Stop Podcasting Yourself - Episode 552 - Wordburglar
Episode Date: October 15, 2018Rapper/writer Wordburglar (Sean Jordan) joins us to talk delivering papers, moving, and old twins....
Transcript
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Hi, he's Dave Shumka.
And he's Graham Clark.
And together we host Stop Podcasting Yourself.
Woo!
Hello everybody and welcome to episode number 552 of Stop Podcasting Yourself.
My name is Graham Clark and with me as always is a man who looked wonderful in white, Mr. Dave Shumka.
Well, it's tonight. It's going to be my first time.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Oh, wow. Congratulations.
Well, you know what it is. I am wearing a white sweatshirt. My kids are out of town. Oh, wow. Congratulations. Well, you know what it is. I am wearing a white sweatshirt. My kids are out of town.
Oh, yeah.
There's no peanut butter fingers all over me.
I love it.
There's no, you know,
alphagetti kisses.
Yeah, you could.
Peanut butter fingers and alphagetti kisses.
You could wear a whole outfit of white. You could you know this is your time that's what i did in winnipeg yeah and it looked great i know
that you you were you had bought a white jeans thinking you're gonna wear them all the time yep
then then then this was maybe the third time they look good good. Yeah, they're fine. Yeah, for the listener,
we just got back from,
we're recording this
in the middle of our tour.
We just got back from Winnipeg
a couple days ago.
And in Winnipeg,
they famously support
their hockey team
by everyone wearing white.
And so I did that too.
You know,
to about two minutes
of goodwill.
It's two minutes
you wouldn't have had otherwise. That's two minutes you went ahead of us.
That's true.
Our guest today, first time guest here on the podcast.
He is a writer, a rapper, a producer, I'm sure.
Because he's producing his own tour.
He's traveling all across Canada.
His name is Sean Jordan, a.k.a. Word Burglar.
Welcome to the show. Hey, it's amazing to be here. I did not expect you to aka Word Burglar. Welcome to the show.
Hey, it's amazing to be here. I did not expect you to be that white today.
I know.
Well, you know, I take care of my laundry.
Yep, yep.
You're pulling it off. It's a great looking crew neck, I must say.
Thanks. It's from Carhartt, the people at Carhartt.
Is that one of the Care Bears?
It's from Carhartt.
The people at Carhartt.
Is that one of the Care Bears?
Yeah, Carhartt is.
He's the one who was on the construction site.
Yeah, he always had a wrench sticking out of his pocket.
Did they have pockets?
What did they have?
They weren't like kangaroo pouches. No, they had cousins.
Yes, they did.
That's right.
If you were a Care Bear cousin, you were just sort of relegated to being a cousin.
You couldn't be like the Care Raccoon. You were just a Care Bear cousin, you were just sort of relegated to being a cousin. You couldn't be like the Care Raccoon.
You were just a Care Bear cousin.
How did Care Bear cousins work?
They were just, well, you had all the bears.
Grumpy.
The other one.
Yeah.
Car heart.
Tender heart.
Funny heart.
And then they had the cousins and there was like an elephant and a bunny.
That's right.
But there was just one-offs of the
other animals that's right there wasn't like a whole family of penguin uh care bear cousins no
it's just the one no they were a care bear cousin it was like no i'm not a care penguin i'm just a
care where do wuzzles fit in this equation yeah where do wuzzles fit in where do popples fit in
i think wuzzles were the hideous mutant offspring of a Popple and a Care Bear.
Okay.
And they were like ungodly beasts.
It was like a half lion, half snake or something.
Or bumble something.
Weird that I remember all this stuff.
Yeah, exactly.
What was a Popple?
They were the ones that went into a...
They folded into a little ball.
And then I don't know if there was
an accompanying
cartoon
probably
yeah I guess
they just popped
like yeah
how far could you
take that concept
you'd be surprised
now they don't
even bother with
doing
making a cartoon
to promote the thing
they just do
they just like
release the toys
and then people
unbox them on
YouTube
and kids watch them
a hundred million times
and that's how
you get your toys
out there
you could do
an unpoppling
then
that's true
take a popple
and
that's a hard life
for them
they have to flip
themselves inside out
for children's amusement
they're like
the
you know
what are those things?
Armadillos?
I was going to say aardvark.
Armadillo.
They all, they ball up.
Yeah.
They ball up real nice.
Do we want to get to know us?
Oh, absolutely.
Get to know us.
So you've been touring all across Canada, starting way out east.
Yeah.
You know, it's kind of weird. I did an unofficial show in Toronto. Then starting way out east. Yeah, you know, it's kind of weird.
I did an unofficial show in Toronto,
then I went out east, zigzagged back,
did Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, which is amazing.
If anyone's been to Dartmouth lately,
downtown Dartmouth is like completely,
it's filled with great restaurants,
there's great pubs, there's Joel Plaskett's
got a record shop and barbershop there.
At that track.
Yeah, it's like everything, Dartmouth, Nova Scotia is an awesome, awesome place right now. There's Joel Plaskett's got a record shop and barbershop there. That track. Yeah.
It's like everything.
Dartmouth,
Nova Scotia is,
is an awesome,
awesome place right now.
It always has been,
but there's a lot of life happening.
And they had a great value village there.
From my recollection, they had like one of the best value villages I've ever been in.
Yeah.
You got some good scores there.
Yeah.
And just,
it was like one of those where they really didn't know what they had.
You know what I mean?
It was like,
whoever was pricing it was just like, I don't know, this coat, $2.
Popple's t-shirt, score, 75 cents.
Come on.
Yeah.
So I did Dartmouth and then I bounced around back to Toronto for a few shows.
And then I did a few dates in Ontario, Ottawa, Kingston, made my way west.
I've done Calgary, Edmonton, a couple of shows in Edmonton, just in Vancouver last night.
Now I'm going east-ish back to Saskatoon and then back east to further.
Wow.
Just rewinding, going to Newfoundland.
Oh, I'm bouncing all over the place.
So yeah, Newfoundland.
Then I'm doing the Maritimes again, going to be in town for Halifax Pop Explosion,
doing some stuff in Halifax.
Then back to Ontario for some dates
and then Montreal.
And then, yeah, it just keeps evolving.
So I've got just added Hamilton.
It's cool, yeah.
It's just this ever-growing, mutating,
Wuzzle-type tour.
It was a Wuzzle Burg tour It was a
Wuzzle burglar tour
Yeah yeah yeah
And you are
You have a new album
Rhyme Your Business
You're one of the few guests
Who actually brings us
The thing
Yeah that's true
Do the
Do the David Letterman thing
On the edge of the desk
There yeah
Where's my camera
That looks good
There we go
This album number six
Five
This is six officially
Probably
It's my seventh sort of solo album,
plus I have like three mixtapes and a couple group albums.
So I've been steadily putting rhymes on overbeats for, yeah.
And what is rap?
Well, for 13 years.
What is rap music?
Just imagine I'm a reporter in 1981.
Yeah.
It's a bunch of catchy words thrown together in rhyme-based form,
though it doesn't always have to rhyme,
but usually with some type of staccato-esque beat rhythm.
Yeah.
Because we still have to, like,
we still have relatives who we have to explain a podcast to.
Oh, sure.
Do you ever have to explain rap to anyone in 2018?
Oh, 100%.
Yeah, people, it's interesting, you know, the take people have.
I mean, people, if they think rap, they'll have a really set mind of what it has to be.
They're like, okay, this is what I think rap is.
It can't be anything else.
But rap, like anything, like you guys know with comedy, with rock, with any genre, with any artistic uh you know expression it can go in a
million different ways you go to a fringe festival for theater you're gonna see shakespeare you're
gonna see comedy you're gonna see everything i love shakespeare yeah you know oh my gosh the bar
night come on this guy get out of here but it's like it's just those words i mean
what even are they yeah i like to say to Shakespeare, thanks for the words.
Anyways, yeah, rap is such a versatile art form, and it always has been to me.
And it's just like writing and creating stuff.
So explaining to people, well, I rap, but I may not be rapping about what you think.
You know, I'm going to rap about stuff I love, and that's why the title is Rhyme Your Business.
I just rap what I know, and it's what I've always done.
So it's sandwiches, it's comic books've always done. So it's sandwiches.
It's comic books.
It's baseball.
It's comedy.
It's whatever I feel like writing about.
Now, how did you get into it at first?
Because, look, I've seen 8 Mile.
I know that probably it helps to get a job at a machine shop of some sort.
You know, machinery.
Metal work.
What do you think that contributed
to his rap? Angst.
You know,
in as much as it was the flash dance
of our time. She was a welder, he was a
machinist. Can I make it any more obvious?
Like, did you start
by doing, just making
your own mixtapes
Or going to rap battles
No I started I was about grade 5
Really?
Yeah we all had rap tracks
Which were these cassettes
I think it was Polytel put them out
And they were these really cool mixtapes at the time
Like late 80s early 90s
Of you name it
It was like a who's who of awesome rap
Maestro Fresh West, Run DMC, Fresh Prince On and Eric B. and Rakim Like just like K.R.S.1 you name it it was like a who's who of awesome rap maestro fresh west run dmc fresh prince uh
on eric b and rakim like just like kris one like all these people were on and it was just you just
got this awesome mixtape of rap public enemy and and we kids just had them and we dubbed them back
in the day because you know you dub a tape yeah yeah and i would just have all these tapes and i
just listened to them all the time i had a little tape deck and I just love them.
And then I was just sort of start wrapping them to myself.
You know,
the Ninja Turtles movie rap,
uh,
was a big,
was a popular jam.
Go Ninja Go.
Oh no.
Prior to Vanilla Ice,
T-U-R-T-L-E power.
Yeah.
Oh,
right.
Yeah.
That's a good.
By who?
Uh,
Oh.
Or by them.
They were like a group that only assembled for like that one song like the
monsters yeah space jam yeah yeah uh oh it's totally eluding me right now but but yeah anyways
i just started writing and uh in grade six i wrote a rap called the pterodactyl rap just because
there was like a pterodactyl in our classroom and i started if you get in here quick everyone write a rap you promised me no
scaring um and that's uh and then i just started writing rhymes and honestly i just always like to
write rhymes and then i would just hear words that rhymed like anytime you'd say something i'd just
like start thinking about the rhyme and i just sort of always did it throughout junior high and
then people were like oh you know sean rap sean'm like, yeah, I just write these things and I just would do them at like school variety
nights.
And then into high school,
uh,
you know,
I was just,
I hung out with a bunch of my friends.
We were all rapping and I met other kids who rapped and we just all
wrapped.
It was never like,
I never really got into the battling stuff because I'm just not that angry.
And,
uh,
I was just like,
I've,
you know,
nothing battling is dope. There's a very, uh, there's incredibly talented battle rappers. But for angry and I was just like I've you know nothing battling is dope there's a very there's incredibly talented battle
rappers but for me it was just more like I love the rhymes and the writing and
the structure and doing different things with it and I just I don't know just
kept doing it and no one really told me to stop and here I am like a million
years later somebody told me to stop yeah Yeah, that's why. I never. Why? Into rap.
I'm here to tell you to stop, actually.
This is an intervention.
Yeah.
Stop pod rapping yourself.
I was always,
like,
I was always intimidated by,
when I was a kid,
by rap music
because I felt like
even,
no matter how many times
I listened to it,
I couldn't sing along
because you do have to have some kind of dexterity to be able to remember and also say those things
and rhyme them and say them in the right way so that they rhyme I was so intimidated by it yeah
and still am still am to this day you know I'm still learning and practicing every day and I'm
sort of even on the way here I was just thinking of rhymes and just looking around.
What rhymes do you think of on the way here?
I was thinking of trying to rhyme Olympic Station with something,
and I was just kind of working on that,
and I was like, Olympic Station, and I'm like, am I like...
Lymphdic.
Yeah, or yeah, an elliptic agent.
I don't know.
know like you know uh what would like is there is there a particular rhyme in any song ever that you're like boy oh boy i wish i i wish i had made that rhyme before that person had made that uh
curtis blow basketball
sport and court ball is my favorite sport i like the way they dribble up and down the court
that's basically
my whole career
has been ripping off that song
yeah it's
Dave do you ever have any
inclination towards
wanting to rap
I mean
definitely around the same age
I wrote a rap song
called Frostman the Snow DJ
it was the take off on Frostman the Snow DJ.
It was the takeoff on Frosty the Snowman.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I don't remember any of the lines,
but I do remember it definitely had like a turn in the second verse where
it became like an anti-drug
driving song.
Is this real?
Yeah, yeah, yeah. It had a message.
We need to dig this out from the archive i mean it was
it was on paper i don't think i kept that paper i'm in the middle of a move right now and it's uh
it's very freeing to just be like don't need these notebooks from 10 years ago oh yeah these
these things i was writing down were very important, but I've never revisited them.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And how many pens have you found so far?
Oh, a lot.
Yeah.
The one thing that I've noticed in the middle of this move is like,
so many things where, you know, when you buy something and you're like,
this came with eight pieces, but I only need two pieces,
like an electric adapter uh an electric adapter
an ac adapter but it can attach to all kinds of different plugs but you really only need the one
and you're like i guess i'll hold on to these other things and then now it's just time to throw
them away yeah yeah there's uh there's a lot of like where i lost the thing, you know, like I lost the electronic, but I still have the adapter and I still have maybe even the instructions.
But I've lost the actual unit itself over the, you know, several moves ago.
So, yeah, I'm collecting.
I'm collecting a lot of trees.
We had these like it's a weird thing where this was a thing that was necessary you you needed to use
these things every couple of years for your whole life uh coin rollers oh yeah doing all your coins
you would have too many coins yeah no time to roll them up and take them down to the bank
and uh oh i just found a big bag of coin of uh cardboard coin rollers it's uh you know when you're when your
daughters get dexterous enough with their fingers they can roll me doobies yeah you can you can
that'll be a fun rainy day activity you can roll all dad's dimes but i don't have any more is the
point what happened all your time i just don't i use a card for everything now i've got change
everywhere what about you?
Change?
I carry a lot of change, yeah.
Yeah.
Coffee for the bus.
Comes in handy.
Yeah.
Tipping people.
I find it all over my floor.
Thanks for the nickel.
But it's true when you go to a coffee shop and then you use a card and sometimes they
don't have a tip.
Yeah.
And you want a tip still because uh you know
that's the way that's the way it should be yeah although i won't tip if they ask me if i'd like
to have some breakfast or something like what that's when i won't tip i have like a very i get
coffee like three times a day but then if they're like and can i get some breakfast started for you
no you cannot but they're like i know how to ask for food. They're just doing their job.
They've been told to say that.
Yeah, I know,
but don't be a robot.
Just be a human.
Just be a person.
Yeah.
Read the room.
I'm like, hey,
I'll get a coffee,
just medium roast, whatever.
They're like, oh,
and can I get some breakfast
started for you today?
Perhaps a whatever,
yogurt-y granola bowl dish.
That does sound good.
I love those yogurt-y granola dishes dish. That does sound good. Yeah.
I love those yogurt-y granola dishes. Maybe some acai in there.
Oh, boy, it's a superfood.
Yeah, very nice, very nice.
Yeah, did you ever work in like a retail job?
Oh, yeah.
I've worked every job.
Every job?
Most of them, yeah.
Okay.
Yeah.
Every sector?
I've done retail.
I've done, yeah, worked at bars, worked in phone book delivery.
I was a paper boy for seven years as well.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, you know, restaurants, tons of retail, you know, wrapping.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Every sector from retail to wrapping.
Retail, done advertising, done, yeah.
When did you deliver phone books?
I delivered phone books.
Well, I think I was in my last year delivering newspapers.
I'm a retired paper boy.
I was putting seven years on the job.
It took a lot out of me.
This was all bicycle years, I imagine.
No, no.
This was the sneaker years.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, back in.
I had a lot of apartment buildings, so I couldn't really ride a bike anywhere.
Okay.
I was up and down the stairs working on those quads. Wow. Yeah, back in, I had a lot of apartment buildings, so I couldn't really ride a bike anywhere. Okay. Up and down the stairs, working on those quads.
Wow.
And yeah, it was good.
But then while I was delivering papers,
someone said, hey, you deliver newspapers.
You know, they pay you twice as much to deliver phone books.
So I'm like, all right, it's paper.
So I did that a couple of times.
Paper is paper.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm already, I already got my root.
I'm familiar with this,
with this product.
I,
because the last time
we had phone books delivered,
they were not,
we didn't ask for them
because they kept
delivering phone books
even after people
stopped having landlines.
Yeah.
And so they,
I just remember them
going through the neighborhood
delivering phone books
and running away so no one could say, I't want to take it back yeah i remember my parents uh they
had the paper delivered every day and we had i don't remember how long it was but we had some guy
who was doing the like the classic like throwing the paper at the, but it would be five in the morning or whatever.
So it was terrifying.
It was always terrifying.
It was never not.
Yeah, it's not a cool move.
Yeah.
That's not cool.
Thwap.
Yeah.
That's a good sound effect.
Yeah.
Yeah, well, I'm not known for my sound effects,
but here they come.
I just remember we got our newspaper at three in the afternoon it was an evening
edition oh yeah delivered to our house oh yeah evening edition yeah wow and then we then it
changed to a morning edition and that then it became a thing where like paper boys weren't
doing it anymore it was guys in cars and you would
if you ever
couldn't sleep
at five in the morning
you would hear
a Honda Civic
pull up outside your house
the motor still running
and a guy throw
a paper on you
yeah
but you were not
just you
and your legs
that was it
me and my legs
yeah downtown
I had a pretty big root
so I was making
a lot of cash
when I was like
in grade seven
grade eight
so it just fueled my addiction of music and comic books what was your seven year
what what range was it it was what was your seven year plan it was actually
it was from grade seven so all through junior high and high school and then the year after
high school i was still delivering i've i was picking up extra routes i'm like doing this route when i'm like 19 and uh because no one else could do it
and what do you mean no one else could do it well look at the ego on this paper no it wasn't
it was more like no one else wanted it right like there were no other it was even by then
they couldn't find any kids who wanted to do this. Cause at this point it's like, it's a lot of commitment, right?
I had about 80 customers every day took me, I could get it done in about under an hour.
But if you were just given this route, some kids like, I can't walk around with this.
Like you're carrying all these papers.
Uh, and then, yeah, they did start outsourcing to the paper, paper adults, uh, who were a very sad, bizarre group of people.
Um, I'd run into them from
time to time oh that's Jerry the paper adult he's on the route a to be for ease
and 1976 I've always been obsessed with sort of the paper rooting lore and
that's that's what the comic book oh yeah but uh but yeah it's um he's also
written a comic book how many volumes is, how many volumes is this? Issue four just came out.
It's called the last paper route.
Love it.
And we're looking at it now.
Yeah.
There we are.
Cameraman.
Zoom in on this Jerry, you weirdo.
This started because when I was in junior high, so my best friend, Alex worked at, uh,
he worked on the paper route next to mine.
So we would meet up and deliver papers together and hang out every day.
And then we'd go home and like watch cartoons and eat cookies and stuff.
And we both loved comics.
So we started making our own comic.
We draw on the back of French class called Adventures in Paper Routing.
And then we'd like photocopy it in the school, at the school basement when no one was around.
And so we just basically made these like little zines of our comic.
And we brought it to a comic shop in Halifax called Strange Adventures and the owner there was so
encouraging and he was like this is a great comic you guys should actually like you know print more
copies and we'll sell them here at the store for you so then that started me just sort of making
these zines with Alex and then we met a lot of other kids who were making comics at the time and
so throughout junior high and high school we we were making these comics adventures in paper rooting. And then we
went off, did our own things for years. And then we kept saying, Alex and I were like, you know,
we really want to come, we want to revisit the idea of the paper route comic book, but do it,
you know, sort of a more, you know, professional approach, if you will use the air quotes.
And that's sort of what we've started doing now. So all these years later.
But this you still printed at your high school school you still went to your high school and printed them then my high
school's been torn down i tried really yeah it's gone oh that was my dream yeah yeah yeah
did someone pants your principal too oh man yeah the um uh that's uh when i was a kid the comic book uh store guy was not encouraging
he was the opposite he was he was this uh classic comic book snob that wanted you to feel like uh
your your dumb comics that you'd picked up were were dumb comics for kids. Yeah. That as a lifelong comic lover and collector,
and I've worked in comic shops, that's so
frustrating because it's such a turnoff.
I think now the way the comic industry is going,
people are more welcoming, most shops,
because you can't stay in business like that.
But when you've got these basement dwellers
running their special museums, they won't sell
you anything.
It's just ridiculous. it's a weird it
is yeah it's all it's a very weird uh thing though there's like no other kind of shop where
oh yeah i made my own uh i made my own uh orange juice you want to sell it yeah yeah yeah yeah you
just bring in different size jars of orange like i never i was never into comic books, but I was really into hockey cards. I drew
some pictures of Mario Lemieux.
You guys want to sell
them? Got some numbers
on the back. He was a good
player. He was magnificent.
He was Lemieux, actually.
Lemieux? It wasn't just
Lemieux, he was Lemieux. The best.
Yeah.
He was probably my favorite
player until
the early 90s.
When I first
discovered hockey, I was like, I like this guy.
Everyone likes 99. I like
66. Yeah.
The guy I liked
was Brad Hull because he endorsed the
GT Snow Racer.
What's that? It was a sled.
It was a cool sled that had
like a kind of
a
futuristic kind of design to it.
It had a handle on it that had stickers
with dials and
stuff on it. Do you remember GT Snow Racer?
No, I'm trying to figure out. Is it for kids?
Yeah, it was for kids.
Okay, so one of those like, okay.
It was like, it had two. Where would you buy it?
Canadian Tire?
Canadian Tire.
Was it Noma?
Was it made by Noma?
It might have been made by Noma.
And it was, it had two skis on it and like a seat and then a front ski for steering.
It was kind of the creme de la creme of uh of uh you know downhill snow racing
well it was the downhill snow racer wasn't it and brad hall's uh picture was on the he wasn't
riding on it on the box it was just him and his uh his uh uniform that sounds pretty sweet it's
better than one of those just like regular toboggans or something yeah yeah it had more uh
it had more control, I guess.
I mean, I don't know.
It's good for going off jumps.
I didn't do a lot of sledding because of the climate here,
but the best sled we ever had was the long,
it was long plastic, out of control,
like not cool looking, but it went so fast.
Like a traditional kind of long within the.
Nope.
No, not that.
Just like a sort of like a kayak.
Oh, yeah.
I remember though.
Yeah, we had one of those.
It was like a thick plastic.
And thin.
You could feel every bump underneath.
Yeah.
In the summer, you could put water in it and just sit and lie in it like a coffin.
Did you do a lot of sledding as a kid?
I did, yeah.
We had a few really good hills in halifax and
there's citadel hill which is right in downtown halifax and yeah i don't know if you're still
allowed to go sledding on it i mean because after a while kids would just be like smashing into
trees at the bottom and stuff and just get out of control but there's a place called the pit it was
in the north end and then these are such classic, like, local place, names of places,
the pit,
Citadel Hill.
Yeah, yeah,
yeah.
Our place that we went was,
Ronnie's,
it was called the dip.
That's what we called our place was the dip.
And then you'd meet everybody at the dip.
And,
uh,
yeah,
everybody had a different kind of sled.
Now that I think of it,
there was no uniformity.
Like it was some kids who had crazy carpets.
Some kids just had a circle that you just
grabbed on the edge of then they had flying saucer they called flying saucers and then some people
had like the old wood yeah like uh you know from a painting kind of yeah yeah the norman rockwell
yeah and uh and then somebody would make a jump some some future engineer would make a jump oh sure and like bring buckets of water and
like ice it up and stuff and uh you know the first kid would just plow right through the jump
kids don't know how to how to make something that you can launch off yeah yeah um but yeah
oh so many so many broken probably Probably my favorite is No Activity.
Yeah.
That and Informer.
Listening to Informer.
Or what was his comeback hit?
Everybody Wants to Be Like You?
Yeah, right.
Whoa, deep cut.
Yeah.
I have not, yeah.
Everybody wants to be like you.
That's crazy.
I forgot he had another song. And that was in, the video think, was in a chalet with sledding and stuff outside.
Nice.
Nice.
Not enough for my money.
Not enough rap videos involving sleds.
Or chalets for that matter.
Yeah, that's true.
I rap about Swiss chalet.
Do you?
Yeah.
I'm all that plus a Swiss chalet festive special with the Toblerone.
Extraterrestrials are phoning home.
Oh, man.
That's a Canadian thing, right?
Oh, yeah.
Is that Christmas you can get this Swiss Chalet meal and then they give you a free Toblerone.
Yeah, but I think they took out the Toblerone and replaced it with like, I don't know.
Turtles or something?
Yeah, it was an inferior bar.
That is probably a pretty prestigious position to get like, we're the bar with the Swiss
Chalet.
Yeah, yeah.
I just want to see if there's another song from Snow that I remember.
I've never had a Toblerone in my life because they got nuts in them. Can't have nuts. Are they good? Is a Toblerone in my life
Because they got nuts in them
Can't have nuts
Are they good?
Is a Toblerone good?
I don't remember particularly liking them
To be honest
Yeah
I haven't had one in a million years
But I like the milk chocolate ones
Like a Mirage
A Mirage?
It's a quality milk chocolate bar
It's been a long time since I've had a Mirage
Oh, well you should see one
I remember the kids,
Canadian kids
consumer affairs show
Street Sense.
Oh, yes.
That someone,
a kid,
a concerned child
had written into them
about what's the difference
between an Aero bar
and a Mirage?
And they were like,
they analyzed them. They're both made by the same company they both have bubbles yeah and they're they're both the exact same weight
so the difference is you know well you like one better yeah yeah yeah but it wasn't like
the round tree wasn't trying to pull one over on consumers yeah it was textural like the way
you bit into them because an arrow can break off easily
into segments.
But the Mirage
was sort of one,
you know,
ribbed log
of chocolatey yumminess.
Yeah, because there's,
what's the one that's like,
I didn't find any more
snow songs,
by the way.
There's like a Mars bar
and then there's something else that's exactly the same
oh yeah milky way yeah yeah yeah and then if you go to dollarama they have the meteor
which i do not recommend it's funny like i will once in a while try a candy from a dollar store
and it's like something that's an off brand you are brave yeah yeah yeah
or something that's from a movie that i came out a long time ago like uh it's it's been a year since
uh you know spider-man homecoming came out oh sure there's still candies kicking around
there's a spider-man homecoming junior men's.
Yeah, I tried to have a flyer route when I was a kid,
which was kind of like paper route, but more nuisance-based.
Yeah, that's a tough one because people would dump the flyers too.
Yeah, and you had to assemble them.
That was like a big part of the job was that you had to put the flyers together at home,
and that was torturous. Wouldn't that be great if they did that with newspapers?
Are they one?
Well, that's the front page.
So you did that until the end of high school, and then-
Yeah, I remember sleeping over at my girlfriend's house at the time and then having to get up to go deliver the news.
And I was like, maybe I'm good, guys.
Maybe I'll see what else is out there.
But I was also, at that point, I was working at the comic shop that I had been previously bringing my paper-rooting comic books to.
So it all worked out.
And then I got a job dishwashing, which led to working at restaurants,
et cetera,
et cetera.
And,
you know,
just kind of following that,
that path of jobs to jobs in between doing my art.
So it's been,
it's been a fun ride.
And now full-time on the art.
At the,
at the moment.
Yeah,
I'm doing full-time,
but I pick up freelance gigs,
uh,
and various things.
Uh,
like I write a lot of radio commercials,
stuff like that.
So when things come up,
like,
you know,
Toronto,
I'm living in Toronto right now and it's super expensive.
So I'm balancing out,
but yeah,
the,
the art's busier than it's ever been,
which is funny,
you know,
bumping into kids I knew from junior high.
We're now adults that I knew when they were kids,
I guess.
Amazing.
They didn't stay kids.
And they're like, hey, you still rapping?
I'm like, yeah, man, I'm rapping more than when I was like 15, which is crazy.
Wow.
It's good.
And you've done, I was looking, like you've played at Comic-Cons and stuff?
Yeah, yeah.
I played San Diego Comic-Con.
I do a show at Fan Expo in Toronto every year.
We do an after party there on the Saturday night,
which is great because then I get, you know,
a real forum for everyone to get my Star Trek The Next Generation
and Spider-Man references.
And do people go nuts?
It's, you know what, it's awesome because, yeah,
for certain lines that maybe your average person
who doesn't read comic books wouldn't get,
if I drop something, they'll be like,
oh, I got this crazy reference.
So it's fun.
And yeah, I just actually was in Edmonton at Edmonton Expo,
and we did a show after on the Saturday night there.
And yeah, it's great to cross over to really kind of combine.
I'm just trying to think what rhymes with Worf.
I was also trying to think what rhymes with Venom.
You know, do you remember Dorf?
Yeah.
Oh, yeah, Dorf.
Yeah, that's. Tim Conway.
Yeah, that's extremely
politically incorrect comedy.
That's true.
Although that's something that's sort of been like, yeah, we know
that's politically incorrect, but
you can have it.
We're not going to spend a lot of time on
bringing Tim Conway
down.
In that case
you could also rhyme
like I
that would be
an instance
where I'd be
I would use
wharf
like a
a wharf
where you would
take your boat to
you would rhyme
wharf with wharf
yeah
in that way
it's kind of fun
to do wharf
with wharf
yeah
yeah
it's all gravy
uh
like a plate
with just gravy
yeah
nice reference
hey Dave
yeah nice um nice alley oopave what's going on with you oh well i'm in the middle of this
move which is fun oh like if i could move every day i would do it uh if you're you know if you're
a snail or a mover yeah a mover a snail or a turtle what are the jobs of people who move every day
oh like that that is the one i mean there's a lot of jobs i wouldn't do but
mover yeah that's one of the jobs i would do i like i i enjoy don't you even as an allergy guy
because i find the one thing is like everything's dusty everything's dusty that's true every corner like behind every
couch that hasn't been moved in eight years yeah and plus you would be going into people's houses
that have cats and dogs and birds can you imagine moving birds oh it would be a nightmare
you would move the birds
They would be
I mean somebody's gotta move them
I guess so
Yeah
Oh boy
Gross
So yeah we're in the middle of that
And last night we did a show
You and I
At the planetarium
At the planetarium
Wow
Yeah yeah
So that was like
Yeah so it was like a live
It wasn't Your conventional version of this show Because we didn't do any of the parts of this show.
We just kind of did a slideshow on the ceiling.
Yeah.
And then we interacted with the guy who runs like the like going through space show.
And we just cracked wise while he did a very good job.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
So, I was going to say that probably won't be released.
That won't be released because somehow the recorder got unplugged.
Classic.
But also, it couldn't get released for a couple reasons.
There's like a long portion where we're just not talking.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And the music of Brianrian eno plays throughout
and he is litigious yeah i was i thought there was gonna be like top secret planetary information
no oh yeah there's a new planet yeah we're not supposed to discuss yeah
rick the planet they ran out who's got the chocolate bar rights to that one
yeah
oh that's gonna be
uh
it's caramel
um
but uh
the other weird thing
that happened to me
is
the other day
I was uh
reading a story
to my daughter
and I was
I had my phone
in my back pocket
and uh
after talk stalled
yeah
I was
I was I was reading a a newspaper that had been delivered
my phone was in my back pocket and it started ringing and uh i picked it up and they said
uh yes uh did did you just call 9-1-1 oh and i said no and i thought it was some kind of scam
and so i was like no i was like mean
about it he was like i just want to make sure everything's okay there like no what like i was
a little bit uh confrontational yeah and are you sure no one called 911 yes i'm sure well sometimes
if uh someone if you hold down the home button on a cell phone, that automatically calls 911.
And I was like, oh, well, I was sitting on my phone.
So, yeah, no, I probably did.
So, all clear.
So, someone, I guess, at 911 must have heard me pocket dial them.
Reading about Nafta Talks stalling.
It's good that they called back you know because like um when i was in uh when we were both in winnipeg i saw uh an ad like a psa
for funding 9-1-1 operators where or in winnipeg huh and um because i was watching
the mayoral debates there was an ad during the mayoral debates about uh 9-1-1 it was a terrifying
ad it was a like a girl hiding in a closet and somebody's broken into the house she calls and
there's nobody at the 9-1-1 desk and i was like oh yeah yeah you guys should fund that you should really fund that that's a
scary commercial uh have you ever called 9-1-1 no never no this was my first time with my butt
oh wow wow well the nafta talks that isn't a you know it is cause for alarm yeah i think we should just walk away I don't think they're negotiating in good faith The last time that I called 911
How many times?
Quite a few actually
Just because
For whatever reason
I've been at the scene of
Various events
And so I called 911
Recently It was just around the corner We had just recorded a podcast of various events. And so I called 911 recently.
It was just around the corner.
We had just recorded a podcast,
and I went down kind of around the corner
to a convenience store,
and there was a guy had OD'd
right in front of the convenience store.
Where was this?
Right on Broadway.
Oh, outside the convenience store
that also does the shawarma?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And there was a guy had overdosed.
On shawarma?
On shawarma.
And he was like, oh, he had sauce all over around his mouth.
And his girlfriend, or I don't know if she was his girlfriend, but she was with him.
And she was explaining, oh, he's overdosed.
And so I got him up and I walked him around and we were called nine one
one.
And,
and,
uh,
and then as soon as the cops were arriving,
she took off,
like she took off so fast because she didn't want to get arrested or
whatever for doing whatever drugs,
you know?
Um,
uh,
but yeah,
like they thought I was friends with them.
They were asking me all sorts of questions.
Like what kind of drugs were you doing?
I was like,
nothing.
Sudafed.
Like,
I don't know.
Um,
yeah,
he's overdosing,
but just walk him around a bit.
That could have saved Jimi Hendrix.
Also,
Graham,
that's amazing.
You're like a hero.
You're picking up the stranger who's ODing.
I think that should be commended.
That's pretty awesome.
Yeah.
It was, it was weird because the cops, obviously in this city, they have to deal with it all the time.
So they, just like when I left, they were like, that's fine.
Like, we're not going to try and, like, fine, we'll take him in the car.
It'll be fine.
Not an ambulance?
No. I mean, maybe an be fine. But not an ambulance. Uh, no,
it was,
I mean,
maybe an ambulance showed up after I left.
I was like,
once the cops were there,
I was like,
right,
this is now,
this is your beat now.
Um,
I'm trying to,
I'm no Patsy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm no stool pigeon turn.
Yeah.
I'm my buddy here.
Um,
yeah,
the, uh, uh, I had a friend who was a 9-1-1 operator for a while like in the tv show
9-1-1 is that uh um what's her name jennifer love he's on it yeah yeah yeah there's a big there's a
great cast oh she was so good in party five i just really like yes yes sorry she's great she's
great as the ghost whisperer.
She was great.
And I know what you did last summer.
She was great in heartbreak.
Yeah.
Yeah.
She was fantastic in that one.
Flashbacks.
Wow.
Yeah.
And she,
was she in a show where she worked at a rub and tug?
Oh yeah.
That was a couple of years ago.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Whoa.
I have.
Yeah.
I missed that one.
It was called rug and tub.
And she was Jennifer Rug.
Yeah.
Oh, wow.
But,
It's called Jandhoppers.
Love is her middle name.
I mean,
Yeah.
Is it actually just a nickname?
Is that true?
Yeah.
All my friends just call me love cute um but like uh apparently at the the main 9-1-1 facility they have their own
like water source they have their own like well there so if there's a whatever natural disaster
or whatever the 9-1-1 can keep going for weeks and weeks and weeks. Is that here?
Here.
Oh,
okay.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They have their own water source and they have their own electricity source
and everything.
So,
you know,
if you,
unlimited Twizzlers,
Oh boy,
they got crash services.
Um,
it'd be a tough job.
911 operator.
Someone's got to do it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And who better than Jennifer Lovehue? Mm-hmm. It's got a nice phone job. 911 operator. Someone's got to do it. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And who better than Jennifer Love Hewitt?
She's got a nice phone manner, I bet.
What celebrities do you think have the best phone manners?
Phone manner?
Yeah, just like are really good on the phone.
Oh, boy.
I feel like anyone who grew up learning phone manners.
Yes.
I immediately thought of Judith Light.
Oh, she would be amazing on the phone, Judith's the boss yeah angela she would answer the phone light residents i think
yeah yeah yeah oh boy what did you guys all you just answered the phone hello when you grew up
uh until i was a teenager and then i had to say my because i had to say my name because i sounded
just like my dad and so if i said hello then the friend would just launch into a tirade
i'm on a rant your dad's friend yeah oh i hate your kids
john i'm so glad your son didn't answer the phone.
Were there any phone rules in your home?
No, I used to love making answering machine messages.
So, you know, you do something like,
Hi, this is the toaster.
The phone can't come to the phone right now.
Or the answering machine can't come to the phone right now.
You know, just stupid stuff like that.
When you said phone manners, though, I was thinking like
phone manners sounds like a place
where all the phones go.
This is the home of Bruce Phone.
Stately phone manner.
I'm Bruce Phone.
He's the secret identity.
I don't know.
Yeah, no, phone manners were very
even now, I don't know how I answer
the phone. I'm just like, hello, hello.
Hello.
How dare you call me is mostly what I answer with.
Yeah.
Or, you know, what emergency is happening that you're phoning.
Like when someone calls me, I'm evaluating.
If I don't answer the phone, will they leave a message?
And I'm going to have to deal with that?
Yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
But I assume if anybody's phoning outside of my folks or whatever
i assume that it's something very very something's gone terribly wrong but then you still don't
answer yeah exactly exactly i don't want bad news um yeah how did you have to answer the phone when you were a youngster i was i say hello uh yeah
uh and i was the worst at it and like i i everyone in my family i had older sisters so they wanted to
touch the phone at all times just wanted to be near it but i just remember one time i had to
take a message and i i like this is something my family still makes fun of me for
a woman called asking for my mother my mother wasn't home and so she left a message tell her
to call louise rose and i could not remember the name louise i knew it was a human name
and so i was like huh when when uh my parents got home, my mom was like, anyone call for me?
Yes.
Something like Woolies.
Woolies Rose.
This is a cute family story that people tell about me all the time.
Oh, boy.
What's going on with you?
Oh boy.
What's going on with you?
Um,
I,
uh, well,
we went on that,
that there tour and then we came back to town and,
um,
I was eating at a diner and,
uh,
eating with a friend.
And the whole time,
the whole time I was just out of the,
the corner of my eye,
there was an old lady with her hair tied up into kind of like, you know how like a little girl would have her hair kind of tied up into a point that kind of goes straight up, you know, Cindy Lou Who style?
Yeah.
But this was an old lady.
So I'd never seen an old lady with hair tied up like that.
never seen an old lady with hair tied up like that and and so i was like it just kept catching my and she also was wearing some very funky glasses and um you know she ordered a hilariously
big pancake platter that she was never gonna finish so there was a lot going on that i was
just tracking uh out of the you know side vision. And then I turned my head a little,
and there was an exact double of her on the other side of the table.
A twin?
Like an identical twin, but had the same Cindy Lou Who hair
and the same exact pair of funky glasses,
and was wearing the same outfit that the other lady was wearing
and i've never seen that before i've never seen two adult people dressed and are twins
in real life i've never seen it and um was it these ladies yes it, it was. Yeah. The Robbins sisters. Yeah. I thought it was Louise Rose.
Yeah.
And her sister will leave.
Yeah, we got, as we were getting up and leaving the restaurant, one of them said, oh, I overheard
you were talking about TV.
We work in TV.
And I was like, of course you do.
What other thing could you possibly possibly they were on that series of
unfortunate events yeah netflix show yeah yeah and they're from here yeah and uh apparently like
i was googling them and they uh wore like really funky costumes to when the maybe like a the royal
family was visiting here and they like upstaged the royal family
because these two old twins wearing really funky outfits were in the reception area for uh
uh who was it who visited us uh i think uh did william and the and kate yeah yeah yeah so and
but like i've just never seen that before how did you know that it was them just
i they're i see them around town really yeah oh wow i think i've drive by their bus route from
time to time it's it was so crazy to me that that that you know i mean obviously if you're twins
you're and you're fine with dressing alike show show business is the route you're going to take.
I don't know much about them.
I assume all twins dress the same until they can choose their own clothes.
Yeah.
And then at a certain point, and then they never dress the same again.
Do you think there's ever the case of twins who dress the same then they stop dressing the same and they're like
you know what life hasn't been going great since we haven't been dressing the same and they come
back together and if so what do you do do you say where did you get that outfit i'll go buy the same
one or do they have to buy all new clothes i think they start from scratch i think they go
okay what what uh what's our general style and And then they just hit the boulevard.
Yeah.
What's our general style?
Funky twins.
Funky identical twins.
Do you think fraternal twins ever do that?
Dressed the same?
Yeah.
Their entire lives?
Why not?
Jason and Justine Bateman?
I don't think they're actually twins.
Yeah. But like, i don't know i just it's the first it's the first time i've ever seen that in my life because it was it was mind-blowing yeah old twins they're they're uncommon yeah
i'm just sort of yeah they die young yeah one of them does that's right um yeah i uh i remember i was talking to a young uh young comedian
and he was talking about oh my brother also does comedy in saskatchewan uh he's my identical twin
and i was like do you not understand that you should be doing that as a couple like that you
should be a pair of twins doing comedy together? Head and cross is mine.
Yeah, like the Lucas Brothers do that.
Is it Lucas Brothers?
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
And the Sklars.
Sklars, yeah, yeah.
And the Smothers Brothers.
Oh, yeah.
The Mario Brothers.
The Mario Brothers, yeah.
I find that a lot in adult life.
Like when you are a kid, you're aware of every twin, you know?
Yes.
And then like, you'll know someone for years as an adult and find out,
I have a twin brother.
Yeah, that's true.
It's not, uh, because you, all the twins, I know they all went to the same school.
There was no separate, there was no.
What a nightmare would be to have to drop your kids off at two different schools.
Oh yeah.
Did you go to school with twins?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I was just thinking, I'm like, I haven't, I don't think I've noticed twins since I was in school.
I'm sorry to all the twins out there, but I've just, I don't know many twins now.
Yeah.
But yeah, in school there was always a couple of twins and they would dress the same and everyone was like, oh, cool.
And then, yeah, I don't know what happened to them for a while um yeah so uh you know that was that's
what happened to me i got to i got to see and meet tv twins yeah the robin. And, you know, they've been in stuff since the, you know, the 80s or something.
So here's to many more years of the Robin sisters.
A toast.
Yeah.
Maybe they'll be in the next, the twins sequel.
Are they making a sequel?
I've heard a long time ago they were going to reunite to do something.
Why not?
Danny DeVito, you know, he's still busy.
And Arnold, I think he's doing Terminator 6 now.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
He's crazy.
That last Terminator was so bad.
It was so bad.
What was that one called?
Terminator 5.
Yeah.
A revolution.
Can you name all the Terminators?
Oh, boy.
Terminator?
Okay, I'll start.
You know what?
Let me do the first few.
Terminator.
Yeah.
T2, Judgment Day.
Yeah.
Terminator 3 with the girl.
I think Terminator 3 was maybe Rise of the Machines.
Rise of the Machines, yeah.
And then 4, I think, had an R title as well.
4 was the one.
Revolution, Retribution, Renovation.
Oh, these robots are making light work of this house. It's a DIYutions you know renovation oh these robots are doing making light work
of this it's a diy you know you just really wanted a new kitchen what uh which one was
christian bail and he was in like either that was four yeah it was yeah it was like regenesis or
there was a genesis one oh yeah maybe maybe Maybe Genesis was 5 And it had Arnold
Well there was
A CGI Arnold in it
Wasn't there a
Yeah
Robocop versus Terminator
Genesis game
Yeah
I think there was
Yeah
That's amazing
Deep cut
Yeah yeah yeah
The Terminator
Yeah
Terminator 2 Judgment Day
Terminator 3 Rise of the Machines
Terminator Salvation
Salvation
Oh Salvation
Terminator Genesis
Genesis
Not Genesis
Oh yeah with the Y
Geni
Yeah
G-E-N-I-S-Y-S
And
Coming out next year
Terminator 6
What was Rise of the Robots?
Rise of the Machines
Rise of the Machines
Was it had Claire Danes in it
Okay yeah
She was
I don't know who she was.
She wasn't
a Connor.
And then it was,
I can't remember the name
of the kid who was.
Oh, Nick Stahl?
Nick Stahl.
He was a grown up John Connor.
And Christiana Loken
was the
Terminatrix.
Yeah, Terminatrix.
There's a Termator fan somewhere listening
just screaming at us yeah yeah but i've got everything right yeah and uh you know what the
that last one though uh where they had to explain why the terminators like
old they're like they didn't do like uh they didn't cgi him young they did but then he was
also old and uh they said well the organic material on top ages and it was like why
why would that be why would they do that why would they make that well
it that's what organic material does yeah that's true yeah i guess i can't be mad at it look i watched it i'd watch
it again i watched it and clearly forgot most of it so yeah yeah they it's a lot it really leans
on the time travel aspect of it and uh who are you who are your guys who are your favorite guys
like the terminator yeah i like the termininator? Yeah, I like the Terminator.
You like the Predator?
I like Predator.
Who do you like?
Robocop?
Terminator, Predator, and Robocop.
I think Terminator's top of the heap for me.
How about you?
Yeah, I'd say, you know, Predator's pretty cool.
Predator is pretty cool.
What about, okay, let's throw in Alien as well.
Oh, Alien's probably the top.
Yeah, Aliens.
Aliens, as a series, I think they still beat all of them.
But just as a xenomorph.
As a xenomorph, I'll take an alien over predator.
I mean, they're scary.
Although predators have been known to team up with humans.
That's true.
Like in Alien vs. Predator.
Oh.
So predators could be on your side.
I think aliens, they just want to kill everybody.
Yeah.
There's never been a friendly alien.
E.T. Oh, yeah. You just want to kill everybody. So yeah, it's, there's never been a friendly alien.
E.T.
Oh yeah.
Well, you always got to bring E.T. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Absolutely.
I do.
Alf.
Yeah, Alf.
I mean, not to cats though.
Oh boy.
Should we move on to a bit of business?
Yeah.
It's a business time.
Oh, hello.
Hi there, Graham. it's a business time oh hello hi there graham uh did you know that uh we are supported by our
listeners we are also supported by advertisers and even the odd jumbotron message and we've got
a jumbotron message right now now uh who would you say this is from is it would you say that it's uh
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Festival, which will be presenting live shows, workshops, and panels
on November 8th, 9th, and 10th with the theme
of true crime, true justice.
One of the featured nights of the festival will be dedicated to
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being made in Vancouver.
Join the cast and crew behind the hit
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Hey, I make that.
Hey, wait a minute. This Is That, and
stop podcasting yourself as they bring
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comedy. Oh,
that sounds fun. Yeah, that will
be fun. I'm going to be a part of that. Yes, you i'm gonna be a part of that yes you're
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you still gotta pay to do a jumbotron for me to talk about it
so buy your tickets now for the vancouver podcast festival happening november 8th 9, and 10th at vanpodfest.ca.
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Back to the show, big boss.
I listen to reading glasses because Bria and Mallory have great tips.
You're a comics reader and you want to use a library connected app.
You can try out hoopla.
I listened for the author interviews.
I'm mad at myself that I waited as long as I did to start reading Joan
Didion.
They give me reading advice.
I didn't even know I needed.
If you go in person to an event and go up to an author or a filmmaker or anybody and tell them what you don't like about their work, you're a trash baby.
Look, I understand you didn't like Heroes Season 3. That's fine. I don't actually need to know that information.
I'm Brea Grant.
And I'm Mallory O'Meara.
We're Reading Glasses and we solve all your bookish problems every Thursday on Maximum Fun.
Overheard.
Overheard's a segment in which, you know, if you hear a thing or see a thing out there, say a thing.
That's the way it goes.
And we always like to start with the guest.
If you would, please, word burglar.
Yes.
Well, you know, I've overheard a lot of different things on the SkyTrain over here. goes and we always like to start with the guest if you would please word burglar yes well i you
know i've overheard a lot of different things uh on the sky train over here i overheard an
announcement that said the california roll was created in vancouver really i found really weird
because why wouldn't it be called the vancouver roll yeah probably to sell but they would sell
better if you could you know tell people Like hey this thing's
From California
Yeah
I'll take two
Yeah Hawaiian pizza
Wasn't invented in Hawaii
Yeah
It was invented here
In Canada
Huh
Yeah
Just blew my mind
Yeah
Oh yeah
And then if you say
Like a Canadian pizza
Everybody would think
Canadian bacon
Not
They wouldn't think
Hawaiian pizza
Yeah exactly
Yeah So you know That's why You gotta sell We do have a Canadian bacon Not They wouldn't think Hawaiian pizza Yeah exactly Yeah
So you know
That's why
You gotta eat
So you gotta sell it
We do have a
British Columbia roll
It's got salmon in it
Oh really
What else is in it
Uh
Weed
Cool
Yoga
Basically
Yeah
Yo
It's got some yoga
In it
And
I don't know
Bad drivers
Um Dave Do you have an I don't know, bad drivers.
Dave, do you have an over? I haven't overheard.
This is, I mean,
so
when I was in Winnipeg,
I went to this
breakfast place that was
the
patrons seem to be
old-timey Canadians. maybe not the most woke fellas
sure so this is very bad but this is uh like my basically a summation of the worst thing you can
possibly hear for an old white man say uh the guy is obviously a really good lawyer and judge to be considered for this job.
Does it really matter what he did 40 years ago?
Lordy, lordy.
And the guy he was sitting with just said, politics.
That guy sitting with him was like, I don't want to have this conversation.
Yeah, yeah.
But we're talking about politics?
Politics.
Oh, boy. like i don't want to have this conversation yeah yeah but we're talking about politics it's like oh boy if uh he had said something about baseball the guy would have been like sports sports yeah i don't know sports um yeah the uh uh it's always weird when uh especially
if it's somebody that you don't really know is coming at you with a heavy opinion like that.
And you're like, ha, ha, ha.
Like, there's no, you just want to say, like, yeah, I don't know, man.
Politics.
Well, I want to move on.
When I was in Toronto, speaking of tipping, I was like, we got picked up for the JFL Festival.
And it wasn't like, there was no money exchanging hands.
But in my mind, I'm like, do I tip this guy for driving me?
Oh, yeah, yeah.
And I was like, oh, shoot, I only have a $20.
I'm not going to give this guy a $20 bill, but he's doing a good job.
He deserves something.
And then like the first thing he says to me is so racist. And I'm like, okay, well, I don't feel bad anymore.
You know who's a bad driver
you know
what kind of people
are bad drivers
well yeah that's
and the coffee shop
if they ask me that
then they don't get
the tip
so you know I'm like
I'm gonna give this guy
oh no he didn't
pass the tip test
so he didn't pass
the tip test
yeah
oh yeah
yeah the guy
the guy I had
as a driver
pleasant conversation
the whole way well mostly about the weather oh boy that's the way to do it yeah Yeah the guy The guy I had as a driver Pleasant conversation Yeah
Well mostly about the weather
Oh boy that's the way to do it
Yeah
How was the GFL 42?
It was good
Yeah?
Yeah
Did they do more than 42?
Yeah
Yes
We were number 61 I think
Yeah they
They start
I think 42 is where they start
And then they build out from there
So
Yeah
It was fun
It was a fun festival
And like got to do
A bunch of different shows And The live podcast was a fun festival and like got to do a bunch of different
shows and the live podcast was a lot of fun that's awesome yeah who would you guys have on it
paul f tom oh paul f tom oh yeah we were just talking about yeah and so yeah it was a lot of
fun in a movie theater it smelled so nice in there oh popcorn yeah popcorn maybe a little bit of licorice it was the movie theater had comedy events and the
palestine film festival yeah and uh it was uh there were lineups for all the different
events and uh walking in i was like oh yeah i could see which ones for the yeah i guess i know um you there with your uh you know like inside joke uh mr show t-shirt
you here for the deep political discourse yeah uh deep dish political discourse though so good so saucy what would you say you're overheard
is this time around uh mine was an overseen from last night it's not really uh funny but it was
amazing i've never seen anything like it was it the view was such a beautiful view last night yeah
that's true yeah um there was a car uh flying down the middle of the street
that the whole front of it
had been
in an accident
and so the whole front of it was kind of going
under the front wheels
of the car and
sparks were going everywhere
and this car was cruising and it was being chased
by another car
so it drove into,
I've never seen a maneuver like this,
drove into a parking lot
to try and lose the person behind them
and then out the other side of the parking lot
and then down the street.
Did it lose them?
No, not even close.
Follow the smoking car.
Yeah, and it smelled so bad.
It stunk like burnt tire and burnt plastic.
Was it like someone trying to do a hit and run or trying to run from a hit and that was the guess there was somebody running from a hit and run
uh but uh man oh man i never considered in action movies when there's a chase scene that probably
that stinks so much for all the people who are just walking around i've considered what i would
do in a chase and I would constantly
be honking. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Let everybody know.
I don't have a siren, but let me through.
It's true that
in action movies they don't honk
very much. And they come so close
to hitting someone. Oh, yes.
But it's also, you don't think about how
much it smells. It smells
terrible. All that burning rubber. This is over-smelled about how much it smells. It smells terrible.
All that burning rubber.
This is over-smelt.
Yeah, it was over-smelt.
I would also be honking because chasing makes me horny.
I also have overheards from people all over the place. Oh. Yeah.
If you want to send one in, you can send it in to spy at maximumfun.org.
And this first one is from Josh from Austin, Texas.
Joshton.
Yeah.
Oh, I love Austin.
Do you?
Yeah, I played South by a few times.
Yeah.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
South by.
Southwest.
Oh, yeah.
What type of venue
Did they have you in?
I was in a place
I think it's called
Like the Flamingo
I played there a few times
Okay
And I played in a donut shop
One time
There you go
That's pretty awesome
And a couple
And a Mexican restaurant
And a bunch of different venues
Yeah
So I've done it
I've been there about
Three or four times
And done multiple shows
While I've been there
It's the type of festival
Where every standing structure Be a fan exactly yeah yeah um great yeah austin's
wicked town yeah yeah i've never been you no no let's go guys let's do it 2019 yeah road trip
boys on the side am i right guys what's that about i don't know a road trip Riding in cars with boys Am I right?
What was the one Where
With Drew Barrymore
Home Fries?
No
And Chris O'Donnell
And they're driving in a car
It's not Joyride
Because that was a horror movie
Yeah
It wasn't Home Fries
No it was Home Fries
Was there such a movie
Called Home Fries?
Did I make that up? Home Fries? Yeah there such a movie called Home Fries? Did I make that up?
Home Fries?
Yeah, yeah.
With Drew Barrymore.
Okay.
Maybe she gets pregnant?
I don't know.
I don't know what Home...
Why have I seen Home Fries so many times?
It sounds like it could be a movie.
As far as I will comment.
I mean, all this Drew Barrymore talk.
I mean, I have to mention the word burglar line.
You say your girl looks like Drew Barrymore.
I met her.
She looked like Drew Careymore.
Yes.
Oh, boy.
That's old school.
Taking it back.
Yeah.
Yeah, CBC Radio 3 award-winning lyric.
Yeah, lyric of the year.
Oh, cool.
Yeah.
Yeah, we were talking about radio three
yeah that was 2006 or 7 wow it's been a long time yeah r3 yeah shout out cbc yeah and drew
carrie looks better than ever he does he really does he i mean hey you know i date him you know
yeah he grew his hair out a little bit he wears funky new glasses his hair out a little bit. He wears funky new glasses. His hair is a little too the color of his skin.
He's just a beige.
He's just beige.
Just a wave of beige.
He's like a live action Dilbert.
Yeah.
Yeah.
This is Josh from Austin.
I was recently in the produce section of my local grocery store.
An old man walked up to the big container of white grapes,
sampled one,
chewed on it for a moment,
then loudly proclaimed
bullshit
and walked away.
I, uh,
are they,
they're not,
are they eating grapes?
White grapes?
Yeah, white grapes.
Yeah.
In a grocery store?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I don't know that
I've ever had a white grape.
Every grape in a grocery store
is eating.
You can eat
You can eat all the grapes
No one
Nobody's taking home
To stomp them
Yeah
No one's making wine
Are there scenic grapes
Or
Yeah
Just to add ambiance
While you're shopping
Yeah those wax grapes
Yeah
Those rubbery
Rubbery guys
Yeah
So
Chris O'Donnell
And Drew Barrymore
Made two movies
Both in 1995
Together Really The one i was talking about
was mad love okay what else were they at the bachelor oh close oh the batman forever oh the
batman forever yeah she was in a scene yeah she was in one scene she was working with. Two-Face? Two-Face, yeah. Yeah, they were working on a new project.
Laying down beats.
This next one comes from Katie from Calgary.
During my university days, I worked at an independent video store in Edmonton.
When we played movies in the store, we had something called TV Guardian
that would cut
out the audio when there was an inappropriate word and and would replace the word in the closed
captioning with a replacement word that never ever worked for example the f word was replaced
with hug and vagina was replaced with form uh these never made sense in context as you can imagine but my all-time favorite was when we
played the family favorite chicken run when the closed captioning would normally have said
cock-a-doodle-doo it changed it to the more family-friendly jerk-a-doodle-doo um wow yeah i uh uh you ever seen chicken run no a lot of fun a lot of that that claymation
yeah is that the appropriate term claymation yeah claymation for yeah
yeah i don't know why i saw it but i saw it at a university movie theater
with a bunch of stoned that was the time yeah yeah with a bunch of stoned uh university students
a fun day not hurting anybody it's the for the wallace and gromit crew yeah yeah love them yeah
yeah i love them too they make those car commercials. Oh, do they make the Chevron with Tech Runs?
Yeah.
Oh.
Yeah.
They made a whole series of like animal ones that were like that,
that was audio from interviews with real people,
and then they animated it, and they were different animals.
Yeah.
I feel like I went through that sort of grommety, claymation phase.
Yeah, sure.
Yeah.
Yeah, we all had a,
yeah, we definitely all had a grommety.
It kind of,
it took America by storm.
It really did.
It captured our hearts.
Now I kind of forgot about them.
Yeah, but you know what?
Did you know that the California raisin
was invented in Vancouver?
That's where they recorded their first film.
Yeah.
California angels, everything. Yeah. It's all Vancouver. That's where they recorded their first piano. California Angels,
everything. It's all Vancouver.
This is
from Claire
L. in Dublin.
One side of a colleague's phone conversation.
She's
saying,
Hello? No, can I have a
different piano? I don't need a
grand piano. Why don't we have a piano? A respectable library should have a different piano i don't need a grand piano why don't we have a piano
a respectable library should have a piano it just sits there and looks pretty it doesn't have to be
played or anything and then she rounds it out with i like michelle pfeiffer i have no idea what
you're talking about but yeah i can be her yeah but it's baker boys absolutely that's what they're talking about yeah
the most famous sitting on a piano photo maybe there's an ann getty's one of a baby sitting on
a piano i mean i assume i don't i don't know what a star is born is about but i assume lady
rolls around on a piano that would be amazing to go to a show where somebody rolled around on a
piano i'd love it i mean it'd have to be a pretty grand piano.
Yeah.
Do you think Elton John will roll around on a piano for his last tour?
I mean, he's done everything else.
It's all been leading to this.
That would be great if he busted out the old Donald Duck costumes and all that kind of stuff.
Just for one last Bizarro tour.
It's not his last tour
though, right?
He'll tour again.
I don't ever remember
him touring.
Didn't he tour with
it wasn't him
and Billy Joel
went on a tour together?
I feel like
Elton John's always on tour.
I feel like
Okay, okay, fine.
He's like the
Harlem Globetrotters.
He comes once a year.
He has the Washington Generals open for him.
I was a Barry Manilow household, so, you know, growing up.
So Elk John I knew a little bit, but it was really the Barry Manilow discography
that I became very well acquainted with.
Oh, yeah, he influenced all my songwriting, for sure.
He wrote the songs.
He did write the songs.
He didn't write that one, though.
He still does.
Do you know what else he wrote?
Do you know what his famous commercial jingles are?
Was it the Band-Aid?
He did I Am Thug on Band-Aid, yep.
Oh, wow.
And did he do a McDonald's one, too?
He did Like a Good Neighbor, State Farm is There.
Oh.
There.
Nice.
I got to say, I took my mom to see him in Toronto a few years back.
Tickets were ridiculously expensive, but that guy puts on a show.
Yeah.
And he's like very, and you know, now he does Vegas and everything, but give Barry Manilow
his props.
He's an incredible performer.
Yeah.
And he was like, he pulled out a joint and like mocked, like smoking a joint on stage.
Like, yeah.
You know, you've got like all these like 60 year old women just like oh swooning at barry and uh i think he married a guy named gary
so it's barry and gary manilow true story yeah that's the one thing that same-sex marriages
have brought us is the barry gary larry yeah harry har Harry I mean it just It doesn't
I guess there are
Terry's
You know
Absolutely
Of all
Of all genders
But
Now in addition
To overheards
That are written
And we also
Accept your phone calls
If you want to call us
The phone number is
1-844-779-7631
Yeah
Or 1
Ugh
SpyPod 1 Like these people have Hi Dave Graham And possible guests 797-631-41. Ugh. Spy pod one.
Like these people have.
Hi, Dave Graham and possible guests.
This is Xander from Michigan calling with an overseen.
I was on my way to work.
This was probably about 9 o'clock at night.
And I drove past one of those charter buses that usually have the screen on the front with whatever destination they're going to.
But instead of that, it just said, I'm lost.
So hopefully they're all okay.
Oh, no.
You get on the bus, you assume they know where they're going.
How do I stop this thing?
That's what it just says on the thing.
Whoa, whoa, oh, oh, whoa.
That's what it just says on the thing.
Whoa, whoa, oh, oh, whoa.
I've been on a couple Greyhounds where I was like,
I'm not sure this guy knows what.
It feels like we're pulling off all of a sudden to a weird small town. What I don't like is when you're on a bus or you're waiting for a bus
and it either will say not in service
Because like someone's training
Or I don't know why a bus would not be in service
I'm standing here
Just let me on
Yeah you're driving by anyways
And the other one is
Sorry bus full
Which I don't appreciate either
Because just stop and see how many people get off
And then let that many people on
Yeah yeah yeah, yeah.
Yeah, sorry, bus full.
Like, I feel like.
Sometimes they'll even, like, go past the bus stop to let people off, like, further down the street just so you don't get the wrong idea.
Yeah, it's something I put up with a lot with the bus, the sorry bus full.
But you know what?
I just wait until somebody gets out the back and get on.
You're not the boss of how full it can get.
You're not the boss of me.
Yeah.
As possible guest, I approve that.
Okay.
Here's your next phone call.
Hey, David Graham.
It's Aaron from Houston.
I just walked four miles up a mountain in Utah.
And while I was up there, I heard a guy say,
Whoa, you could say the Earth is God's big art project.
Well, off I go.
It's true.
Never finished, really, you know?
Yes, it's always on the run.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Always adding a new animal?
Is that what's happening?
What is god working on
these days yeah uh like a some kind of uh super virus yeah that's true yeah some sort of thing
super bug that's gonna take most of us down yeah i wonder what'll be left i mean they always say
cockroaches are gonna outlive you know any kind of epidemic or kind of apocalypse or whatever that they'll somehow maintain.
And Twinkies.
Twinkies, cockroaches.
But I wonder if there's just like any animal that really is going to,
something maybe that lives in like the, you know,
Marianas Trench or something like that.
Well, I think the, like, so what,
is there going to be a mass extinction event like a plague?
I think that's my, I mean, if I had to put money down on how it all, it's going to be plague-based.
But won't that then, like, if we wipe out half the human population, won't that just make, like, slow down everything else that's wrong with the planet oh that's interesting so the plague may save the day well i mean like it wouldn't um
not if you get the plague no yeah yeah but like wouldn't the uh you know the human race that would
buy the human race a lot of time i think yeah that's true that's uh your thoughts yeah no i'm
still thinking about what creatures would survive.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I don't know.
I just saw a quiet place,
you know,
you see that film?
No.
There's the monsters that I don't want to spoil anything.
Well,
everyone has to be really quiet.
Yeah.
Everyone has to be super quiet.
Otherwise the monsters come and get you.
Right.
And,
uh,
yeah,
but they,
I feel like they would survive.
They would survive.
Sure.
Yeah.
Yeah. So the one thing you think would survive
but it doesn't exist.
I think Robocop would survive.
I think Predator would survive.
Yeah, absolutely.
Oh, he can do anything.
I like the Predators.
Yeah.
I heard the new Predator film, not great.
That's what I heard.
That's a shame.
That's a shame.
But he'll be back. He'll live to hunt another day. Great thing about Predator film. Not great. That's what I heard. That's a shame. That's a shame. But he'll be back.
He'll live to
hunt another day.
Great thing about Predator.
Predator,
if you're listening,
I think you're still
cool.
Yeah,
Dave Graham
and Predator guest.
Here's your final
overheard.
Downloading
and playing
and going.
Hi,
Dave and Graham
and possible guests.
This is Lisa calling in from Syracuse
for the overheard.
I actually called in like a year ago
with one where a woman was wearing a T-shirt
that said official smile maker
and she had the most pissed off look on her face.
And he didn't hear it, but that's okay.
I forgive you guys.
I do have a better one.
Who are you?
So I was at a McDonald's
and there were two workers talking to each other,
and they couldn't have been more than early 20s.
If that, they might have been late teens.
And anyway, one of them was talking to the other one about someone being a player that they knew.
And the guy asked the other kid, he said, you're a player, right?
And the guy said, nah, I stopped being a player in middle school.
Oh, wow.
So when you were like 12.
Anyway, off I go.
That's when I hung up my...
Your playing?
Yeah, my playing.
Your cleats?
Cleats.
Yeah, because you can't live that life forever, know it's it's and what made you a player
how did you how did this how were you a player well i was a baller and i was a shot caller so
those those were my two starting points and uh you know i wish honestly i was a bit tall yeah i get
you yeah you understand yeah um and uh things just evolved from there
that's fair it was very organic yeah um uh ever a player i was a player yeah then i became more
of a worker okay yeah you know you know i try and go back to the play you know but yeah i still try
and play every day yeah gotta play every day every day well you gotta pray
just to make it today
yeah
I pray to play
I pray that I can
just play more
yeah
now that brings us
to the end of the episode
oh no
yeah
that was so much fun
well it had to end
sometime
logically
it just had to
just like the plague
yeah
exactly
I mean it's
waiting to begin.
Whoa!
Afternoon ghost.
You did scare me.
You said you wouldn't scare me.
There was a, something fell off a thing, and it was, I mean, it was a thing that happened.
Yeah.
I'm not really going to go into specifics, but something happened, and there it was.
Yeah, afternoon ghost.
You are touring all across Canadaada yes uh where can people find
out where this will oh yeah why don't you just say where yep you know what go ahead and we're
rolling the easiest place is word burglar.com okay and that's w-o-r-d-b-u-r-g-l-a-r you'd be
surprised how many times people spell it er-R or just get it wrong completely.
Like I played Newfoundland one time.
There were posters all over town that said the word bugler is playing tonight.
Word bugler.
Word bugler.
That's my website.
True story.
Word bugler.
Hopefully when I go back there, which will be before this airs, I think,
but they'll get the name spelled right.
Yeah.
So this will be out on the 15th.
Okay.
So I'll have more dates going all the way up till the end of the year.
And then I'm going to do another tour in the spring.
That's the game plan.
But yeah, I'm always putting out, there's new videos coming out, new singles, all kinds
of stuff happening.
Got new vinyl coming out in January and CD.
And I'm on all the different musical playing places you can listen to music.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Can't form sentences right now, but yeah.
It's okay, there's a plague.
And
Dave... And by the way,
if there's a plague right now, sorry about all the
plague jokes. We're pre-recording
this. We don't know exactly, we can't
say. Oh, but it keeps us current.
Yeah. Oh boy.
The episode where the guys predicted the plague.
Oh, boy.
The thing that would kill them.
At the end of an episode where we have somebody who has an album out,
we like to play a track.
What track should we play?
Well, I would recommend Rental Patient,
which is the first single off the new album.
Okay.
And it's about that time
when you had to rent videos.
And I think if you ever had to,
you know, leave your house
to watch a movie
on your own couch,
you would understand
that you had to be patient
when you went looking
for a video.
Yes.
And this is all about that.
And yeah, there's a video
for it on YouTube now.
And I highly recommend
all your listeners
go check it out. Okay. Yeah. Well, thank you so video for it on YouTube now, and I highly recommend all your listeners go check it out.
Okay.
Yeah.
Well, thank you so much for being our guest.
Do we have anything?
No.
Let's just get out of here with Rental Patient.
Bye, everybody.
Are your kids renting a movie this weekend?
Saturday afternoon matinees aren't what they used to be.
To begin with, kids don't have to go to the movie theater.
They can bring a movie home from a rental store.
What you know about going out to catch a movie at your own house?
Waiting in line to watch something on your own couch, no doubt.
You had to get up and get it or ask an adult if your pick was restricted.
Get this, I know it's hard to believe it, but if a movie was rented, you just couldn't see it.
None to download from your humble abode. You'd have to leave your home bungalow and run down the road.
Hope the local shop had a copy in stock, cause if not, gotta find something else to watch.
And if you thought I was done with flipping your mind, they only let you have the flick for a limited time.
And if you didn't rewind, you were the evilest dude, worse than the term previously viewed.
Even though you paid, it was only yours to borrow.
Cause after all of that, you'd have to bring it back tomorrow.
Yo, take it from a rental patient.
You had to have rental patience.
Checking the shelves of every destination.
They might have a copy at the next location.
Yo, this is for the rental patient.
Selected discs and cassettes for playing.
Popcorn sets through the ventilation.
Better get something good cause your friends are waiting.
Okay then.
Now in case you didn't know the lengths you had to go just to get a video.
It was a ritual.
A major event.
When you got your own card and were able to rent.
Swear everyone went.
Families to film buffs.
Stoners and punks who try to steal stuff.
Or just loiter and eat the free popcorn.
Sneak a peek behind the curtain they stock porn. And every visit was a hunt and a gamble. We'll be right back. Beguile, cause if you don't want to find, you better make sure you return it on time. Yo, this is for the rental patients, selecting discs and cassettes for playing.
Popcorn sets through the ventilation, better get something good cause your friends will wait.
The top movies were dirty, they all got around, in and out of every last player in town.
Wow, I mean, why you think each release came with fingerprint stains and some pizza grease?
Seven day rentals for seven bucks, kid.
Test your luck, cause what you picked you were stuck with.
Why put up with this? Glad you asked.
Cause buying back then cost a lot of cash.
It was the age of renters, made more memorable.
Cause we knew what we had was ephemeral.
A flicker on the screen, a brief time and moment.
Of taking something home, knowing you didn't own it.
You don't appreciate the grace, till you take a risk.
Beta VHS, DVD, Laserdisc.
Maybe this is just how they were meant to be seen.
On pieces of plastic, you're sticking machines.
Yo, take it from a rental patient.
You had to have rental patience.
Checking the shelves of every destination.
They might have a copy at the next location.
Yo, this is for the rental patient.
Selecting discs and cassettes for playing. Popcorn scents through the ventilation. Thank you. Gigantic video, jumbo video, video flicks, video pics, MT video, video 99
Johnson's video in Scarborough where I saw the G.I. Joe cartoon movie
And they had the Super Famicom games, and the Famicom games with the converters
That was crazy, Blockbuster you can't forget about, Hollywood video 99
Queen video, video free Brooklyn, whatever video in every city yo
This is for every rental patient out there. Uh.