Family Trips with the Meyers Brothers - BONUS: THE MEYERS FAMILY Stayed in an Airbnb in Larry's Hometown
Episode Date: December 14, 2023It's a special bonus episode featuring Daddy Boy and Mommy Girl! Seth and Josh meet up with their parents, Larry and Hilary, at an Airbnb in Larry's hometown of Pittsburgh for a fun weekend of Scrabbl...e, good eats, the Steelers game, and more! Plus, the whole Meyers family answers your most-asked questions!
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Family trips with the Myers brothers.
Family trips with the Myers brothers.
Here we go.
Hey, Poshy.
Hey, Sufi.
Well, it's a very special episode.
Why is that, Suf?
All right.
First of all, this is sponsored by Airbnb.
We are currently in one of their units.
Yeah, we are in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
This is an annual family trip we take with our parents.
We come to Pittsburgh once a year.
We go to a Steelers football game.
Mm-hmm. Yeah, this is the first time we're doing it like this. Our parents, we come to Pittsburgh once a year. We go to a Steelers football game.
Yet this is the first time we're doing it like this.
We're all staying under one roof like we did when we were children.
We have a five-bedroom house in Shadyside.
So mom and dad can sleep in separate rooms.
They want to.
We've just revealed, by that cackle of a laugh,
we've just revealed who our special guests are.
It's a wonderful unit.
It is in the most lovely Pittsburgh way. These are some of the
black and white photographs on the wall.
Roberto Clemente,
Terry Bradshaw, Andy Warhol,
Mr. Rogers, Arnold Palmer.
They're really, I mean, that's kind of the...
There's one too many, but that is the.
And Wiz Khalifa.
And Wiz Khalifa.
Yeah.
Black and yellow.
Black and yellow.
Yeah.
I can't believe the first thing dad said on this.
It's Wiz Khalifa.
I did not have that in the pool.
What was the first Pittsburgh person dad was going to mention?
And, but it's very nice.
We've already had Primanti Brothers sandwiches.
Yeah.
They reached out to the pod
and were like, if you guys need any food while you're there, we'd be happy to send it over. And
I didn't think we were going to have time. And then mom and dad and I went out for breakfast
this morning and we came back to the house and then we're sort of comfortable here. We didn't
want to go anywhere. We were waiting for your arrival, and it seemed like the perfect thing to do, so we reached out.
Nick brought it over
from the Forbes Avenue location.
I think he's the general manager over there.
Thank you to Nick Rodler. We really enjoyed our sandwiches.
Permanee Brothers, if you're ever in the Berg,
worth checking out. French fries
on the sandwich. And coleslaw.
And coleslaw on the sandwich.
But Dad, this is, I mean, we were out
on Walnut Street in Shadyside last night, and this is your old neighborhood, essentially, or adjacent to.
I used to work on Walnut Street when I was in high school at a pharmacy, a Walnut pharmacy.
I worked behind the counter, and I drove a Jeep when people used to get their drugs delivered.
People used to get their drugs delivered.
But Walnut Street has always been kind of a very interesting, trendy, little few blocks of shops.
There's an Apple store, for example, on Walnut Street now. And just a place where there used to be lots of action.
When you grew up, that just sold the fruit, the apple.
Yeah, there was an apple.
Different Apple store.
Yeah, I think it was called Ionaco's or something.
It was just a fruit shop.
But now they have computers and stuff.
And yeah, it's great.
I mean, I love being here.
I always like Shadyside.
It's one of the things I always do when I come to Pittsburgh is come to Shadyside.
And I used to go to the original, but it's not there anymore.
So it was one of the deaths in COVID.
And the original was the greatest hot dog restaurant ever.
I know a lot of people take issue with that choice,
but I would say the greatest hot dog restaurant in America.
Greatest hot dog I ever had.
Yeah, for sure.
And that's when it closed.
That was when you officially said, well, I'll just be a vegan.
I guess I'm vegan now.
That was the one thing you weren't willing to give up.
But when we were walking down,
we were driving down Walnut Street last night, and then we took a walk, but you said it was just packed. When you were a kid thing you weren't willing to give up. But when we were walking down, we were driving down Walnut Street last night,
and then we took a walk.
But you said it was just packed.
When you were a kid, you couldn't.
Yeah, every Friday and Saturday night, the sidewalks were packed.
Everybody just came here and walked around.
There were lots of music venues, live music venues here, jazz and rock and roll
and other things like that.
I was too young to go into them at that point.
But every time the door would open, you would hear music.
And yeah, it was just a really happening place.
And it's gone through a lot of cycles over the years.
But it still seems to be a pretty nice neighborhood.
Now, this is a very, I do want to stress,
because I have a, our relationship, you and I, Josh,
with this city is so funny. Because we were born near Chicago, Chicago suburb.
Then we lived in Michigan, then New Hampshire, where mom and dad still are.
We then both went back to school in Chicago.
We then both lived in Amsterdam.
And then you've spent the last 20 years in LA, and I've spent the last 20 years in New
York.
And yet, weirdly, I feel more connection with Pittsburgh than any other city in America.
Anytime I see a for sale sign on a house, I'm like, well, maybe.
Yeah.
Like, I'm interested.
I take a picture out the window of the airplane every time I fly in.
I don't know who those pictures are for or what I'm ever going to use them for.
Driving through the Fort Pitt Tunnel into the city is one of the great reveals of any American city.
As Dad always says, it's the only city with...
Front door.
Front door. Front door.
And yeah, so we, you know, mom and I, mom, dad, and I got in yesterday.
And we, so yeah, we, you know, we drove around and we saw some stuff.
And this morning we took a drive.
We saw dad's old childhood house.
One of the first houses that mom and dad both lived in.
Got some good pictures of them.
Yeah.
And I ran, last year I went for a run from downtown to Sliberty,
which is how Pittsburgh people pronounce East Liberty.
And I saw someone on dad's old front porch smoking a joint.
Wow.
Yeah.
And I was like, good for them.
Yeah.
But the other thing, in Shadyside here, there's a real estate office.
And they have pictures, like they do in many real estate offices, of homes you can buy.
In one line, there were three homes.
One is a stately old home called the King Estate, which is right near Highland Park.
And it's on sale for $3 million.
It's a beautiful old home.
We drove by it today.
It's crazy, yeah.
It's a seven-bedroom, just gorgeous. today. It's crazy. Yeah, it's a
seven-bedroom. Yeah, I used to go sled riding there when I was a kid. The one in the middle
was a house on the south side of Pittsburgh, which was an old area where there were a lot of mills,
but it's been gentrified over the years. And the third place was on Lake Como in Italy.
And the third place was on Lake Como in Italy.
That's how we do it in Pittsburgh.
That's how we do it.
You can get anything you want and share inside.
Now, I have a question, Dad.
Did you ever, in a sliding doors version of your life,
do you think, oh, it would have been so great to raise my kids here in this city and never leave Pittsburgh?
Or are you happy with the fact that you got out and have been in different places?
It's interesting.
I think when I was 18 years old and went to college
and out at Northwestern,
I always thought I wanted to see a bigger world.
I mean, we traveled a bit with my parents,
mostly to Florida,
but in other areas around sort of the Pittsburgh area.
This has all been established in previous family trips.
Yeah.
Oh, I probably didn't listen to that one.
That's why I didn't know it.
Oh, I guarantee you listened to that one.
Yeah.
So I guess when I was younger, I wanted to spread my wings a little bit.
But I would have had no problem raising you guys up here in Pittsburgh.
Mom, would you have been happy to live a life in Pittsburgh?
I loved our time here.
Yeah, we had a great time.
No, I would have wanted to branch out a bit.
Today we had the traditional car drive tour of all of Daddy's old places, which tended to feature girls that he made out with in eighth grade
and seventh grade.
I never even kissed anybody till I was maybe 16, but this one was.
And then that's, the heartbreaking thing about that is you're 18 when you meet Dad, right?
So there's a very small window of non-Dad makeout sessions.
Exactly, exactly.
Yeah, I was forced to settle for the bird guy.
Yeah, you settled for the bird guy.
Now, you are from Marblehead, Massachusetts.
You love Marblehead.
I do.
But you don't love Marblehead as much as Dad loves Pittsburgh.
Oh, I might.
I think I might.
I think she does.
I do.
There's less to root for in terms of like the Steelers are sort of.
There's no sports thing, but yeah.
You like root for the American Revolution?
That's about the only thing.
That was the last thing that was fought near Marblehead.
Last hurrah, yes, of Marblehead. Dad, you also were recently, all three
of you were on our annual Thanksgiving show. Yes. Fantastic work.
Thank you. There was a very funny comedy segment, and I can
say that because I was not in it, called You Brined. All of you were great.
Dad, you complained about the Steelers in the body called You Brined. All of you were great. Dad, you complained
about the Steelers in the body of your brine, and one of our writers who's from Pittsburgh noted that
your Pittsburgh accent came out a little bit. You were unaware of that. You don't realize that when
you talk about the Steelers, it comes out a little bit. No, I didn't notice that when I was doing it
at first. And he said that to me, and I thought, no, I should have thought of that, and I should
have talked more like I was from the Berg, but I didn't do it. I feel bad about that now. No, I don't do that really.
The funny thing is, if you've never been to Pittsburgh, people literally do talk like that.
Yeah. You know, it's funny, when we were landing, we landed, we flew from Boston,
and the flight attendant that was wishing everybody a good day, she said,
yinz have a good day. She said, yins have a good day.
So she'd been here before.
Yes, there you go.
We're taking advantage of the extra space here.
And we have begun, and I know this is going to be crushing to our podcast listeners
that we don't have a final score of our Scrabble game.
We have started our first Scrabble game.
Dad's out to an early lead.
Dad's out to an early lead, although if it's time that it takes you to make a move,
mom is clearly winning.
Yeah, you would say she's dominated the game.
Yeah.
We have a beautiful deluxe spinning Scrabble board,
which I highly recommend when you're at a table.
And every time I've spun it, I've knocked over mom's tiles.
She doesn't realize she has to move it out of the spin zone.
So, I mean, other than that, she's off to a hot start.
Also, any time you play Scrabble with mom, the amount she blames, dumb luck.
Oh, yeah.
You know, I went first and she sighed about that.
Oh, yeah.
And you know if dad has the Q or the J.
We're going to be hearing about that.
I got a triple word on my first one.
And then she's always looking for someone to blame.
She's like, who set him up?
You did.
You set him up.
Look, this is how words work.
What do you think about the word QI, Hurry?
Oh, nonsense.
No, but what do you call it?
What do you call it?
Bullshit.
Yeah, it's a bullshit word.
It was very nice of you to try to clean it up.
We know the real thing.
Our sponsor was like, please remind your mother.
All right, so this is, first of all, it's lovely.
And we should know, this will air a little bit later,
we are going to a game tomorrow.
It will be the Steelers versus the Arizona Cardinals.
So you listening to this know if we had a nice Sunday
or if this whole trip was for naught. I would like to think that I'm if we had a nice Sunday or if this whole trip was for naught.
I would like to think that I'm capable of having a nice Sunday regardless of the outcome.
And I know that's not the case for you or dad.
No.
It is for me.
Good for you.
It is for me.
Not only will it ruin Sunday.
Oh, here we go.
It will.
Buy me a river.
Well, I don't think you should go to the game.
I think you should just stay here.
It'll ruin the week. I can't read the sports paper. It'll ruin the week if they lose,
and especially if they lose to the Cardinals. It's a very grown-up. It's awful. By the way,
I want to say, one, it's true, and two, I don't like it about myself. I'm not walking out in the
street saying I'm the better of the version. I've got hate, and I'm, you know, I've got three kids now.
I don't want to lose my Sunday.
I've tried so many different ways
of trying to temper the way I feel about,
and I feel like someone who's like,
so I just do cocaine at breakfast.
Nothing I do makes it any better.
I'll tape the game.
I'll watch it later when the kids are asleep.
I'll only follow on social media and nothing works.
If I tape the game and I know I'm going to watch it later
and I'll be with the kids trying to give them my full focus,
I just look in their faces and all I want
to say is, do you know the score?
If you've got anything,
tell me. No, don't tell me.
Only tell me if it's good. Oh, then I'll know it's bad if you don't say anything.
So, anyway,
Dad and I will be living or dying
with the actual result of the game.
And again, if you're listening, you live in Arizona and you're rooting for them,
just give us this one.
You guys got the fucking Grand Canyon.
You're winners every day.
Speaking of the Grand Canyon, I do want to mention,
because Primanti Brothers sent us food today,
but also the Grand Canyon did reach out
and they sent us a message that you read in a previous podcast.
And then at the end of it, you were like, and they say, meet us in an unmarked white van at the airport.
But I do want to tell the good folks at the Grand Canyon Conservancy who offered to give us a tour.
I'm interested.
We're interested.
Yeah.
I'm in.
I'm in for that.
And we want to make that happen.
I'm not taking a donkey to the bottom.
And just so you know, our mother will not take a donkey to the bottom.
Yeah.
So, yeah, but I didn't want...
So we will need three donkeys and a stretch limousine.
I think she'll, yeah.
You'll ride an ass, though, won't you?
Oh, she married one.
There we go.
With that, all right, so that's...
I thought I'd get that out before she did.
Yeah, that was a very smart move.
So anyway, one of the things we asked for our listeners,
knowing that this special episode was coming up,
is if they had any questions for our parents.
So we've really enjoyed these listener-inspired episodes.
And now we're going to ask our producer, Sam,
to play the first question.
Hello, Myers brothers.
Similar to you guys, my dad raised my brother and I outside of Pittsburgh,
specifically Philly, but we're huge Steelers fans.
And my question is, do you remember your first Steeler game together?
I know for me, I'll never forget taking the Clipper over to Heinz
and scalping
some tickets. We went to a couple
playoff games and just so
incredibly fun. Just curious
if you guys had that same
experience. Cheers.
I went to a Steelers game with dad
first, without you.
What?
Yeah.
We each got high school trips.
Oh yeah.
You guys went skiing.
We did.
We went to Taos, New Mexico.
Very active.
Uh-huh.
I wanted to come to Pittsburgh.
This would have been 1990.
We saw a Steelers-Chargers game.
That was our first game in Pittsburgh.
And the Steelers won, which was very exciting.
We also then went to a couple of Pittsburgh Pirate playoff games
against the Cincinnati Reds. And that was
ultimately a National League Championship series that Pirates lost, but I believe we saw one win,
one loss maybe. And the one thing I remember about that trip is I had a history of being a
procrastinator in school. And dad said, I'm going to bring you, but you have to do your homework.
This can't be a situation where you don't do anything. And I didn't do anything.
And it was months later, I got just terrible grades.
And I remember, I actually, he goes, what happened?
And I was like, well, we took that trip.
And you were so mad.
You were like, I told you I couldn't do that.
But the first game we actually went to
that was a Steelers game was not in Pittsburgh.
It was in?
Oh, Detroit.
Detroit.
Thanksgiving.
We went on Thanksgiving Day to the worst loss of Pittsburgh Steelers.
45-3.
45-3.
Yeah, we were living in Michigan at the time.
Detroit Lions always play on Thanksgiving Day, and it was like, yeah, we'll go to the game.
And my mother was with us.
What was it, Silverdome?
Yep.
And we were in the very last row, at the very top.
Let's just say, our seats are going to be a little bit better tomorrow.
This is actually interesting, though, because, again,
the Steelers were not a good football team then, when we went.
They're not in the 70s.
And this was the worst era, maybe, of the Steelers.
It would have been nice if we won, but the stakes were fairly low.
To the point that you actually, I remember that day,
I was beside myself, upset, and you were in a better mood.
And I remember the thing you said as we walked out of the stadium.
You looked at me and you said, welcome to the NFL.
I can't believe we never came to Pittsburgh to go to a game
when we were littler.
I don't recall.
We went to baseball games. We went to baseball games.
We went to baseball games, yeah.
But you know, I can remember my first Steeler game was with my dad.
My dad was a season ticket holder from the Steelers from when they were founded.
In like 39?
In 39, whenever it was.
And they played at Forbes Field where the Pirates used to play.
It's a baseball field, really.
And what I remember about going to those games,
because my dad would go with other people, adults,
but he would take me to a game.
And the Steelers were truly terrible in the 50s.
We would go, and it was freezing.
Because I would always go to a late-season game when no other adults wanted to go.
You know, it was probably a 12-game season there,
and the Steelers had won two games.
And what I remember most vividly is being freezing cold, number one, having to walk a long distance
to the game because my dad had a place he could park for free, making it worse being cold. And
that they had hot chocolate in little cans that were about the size of a can of tomato paste.
And the way they heated the hot
chocolate up was to put those cans in boiling water. And so the cans were hot to the touch,
but you had gloves on because it was cold. And so the good news was that you could hold the cans
so they were like a hand warmer. And then you would drink the hot chocolate, and it would scald the skin off the roof of your mouth.
Yeah.
We also, we drove down and slept out at the stadium, Seth and I, to get tickets for, was it a wild card game?
No, we went to the AFC Championship game, which we lost to the Chargers in 19...
92?
92.
Yeah.
No, 94.
95, sorry, 95.
92?
Yeah.
No, 94.
95, sorry, 95.
And yeah, because of that beatdown,
the Chargers had a not very well-known tight end named Alfred Papunu.
Yep.
And he just torched us for that game.
And I was pledging my and your fraternity at the time,
and Alfred Papunu is my pledge name.
Yes.
In Fiji.
I remember that we drove from Chicago to that game
with dad's oldest friend, Denny Miller.
And we were so excited.
Huge favorites against the Chargers.
It was a crushing, crushing loss.
Lost in the last play of the game.
We had a chance to win.
Ball knocked down in the end zone.
And I remember driving back, and Denny was the opposite of,
I'll keep these kids' spirits up, because he drove back,
and the whole drive, he's like, I think I'm going to throw up.
Just the whole drive, the whole eight-hour drive, he's like,
I might have to pull over and throw up.
So that was, all right, so that was, yeah, a lot of memories.
Lots of memories.
But man, I'm so excited for this game tomorrow.
I love going to see the Steelers.
Oh, me too.
I can't wait.
I can't wait.
All right, next question.
Hi, inquiring minds would like to know what your parents did for their honeymoon.
All right.
What did you guys do for your honeymoon?
Okay, so we didn't have any money at the time, and a relative of my mom gave us a beautiful house in Hamilton, Mass.,
on a little river, wasn't it, Larry?
No, it was on a lake.
It was on a lake.
And the house was next to a beautiful house.
It had a view of a beautiful house.
Oh, good view of the beautiful house.
Well, we were given this house for three months, so this was a good deal. Whoa. Yeah. Just one little quick question. The house was owned by the people that
owned the beautiful house. They were friends of your family. And they said, we can have it. We
just had to get it in shape. And my friend, same friend, Denny, we went in there and it took us
like days to clean the spiders out and then, and to clean it up. And it was fine once we fixed it up.
But it was designed because the second floor probably had,
what would you say, 20 or 30 beds?
Yeah, like bunk beds and single iron beds.
Yeah, so it was like a camp.
It was a camp.
Yeah.
But that wasn't that.
So the honeymoon, we knew we had this thing and we had no money.
But we went to Boston and stayed at a nice hotel.
And we went to Trader Joe's for dinner and had one of those big poo-poo.
No, not the poo-poo.
Scorpion bowls.
Scorpion bowls.
Oh, my gosh.
And Larry's not a big drinker, but of course, you know me.
I can hold my liquor.
So I got Larry a little shickered.
me, I can hold my liquor. So I got Larry a little shickered. And then I remember being in our bedroom. And I mean, we're kids. I'm 22. And as we've already established, I didn't kiss anybody
till I was 16. So all of a sudden, I'm just going to just wherever this is going, just remember,
we're both your children. I know. No no but the door dad it turns out the maid
just walks right in and i said larry you said oh i forgot to lock the door so there we are
in our honeymoon i was watching a pirate just to tell you that i remember the other thing i
remember about that the night that we went to trader uh fix fix we also went to Trader Vic's. We also went to the movies. We did. And we saw MASH.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, we saw MASH.
And we only spent one night there.
And then we went back to this place on the lake.
And a bunch of the people that had come to our wedding, which were college and high school friends in my case, they all came up and stayed there for a couple days.
But I remember, too, I had a Mustang at the
time, or maybe it was the white Camaro. No, the Mustang. But they had attached, our friends had
attached the cans like they used to do. And they had in shaving cream on the back, you know, just
married. And it like took the paint right off the car. And I thought, is this supposed, and then
you're driving into Boston, 128, that's a busy road. Clang, clang, clang.
And they were those tiny hot chocolate cans.
You tried to take them off.
You couldn't touch them.
You couldn't touch them, yeah.
I will tell you, the idea of going to Trader Vic's and then watching MASH,
that would have been my dream honeymoon.
I had to go to Machu Picchu.
Talk about a family trip.
But I want to tell you two other things about that honeymoon that are relevant.
Number one is on this lake, there was a little dock.
And at one point, I stepped off, and there was a foundation block that was on an angle.
And I slit the bottom of my foot open.
I remember that.
And the other thing is I got a fishbone stuck in my throat.
Remember that?
And we had to go to the hospital and they pulled it out.
But otherwise, it was a good time.
You know, there's an old wives' tale that if on your honeymoon,
your husband gets a fishbone caught in his throat, that means he's a catch.
I thought you were going to say maybe he wouldn't talk so much,
but it didn't work out to be that way.
I was like, what do you...
What do you...
That must have been so exciting.
That's the first time you heard your husband say,
Motherfucker!
Not the last!
Not the last!
Not the last!
Not the last!
Do we need to take you to get this bone removed from your throat?
No, no, he just kept talking and his throat crushed.
Yeah.
I'll force it out. I'll force it out I'll
force it out my talking his esophagus grounded into dust because we're talking about honeymoons
I just want to ask we obviously I think all our listeners know Josh got engaged this year very
exciting how often are people asking you about wedding plans and all the time is it do you hate
it well I just don't have answers for them. So I feel like I'm disappointing them.
You just spent a lot of time with your fiance's family.
And so I imagine.
But they know the score because they.
Right, right.
So it's people outside the immediate family that are.
Yeah.
I get it because it probably seems like a nice small talk thing to say.
But then if you don't have answers.
Well, my buddy Randy Suazo just texted me.
He's like, hey, I hear you set a date.
Congratulations.
And I'm like, no, where'd you hear that?
And he said he heard it on your show.
And I'm like, you misheard it.
People ask us all the time.
That I imagine.
Yeah, people ask us.
Why do they all care?
I know.
I know.
I mean, yeah.
All your friends, they're not getting invited.
All right. Let's hear our next one hi my request would be
or my question would be to your mom you want to go day drinking love you guys
um there's not much i love more than day drinking there One of the first day drinkings was me and you.
And very worth going back and watching.
It was very fun and great.
Yeah.
We started like 10 in the morning.
And I remember you saying it was a little late.
You said, I can be there at 9.
We got there, and you'd already, we were on first name basis with the bartender.
Yeah, and then you guys went out
to lunch afterwards and she ordered that's the thing yeah usually at the end of day drinking
i'm barely you know ambulatory and we go out to lunch and hurry orders another gin and tonic
her trader vicks order by the way is scorpion bowl one straw
we uh we did like one of the perks of of this Airbnb, they reached out and they were like, do you need any groceries?
So I gave them a list of some things that we wanted for breakfast just to have some snacks around.
And then I rolled the dice and I was like, and maybe some gin and tonic stuff and a bottle of scotch.
And so it was here.
It was here.
Yeah.
But they didn't have enough tonic.
So I actually had to go out and get tonic today.
So that was part of my mission, was to go get tonic.
All right, well, gold star.
Yeah, real, I guess.
Somebody's looking for a pat on the back here.
Holy.
One of the problems of when you order two days' worth of gin for mom,
the owner of the home called and said, you can't have 20 people.
There's a limit to how many people can stay there.
The burns are coming.
It's Ford Field hot chocolate.
The burns are coming.
All right, so it's a hardcore yes on
will my mom go day drinking with you?
Yes.
Yeah, although we're recording this,
it's 3.40 in the afternoon.
Have you had a drink yet today?
Yeah, I had a beer with lunch, and I just had a gin and tonic.
But this is vacation.
This is vacation.
I'm not critical.
At home, I wouldn't have had anything yet.
I wait till around 5.
Well, 5.30.
Oh, yeah, for Pardon the Interruption.
Yeah, we have a beer and watch Pardon the Interruption.
Whatever time, if it's later, we tape it and we watch it.
But that's definitely Hillary's first drink of the day, for sure.
It's a tradition.
It's fun.
You should go day drinking with Wilbon and Kornheiser.
I'd love to.
I love that.
Plus, Wilbon is the Northwestern guy.
He's the Northwestern guy as well?
That's the best.
He wears purple so well.
Yeah, he certainly does.
Go Cats. Go Cats. Let's hear our next one hi myers family i'm looking forward to seeing you around pittsburgh
maybe i have one question and one steelers related anecdote the anecdote is my kids went to elementary school, and I think even high school, with Coach Cower's kids. So Bill
Cower was always scowling on TV, and that was the picture I had of him. And when my kids were about
five and seven, there was a school festival that we were going to. And I was coming out of the
parking lot, heading down a hill, holding my five-year-old's
hand. And Coach Cower came purposefully striding towards the parking lot across the hill, wearing
his usual scowl. I was a little intimidated, although all of the moms that I ever talked to
were talking about the crushes they had on him. But anyway, my five-year-old pulled away from me running straight down the hill into the path of Coach Cower. And he, at the last second, saw my son and adjusted
his stride so that my son ran underneath his legs. And then he turned to me and just gave me the
biggest, widest grin that I'd ever seen. And I realized why all the moms had a crush on Bill Cowher.
The question is, where about in Pittsburgh did Larry grow up and where did he and Hillary meet?
Well, I grew up in East Liberty on Heberton Street, right? Three houses away from Dilworth
School. I went to Peabody High School, which is now called
the Obama Academy. Hillary and I met at Northwestern University, where we were in an English class
together freshman year. Go Cats again. And eventually after Northwestern, we lived in
Pittsburgh together for two years. We lived on Highland Avenue right near Highland Park.
And I went to Carnegie Mellon for graduate school for two years. And lived on Highland Avenue right near Highland Park. And I went to Carnegie Mellon for
graduate school for two years. And Hillary was a teacher here in town.
Yeah. Reading teacher.
Yeah. Up in Knoxville.
Knoxville. Yeah. Halftime at a Catholic school.
In, where was that? The West End, I think.
Yeah.
Yeah. And she said, oh, I got a job I'm going to teach in Knoxville. I had lived here my whole life. I thought, we're moving to Tennessee. But I didn't even know about the Knoxville area.
See, the one thing about my father was born in the Hill District, and my mother was from
Sharpsburg. So the fact that my father actually crossed the river to go to Sharpsburg to meet
my mother is an amazing thing in and of itself. Because if he had to go across a bridge, he needed a three-day weekend.
My interesting Bill Cower story, and I love Bill Cower, and had him on my show,
unfortunately during COVID. So I didn't have him there, but he wrote a book and got to talk to him.
I love Bill Cower. But his grandchild was born the same day as Ash,
on the same floor of the hospital.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
And when I found that out,
it was almost more exciting than the birth of my own son.
Next.
Hi, this is Jenna from Chicago.
I have a question for the Myers parents.
So I'm loving the podcast. I love when y'all are on.
And I have two boys like you with the same age gaps, but they're younger. They're four and one.
And you've done such a great job raising two wonderful boys. And I wanted to know,
how do you do that? What is the secret to success on raising such wonderful kids? Because
I've still got time. Mine are
four in one. So any advice would be appreciated. Thanks. I think we were blessed. Our boys were
always the best of friends and very little argument or fighting over anything. I was a
soft touch. Larry was a disciplinarian. So we kind of divided those duties. They knew there were very strong boundaries of
things they could and couldn't do. And really, I think the main thing was that there was just
so much love between them. And I think love in our family, which has obviously continued to this day.
I don't know.
Oh boy. Here we go. No, it's just, you know, you don't get a manual when you're a parent.
So you just kind of wing it.
But I do think it's fair to say that the way my parents were with me, I didn't try to emulate everything they did.
I don't think you try to emulate everything that, you know, certainly Hillary and I did.
So you find your own way about it.
thing that certainly Hillary and I did. So you find your own way about it. But I do think a couple things were, because we never had, as Hillary indicated, very many problems. And when she said
I was a disciplinarian, it wasn't like I was smacking them around or anything like that.
But I didn't make idle threats. If I said, if you had to do something, whatever it was,
and you didn't do it, there would be a consequence. It wouldn't be terrible. It wouldn't be abusive, but there'd be a consequence. And I
do remember when Hillary went back to work as a teacher, she had taken several years off when you
guys were young. We said, well, you guys have to do chores. You have to do more chores because
mom's going to be busier at night, going to do homework, blah, blah, blah. And I said, you have to do the dishes. And doing the dishes was not actually washing them, just cleaning the
table and putting them in the dishwasher. That was your job. And I said, I don't care.
I don't care. Yeah.
It was a lot.
That's what you said at the time.
Yeah.
He just started to cry.
And I said, I don't care if you do it together every night, take turns every other day, every other week.
I don't care.
You figure it out.
But that's your job.
But I do remember coming home one week, like a Friday night or something.
We were out.
You had had a babysitter and whatever.
And because you weren't old enough to be by yourself, but you were old enough to have these chores.
So when you went back to school, what grade were you in, Seth, when she was back to work? Fourth. Yeah, fourth. Fourth. So you're about 10,
you're about eight. And we came home and there were some dishes in the sink. It was like 1230,
one o'clock. I went up, I woke you up, brought you downstairs, made you put the dishes in because
that was your job.
So there was always a consequence.
And no idle threats.
I don't know how you remember it.
I mean.
No, that sounds right.
I would agree there were no idle threats.
I don't ever remember negotiating down a predetermined or a pre-agreed upon punishment.
That was always the way it went.
No.
The punishment was well known, yeah.
Yeah.
But I remember I did so poorly on a test the day after you woke me up
in the middle of the night to do those dishes in second grade.
You got held back a grade, right?
I got held back, yeah.
You're lucky it got into college.
But yeah, those are consequences.
You're two years younger than me and five years behind me in school.
All from that one night.
Yeah, I still have to finish up some credits.
Oh, I had a funny thing, talking about parenting styles,
which is Ash, the seven-year-old, is very sweet with Addie, the two-year-old.
And this is the first time I feel like I got a parenting note from Ash
because Addie, the boys eat vitamins in the morning, and Addie has one.
And so Ash went and actually got the one she has
and he gave it to her and she goes,
I want more vitamin.
And he goes, Addie, you just get one vitamin.
And she goes, okay.
And then he looks at me and goes,
see if you say it like that.
She understands.
And I was like, the fuck?
Sounds pretty condescending.
Oh, I was dripping with condescension.
Absolutely dripping with it.
Before we go to our next recorded message,
some of you emailed in some questions as well.
Since Hillary was a French teacher,
did you guys ever go to France or French-speaking parts of Canada
to practice your French language skills?
That was not a...
No.
We did Quebec once, did we?
Or is that just you?
No, that was me and my family, my sisters.
We did go to France one time.
And it was so hot.
Oh my gosh, remember that place?
And the Pope was there.
It was terrible.
It was just the most sweaty Catholic vacation.
And I always remember that you get a little flustered when it's time to order in French.
For me to do the ordering?
Yeah, I think especially in front of us, with us as your audience.
Oh, okay.
Because we're like, all right, madame.
Bring it on.
Let's see it.
Yeah, let's see it.
Yeah.
No, that's probably fair.
That's probably fair.
But no, we didn't do.
No.
Because the Pope was there, there were no hotels.
Yeah.
And we ended up in this real small, definitely not three-star, two-star, I don't know what they have below one, maybe a triangle.
It had like an interior courtyard, and everyone's hotel room opened up into the center, and everyone's doors were open because it was so hot.
Yeah.
That's the only time I've ever been to Paris.
Yeah.
And the second day we realized at the check-in you could ask for a fan.
So most people had fans.
We didn't even have a fan.
I think we went to bed.
We all took showers and went to bed wet.
Yeah.
Just because, yeah, which didn't really work either.
That seemed like a good time.
I remember you would write us little phrase books before we went,
such as,
avez-vous gin and tonic?
Ma mère veut un gin and tonic.
Is that right?
Où est le fan?
Où est,
yeah.
But also,
yeah, I just want to say,
thank you for the bon question. Ah, yeah. Yeah. But also, yeah, I just want to say thank you for the bon question.
Ah, yeah.
Merci.
Yeah, obviously, the French stuck pretty well.
Here's another good one.
Who behaved worse on road trips, Seth or Josh?
I don't know.
That's a tough one.
I don't recall.
Let's say Josh, then.
I don't recall. That's a tough one. I don't recall. Let's say Josh then. I don't recall really bad behavior. I can recall unusual behavior because we used to go away,
and this sort of ties into the whole trip here to Pittsburgh, because we used to go away
in the April vacation for school and usually go to somewhere where there's a beach,
Florida, the Bahamas, something like that. And we would all be on the beach and it was the
NFL draft. And Seth would spend, because it wasn't like a long three-day or four-day thing like it is
now. And Seth would be inside watching the draft, waiting to see who the Steelers would pick. Then
he would come out and tell us who it was. And then he would go back inside and spent the whole day
watching the draft. How is this bad behavior?
I said it was unusual.
He said he teed it up as unusual.
Are your headphones hooked into this podcast?
What are you listening to over there?
There's some nonsense coming from my right.
Oh, boy.
Oh, boy.
Let's hear another recorded question.
Hi, my name is Haley and I am a lifelong Pittsburgher. I'm very proud of it. And I just have to say that I wanted to clear something up that I think your dad said on that very first episode when you had them on, when you asked him if he thought Pittsburgh was a good place to visit and he said no.
to visit? And he said, no. And I just have to say, I want to clear the air there because I think Pittsburgh is an amazing place to visit, whether you're with your friends or coming with your
family. There is no shortage of things to do here. I am a very proud Yinser and will tell anybody who
asks me if Pittsburgh is a place to visit that yes, it is absolutely worth a visit. So I just wanted to
clear the air there because I don't think we gave Pittsburgh its flowers and I wanted to make sure
that it got it. Big fan of the pod. You guys are great. Thank you guys so much.
Well, first of all, I'm already married to Hillary, so I can't take that criticism from you.
That's our job. Don't try to usurp my wife's role.
First of all, I don't remember.
Just for, since it's a non-visual podcast,
my mom is rolling her eyes.
I think she's ordered another genitalia.
First of all, I don't remember.
I don't remember saying that.
And I would never say that.
I think that Pittsburgh is an incredible city, and I think it's a surprise.
People that have never been here are always surprised.
And I can recall a trip before I retired with some of my colleagues from New York, and we came here on business.
I think we were seeing Alcoa and some other Pittsburgh-based company, maybe PPG or something like that.
That's a flex.
And we were walking around, and these guys were in their mid-30s.
They couldn't believe it.
Their image of Pittsburgh was steel mills and that.
And we had some time.
We walked along the river.
We went literally and stood on the point.
They were very surprised at what Pittsburgh was.
And I think it's got great sports.
It's got great culture.
It's got great neighborhoods.
How many bridges would it have?
Put it in relation to another city, maybe an Italian one.
Probably next to Venice, nobody has more.
I think there's 700 bridges
great and you know what the biggest bridge is what's that the pittsburgh steelers that's the
bridge the pittsburgh steelers poetic the pittsburgh steelers are the bridge for all of us
in the city of pittsburgh yeah i don't that either. The hottest fire forges the toughest steel.
Play Renegade now.
I've always loved
coming here.
And also,
I feel like
living in Los Angeles,
anytime there's
a sporting event
cutting to a commercial,
they might show
the Hollywood sign,
which I live very close to,
or the Santa Monica Pier.
There are sort of
all these landmarks.
And similarly,
in Pittsburgh,
they always show a place
and I'm always like,
oh yeah,
I've been there. I've been there. Shot of the incline, a shot of the point.s. And similarly in Pittsburgh, they always show a place and I'm always like, oh yeah, I've been there.
I've been there.
Shot of the incline, a shot of the point.
Yeah.
I also think in recent years, even living in New York,
you read about how there's a bustling,
or I don't know if that's the right word,
but there's a great new restaurant scene.
We're not going to make it this year,
but last year we went to a fantastic,
we read about it at New York Times,
one of the best new restaurants of the year at Tepka.
Yeah.
It was a wonderful vegan restaurant. We went went to on behalf of Josh's veganism,
but I think we all had a great meal.
Yeah, it was delicious.
Vegan Polish.
So yeah, it's a really cool place. And even East Liberty, where you grew up, that is now
a completely different neighborhood. And it's a cool, young, it's a tech-friendly,
bike-friendly city. It's great.
I think two times on our visits, we've gone to the Warhol Museum, which is wonderful.
The best.
Yeah.
It was raining last time I think we were here.
We went to the Carnegie Museum, the art museum.
Yeah.
It's always good.
I always feel great coming home.
Always feel great.
I really am.
I'm going to listen back to that episode to hear you run down Pittsburgh.
I can't believe it.
I'm shocked that he said it.
This might be a situation where mom got her hands on some AI.
Mom might have
a deep fake dad.
I'll tell you
where I don't like
Pittsburgh.
Sounds like it.
Pittsburgh is
a bad place.
All right.
Let's see if we have
another question.
Hi Pashi, Sufi, and Ponkas.
This is Brendan from Ontario, Canada, with a question about one of my favorite topics, dogs.
Over the last decade of Myers Family holiday appearances, we've heard a lot about the dogs in the Myers family.
I myself am particularly fond of Albert.
My question is, did you ever take your dogs on vacation with you?
If so, how did that go?
If not, who watched them for you? Did they do a good job? It's been years now. You can be honest
if they didn't. And did your pet sitter ever tell you a funny story about something the dog did
while you were away on vacation? And as a bonus question, does Frisbee travel well? Remember the
trip that you boys complained about, the Molasses Pond Adventure.
One of the reasons that I loved it so much was we were allowed to take Albert, who was at that time,
I don't know, eight or so, but a big boy. Albert I. Albert I, yeah. And he had a great time.
There's pictures of him getting in a canoe and he was running around like a wild boy. You didn't have to worry about him.
But otherwise, you can't take 100-pound dogs on trips with you.
So I can't remember any other one.
I also think if you're going to stay with other people,
it's very imposing to take your dog.
And so we have had great dog sitters for years.
And they've really been wonderful with the dogs.
And for many, many years, they stayed at our house
because one was a college student and who later on had a job.
But we had an invisible fence.
The dogs, because we had two dogs for many of these years,
could be outdoors during the day.
And even now, we have two different dog sitters that we use.
And just today, we got pictures from a
dog sitter of Albert being on the floor with a very small baby on its hands and knees. And Albert's
licking this baby's face and the baby's laughing. And yeah, they send us stuff every day. We're very
fortunate because we do like to travel and knowing that uh that albert is uh is well cared
for is uh we wouldn't be able to do it otherwise frisbee travels very well she's very easy to bring
on trips she's also very easy to forget on trips well because she frisbee seth's seven pound
italian greyhound yeah will climb onto a couch and just wants a blanket to be put on top of her.
Yeah.
She's very invisible.
Yeah.
She's living an invisible existence as a dog.
I think she's on basically a work stoppage due to the fact that we keep having children.
Because we treated her like a child, and then we had real children, and I think it dawned
on her.
She was like, wait a second, am I a fucking dog?
Have I been one this whole time there have been a couple times where we've driven away from our in-laws house and then realized you know three kids in a car and one of them
you left her on a boat one night didn't you we'll edit that out I wasn't there I wasn't there
I swear to god I wasn't there we're still gonna edit it out but that one's not on me a lot's on
me but that's not on me when we were just visiting you over Thanksgiving,
I think we got there on Thanksgiving morning.
And I think it was like Saturday morning where I said,
where's Frisbee?
Because I had literally not seen the dog for two days.
Yeah.
Yeah.
She's pretty quiet these days.
And if Mackenzie had her way, she would always travel with the dogs.
She took Debbie to Montana to a horror show, and we might go away for New Year's with the dogs.
But I don't love traveling with dogs because then I feel weird leaving them in an apartment or certainly at a hotel would be even weirder.
But we have brought them to some places.
And it is nice to have them, but then you just have to get over the fact that it might be strange for them to be in a new place.
And I will say, Airbnb is going gonna be a lot more pet friendly yeah a lot more pet friendly than a hotel oh for sure yeah for sure and it's a house yeah it's a house also if maybe you need
to do some laundry it's nice to do laundry whereas at a hotel they're like oh a t-shirt
will be 12 to launder for you so we're gonna iron it so it'll look weird when you wear it it'll be $12 to launder for you. Oh, so we're going to iron it so it'll look weird.
When you wear it, it'll be clean, but it'll be boxy and weird.
Weird creases.
Oh, I had another question.
And I'll tell you this one.
If you guys get this one wrong, I've got a real issue.
I'm walking right out of this podcast.
What was the most unreasonable request Seth Josh made as kids?
It doesn't have to be a specific request, but who made more unreasonable requests?
Well, it sounds like you've made up your mind, Seth.
I have.
Are you kidding me?
I need a room where I can watch the football draft.
I didn't ask for it.
I just disappeared.
I remember one specific unreasonable request
that you made, Seth.
How is this turning on me?
I know where you were going,
but I just happen to remember as being unreasonable,
when we moved from Michigan to New Hampshire, you guys were pretty young, second and fourth grade.
And I was saying, so we're going to move.
It's going to be exciting, blah, blah, blah.
And I said, what kind of house do you want?
You said, I want a blue house with a round door.
Yeah. Little hobbit. What kind of house do you want? You said, I want a blue house with a round door.
Little Hobbit.
Where we're going to live?
Yeah, we're going to live in the shire.
It was like Beatrice Potter.
Yeah, that's what I want.
I thought it was a little.
I kind of thought a round door would be great.
But yeah.
Well, I don't know what you're thinking. I don't know.
You always wanted shit.
What?
Guinea pig pig a rabbit
like the whole house
stunk
and there were people
screeching
every time you opened
I never asked for anything
to this day
I want these comics
and I want
I'm having them
with my own money
I want these
colored pencils
you know what I wanted when I got allergy tests
and I was allergic to dogs
I wanted to live in a dog free home
I didn't even get that
I had bad asthma
still do but it's a lot better now
because I don't have a sheep dog in my home
but I remember when dad took me to get
you know that scratch test
for allergies
I wonder if they even still do it.
It seems dated.
But like 32 different,
and it's like all of a sudden
there's a big splotch for ragweed and dander.
And then the biggest one,
my dad's like,
what's that?
Our dad.
You.
My dad.
I go, which one's that?
And he goes, that's dogs.
And I remember on the drive home,
he's saying, so we're not going to goes, that's dogs. And I remember on the drive home, you saying,
so we're not going to get rid of the dog, but we're going to stop eating ragweed.
Let's see if we have another recorded message.
This is a question for Seth's family. This may stir up a bit of trouble, but I think it's a good one.
So for Seth and Josh, it is at what point in your life were you the happiest with your parents?
And at what point were you the most aggravated with your parents? And I would ask the same
of your parents about both of you.
Oh, look at that. Turn the tables.
Yeah.
Which birthday was it? We all came home for your birthday.
70.
And we were in New Hampshire.
Yeah.
With surprise party. Both of us surprised you.
He had been there for the whole week.
Oh, right. And then I drove in the night party and surprise you and i just remember us going back home and the dogs were there and we were all a little we you know we were a little
tipsy and we just were playing john prine songs and just screaming the lyrics together yeah and
we i mean songs we'd all listened to a million, and not one of them did we know more than 40% of the lyrics.
But there was no, no effort was made to not give it a full-throated singing.
I remember you made a video of us, Little Fishies.
What's the sound?
See, exactly.
Little Fishies.
Nope.
But it was a really late night.
It was a really late night and a really great night.
And that was pretty great.
And the other one for me was, and I maybe told this story before,
but the four of us on my wedding day, the four of us were sitting
an hour before the wedding.
And I remember saying, what was it like the two years I was gone?
Because that, to me, is still the most fascinating time in this family.
I was at college, and the three of you lived together. And I'm just so curious. I was like, Because that, to me, is still the most fascinating time in this family. I was at
college, and the three of you lived together. And I'm just so curious. I was like, what was it like?
And you guys all said the sweetest thing, which is you had no memory of it. And that meant so much
to me. I mean, I see friends of mine who have kids in high school now, and you just become more
independent. The older you get, the older you get the closer you
get to going off to college or whatever it is you might do after your senior year in high school so
I think I was so busy my junior and senior year with student council and like any other you know
plays things that I was doing that I don't have a lot of clear memories of what it was like to be
home without you.
Yeah.
And then if I could just jump to the most aggravated,
was that night dad couldn't put five dishes away.
I remember how mad and sad you both were to leave Michigan.
And it broke my heart. And years later, clearing out like your old journals and things like that.
I mean, you wrote about it in great length. I can't believe mom and dad are taking us away from
all that we love. And it never happened to me. I lived in my same house my whole childhood. And I
felt so guilty. Like, is there any way we could have not done this? And there wasn't. It was just
the way- And it was halfway.
We moved in the middle of a school year as well.
Yeah, it was January.
Yeah, it was January.
It was awful cold.
And it was, yeah, it was awful.
But it was, I mean, I should say,
I think for both of us,
we clicked into New Hampshire right away.
Yes, pretty quickly.
Yeah, I remember one thing.
It's not, it was a period when you were in seventh grade
where you mentioned homework before
and you were a huge procrastinator.
Yeah.
And it would drive me crazy.
And then you're in school where mom's teaching.
And so all the people that are your teachers are her colleagues.
And we're getting these report cards that you're getting good grades, but they're saying, yeah, but he turns in his homework late.
He doesn't do this.
And it used to really bother me. And I used to kind of be on you about that a lot throughout the year. And at the end of the
year, you wrote something. And I'm not going to be able to recall exactly what it was,
but it was about the family. And you got an A++. And at the bottom of the first page,
it said, I can't wait to turn the page, whoever the teacher was. And you turn the page,
and then some other stuff, you say, it's maybe three pages at the bottom. What an interesting
family. And you came home, and I said, because this was school was over. We found this in your backpack.
And I said, hey, I read your essay about your family.
Because, oh, that was the thing you kept procrastinating about.
You were supposed to interview your grandparents.
You were supposed to go through albums.
And you didn't do any of that.
And I kept pushing and pushing it.
I literally remember you printing it out.
I heard the printer in the morning before school,
you were printing it out.
The loudest printer.
Yeah.
And I was thinking, ah, you're going to get screwed here,
and it'll serve you right.
There'll be a real parenting moment here, a real lesson.
And it's A++.
And so I said to you, I read the thing. And you said, yeah, it was really good.
I got a great grade on it.
I said, yeah, it's just one thing.
I go, what?
He says, not our family.
You made it all up.
He goes, yeah.
That's one of the best lines ever.
What were they going to do?
Check.
Yeah.
But at that point, it was the end of seventh grade, going into eighth grade.
I said, why do we have to go was the end of seventh grade, going into eighth grade, I said,
why do we have to go through all this nonsense all year about this? And then you also said something that made a lot of sense. If you're a parent, you should be paying attention to
what's going on with your kids more than maybe you are. And you said, hey, my goal this year
was to be more popular. That's what I wanted to do. I didn't care about anything else.
And I said, how did you do on that? He goes, everything was great. I go, we done with that
now? He goes, yeah. And everything was fine after that. But to me, the one thing kids don't realize
is that your parents remember being kids, maybe not everything. But you can say, oh yeah, when I was 12,
yeah, it's what I wanted to be too. So it all kind of came together.
Yeah. I do remember right outside our garage in the house we still live in. I don't know what,
it must've been end of the year, but I remember like there's a spot where I remember standing
where you were yelling at me so much about my lack of effort.
I remember it exactly the same.
And I cannot walk by that spot without having sort of phantom images.
Because I developed this technique where when you were screaming at me,
I would just focus on a point behind you.
And if I stared at that long enough, you would just disappear.
And I would think that I was just listening to the radio.
But that's exactly the incident I'm just talking about.
It's exactly where it occurred.
I remember it exactly the same way.
I don't remember yelling at you that much.
Well, you wouldn't yell at Josh
because I think we all know what would happen.
Up the stairs, slam the door, and then we just let him have it.
That's what I'm talking about.
Difficult.
That's not a demand.
That's just, I'm going to divorce myself from this situation.
Exactly.
I do remember there was some, it was like an extracurricular field trip.
Something that I really wanted to go on.
And dad was in the bathroom.
Yep.
Yeah.
And you're like, I'll be out in five minutes.
I was like, we got to go.
And you're like, I'll be out in five minutes.
And like, it was 10.
And then we pull into the parking lot and that bus was gone.
And I was so mad.
Oh, yeah.
I remember that vividly.
But you were clearly in a tight spot.
I'm sure if you could have gone sooner, you would have.
Yeah.
That does.
That one, I remember that as well.
Yeah, and it's not like you can tell your friends what happened.
Yeah, I remember.
You can now.
your friends what happened.
I remember.
You can now.
I'd like to think that's the,
I'm sure there were times in my life I was more angry,
but I can't think
of what those are.
That was certainly
the time I remember,
I would have guessed,
was the most frustrating
to parent me
is those years
where I was just.
It was only really a year.
It wasn't that bad.
But Josh was stubborn.
He was far more stubborn. You were more conniving, I suppose. You were just better at playing it off. But he was
stubborn. I think easygoing, I'd prefer maybe instead of conniving. Nah, conniving's the right
word here. Yeah, you know how to play the game a little better. But Josh didn't even try. He was
stubborn. But the best example is you were very young.
In your bedroom, your bed came up against a shelf.
And it was right at the height of your bed.
And you had all these stuffed animals.
And we used to be concerned that there were too many stuffed animals in the bed.
So I would put them on the shelf when you went to bed.
And you didn't want anything on that shelf. Your expression
when you were young was always would start when you didn't like something, you would say,
I told you, I told you nothing on my shelf, nothing on my shelf. And so we'd have to take
all the animals off of the shelf. And meanwhile, I had just redecorated your room, wallpapered it, painted it, and the shelf was painted.
And so you go to sleep.
We move some of the stuffed animals on the shelf and go back downstairs.
And later we hear footsteps.
I hear the water on.
Footsteps coming back,
footsteps going on, water on, footsteps coming back. We don't know what's, we listened to this
for a while. We go upstairs. You had gone into the bathroom and got cups of water.
You were pouring it on the shelf, which had orange paint on it, and you were rubbing it
with towels until you had blistered the paint. And I walked in the room, I said, what are you
doing? And you said, I told you, nothing on my shelf. I think it was pretty clear.
Very clear, not even paint. Yeah. And that was a real teachable moment for me because if we hear footsteps in a water faucet,
we never give it an hour.
We move pretty quickly.
Oh, I'm sure it's fine.
We have, I believe we have one more question.
Let's give it a listen.
Hi, Josh and Seth.
Since it seems like we're all destined to turn into our parents,
I want to know who's turning out to be more like your mom
and who's turning out to be more like your dad.
Thanks. Love the show.
I think mom and I have a lot in common in what we love to do,
but I think as mannerisms, I find that I am dad way more than I am mom.
I think that's true, but I think we both, we obviously both have parts of both of them.
And Mackenzie will very often say like, oh, you sounded just like your dad when you said that.
Yeah.
And it's usually when I'm angry.
I was going to say.
Yeah, I think that's it.
Weirdly, that's when. Yeah when I slip into a Pittsburgh accent.
It's weird, but that's when it most comes out.
But I like when you guys are on the show
that people can see the lineage.
When I read the YouTube comments
after you guys do a sketch, for example,
they're like, oh my God,
well now you see why Josh and Seth are like that. Like the delivery, there is a Myers family delivery that I
think we all have. And, and I certainly think, you know, to make sure that it's not just when I get
angry, but I think the way we, the storytell is very much inspired by dad. And then the one time
I tried to live like mom and have as many drinks as she did. I was in the ER.
I'm just kidding.
Yeah, it's sort of like you try to emulate actors that you love or comedians that you love, and they're different,
and they have different qualities.
And this might be more of a Steve Martin take than a Richard Pryor take,
but I feel like the same way there's a dad approach and a mom approach.
I think Seth hit on it. I think it's telling stories. I think for me, this came from growing
up here. We were just talking about it today. In high school, there was this IKC center in East
Liberty, and I was Sandy this morning, being on the steps of that place, maybe one night a week or whenever it was, and hearing guys tell stories and making one another
laugh. And laughter was currency, man. It really was. And where I grew up, I said, was near Dilwer
School. There was lots of kids. We used to hang out in that schoolyard all the time. And we laughed
all the time. We made fun of one another all the time. We teased one another all the time. And we laughed all the time. We made fun of one another all the time. We teased
one another all the time. One thing that came out of that is you had a thick skin or you couldn't
survive in that environment. But telling stories to make other people laugh was something that was
really part of growing up for me. And we all are storytellers. And Hillary's become a good storyteller because she's absorbed that culture as well. And with her friends, she tells stories all the time.
And when she's telling a story, when I'm there, I always think about how much better she could do
than she does. But she does a good job. She does a good job.
I really wish you could all see her face because I think in his head
he's like this is a compliment
her face is not registering
I will say
when I read books to the kids
Lexi will always say
you read like your mom
and I like that
when we talk about stories
you were the story reader
and I like that I learned that rhythm
especially like reading Roald Dahl books and
realizing, oh, these are books I'm reading now, the same books that my mom read me.
There's this one cassette tape that we, on a road trip, the four of us took with our Uncle Kurt.
And in that, you read us, I think, serendipity, and there's something else that you read us,
and it's to hear that sort of
sing-song voice that went with all your stories is yeah it's just great I certainly read to your
children Seth but I don't remember reading to you do you guys remember that or no I was the reader
I think it was her mom for sure well she would read us like rolled on. You'd be like, do you guys want to hear the new Ludlum?
Little Ed McBain before Brad.
Even working in my career, when you were doing business development for whatever it was,
you were talking to people.
You're always telling them a story.
That's what you're really doing. I mean, that was what made me good at what I did,
story. That's what you're really doing. I mean, that was what made me good at what I did,
is that I could talk about something and something to do with finance or whatever,
but put it in the context of a story. And even my friends from growing up, I'll call,
somebody will call me up and say, give me a story. It's all about storytelling.
And if we haven't said, our dad just retired from a successful career as a con man.
A lot of storytelling. A lot of storytelling.
A lot of storytelling.
I have one last question that was emailed in.
Somebody asked this.
This feels like we're maybe searching for a compliment.
But when was the first time you remember being proud of your sons?
Taking a little, maybe edit out the pause.
Yeah, I mean.
Was it when they got their own podcast?
No.
No, that wasn't much. It's wasn't much everybody has one of those no i think uh good burn fair burn i think that uh this goes way back
way back when you were wilbur i was wilbur in charlotte's web it's charlotte's web he was
some pig he was some pig. He was some pig.
And how old was he?
Kindergarten?
That was second grade.
Was that second grade?
God, that's amazing to think that Ash's age,
because Ash, who I love so much,
would be such a shitty Wilbur.
Yeah, I guess I would say I can't remember a first moment.
There's been a lot of moments and different things,
big things, little things. Yeah. I think that's been a continuing theme. I couldn't pick out one.
No, I can't either. I couldn't pick out one. I will say when we go home, one of the nicest
things is the scrapbooks you kept, especially for early career stuff where literally anything
is cut out and put
in a scrapbook. And that is a very, very nice thing. And then you have one for dad that's empty.
No, there's a picture of him with a bunch of wood.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah. That nice wood picture. Back when that was the con.
He was early in the wood game early in the wood game
it was a picture of me
pointing at you two
having you cut and stack
yeah cut and stack
it was me
managing the process
yeah
well
this has been
very lovely
thank you for your questions
everybody
thank you
thank you to Airbnb
for what has already been
an incredibly cozy vacation
like I said
we do this every year
this already feels different and more special to be in a home.
We're going to finish this up.
We're going to move back to our Scrabble game.
Oh, and I think it might be gin and tonic time for me.
It might be, yeah.
What time is it?
Not that it matters.
By the way, I think it might be gin and tonic time after you've already had a gin and tonic.
It's really funny.
This also real quick.
So I'm having breakfast or coffee
with mom and dad at the hotel. They're about to go with you. Yeah. We're having a nice, calm,
everything's good, little sit down, little catch up before they leave. They go upstairs to get
their bags. You call me, Seth, and you're flustered. You're like, are you with dad?
Like his phone is in Queens. We have to catch an airplane. And then out of my sort of perfectly calm,
everything's going the way it should.
Then I got to race upstairs.
I knock on the door.
I give dad my phone.
I'm mad now because you're mad.
And so it's all building up.
We get in the elevator with them.
We press the button to go to the lobby.
The lobby button on the elevator panel falls off
and falls on the ground, this little brass circle.
I bend down to pick it up.
I hit my shoulder on a dispenser for a-
Hand sanitizer.
Hand sanitizer.
It makes me so mad, I punch it.
It opens up like it was like,
oh, do you want to refill the hand sanitizer?
Which isn't what I wanted.
So I slap it closed. Dad's looking at me with this little smirk and, oh, do you want to refill the hand sanitizer? Which isn't what I wanted. So I slap it closed.
Dad's looking at me with this little smirk and he goes, there you go.
So I guess to answer an earlier question, we're more like our mom.
This is a delight.
Thank you to our listeners.
Thank you to Airbnb.
Thank you to Pittsburgh.
Greatest city in America.
Let's go Steelers.
Let's go Steelers.
Here we go, Steelers.
Here we go. Here we go, Steelers. Here we go.
Here we go.
Here we go, Steelers.
I got a feeling.
Thanks, everybody.
Bye.
Who goes to Pittsburgh most every year?
Well, that's the Myers family.
Recounting their memories of times they were here. That's classic Myers family, recounting their memories of times they were here.
That's classic Myers family, Hurry and Yerry and Sophie and Posh.
They are a core four family, they all got to stay together, and had some beautiful Pittsburgh weather.
La la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la. And had some beautiful Pittsburgh weather.
Dad tells stories. Sometimes he says things that he just said.
Repeat stories.
Hurry's eyeballs might roll out her head.
Check at downtown
Cross the bridge to see the Steelers play
It's nice to get a win, but that wasn't happening
Now Suf and Dad will be crabby all day
Da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da
The incline is so fine, a sight you should see
So says the Myers family
They were so cozy in their Airbnb
That's Nuglin Myers family
For many sammies piled up to the sky
To feed the Myers family
Family closeness is their mission with this yearly Pittsburgh tradition.