The Commercial Break - It's The Safe Zone!
Episode Date: May 29, 2024"Safe Zone" gets a whole new meaning on this episode of The Commercial Break... Bryan should have gone to school Falling from great heights Storytime with Bryan Bryan’s shaking in his boots Bab...y Reindeer 90 Day Fiance: Love in Paradise “Live” sperm donation It’s a safe zone! Getting lost on the AT Bryan’s upcoming transatlantic journey Good for the whales! LINKS: Send us show ideas, comments, questions or concerns by texting us 212.433.3TCB text or leave us a voicemail Watch TCB on YouTube Creator: Bryan Green Co-Host: Bryan Green Co-Host: Krissy Hoadley Producer: Christina A. Producer: Gustavo B. Download & Listen on the Audacy app To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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So excited for our date. I've been saving up all week.
Oh, that's nice of you, but I don't mind splitting the bill.
I'm not talking about the bill.
Oh, that's nice of you, but I don't mind splitting the bill. I'm not talking about the bill.
On this episode of The Commercial Break.
You don't want to meet somebody for a hundred dollar item at the back of the Walmart. You know what I'm saying? So I'm glad they have that drop off zone for Facebook. It's literally called the
Facebook Marketplace drop off zone. So I'm wondering if I'm a sperm donor, if I could live donate sperm
in the front of the police department
and just say I'm...
Hey, it's your safe zone.
It's your safe zone for me to drop off my goods.
The next episode of The Commercial Break starts now.
Oh yeah, cats and kittens, welcome back to the commercial break.
I'm Brian Green.
This is the spots to my tiger, Kristen Joy Hoadley.
Best to you, Chrissy.
Best to you, Brian.
Best to you out there in the podcast universe.
Although I think, I think leopards have a spot.
Oh, tigers don't have spots?
I think tigers have stripes.
They do?
They do.
Oh, I should have paid more attention at school.
I'm the stripe to your tiger. You're the stripe attention in school. I'm the stripe to your tiger.
You're the stripe to my tiger.
You're the stripe to my tiger.
Or the spot to your leopard.
Whatever, who cares?
I should have paid attention more in school.
I should have actually attended school
and then maybe I would have learned some of those things.
But you know, you can't go back in the past or so they say.
No.
I just read an article, this is like terrifying,
this is like my, besides having a tooth cracked out of my head while I'm wide awake, my next
living nightmare is falling from great heights, falling from any height, really. Heights in
general are my worst living nightmare unless I'm in a building.
Right, that's a lot of people.
Yeah, it's not a particularly uncommon fear or phobia to have, and I've got it, and so
does my son, and I think my it, and so does my son.
And I think my two daughters are not afflicted with that fear because they'll climb up and
down a ladder, be near high places, and it doesn't seem to bother them.
My son, on the other hand, he's got that verified Brian look on his face.
Whenever he goes more than two steps up the ladder, he's like, daddy!
I said, I agree with you, son, just get down. Don't bother. Yeah.
Don't try and be brave here. Just get down, forget about it. You can live life without going
to high places without security fences or walls or anything like that. There's a famous canyon
in Washington. It's been photographed a lot and I'm sure if you saw it, then you would see the
bridge and you would understand a lot of people. I think they-
Washington state?
Washington State.
They bungee jump off of this quite a bit, even though I don't think it's legal anymore,
they bungee jump off of it.
Teenagers will often try and make it down into this gorge that is 400 feet off the ground.
The bridge is 400 feet off the ground.
That is a little less than 40 stories.
40 fucking stories in the ground. That is a little less than 40 stories. 40 fucking stories in the
air. A 19 year old over the weekend trying to traverse this canyon fell 400 feet and
survived with like scratches and bruises. How do you do that? How do you do that? Who
get this kid, send him to my house, take his blood, transfuse it into mine. I want to know,
first of all, how do you even have the bravery to get up there and start trying to climb down this
particular path or whatever you want? Second of all, how do you survive something like that?
Lauren Ruffin Well, you're 19.
Jared Svelter Well, I was 19.
Lauren Ruffin That's how you have the bravery to do that first.
Jared Svelter Well, that's true.
Lauren Ruffin And then I don't know, maybe there was like a rolling, I was 19. That's how you have the bravery to do that first. Well, that's true. Yeah.
And then I don't know, maybe there was like a rolling, like a, you know, like a rolly
poly that kind of like, yeah, like a little weasel or something.
Just roll yourself up and into a ball and bounce a couple of times into the ravine.
You know, I was 19 once.
And now that I think about it, I did a lot of drugs when I was 19.
I think that's taking about just as much risk
as traversing a 400 foot cliff.
You never know what's in it.
I think I took a lot of risks, similar parity
as far as life and death are concerned.
I just never thought of it like that.
I don't know what it is, but the thought, the sight,
the feel of being high up, it paralyzes,
literally, physically paralyzes me.
I'm not like that, but however,
I also don't wanna go jump off a bridge at 40 feet,
at 400 feet.
No.
I'm good on that.
But I'll go to a high roller coaster.
High roller coaster all day long.
High elevator.
I don't care about that.
Yeah, I trust that, you know,
only once in a million does a freak accident happen
where you would actually fall off of a roller coaster.
Most of the time you're just stuck in some weird position, which I wouldn't like.
But at the same time, I would know that help is coming at some point, right?
So roller coasters don't bother me.
Tall buildings, as long as I'm not like right at the window, I'm okay.
You and I did a Ferris wheel one time.
The Ferris wheel was okay.
Yeah.
I didn't love it. I'm not in love with Ferris wheels, especially
not the kind that gets set up and taken down in less than an hour. That is then,
here in the state of Georgia, like a lot of states, including Florida, the people who actually
like look at those carnival rides in order to make sure that they're in good condition,
is the State Board of Agriculture. What agriculture and carnivals have to do with each other,
I have no idea.
But you can look for a disease in a corn,
but can you really know whether or not
there should be an extra screw in my carnival ride?
I mean, I've been down rabbit holes on the internet
and Instagram and TikTok,
where it's just reel after reel
of nightmare carnival accidents.
Like, you know, an arm flies off of one of those swinging
rides and people just go flying across the area.
That's probably not helping your fears.
No, of course not. It's just reassuring me that my fear is legit. I think this is legit. I don't
know where it came from. You know, probably some pre-man ape was up high on a cliff somewhere and
said, oh, this doesn't feel good.
You know what I'm saying?
Ah, this isn't natural, let's go backwards.
But now I am afflicted with it.
It is genetic.
I'm sure I passed it down to at least one of my children.
And you know, here's the thing.
Let me share a story with you.
When I was-
Storytime with Brian.
With Uncle Brian. That's the wrong noise altogether. There we go, storytime with Brian.
That's the wrong noise altogether.
There we go, Storytime with Brian.
I like the beep beep.
You like the beep beep better?
Okay, we can go with that.
It's a cron crash waiting to happen.
Storytime with Brian.
When I was like 23, 24 years old,
you know, at Six Flags or at whatever your local amusement
park is, they have those big swings.
It looks like a big arch and then they pull you up to one side, way high in the air, and
then you pull this string and you go flying.
Swing back and forth.
Six Flags Over Georgia installed one of those one year and now it's like a permanent attraction
there.
And it's pretty high up in the air. I'm going to guess 20 stories is my guess. And like a lot of dumb shit in my life,
I do it to spite other people. Like I do it when people think I can't do it, then I do it just to
spite them, right? No, that's not true. I'm not afraid of heights. I can get out there and I can
do that. And so I was with my best friend, Raphael at the time, and he says, dude, you don't have to do this. Like, you know, I can go on the ride by myself. It's a two person
thing, but one person can go on it. And I'm like, no, no, no, bro, I'm not as scared of
heights as I say I am. I can really do this. This is fine. It's cemented to the ground.
I'll be okay. And he says, bro, you don't have to prove anything. You don't want to
do it, don't do it. And I'm like, fuck you, I'm doing it. So, he goes, he pays the extra
50 bucks or whatever it is to do this particular ride. And then we have a time to come back. So it's maybe 45 minutes later,
hour later, we're supposed to come back. As the clock keeps ticking, tick, tock, tick, tock,
I get more and more nervous about this whole experience. And by the time it's time for us to
go get ready to get on this ride, or they strap you in. My legs aren't working.
I'm not able to walk very well. That's how physically crippled I get by the fear of heights.
And so, we get on this little stand. The stand raises up so that they can attach you to the
string, right? They put this big suit on you and it looks like a, I don't know, I don't
know how to explain it. It's like a big mat they put on you so that when they lift you
up, you're just together, two people together on this hanging mat, 20 feet in the air, which
is not normal for human beings. You're not supposed to be up there. So he's lifting us
up on this little platform. I'm shaking like a leaf on a tree. Raphael looks over at me.
We're very close. We're like tied together basically. And he's like, bro, you don't look
good. And I'm like, bro, it's okay, like, I'll do it. He's like,
you have a chance right now to just say you don't want to do this. Brian, don't do this.
At every step, my crippling anxiety is overridden by the incredible ego I have at 20, 23, 24
years old. I just know I have to do this. I have to prove Raphael
wrong and myself right that I can do this. So, the guy attaches us and when he attaches
us, he says, I'm going to lower the platform and as I lower the platform, you guys are
going to go from standing up to laying down. You're just going to swing and it's just
going to lay you down. So, this is all being videotaped, by the way, for posterity's sake,
because of course it is, just like when I went skydiving. So this is all being videotaped for future embarrassment of Brian.
Right, okay.
So as the platform lowers, it's not a gentle laying down. It's like, as soon as our feet
are disconnected from the thing, you just go flat over and now you're 15, 20 feet in the air,
and I screamed like a three-year-old girl. I was like,
ah! Ah! Like that. And Rafa's like, Brian, just say you don't want to do this. Say you do
not want to do this. And I'm like, no, no, no, no, no. I got it. I got it. We're here
now. What are we going to do? And the guy down on the platform who's not even
reached the ground yet is like, bro, you okay? You sure you won't do this? And I'm
like, I got it. I'm good. Thumbs up, I got it, I'm good. It's like thumbs up, I got it, I'm good.
So then the string starts pulling us upward.
So now you're face down and it's pulling you upward,
200 feet in the air.
Chrissy, Chrissy, the noises that I was making.
Rafa was a psychiatrist at that point.
He was my therapist.
I was like,
ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, my therapist. I was like,
Raphael's like, breathe, bro, breathe through your third eye and through your chakra down through your anus, breathe,
breathe. And I'm like, stop telling me to breathe. Stop
telling me to breathe. We get up to the very top. The guy told
us, I was on the side with the little polar, because Raphael was
like, you be the puller.
That way when you're comfortable, you go.
So the guy told us, he said, listen,
when you get up to the top, there's gonna be a loud speaker.
I'm gonna tell you it's good to pull.
You can pull any time after that.
It took nine and a half minutes for me to pull that thing.
Nine and a half minutes.
At some point, the guy down with the microphone
what said, hey bro, you gotta pull it bro.
You gotta pull it.
There's other people waiting in line.
You gotta pull it, we'll bring you back down.
There's only one way now, you just gotta pull it.
And finally, Raph had to reach over and pull it.
He reached over and pulled it.
Best two and a half minutes of my life was swinging down that thing. Best two and a half minutes of my life was swinging down that thing.
Best two and a half minutes of my life when we finally got swinging was the swinging.
The part falling down toward earth, I made chimpanzee noises, I'm sure of it.
What's that noise that I make that everybody likes? It's a,
that was the noise. That was the noise that I was making.
I am not built for heights. It is not in my DNA. You're also afraid of heights,
aren't you? No. Oh, that's what I was saying. I'm good with that stuff. You're
good with the roller coasters. I'm good with the roller coasters or the heights.
I mean, it's, it's scary, but I'm into it. I like the adrenaline. Someone puts you
on the top of the Sears tower. You're good doing one of those like,
like what Astor did, like lean on the glass.
Yeah, I would do that.
You would?
Mm-hmm.
Well, fuck you.
Jeff would not.
He's scared of heights.
Jeff is not, yeah.
Okay, see Jeff, brothers in arms, buddy.
Brothers in arms.
I knew it, I knew I liked Jeff for a reason.
Anybody who's scared of heights is good with me.
We can all stay here on the ground
but the rest of you go somewhere else.
But like I said, I would also not just go on,
climb up to a 400 foot bridge,
free freestyle at it, whatever,
and then jump off trying to get myself into a hole, no.
No, no, I wouldn't bungee jump.
I wouldn't do anything like,
I say that and then I went skydiving,
but I don't know, something felt more secure
about the skydiving than but I don't know. Something felt more secure about the skydiving
than any bungee jumping ever would.
I feel like they'd miscalculate the amount of rope
that I needed or whatever.
Yeah, I'm good on the bungee jumping too.
I don't wanna do that.
You know, bring this up to tell you also
that one of my favorite YouTube channels,
which I can't remember the name of now
because I'm old and I forget stuff. One of my favorite YouTube channels, which I can't remember the name of now because I'm old and I forget stuff. One of my favorite YouTube channels is a channel of one of those, like, city climbers, the guys or
girls who go up, there's a tall crane on top of a tall building, you know what I'm thinking?
Okay.
In China, in Asia, wherever it happens to be, they fly all around the world, they find places that
are unnaturally high. Like, oh, we're building the world, the next world's tallest building,
192 stories in the air, and then we have a crane to lift this stuff into air so that
we can put it on the top of this 192 story building, and that crane is an additional
40 stories in the air. So, let me, in the middle of the night, when none
of the construction workers are there, let me go, let me climb to the top of the building,
and then, nay, let me climb to the top of this crane, and then, nay, let me climb out on the crane,
so now I'm hanging by one arm, swinging around, unnaturally, completely, there's nothing
about this that humanity needs to do.
Do you know what I'm saying?
Why would you do that?
And people die doing this.
There's lots of cases of people dying doing this.
But these kids, they're like, I don't know, they have some other worldly power to get
out there and not only decide that they want to climb out 1,600, 1,700 feet in the air,
but then climb out and prove that they can hang on
with one arm while they're filming
with their selfie stick and the other.
Yeah, that's crazy.
Well, they get millions and millions of views,
they make money.
That's better than we can say.
What are we doing?
We're right here on earth, can't make money.
Those guys up in the buildings being stupid,
they can make lots and lots of money.
But that is one of my favorite YouTube channels
and my palms get sweaty
every time I watch one of those videos. Every time I have a physiological response to someone else
being high up in the air. It's crazy how my body responds. I wish I had any control over it. I
really do. Yeah. I don't know. You have other strengths. Tell me. Give me one.
Give me one.
Give me one other strength.
Well, you're a great best friend.
Oh, well, thank you very much.
I really appreciate that.
You're a superhero best friend.
Yeah, I'm a superhero best friend.
Yes.
I'd rather be a superhero hanging off the end of a crane.
Making millions of dollars on YouTube.
Let those guys do it.
Yeah. You know what the video that haunts me every time
is the video of the guy that's doing like some weird form of parkour up on buildings.
You know, he's like, you know, jumping from one building to the next
or one corner of a building to the next, 50, 60 stories in the year.
And there's a famous video out there of a guy who jumps,
he grabs on, he's trying to show off a little bit,
and he loses his grip and he's hanging there,
trying to pull himself back up,
trying desperately to pull himself back up,
but he doesn't do it, he doesn't get it,
and he falls and that's it, a game over, end of life.
Why are you doing that?
For millions and millions of dollars? Yeah, I do it are you doing that? For millions and millions of dollars?
Yeah, I'd do it too.
If someone offered me millions and millions of dollars,
I'd climb one of those cranes.
I would.
How many dollars would it take
for you to climb one of those cranes?
Oh, I don't know.
Yeah, I guess millions.
In the millions.
I would likely die because my body would have a reaction
that wouldn't allow me to like actually do it correctly.
I wouldn't be able to overcome that physiological response.
But at least I know my children were taken care of.
You know, if someone said 10 million bucks, Brian, go to the Shaxing Tower in China and
climb out on that crane, I'd say, kids, I wasn't a great father, but I was the father
you had.
And now you and your mother are going to be
rich, flying to Spain on private jets, and she's going to sleep with the pool boy. But just know
that I died in a semi-honorable fashion, making a YouTube video for money for your private education,
for your cooking school in France.
Jared Lieberman There you go. It's honorable.
Jared Lieberman It's, you know, listen, we do what we can here on this earth and then we move on to
the next, whatever that is.
Mm hmm. The next realm.
Yeah. And I'm sure I'd find that, I'd find that out just like I did at the top of the
Sears Tower, completely encased in glass, no fear of anybody falling, dying, anything
like that. And Brian's knees buckled and I fell to the floor.
And Astrid had to drag me out of the Sears Tower.
Maybe you were one of those guys, you know, that worked in a past life. Maybe you were one of those
guys that were working on... The steelworkers. The steelworkers on the top of the tall building
and maybe you fell and died. That's a lovely thought. And that's why you're afraid in this
life. I'm going to talk to my therapist about that, my next past life regression. Yeah.
You might be right. You might be right. Just be right just throwing it out there that could be true
I could have fallen off a tall building and now it's just like
Genetically in me that I'm always gonna be afraid of heights and rightfully so yes
I bet a lot of those guys died like that. Yeah, you would have to think yeah
There was they didn't even have like what's that one famous picture, you know with them the four guys
They didn't even have like. What's that one famous picture, you know, with the.
The four guys eating lunch.
Lunch.
Yeah, on the top of the.
I know.
Get me the fuck down.
That's what I say.
Can I go to Kat's Deli?
Do I need to sit here and eat?
But they, like you, were probably like,
I've got to provide for my family.
And this pays really well.
Oh, it does pay really well
because one in seven of you ain't coming home tonight.
But you know, so we get to give the extra money. When Joe dies, y'all get to split his tick. So keep on climbing
up to the top of that building. And they like road steel girders to the top of that. It's just insane
to think about. And this is 100 years ago too, right? When was the Empire State Building built?
20s, 10s, something like that. That feels right.
Sometime in the 1900s.
Sometime in the 1900s.
When I worked in the real estate business,
I went and visited a project,
and it was just a 20-story building. It was not anything particularly high.
And I went and I visited, and I took like the,
you know, the dinky little elevator
that they basically attached to the side of the structure.
Yes.
It's like a construction elevator.
I've seen those.
Yeah.
And it's a cage.
That's all it is.
It's just a cage, a rattly ass cage, stuck on this one little pipe that's flutting you
up to the air and you're stuck with eight other guys in there, 300 pounds more than
I am.
You know, they're big boys, some of these gentlemen that do this kind of work.
And so, we're riding up this elevator, it's like, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, kuk, And so, we're riding up this elevator, like, I am in the corner and I'm just like shaking rabidly like a dog.
I can imagine.
Yeah. And then they wanted to get out and walk around and I just kind of, there was like a cement,
the elevator shaft had been built and then the rest was being built out, the steel was being
built out. And there was a floor, but it wasn't like the permanent floor, it was just a floor for people to walk on, like a temporary floor.
But they had that big, you know, elevator shaft made of concrete, and there was like a little,
tiny pad that you could, you know, that was there for whatever purposes. And I stood there, while
everybody else toured around, while the, you know, the contractor gave this grand tour of the city,
and look at those views, and tour of the city and look at those
views and look at this and look at that. I stood there shitting myself in the corner
and then had to take the ride back down, shitting myself again because it's fucking holy shit
scary to me. Somebody has a cure for this, let me know. I know one of these listeners
is going to call out.
Zanax.
Zanax.
I think that's your…
I think, I actually think my physiological response is stronger than Zanex.
All right, let's take a break. I want to thank very much Wendy McClendon Covey for coming in this
week. Please check her out and manifest. She was a lot of fun. And just such a legend to me.
And if you didn't listen to the interview, and you do go listen to the interview, you'll know
that the last two and a half minutes of our conversation got cut off for whatever reason. It didn't
record and so I had to put a little transition in there. But I want to apologize to Wendy
about that. But anyway, there's 49 minutes of great conversation.
Yeah.
Let's not talk about the stuff we don't have. Let's be proud of the stuff we do have. Shouldn't
we, Chrissy?
We should.
I agree. So, go check out Wendy McClendon Covey in all of her forms and formats. She is a wonderful
human being and we really appreciate her coming on board. Let's take a break and we'll be back.
Well, thank the baby Jesus. Brian took a breath and now I will use this opportunity to let you
know that we've got a brand new phone number. That's right, it's 212-433-3TCB. And you can
text us anytime you want.
Or you can call and leave us a voicemail
and we might just use your message on the show.
Once Brian gets through all the messages
he missed last year, of course.
Anyway, you can also find and DM us on Instagram
at the commercial break and on TikTok at TCB Podcast.
And of course, all of our audio and video
is easily found on tcbpodcast.com.
Now I'm gonna thank G one more time that we have sponsors, so thank G and here they are.
This show is sponsored by BetterHelp.
It is hard to believe that half the year is gone and each year seems to go by faster and faster.
But at this halfway point, I think it's a good time to stop, look at some of the accomplishments. And of course, it's also important to check in and see what kind of progress
I can make for the other half of the year. One of the people who's been instrumental in helping me
do this and stay focused on the tasks that feel important in my life is my therapist. We talk about
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because it really does work.
Therapy can help you smooth out the rough spots
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I've said it before and I'll say it again,
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All right, now we're back.
Okay, here's the situation.
Let me explain it to you,
and we'll see what you think about this.
Seeking Sister Wives,
which is the only show on TLC
that I'm currently trying to keep up with,
even though there's lots of better TV out there.
Not to interrupt you, but I am just for one second.
I finished Baby Reindeer, so there you go.
Okay, so-
We'll talk about that later.
Well, no, give me two minutes dissertation.
What'd you think?
Yeah, I mean, it's crazy.
It's sad. Yeah. Yeah, I mean, it's crazy. It's sad. Yeah.
Yeah.
What do you mean it's sad? Someone's mentally ill. That's sad.
Well, that and the guy seemed to also have some problems.
I was talking about both of them.
Yeah, it was interesting, I guess.
Yeah.
Yeah. So, yeah, I finished it. I was like, damn it, I don't wanna finish this,
but Brian's making me.
Making you, I just wanted you to see it all the way through.
I was so excited about the show, I loved it.
It is sad, I mean, in general, it's a sad story,
but there are, it's certainly there are moments of-
I guess it turned out he's got a Netflix special,
so that's good.
Yeah, we'll see what he does for two, right?
I'm interested to see what he follows up with.
Yeah, because they did kind of leave it.
Yeah, I don't know that there'll be a baby reindeer too,
but they did leave it.
I mean, it's kind of an open-ended.
My take on the end of it, and spoiler alert,
is my take on the end of it,
is he meets this lady Martha,
who ends up becoming his stalker.
When she walks into a bar he's working at,
and she's had a bad day or whatever it is,
and he's the bartender, he gives her a cup of tea.
For free.
For free.
He gives her a cup of tea.
And that starts this year and a half long crazy...
Like three, four years.
Oh, three, four years.
I don't know how long was the timeline, but it starts this incredibly crazy story of her
stalking him intensely.
I mean, really intensely.
And his push and pull in his brain about being empathetic toward her,
or calling the police. Anyway, the very end scene, and this is the spoiler alert, fast forward 30
seconds, is he walks into a bar, he's just had a bad day, and a cute bartender gives him a cup of
beer, a glass of beer for free. And then it's kind of like, my interpretation of that is,
was he the sick one all along,
or was she the sick one all along,
or were they both just sick together
and needed each other in some way, shape or form?
Could it just have easily been him
who started stalking somebody, right?
Okay, so, Baby Reindeer, great, go watch it.
Now, it's back to Seeking Sister-Wise,
a much better television program.
This one's gonna win Academy Award.
I have not gotten back into that, but I will try.
Okay, well, Baby Reindeer is much better
than Seeking Sister Wives, I'm just giving you shit.
But at the end of the day, this one is super fascinating
because none of these couples work out.
None of them work out.
They're trying desperately to find Sister Wives,
but it's just a shit show all over the place,
as you would expect.
Yes. So, not saying it never works out, but it's just a shit show all over the place, as you would expect. Danielle Pletka Yes.
Jared Sarkissian So, not saying it never works out, I'm saying
on the television show, it doesn't work out. And that's probably for good reason because
TLC needs to produce a season number five and they're getting good ratings, right?
So of course, they're with people who probably never had a chance in the first place to find
a Sister Wife.
Okay, one of the storylines this year,
oh, excuse me, this is not Seeking Sister Wives,
this is Love in Paradise, 90 Day Fiance Love in Paradise.
Oh, you started Love in Paradise.
I started Love in Paradise.
Because I started it and I was like, nope,
not gonna get sucked in.
Okay, there's only one, there's only two storylines
that I carried out. So you started Love in Paradise.
And I just watch it for this one,
I literally fast forward to one or two storylines of this.
And here's the storyline.
Seeking Sister Wives is good too.
I'm sorry, I brain farted there.
There's a great storyline on that one too.
But I'll try and keep it to one TLC show
per episode of the commercial break.
So 90 Day Fiancé, the other way, Love in Paradise.
So essentially it's Americans going to meet their loved ones someplace else, rather than the normal 90-day fiance, which is someone
from abroad coming to the United States, going through the 90-day visa process.
So this one guy meets this girl, she lives in Malta, very beautiful woman, very seems
down to earth, lovely place to be in Malta. Who doesn't want to live in fucking Malta?
Yeah, gorgeous.
Yeah, gorgeous people all around, gorgeous location, wonderful country, or wonderful city.
This guy, guess what he does for a living?
What?
He is a sperm donor.
Okay, now, that's the important thing to know about.
I guess you could do that for a living.
He does it for a living.
He's been doing it for a living for a long time.
He does clean living.
He makes sure that his body's, he's not like a workout guy.
He's got a dad bod for sure.
But he makes sure that his body in general is clean, free from nicotine and tobacco,
free from trans fats and all this other stuff.
He eats a lot of lettuce and fish and he takes a lot of supplements to make his jizz extra
gooey and full of spermies, right?
He says that the average man has 190 million sperm per inch.
I don't even know how they measure that, whatever.
But he's got 380 million sperm per inch or whatever.
So he basically very braggadocious about his sperm count
and his ability to get women pregnant.
And here is the storyline, how he got here. He one day wrote, he one day read on Facebook
that one of his friends who was in a relationship was having a lot of trouble conceiving, and they
were having trouble conceiving because of low sperm count. Now, why you would put this on Facebook,
I don't know, but I have been on Facebook, and I know that people aren't ashamed of anything.
No.
They'll put anything on Facebook.
It's like that goddamn next door.
So he reads this post and he says back to his friend
on the Facebook post, hey, I'll give it a try.
You can have my sperm, right?
I got strong sperm.
I got strong swimmers.
I got a lot of them.
50 billion per inch.
50 billion per square meter.
I'll be the baby daddy.
I'll be the baby dad.
So weird, but okay.
Okay, right, exactly.
But hey, listen, I could see, you know,
someone was having some struggles.
Trying to help out.
I could see, you know, jizzing into a cup
and saying, God bless you.
I don't wanna talk to the kid, but God bless you.
But he offers to help, and that starts his life
as a professional sperm donor.
But the really weird part about this
is that he does most of his sperm donations
are done as live sperm donations,
having sex with the woman to conceive.
Live sperm donations.
Live sperm donations.
Not in a cup in a bathroom, not in a turkey baster like I have seen is done, but live
sperm donation.
Like in a medical setting?
No, in a medical setting, like in a Airbnb setting.
He flies around the world and he literally has sex with women to get his super jizz into
their uterus.
That's it. He's got 180 children
or something like that all around the world, and he gets paid to travel, fly, and do live
sperm donations. That's how he says it. I don't think there's an actual term for this. I think
it's just sex, right? But he calls it live sperm donation. Well, he's got this beautiful girl in Malta who he's now
fallen in love with because she wanted his sperm. But she, I don't think she wanted the live sperm
donation version of this, I think she just wanted sperm. But he has this whole Facebook page where
he connects with women around the world and then he goes and he has sex with them and he was showing
the cameras how he makes sure that they have the best chance to get pregnant.
He stands on the top of the bed, she lays her head upside down over the bed, you know,
over the bed.
She's basically hanging upside down over the bed.
And then he does his thing.
He ejaculates and then he keeps her there for 10 to 15 minutes before he pulls out with
her legs upside down in the air.
And I'm like, this guy is just a fucking creep. That's what he is. He's not a live sex sperm donation guy. He's just a fucking
douche running around pretending to get girls pregnant so that he can have sex with whomever
he wants. And he probably charges $2,500 for the pleasure. He is a male prostitute. That's
what he is. What a life in another world, in another universe.
This would have been my, this could have been my superhero moment.
I don't know what my sperm count is, but I think I'm doing okay.
I got 30 children.
I think I'm doing all right.
Well, not anymore, but-
Not anymore.
I have zero sperm.
But I'd be willing to give it a, you know, I told Astrid, I said, listen, times are tough
right now.
You know, podcast is chugging along on zero gas.
Podcast is chugging along on zero gas.
You know, I could give blood, I could give sperm, I could do live sperm donations, to
which she said, I don't know what that is, but no.
I have no idea what you're talking about, but no.
No.
Live sperm donations.
This is an incredible thing that I did not know existed. And I'm
dying to hear a story about, like, I'm dying to hear if someone in the audience has done
this and knows of somebody who's done this, has been the recipient of a live sperm donation.
I would love, love to hear your story. You must text us and let us know if you're out there,
if this is something you've been a part of or have heard someone close to you has been a part of,
because I want to know what the minutia of this is. How, I don't know, I'm just like befuddled
about how someone would be convinced to do a live sperm donation. I mean, I guess that is the
traditional way of getting pregnant, right?
Nicole Soule-Northam It is, but...
Jared Soule-Northam Would you do it with a stranger?
Nicole Soule-Northam No.
Jared Soule-Northam And he's not a... Listen, I'm no Brad Pitt either. I get it. I'm no
Giovanni Robisi. But at the end of the day, if that's even a guy, I'm...
Nicole Soule-Northam Sounds like it should be.
Jared Soule-Northam Sounds like a guy.
Nicole Soule-Northam Like a romantic guy.
Jared Soule-Northam Yeah, I think he's an actor.
Giovanni Robice.
I'm no, you know, good looking super hunk.
But at the end of the day, I think I can weigh myself sometimes if like the extremes are
like I look at Brad Pitt and I go definitely not me.
Right. But then I look at I don't know who could I look at? I don't want to make
fun of any…
Careful here.
Yeah, I want to be careful here. I'll be real careful here. I look at Jack Black, one
of my favorites, definitely a lovely guy, very nice guy, but I go, I might be a little
bit better looking at Jack Black, right? Okay. So I look at this live sperm donation guy,
and I go, I think I got him beat. I think I got that guy beat. I think I probably could have made
a good career out of this, Chrissy. One where I don't have to update my LinkedIn profile.
There's no clocking in or clocking out necessarily. There's dicking in and dicking out,
but there's no clocking in or clocking out. And free travel all around the world.
What more could you ask for?
This guy is literally living the life.
He's getting paid to have sex.
And then he has none of the responsibility of being a father and all of the joy of thinking
about it.
I mean, all of the joy of imagining he's a father. Yeah, it seemed like this may have worked
a little bit better though, without ancestry.com.
True.
Because he's gonna have a lot of people coming to him.
He's gonna have a lot of people, and what do you say?
Mm-hmm.
Hi, daddy.
Yeah.
Yeah, listen, son, I know you think that I'm your dad, and I probably am, given that I was paid to
have sex with your mother and then donated my sperm to her.
And genetically, it says you're my dad.
And genetically, we share the same DNA. But at the end of the day, I didn't care about you then,
and I don't care about you now. I just thought your mom was hot.
It was just a job.
Yeah, it was just a job. You can find anything on that Facebook marketplace.
You can find anything on that Facebook marketplace.
I haven't really explored it, but everybody's talking about it.
Oh, we just sold a bunch of stuff over the weekend.
Selling the entire house.
Yeah.
Selling the entire house.
Sperm donations, blood donations, selling everything that we own.
And we did it.
And the local police department here has a safe drop-off area.
Oh, they do?
They do.
Oh, that's a good idea.
Yeah, they have a safe drop-off.
Good for the police.
Yeah.
Because I know I've bought something off of, what was it, Craigslist one time, and it was
like meeting in a parking lot at Best Buy.
So I'm glad that there's safe places now.
Yeah, that's right.
You don't want to meet somebody for a $100 item
at the back of the Walmart, you know what I'm saying?
So I'm glad they have that drop-off zone for Facebook.
It's literally called the Facebook Marketplace drop-off zone.
So I'm wondering if I'm a sperm donor,
if I could live donate sperm
in the front of the police department and just say,
hey, it's your safe zone. I could live donate sperm in the front of the police department and just say, I'm,
Hey, it's your safe zone. It's your safe zone for me to drop off my goods. And she's just got to hang out upside down for 10 to 15 minutes. Don't mind her. See that mattress over there. That's
about to get changed. What if I showed up? We're going to use that. Popped open the hatchback,
pulled out a single mattress.
There's like a little park area in front of the, it's just tiny.
There's probably some sicko out there that wants to buy the mattress after you do the
live sperm donation.
Oh yeah, well, maybe it's the woman.
That's a double, double win.
It's a win-win.
She says, hey, that's gold right there.
Don't want to lose any of that.
I'm taking that sheet home if you don't mind.
So Astrid, of course, she's selling the stuff because I don't know the
first thing about anything. So it's just better that Astrid handles stuff, if I'm being honest.
All stuff. I can go out and play with the kids. I'm good at that. So, you know, this weekend,
every once in a while it would be like, hey honey, can you meet the guy at whatever? Hey,
sweetie, can you meet the girl at whatever? Yeah, yeah, it's 10 minutes down the road. So, I jump in the car on one of these drop-offs and I'm dropping off
a baby bag, like a backpack specifically made for you to carry around your small, little bastard
children from your live sperm donation. And then you have-
Like the front pouch thing?
No, no, no, the back one. Well well we did sell the front pouch one too like the
carrier the baby carrier yeah this is an actual backpack where you put the baby
in it no it's made for like the bottles and it's got a million yeah it's one of
these designer things that everybody has to have and it's way too expensive
because it's just a backpack but they call it a baby yes it's got an extra
pocket for nipples and I don't know who fucking knows, you know, any reason to charge you more money. And so, but Astrid being the, you know, incredible
human being she is kept it neat, keeps it neat, keeps it clean. Now it's clear we're
not having any more children. So she thinks, Hey, there's lots of ladies who love to have
this. Yeah, I like this whole idea of recycling, upcycling. I do. And we gave a lot of stuff away to the women's shelter too, like stuff that...
We've done that.
Yeah, some stuff we sold, but then some stuff we gave away, because we thought it would be useful
to the ladies who are obviously having a tough time right now.
Yes.
So, and they have children too, which just makes it like double whammy. So she says,
hey, can you meet this lady? Drop off the bag. Okay, I'll meet this lady. So I say, go to the safe exchange,
go to the safe jizz exchange area.
And I get there, I pull up right next to her.
We're both in these SUVs.
Well, she turns out to be quite the chatty patty,
which is not what I was bargaining for.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, I just wanted to go down like a drug deal, literally.
Here's the bag, give me my money.
Yeah, I'm not here to have a full conversation.
But of course she's a chatty patty.
And what are you gonna do?
Now you're stuck in front of a police station
looking strangely like a drug deal
and you're handing her literally a bag
that by the way Astrid put paper in.
So it looks like it's the bag is completely full
of something.
So here we are through the windows
exchanging this whole thing.
And she, and so as a part of the,
just being a human being and having a
conversation, I say, oh, enjoy the bag. Are you expecting? Is there another one on the way?
Is there a kid at home? And she goes, oh, no, no, no, no. And I go, oh, okay. She goes, it's just
all the fashion right now to have these backpacks when you're hiking. And I was like, oh, really?
have these backpacks when you're hiking." And I was like, oh, really? Yes, it's got so many pockets. It's so perfect. It looks great. It's totally useful. I just love it. I've been looking
for it, but I don't want to buy it new because it's too expensive. I applaud you for that.
But people are carrying around baby backpacks as just regular backpacks because they're fashionable.
Yes, all my friends have them and I'm just dying for one. And I was like, oh, okay, where are you going hiking?
Well, not like hiking in the traditional sense.
I mean, like when I'm out in Charleston
or St. Simons Island, and I'm like, oh, like rich hiking.
You mean like walking in front of retail stores.
Just walking around.
With your thousand dollar baby bag on your back.
At least it's used.
I mean, unbelievable.
Listen, use the backpack for whatever the fuck you want.
I'm not here to tell you.
I don't think there's any law against using a baby backpack.
It has a backpack.
I guess I was thinking too,
like mothers maybe that had them
are now reusing them to go hiking with.
But the hiking and the walking?
Having FOMO over your,
over what kind of backpack you have.
It happens. FOMO over the backpack? That kind of backpack you have. It happens.
FOMO over the backpack?
That's how the Stanley Cup went crazy.
That's how anything goes crazy.
Oh yeah, we all decided to put that down.
I've noticed Stanley hasn't been in the news in a minute.
Beanie babies, whatever it is, there's always something out there that people want and then
it kind of becomes just a thing.
You have to have it.
After the beanie baby situation, I am never going to call the death to any collectible
or fad because it's really not.
I told you I went to that cabbage patch kid fucking place
where the creepy babies just fly out of the lettuce
and your kids are asking you all kinds of questions
about where babies come from
and why do they come out of lettuce.
And I'm like, well, it kind of looks like lettuce
when birth is actually happening.
You don't wanna do that.
Don't look. Don't
look into the eye of the sun. But, you know, I go there, there's hundreds of people in
that fucking place. They're all, it's all the rage to get a cabbage patch kit again.
I thought we got rid of that in the eighties. Now all of a sudden, whole new generation
of people with the cabbage patch. So I guess I can't fault the lady for wanting the backpack
too much. And at least she's buying it used, at least she's being frugal about it.
She is, yeah.
She's saying, hey, let me not destroy the earth anymore.
I'll take a used one, no problem.
But it made me think we should have sold that for a lot more money.
I know.
We should have posted it in the Charleston Facebook group, because apparently there's
a lot of people hiking around Charleston.
She goes, oh no, Charleston, walking around Charleston, like walking around Charleston. She goes, oh no, Charleston, I'm walking around Charleston. Like, walking around Charleston.
That's just like, flat, like, you know, becoming more and more under the sea, I think.
Yes, it is a city literally under the sea. They had to build a wall to keep the sea out,
number one. Number two, there isn't a nature trail to be found within 10 miles of Charleston,
unless you want to be in the swamp, of course.
And so I just thought that's an interesting way
to describe hiking as middle of Charleston.
I know, she could have at least said like,
North Georgia mountains and just gone with that.
I know, that's what I would have said.
I would have been like, I'm hiking the app.
I'm in and out of the app in a couple of days.
You know, the app trail, app trail.
Where we got lost at the beginning.
We got lost in the App Trail,
but we didn't even make it half a mile down the App Trail.
We were trying to even go on the App Trail.
If we only had the baby bag,
we probably would have survived.
We could have put some extra supplies in there.
Unbelievable.
All right, let's take a break.
We'll talk more about our expeditions
and we'll talk more about the Appalachian Trail when we get back.
What? Oh, hi, it's Christina again, here to remind you to go to tcbpodcast.com for
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So let's be clear, when it comes to shipping internationally,
can I provide trade documents electronically?
Mm-hmm.
The answer is FedEx.
Okay.
But what about estimating duties and taxes on my shipments?
How do I find all the...
Also FedEx.
Impressive.
Is there a regulatory specialist I can ask about?
FedEx.
Oh.
But let's say that...
FedEx.
What?
FedEx.
Thanks.
No more questions.
Always your answer for international shipping. FedEx, where now meets next.
And do do do do do, we're back with you. Did you ever go on the Appalachian Trail besides that one
and a half miles you went with me? No.
No? But I've known people that have hiked it.
Oh, I've known people that have hiked it too. Yeah.
Good for them. My dad hiked it.
I hiked it for two and a half days. Part of it. Part of it? Yeah. You need to go all the way up
and all the way down. Yeah, that's a commitment. That's a task. You gotta have like six months of
your life dedicated to that. You have to have no job, sponsors, rich parents, something. I don't
know. Or no parents. I'm not sure, but I've known people who have done it all the way up and all the
way down.
And they were just like different human beings when they came back.
I mean, they were strange human beings in the first place, but when they came back,
they were like really in it.
You know, there's an interesting statistic that none of the guys who went to the moon
ended up married to their first wife after they went to the moon.
And some people believe that there is this like real psychological switch that flips when you go so far out there
and we're talking about space or wherever and you spend this time with yourself, some
switch flips and it's really hard to relate to other people who haven't also done that.
And so, I felt that way about some of the people that went to the Appalachian Trail
that I knew, even some that just went for a month or two, didn't even go all the way up and all the way down.
I hiked it for two and a half days and I came back. We were going to do it for two weeks,
I made it two and a half days. That's it. Because I was like, fuck this, I'm not interested.
I like a good day hike. But anything over six hours for me is like, okay.
I take six hours a day. By the time I was like, you know, 14 missed 14 showers, I was
really feeling not so great about myself. I had a raging case of, I don't know, you
know, apple app ass, I guess is what they call it. I had a raging case of app ass. And
I just wasn't, I just wasn't cut out for it. I'm not cut out for much physically. As I've
said before, I am no high performance anything, let alone athlete or trail rider.
That's just not me.
But I was with these, this group who really were dedicated to this whole thing.
It's mythological to them, right?
To go up the Appalachian Trail, even just a little bit and come back down.
But the people who made it all the way up or all the way up and all the way back down,
which I only knew one guy.
He was like 20 years old when he did it.
He was gone for, I don't know what it was, six, seven months.
Yeah.
It's a long time.
And you have to do it during a certain time of year and you rely on the
kindness of strangers and occasionally you can find a telephone, a hotel or a
warm bed, but most of the time you're just out there in the middle of the
wilderness and good luck if anything happens, you know, back then when I knew
the guy who did it, there weren't like satellite cell
phones.
You didn't have coverage in every corner of the United States.
So you went out there and where would you charge it anyway?
Right?
Where would you charge the fucking phone?
I guess now you have like, you know, battery packs and all this sun.
What are those things?
Solar.
Solar?
Is that what they call it these days?
That the kids are calling it?
Solar panels.
You have solar panels that can charge your phone and all that shit.
But back then, literally no communication until you got to
the next spot where there might be a payphone or a telephone that someone would let you use.
And this one particular dude that I knew that went up and back, when he came back, he was a
different human being. It was hard to relate to him. It's like he had touched the face of God,
and we were all
plebes waiting for him to come back. I saw him at a party one time and he had these long beard.
Jared. Oh yeah, the beard is definitely.
Jared. Permanent, B.O. You know what I'm talking about? Permanent. Because it just baked into his
skin. The body odor just baked into his skin. So, he smelled like, I don't know, like a Grateful
Dead concert in the 60s. And so, I saw him at a party and I'm all drunk and I got a beer in my hand, you know, smoking
cigarettes, two pagers and a cell phone.
What's up, man?
You having some Appalachian trail?
It was life-defining, my brother.
I'm holding space for you.
I don't know what the fuck that means.
You want a Bud Light?
No, I'm staying away from the pleasures of the skin
and the earth. Okay, whatever, bro. I'm going to get a Bud Light and I'll come back and
smoke a camera light with you." I mean, he was like a different human being in a otherworldly
way.
I can imagine that that happens.
It does. How are you gone for six or seven months with limited, if any, human interaction in the bears, in
the snakes, taking a shit? I mean, listen, just waking up in the morning and having your
morning pest conference over a bunch of kudzu with insects crawling in and out of your anus
and then having to bury it so the jaguars don't get you or whatever, it's got to be,
after a while, it's just got gotta change your mentality about life in general,
about earth and our place here and all that. I wish, just like the guys who climb the towers,
I wish I had that kind of fortitude in some way, shape or form, any kind of fortitude to do
anything that dangerous change. I mean, some people would say like, oh, you did ayahuasca and you go
to these weekend retreats and you went to the parties in the woods. Yeah, I was always
15 minutes from air conditioning. Like, I didn't do anything revolutionary.
Right.
These people did. I also watch, I watch a lot of these videos of the guys and girls
who go across, they sail across the Pacific Ocean or some great distance by themselves
in little dinky ass sailboats. There's this one guy
who's on a trip right now, and when he can, he uploads videos to YouTube. He's got one of those,
like, you know, I don't know, satellite cell phones or whatever. Oh my God! This dude went
from chunky monkey, like, you know, full dad bod, like his tattoos were stretching, you know what I'm
saying? In three months transformed his entire body, he's like,
he's like a Buddha now, he knows everything, he's an old man in the sea, he's talking to the whales,
he's calling dolphins and they're pulling his rig, you know, across the ocean. I mean, it's
unbelievable. It's unbelievable. And I think to myself, I am so jealous of this guy and his
pursuits in life, when all I do is wake up, walk 20 feet, talk on the microphone
for an hour, shut it down, and complain about everything in life. And this guy's out in the
middle of the ocean with the whales and the cargo ships and everything else bad that can happen in
the middle of an ocean without any communication or human contact. And he's just loving it. He's
like, tomorrow I've sailed to Bora Bora. And I'm like, oh,
that's nice. Tomorrow I, you know, change another dirty diaper. Tomorrow I talk about
live sperm donation on the commercial break.
Well, he also maybe doesn't have 30 children.
No.
Or maybe he does.
Maybe he does.
And that's why he's left.
Well, listen, if there's anything that's gonna get me motivated to get on that cross,
transatlantic sailing by myself, it's the 30 children.
I'm telling you what.
There you go.
Keep watching those videos.
That can be your motivation.
Oh, Christy, we just need to do-
We'll check in with you from your boat.
We need to do one thing like this before we get too old to do one thing like this.
You know what I'm saying?
I think we got a good 20, 25 years left that we could probably tackle one of these things. Commercial break, live from the
Pacific Ocean for 119 nights. We can catch fish, we can swim with the dolphins. You know what's
startlingly, I guess, scary when I watch these videos of the people that are crossing the Pacific or
the Atlantic is when they do anything out on their deck, they have two, not one, two
carabiners with lines attached to them so that if they fall off the side, they don't
lose the boat.
Yeah, that's a good idea.
That is, but just think about the minutia of that.
Think about the reality of that, that you have to.
Lock yourself to the boat.
Think about storms that you're going through, waves.
All of it. Yeah.
All of it.
Whales pushing you up.
Oh, the whales are killing people out in Spain.
What the fuck is going on with that?
I wouldn't even know that.
The killer whales?
Killer whales, the big sperm whales
and the killer whales, the blue whales.
They are in Spain,
some parts of the Mediterranean right now,
they are capsizing yachts,
50 foot, 60 foot, 70 foot yachts.
They're like eating the propellers, eating the propellers.
They're like, you bunch of rich assholes.
Yeah, you bunch of rich assholes.
We're sick of you driving around.
Get out.
Get out.
There's too many of you.
Yeah.
So I read this article.
I was gonna talk about this on another episode.
What's the show on Bravo?
Blow Deck.
Blow Deck, yeah.
Way, way below.
We've seen too many seasons.
That's right.
Get out of here.
I don't blame those whales.
I just don't blame those whales. I just don't blame those whales.
But then like some whale psychiatrist or some whale psychiatrist, whatever he is, behavioralist,
he said that a lot of people are interpreting it that the whales are attacking the boats.
Well, yeah, when they capsize the fucking boat, it seems like they're attacking them.
He says, no, they're just playing with the boat.
That's what they're doing.
They're playing with the boat.
Oh, how nice.
How reassuring.
I don't care if they're playing or if they're attacking. I don't want them capsizing my boat
in the middle of the Mediterranean. That's just not what I want. So anyway, it is like the startling
realization that you cannot get disconnected from the boat in any way, shape or form, that you must
be attached to it 24 hours a day, seven days a week, is really, really scary. I mean, who in their
right mind thinks that's a good, how do you sleep at night? You know, how do you sleep
at night? But I think if we had each other to do this, then we could probably survive
it together. And we could do episodes of the commercial break. We would probably, someone
would kill someone.
Live from the Pacific Ocean.
Yeah, live from the Pacific Ocean. Chrissy's not here today. I threw her overboard, but
I'm hoping I'll find her soon.
I thought I heard her screaming in the middle of the night.
Meanwhile, I'm off riding a dolphin.
Hey Brian!
Meanwhile, you're attached to the Caribbean.
I'm having a great time.
Chrissy ends up in a wahoo.
Yeah.
Hey Brian! Good to see you!
No, no hard feelings about getting thrown off.
Yeah, exactly. It was meant to be. Strange, no hard feelings about getting thrown up.
It was meant to be.
Strange thing happened.
This dolphin picked me up.
Yeah, a pack of bottlenecks picked me up, drove me to Oahu, and on the way we found
Mexican cartel bags of money and cocaine.
I love that shipwreck that everybody's looking for. They took me to it.
I found it.
I've got this pouch of gold coins.
One dolphin opened his mouth and old pirate booty came out of it!
It was amazing!
Rays! Sparkling everywhere!
So hey, why don't you go ahead and get another night in the boat?
I'll let you anchor wherever you want to.
I gotta get back to my brand new house being built next to Oprah!
Talk to you later!
I heard the latest episode of the commercial break! Just as shitty as it always was!
See you later!
Keep going!
Keep going!
Right off into the mystic!
You're doing a great job.
Please, Chrissy, I just need some water and a steak and a new microphone.
Dolphins made me sign contract. Said, don't give any of that to Brian.
They really don't like you.
I know, they took off the back half of my boat.
Brian rides in on an old piece of wood
with like one of those orange preservers on,
looking like Tom Hanks.
Oh, did it. Yep, that's the way it's gonna go. Maybe we should start on the Chattahoochee before
we tackle the Pacific. Yeah, maybe we, maybe I should be able to swim the entire length of my pool
before I try and get out. Yeah, let's start at your pool.
Yeah, we'll put a practice boat out there. Let's spend one night and see if we kill
each other. Listen, I know that I can't even get guests to come up on our
computer right. I'm sure I wouldn't handle a sailboat, okay? Because one thing
is common with all these people who are sailing, doing the Appalachian Trail, all
the videos that are online, one thing is they all all these people who are sailing doing the Appalachian Trail all the videos that are online
One thing is they have all have in common. They're all fucking MacGyver all
You have to be because everything goes wrong. Everything goes wrong. It always does
Yeah, like, you know sailing is not an easy thing to do just in the lake
Let alone in the notion for a cap size one went on a 4h camp
Really?
Yeah.
Most likely to drown.
Chris is most likely to drown.
Yep.
Yeah, I don't.
Yeah, it was fun.
I like boating, but I don't have the best of experiences.
The one yacht I've ever been allowed on in my life,
my kids spilled red apple, red grape juice all over the white carpet.
Yeah, it was fun while it lasted, Brian.
Fun while it lasted.
All right.
Well, I hope you all enjoyed your Memorial Day weekend.
Yeah.
I know we did.
We didn't do anything.
Stayed right here.
Another four day stretch at the house. We'll just add on to the 180 day stretch
I've already got going.
One of these days.
One of these days.
I keep telling myself, one of these days, Chrissy,
we're going to be rich.
Yes.
Yes.
I have firm belief.
I have firm belief.
Here, look.
I have the first dollar we ever made right there under the board.
Oh, nice. Right there, signed by me.
It's not the first dollar we ever made. We haven't made a dollar yet.
I loaned myself a dollar to pretend I made the first dollar ever on the commercial break.
All right, you know how it goes. We'd love you on the show, especially if you have been the recipient of a live sperm donation.
212-433-3TCB.
That's 212-433-3822.
Questions, comments, concerns, content ideas.
We take them all at that phone number.
So many people have been texting in.
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We love it when you text us.
We got so many text messages over the holiday weekend. At least I had something to do. I was responding to our fans and our friends.
Thank you for texting, dear audience.
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Thanks again to Wendy McClendon Covey.
Go listen to her episode and follow her on her socials.
Okay, Chrissy, I guess that's all I can do for today.
I think so.
But I'll tell you that I love you.
I love you.
Best to you. Best to you. Best to you.
Best to you out there in the podcast universe. Until next time, Chrissy and I always say, we do say, and we must say,
Goodbye! I'm gonna be a good boy You