.
Liquidation, you know, I got in touch with the auctioneers and it was a steal, I mean, for sale sign was up liquidation
you know I got in touch with the auctioneers
and it was a steal
for the price you know
I thought I know what I'll do and I'll get a zoo for the kids
I need a quick look into the prices
of alpacas and stuff and camels
and Christ knows what else
so your idea was to turn it into some kind of
wildlife experience
a family entertainment zone yeah
hands on so ducks ducks
rabbits oh christ ducks rabbits hedgehog badgers uh anything else i could find a couple of llamas
uh a dog with three legs uh a cat various rodents yeah that was it really uh what else was there
i'm trying to think a fox
would you call it a zoo?
I call it a zoo
I called it
Eli's Organic Zoo
right
and basically
kids come in there
with their families
take like 24 could to get in
and they could see
all these things
living in their natural habitat
I said natural
you know their habitat
like you know
but within
it's just got to be
it's a matter of days
they'd all died
or they'd all
all the animals
had passed away
like
every single one of them
yeah yeah
all of them gone
yeah
they were drinking
from the old
Black River
weren't they
I told them
stay away from
the Black River
because that was
where I used to
dump a lot of
my organics
from the other place
you know
you told them not to
yeah
got them in
like got all the boys and the girls in by boys and girls you mean llamas and ducks them not to? Yeah, I got them in, like all the boys and the girls in.
By boys and girls,
you mean llamas and ducks and...
Yeah, all the lot of them, yeah.
I got them in a big shed there.
I said, listen now,
stay away from the Black River.
Don't drink Black River.
Of course, bloody kids being kids.
And by kids, I mean animals, I think.
They were straight down there,
like, oh, yeah,
hee-oh, hee-oh, whatever.
And slurp, slurp, slurp.
Within 72 hours, tops.
Every one of them dead.
So then you're just left with an ex-butterfly farm
filled with the corpses of various animals.
Yeah, a lot of dead rodents and vermin
and a couple of mammals and that.
But as I said before, I'm a survivor, you know.
I'm a survivor.
I pick myself up by my bootstraps like I always have done.
No one's ever looked after old Eli.
You know, old Eli is old school.
He looks after himself and no one's going to look after me, mate.
Don't even know about that now.
So I thought, right, let's get old.
First and foremost, I thought, right, what's the animal equivalent of old Eli?
What's a survivor, right?
What just gets the job done?
What is prolific?
What just refuses to die right
and I couldn't afford lobsters
so they were one of the most
hardy crustaceans
as you know that
you have a lot of respect for them
lobster
yeah
no doubt about it
yeah they're fantastic
I mean
you drop a lobster
in boiling water
I mean for two or three minutes
he's given a bloody good fight
like you know what I mean
and your point of view
is that if
if you were dropped
into boiling water,
then you'd also put up
a similar kind of display.
Oh, I'd be like
a bloody screaming banshee, man.
I would be like
a screaming banshee.
You drop me in like a big,
what do you call them,
a bain-marie.
Drop me in a bain-marie
in boiling water
and I'll see what you get.
You'll get a bloody,
ho-ho,
you'll get a nice fury
right until my last breath.
So,
but I couldn't
afford lobsters.
Second on the
wish list,
another survivor,
very similar,
actually,
I called it
a land lobster,
scorpion.
I've read a
couple of
scorpions saying
they're going to
be surviving
in 65 million
years,
there'll be
scorpions
evolving into
the dominant species on the Earth, you know.
You know, you can freeze them, you can hit them with a hammer,
you can stick them in.
They found scorpions crawling up in there like nuclear blast traitors and stuff.
You know, you can chuck them in the freezer for years on end.
You can smash them with a hammer, with a brick.
Man, I've tried all these things.
They are bloody survivors, man.
They are survivors.
How do you think you would fare after a nuclear blast?
Would you survive?
There's no doubt about it, isn't there?
You've just got to get on with it.
You know what I mean?
Every morning, oh, my eyes are falling out.
I've got no face left.
Get on with it.
So you just use a kind of...
Get on with it.
What does that mean?
I've seen the videos.
I've seen the videos.
I've got it all planned. Don't you worry about me. All you like. If it all goes tits up. What does that mean?
What do you think get on with it means in a post-nuclear context? Stay in there till the worst of us die down a bit. Get out there, do a bit of looting. To be honest with you, I think I'd thrive.
I wouldn't just survive, I would thrive.
If I was in charge, I'd be smacking that red button, mate.
Don't you worry about that.
Straight away, bang.
I'd launch a...
I'd attack my own country.
Happily.
If I was president or prime minister, I would launch a preemptive strike on my own country happily if I was president or prime minister I would launch
a preemptive strike
on my own population
thereby
you take the enemy
the enemy is out of the game
he's gone
he can't get you
over the barrel
or I'm going to
blow you up
unlucky sunshine
I blow my own people up
and then
who's last
the colonel
and I mean with a K
right
like in a nut
the odd bit in the middle us the survivors Eli and his boys right Who's last? The colonel. And I mean with a K, right? Like in a nut.
The odd bit in the middle. Us. The survivors. Eli and his boys, right?
And we'd march out of that bloody, we'd march out of that bunker proud, like peacocks.
More from that big interview later.
But first, after the concerning answer phone message that we received last month,
this month we were met with this.
Hi, I'm just calling in because, well,
I've just finished listening to the most recent episode.
Great stuff, as usual.
But it's funny, really, because I feel like, you know,
I feel a bit like I've been going mad because I think I might have had contact with some kind of,
you know, like a fifth meet.
And, sorry, hold on a second, there's someone at the door.
Hello?
Oh, God, no, no, no, Jesus Christ, no!
Meet number one, number two, three, four.
Bring me number five and I'll show you the floor.
Trust me, me, there are no men alive who have tasted that shit.
Meet number five.
You better watch yourself,ind your shit from the street
You find the fifth meat
They come back and eat
Three quick shots with a blam blam blam
Fifth shit's more dangerous than mint and lamb
I know you're not going to believe it, but I've tasted the fifth meat.
Our friends Margaret and Bobby were having a dinner party,
and one of the guests, Miranda, I think her name was,
had brought over a platter of what she called fifth meat meatballs.
On the way home, my husband commented that Miranda had this really huge forehead,
like her skull was way too big for her skin,
but the meatballs were like
nothing we'd ever tasted. They had a big cooler with a sign selling humanely raised beef, pork,
and something else that they wouldn't identify, but they seemed really, really anxious to sell.
I was in the meat market over in Lufkin talking to the new guy behind the counter,
and he suggested that I pick some of this, what he called, fifth meat sausage.
And so, you know, I asked him, I was like, what's fifth meat?
And he said, you know, don't worry your pretty little head about it.
I haven't told anybody else this, but I went out one morning,
and there was some meat sitting out on my porch.
I don't know where it came from.
and there was some meat sitting out on my porch.
I don't know where it came from.
I just ordered a meat feast pizza,
and it's got all the usual stuff on there,
the pepperoni and the chicken and the ground beef.
But there's something else on it. It tastes funny. I don't really know what it is.
I can't really identify it.
Beef, lamb, Fred in Chicago.
I'm calling about your last episode, about the fifth meet.
I'm an attorney, and I have a secretary who's from Mexico,
and she occasionally brings in homemade meals that her mother makes.
She brought one in last week, and I asked her what it was.
She said something in Spanish, something Cinco, something.
I didn't know. I took a bite, and it was incredible.
I asked her again. I said,
Claudia, what exactly is this?
And she turned to me, and it was at that point she told me i'm sorry hold on one moment after the animals have been purchased they are sent off to be slaughtered and made into meat
and many other products as they move along skilled butchers remove the hides which are very carefully
saved and are later made into leather other butchers put the beef into halves. Each half is called a side. The sides are washed
with hot water. Everything is kept clean and sanitary. A day or two later when the meat has
been chilled it may be graded for quality by the meat packers or by a government man.
The meat is now ready for market. It is moved to the distant cities and towns in refrigerator trucks. Is it a bird, is it a plane? Nah, it's number five Stay away if you really wanna stay alive
Cause they'll come and get you, come and get you, oh they really will
And when they do, tell me how you're gonna feel
Not great and there's something I can guarantee
Consider this my warning for you, don't be mad at me
Cause when they come, nobody ever sees it
Shoot, shoot, bang, bang, man, don't believe it
The government won't help, nah, they don't care
Ain't nothing right about
that sweet smell in the air keep your paws off stick to wrong speech because if you don't your
last words will be help me uh just a minute let me go see who that is.
Oh, hang on, maybe this is...
There's someone at the door now, maybe it's the pizza man again.
Hang on. Bear with me.
Jeez, it's 11 p.m. Who could be knocking at the door at this hour?
Hold on.
Give me a minute, someone's at the door.
Hold on.
Just a minute!
Good Lord, hold on, someone's at the door.
What?
Oh, my God. Good lord, hold on, someone's at the door. What? Oh my god!
About six and one half million people work in the producing of meat
to turn the livestock raised on over four million farms into nutritious meat for your table.
Meat which once was a sea of grass on the Western Range. If it is you who is playing what we can only assume is some sort of prank,
claiming that there is a so-called fifth meat,
please stop.
It isn't funny and it isn't clever.
There is no such thing as a fifth meat.
God gave us four meats, and they are the palette
with which we paint our own meat pictures. Talk of a fifth meat is irresponsible at best,
and dangerous at worst. If you're listening, and no doubt you are, put a sock in it.
Back to our big interview with Eli Roberts, after this.
Why would you listen to a podcast of TV pilots that never got made?
It must not have been any good, right?
I don't know for a fact that anyone read it.
They couldn't get the deal done.
It was kind of a regime change.
Someone at the studio who was in a decision-making capacity said,
these guys seem like losers.
They just blamed it on, okay, well, it must be women.
We got word that USA had decided to stop doing comedy.
Why aren't we making this?
It was so good.
Hear the TV comedies you never got to see
on the Dead Pilot Society
podcast. Listen on
MaximumFun.org or wherever
you download podcasts.
You decided that you couldn't afford
lobsters. Why didn't you go for the scorpions?
Because
I feel a kindred.
They're the kindred spirit
to me, as I said, right?
And I don't want to exploit them. You're talking about a survivor
of the Armoured Kingdom. He deserves respect.
Okay, so you didn't go
for lobsters. You decided against scorpions.
What happened next?
Well, I thought, funny enough,
I was watching the
build-up of the Rio Olympics,
and they were talking about mosquitoes.
And I thought to myself, hello, right?
They said, you're talking low-maintenance, prolific breeders, very, very, very, very easy to keep.
So I decided to reopen as Mosquito Mayhem.
And basically it's a place you can bring your kids,
bring your bloody grandparents, your parents, whatever,
come to old Eli's, Eli's world of Mosquito Mayhem.
And just talk me through, you know,
imagine you've got a family and they're thinking of coming to Mosquito Mayhem.
You know, what are they going to experience in that day?
Oh, you're in for a rollercoaster ride.
Honestly, I mean, I cannot stress strongly enough
that you'll be on a thrill ride from the moment you arrive.
So you pull up in your car, right?
I say, if you want to get the full experience,
shorts and T-shirt, right?
Shorts and T-shirt and the kids.
You get out of the car and within within a matter of
seconds you'll start getting the full experience different types of mosquito and strains of
mosquito in different parts of mosquito mayhem you get out of your car you're going around the
various zones different kinds of mosquitoes you're getting bitten by the sounds of things
oh yeah you'll be in lumps within 40 minutes.
Now, I know you've had run-ins in the past
with health and safety in this country
because of how you're running your slaughterhouse.
Here we go, that's your job.
Have you had any communication with the authorities
about this particular issue?
Well, no, for a simple reason.
They haven't informed us.
What are you going to say?
Oh, we've had reports
that there's a mosquito outbreak.
Oh, really?
What, a mosquito may end your brain?
Yeah, there might be, yeah.
Oh, there's various infectious diseases.
We've heard there's dengue fever.
We've heard there's, you know,
there's Zika virus.
What the bloody hell do you expect?
Of course there is.
That's what people
are paying top dollar
to come for, isn't it?
How many people
have you had
visiting the
experience so far?
We've had a family
from the West Midlands
came down by mistake.
When you say by mistake?
Well, they were
trying to find
Oakwood.
It's a theme park
in 10pm.
They took a wrong
turn in and they
saw us and then
we popped in.
I took a third of the grid off it and they had a walk around the place they lived it lovely family uh wife and a husband two kids they lived it in the zika zoo and all that and uh
thank you dungeon can i get you to do something of a thought experiment
fire away yeah so just uh think back to when um the space you're using at the moment for Mosquito Mayhem was Eli's Organic Zoo.
Right, yeah.
And the couple of days before that finished where you had the llamas there and you had the dog and the ducks and the cat and the rodents.
And just remember how that made you feel when you saw children walking
around that and interacting with the animals.
Yeah. And then
compare that in your mind to how you feel
or how you felt when that
family from the West Midlands were walking around Mosquito
Mayhem. And can you tell me which of those
feelings made you feel more like it was
a worthwhile thing to do?
The second one. Arms down,
yeah, because the thing is, right, in this life, we more like it was a worthwhile thing to do? The second one. Arms down, yeah.
Because the thing is, right,
in this life,
we've got everything too easy.
Right?
There's no national service anymore.
You know, there's no workhouses.
You know, kids aren't going to look at chimneys
or they aren't going to go, you know.
So where are we going to get our model fibre from, right?
You're not going to get any euro disney what i mean walking down
there with some big burke with it with
a mickey mouse hat on
yeah so you're saying that you're
who won the second world war
who won the second world war yeah we
yeah yeah allies yeah
no never mind the bloody allies don't
start that again no
that's, my foot.
We did, right?
We haven't got a bloody Euro Disney.
Have we?
Coincidence?
I don't think so.
You're saying that the fact that Euro Disney...
You're saying the fact that Euro Disney's in France
tells us something about the moral nature of...
They're weak.
Right?
Weak.
Morally weak.
Physically weak.
Mentally weak.
Because of you're Disney.
I see that family, that lovely family walking around there, right?
I used to like seeing my own kids back in the day when they were crying their eyes out about various things, right?
And I thought, oh, this is giving me a tremendous sense of well-being.
about various things, right?
And I thought, oh, this is giving me a tremendous sense of well-being.
Just to see him thinking,
oh, I can see the one kid looking at his dad
thinking, Dad, life's hard.
You better believe it, sunshine.
These are valuable, valuable life lessons.
And the way I look at it, right,
you come out of mosquito man,
scratching and bleeding and whatever,
whatever else you want,
dengue fever or whatever, right?
It doesn't matter.
That's irrelevant.
What will stay with you is that wonderful feeling
that Christ, life is hard.
And life is a bloody hard thing.
And one day we're all going to die.
And the very, very best we can hope for
is that it's going to be quick.
Whereas the odds are, I mean, it's going to be horrific.
It's going to be a long drawn out affair
you know
the very very best
you can hope for in life
you know is to meet
and to fall in love
and it's all wonderful
and you have a great life
and you bring up your family
and everyone's happy
and dancing through meadows
and holding hands
and making daisy chains
right
well
wise up sunshine
do the best you can hope for
is one day
your missus is going to die or you're going to die.
And she's either going to watch you die or you're going to watch her die.
And if you're lucky, it's in bed.
Wake up.
Smell the coffee, as Americans say, right?
That kid comes out of there, out of Mosquito Man and his family.
The simplest task after that is going to seem wonderful.
How long do you spend in Mosquito Man?
Two and a half hours he spent, right?
The boy was 10 years old
the boy was at a percentage of his life
nipping
the rest of his life is going to seem
wonderful compared to that
you know two and a half hours
walking around Malaria Mountain or
you know the Zika Zoo
getting various infections
and you walk out of that place
when you go to that netting
you think to yourself, oh thank Christ that's over
and every day after that
and it might be three or four days
it might be 70 years
it's going to feel like a blessing
What would you say, Eli, to people
whose philosophy is slightly
different and they'd say something
along the lines of that
childhood is a very special time and that children should be allowed to be children and shielded from the harsher realities of life because you've only got one chance to be a child.
Here we go. Who said that then? Someone with a beard, I imagine.
A beard?
that then?
Someone with a beard, I imagine.
A beard?
You heard. Oh, a child is a special time. He should be allowed to be, oh, wonderful.
And at 18 years of age,
oh, I was
expecting more than this.
Whereas
someone who's been through old Eli, you know,
couldn't see Mosquito Man
as a kid. 18 years of age, he's working in a slaughterhouse or he's working in old Eli, you know, couldn't see Mosquito Mayor as a kid,
he's working in a slaughterhouse or he's working in a knackers yard,
swallowing some caustic soda, right,
his lungs are burning up,
he thinks, oh,
it's not as bad as bloody Mosquito Mayor, mate.
I want to talk to you about,
I'm interested as to where this has all come from,
and I want to talk to you about your own childhood.
Hmm.
My dad, God bless him god bless
his soul he was very much of my philosophy that you know the harder you make childhood
the easier you make the rest of your life and i thank him for it every day in a way in a strange
way you know the guy i go to bed and there's there's a photograph of my father
next to my bed
and I scream at it
before I go to bed
why did you do it
why
why
why did you ruin my childhood
I hate you
I hate you
next morning I wake up
with a wonderful feeling
of catharsis
you know
oh yes
I'm awake
my dad's dead
and I just feel alive
and that's
I get a little thankful
for that
you know what I mean
where there's some
sort of pampered childhood,
I'd wake up thinking, oh, God,
oh, isn't life a drag compared to being a kid?
Oh, I miss being a kid.
Hey, time's linear.
Move forward, right?
Why do you want to do all the best stuff first
and make everything else feel shit?
Do the shit stuff first.
Make everything else seem nice.
Yeah? So would you say that for Elits the the best is yet to come of course it is of course it is every day yeah every day is a blessing
every day i'm not with my father and my father's legacy is i relish every day and if i can if i
can impart that on other people, do the shit stuff first.
Everything else is gravy.
You make a kid, I tell you what,
you make a kid happy,
you ruin him for life.
Thanks to Eli for that wonderful interview.
And all the best for the future success
of Mosquito Mayhem.
Also, network members who visit the attraction
and quote the code ORGANIC
will get 10% off a family entrance ticket
and a free bucket of homemade milk-based mosquito bite lotion.
So that's all we've got time for this month.
But if you're after more beef and dairy news,
get over to the website now where you can read all the usual stuff,
including an in-depth scientific report in which we investigate the question,
which is cleaner, the average burger restaurant or an anus?
So until next time, beef out.
A big thanks to Mike Bubbins and also thanks to network members Sarah Morgan,
Tonya Pruitt, Randall Cooper, Jamie Bradley, James Garrison, Nathaniel Metcalf and Fred Nicol.
Also thank you to Rapwolf and 13Beats.
Thanks also to everyone who came to the
first ever Beef and Dairy Live at the London Podcast
Festival. I thought it was great fun.
It was a bit of an experiment to see how
it would work but I think it worked and we all had
a great time doing it and I'm
really pleased that so many people came. So thank you.
And also thanks to those people who
were my guests and who were involved.
So that's Josie Long, Mike Wozniak, Tom Crowley, and Martin Ostwick,
who are all absolutely brilliant.
And hopefully I'll be able to release a recording of it or maybe chop it up and put it in upcoming episodes.
So listen out for that.
Thank you for listening.
Keep leaving your reviews on iTunes.
They're really helpful.
And if you haven't done so yet, you have no excuse.
Goodbye, friend. really helpful and if you haven't done so yet you have no excuse goodbye friend i'm barbara gray i'm brandy posey and i'm tess barker we're lady to lady do you want to sleep
over in your ears is that a friend in your pocket or are you just podcast to see me we're a portable
hangout you can bring to the gym on the subway or on an oil rig seriously we have listeners who do
that show with us while we get high with marg. Talk showgirls with Katya from Drag Race.
And hear Broadway star Anthony Rapp sing Hamilton.
I am not throwing away my shot.
I am not throwing away my shot.
Hey, yo, I'm just like my country.
I'm young, scrappy, and hungry, and I'm not throwing away my shot.
That's Lady to Lady.
Can you keep a secret?
Neither can we.
Maximumfun.org. Comedy and culture. Artist owned. neither can we.