The Nateland Podcast - #128 Texas
Episode Date: December 14, 2022Nate's headed to Texas this week so we thought it would be a great time to learn about the Lone Star State. While most Texas historians focus on the Alamo or the JFK assassination, the guys decide t...o shift their focus to AstroTurf, the Midland Man, and Brian's family vacation to Alabama.   Podcast produced by Nate & Laura Bargatze Recording & Editing by Genovations Media https://www.natebargatze.com https://www.allthingscomedy.com https://www.genovationsmedia.com Email - Nateland@NateBargatze.com Helix - HelixSleep.com/Nate  Helix is offering up to 200 dollars off all mattress orders AND two free pillows for our listeners. Go to HelixSleep.com/NATE. With Helix, better sleep starts now.  Athletic Greens - AthleticGreens.com/Nate  Right now, it’s time to reclaim your health and arm your immune system with convenient, daily nutrition — especially heading into the flu and cold season! It’s just one scoop in a cup of water every day. That’s it! No need for a million different pills and supplements to look out for your health. To make it easy, Athletic Greens Is going to give you a FREE 1 year supply of immune-supporting Vitamin D AND 5 FREE travel packs with your first purchase. All you have to do is visit ATHLETIC GREENS.com/NATE. Again, that is ATHLETIC GREENS.com/NATE to take ownership over your health and pick up the ultimate daily nutritional insurance!  Vuori - VuoriClothing.com/Nate  Vuori is an investment in your happiness. For our listeners they are offering 20% off your first purchase. Get yourself some of the most comfortable and versatile clothing on the planet at VUORICLOTHING.COM/NATE that’s VUORICLOTHING.COM/NATE Not only will you receive 20% off your first purchase, but enjoy free shipping on any U.S. orders over $75 and free returns. Go to VUORICLOTHING.COM/NATE and discover the versatility of Vuori Clothing.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, I'm Jillian.
And I'm Patrick.
And together we make the podcast True Crime Obsessed.
If you love documentaries the way we love documentaries,
you might be interested in our show
because we recap all the documentaries that you're watching.
We've covered just about every true crime case you can imagine.
We're talking the Hatchet Wielding Hitchhiker,
the Ted Bundy tapes.
What else?
The Turpin 13.
Yes.
The amazing sisters who basically tell the story.
The girl in the picture.
Yes.
All the documentaries you love to talk about with your friends. We're your friends now. We're the friends you talk about that stuff with. Yes. With the amazing sisters who basically tell the story, the girl in the picture. Yes. All the documentaries you love to talk about with your friends.
We're your friends now.
We're the friends you talk about that stuff with.
Yeah.
We're True Crime Obsessed Podcast.
Stitcher us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen.
Hello, folks, and hey, bear.
Welcome to the Nate Land Podcast.
I'm Nate Bargetti, sitting with Brian Bates, Aaron Weber, Dusty Slay.
Hey, I'm Jillian.
And I'm Patrick.
And together we make the podcast True Crime Obsessed.
If you love documentaries the way we love documentaries,
you might be interested in our show because we recap all the
documentaries that you're watching. We've covered just about
every true crime case you can imagine.
We're talking the Hatchet-Wielding Hitchhiker, the Ted Bundy
tapes. What else? The Turpin 13.
Yes. With the amazing sisters who basically tell the story.
The girl in the picture. Yes. All the
documentaries you love to talk about with your friends.
We're your friends now. We're the friends you talk about that stuff with.
Yeah.
We're True Crime Obsessed Podcast.
Stitch us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen.
There we go.
Welcome, everybody.
Excited to be here.
You know, we're all here.
Aaron, you're back.
It's good to be back, man.
You got your passport?
Yeah. all here aaron you're back it's good to be back man yeah your passport yeah i had a corporate gig
in cancun mexico that's been on the calendar for 11 months so of course i didn't think to get a
passport until two weeks ago yeah um plenty of time i applied online i paid for the expedited
shipping i paid for the expedited processing it was scheduled to get in the day before i left
and then i get a
notification that my picture has been rejected because i'm they say you're not allowed to wear
a military uniform yeah in the picture you're wearing camo i mean look at the picture this is
the picture they go yeah that looks straight military that's crazy dude there's some other
reasons i should have been rejected.
Camo's the least of the problems. So I called and I'm like, this is not a
military uniform. I'm just wearing it.
It's an active shooter uniform.
They're just like, how unhappy are you?
Come talk to us.
Well, they tell you not to smile in these pictures, right?
They say a neutral expression.
And I remember asking the guy.
That's less than neutral. You went the other way.
Yeah.
Turn that smile upside down smile that is enough yeah i asked the guy should i take this off and he was like nah you're good
so that guy rejected so i missed the podcast at the gas station they took the picture hey you
think this is gonna get through he's like ah it's fine dude you guy doesn't care at all if it gets through. I don't. Like, he's like, I don't. You're fine.
So I had to fly to a passport agency and get a passport in person.
And the only appointment available in the entire country was Buffalo, New York.
So during the podcast last week, I was flying to Buffalo to get a passport.
Got it in in the nick of time.
And now I'm back.
Look at you.
That's. Look at you. That's, yeah, I mean, I think it shows some life in your picture.
You're not allowed to smile, though.
You shouldn't frown.
You think that's a frown?
I mean, honestly, when I said act, like if they showed that,
we are on the look for this man.
No one would bat an eye.
They would be like typical. They would be like typical.
They would be like, how did they let him out?
Yeah.
That is the picture they use for a missing person every time.
Well, yeah, but the other person's missing.
We know this man.
This man took the.
Oh, yes.
If they posted that and said, we're missing this guy,
no one's looking for that guy.
Right there.
There they go.
That guy knows what he's doing.
He's out. Yeah. He wants to be be missing he's drinking at a motel six yeah
yeah he chose it uh well i'm glad you got it thanks man uh we uh i was in your town
montgomery last night gump town dude gump town we. Cause I, it was, it's only like four hours home.
And so I didn't realize that until like last night.
And then it was like,
Oh wait,
I was like,
all right.
Cause usually I wake up on the bus and then I get out and we do the podcast.
But then we,
I could get home last night.
I got home like one 45,
but it was like,
we left.
I don't ever leave immediately,
but I mean,
I walked off stage and walked to the bus,
and we had the bus pointed to the street and just was gone.
It was pretty nice.
Do you want to hang in Montgomery for the night?
I mean, we were going to because I thought it was –
if it shows at 8, if it gets pushed –
I don't want to get home at like 4.
Yeah. I'd rather just sleep on the bus and get home at like 4 yeah I'd rather just sleep
on the bus
and get home at like
9.30 or 10
or something
but
last night I was like
oh we'll get home
at like 1.45
so we
yeah
I walked straight
right on
and just left
it's pretty
they said Mick Jagger
does it
pretty cool
yeah
that's a real Mick Jagger
move yeah
yeah just get right out of there Mick Jagger Montgomery yeah I was about to say, that's a real Mick Jagger move, yeah.
Yeah.
Just get right out of there.
Mick Jagger, Montgomery.
Yeah, I was going to say, what does he do?
He just walks right on the bus? They said Mick Jagger.
I've never left.
I don't like, I would normally not leave like this,
but I was just like, realized we could get home,
and it was like, oh.
But Mick Jagger will, like, he says goodnight.
The band keeps playing.
He walks off stage, walks to a car, and then once the car gets out,
they turn the lights up, shows over, and then the people leave.
And he's already long gone.
Oh, he's already a few blocks away.
I mean, there's people that probably, he might be back,
he might be at a restaurant before you're even out of the building.
He's on a helicopter out of there, for sure.
I always heard there was like Carlin would do it and then Cosby.
I heard like they would have a – they might have been in Seinfeld.
I heard that too.
I don't know what that –
I think it's a movie comedian.
They talk about it.
I don't know.
Maybe it was somewhere else, but they would leave.
I mean, they have a car waiting.
And so when they say goodnight, they walk to the car.
And they would have like a bet between the two.
Like who could get out there the fastest.
Who could get out there fastest.
I feel like Ryan Hamilton and Mark Norman told us that Seinfeld's kind of like that.
He's out of there pretty quick.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think I've heard, too, like Seinfeld has kind of like that. He's out of there pretty quick. Yeah.
Yeah, I think I've heard, too, like Seinfeld has done one where he's got a plane.
Yeah.
And, like, as you're taking off, you can still see people leaving the building.
Wow.
Yeah, it feels abrupt.
I mean, I guess I get, like, if you're touring for 40 years, you know,
you could be like, all right, let's get out of here.
I used to work with this guy who managed the Buffalo Bills stadium,
not the team, but the stadium. And he said in the off season, they would bring in big acts.
And this was probably, I don't know, 70s.
And they brought in the Rolling Stones and said they wanted all their money
in cash.
And they took the cash to a helicopter pad.
And the moment the show was over they got they
got their money and got on the helicopter i just flew right out with like you know thousands in
cash oh it might be maybe millions yeah yeah like hundreds of thousands at least a lot of money
yeah yeah that's yeah that's weird how do you know that guy story like that's got to be true
well he was he played for the Buffalo Bills in the 60s,
and I worked with him for a long time.
He was in retirement age.
OJ?
He said he was around when OJ was there,
but he played football when Jack Kemp, who was Bob Dole's running mate,
was quarterback at the Buffalo Bills.
But he was my boss. as stew barber is his name he was my boss as a pesticide guy yeah he was great yeah yeah that's
fun yeah we did uh uh yeah you always know more football stuff than i you look like i know you
always surprise me yeah i mean i like football I don't like a lot of sports.
Yeah.
But I do like football.
Yeah.
It's always just like I don't think you're ever going to know who these people are.
Oh, yeah.
But it's got to be a weird way like that.
It's not just from watching SportsCenter.
Well, I used to love SportsCenter, but it is not fun anymore.
You know what I mean?
It is like a sports podcast.
I want to see highlights. Yeah. That's all I want, a sports podcast. I want to see
highlights. That's all I want.
Some sports highlights.
Sports Center's got it.
I don't watch it much anymore. It's just too much.
It's when they started standing up.
Oh, yeah.
That's when it went downhill for me.
Stay behind the desk.
Everyone started doing that.
Yeah, what are you standing around for?
They started getting... They are the behind the desk oh yeah everyone started doing your role yeah why are you standing well they
started getting well that's that's they started getting like they are the celebrity and so like
that's what i always think with uh media journalism some of that is like once they
want to be the celebrity then you're kind of it's kind of not going to go good because you're
uh you know it's like i mean they're famous i like i have trouble watching it like i want to
see just the highlights i then they also throw too many stories in it's like too many like
i see you'd be at midnight and then it's like some sad video and you're like dude i'm
i'm just trying to see who won what game and i gotta watch a 25 minute video of some team
game and I got to watch a 25 minute video of some team.
It's very contrived.
Yeah.
All reality shows.
When I did Last Comic Standing, they were like, what would this mean to you to win this?
What would this mean?
I was like, I don't know.
It'd be great to headline clubs all over the place.
You know, they said it like your heart and souls in this, right? I'm like, no, I just would like to be the funniest.
What would it mean to look your parents in the eye and say, mom and dad, I did it. like your heart and souls in this right i'm like no i just would like to be the funniest what would
it mean to look your parents in the eye yeah and say mom and dad i did it they would go my parents
would go what what'd you do yeah i told my dad i was on netflix he goes oh that's great and then
he goes what's netflix again yeah they're uh i think that stuff's going away like people don't want you just like you just like
just to have the competition i don't need the drama yeah like you i think i mean laura watches
survivor she's watched it forever and but i think she even could fast forward some of the drama of
it because it's like i want to just see the compete and maybe a tiny bit of it, but I don't need.
You ever watch The Great British Bake Off?
No.
On Netflix?
Uh-uh.
It's a competition show, and it's British.
Sounds like it.
I get to say that.
It's British, but it's fascinating the difference
between American television and British television
because it's a competition show.
But you know nothing about these people.
They give you like a five-second look into their their life and then it's all just about it's fun it's encouraging there's it's not overly dramatic it's totally the opposite of what you're talking
oh yeah yeah it's fun yeah i like that and you get to see some nice cakes yeah you like that
i like cake week i'll tell you that much yeah Yeah. Biscuit week, not so much, but I'm into the cakes.
Why don't you like biscuit?
Oh, like the cookie biscuits?
Cookie.
Yeah, they call them biscuits.
You don't like cookies?
If there were regular biscuits, I'd be into them.
That would be fun.
Regular biscuits?
Yeah.
But cookies.
You're the judge of that, and you're like, well, I'm just disappointed how loosely y'all
used the word biscuit over here.
You know you had a nice
Montgomery Alabama young boy come judge this yeah and I expected this is not what I expected
chocolate chip biscuit I don't like this and they'd go you don't know nothing about cookies
you don't like cookies no I'm into cookies too yeah yeah but I prefer a biscuit yeah
cakes are I think I've uh I enjoy cakes more now than I ever did.
Why is that?
I don't know.
You eating less of them than you ever did?
I don't think I ever was on a stretch of them where I was just on a run of eating cakes.
But I think I just like, you know, nice cake is nice.
You just appreciate them.
In a certain age?
In a certain age it's their age you feel like you're healthier now you eat less junk food that maybe you appreciate it
more because it's kind of a rare i love it a treat you feel like you've earned it in a way
uh yeah i mean i don't know if i've earned it but it's uh it's it's yeah it is nice we have a cake
like someone's birthday on the road and it's's always nice. Yeah. It's always nice.
A little slice.
I mean, I could eat so – cake and ice cream, I've liked.
It's fun.
Yeah, that's very fun.
It's a good time.
Yeah.
It is fun.
You get a little bit of each and a forkful.
It's really good.
I like ice cream and pie, too.
I'm a big pie fan.
All pies?
I like pecan pie, but I don't know.
I like apple pie, berry pie.
Yeah. Berry pie.
Like a blackberry, blueberry. Okay.
You got to be a little more specific. Yeah. Not raspberry.
Fruit pie. Yeah.
Yeah. This podcast is
off to a good start.
I mean, I don't know.
We listed our pies.
Anyway, we had great weekends.
I met Dean Ripa's sister from the Cape Fear Serpentarium.
So this is the brochure from the Cape Fear Serpentarium.
She brought me some stuff.
And I got some other stuff.
They sent me some facts and stuff for you to look at.
I didn't really get to look at them yet, but I'll look at them when we talk about them one day.
But pretty fun.
It's still going?
No, no, no.
Now it's like a bizarro, weird place.
Like it was before?
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
But now it's that that they were very sweet and uh uh they were they
were nice and they said they loved it and i you know i always like felt like even though it's
crazy he's like i don't ever feel like i'm making fun of someone and uh but they were like nice
they're like no no he would have loved it uh so uh you know that's good and his and his his sister
they they they have a son now.
Like, it's a – they were very nice, very nice.
It was really cool to get to meet them.
But that was in – we were in Charlotte three nights, and then it's like Macon, Georgia.
There's something else, something in the middle.
Little Rock?
No, that was last week.
Macon, Montgomery, and somewhere else.
Mobile?
Three.
Augusta?
It was Friday and Saturday and Sunday.
No, maybe that was it.
Macon and Montgomery.
Mobile was the other day.
That's a good run.
Sounds like a Jamie Johnson song.
Yeah.
I was in Birmingham last night.
I'm sorry.
I siphoned some of your ticket sales, dude.
That's where they were.
They said they were short-staffed.
That's probably what happened.
Where were y'all?
I was in
Mattoon, Illinois.
This is really the Hollywood
of the South.
We're really rocking it out. I got Hollywood of the South We're really rocking it out I got out of the South
I went to the Midwest
Mattoon, Illinois
Oh, Mattoon
The Fields Church
Did a show there
They gave me this Titans
Nice Titans
Oh, nice
Titans aren't doing too well right now
But I still wanted to wear the shirt
And think over that
Titans Combine Training
Well, they're not too far from Indianapolis
So
Oh, yeah I'm guessing that's why they gave me that um so yeah i was in my tomb all right i went
to the liberty funny bone or or the cincinnati funny bone and it was great hot shows i managed
to get out of there without eating skyline chili again still not had it uh i don't know if people
have ever talked to you about Skyline Chili,
but the shows were great.
The shows were really great.
But everybody's like, you got to try it.
And then there's also the other half of everybody that's like, don't do it.
They're like, oh, it's like chili, but over spaghetti.
And they put little chocolate flakes in there.
And then I'm like, just keep adding ingredients to where I'm like,
I don't think so
yeah i don't think i'm gonna do it i don't know if you guys have experienced sky i think i've had it
uh but yeah i'm not yeah i think i've had it i mean up until the chocolate flakes it just seems
like spaghetti yeah but you don't have to get that stuff on there you just i don't know i mean i don't
even know like everybody people are like do it do it and then they're like don't have to get that stuff on there. You just. I don't know. I mean, I don't even know. Like everybody, people are like, do it, do it.
And then they're like, don't do it.
And then I'm like, the people that don't do it scare you really out of it.
Yeah.
Why do they say not do it?
I think they just think it's gross.
Oh, no.
I think all your digestive problems, you don't need to be digging in the skyline.
That's probably, that's probably true.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, I would try.
Maybe one day I'll get in there and I'll try it a. Yeah. Well, I would try. Maybe one day.
I'll get in there
and I'll try it a little bit.
All right.
All right.
Keep us posted.
It's been a big eating podcast.
Yeah.
Well, I think everybody
would like to know
when you do try it,
so keep it.
But the shows were great, though.
Oh.
What a great place.
The club really takes care of you.
They put me in a nice hotel.
The audiences were great. So friendly. Nice people. Yeah. Great. Yeah, that's a great place. The club really takes care of you. They put me in a nice hotel. The audiences were great.
So friendly.
Nice people.
Yeah.
Great.
Yeah, that's a good place.
All right, let's start with the comments.
I'm trying to get something rolling off top.
Sheldon Larson, thanks for this wonderful podcast that keeps me laughing and smiling on my daily work commute.
I am so happy that all of the World War II topics that are out there, everyone is focused on the bats.
It had me laughing so hard I had to pull over so I wouldn't crash while listening.
Yeah, those bats with bombs on them.
Bats with bombs on them.
It's hard not to talk about them.
Yeah, I mean, and there's a lot of unfunny things about World War II, so it's nice to focus on the bats.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, Justin knew a lot, and once we got done with the air, he told me a lot of stuff about how Hitler wasn't all bad, and he had some really strong opinions.
It's a little disturbing.
I was gone by then.
Well, I mean, if you want to know, email Justin.
He'll tell you about it.
Yeah.
He'll get into it.
Yeah.
A lot of people are writing in that they have to pull over while listening.
That's really nice.
I want one of you to just keep going.
See what happens.
You know?
Yeah.
That'd be a much better story.
I was in a wreck in my cars total.
Yeah, push through.
Brian Gregory.
Hello, folks, and hey, bear.
I thought, oh, boy, when I saw today's topics.
Mostly because last week was on holiday shopping.
What's next?
Electric cars followed by War of 1812, perhaps.
Love the randomness this podcast brings,
but more so the needed laughs in the middle of a busy work week.
All right.
We love that.
Yeah.
Kayla Bell.
The fact that Breakfast says,
I watched a history movie called Godzilla vs. King Kong,
and no one even knowledged the absurdity of the joke he made.
Makes me think everyone rolled with it because this is a comedy podcast,
or no one knew that it's not a historical movie,
both of which would be on point for this podcast.
I believe that it is.
I mean, they very well could be, you know, who knows?
It could have been a giant.
I mean, Godzilla is essentially a dinosaur
yeah right i mean come on yeah but we already 50 50 on that yeah but yeah so it could be yeah
but if you're but if there are dinosaurs we hope that they were godzilla and yeah absolutely lived
in the ocean yeah yeah right before they turned into birds. Yeah. They were on their way. Yeah. Who could fly?
Could Godzilla fly?
Some of the, no, but some of the ones they fought could.
Yeah, that was another.
Moth, Mothman, Moth, I don't know.
Mothman.
He could fly.
Yeah.
I can't remember.
Michael Mitchell, Dusty being on computer duty is like Nate being on reading comments duty.
I have to wonder if someone wouldn't be better.
He Googled like two things and the whole time
being wrong about the Godzilla vs. King
Kong movie when he had an answer
five seconds away.
I love them all, but Aaron does bring some
useful skills and perspective
that is missed in this episode.
Alright, I'll take that. Well, there's no question about
that. I mean, whenever I'm
asked to do the computer, I'm like, I'll do it.
But it's not going to be as good.
It's tough Googling when somebody's looking over your shoulder.
Yeah.
You know, seeing what you're doing.
Yes, it is.
It's a lot of stress.
Yeah.
I mean, I think I should go back to doing it.
Okay.
Yeah, you should.
Let's see if the people want that.
Yeah.
They bring a typewriter out, you got to pass it to Laura, and she has to Google it.
You just...
And then you rip it, hand it.
They run it like the old news.
Oh, yeah.
Would y'all pass on new stuff like that?
Tap it on?
No.
Read the story.
Would you ever rip paper and run it on there and go...
And they go, oh, my gosh.
You have the tube like at the bank?
Ladies and gentlemen, we have Godzilla King Kong.
Apparently in the Gulf of Mexico.
Breaking news.
No, we just tell them they're at peace.
Yeah.
That's got to be a – that's something to really learn how to do.
To be good at that.
To be able to listen to someone talk to you while you're talking
and not lose your train of thought. yeah that is tough i think that's real tough yeah
because new i mean these people have to be like oh yeah and then it could just be like bam man
because they're not just telling you just anything they're telling you something so
dramatic that they have to interrupt you yeah and you have to keep talking
yeah like godzilla and king kong just spotted
like would you just say hey you'd be like hey brian godzilla and king kong we they have been
spotted and that's where the person goes well if there were two anchors up there then i would
always wait obviously till the other one's talking to tell the person but if it's just
one person up there you got to tell them while they're talking. You just try to do it the best you can.
They're trying to do the news and they
just hear...
It's just whistles.
What is that?
Did you ever leave it on and you're just talking?
It just flipped up and I'm
just blasting the...
I got to get out of this job.
He's up there like,
you know.
This guy's terrible.
Tornado came through.
He goes,
it's Tornado.
They keep saying Tornado.
You give them some Lebanon news
that you think's big.
Like breaking news.
New Golden Corral.
Well,
I'm kind of upset because a couple weeks
ago we talked about famous people
from Lebanon. My buddy Nick,
who I go to the Titans games with for years,
up until this year, we sit together.
Lebanon just had their annual Christmas
parade and he was the Grand Marshal.
Oh, wow. He's lived there for like a year.
Wow. What does he do?
He's on the news.
So, local newsman that lives in Lebanon
Grand Marshal Lebanon Christmas Parade
Yeah
That should be me
That should be you
What happened that you guys don't sit together anymore?
Did you talk about this?
Well, we didn't renew our tickets this year
Okay
But, yeah, but you're on the podcast
Yeah
You're moving and shaking
Yeah, absolutely
So, yeah, you could have been the Grand Marshal
I should have been Did you go to the parade? No I was too upset, I protested I wouldn't. So, yeah, you could have been the Grand Marshal. I should have been.
Did you go to the parade?
No.
I was too upset.
I protested.
I wouldn't have went.
Yeah, I wouldn't have went.
This parade looks pretty crazy, man.
Is that now?
That was this weekend?
That's for 2012.
2012.
Yeah, things have changed since then.
I can't imagine it's much different now.
Yeah.
How often did you go?
Did you go every year?
Growing up, I did.
Yeah.
One year, our Cub Scout troop got to ride in the parade.
Oh, wow.
I was very excited about that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You know, I went downtown.
Were you like 40?
Yeah.
I went downtown Lebanon, and they had this little.
It's not Lebanon.
Come on, dude.
Come correct.
Lebanon.
You better come correct.
Lebanon.
Sorry.
And they have the square.
Yeah.
And it's beautiful. Yeah. But you get outside that square. That's it. Oh better come correct me. I'm in Lebanon. Sorry. And they have the square. Yeah. And it's beautiful.
Yeah.
But you get outside that square.
That's it.
Oh, come on.
No, I'm just saying.
I mean, I was in there, and I was like, whoa, we're always making fun of Lebanon.
And I thought, well, this is great.
Yeah.
And then I drove just out of there, and I was like, oh, that is the downtown.
Well, any place that has a square, there's not much around it.
Is this the square we're looking at right here?
Yeah.
The parade?
Yeah.
So the parade is just the school bus is coming through?
Well, yeah, it's a parade.
It looks like a clown bus.
I don't know what that is right off hand, but maybe Bozo's on there.
I'm not making fun of Lebanon.
I'm just saying.
Yeah.
West Main Street's nice.
There's a, just off to the left there, there's the statue of General Hatton.
He's a Civil War soldier that everyone wants torn down,
except if you live in Lebanon.
They're like, nah, he stayed.
He's our guy.
Is he from Lebanon?
No, but we just like him.
Yeah.
Y'all just picked one.
I really don't know the story behind.
Maybe he is from Lebanon.
Y'all just picked a guy, and you're like, that guy feels like us. Never to leavening if you can meet that guy he's like i didn't really i wasn't
like really in the thick of it you know and they're like no no you're right what we wanted to be
leavening we're not in the thick of it we were there we were around we can tell you all about it
but i was pretty far back from the cannons.
Michael Mitchell. Oh, no. Jerry
Cannot.
Cannotty.
Jerry Cannotty. Listen to Nate explain
how to stay warm when you're camping exactly
while listening to this podcast.
After saying you should lay on the leaves to
stay warm, he caps it off by saying it's possible nothing he said is true.
Love you guys.
Keep up the great work.
Is that true?
I think you do lay on the leaves, though.
I'm going back.
I do think you want to stay off the ground.
Yeah.
Like, if you want to stay warm.
I think the ground takes heat from you.
Yeah, I wouldn't get in the dirt.
I think you'd dig a hole in the ground,
and then the walls would insulate you.
That's what I would do.
Well, I mean, eventually you're going to have to lay down if you're out there in the woods.
But I mean, I would lay in a tree or something.
Yeah.
On a limb.
You'd lay something on a limb.
Richard Kimball just put some leaves over him.
I believe him.
Okay.
Dr. Richard Kimball.
From the fugitive?
Mm-hmm.
Oh.
Okay.
Michael Clay.
Michael Clay.
Sam Quesada.
As a military history major, this episode is a world collides moment for me.
There was a missed opportunity to talk about Mad Jack Churchill, though,
the last guy with a confirmed longbow kill. His life was truly insane, and he stormed the beaches with a sword and longbow That's crazy.
Yeah.
Here he is.
I mean, just getting after him.
So what did he do?
Well, I guess he didn't take a rifle.
He took a sword and a longbow.
This guy must be who Hawkeye from the Avengers is based off of.
Look at that guy.
Mad Jack.
Well, that's got to be fresh.
Even if you're on the other side and you get killed by that arrow,
you're like, I mean, you're like, how much slower?
You're like, of course I'm the one that has to get of course
they have to notify that guy's family yeah and you're like is he's dead he will be it's just
gonna be long it's gonna be long and painful he got shot by an arrow and they're like what
and he goes no no he got this one guy we got we got one guy we got one guy that would run out of rifles no he prefers no no he got the long
you know you know like that would be just the i mean just the shock of just an arrow like
i'm the guy that dies from an arrow uh and that guy did he probably really would have to think. It figures.
Figures.
Yep.
Kelly Russell.
I was so excited to see the theme was World War II because I literally just finished reading Unbroken,
Olympic runner Louis Zamperini's pretty good biography.
Y'all dug into specific athletes and never,
ever mentioned the Deliquent.
What?
I had trouble with that one.
Delinquent.
I used all my powers on Zamparini.
Mentioned the Deliquent-turned-Olympic runner-turned-Army-Bombardier.
Bombardier.
Is that it?
I don't know.
Bombardier. Bombardier. Is that it? I don't know. Bombardier.
Bombardier turned army.
Bombardier turned POW.
War hero turned evangelist and humanitarian.
Humanitarian.
Humanitarian.
That was a wild ride.
That covered a lot going on there.
I thought I made through.
I thought I got through the weeds.
That's like you're like, I see land over here. After Zamperini, I go, no, no, no. I thought I made through. I thought I got through the weeds. That's like you're like, I see land over here.
After Zamparini, I go, no, no, no.
I can see the ocean.
Yeah.
And then I don't see the.
Feels like Kelly put words in there just to trip you up.
I know.
Yeah.
The Zamparini was a trap.
I know.
You felt so good after that.
Yeah.
I remember this movie from a few years ago, Unbroken.
I think Angelina Jolie directed it.
And this guy had an incredible life.
He was like, I mean, basically just what she said.
What's a humanitarian?
Like somewhere like a zoo, you look at humans?
Studies humans.
Like a terrarium for humans.
Yeah.
Yeah.
What do they do?
Just do good things.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, like I think Jimmy Carter.
It's a good word to use for somebody that doesn't,
there's nothing really we can nail down.
Yeah.
But he was just doing some stuff.
He was just a good guy.
He was a good guy.
He was a good guy.
Humanitarian.
Yeah.
Philanthropy.
Yeah, we don't
really know what he was up to john wiling regarding operation mincemeat the movie on netflix is decent
however i would recommend the documentary on youtube over the movie the fantastic documentary
answers many of the questions the guy asked also Also, the guy's ask. Also, the person credited with coming up with the idea for the operation
is none other than Ian Fleming,
who would go on to create James Bond, Keep Up the Good Work.
Yeah, a YouTube documentary, at least used to be,
was always superior to the Netflix documentary.
That's where you get the real info.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
I feel like I mentioned Ian Fleming last week.
Yeah, i felt so
too um well i'm just gonna watch the netflix movie well if you want the lies you have to go look at
youtube and uh you look at like yeah like that yeah documentaries are you kind of don't i don't know if i trust a ton of new ones
yeah that's what i'm saying yeah because it's like it's like after like making a murder like
where it was like you know it was all super fun and you know or you know you're like oh this guy
did and then there's stuff they left out that you're like i mean there's no way he didn't do it
and then you're like i always feel bad for the, you know, it's like, is that family?
You know, and you're just making a movie and you're, it's a crazy story, but it's crazy
because you left out the part that he did it.
And then that's the part that's like.
And then you're like, well, that was 12 hours of my life.
You just completely misled me the whole time.
Yeah.
Well, and if you don't look into it more, then you still think.
But then if you start reading stuff about it, you're like, oh, oh, oh, wow.
For sure.
Even movies like Michael Orr talked about the blind side being like, yeah, that wasn't it at all.
Yeah.
You know?
It's like, so you just basically make a lie of that guy's life.
Right.
But it is how interesting could a, like that was a movie.
It was a great movie.
It was very fun.
I think they got the majority of it right.
Yeah.
I don't think he said that wasn't.
He wasn't just some rich kid that they made up about living in the projects and adopted by a white family.
Yeah, and I think a movie's a little different just because it's like, well, it's got to be watchable.
Based on true events.
But if something's a documentary, then you think, oh, I can trust this.
And then it's, you know.
Yeah.
Yeah, if it's a documentary, for sure.
You're supposed to be able to trust it.
Do you know the difference?
Well, it depends on the subject yeah movies are
called undocumented documentaries exactly well like uh the kennedy one with oliver stone that
supposedly was like that's a movie but jfk jfk he got i think uh was like he's like way into jfk
so i thought that i think that was supposed to be like some true stuff.
Does the Kennedy family agree?
I don't know.
Yeah.
I don't know.
You haven't talked to him yet?
Not yet.
I just watched a three-part series on Shaq.
Maybe there's more to come.
I don't know.
On HBO about his life.
And, you know, he takes some shots at
carlos groves i don't appreciate that yeah and i'd like carlos grows to be able to respond yeah
carlos grows my hero i got his autograph in high school okay i don't know him he uh no one does
okay well if carlos grows wants to come on here and yeah and and uh defend himself defend himself
we'll let him all right yeah but he hard- fouled Shaq in the SEC tournament to the point where Dale Jones said Shaq should
just go pro because these guys are going to hurt him before he gets his money.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
Because he couldn't hit free throws, so...
Dale Jones, the comedian?
Yep.
Sorry, Dale Brown.
Oh, okay.
I got it.
I'm glad you said that. Yeah. People are like, what? No, Dale Brown. Sorry, Del Brown. I'm glad you said that.
Yeah.
People are like, what?
No, Del Brown, sorry.
Christina Marshall.
The book The German Wife is based on the true story of high-ranking Nazis being brought to the United States first as prisoners, but then mostly granted full citizenship.
Yeah, some people told me to look up Operation Paperclip,
which is kind of the same as the book.
Apparently, people like Von Braun, they were Nazis,
and then they came here, and then they're like,
well, you could do some good stuff for us.
So then they got their citizenship.
Yeah.
Yeah, why don't you just go ahead and start NASA for us?
Yeah.
Go ahead and get that going. Yeah, why don't you just go ahead and start NASA for us? Yeah. Go ahead and get that going.
Yeah.
I mean, that's what happened.
Yeah, the world's a crazy world.
It is.
That is crazy.
It really is.
Stuff is crazy.
It is crazy.
It goes in your, you're like, there's really no answer.
You know, you're like, I don't even know what to say.
But just, yeah.
She always.
Just know that Nate just recently headlined the Ron Braun Center,
so he clearly supports it.
I mean, yeah.
I did a guess at, but that doesn't count.
That's true.
It's worse.
He has to be on.
Yeah.
That's true. He goes, these are my to be on. Yeah, that's true.
He goes, these are my people.
It's literally word for word.
He really had options.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm not even going to pay for this.
I just want to do it.
CC Morgan.
I always thought it was silly when listeners got irritated at you guys for getting facts wrong,
but as a professional musician with a master's degree in music, I finally feel their pain.
The big band slash swing era began in the
30s and was at its height when World War II began. Some of the most enduring jazz and Broadway hits
were composed during the Great Depression and World War II. The nasally tenor music Justin
described was more popular during the previous era. Yeah, I'll be honest. Justin was wrong.
I didn't know a lot about what Justin was saying at that time
about the music that plays during World War II or World War I.
I didn't.
Yeah, there's a chance Justin didn't either.
Yeah.
Good chance.
So, but I like when Justin's on here, we don't defend him.
We're like, yeah, well, Justin's an idiot.
Well, this guy was very upset about it, C.C. Morgan here.
But I like Big Bandit Swing.
Yeah.
Do you?
I mean, I don't have a lot of albums.
You jamming out to that in the car on the way here?
But I don't mind it.
When was the last time you listened to it, do you think?
I don't know.
Captain America?
Yeah, I mean, I don't have any.
But you'll hear it, and it's got an upbeat
tune to it.
I don't know the instruments,
but you know.
Where are you hearing it?
Upright bass, probably.
Where do you go
where big band music
is being played?
You know, like,
who was the,
it was kind of coming back
popular in like the late 90s.
The, you know, the.
Ska music?
Like the jump job
and then you got a jump job.
Yeah, yeah, the big bad
voodoo dad, Eddie?
Yeah, stuff like that.
It was kind of coming back
around a little bit street cats cc morgan right back and see if that's the same thing
yeah he's like no just i like big man i listened to mighty mighty boss tones back in the day yeah
totally mighty mighty boss stones yeah that kind of stuff brian's behind seltzer orchestra something
like that yeah okay uh My only Big Bang experience
Is Elaine
Yeah
Going to Big Bang
I'm Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
That's another thing
That's a whole other thing
I don't know anything about that
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm a, I'm a, I'm a, I'm a, I Stinson. I didn't mean to bring that up.
Dustin Stinson.
The best part of this episode is when Dusty says,
the homeless guy that died from rat poison was invaluable to the government.
I think he thinks the meaning of the word is the opposite of its real meaning.
Love you guys.
Keep up the good work.
Yeah, invaluable, I guess, means you're the most valuable.
Is that what he's saying?
Oh, okay, I guess so.
I don't even know that I used that word, but maybe I did.
But yeah, I mean that the guy, the government did not care about that guy.
Gave him rat poison, killed him, and then used his body.
Yeah.
Okay.
So he was invaluable.
Yeah.
I mean, I thought invaluable, but I guess invaluable could mean, oh, just the height of value.
What would be, yeah, what's not valuable?
I guess you just have to say not valuable.
Worthless.
Oh, really?
Disposable.
Unvaluable?
Unvaluable.
Expendable.
Invaluable, I think, means you cannot assign a value to it.
Okay.
It's priceless.
Oh, yeah. So the homeless guy was priceless and i mean
let's i mean let's be honest though for the work he did in the end it really was it was priceless
yeah so good for that guy and that's it they go it's priceless and i go man he goes but i just
got it for free they say that yeah but i mean it's a human being Yeah they're like
What'd you pay this guy
It's not a price
We can put on it
You couldn't
Couldn't even assign it a price
We killed him
Justin Coffee
Most of the time
I'm just listening to podcasts
While driving
However
Basketballs
And expression
When Nate says
So the Nazis
Started fighting
Started fighting Germany is priceless.
I'll be watching the show a whole lot more
in the future.
That's funny.
What it's all about.
What it's all about, invaluable,
of inestimable
value.
Priceless.
Inestimable?
Inestimable? Yeah uh it's a lot that seems yeah that that doesn't seem like a real word it seems like a college person that goes yeah what's the definition
invaluable and they go i don't know but i'll throw in another crazy word it's like don't put another
in in front of a different word to define a word with an in in front of it like what's
invaluable mean inestimable inestimable and that definition is incalculable yeah it's like yeah
it's like come on guys now do you think that the way they break down the pronunciation do you think
does that help you inestimable sounds like uh spanish i don't know why the E's are upside down.
Yeah, I forget what that means.
I don't know.
I don't know why that's necessary.
You don't even need that when you can just press play.
I think it was...
Inestimable.
Inestimable.
I've never even heard that word.
Really?
No.
Then go to college where you speak right to the...
Talk right to the source.
Yeah, we go, that ain't worth nothing, man.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Hey, I'm Jillian.
And I'm Patrick.
And together we make
the podcast
True Crime Obsessed.
If you love documentaries
the way we love documentaries,
you might be interested
in our show
because we recap
all the documentaries
that you're watching.
We've covered just about
every true crime case
you can imagine.
We're talking the
Hatchet Wielding Hitchhiker,
the Ted Bundy tapes.
What else?
The Turpin 13.
Yes.
With the amazing sisters
who basically tell the story.
The girl in the picture.
Yes.
All the documentaries
you love to talk about
with your friends.
We're your friends now.
We're the friends
you talk about that stuff with.
Yeah.
We're True Crime Obsessed Podcast.
Search for us on Apple Podcasts,
Spotify,
or wherever you listen.
All right.
Feels good to do.
There it is.
I'm going to do.
I love doing that.
This is my, I get one bottle of real Fiji water,
and then I'll never have Fiji water in this bottle ever again.
Oh, wow.
All right.
That's the real stuff.
This is the real stuff.
I bring it out for nice occasions.
The bar gets a hold of it, and it becomes garden hose water. All right. That's the real stuff. This is the real stuff. I bring it out for nice occasions. Mark gets a hold of it, and it becomes garden hose water.
All right.
All right.
This week, we're talking about Texas.
Texas.
State of Texas.
I'm going there.
I'll be there.
This week?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I thought that's why you chose it. I'll be in Midland, El Paso, Lubbock, and Amarillo.
Oh.
The western part of Texas, it looks like.
I looked up – oh, sorry, go ahead.
It's next to Odessa, which is from their –
Friday Night Lights.
Oh, yeah, I don't even know that.
But I never watch Friday Night Lights.
Really?
Yeah.
You know what's funny? Ted Alexandlexandro comedian very funny comedian yeah texted me uh once and he goes
have you watched friday night lights and i go no and he goes i think you really would like it
this was like and i was like okay and then i still never watched it the movie or the show
which one was he talking i thought he was talking about the show. The movie was great. I never watched the show.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The movie is based on a true story.
Yeah.
And it takes place in Odessa, Texas.
Yes.
The television show is in a fictional town of Dillon, Texas.
Yeah.
And it's loosely based on the book and the movie.
Yeah.
You like both of them, I think.
Yeah.
But I'll be... I was thinking uh no country for old men i was about
to say you're going to where some of the coolest movies are no country for old men hell and hell
or high water which i loved um sicario oh yeah all those movies happen around the border el paso
yeah uh midland things like that Those last two
Were done by
Same guy
The guy who does
Yellowstone
I'm drawing a blank
On his name
But he's
Killing it right now
Yeah
Taylor Sheridan
I think is his name
Anyway
Yeah you're going to
The cool places
The record for
Largest
High school football
Tennis
We're talking about
Odessa
Was
Over 50,000 For a high school Football game State championship're talking about Odessa, was over 50,000
for a high school football game.
State championship game,
I'm guessing?
I think so,
at Cowboy Stadium.
I sent you a link to that.
They've had a few
that have been right around there,
but I think now they do it
at Cowboy Stadium
and they can really pack it in.
There's, I mean...
Oh my goodness,
54,000 people in 2013. Wow wow is that a lot or not a lot
i don't know it's a pretty good amount people always go what's the population and i go
i don't know what is this that you're even this is high school football attendance oh
oh i thought you're talking about the the population of the town
okay okay for a game, yeah.
Why are y'all blown away by a town of 54,000 people?
You go, wow.
Imagine living in the city like that.
Yeah.
Yeah, and that's a ton.
Yeah.
For high school football.
I mean, this is, Vandy doesn't have some.
No.
No.
It doesn't even hold that many.
Yeah.
Even if Vandy wanted to sell it out, they couldn't beat it.
So Texas is the second largest state in the country in size and population.
Alaska won.
Alaska for size.
Oh, population of California.
Yeah.
Yeah, Alaska's way bigger than it. Way bigger.
I think. I think it's like three times the size of
texas three times i think so we talked about in the alaska episode it's crazy it's like
takes up like a third of the country almost yeah yeah but everything's bigger in texas
yeah what is that all about uh don't mess with it. Just because everything's, yeah, I imagine the trucks are big, women.
You know that slogan, don't mess with Texas?
Man, I don't know.
Yeah.
The don't mess with Texas, that's, I thought that had been around forever.
That's a fairly new slogan.
It was a litter campaign and really kind of took off in the 90s.
Oh, they kind of spin it the other way.
It was like, don't mess with
it because they don't litter yeah and it but the statement would be like if someone said don't mess
with texas like if someone said don't litter you'd be like don't mess with texas don't tell us what
to do that's what i take it oh yeah like don't you don't want to i think that's kind of what's
become yeah but to start off as an anti-litter campaign. Really? Got rid of that quick.
Yeah.
Moved on.
Yeah.
So I looked up the largest cities in the United States.
Five of the 13 largest cities in the United States are in Texas.
Wow.
That's pretty crazy.
Yeah.
Wow.
Houston is like third, fourth largest in the country.
Fourth.
Yeah.
The one that always surprised me is San Antonio.
Because I base city size off of sports teams.
Right.
That's how I think they're big.
It's like the seventh largest city in the U.S.
I had no idea.
Never gets talked about.
No.
Slides under the radar.
Well, they're a small fish in a big pond.
Oh, yeah.
And so they would need to go. You move them to any other state. I mean, they're a small fish in a big pond. Oh, yeah. And so they would need to go.
You move them to any other state.
I mean, they're just.
Yeah, just move them over to Mississippi.
Yeah.
Move them to Mississippi.
I mean, you're, yeah, you're New York.
You're right.
But they're still bigger than Dallas.
And you hear all about Dallas.
San Antonio's bigger than Dallas.
Yeah.
I don't believe you.
But Dallas-Fort Worth together is probably bigger. Yeah. Than San Antonio, right? Yeah. I don't believe you. But Dallas-Fort Worth together is probably bigger than San Antonio, right?
Yeah.
So they kind of split their city up.
Yeah, the DFW metro population is 7.5 million people.
Yeah, that'd probably be number two.
It would be second if you counted them combined.
Yeah, San Antonio's metro is 2.6 million.
So we're not even, I mean, not even seeing a ballpark here.
What is just straight up Dallas, though?
I don't know.
We'll look it up.
Yeah, that's what you got to look up.
You're cheating.
You counted another city.
Well, Fort Worth is like what?
Yeah, that is because it's.
1.3 million in the actual city.
And then, wow, San Antonio, 1.4 million in the actual city.
You're right, Brian.
You did your research.
But sometimes it's like, what are they all counting there?
It's like, I was talking to somebody about that.
Like Columbus, Ohio is one of the like, I don't know, maybe fifth largest.
I mean, or something.
It's gotten way up there.
It's huge, yeah.
But it's like, you know, somebody was saying that St. Louis would be bigger, but St. Louis only counts the metro area, whereas Columbus would count all of the suburban areas around it.
Well, I mean, Nashville is bigger than Memphis, but Memphis only counts city limits, and Nashville counts the whole county of Davidson County.
Yeah.
But for the metro area, you and I talked about – you said murfreesboro was going to be bigger than memphis and um based on nothing just gut feeling
yeah you were wrong but uh i mean maybe someday it would be but we talk about the national metro
area they count murfreesboro they count every county they count franklin brookwood so that
dallas fort worth seven and a half million that, that's more than just those two cities.
That's the whole area around it.
But that means there's probably more people that live up there than right around it.
It's the second busiest airport in the country next to Atlanta.
But you're right.
If San Antonio were in Mississippi, it would be a huge deal.
Oh, yeah. There'd be an be a huge deal. Oh, yeah.
There'd be an NCIS San Antonio.
Oh, yeah.
They're bigger than us.
Where are we?
A million?
Yeah.
We're not even spitting distance.
We're 21st, I think, in size.
Talking about Nashville.
Weak.
The Astrodome in Houston was the first dome stadium in the U.S.
Oh.
I remember it was a big deal back in my day.
Yeah.
I remember talking about the Astrodome in a time where it was like it did i didn't know it was the only one but it would be
like people would be like yeah the astrodome it's a dome yeah you know i mean like we would talk
about it like they call it in it they go astro yeah they called it the eighth wonder of the world
because it was is that where the term astro turf comes from yep oh really yep it was because they played on artificial turf so they called astro turf so
this was the first ever fake grass yep whoa at least in the united states okay i think we probably
did it first what other country would have done it before i don't know i just the way it according
to this it was the first dome stadium in the country. Makes me think maybe somewhere there was somewhere else.
I don't know.
Yeah, you call everything AstroTurf.
Mm-hmm.
I don't feel like as much now.
What do you call it now?
Artificial turf.
Artificial turf.
I don't think so.
I think I call it AstroTurf.
Yeah, me too.
It's so commonplace now, though.
Yeah.
You think like sports broadcasters and stuff still call it AstroTurf?
No, I mean, I think, you know, they try to talk better, you know.
Yeah.
But I mean, I think, yeah.
Now they say synthetic.
Yeah, now there's like synthetic.
Like now it's like trying to sound like it's this special thing.
Yeah.
Just so they can lie to you and make you spend money on it.
Yeah.
You go, so it's AstroTurf?
They go, eh.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean.
Yeah, like all the, I mean, not all, but most,
I feel like most of the stadiums are AstroTurf now.
Professional.
Mm-hmm.
Oh, yeah.
Or some type of synthetic kind of thing where it's like a hybrid gmo i mean
sometimes you'll see them there'll be a tackle you just see like dirt fly up for just a second
like oh yeah or dust or whatever would you what if you so you play a sport and uh they use some
turf that's got you're like i don't trust what's in this. Well, I mean, I guess I would still –
Yeah, I'd still have to do it, I guess.
But you have to play infield.
Well, maybe, yeah.
Could you go, I would like to be infield on dirt on –
Yeah, I mean –
On the baseball?
Depending on what's going on with it, yeah.
I mean, or how much they're paying me, you know what I mean?
You weigh the risk.
And then – because I like the idea of a ball right on the fringe of outfield
and dirt, and you just –
You won't run into the outfield.
You won't go and have to get it.
Yeah, don't dive for it.
Yeah.
No dive.
I don't think you're even going to go get it.
You're like, I tried.
And then the announcer's out to go,
well, everybody I think knows Dusty Slay
as a...
Doesn't really trust the turf.
I don't know why they keep playing him
in that position.
Let him be the catcher.
Yeah.
Or it's all dirt.
Now, if you were an outfielder on grass you'd play with
no shoes because you like to yeah do some ground yeah you could be like the kairi ervin like that
he can't travel to games but you do it because it's like well you know dusty's out this week
because uh there's you got some new turf over at the toronto blue jay stadium and uh so big missing
hole at old shortstop.
That's the thickest part of the dirt in the infield,
so he has to play that position.
I like that.
I like that kind of controversy.
First base would be a good one.
First base would be a good one.
I always felt like first base, I mean, I guess catcher too,
is like one of the hardest because people are just throwing at you all the time.
You know?
Like you're not really getting thrown to all the time at third.
But you don't got to run that.
Yeah, but third, you get some rockets.
Third's the hot corner.
That's what they call it.
You just get rocked over at third base.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
And then you got to throw it the farthest.
That's true.
You got to have a real gun for that.
And then first, you got to be able to do the splits.
Yeah.
And just kind of stand there.
And you're right in front of the opposing team's dugout,
which I think never gets talked about, but it's pretty nerve-wracking.
Probably a lot of trash talk.
I used to get people say some mean stuff to me back in the day.
What was some stuff they would say about you?
Oh, would they?
Oh, it was ruthless back in the day, man.
You played third base?
Oh, yeah.
East Montgomery baseball, you're standing in front of the opposing team's dugout.
We'd be yelling stuff at each other.
It was fun.
They would make oink sounds.
Sometimes, yeah.
You were at third base?
Played third base, pitched.
Oh, I think about first base.
Third base feels like –
Well, first base too, I guess, depending on if you're home or away.
Third base used to feel like a big guy position, though.
You'd be a big guy.
Like Terry Pendleton used to be the Atlanta Braves third baseman.
He's kind of a bigger guy.
Third, I would think – yeah, I don't know.
Bob Horner before him?
Were you a big guy?
You were just like a football player.
Not that big.
I was getting there.
I was on my way.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It was like, you would go.
He's going to win one day.
Like, if there had been one more year of high school baseball,
you'd went to first or coached one of the bases?
Be a third base coach.
You're just slightly removed from that.
Yeah.
You could do a little wave around.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Just get hit by the ball.
Comes your way,
you're like, he ain't moving.
Third base coach would be the best.
Yeah.
Wave them every time.
If they get out,
go, hey, I thought you'd be faster.
You think catching,
would you go up or would you stay down?
What do you mean?
Like, you know, they got to hop up on their legs.
Yeah.
Oh, I'll just stay down on the ground.
You just stay.
I'll just sit down Indian style on the ground and catch it.
Like, is that a footstep behind the catcher?
I did catch a little bit.
I got bad knees, though, man.
It is tough. Yeah, how's the catcher? It's tough to squat down like that. Do you have the knee savers in behind the catcher? I did catch a little bit. I got bad knees, though, man. It is tough.
Yeah, I was a catcher.
It's tough to squat down like that.
Did you have the knee savers in behind the knees?
No, we didn't have that stuff back then.
Are you serious?
What?
I don't know.
We don't have money like you did.
I never heard of a knee saver, yeah.
I had used whatever equipment.
Nothing was ever – Harper's catching now,
which makes me very excited in softball.
But, I mean, when I caught, this is – I mean, 89, dude.
Like, there's no – that wasn't invented.
You're using a regular glove as the catcher.
You were – I mean, you had the stuff.
You had a helmet, and you had the stuff.
But, I mean, you had the stuff,
but you had nothing that was protective. No frills.
Yeah.
The frills was you get to wear the uniform.
I loved putting on the catcher's uniform.
It was so fun.
Yeah, it's like you're going to battle.
Yeah.
It does feel like that.
It was great.
Then when I went to 13-year-old league,
it was the last year I played,
but then the catcher's equipment was too big for me. It would droop, and that's when I went to 13-year-old league, it was the last year I played, but then the catch equipment was too big for me.
Like it would droop, and that's when I stopped because it was like,
well, I'm going to get – I'm not even protected.
It was too small or too big?
Too big.
So it wouldn't – I would feel like it would be like – I don't know.
I never wore the catcher gear.
Well, it would be very loopy, and I remember the front would come way down.
Oh, okay. It was like because it would – like I couldn't get. I never wore the catcher gear. Well, it would be very loopy, and I remember the front would come way down. Oh, okay.
It was like because I couldn't get the straps enough.
Just your sternums just exposed right there.
Yeah.
I remember they'd tell you to go catch.
Like, well, just go catch and don't have the equipment on while the catcher's getting in.
You're like, I don't want to do that.
Yeah.
I don't want to take equipment.
Yeah.
I loved it.
Yeah.
Harper does it now.
It's fun.
She plays slow pitch softball?
No, no, no.
Fast pitch?
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, selling an insult.
I'm just impressed.
I mean, they're not throwing super fast, Brian, but they're still –
Yeah.
Some girls throw it.
Really?
I mean, there's always a couple because she's 10,
so it's like some girls are maybe a little bit older, and then they – I mean, some of them start throw it. Really? I mean, there's always a couple because she's 10. So it's like some girls are maybe a little bit older.
I mean, some of them start humming it, but she does it.
She loves it.
That's great.
Yeah.
She's got a game ball.
That's what a game ball is.
All right.
The King Ranch in Texas is the largest ranch in the United States.
It's bigger than the state of Rhode Island.
Oh.
So it's one Rhode Island.
Well, it's more than one.
It's bigger.
So it's 125,000 acres.
Wow.
So who owns the King's Ranch?
I tried to figure that out.
It started off as Mr. King back in the day but i'm not quite sure now they mainly
cattle there they did produce a triple crown winning racehorse though wow that's good that's
impressive yeah and now it's a national historic landmark oh okay it might not even be privately
owned anymore there you go they got it yeah the government took it of course what's the uh
got it yeah the government took it of course what's the uh always do 825 000 acres 25 000 acres did that what you just said i thought so you said 120 did you say 100 uh if i did i meant to say
825 000 yeah i don't know i thought you said 125 but either way it's impressive it's impressive. Yeah. Either way, pretty big.
One time we went on...
Pretty big difference, though.
It is a big difference.
Quite a big difference, but I don't...
One time the Bates family went on vacation to Alabama,
and we asked...
We stopped at a gas station and asked
where Randy Owen's house was from the group Alabama.
Oh, yeah.
He went to Fort.
Fort Payne.
Yeah.
Fort Payne.
And we drove by his house.
That was our vacation, driving by Randy Owen's house.
And you can't see it, but they said he had 1,600 acres.
And we thought that, I mean, we still do.
That was just unbelievable that someone would own that much land.
Yeah.
Well, let me ask, though.
Your vacation was to go to Fort Payne,
and you didn't know where the house was at until you got there.
It wasn't just that, but we took a road trip, family vacation to Alabama.
That was a day on that.
That was one of the stops.
Okay.
Yeah.
And we stopped at the gas station and asked where Randy Owen's house was.
Go to Fort Payne.
We'll ask around.
Yeah, I love it.
Yeah.
But I still remember.
They said he owned 1,600 acres.
Wow.
Wow.
That is crazy.
There it is.
There's the land.
It's got a pool.
It looks nice.
Yeah, I couldn't see it from the road.
It's just a gate.
Oh, he's right.
Yeah, it's right there.
Y'all didn't see it?
He took a picture in front of the gate.
Did y'all take a picture?
Probably.
Yeah.
I just remember there was a lot of trees and a lot of land.
I mean, was Randy Owen even like, what are you doing, dude?
He's got a real core memory there, Brian.
Pictures of security going, get out of here, guys.
Well, I was younger.
It was my sister who was five years older than I am.
She was the one really into Alabama at the time.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Were they like a teen heartthrob band at one point like young no but they were in the country music my mom didn't
like them because these young boys were stealing all the awards from Oak Ridge boys oh really yeah
she didn't like these young Alabama's young guns coming in yeah they were really trying to make
them like the Beatles they said at one point that's why they because it was just the three
of them were the cousins and then they kept
putting the drummer
in the pictures
on all the,
because they wanted them
to be like the Beatles.
They wanted to have
a group of four.
The blonde guy there
is not really part
of the original group.
Well, this is,
if I were to remove
one of these from the band,
I'd definitely pick that guy.
Yeah.
And the rest are all cousins.
Which one just died?
I think the guy
on the left, the far left yeah okay
yeah all right we went to that yeah the hank williams senior uh his museum he did uh it was
it was crazy he was he died uh he was 29 yeah like so and we were saying like when you see video of
him you're like he's probably 25 and he looks like he's 40.
Yeah.
Hank Williams died at 29?
Yeah.
I actually thought he was younger than that.
But I knew he was very young.
Yeah.
I mean, that guy was, I mean, so young and just was like, he went hard.
Yeah, they said he had a lot of back problems,
and that he always had pain.
Yeah, they were saying he had the thing that Abraham Lincoln had.
Okay.
Whatever, some.
I just heard someone say that.
Julian said, he goes, oh, that's what Abraham Lincoln had.
Some being tall.
Like, if you're too tall, you have.
Abraham Lincoln had other health problems, too.
But what was it?
He got shot in the head.
Oh, yeah. COVID. But what was it? He got shot in the head. Oh, yeah.
COVID.
That'll do it.
So Hank Williams was tall?
I don't know.
But there's something that Lincoln had that's called whatever.
So average?
It's whatever they're born with it.
And I think it's, and Lincoln had it.
Maybe it's the Williams, you know.
Yeah, maybe it's that Williams syndrome.
Uh-huh.
Yeah.
I don't know.
That's cool.
Yeah.
Maybe it was named after him.
No, because Lincoln had it.
I figured they would have done him.
Yeah.
Yeah, they'd probably lead with him.
Well, Buddy Holly. Marfan. Mar done him. Yeah. Yeah, they'd probably lead with him. Well, Buddy Holly.
Marfan.
Marfan syndrome?
Yeah.
Oh, Liam Nelson, the comedian Liam Nelson, who's seven foot tall, has Marfan syndrome.
Oh.
Yeah.
Yeah, I thought you said Liam.
Liam Nelson.
The comedian.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Not Liam.
Yeah.
Yeah, very close, though.
Yeah.
Buddy Holly from Lubbock, Texas, was 22 when he died. How did he die? Plane crash. close, though. Yeah. Buddy Holly from Lubbock, Texas was 22 when he died.
How did he die?
Plane crash.
Oh, yeah.
Waylon Jennings was supposed to be on that plane.
Really?
Did he know something?
I don't know.
They said something.
I guess they needed somebody to get off or something like that.
It had too many people.
He got off.
That's crazy.
That's got to be crazy.
Yeah, apparently Waylon Jennings made a joke as he was getting off like i hope your plane goes down yeah and then it did uh
that's gotta yeah but i would imagine even you say that you're there has to be a point you're
like yeah dude i don't i mean you gotta yeah i was just making a joke bad yeah but it would imagine even you say that you're there has to be a point you're like yeah dude i
don't i mean you gotta yeah i was just making a joke bad yeah but it's i didn't do it yeah yeah
you do go i didn't no y'all don't think i did it right and they go i don't know it's kind of tough
man uh nobody that does it makes that joke you know Unless you're a smart thing to do.
Really a forward thinker, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, plane crashes, they've gotten a lot better.
Because, I mean, think about, they went down, Patsy Cline.
The great Leonard Skinner.
Leonard Skinner, Roberto Clemente.
A lot of people back in the 60s died in plane crashes.
Jim Croce, yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
John Denver. Yeah. John Denver.
Yeah.
Golly, that's a lot.
I just said that.
Yeah, he died in a plane crash, right?
But he was self-piloting, right?
Yeah, well, still a plane.
Yeah, but I mean, I'm just saying.
I think a lot of those were private planes that were not, like they,
like I think Leonard Skinner's plane, they were like.
Oh, they said they were going to fix it.
Yeah.
After this trip. Right, it had some problems. It had problems. Yeah. think leonard skinner's plane they were like oh they said they were gonna fix it yeah after this
trip right it had some problems it had problems yeah and it's crazy to think that they were
that then they were just like we'll be all right yeah you just figure it out that's what i always
think when i'm on a plane and they come over the overhead and they go oh we got some repairs we
gotta do i'm always like just let's just go man but then i'm also like nah i don't want to go down
but you know what i mean it's so inconvenienced by it that i'm just like let's just go man but then i'm also like no i don't want to go down but you know what i mean
it's so inconvenienced by it that i'm just like let's just go well it's the it's the idea that
uh you're like the planes back then like just the careless they're like yeah it almost could
show you how safe planes are now is that even back then they were flying and you're like they probably weren't fixed and ready and whatever and you know
yeah i mean it's annoying when they they come over the overhead and tell you that there's going to be
a delay because they're fixing something but also it's like yeah it's nice that you're not running
the plane with the check engine light on yeah yeah so there are three power grids in the united states one east of the
rockies one west of the rockies and then texas has its own wow wow so a couple years ago there
was a big bad snowstorm ice storm and most of texas got knocked out for a few days so their
power grid's not great.
Well, then they use wind turbines, and they froze, right?
Or something.
I think there was something to that, yeah.
Yeah, people almost got real bad.
Yeah. Mm-hmm.
So in Midland, Texas, where you're going,
In Midland, Texas, where you're going, they found the remains of the oldest known human in North America.
They call it the Midland Man.
Anywhere from 9,000 to 11,000 years old.
Turns out it was a woman, but they still call it the Midland Man.
Yeah.
And it was found in the 50s, but there's a there's a monument there that still uh you google midland man you just see it's just a bunch of mug shots
yeah this is not what you're talking about people coming to nate show this weekend
that's just like that's passport photos uh maybe midland man Monument or something? Yeah, yeah, yeah. I don't know.
But anyway, yeah, they think it's like the, well, that's still not it.
But anyway, it's there, and they think it's the original.
I mean, obviously, there's probably older.
I think maybe even since then they found older,
but at the time they were like, this is the oldest known.
How did they know how old you was?
They cut a leg open, count the rings?
Yep.
Carbon dating.
Yeah.
Yeah, they did some carbon dating.
What is that?
There it is.
Well, it's pretty flawed.
Right there.
This one?
Yes.
Historic plaque?
Yes.
It was a plaque, yeah.
Oh, look at that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
How old is he?
Oh, 9,095.
Found in 1953 on the ranch near here by pipeline welder Keith Glasscock.
Fossilized skull, rib, and hand bones have been exposed by weather conditions.
Tests indicated these were bones of a woman who lived as long as 9,095 BC.
So tests.
Oh, BC.
Yes, they don't go into a lot of detail about what those tests are.
Yeah, indicated.
They don't go into a lot of detail about what those tests are.
Yeah.
Indicated.
Yeah, we figure.
We ran a couple of tests on them, and we figure at least 9,000 BC on these things.
I mean.
Well, they think it was found next to bones of extinct species of horses, camels, mammoths.
Yeah.
So they can use context clues.
Yeah.
Must have been around the same time, you know?
Yeah.
You don't run into a lot of camels these days that's for sure over here yeah they're all they've all been caught yeah also in midland the childhood home
with the bushes oh you can go tour it um really is it a big home um i don't think it's too big
but it's the only home in the world where two presidents lived,
two governors, a first lady, ambassador, and a CIA director.
Yeah.
I thought, did they come from money?
I think they did come from money, yeah.
They're like an oil family, I think.
I think so.
But a relatively modest
home it looks like unless it goes super deep and it's like yeah a bit of a compound but from the
outside it looks like pretty modest home where's that at midland oh you gotta go by there when
you're there yeah midland's the one where it's like the old they said it was uh i don't know i
might have talked before but like when uh like but when oil is striking there when it's good, hotels are like $500 a night.
Whoa.
When I went there, I did a show at Billing Ball there once,
and it was like a red roof inn.
And I want to say it was $300 a night then.
And they said they would go to McDonald's and just tell them,
if you quit right now,
come work at a soul food.
I'll give you a hundred thousand dollars.
Wow.
And like,
cause it's just,
it's,
they need,
they need,
they need to work right then.
And then people go there and stay there to work.
And so they know you're going to go and make a ton of money.
So they charge $500 a night at Red Roof Inn.
And so like,
it would be,
there's a lot of like
you're super rich to super poor because then some of these guys would get a ton of money but they
don't know how to like spend it and they would buy you know you just see them they're poor and
the next thing you know they have a helicopter and a hummer and then they're and they're living
in some crazy house and then they all goes away and then they're back to right back to mcdonald's yeah
but they're like i had a good run they had fun drove that lamborghini for a while man yeah
they had fun yeah i think a lot of people are happy to have that fun like they're almost like
if you told them if it went away they're like yeah i'm okay with it going away like it was
i don't want to do that anymore it It was, they like, people like telling stories.
Yeah.
And so you don't get to tell stories if you, you know, if you still have it.
Right.
If you make the money, put it in the bank, you spend it wisely.
There's not a lot of stories.
Yeah, exactly.
Not a lot of stories.
I'd rather have a Hummer for a month or a Honda Civic for 20 years.
Right.
Give me the Hummer, dude.
Yeah.
Let's ride it out.
Yeah.
Well, here's a fun oil story.
So in Wichita Falls, Texas.
Fun what story?
Oil.
Yeah, oil.
I can't say it very well either.
OIL story.
They struck oil, and a lot of people became millionaires overnight.
So all these oil companies were coming in. They struck oil and a lot of people became millionaires overnight.
So all these oil companies were coming in.
So this – I think you're going to Wichita Falls too.
Yeah.
Not this time, but I am.
Coming up.
This promoter came in and said, you guys need to build a skyscraper because you need offices now and all this stuff.
So if you guys give us $200,000, we'll build you a skyscraper here in town.
So they got the money, gave this guy $200,000.
And what they didn't notice is the scale, the blueprint he showed us,
showed him was in inches and not feet.
Wow.
So he tricked them into building the world's littlest skyscraper.
Oh, wow. It's called the world's littlest skyscraper. Oh, wow. It's called the world's
littlest skyscraper. It's 40 feet
tall, and
it's 11 feet by
19 feet. You really got to give it
up to that guy, though. That's a good scheme.
That's amazing. Yeah. They tried
to track him down, but he was already gone.
What goes on in there?
Did they use it?
I mean, the building's still there it's been through tornadoes they said and floods and it still exists it's in the middle of a thriving area it looks like yeah you can tell like it's
a legit building though it held up yeah it's a legit building that's like an you know that could
be an apartment you know like a you know like one of those retro refitted apartments? Yeah, you got your bedroom on the top.
Yep.
I think they said 25% of it's just stairwell.
But everybody was so busy with oil that no one paid attention to the construction.
Yeah.
And then they're like, wait a second, this isn't what we thought.
But by then he was gone.
I wonder, yeah, I guess did he do it on, I i mean i guess he did it on purpose but what if he was like
he didn't mean to do it and then it's like you know you're like dude are we you just already
started and you're like i'll just i guess he took the money before he built it yeah but you know
people try somebody tried to do that to my dad. They brought some gravel and they were like, we'll build you a driveway here.
We'll charge you so much for square foot.
And he goes, okay, that sounds good.
And they put it all down.
And then when they were done, they gave him this price and the price was way higher.
And they were like, yeah, it's about cubic feet.
And he said, well, you said square feet.
And they were like, oh, no, it's cubic feet. And then they were like oh no it's cubic feet and then
they were like he hit the price they gave him was like hundreds versus the new price which was
thousands and my dad was like well you're talking thousands i'm talking hundreds you can just take
all this gravel up and just take it back with you is that what he did and they uh apparently
were running a scam and my dad and and they got, I don't know if they got caught,
but my dad was like, well, I'll just call the city
and talk to them about it.
And they just took off.
And so he got a free road.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, it worked out.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's how I thought that story was going to go.
Yeah, you don't give the money away first.
My dad would not let them have built a little tiny skyscraper.
Yeah, you watch it.
Yeah.
But I do think when the town is, I mean, that old money is legit.
So these things, they don't even care.
Right.
And you're thinking like, all right.
They're just sitting around somewhere going, we about to get a skyscraper.
They got a little coffee, or they got something there.
Yeah, Dave Elrod's going to get reelected there.
Hello Apparel.
Yeah, it's a consignment store right next to it.
Oh, all right.
That's storage now.
Going up to the fourth floor, get the rest of those bed frames.
Is there an elevator?
No, no, no, but there's a...
It's a lot of stairs.
You got a lot of room on those stairs.
Yeah.
It's like the big roads that Kramer made.
Yeah, the wide lines.
Yeah, it is crazy.
25% of that is stairs.
That's not a...
That's not a little amount, is it?
Yeah.
And how do you track a guy down like that in the 20s?
I mean, you just can't.
No, you're gone.
You're just, you're gone. You're gone.
You're gone.
Yeah.
I mean, he would have to really leave, though.
You have to.
But, yeah, you're gone.
You're gone.
Too bad he doesn't get to see his work.
You probably heard about it.
Yeah.
He never got to really take it in.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So it's bowl season.
The one on right now, the oldest bowl is the Rose Bowl.
Probably knew that.
Second oldest.
Anyone want to guess?
Peach Bowl.
Based on Texas.
Cotton Bowl.
That's a good guess.
Sun Bowl.
Sun Bowl.
In El Paso.
You're going to El Paso?
El Paso.
I spent a month there one night.
Yeah.
Have you been there? No, that's Kramer's. Yeah, yeah. Is that what he says? Yeah. El Paso El Paso I spent a month there one night yeah have you been there no that's Kramer's
yeah yeah
oh is that what he says
yeah
El Paso
yeah
spent a month there
one night
I've heard road comics
do that joke
a few times
oh yeah
actually in a gig
me and Aaron did
in Michigan
that casino
that host
a radio DJ
did a joke like that
boat man
no no no
at that other one where the guy the guy with the with the messed up arm and the guy had one eye.
It was in the casino in Michigan.
Way up.
Sault Ste. Marie?
That casino?
No.
Did we talk about Boatman's intro?
No, I don't think so.
Do you want to talk about it?
Yeah, sure.
It's one of the funniest things I've ever.
It's one of my first times on the road with Dusty. it's this local radio guy hosted the show so he gets all of
dusty's credits and your credits at the time were jimmy kimmel you just done jimmy kimmel tmz yeah
and you're from nashville yeah and that's what you asked him to say yeah it's up there he goes
all right guys ready for the last comic anybody here watch tmz and this no he goes, all right, guys, ready for the last comic?
Anybody here watch TMZ?
And this, no.
And he goes, well, about Jimmy Kimmel Live?
Jimmy Kimmel?
Nobody?
Nobody?
What about that show Nashville, huh?
Like a couple people?
Well, he wasn't on that.
He's from Nashville.
So Dusty Slay.
Yeah. I mean, surprisingly, it was a good gig. Yeah. But that Dusty Slay. Yeah.
I mean, surprisingly, it was a good gig, but that guy was the worst.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He's just setting you up for – Dusty Slay goes, all right, riding that energy on that intro.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, but this other one was the Island Resort and Casino.
I forget the part.
It was Upper Peninsula, Michigan.
It's the last one we did
on that run it's where we both bombed really bad i mean and there was people you could smoke in
there it was still daylight there was skylights in there you could just see it was on mother's
day too yeah it was on yeah they had people you know people older people in wheelchairs in there
smoking big biker gang right up front a lot of injuries to their bodies like one guy was
missing an arm and and like a guy was
missing an eye and the leader kept yelling at us the whole time and i was like i was like it's
clear i told him i said listen it's clear no one's gonna make you be quiet yeah but you're you're
ruining the show i'm not gonna tell you to be quiet but if you did that'd be okay yeah and
the quad do uh nah yeah He did buy a shirt.
Oh, yeah?
Yeah.
But he was the only one because the rest of the people did not enjoy the show.
Yeah.
And no one was going to do anything to that guy.
Yeah.
They were terrified of him.
I wasn't terrified, but I didn't want to fight him.
Yeah.
I grew up with around guys like that.
Yeah.
He's fine.
Yeah, you have to...
How old was he?
It's tough to say. Probably 50s.
He could have been 40.
It was a free-for-all in that show.
I don't think there was a single employee of the casino
in the room with us.
Huge room, but off to the side
of the casino. So they go, hey, it's Mother's Day.
Everybody's there for the Mother's Day buffet.
So we're going to pop over and see the show it was just chaos in there i bombed so bad
i saw the video of that yeah that particular set it's fun and it's quiet but you can hear
dusty laughing in the back the whole time about how bad i'm doing nothing funnier than to me than
my friends bombing yeah you got a lot of that it is yeah that's always fun yeah uh
yeah that's crazy mother's day buffet that's like where you're like why are we doing a show
they just need something i know they have to offer something and it's like i'll just give
they give you whatever and they had this beautiful like theater room that people performed in but i was not at that level i was doing the
side room where you could where you could smoke in yeah i've done uh i think i did that somewhere
i'm not did it at like a lot of the connecticut casinos coming up like yeah where you're just
you would go and i remember going to one and i I mean, it's just, it's very sporadic.
It looks like people are just, there's six people in there, and everybody's at a different, their own table.
Oh, yeah.
And it's just, and you got to go up.
I did one just north of Texas in Oklahoma.
I stayed in Texas.
That's how close it was.
My hotel was in Texas, and I drove over to do, uh, Kiowa, Oklahoma, a lot of
Native American people in there and in the show watching. And they had the, you know, just no
laughs. I mean, barely laughs the whole time. And afterwards, these very, you know, mean,
stern looking guys come up and they go, Hey, great show, man. We really loved it.
stern looking guys come up and they go hey great show man we really loved it yeah i was like wow you did not laugh one time yeah i was afraid of you yeah
they're like yeah thanks for coming out here yeah it feels good to laugh like that
yeah
haven't cut loose like that in a few years this is the place i really appreciate
this is the same casino we were at but this is not where we were at.
Yeah, Harris, Michigan, and I don't remember it looking like that.
This place looks very nice.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We were nowhere near this.
They wouldn't let us near this.
No.
Yeah.
Sage Run Golf Course.
That golf course looks awesome.
Yeah.
Six Flags started in Texas because there are six flags that fought over texas
uh one time texas was his own country its own nation oh wow it was under how did they lose that
well they agreed to come over to the united states but they were with mexico and then they
fought mexico for independence that's when the alamo happened and all that. And so for about 10 years, Texas was its own country,
which sounds crazy, but it's bigger than a lot of countries.
Yeah, when was the Alamo?
Like 1830s.
I love that.
That sounds awesome.
Yeah, you would think they would have just stayed their own.
I mean, they're all, I feel like that's kind of their thing is like.
The lone star state.
Yeah, it's like the, and the threat of like, we can do our own thing.
Yeah, I don't know why they decided to join the United States,
but then soon after they did it, the Civil War broke out.
So then they joined the Confederate States.
So that's one of their six flags that's flown over them.
But yeah, they were their own country there.
And Sam Houston, where the city of Houston is named after,
was their president, one of them.
And also a former governor of Tennessee.
Oh, he was?
Yeah.
I wonder why they didn't call anything Houston for him.
I went to Macon when I was in Macon, Georgia, or this weekend.
So they said Nathan Macon.
All the Macons and a lot of the Macons in the country are named after him.
So if you go to a Macon town in the U.S.
Or it's a Macon County, Tennessee.
Yeah.
Or it's a Houston County, Tennessee.
There's a lot of it's Macon.
Nathan Macon.
Yeah.
I like to think that he just walked around and talked to everybody
and they're doing it.
He's like, why don't you call it Macon?
And they're like, oh, that's a good idea. You idea you know it's like is this to be other people do that
he goes nobody's doing he goes where would i how am i getting to these other places and telling
them to do it and now there's a bunch of macons yeah there he was yep nathaniel macon nathaniel
good looking dude 25 in that picture. Yeah.
Might have been.
Might have been.
Amarillo is the helium capital of the world.
We talked about helium. What does that mean?
90% of the world's recoverable helium supply comes from Amarillo.
Why?
Because that's where it's at.
Because they have helium fields.
Helium fields?
They grow it?
There's a lot of floating stuff out there.
I guess.
High-pitched floating stuff out there.
A bunch of those wobbly, inflatable dudes just in fields,
just going back and forth.
No gravity out here.
Yeah, a helium plant.
There you go.
I thought you were joking about
global helium production
was centered near Amarillo
with the production
of almost all the world's supply
for over a decade
prior to World War II.
Wow.
I don't joke about my helium.
I'm sorry.
So,
I guess that started 1868.
On the 100th,
100 year anniversary
of the helium
being discovered
they did a planet a time capsule so in 1968 they put this time capsule in helium and they put in a
past book i don't know quite that what that is but i think it's just a book that tells you where
to find the account for a ten dollar bill that they put in a bank account so it's supposed to
be open in 1 000 years in the year 2968. And based on 4% interest, that $10 is going to be worth a quadrillion dollars when they open it.
Wow.
Whoa.
Wow.
Well, by then, what will a quadrillion really be worth?
I mean, honestly.
What does that always mean when they're with interest?
When you put in money and they're like, well, over time, your interest alone,
it'll be worth more or something.
How's that going to be worth
a quadrillion dollars?
Maybe it's compound interest, which means
it would just build on itself.
Yeah, but that's where I don't...
There's a $10 bill in a bank account.
So that means
who's putting more money into that i think the bank uses your money
when you put money in the bank the bank is using the money to invest in stuff yeah and they make
money and so you generate interest from yeah okay it's pretty small amounts like one percent i think
is really good so it just naturally they give you like so so 1%, is that even a penny on the $10?
1% of $10 is, yeah, it's more than a penny.
And you get that every day?
Yeah.
You get it every day?
No, this is a year.
Oh, a year.
It's like your annual yield is 1%.
Oh, so in one year you get a penny.
10 cents, I guess they say.
If you have $1.
If you have one.
Oh, you get 10 cents with ten dollars.
Yeah.
So the bank.
So you could go.
If you put ten dollars in,
and then you go close in a year,
you would get back ten dollars and ten cents.
You would have ten dollars and ten cents.
And they'd like it.
Okay.
If it was one percent interest.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So in this case, it was.
And the banks can't go out of business.
Well, it's insured.
I think it's all insured.
Yeah.
But that could go all the way.
Remember FDIC?
Remember It's a Wonderful Life.
That's what happened.
Oh.
Yeah.
Oh, and A Wonderful Life.
Yeah.
It was a run on the banks.
What's that?
That's what they called it, a run on the banks.
Right, right, right. It's a wonderful life. So they take everyone's money out of their accounts in the whole town. Yeah, yeah. Scary. Scary. a run on the banks what's that that's what they called it a run on the back on the right right
right it's a wonderful take everyone's money out of their accounts in the whole town yeah yeah
scary and that uh yeah because everybody took their monies out of the bank we'd be in big trouble yes
yeah because a lot of the money is just like a promise right like there there is in a lot of
ways there's not really the amount of money that exists so if we all tried to take it at one time there wouldn't be enough yeah yeah
they don't have that amount in cash at the bank yeah so if everybody went to withdraw it'd be a
real big problem yeah for sure yeah something to think about yeah the mattress looks better
yeah that's what i'm saying the banks is only as good as the trust yeah bank of trust bank of trust well that's in the name yeah look at that well it would be like
you could uh yeah i don't think i've ever understood how they made like because they
always say that compound interest but then you're like if it's part of the quadrillion
who's going to pay that like if it's in that bank yeah they're gonna be in trouble that yeah
that bank's gonna pay it like you know it's like you just gotta it's like yeah it'll be worth that but good luck getting
good luck cashing that out yeah bank's gonna be like just because some bozo put this in 900 years
ago a thousand years a thousand years ago like you think i'm gonna give you a quadrillion dollars
and it's gonna be like kramer and the bank going like,
they didn't say, hey.
Or hello.
Hello.
Yeah.
Like, you know, it's like there's a point where you go,
you got to really trust that that's going to stay in there
and that these people are going to give it.
Yeah.
In this case, I don't think anyone really believes that's going to happen.
It's more just a fun fact.
But to your point, yeah, anybody who invests their money over a period of time,
you've got to hope that the bank doesn't close.
You've got to get it out before the bank closes
and everybody else wants to get their money out.
I feel like you've always got to be on the watch.
Yeah, yeah.
Where would you put your money if you don't believe in banks like Dusty?
Well, a lot of people put it in metal, like precious metals, like gold, silver.
Yeah.
Or assets.
Bitcoin.
Yeah.
Yeah, but Bitcoins.
I just found when I was born, people in my family, I got two U.S. savings bonds for like 50 bucks.
And they just matured to the, they're worth 100 bucks each now.
All right.
They doubled in value.
Took 30 years, but they doubled.
Yeah, but like the Bitcoin, like the FTX and all that stuff is like, that's just gone.
So it's, yeah, that is crazy yeah where do you put your money but silver and
gold you just go buy silver and gold yeah you just buy and like literally you just have gold in your
house you can do it that way or you actually physically have it yeah that way if like the
money went away like if somehow the u.s dollar went out of circulation you would still have something of value. Something tangible. Yeah.
I learned in history class, FDR, after the depression, the New Deal,
it was all these new policies and programs.
One of them was insuring. This was brand new at the time.
Insuring the banks.
For me?
Yeah.
Yeah, this was in real time.
I read this in the newspaper.
It was current events class.
My current events class.
Things are going to happen in the future. He insured in the newspaper. It was current events class. Current events class. Things are going to happen in the future.
He insured all the banks.
FDIC, which you'll see, I hear on radio, member of FDIC,
Federal Department of Insurance and Commerce, I think,
and up to $100,000.
So your money was insured up to $100,000,
which back then was pretty much all you're ever going to need.
And I think banks still do that.
I mean, I think they probably raised the rate.
You better hope so.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Because it's, you know, yeah, it seems it is crazy.
That's the thing.
You got to have a lot of trust in a lot of things.
I think we talked about this on the, maybe on a previous, the TV episode from two years
ago, but there's a town in Texas that agreed
to change its name
to Dish
so they got
free basic
TV and DVRs
for 10 years
from Dish
Network
oh wow
who agrees to that
well 200 people
live there
so
oh
they probably just
all agreed to it
yeah they were like
listen you guys
want free TV
yeah
change the name
what was the name before?
They don't get it anymore?
I don't know.
I think they're still called Dish,
but I think the,
whatever free they got's ran out.
What was the town called before?
Clark.
Oh, so Clark's not a bad name to give up.
And Dish is in all caps.
Isn't that interesting?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I hope they get to renegotiate.
We're called Dish as long as you give us free stuff,
but once you're not, then we're not going to do it.
Yeah, they're like, we'll call ourselves Comcast Texas, okay?
Wouldn't fund the deal.
Direct TV Texas.
Yeah.
What, go back down? Yeah. Oh, Texas. Yeah. Yeah. What, go back down?
Yeah.
Oh, we'll go.
So Amarillo, Texas, and farmers, cattlemen in Amarillo, Texas, sued Oprah back in 1998
because she did an episode on mad cow disease, and she said something about,
I'm not going to want to eat beef anymore after this.
And they said it really hurt their business. So they sued Oprah for defamation and it went to trial in Amarillo so much so that she had to move her show to Amarillo
for a few weeks while this trial was going on. Oh, wow. So for like six weeks, she did a show from.
So she wasn't really worried about it. It seems. She was like, yeah, I just moved my show
to Texas.
She seemed pretty... I mean, this is a
picture of her. It says Oprah Vindicated.
She seems pretty excited that she
won. How could you even
sue her for that?
I mean, I guess if you said it's
hurt... I mean, it's not like a criminal thing, but
just like defamation hurt our business, and
she didn't have any... know they said she's just saying stuff that's not true and at the time
her show was probably i mean her word was yeah oprah says it she's getting people to read books
exactly you know what i mean yeah so people are gonna listen she'd be around now that wouldn't
even make the yeah yeah we're so far the opposite way now that you're like, even if she said it, you're like, I
don't believe either.
I don't believe you.
I don't believe the meat.
I don't believe banks.
Right, exactly.
You're just like, I don't trust anybody.
Oh, I said for six weeks, nearly a year, she relocated to Amarillo's Little Theater.
Wow.
And during the trial, she hired Dallas-based jury consultant Phil McGraw to aid her in
selecting...
Tim McGraw's brother.
Well, Dr. Phil.
Are they related?
But they had a strong mustache game.
Yeah. Both Tim and Phil.
I bet they've met.
They probably met.
That's pretty big.
Phil McGraw. I mean, she like
helped that town out probably. Amarillo?
Yeah. Who do you guys think is the most famous celebrity from Texas?
Who do you think of when you think of Texas?
Matthew McConaughey.
That's kind of what I think, too.
I do think of him.
Yeah, he's the first guy.
I mean, I think of a lot of country singers, too.
Willie Nelson?
Willie Nelson, yeah.
I think Billy Joe Shaver, George Strait.
George Strait, for sure.
Amarillo by morning?
Yeah. Up from San by morning? Yeah.
Up from San Antone.
Yeah.
It's a helium reference possibly.
Think of Rogan now too.
I think Texas.
I'm just thinking of the names that jump in when I say Texas.
Yeah, but would you say Rogan, he's not from Texas.
But he's Texas.
Yeah.
That's so weird, but I don't think front.
You're talking about born and raised like Texas born.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I think if you're like, I live in Texas now.
Like, yes, Rogan's in Texas, so everybody knows he's in Texas.
I mean, Elon Musk is in Texas.
Didn't he move his country?
I don't know if he lives there.
They're in Austin, yeah.
Waylon Jennings says, it don't matter who's in Austin.
Bob Wills is still the king.
That's what he says.
Who's that?
Bob Wills was a Texas and the Texas Playboys.
He had the swing band.
During World War II.
A Western swing band.
Yeah.
Okay.
So Bob Wills was pretty big at one time.
Yeah.
I don't know if you guys think about Bob Wills
when you think about Texas.
I haven't thought about him much, no.
I think of Nolan Ryan.
Yeah.
George Strait. the Bushes.
The Bushes, for sure.
Yeah, the Bushes might be.
That might be.
Beyonce is up there, too, probably.
Right?
She's from Houston.
I don't know. I feel like I wouldn't even know.
Yeah, there's a lot I would not know where she's from.
Okay.
So it'd be like, where do you know they're from?
The Bushes are probably right.
Matthew Connery just now because you see him out.
So it's kind of just who you think
you could probably go Emmitt Smith
or Troy Emmitt just because of the Cowboys
but they kind of relocated there
yeah but you just
they did but you might think
if someone said it
Johnny Manziel
Johnny Football I mean at one point his last name was
Football
Texas that's a big deal Johnny Manziel. Johnny Football. I mean, at one point, his last name was Football.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Texas.
That's a big deal.
It is.
Yeah.
Is there a right answer to this?
Is there some way to quantify?
No, I just wanted to.
I think of the Bushes and George Strait and Matthew McConaughey.
I had an aunt, a great aunt, that lived in Texas.
I don't think she's in consideration. Well, that's who I think about, though.
Really, East Texas.
Her name was Aunt Pud.
And we had, they all had nicknames.
My grandmother's nickname was Boozy.
And I don't even think she drank.
I don't know where that came from.
But we would go out.
We would drive out to Texas.
Go across Mississippi, across Louisiana, out to Texas and hang out with Aunt Pud. And she had all these
rabbits in her backyard, just wild rabbits. And we didn't have rabbits in Alabama. So I loved it.
And then when I got older, we would go out there and Aunt Pud told me that the rabbits were like
eating all our garden up and she wanted me to shoot them. And she had a BB gun. So I remember
these rabbits that I used to love as a kid, now I'm like a teenager and I shot one of the rabbits
and it didn't die right away, but I didn't want it to suffer.
So I had to like shoot it a bunch of times.
It was traumatic for me.
And then I don't know that we ever went back out there after that,
but I liked my ant pod.
Rest in peace.
It was traumatic for me.
I was like, jeez, I love these rabbits.
My uncle, they live in Houston.
But I lived in Del Rio, Texas.
You did?
Yeah, when I was five.
Oh.
I ran away.
And now we moved there.
My dad was a teacher at saint james episcopal school
and so i remember we drove there uh i you know i remember been to be i remember horned toads
they were in texas and i remember catching them crawl dads same as horned frogs like tcu
i think so yeah yeah yeah yeah and then uh so we yeah we lived there uh
when i was uh yeah when i was five we lived there for one year it snowed
i remember that kind of remember that uh but yeah i lived there and then i went back and did a show
like i remember did a college run and it was like along the border and uh i remember we went in this lady the girl
that booked me was like she was she was over it was all community colleges so she like booked me
at this school and she was like from georgia so she was like this was this is i mean years like
eight years ago ten years ago and she like see me and she liked me and she was like oh i wanted to
bring a you know comedian here
well we go i go do these shows i mean nobody speaks english at these schools really i mean
it's a second language it's at best like it's and so i'm like down there and i'm like think it's
gonna be like oh i'm about to do a big run like it was a big deal to do those community colleges
do a big run all during the day yeah and then you then you go do it, and you're like, these people are not going to get any of these jokes.
And it ended up being great.
She was great.
And then I remember we went to an Applebee's to go eat.
And they were playing Mexican music.
Is that what you say?
Mm-hmm.
And then they were playing Mexican music in the Applebee's.
We walk in, and then they started playing Garth Brooks andoks and regular and i swear i saw you walk in i think they did it
like it was almost like it was all like it was so many people that were like yeah we're just
listening to our the music we want to listen to and then like one white person walks in they're
like and then they just went like garth brooks and like oh yeah and i remember thinking did that music
just change like mid-song yeah it was just it was just like all right well we got to make it normal
and that was uh what was that i uh i don't know maybe near del rio i was in del rio
they might have thought you were a secret delper. Del Rio is on the border.
So I remember we went over to Mexico once.
We got one of those chess boards that was like the marble chess.
Oh, yeah.
You know, you can buy them at like, do you see Del Rio?
Yeah, there's Del Rio.
Yeah, yeah.
Del Rio is on the border.
So we lived there, and you could walk over there.
The Rio Grande right there.
I mean, a few blocks. Yeah. We thought about going the other way that's awesome yeah we were there i mean this is it had
to be 1985 when we were there did you ever run away from home when you were a kid no you never
did that not even like you know i wouldn't have ever no i wouldn't have done it I'm trying to think if Harper tried to run
like
I feel
I don't know
if I'm making
like I can't remember
if she
might have
or said something
one day
of like
did she
I don't know
it doesn't feel like
she
she wouldn't do that
I mean I know she's 10
I'm acting like she's
50
I'm trying to remember
but I
for some reason
in my head something pops up about a kid, you know,
going to do it, and you watch them just kind of walk,
and then you just sit up there and watch them, and then they come back.
Like, you know, I want to say when she was real little, like something,
like, you know, it's cute.
Yeah, because you know they're coming right back, right?
Yeah, it's the best.
I ran away for hours, I mean, multiple times.
Really?
I'm done with this, you know, or whatever.
Enough.
Yeah, I just get on my bike and ride like a mile away,
and then I get hungry.
Yeah.
So I have to turn around and come back, tail between my legs,
act like nothing happened.
Look at that.
Why'd you run away?
I don't know.
You know, as a kid.
You don't want to carry on the Notre Dame legacy?
Did you tell them you were running away, or did you just do it? i think i'd probably leave a note okay yeah do they ever know or you
were i think yeah they know but they know me well enough to do i'm coming right back you know he'll
get over it he's just steaming a little bit yeah yeah you're really zero what's the zero threat 30 what's the movie zero dark 30 no the office his movie from oh uh
yeah uh michael scott's movie that he made i can't remember yeah i thought it was something
like threat level midnight i don't know that doesn't really make sense but i was thinking
you go zero to like you're like everything's cool to like i'm running it out yeah zero to 60 yeah
yeah you would just Gone in 60 seconds.
Yeah.
There you go.
Yeah.
310 to you.
Yeah.
I don't know if any of these.
Yeah, 310 to you.
Texas has more guns than any state.
More than a million registered firearms.
Wow.
I thought it was.
I really thought it was like Wisconsin or Minnesota.
I thought it was something like that you wouldn't expect.
You didn't think it was our wisconsin or minnesota i thought it was something like that you wouldn't expect you didn't think it was our biggest state i i thought somebody had said something like it was
wisconsin or minnesota who knows if any of this is right yeah it would make sense to be
it makes sense that it was texas yeah for sure there's a conspiracy theory
from a few years ago uh jade helm 15. Oh, yeah. You know this?
Dusty's eyes lit up.
Oh, yeah.
Would you like to walk out of the room?
Do you know Jade Helm 15?
No.
It was a military training exercise.
This is in 2015 that all the armed forces were participating in,
training exercise.
But the word got out.
People were starting to say that it was really U.S. government
was about to try to take over Texas.
They were shutting down a lot of Walmarts and operating out of the Walmarts.
Yeah, and they thought they were going to try to do martial law and round up.
In fact, a lot of people was saying like Walmart was like some kind of like
wall backwards is law.
You know what I mean?
People were really drawing.
Tram law?
Yeah.
Well, they were taking off the T.
It was like M-A-R, like martial law.
They were really drawing some string.
I'm not saying I was in.
I watched some videos on it.
I mean, I'll watch anything.
I'm not.
That's not on Netflix.
Yeah. That's a YouTube documentary. It's not even, I'll watch anything. I'm not. That's not on Netflix. Yeah.
That's a YouTube documentary.
It's not even on YouTube anymore, probably.
It's not now.
But that's why YouTube's the best, though.
It used to be.
Now they got it off.
Yeah.
That's interesting.
Yeah, I mean, even the governor of Texas.
When was this?
2015.
Oh.
So they were just like, we're going to take over.
Well, people were starting to think that the
federal government was going to institute martial law come in take over texas try to take away guns
right yeah and there was something about walmart and even china i think well people think a lot of
people think that walmart's are like secret military like they can be they can become a
military base at any point walmart's yeah a lot of people believe. Walmart's king?
Yeah.
Why is that?
Because they say they have the ordering system already built into place
to where they can order whatever they need.
They have secret entrances underneath.
The shipping infrastructure, they already have all that in place?
Yeah.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
Well, that's like if there's a hurricane or something like that,
some of these big companies have, I guess, the ability to help and get stuff.
But I think that would just be like, yeah, you're a big company.
Yeah.
I mean, I'm not saying I believe it, but I did watch the stuff.
I mean, it was a bunch of people that would drive around the parking lots of Walmart,
and they would film different things, and people would film the garden center,
and they would go, you know, they'd say, there's barbed wire around the top of this.
This is like a prison out here.
That kind of stuff.
And you're looking at it and you're like, well, it doesn't look like a prison.
It's probably to keep people from shoplifting, but yeah,
it does look like a prison.
You could kind of get into it, right?
Yeah, I mean, I can get into it.
I mean, I got time to kill.
I'm in hotels a lot.
Yeah.
Some conspiracy theorists have connected the Jade Helm 15 military exercise
with an apocalypse caused by a comet or asteroid striking the Earth
because the exercise had an ending date of September 15th,
which is the same month identified by some conspiracy theorists
for the catastrophic impact of a comet or asteroid,
which didn't happen.
Yeah.
But it's not a crazy leap.
What do conspiracy people say about when stuff doesn't happen yeah but it's not a crazy what are conspiracy people say about uh
when stuff doesn't happen well i think a lot of people you know they just move on right they don't
to the next there's not really i mean with anything though there's never really much
acknowledgement yeah you know they just just kind of move on and yeah they just kind of go all right
well that was we tried that yeah i mean people will fade away i mean there's been people that that have predicted things and then
it doesn't happen and then they just kind of fade away because now they you know nobody's listening
to them now but couldn't you argue that because you guys are because they uncovered it that that's
why it got stopped well that's interesting i have heard people say stuff like that too they were
like oh they get caught on to us.
I have heard that before too.
That would be a great, that's the angle you would need to go.
Yeah.
And then you're like, I'm 100% on stopping all this.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, you're welcome.
I stopped it from happening.
And then you'd be like, well, you need to let one happen.
You're like, well, the next one you don't want to happen.
Right.
Because they're taking over a Walmart.
Walmart.
Tram law. Tram law or another another way to go we go it did happen and you just didn't even realize it yeah the world
did end you know yeah i mean that's what some people will say stuff like that you know with uh
like biblical predictions and stuff people will say well you don't think it's happening because
it's not on the news but it did happen you know people will say, well, you don't think it's happening because it's not on the news, but it did happen.
You know, people will say things like that.
I've heard that before.
I mean, I'm just into watching it all.
I'm into seeing what's happening.
I mean, it's a lot of fun for me.
Were you into Y2K or were you too young?
No, I was too young then.
I was.
But you would have got swept up.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, oh, yeah.
That would have been.
I mean, yeah, that would have been yeah that
would have been incredible for me yeah yeah yeah i mean we were a little worried about it i mean
that's the year i graduated high school you know so i was about eight i mean and it's like uh you
know we were worried about it a little bit but but not i think i remember being a little like
you're like it was a crazy thing that you're like something's gonna happen what did people think
was gonna happen uh well they just said that like all the computer systems were just programmed for like at 99 it
would just reset right and then everything would be all the banking systems would be messed missile
defense systems probably power grids go down power grid even my grandmother came to our house that
night just uh oh so y'all were worried my mom my mom my mom told me my grandmother came to our house that night just to- Oh, so y'all were worried about it a little bit.
My mom told me my grandmother came.
I don't even remember her coming, but she would never come to our house.
Yeah, because, I mean, you would-
Then you're just-
Now people are talking so much about-
There's so much.
Every day is the craziest thing ever to happen in the history of Earth is every day.
Right.
Oh, yeah.
So it's now, I think, you know.
But then you're like, it was.
I think that's the example, though.
It was borderline unifying.
Yeah.
Because it was everybody was kind of on board like, oh.
I was about to say a little bit of the opposite.
I feel like, because nothing really happened, obviously.
I think people thought some stuff would blow up, too but then the when nothing happened people said see i told you
all while nothing was going to happen it's just a bunch of media blowing whoop whatever but i feel
like because i feel like this is an example of they got on top of it not the media but just
anybody they fixed the problems yeah i think if they had just ignored it there would have been
some major problems because they worked on this for a long time leading up to it.
Yeah, it didn't sneak up on them.
No.
Y2K, it's like they saw it coming on the calendar.
Yeah.
Right, so they got on top of it.
Yeah.
I don't think anything really happened.
That might be a good place to stop.
Yeah.
All right.
I feel great.
All right, everybody.
I will be in Texas this week.
Midland, El Paso, Lubbock, Amarillo.
Come out.
Yeah, and then New Year's Eve, Toronto.
And my special.
I did not.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
We didn't talk about that at all.
I'm surprised.
Talking about it at the very end.
You want to save that for next week? I have some questions about the title and stuff We didn't talk about that at all. I'm surprised. Talking about it at the very end. You want to save that for next week?
I have some questions about the title and stuff.
We can talk about that.
Yeah, we can talk more about it next week.
But it is at Amazon and all that.
So we'll talk about it next week because I forgot to say it.
But yeah, January 31st, Amazon.
Yeah.
This Friday, I'm with Henry Cho at the shills theater in florence alabama
january 7th asw whiskey exchange in atlanta and january 28th at fox river church in waukesha
wisconsin nice man i'm uh san diego california this weekend mic drop comedy club pretty excited
friday and saturday three shows come on out wow that's amazing i had no
idea i am also in san diego at american comedy oh are you really yeah that's crazy i had no idea
oh my god we're in san diego at the same time that's gonna be great well it's like it'd be
great for my ticket sales it's gonna be fun to see you out there. I had no idea. Where are you going?
Where are you at?
I'm at Mic Drop Comedy Club.
I think it's all that stuff's very close to each other.
I don't know for sure, but I know like the club and a lot of that's right there.
But I mean, people can go see both this week.
That's right.
Okay.
Well, yeah, let's do that.
That's right.
Yeah.
Let's spin it that way.
Yeah.
Wow.
That's pretty cool.
Thursday, Friday, and Saturday.
Nice.
San Diego.
Go see that. Yeah. Look at that. Aaron and Dusty. Aaron and Dusty. You go see them. That's pretty cool. Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. Nice. San Diego. Go see the ad.
Yeah.
Look at that.
Aaron and Dusty.
Aaron and Dusty.
You go see them.
That's pretty fun.
You go see.
Yeah.
I think so.
Yeah, yeah.
All right.
Look at that.
That's fun.
Yeah.
That's going to be great.
All right.
You guys want to guess how many states we've done now?
Oh, yeah.
I don't know.
12. 13. 15. 16. I don't know 12 13
15
16
this is our 16th
oh wow
we'll make it through
it's a milestone
yep
yeah
we'll do some more
alright
we didn't cover nothing
of Texas
yeah we did
but
talked about
why'd you kick
we love you
and see you next week
bye about why'd you kick? We love you and see you next week. Bye.
Nateland is produced by Nateland Productions
and by me,
Nate Bargetzi
and my wife,
Laura,
on the All Things
Comedy Network.
Recording and editing
for the show
is done by Genovations Media.
Thanks for tuning in.
Be sure to catch us next week
on the Nateland Podcast.
Hey, I'm Jillian.
And I'm Patrick.
And together we make the podcast
True Crime Obsessed.
If you love documentaries
the way we love documentaries,
you might be interested in our show
because we recap all the
documentaries that you're watching. We've covered just about
every true crime case you can imagine.
We're talking the Hatchet Wielding Hitchhiker, the Ted
Bundy tapes. What else? The Turpin 13.
Yes. With the amazing sisters who basically tell the
story. The girl in the picture. Yes.
All the documentaries you love to talk about with your friends.
We're your friends now. We're the friends you talk about that stuff with. Yeah.
We're True Crime Obsessed Podcast. Search for us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen.