The Nateland Podcast - 138: #138 Country Music
Episode Date: March 1, 2023We're talking about country music on this week's podcast so of course the guys discuss important topics like Walt Disney's frozen head and if Andre the Giant wore blue jeans. Podcast produced by Nat...e & Laura Bargatze Recording & Editing by Genovations Media https://www.natebargatze.com https://www.genovationsmedia.com Email - Nateland@NateBargatze.com
Transcript
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Hello, folks, and hey, Bear.
Welcome to the Nate Land Podcast.
I'm Nate Borghese, Brian Bates, Aaron Weber, Ola Dusty Slay, the cowboy.
All right.
It's kind of a, he's got a, if you're listening, he's got a cowboy shirt on.
Got a little, I feel like a New Mexico.
Yeah, I might have got this in Texas.
Yeah, yeah, well, I said New Mexico.
And I think he's got our Mexican.
Close.
Like a little more Mexico.
I think it's got a Mexico vibe.
Got a cactus, cactus, little Mexico country.
Yeah. Yeah. I think it's got a Mexico vibe. Got a cactus, cactus, little Mexico country. Yeah.
Yeah.
I like it.
You know, if you go down to San Antonio, it's the Mexican guys keeping the cowboy look alive.
Yeah, that's what the shirt, I think it feels, yeah.
Yeah.
Did you ever wear a bolo tie?
I've never owned one.
I mean, I'm not against it.
I like it, but I never can make myself wear this shirt out in the world.
Yeah.
But you are today the world. Yeah. But you are today.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's a good shirt.
It's a lot.
It feels good.
Look at the, even the cuffs.
Yeah.
Some kind of greenery there.
Yeah.
They put stuff where they could put stuff.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Have you ever worn that on stage?
I never have.
Because in Huntsville, you had kind of a Western shirt.
Yeah.
I bought two of them.
I wore the other one.
It's a little more plain and I wore it
for an hour on stage
and it made me
very uncomfortable
and I never wore it again.
Yeah.
All right.
But I, you know,
this may be some
grand old Opry type shirts.
Yeah.
Come on out with that.
I can see that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You look like one of the
Opry square dancers
yeah i told him at the opry that one day i want him to bring me out and i'll just come out and
start singing and see how long it takes the audience to know that i'm not a singer and the
guy goes it happens all the time oh really yeah so i guess people will sing at the opry not very
good sometimes yeah well i think they would think you, because you're like, you know, Leslie Jordan was like funny.
Oh, yeah.
So it's like they might think you're that.
Yeah, that could be it.
I'd go for that.
The new Leslie Jordan.
Yeah.
Dusty Slick.
Dusty Slick.
Yeah.
I could go for that.
He's very joyful.
Yeah, he was.
I mean, you're joyful, but it would be, it's a different vibe.
It's a much different vibe. It's a much different vibe.
It's a much different vibe.
I could see Leslie Jordan saying we're having a good time.
Leslie Jordan's never been banned from a Joanne's Fabric.
Well, that's true.
I don't know that that's true, Albie, but I bet he has.
We know somebody here has been.
I don't know if I'm banned, but they don't want me in there, I'll tell you that.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
They see that shirt.
They're like, well, look what you did last time.
You put it together.
So we're here.
I'm home.
We had a great show this weekend.
And then I leave
today
to go. Tomorrow, I'm today to go.
Tomorrow I'm going to L.A.
to Adam Carolla's podcast, When He Comes podcast.
And then Corden, James Corden.
With Jamie Lee Curtis.
Really?
Yeah.
All right.
Nice.
Yeah.
So it'll be fun.
Are you going to be sitting on the couch with her, do you think?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think so.
Isn't that how he does it?
Well, sometimes they leave.
Oh.
Right? Am I crazy? Or sometimes, like, are you going, you're probably does it? Well, sometimes they leave. Oh. Right? Am I crazy?
Or sometimes, like, are you going, you're probably, she's probably first.
Yeah, yeah.
No offense.
Yeah, Aaron.
Sometimes they leave right after.
Yeah.
That'd be cool if she stuck around.
Oh, I've always saw them as just two guests, but I don't watch James Corden much.
I thought it was all shows.
Anyway, that'll be cool.
No, his is usually, they stay together.
Yeah, I think his is a little different.
I think they talk.
I think it's both guests kind of stay on there together, and he kind of talks to both.
Okay.
I believe.
Okay.
I watched it this week in my hotel room.
It was David Bautista and female comedian.
I can't think of her name right now, but they just take turns.
Oh, yeah.
He'll ask her a question
then ask him a question
then they interact together
yeah
you tell her how you
watched Halloween
in a drive-in theater
yeah that's what I was thinking
I'll tell that story
I gotta find a
yeah cause I was all
I was like
I didn't even find a picture
like I had a big
thing of popcorn
yeah
and then like
he was gonna come
and be like
here's my popcorn
I got
and they were like
well we got Jamie Curtis here
so we'll probably keep the camera on her a little bit oh all right so i guess you don't want
to i guess you don't want to do the popcorn thing all right all right um yeah i'm uh it'll be very
fun and then i could fly home and go to career day have you done career day before i did it last
year how'd it go do you do okay? Yeah.
You know, I don't know.
You talk to the kids.
They ask questions.
Last year, so it's all about what you're going to give these kids.
You've got to give them something.
Oh, you bring in something to give to the class. You bring in something.
We've got some good stuff.
We've got some hats.
So this one, we're giving hats away, which I think it's going to go over good.
Last year, I did meet and greet passes that we signed.
They had to use.
Yeah. I go, I had a lot more meet and greets this year than normal.
I was like, these kids were selling them on eBay.
But I was doing it. And then I brought a marker. I was like, I'll sign it.
I was like, I don't know what to get
like I don't know what to tell them
what to give them
you know
and so
I was like
I was like
let's just get a box
and meet and greet
I'll just sign them
so I was just signing them
and then Harper comes through
and Harper goes
he'll sign your name
just tell him your name
and he'll sign it
and I'm like
Harper don't
and then I mean
it is
every kid telling me their name and some names are so long and I don't. And then, I mean, it is every kid telling me their name.
And some names are so long.
And I don't know how to.
So then, I mean, it becomes.
I mean, we're barely going to.
It's almost over, career day.
And I'm just having to be like, what's your name?
And then Harper's just like, I'm on over.
Like, he'll do it.
And so I'm just having to sign all these crazy names.
So you won't be signing the hats.
I'll sign the hats. I already told Harper. I go, let's not all these crazy names. So you won't be signing the hats? I'll sign the hats.
I already told Harper, I go, let's not go with the names.
I was like, I think that kind of slows everything down a little bit.
If they want to sign the hat, I'll sign the hat.
But these kids don't care.
Is it the same kids as last year?
Probably, yeah.
You should require them to have a meet and greet pass to see you this year.
Oh, yeah, that's good.
I go bring it back.
Yeah, yeah. I'm sorry. are you competing against other parents in this or is there like a dental
hygienist trying to talk right yeah last year i was set with a surgeon and he brought like a
skeleton so yeah i mean i was next to him and no matter how cool your job is if somebody brings a
skeleton in it's tough to compete it's pretty good yeah it's pretty good yeah yeah i mean i don't think p you know it's like i don't know what to give them skeleton in, it's tough to compete. It's pretty good. Yeah. It's pretty good.
Yeah.
Yeah, I mean,
I don't think Pete,
you know,
it's like,
I don't know what to give him.
It's like,
it's all about,
I get,
you know,
it is tough.
I'm doing it.
I'm telling a joke about it on stage now
because it's just a different thing.
But it's,
yeah,
it's,
you know,
it is fun though.
It's like,
I miss so much stuff
because I was going to have to miss this one,
but it was, I just miss too much stuff. And, and. It's like I miss so much stuff. Because I was going to have to miss this one. But I just miss too much stuff.
And so I was like, I got to get home for this.
So it's just going to be a long 24 hours.
It'll be fun, though.
It'll be fun.
Come rolling in.
Tell them on no sleep.
Tell them that.
Yeah, tell them that.
Because, guys, I don't't know how tired I am right now
you don't know how lucky
you are to have me here
I'll tell you what guys
I'm drunk
tell the kids
he goes
how do you get through it
you go
you drink
nah I don't drink
but
it would be funny
if a dad came in
a little
little
oh yeah
I bet it happens
oh yeah
oh I bet
yeah
I bet you get some schools a little know, the ones that are closed for when you're like,
why are we closed today?
There's no snow.
You know, like there's always like.
The threat.
Yeah, because there's people that live on some back roads.
And those are the ones why you close school.
It's usually for just the percentage of people, you know.
So I bet there's some dads up there.
Oh, yeah. ones that why you close school it's usually for just the percentage of people you know so i bet there's some dads up there oh you get some like i went to uh robinson county cooper town elementary for a little bit and that's like it's more farm and so like i mean they're the career day is like
i mean these kids are just seeing their career day is the job that they have currently in elementary
school it's like what do you do oh well we well, the kids in elementary school can do the career day.
Yeah.
Because they go work the farms.
They're in elementary school.
Yeah, Leon Morgan, who also grew up in Roberson County,
said that that's a big tobacco county,
and the high school boys would be out for weeks
when tobacco season was going on because they got to do it.
Yeah.
Yeah, my dad, when he was teaching there, I was in elementary school there. boys would be out for weeks when tobacco season was going on because they got to do it yeah my
yeah my dad when he was teaching there i was in elementary school there but yeah i mean yeah
career day would be the kids talking about what jobs they have yeah just the high school kids
yeah like a kid two grades above them just going what do you do he goes you know when i'm gone
most of the year you know uh so yeah uh so that's what I got going on. Where were y'all at?
I was in Raleigh at Good Night's Comedy Club, Friday and Saturday. Sold out both shows.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
That's crazy.
Yeah. I saw our buddy John Thornton Jr.
Yeah, yeah.
Hung out with him. And Thursday night, I was in Maryville, Tennessee, doing a show for True Purpose Ministries.
I was at a church there, and it's an addiction recovery center.
And they had a singer right before me.
I had a fallen singer.
I'm like, all right, I can handle this guy.
This guy was also a preacher.
So in between every song, he'd be really putting in some testimony and stuff.
I'm like, this is getting tougher and tougher.
People are getting into it.
And at the end, his last song, he said,
let's just get everybody up here who's went through the recovery program,
who's now clean, and we're going to sing,
Oh, Victory in Jesus.
And he gets everybody up there.
They're clapping.
Everyone's standing.
They're singing.
People are crying.
They got babies up there.
And I got to follow this guy.
Wow.
It did not go well.
No, I did fine, but it's a tough follow.
Is it?
How much of a break did you have between?
Were they all back in their seats before you went back on?
They were.
Now, the director.
Still crying now.
Yeah.
I slip on a tear up there on stage.
The director of the program.
Did you walk through the crowd as they walked back to their seats?
I have to elbow a baby out of the way.
Excuse me.
Excuse me.
I'm next.
So if you guys don't mind.
It was, I mean, it was pretty quick.
They, the director of the program gets up there.
It was a good little buffer.
But I mean, he's got a powerful story too.
He's an addict that's recovered.
And now all these people are, you know, and they show a little video and it's pretty powerful.
And then I get up there and boy marriage is hard isn't it hello folks
yeah i think addiction's bad try marriage yeah
how many people you think got started back up after you
a few people fell off the wagon a A few people just go, I gotta go to a bar.
I sent some people back.
But no, I met the mayor of Dusty Town.
All right.
Was it the crowd?
Oh, really?
Oh, that's awesome.
Was the crowd that went on stage, was it so much of the crowd that you almost could have been like, well, y'all just stay up there and I'll stay down here?
Yeah, it was a lot.
Yeah, yeah.
It's easier.
I'll just do the show from the seats
logistics wise
you're already there
let's just do it
I've done a show
where there wasn't
enough people
that they just set
their crowd
on the stage
it was like
instead of
it was like
almost like
too big of an auditorium
that they're like
well we'll just do it on
like that's their backup plan
is just to set it on the stage
and then you do a show.
Everybody?
Yeah, yeah, because there's not enough people.
It's a 2,000-seat place.
And so they're just like, well, we'll just sit seats up here
and do it on the stage.
Yeah.
You could do something like that.
I should have done that probably then.
I feel like there was a show.
I'm trying to think if there was a show where it was the audience.
Yeah, it was something like, yeah, it was like when we brought the audience on,
just brought them on the stage.
There just wasn't enough people.
It would be fun on a show like that, you know, to be like, yeah, you know,
it is nice to be recovered.
I'm just kidding.
I never did drugs.
I was smart enough not to do that.
Yeah, to go there.
Yeah.
Well, my closing joke
is usually about a fake testimony
that I give. I mean, the whole joke
was basically what they were sharing, so I had
to do some editing in my
head real fast. Find a new closer
on the fly. And then the closer I switched to
about canceling
my newspaper subscription. Also, I
say I'm going to prison, which all these people
just shared, so I'm like, right, I'm already in this one.
Well, when people have so many problems, you're like,
you can't avoid all the jokes.
I think, but they're not going to be sensitive about it.
No.
That's the people that's the least sensitive.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They like it.
Yeah, they were great about it.
Yeah, I think once you've been to prison, words don't hurt.
Yeah.
Right?
Yeah. about so i think once you've been to prison words don't hurt yeah right yeah i wonder if they go like they watch the show i wonder if they asked they were like you know because these people are
always all pretty fun people so they just brought the opposite to do the show they go who's who's
been walking the line never veered off off? They go, we got him.
We got the guy.
We got the guy.
We got the guy.
It's too much if it was also.
Like Dustin Chafin does those.
And I did one for an NA, Narcotic Anonymous group.
But I'll tell you, they heckled me.
It was rough.
Really?
Yeah, it was in a gym. I think we talked was rough. Really? Yeah, it was in a gym.
I think we talked about it with Dustin on, but it was in a gym,
and I was in New York, and we go.
And so Dustin, I was just going to open for Dustin,
and Dustin had stuff for this because he was in this.
So he knows how to deal with it and talk to him, whatever.
And I remember I went up, and it was gym lights, so then they cut the remember I went up and they had, it was gym lights.
So then they cut the lights off in the gym.
Well, it gets too dark.
So they're like, we need to cut the lights back on
because you can't even see the stage now.
So they're trying to like find like the square to cut on.
So at least there's some light on the stage.
So, you know, when you cut on gym lights,
it's like, it takes a minute.
So then they're like, we got to start the show.
So we start showing them, the lights aren't even going yet.
So I'm just like in the dark.
And then I start.
And it went so bad at one point, I think I said,
well, I thought you people were supposed to be nice.
And then it was, yeah, I got, it was not good.
And then Dustin murdered.
But I had a rough go.
Those lights were still warming up.
They were still still they weren't
there they weren't there i saw you you went to the tallest or what is it the biggest little
skyscraper yeah wichita falls texas and it brought joy in my heart that because of this podcast maybe
you were like the tour guide and everything that was going on i did know we asked the lady there
they have a shop there now but we we asked a lady there about it.
And so she told us even more.
But I did say this.
It was crazy.
There's been a few things I've explained where I'm like, oh, I've learned this from the podcast.
And I don't even remember these podcasts, but they somehow, they sit in your brain.
You end up just kind of saying something about something dumb.
Yeah, it just seeps in there.
And then you're like, I don't know how I know this.
Yeah.
Like by osmosis is what they say, right?
Yeah.
Yeah, it just sits there.
Yeah.
And it pops out.
Yeah, that place is, it's crazy.
It's very small.
I mean, it's so small.
They have a building.
At one point, we were going, we've started running on the road,
really giving it a go.
Love running.
I've learned.
I've learned.
I think I always liked running, and I just never was too lazy to do it.
More than hiking?
No, I like hiking.
I like hiking for, but I think hiking for, you know,
you're out in nature and all that.
But, like, running is like, man, it's just really helped with me being super busy
and being over, a lot of stuff is very overwhelming.
And it's like just the schedule gets overwhelming.
And it's, you know what, this is all, everything I've wanted,
so I don't want to feel sorry.
But it's like it's helped when I run.
It's like you just feel like you just get, it's just like going away.
It's like almost like meditation. You know get – it's just like going away. It's like almost like meditation.
You know, you just kind of like zone out.
You're in your own little thing, and you just can focus.
Did you ever see the movie What Women Want with Mel Gibson?
You remember one of these, and he's in advertising, and his campaign is for Nike sports.
Oh, yeah.
And that's the campaign that he introduces to them.
I think the line is, no games, just sports.
When you run, because you just tune everything else out.
It's the simplest form of doing exercise.
Like I'm doing a thing to train for like a half marathon,
and it's like you run four minutes, walk one minute or two minutes.
You know, and you just do that back and forth,
and eventually it gets like you do it very long.
But I'm seeing these towns.
I went running in every single city.
Wichita, Fall, Texas, we were running.
We saw that.
So not that I wouldn't.
But, I mean, I don't know if I would have saw that because you're just kind of like sitting around.
So you go run.
We go see Little Skyscraper.
And we see another thing that we thought was it, and it wasn't it.
That's how small that is, is there's just like side buildings that are bigger than that.
Yeah.
And then we went running in every city.
Wichita Falls, Texas, I forget where else I was.
Tupelo, we went running to Elvis' house.
So we just ran to his house.
And, you know, it's fun to have like an end goal.
You're like, all right, we'll just run, and then we'll stop at Elvis' house.
And then Baton Rouge, and I fun to have like an end goal. You're like, all right, we'll just run and then we'll stop at Elvis' house. And then Baton Rouge and I had to be somewhere else too that I'm blanking on.
But Baton Rouge, we were running along the Mississippi River and saw, we didn't get all
the way down there, but saw LSU Stadium, like kind of in the distance and then ran back.
Like, it's just like, it's like, you're like, oh man.
Because it's, I've gone to so many cities and you just, even if you go walking, you just
don't really, cause you're not walking, you can't, you're not walking three miles.
Yeah.
So, but when you do a little running, you're like, you're just like, yeah, just out and
about.
That's how I always felt about biking.
Yeah.
You know, biking, you can really see stuff, but yeah, walking so slow that it's like,
you know, but running's walking's so slow that it's like, you know.
But running's hard for me.
Yeah.
The word jogging's kind of left our vocabulary.
Nobody uses that word anymore.
What's the word? I do jogging.
Running?
I think everyone just calls it running.
Yeah.
But back in my day, jogging was like a slow run, you know.
Yeah.
Well, I'm jogging.
My thing that beeps tells you to go it tells you to jog
it says jog now so it still uses it but i know what you mean you just say running yeah yeah it's
uh because i you know what i mean i want to take those uh electric bikes out not that they're not
even an ad today but i like i want to take those on the road that's what i've been doing yeah oh
really i took it on the road this weekend. Folds in half.
I put it in the back of my car and take it out anywhere.
It's awesome.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
That's what I want to do.
Because if you go do the running, the jogging, you get the exercise over it,
then you can actually have some fun and go actually just ride on that thing like a motorcycle.
You can take it around anywhere.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, it's fun.
It's fun.
Where were you?
I was in Asheville north carolina
this weekend four shows at the wortham center for performing arts uh a lot of fun two shows sold out
which is awesome all right and i had like a weird a weird there's a weird person at every show
so ashville is a weird town dude yeah it is you it is. You know, it's like Austin says keep Austin weird,
but Asheville, there's some odd people there.
Nice people, but one show, I took a picture of it.
A guy in the front just had a big shirt that just said,
I pooped today.
And he was just wearing that.
Was it a mirror?
That feels like something you would have on you wear walmart slippers
that's true uh and then there's a girl at one show this this guy this guy was hanging out with him
oh look at that guy yeah he was into it he was a fan and then there's a girl another show that was
was that guy a fan that guy had no clue who I was.
Oh, yeah.
Okay.
So he's not going to be watching this podcast?
He's just confident enough that he just wears that shirt.
He's going to a comedy show.
He's like, it'll be hilarious.
Yeah, going to a comedy show in that shirt.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
And well, if you wanted to discourage him not to wear it ever again, you did it.
When the headline in comic asked a picture with him.
Yeah.
There you go.
And he's like, did this shirt work?
He goes, worked again.
It worked again.
It works every time.
I was the star of the show.
Yeah.
Maybe this guy's battled constipation in his past, and he's just,
they got happy.
Well, we talked about it a little bit.
They got happy.
Yeah, yeah.
He was proud of it.
And there's another girl.
Did you go, did you?
And he goes, no, no, no.
Not yet, actually.
I'm open.
Yeah.
There's a girl in the front who had been drinking and she the whole show instead of laughing she was just uh snapping a
little bit but not really snapping just like rubbing her fingers together she's doing that
the whole show yeah that's tough and then at the end of the show i'm saying i said hey thanks for everyone for being here i'm going into my spiel and she just goes this isn't court
she's so drunk yeah she's like this isn't court yeah and i mean did you think this was a courtroom
you're like no ma'am your court dates tomorrow yeah we don't know what it's gonna be about but
it will be tomorrow.
The shows were all great.
Thanks for everybody that came out.
Asheville's a weird place.
Some say their own dialect.
So you might need Babbel to help you get through the next time you're in Asheville.
You know, the AI thing.
Talk about Babbel and talking about writing AI. We were doing it this weekend on the phone, AI, like writing jokes,
you know, people's voices, like Becky Owens' voice.
Yeah.
So it was like, you think comics will – because you could write an hour. Like our Eric Barber trainer said it's – he was like, it won't let you do an hour because it was like – it said something like that's not – it's like it's hard to do an hour or it's not – don't do an hour.
It stopped it for some reason.
Like an ethical reason was like it's not right to do this.
Like the AI said that.
Like the AI said that.
But I mean, you could, are comics going to be like, I need new material, and you just go write me, you know, 30 minutes in my own voice?
I bet they're doing it already.
I bet open mic people are doing it already.
Are they good jokes?
They've never been good.
I mean, they're writing in-
The ones they sent to me have never been good.
Yeah, but it's like, you could, you just then go, if you write a set, like if I need new material and I'm like, write me a, you know, I tell AI to write me a joke about something, anything.
And then I just start doing the joke.
I mean, it's in my voice.
What I think it can be actually useful in is not something that broad, but you can go like, you ever like, I need an analogy for this.
odd but you can go like you ever like you're i need an analogy for this you can just write me three analogies comparing this to this and it can churn them out for you it can be helpful in that
way i don't know about write me a new hour in naparkessi's voice that's not going to be
yeah but if you write a joke like can you type in there like so like uh uh trying to do something I'm not talking about.
Like, you know, write a joke about Asheville.
In your voice?
Yeah.
So we have the prompt is write a stand-up comedy bit in the voice of Nate Bargetze about the city of Asheville, North Carolina.
Ned, do you want to read it? Yeah.
Hey, what's up, guys? Nate Bargetze here. So I recently went to Asheville, North Carolina. Ned, do you want to read it? Yeah. Hey, what's up, guys?
Neighbor gets here.
So I recently went to Asheville, North Carolina.
And let me tell you, that place is something else.
First of all, I got to say, Asheville is like the Portland of the East Coast.
You know, they got all the hipsters and the craft breweries and the vegan restaurants.
I mean, I saw more man buns in one day than I've seen in my entire life.
The thing that really got me about Asheville is the art scene.
They got all these galleries and studios, and I'm looking at some of this stuff,
and I'm like, what is this?
Is this art, or did someone spill paint on a canvas?
I saw a painting of a dog that looked like it was done by a kindergartner,
and people were raving about it.
They were like, oh, it's so raw and emotional.
I'm like, it's so raw and emotional i'm like
it's a dog man it's not the mona lisa don't even get me don't get me started on the street
performers uh yeah so it's basically that ai has been to ashville it sounds like yeah yeah they
wrote a lot of stuff but this just feels like this is like an open mic comic has walked on the street
and just looked at things.
There's no real jokes here.
It's just observations.
Right.
But, I mean, if you could, like, regenerate means it'll just give you another idea.
Yeah, or it'll just run it again with the same prompt.
Yeah.
And the outcome will be different. How's everybody doing tonight?
Good to see you.
And the outcome will be different.
How's everybody doing tonight?
Good to see you.
So, yeah, it's like a combination of a hippie commune and a retirement community.
I mean, that's not terrible, especially so specifically for Asheville, if you're doing it.
I mean, it's like built by the Biltmore.
Huge mansion that was built by the Vanderbilt family.
It's like a castle, but with air conditioning.
You know, so it's not, you know, it's not great, but it's like. No, no.
But I mean, you know, someone that's like,
it's just like, is it going to get where you could just,
you just get all your stuff out of it.
I think so, it's going to ruin everything.
And then you're, I don't think it'll ruin anything because I do, there's got to be a difference.
I think an audience could tell a difference, you know, between that versus.
You hope.
Now they can, but give it some time.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It kind of be like Deep Blue.
Remember when it played Gary Kasparov in chess and the first time the world chess champion, he beat it pretty bad,
but it kept getting better and better and learning more,
and it finally was better than he was.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But you're not going to have any personality in your thing.
But see, if it's right in your voice.
Yeah.
But I guess you would have to have a voice.
That's the thing. You have to have a voice that's the thing
you have to have a voice
so whatever you're writing
and if you're trying to write a Johnny Cash song
well you have to be like
Johnny Cash
like Johnny Cash can use that
but if you're just a
someone coming up
you're going to have to just copy people
and then you're
I guess you could steal someone's like essence or whatever.
What makes them?
I mean, Elon Musk has been saying for a long time that AI is going to take over everything.
And we're going to not be able to keep up.
That's why he wants that Neuralink so that we can plug into our own brain to update ourselves so that we keep up with AI.
Yeah.
He's been saying that for way back, years ago.
So let me guess, you're on board with this?
Yeah, I can't wait.
Well, Elon Musk is involved with this company, OpenAI.
He's like a partial owner.
Well, he wants to sell Neuralink.
So he's like, let's get this going here.
Yeah.
Yeah, what are they going to plug in?
Well, I don't know.
I always just think about the matrix when they wake up from the pod
and have to unplug the thing from their head.
It somehow connects your brain to the internet,
and so you could Google something yourself.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
I don't know if we're going to see that.
I hope not.
Like, we are not going to see this.
Oh, we're already there.
You're plugging, but not a person.
Somebody tweeted from their brain.
Do you know what I'm talking about?
No.
There's been a tweet sent by a thought.
I like that you took it to other people right away as if we had not seen it.
Well, you know.
Yeah.
He didn't say in the group.
Look at this, actually.
You know what the tweet was?
Hello, world.
Oh, really?
This happened.
62-year-old Philip O'Keefe from Australia suffers from ALS,
and he used a device to tweet from his thoughts.
And the tweet said, no need for keystrokes or voices.
I created this tweet just by thinking it.
Hashtag hello, world.
I still dedicated mine to Tiger.
I don't know thomas may have something to say about it yeah that's pretty amazing so we're already there there's already the technology
so that guy put that in there and he just thought it he had some kind of device where he just
thought it and then he was able to like a. Like a Bluetooth. Bluetooth for your thoughts.
God.
How does it even tell your thoughts?
I have no idea how it works. I don't want that thing hooked up.
Well, that's like, you know, what if you were, you go, how'd you think of, that's so insane.
You just walk around the corner and you just see someone on a computer.
He's going, hello world.
And he's, you know. Yeah.
Just someone sending it.
So here's how it works.
A node is implanted into the brain via the jugular vein in the neck, placed in the chest under the skin, avoiding the need for drilling into the skull or open brain surgery.
It sits on the motor cortex, part of the brain, in charge of voluntary physical movement and picks up on brain signals.
So the user can look at a screen with a keyboard
and envision which letters they want to type.
Through a device placed on the chest,
a machine learning algorithm will then process the brain data
and translate those signals into specific digital commands.
It'll just know what you're looking at on the screen.
Yeah, pretty scary.
All this technology and he's on Twitter.
First thing he does.
That's crazy.
So get ready.
Where were you at?
Indianapolis, Helium.
Great weekend.
The opposite of what we were just talking about.
Yeah.
Is it?
No, I don't know.
It's just very funny to go from that to be like, Helium.
Yeah.
Helium's great. Great shows. I haven't know. It's just very funny to go from that to be like helium. Yeah. Great.
Great shows.
I haven't been to Indianapolis in a long time.
I used to go there like three times a year.
It was great to go back.
That was a,
yeah.
I like helium a lot that y'all just missed each other.
Yeah.
About one week.
Oh,
that'd been cool.
It would have been fun.
Yeah.
Yeah.
All right.
Good.
Maybe for Dusty,
not for me.
That's what I said.
I even had a lot of people that would say,
I'm coming to Dusty's show.
They post about it.
I'm like, well, I'm there this weekend.
They're like, yeah, I can't get a babysitter this weekend.
Some people just say, just come with Dusty to his show.
Well, it would have been good, though,
almost to if you were up in that other room,
and then it's like people could just go one show and the other show.
Some guy tweeted something like,
I missed Dusty's show when he was in my backyard,
and now I'm seeing Nate 55 miles away.
And I'm like, there's really no need to share that.
Yeah.
That's how far back my seats are.
Yeah.
He's 55 miles away.
You know, I'd like to say, though, while I was in Indianapolis,
I did the Bob and Tom show.
And I've done that show a bunch of times.
And I have struggled on that show.
Oh, really?
And this time.
Struggling in what way?
Like to get a word in?
Well, they have a lot of people on the show.
There's like six people in the room at all times or more.
And it can be hard.
But I had the best time I had ever had there.
And it was great.
And I think this podcast has helped because we got, you know, we got four people in here.
We're all, you know, so I think I'm practiced now.
It was good.
And they were very nice to me.
I think it helps that I've, you know, been on Netflix and some late nights now.
They like me.
When I'd gone there before and had done nothing, they were like, who's this guy?
Yeah.
They're great.
They are great.
It was really fun.
Bob and Tom was a big deal for when I was starting comedy.
Or before I started comedy, I would listen to them every morning when I read water meters.
And that's where Greg Warren and just a lot of comics, I would hear on that.
And it was like, I want to beat these guys.
Like Mike Birbiglia was big on there.
And like, so it was Bob and Tom was a big deal for me.
And it is great.
Is that a show where you do, where you would do bits or is it?
Okay.
Well,
I just kind of,
it was almost podcast style.
I just sat in there.
We told some jokes,
but I was there for about two hours and it was just,
yeah,
it was a lot of fun.
It would be,
you would do bits on that.
And a lot of those guys used to do that back then.
Now you can go on and you can just talk more conversation.
Okay.
But it's great.
All right.
Let's read some of your comments.
Comments come from Twitter, Instagram, YouTube, Apple Podcast Reviews, and Nateland at natbargetzi.com.
Elizabeth A., hello, folks.
I know others have probably said this before, and thanks for all you do.
Having the podcast really meant a lot this week, especially with the band back together.
It helped me laugh and keep from crying after a really hard breakup.
God bless.
Oh, sorry.
All right.
Well, glad you're not crying.
You're back on the horse.
Yeah.
I am glad that she's not crying.
I know you guys laughed, like I said,
in a way that I wish that she was crying.
She might be now.
You got her started again.
Charity Hagen.
Nate, the guy you talk about laughing in Phoenix is my dad.
His laugh is unforgettable.
He's had a hard year this year, and your show really made his whole week.
Thank you for being you.
Well, that's awesome.
I mean, he had a good time.
Too bad you cut him out.
No, no, his laugh's in there.
You hear it. We just...
No, we took it out some other places.
But he's in there.
He's in there. That's awesome. He's got a great laugh.
It was just...
Yeah, I mean, that's the thing
when a laugh's like that. I've had people like that
where they're laughing. It's like, I don't want to be like, hey, stop laughing.
But I do want to be like, hey, have a different laugh.
Yeah.
Enjoy yourself differently.
Yeah.
Carly Seas.
I think you skipped one.
Oh.
Brittany Sawyer.
Unbelievable that Nate didn't ask Sandler what the double V names are about in his movies.
I read that sentence.
The folks need to know.
Yeah.
I didn't think about it.
Yeah.
I think that was more my worry.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
This is Dusty's crusade.
Yeah.
Yeah.
If I remember around the beginning, I did.
I was trying to pick his brain about other things and just career stuff,
but I'll make sure I get this double V thing down.
I mean, Nate did ask Joe Rogan if,
uh,
Barry Sanders could dodge a bear.
I did that.
Yeah.
So,
so I did that.
So I'll get to the double V thing.
Uh,
trying to get some,
uh,
pick a career advice.
Oh,
right.
And I had to,
by the way,
I got a friend that doesn't believe in the moon.
Uh,
why do you do double V's in the names?
Just as you, as you walk out.
Just go, ah, dead gamut.
I got a buddy that thinks Apollo 13 was fake.
What's the double V thing?
He's dying to know.
He's dying to know.
He's got a few ideas.
He's on the top of a building right now.
Carly C's.
Breakfast and Dusty
hyping up Miss Rachel,
his peak toddler dad.
Yeah, a lot of people
that say after we talked
about her on the podcast,
now she's coming up
in their feeds.
Oh, yeah.
Well.
It's what happens.
It's great.
I watched two or three
episodes this morning
with my baby.
Two or three episodes?
Well, you know, seconds.
They're probably quick.
Yeah.
Okay.
So he couldn't let it go.
Let's just see how it ends.
Jordan Dunn.
If Aaron Standard for Based on a True Story moved.
All right.
Hold on.
Let's get into this sentence.
Different.
I don't know what I'm doing with sentences.
It's like I think when you put punctuation there, I get moving.
So those quotation marks threw you off right there?
I get going.
I don't know.
I'm like, if Aaron's standing for a based on his –
I get it where I get my voice gets myself trapped where it's supposed to end
and the sentence is like, we're in the regular sentence, dude.
It's the middle of a sentence.
If Aaron Stainard for a based on a true story movie is exact historical accuracy, he may want to just avoid all movies based on true stories.
This would result in him not getting to watch his beloved Sorkin films.
Turns out Mark Zuckerberg and Billy Bean didn't give five-minute monologues
every time they spoke.
What's my point?
Remember the Titans is the best movie ever, and Rudy was off sides.
Man, I'm sorry.
I struck a nerve, Jordan.
I apologize.
I definitely understand if you're making a movie based on something that
really happened, you have to massage the story. You have to restructure it in a way to make it work for a movie my point was that
remember the titans they changed fact like things that are the whole movie's about they changed like
necessary and i can't figure out how to word this. Well, having the guy get hurt before the game instead of after,
it seems unnecessary.
Yeah.
Well, how would you word it?
Actually, what you said was based on a true story.
So give us the other example.
Give us the movie example.
See, I would think that's one that I'm okay with them
just fudging a little bit for the storyline.
But the point about resegreg point the whole point of the
movie is they're the only team with black and white players and then you find out every team
had black and white players that's that's what the movie's about yeah so you've changed the facts in
such a way that it's it's not based on anything yeah factual yeah anybody can make up that story
exactly that was my point and yeah i, I mean, look, social network, Moneyball,
they're not, you know, we're not reading a transcript of real life,
but they didn't change huge facts in the story.
That's what I'm trying to say.
And Rudy was probably off sides,
but we had already won the game at that point anyway.
Yeah, and the guy only got one play.
I mean, let him have the play.
The guy's got a lot of issues, and when college is over,
life's not going to get better for him.
Yeah.
Well, I knew it.
Rudy was – no one really cared about Rudy.
No.
That was the whole thing with Rudy, right?
Like Joe Montana didn't like – like what we talked about before.
That's the thing with Rudy is like they're annoyed they made a movie about –
Well, it's funny because some form of Rudy happens at every college, every season.
Yeah.
Like all the time.
It's not as original as a story as I'd like to.
Or high school.
Every year at the end of high school basketball or football, they'll put in a kid who's been
on the bench for four years, the team manager, and sometimes they'll let them score.
Exactly.
And sometimes that might have been me.
I'm not saying it was or I'm not saying it wasn't,
but we didn't have video cameras back then.
Did that happen to you?
No.
Oh.
They were like, no, no, no, we're ahead, but low risk.
They tried to let me score.
I still couldn't do it.
I kept missing.
There you go.
They let you walk out there and just ask for autographs.
The other teams rebounded it, giving the ball back to you.
Keep missing it.
Kev F.
Being a bald man
myself, if I had hair like Dusty's, I
would just stay up at night and brush it
continuously while running my
fingers through it. Yeah, dude. That's a blast.
I love doing that. I love to just set
up light, brush it, smell it, through it. Yeah, dude, that's a blast. I love doing that. I love to just set up light, brush it, smell it, feel it.
I like to stand in front of a fan, let it flow.
Oh, there you go.
Yeah.
You know?
Danny Smith.
I love how Nate summed up his AT&T Pro-Am experience with,
this was a dream come true, and out of all the things I've wanted to do,
that was one of them.
I feel like there's a merch opportunity with that quote keep up the great work fellas it was a dream come true it's hard to like say uh you know it was i was listening to uh
burt kreischer's podcast with Louis C.K.
And they were just talking about like when Louis did
Madison Square Garden,
he
said he would take the train
there, the C train. He did it eight times.
He would just take the train there
like he was going to work because he was going to work
and he goes and does Madison Square Garden
and then he would get on the train and he would go home and it wasn't like in the moment it was like you know
he's like yeah it's what i just went to work and then he said he went to see bob seger uh and he
just went to go watch and you know he thought in there he's like watching bob seger he's like it's
crazy to think like me and him are the only two people in this room that have played this room.
Yeah.
And then he said he started crying.
And like he said, someone told him, his girlfriend or something at the time told him, because he was like, why am I crying?
And he was like, maybe then he was able to like wrap around what he had done.
You can't when you're in it.
But then when you see someone else do it, you of go man i did you know or something i don't
know right so when i do the pro-am next year you'll fully appreciate it that's what i say yeah
yeah well it's like when you do when you're in it when you're doing stuff you like it is
it is hard to i mean you i am aware of how appreciative and how lucky i am to do this
but it's also hard to completely wrap your head around that what's happening.
You know, it's like, just like every show,
it's hard to wrap your head around that anybody is there and that would know
you.
I don't see you crying about it.
Well, you're still in the moment too.
Yeah. Yeah. I'm not, it's not, this is not about AT&T. I've just,
it's about everything.
Yeah.
I think even when you, when I do Bridgetone,
like it's going to be overwhelming, but I don't know if I'm going to handle it the way someone might
think I should handle because I don't know how to handle that situation like it's not the end
it's not like you go I did it it's over it's like that's right but I think it's uh yeah you're going
to have other times that's going to be like golly that's great like be able to look back on it I
mean I'm in it right now. I'm in it.
It's also a progression over time too, right?
Like if you went and did an open mic
and then the next day you're selling out Bridgestone,
you would be like, wow, this is overwhelming.
Overwhelming.
You've been like building up, you know?
Yeah.
It's almost, but everything is overwhelming so much
that you can't let it be overwhelming
or I'm not gonna be able to do the thing
that I'm supposed to do.
So some of it is that you have to go, because it is overwhelming to think when I go walk around,
I mean, I don't think there's not, I really am surprised that a single person would know who I am. I almost think the audiences, when I go out are, are just kind of like, well, we just come
to comedy shows. Like, you shows. It feels like that.
And it feels like you can go walk around.
In Baton Rouge, you're like, I think I could go walk around the lobby.
And I don't think someone would notice.
I don't think it'd be weird.
Because it doesn't make sense that it would be weird.
I mean, I don't know why it would be. You just think you're like, well, I'm just a dude.
I'm just from Old Hickory, man.
I don't know what to do.
It's like I'm just –
Taking the train to work, essentially.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Essentially, like, you know.
It is special, and I know it's special,
and I'm aware of how special it is.
And I am appreciative of it and all that stuff.
But, yeah, I think it is hard to wrap your head around everything.
It'd be like telling a professional athlete,
can you believe you were just out there on the field playing that game?
And they're like, yeah, but I got another game next week.
If I get too wrapped up in it, I ain't going to be able to perform.
Yeah.
It's a long season.
Which I'm not going to.
I don't want Danny to think we're – I understand.
What he said is very funny because that's funny.
He also mentioned your callback on the door.
It didn't make sense.
Did he? No, I'm joking. Oh. What callback? funny because that's funny he also mentioned your call back on the door didn't make sense but uh did
he no what call last week when we read the guy had the callback idea for you oh yeah special i did
maybe since i did a call back about the door last night oh really yeah and it like didn't go good
and then i just like got out of it i'm not not that I'm not doing I did a call back to the ultimate
by the way
if you come into shows
you can
we did it all weekend
hour
none of it's on the special
alright
that's crazy man
yeah
none of it's on the special
it's hard
Antelope
720
Nate as long as we were talking ward wardrobe what shoes are you wearing for your
special very nice rag and bone metro runner there they are there they are different color but that's
the yeah yeah that color they were great they look good on the stage uh being reflected uh yeah
yeah they were good i'm not even a shoe guy but they were they look good they look good on the stage being reflected. Yeah, they were good. I'm not even a shoe guy, but they look good.
They look good.
I wanted to mix it up this time and not do Nike.
I actually like those.
So, yeah, they were good shoes.
Brandy Hobart.
Hobart.
Aubart.
Nate's special is rated PG-13 due to his use of the words murder and dumb.
Wow.
How do I know this, you may ask?
Am I a ratings expert?
Do I have a secret in with Amazon?
No.
Nate's sister Abigail posted it on the fan page.
Have they had such a falling out after the new tattoo that he won't even speak to her?
Yeah.
There you go.
Abigail's trying to get in.
She's having to get Brandy
to comment for her.
Now, Abigail told me that.
She told me that.
She texted me that yesterday.
Still won't talk to her.
No, I talked to her.
Murder and dumb.
Murder and dumb.
She just told me that, though. I didn't know. Yeah, murder No, I'll talk to her. Murder and dumb. Murder and dumb. She just told me that, though.
I didn't know.
Yeah, murder, because I said murder and dumb.
Dumb is crazy.
Murder, you're like, okay.
But dumb?
Murder, I don't even, I mean.
None of it makes sense to me.
What's dumb?
Why can't you say dumb?
I don't know.
Hmm.
Hmm.
I mean, it's kind of like ratings and standard.
What are we doing?
Yeah, that takes it from G to PG-13, saying dumb? Yeah.
That's crazy.
Do you think stupid would be okay?
Is there a stupid more harsh?
I'm talking about me.
Right.
I say I'm dumb.
I wonder who you're calling dumb matters at all.
Yeah, wouldn't that matter?
But maybe dumb is like, because dumb also means like mute, right?
So maybe somehow it's-
Like a medical-
It used to.
I mean-
Deaf and dumb, it still does in the right context.
I guess, but nobody says dumb.
Like, oh, he's talking about that guy being a mute.
But you know, you also don't know a lot of mute
people. Yeah. I don't know a lot
of them. No. Yeah. They're hard
to talk to. Yeah.
Maybe because you call
them dumb. Maybe that's
why y'all don't get off to a great start.
Are you dumb? Are you dumb?
Joshua Crowe.
Nate referred to having too many choices being frustrating. This is known as
the paradox of choice. It sounds like it's already made up, but it sounds like Josh is making this
up and he's like, let's see if it works for me. Businesses think that customers want more options,
but it actually causes anxiety. I'm in the restaurant business, and two examples of this in my industry
are cookouts menu versus Five Guys menu.
One is simple and enjoyable.
The other causes panic attacks.
So Five Guys has got to be the simple one, right?
For sure.
Because it's just like one patty, no patty.
Yeah, it's true.
It is.
I get that.
We talked about this a little bit when you were gone
because you watch a restaurant show where they-
Restaurant Impossible.
And Aaron said that the one thing they always do is simplify the menu.
Yeah.
Because it makes it better.
Just focus on what you do well.
Yeah, I mean, even that, if you're making a million things,
you're probably not making any of them that well.
Yeah.
Well, it's like Cheesecake Factory is the only the only i guess kind of opposite of that where
theirs is so complicated but it's like there you're like well i can go there and do uh
but yeah and i mentioned that i think but golden corral if you're doing steak and mexican and
italian yeah well the thing about that is like you don't, at a Golden Corral, you don't have to choose.
It's a buffet, right?
Yeah, you just put it on there.
Buffet, you want choices.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's true.
The more choices, the better.
If you go to a buffet and there's one vegetable, one meat, one starch, you're like, well, I could have just ordered this.
Yeah, people, buffets are, they're never as good as any buffet.
I've rarely found a buffet.
Like salad bars are great buffets.
Yeah.
And I've rarely found a buffet that's like great because it's the food sitting out there.
Yeah.
Even when you go to Vegas, you go – there's some places in LA that have a hotel that's like very nice and they have a buffet.
And they have a lot of stuff and it's good, but it's all just a little, like the food sits out there a little bit, you know?
I used to like a Chinese buffet.
Chinese buffet actually works.
That's where it's at.
Yeah.
That's about it.
Why is that any different than any other type of food?
Because Chinese food just sits out.
Yeah.
It's allowed to sit out.
Yeah, it is.
It is allowed to sit out.
It just sits out.
That's what it's about.
They just come by and mix it up once in a while.
Yeah, stir it up.
That's the cookout menu, by the way.
I don't know if I'd get a panic attack from that, but it definitely is a lot.
It's a lot.
Yeah, but I know what I'm doing now.
Yeah, I've never had cookout.
It's good.
You get a tray, and then you pick a main thing from the tray,
and then you get two sides, and then you get a drink with it.
I would love it, man.
I've been on my streak.
We're trying to make a – because Red Rocks.
Red Rocks is like my after picture.
Oh, from the last time you were there.
Yeah.
Okay.
Because the last time I was there, I was pushing – I don't like to say I was 200.
I was probably hit 200, but I was 200.
Now I'm down to like 174 again but i went back up to 180
i went up down so now i'm on a ballooned uh to 180 dude i would love to go to cookout
it was 180 in sixth grade your shirt weighs 180 now i don't know that'd be very funny
that's very mean but it's such a heavy. That'd be very funny. That's very mean, but it's very,
that's a very funny idea.
That's when it goes,
God,
my shirt weighs that much.
If someone said,
my pants weigh more than that.
What kind of pants you got on?
Sounds like a workout.
How much do you think
Alan J.
The Giant's pants weighed?
Nine pounds.
Belt,
belt on?
Yeah.
Belt on, pushing 15 probably.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Like jeans?
I'm thinking like jeans.
Yeah.
Like a heavy material with a belt,
wallet in, maybe 20.
You think he could wear jeans?
Did they have Andre the Giant-sized jeans?
Well, he had some stuff made, I'm sure.
Yeah.
And there are people,
there are, yeah, yeah, yeah.
For sure.
Yeah, I mean, he wasn't, he had clothes on.
I was going to say, he didn't wear.
Even a big and tall shop, you're like, well, actually, we did not plan for this.
Well, I think he gives them a heads up.
I'm a literal giant coming in.
Maybe have some stuff ready for me.
Have you heard of me?
They call me Andre the Giant.
Yeah, he's got pants on right there in that top picture.
Yeah, but not jeans.
Yeah, maybe he's not wearing jeans.
He had to wear those pants because they had to make them.
Yeah, like some sweatpants there.
And they're a little too short.
Yeah, dude, he can figure it out.
He's got money.
If you've got money, you could have somebody make something for you.
He has jeans on over there with Arnold Schwarzenegger, doesn't he?
Yeah, there it is.
Okay, look at that.
That's that fabric paint
that's not really a gene okay yeah it's a gene color yeah you're right it's yeah it's crazy and
arnold schwarzenegger is huge and like he's just yeah they're just so big were they in a movie
together that's kind of looks like conan i think that's conan the barbarian can you imagine every
day is just look how big you are yeah i mean it's every it's
never not that you never walk in a room and just be like is that cream that's will chamberlain
so will chamberlain at least like they gotta sit there and just talk they can just talk about other
stuff yeah not being huge yeah well what chamberl, I mean, looks as big as, they're the same height.
And he's big, dude.
Like, you know, I thought Andre was even bigger, but like, Will Chamberlain's a big dude.
Yeah.
Super Scott Crawford.
For the record, there is no dark side of the moon.
There is the far side of the moon. There is the far side
of the moon. However,
there's a common misconception about
the moon's backside. I'd like to clarify.
Oh, I can't wait. Here we go.
Super Scott. The sun also
shines on it. The first humans
to view the backside of the moon were the crew
of Apollo 8. Crew member
James Lovell was also
on Apollo 13. Hey, Bear. James Lovell was also on Apollo 13.
Hey, Bear.
James Lovell.
That's who Tom Hanks
played in the movie.
So they went around the moon.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, they orbited around it.
I bet.
Did they get pictures?
No, they stopped working
when they were up there.
Yeah.
They were in a hurry, right?
Couldn't get it real fast enough.
That's too bad.
We have pictures
of the other side of the moon.
We do.
Yeah, we did
this last time i was about to say maybe there are some maybe pink floyd kind of popularized the
term dark side of the moon to to bury like when you search for it no i wasn't saying that purposes
we always say dark side of the moon but he's saying that's not even a real thing maybe that
pink floyd album maybe you should type in far side of the map. Do we talk about that's the theory
that Disney did that
with the movie Frozen?
Mm-mm.
That they were trying
to bury search results
about Walt Disney's
Frozen head?
So they named the movie
Frozen.
Oh, really?
So if you Google
Disney Frozen,
all of that's pushed
to the side.
Oh, wow.
That's a conspiracy theory
I like to bring to the table.
Yeah, yeah.
That's a fun one.
Yeah.
I don't know if that
makes that much sense to me, though.
What do you mean?
I don't think enough people are Googling his frozen head.
They were before.
Yeah, but not – I don't think that was –
What were they helping to look up?
Because then you could just go Walt Disney's frozen head,
and you'd be like, okay, now I'm back to exactly what I want.
You just add head to it.
Yeah, you add head to it.
Your game's over.
Well, look.
Yeah, but if you Google Disney Frozen, I mean, it's all the movie.
But, I mean, I don't know if I would Google Disney Frozen if I was looking for his Frozen Head.
Try Frozen Head.
Disney Frozen Head.
Try Frozen Head, I'm sure.
No, just Disney Frozen Head. Yeah. Because that's'm sure. No, Disney Frozen Head.
Because that's what you would do.
If you're listening, there it is.
It's a bunch of stuff. You're right.
Look, I didn't say it's the best conspiracy
theory in the world. I just said
If the movie were called Frozen Head,
then that would be
Disney's Frozen Head.
About a princess.
Cryogenically frozen head.
Yeah, that would be it. Is his head Head. Yeah. About a princess. Cryogenically frozen head. Yeah, that would vary.
And he goes, is that about Walt?
Is his head frozen?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Just the head?
They didn't do the whole body?
I think, yeah.
I think the head was taken off the body.
Like Ted Williams.
This is what they don't want us to know.
Yeah.
So they named the movie Frozen.
I think, look, they didn't go in.
They didn't create a, let's create a movie called Frozen to bury this stuff.
But I think somebody in marketing was like, oh'll be nice call it frozen and knowing in the back of their
head it's a nice little ancillary benefit would have wanted this yeah yeah i don't i don't know
i don't think all right i mean i don't think i believe either but it's again funny that's the
one conspiracy theory you guys won't get on board with. I know. Yeah.
The most basic one.
That's crazy.
That's being ridiculous.
Bianca Huber.
Bianca Huber.
Huber.
I would like to confirm that Nate is
Michael Scott. It's amazing
how his character even speaks with a cadence like Nate.
Their absurd humor also makes them so similar.
In my continued observation, Brian is Aaron and sometimes Pam.
Aaron is Oscar, who is a very underrated character.
All right.
Yeah.
Dusty is a Jim and Dwight love child.
We're having a good time.
All right.
There we go.
I like that.
That's nice.
I mean, I would argue that I'm probably Toby.
I would say Toby.
A lot of people have pointed that.
They even did a little montage of Michael and Toby and then Nate with me.
Oh, really?
It's very similar.
Why are you the way you are?
Yeah.
I like Dwight.
I like the Dwight character in the British office
Whatever his name is in that
Gareth
Yeah it's great
Really good
Yeah you would be Dwight
Some holidays you don't believe in
Some you create
Yeah I've been trying to grow beats forever
Yeah
I can't get them to grow
It's hard
Yeah
Yeah
Alright
So this week
Country music Oh there you go Alright Yeah. All right. So this week.
Country music.
Oh, there you go.
All right.
I got the country music voice.
Yeah, that's why I dress this way.
Yeah.
Now, who is Jesse Daniel?
Jesse Daniel's a country singer that I like a lot. Very, like a new, kind of a new country singer.
He's great.
Very good.
From California.
California country. Okay. And I met him. He came to play in Nashville. He's great. Very good. From California. California country.
Okay. And I met
him. He came to play in Nashville. I met him.
We hung out, took some pictures.
It's great. Now, you know
country music pretty well. Pretty well,
yeah. I'd say you and
I are probably more mainstream country.
Kenny Chesney.
That's a big one for you.
I love Kenny Chesney.
Country just blew up
in the early 90s
and that's when I was in college
and
and Garth Brooks played
the Murphy Center
at MTSU
where
I went to school
and I stood in line
and got
me and
a bunch of my friends tickets
and
you'd go to any show
you'd go to everything at MTSU
I was just always there
every single thing.
Yeah, just sure, why not?
Sure, why not?
I saw George Strait there a bunch.
Wow, that's pretty awesome, though.
Garth Brooks, George Strait.
No, no, I think you'd...
This is all at the early stage of their career.
Yeah.
This is before they're famous.
No one knew who they were?
No.
Well, Garth Brooks, is it their height?
I mean, if he's playing the basketball arena?
Well, that's true.
Now he does giant stadiums.
Yeah.
But that's when he blew up.
I don't think he would come to the Murphy Center.
Well, that's true.
That's when he was blowing up, though.
That's when Friends in Low Places and The Dance and all that, it just come out.
And I'm saying you should go to this stuff, but I think you were probably a good friend.
You just knew, like, this is in town. We got to go. Because a lot of people, I think, you should go to this stuff, but I think you were probably a good, you just knew like this is in town.
We got to go.
Because a lot of people, I think, miss stuff.
Those examples, people were coming from all over to go.
That was a big deal.
But I would go to an MTSU basketball game where there was, you know, a couple thousand people.
You had plans every night.
I had a lot going.
Yeah.
I did comedy at MTSU.
Had you been there, would you have come to that?
I'm sure I would have.
Yeah, if you go back and travel back into the future.
It's funny to think now there's 30-year difference.
Would you have gone?
Would you have went to the world's first fair?
Yeah.
How old were you in like 1992?
10 years old.
Were you doing comedy then?
Well, I was making people laugh, but mainly getting in trouble.
The crazy thing, Nashville has so many venues now to see music.
But then there was the Municipal Auditorium, which still exists,
downtown Nashville.
And it's like a relic.
They still do shows.
But then MTSU's Murphy Center,
people have to go to Murfreesboro to see a big show.
Really?
Because that's where the judge did like their farewell tour.
And there was no Bridgestone Arena.
I wouldn't mind doing a show at Municipal Auditorium.
Be fun. Like, I mean, obviously Bridgestone is what I wouldn't mind doing a show at Municipal Auditorium. Be fun.
Obviously, Bridgestone is what I want to do,
but then go do one for Municipal Auditorium?
Just because that was a big deal.
That was the place.
I don't know.
How big is it?
How many seats is Municipal Auditorium?
I think it's like 5,000 or 6,000.
Yeah.
Yeah, I remember watching basketball.
We had a Ronnie Marietta coach. Yeah? Yeah, I remember watching basketball. We had a – Ronnie Margetz, a coach.
Yeah.
I saw him play on it.
Yeah, they still do like OVC basketball tournaments.
It's bigger than I realized.
9,700 in the round.
Wow.
Might be able to do a weekend there next year.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But who were like your biggest country music music were you into country music as a kid
i was not at all or have you ever been i i got into it when i moved to nashville because you
just can't avoid it yeah growing up in alabama nobody surprisingly none of my a lot of people
in alabama do obviously but it was just my family and my friends and the guys I hang out with.
Nobody listened to country.
They thought it was lame.
Yeah.
They thought it was weird.
And then Nashville, it's just everywhere.
So I just embraced it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I guess I'm saying in the 90s, it became a cool thing.
It wasn't just like everybody listened to it.
Yeah.
I mean, I grew up on 90s country.
And I, yeah, I mean, I love it.
I Googled the most best-selling albums of all time,
and every chart would tell me something a little different.
But according to Wikipedia, Shania Twain's Come On Over
is the seventh greatest-selling album of all time.
Was that Any Man of Mine?
Probably.
Yeah.
Man, I feel like a woman. That song? Probably. Yeah. Man, I Feel Like a Woman, that song.
Probably.
It was a great one.
Yeah, huge.
She's one of the best-selling of any country artist.
Isn't she from Canada?
Yeah.
Yeah, she had some real crossover appeal too, though,
because she's country, but it's debatable.
I mean, it's like pop country.
Well, let me ask you about this.
Why are country music fans, they're the only fans that are defensive about their genre in a way that no other genre is?
Because I feel like now it's almost genre-less, the music.
Everything's everything.
It's like, who cares what's what?
But you'll hear that from country fans all the time. Well, it's not real country. Well, it's this. You have to qualify it in a way. It's like, who cares what's what? But you'll hear that from country fans all the time.
Well, it's not real country.
Well, it's this.
You have to qualify it in a way.
It's like, who cares?
Well, I just think there's some aspects you look for in country that you like, you appreciate, fiddle, steel guitar, stuff like that.
So it's about the instruments.
Well, yeah.
There's stuff that makes it country.
And now it's just like people with southern accents singing pop music a lot of
times okay well like folk like folk music would probably be country like you count that as like
yeah in a way yeah in a way yeah so like americana yeah i mean i don't know all the genres but yeah
it's like i don't know there's just stuff i look for where i'm like well this is i mean yeah it's
country but it's like so i feel like all music is like becoming like pop rap now.
Like every genre is like that.
Like rap is like pop rap.
Pop has got a little rap.
Well, you're having AI probably write songs.
Yeah.
It's almost, that's where you're going to see it first.
Oh, I'm sure.
Because you really could like just write,
like have AI write a song.
Yeah.
And then if you get the right person to sing it
and you get beats behind it
and it's just enough that everybody's like, I like it.
And then it is what it is.
Yeah.
But it loses any soul.
Like there's not, it was like, what's that guy's, has the crazy voice.
Like he talks like.
Wolfman Jack?
No.
It's like, you go on letterman a lot david letterman tom waits yeah oh yeah yeah like that guy's voice right he sings it's crazy like he's got a beard
yeah it's not like it's this great voice but it's like you're buying into his whole thing yeah yeah
sure yeah but so like old town road it a couple years ago, it was climbing the charts.
Billboard's high country song, got it number 19.
They took it off the charts because they said this isn't real country.
Well, I think there's no reason why it shouldn't be considered real country now in the state that it's in.
But yeah, I mean, it's not a – I don't find it to be a country song by my standards,
but by the standards that are being set,
I don't know why it's not.
Does that make sense?
Oh, you're saying that the song had come out in 1992.
You're like, obviously this is not a country song.
But because the genre has evolved
to where it was in 2018.
Yeah, it should be.
It should be country.
Yeah, I think so.
All right.
It's a very reasonable take.
That's what I think, yeah.
I think it spent more weeks at number one than maybe any song.
That song was everywhere when it came out.
I mean, they got, it changed a little Nas.
They got a hold of him.
Yeah, it did.
I mean, good night.
That's, you know.
It almost makes you not want to hit song.
Yeah, well, you want to go.
He was not.
I mean, you really do feel.
They got a hold of him.
Because I.
It's wild now.
It's wild now.
So the birthplace of country music, actually not Nashville.
Yeah, Montgomery, Nashville. Yeah.
Montgomery, Alabama.
No.
Memphis, Tennessee.
I actually mentioned this on our Tennessee episode, but it's not Memphis.
Oh, it's Tennessee, Johnson City.
No.
Like East Tennessee, I would think.
Bristol.
Yeah.
Oh, that's what they say.
Well, they've got the birthplace of country music museum there.
Well, I could put up a museum.
Okay.
Say, what gives them the basis to claim that?
I think they did their first recording session in Bristol.
I always feel like country is like a mix of blues and bluegrass.
Okay.
That's what I always think.
Okay.
And it started in Bristol?
Well, it started in Appalachian mountains it was called
hillbilly music and then after a while they're like yeah let's maybe call it they themselves
were calling it hillbilly music i think everybody was okay yeah they just embraced it you're like
why well hillbillies were singing yeah yeah and then it kind of became more country and then so um in 19 uh 25 this i act like i'm trying to remember all this this
insurance company nashville went to your first show at mt issue
wasn't a university
excuse me uh the national life and Accident Insurance Company bought a radio station to promote their, I guess, insurance.
And they do live radio shows.
And their motto was, we shield millions.
So they called their radio station WSM.
And that's WSM.
That's the Nashville radio station now.
That's still the radio station.
And they did a show called WSM Barn Dance, where they just played country music.
And then one night, right before it, they were doing opera.
And when the guy came on for the barn dance show, he said, you've been listening to opera,
but now you're going to listen to some grand old Opry.
And it stuck.
And then they changed the name of it to the Grand Ole Opry.
Wow.
Yeah.
Why did he call it Opry?
Just trying to be like, you're opera, we're Opry.
Yeah.
I don't know, just kind of like slang, I guess.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Kind of slang.
And then the Grand Ole Opry kept growing.
It was at the Belcourt Theater for a while here in Nashville,
and then it kept outgrowing that.
We did a show there.
Belcourt Theater?
We did it. I think I've done it. that we did a show there Belcourt Theater we did it with uh
I think I've done that
my first CMT
oh yeah
is at Belcourt
that's right
but then we did one
with Kenny and his friends
uh
then it moved to East Nashville
for a while
and it kept getting bigger
can you imagine
uh
just
you're like
we do one for Kenny
and his friends
it is funny
like
this is
people
listen to this podcast
all over the world and they just they
got it just in the middle of it like remember we did that show for kenny and his friends were like
oh yeah that's right i remember that and people were like i don't even who is kenny i thought
you meant kenny chesney that's what i thought it's our buddy kenny oh okay and my buddy kenny
it's my buddy i grew up with and it's so funny
that it just made me
just
and I talk about it
I say these names all the time
I'm not saying
because you said it
it just hit me
as you said it
to be like
I mean a lot of people
listen to this podcast
yeah for like Finland
yeah
that have no
ties to any of it
and you're like
remember we did that show
with Kenny
ah yeah yeah yeah yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I really just thought Kenny Chesney
because you had already mentioned it.
Yeah.
No, no, no, no.
I thought it was weird you were on a first name basis with him, honestly.
No.
Like, who were his friends?
Garth Brooks.
Garth Brooks.
Kenny Clayton.
Yeah.
I mean, it's just insane.
So Grand Ole Opry kept on outgrowing it.
They moved it to
the War Memorial Auditorium
which is still
doing shows in Nashville
and then finally
into the Ryman
they started charging
people to get in
because it kept
getting bigger
and bigger
and then
it just kept growing
that's crazy
I've done shows
at a lot of those places
War Memorial
I did a show
did a show at the Ryman
did the Opry
several times
that's great.
Yeah.
That's fun.
Yep.
Elvis.
You are country music.
Yeah.
That's right.
I mean, this is as close as I'm going to get.
Yeah.
I may write a song one day.
Can you sing?
I can't sing, but I may write one.
Yeah.
I wrote a song.
Did you?
With Walker Hayes.
Yeah, this was four years ago now.
You wrote this song.
Are we ever going to hear it?
I do have it.
I don't know.
You did a recording of it?
It didn't get released?
No.
Him singing or you?
Him singing.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
And he's become, I mean, he's become like a huge star since you've done it.
Yeah, yeah.
The Applebee's.
Everybody thought it was the Applebee's song, and it wasn't.
Trust me, you would have heard about that.
Yeah, you'd be talking about that.
So that during COVID,
that TikTok video
blew up of Walker Hayes
doing Fancy Light
and it became a huge,
do you know this song?
Yeah.
Keep in mind,
this is Walker Hayes
friend of the pod.
Yeah,
yeah.
No,
no,
that's the song
you're talking about, right? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, yeah, pod. Yeah, yeah. No, no, that's the song you're talking about, right?
Yeah.
Yeah, okay, yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
It became a huge hit.
Yeah, I mean, yeah.
No, I was at the ACMs, and I saw him do that song in Vegas.
Okay.
It's fun.
It's a fun song.
I mean, it's not my kind of country, but it is a fun song.
Sure.
Yeah.
Sure.
Just a couple things.
Elvis played the Opry, and they didn't like his dress, the way he was dressed,
so they were like, you're not a good fit for us.
He did do it, though.
Yeah, as a teenager.
It's in his house.
Elvis' house.
Yeah, you mentioned it.
You ran there.
Yeah. Yeah, and that's all I said about Elvis' house. Yeah, you mentioned it. You ran there. Yeah.
Yeah.
And it was, that's all I said about it, though.
Yeah.
I mean, yeah.
Sorry, let's get back to the news.
No, I'm just saying, you ran there.
Yeah.
I ran, yeah, but I was, I mean, we could have talked about it.
Elvis' house.
But we'll get back to you
well go ahead
tell us
no no
he's like tell you
I ran there
and I saw this
I ran there
I saw it
did you get to go in
yeah
yeah I bought a ticket
it was two bedrooms
I mean not two bedrooms
it was a kitchen
and a bedroom
this was his childhood house
yeah
okay
he lived there
until he was 14
in Tupelo
and their homes were
it was just two rooms
so you had the bed in the bedroom and then you had the kitchen like back then because it was like
they had to do so much stuff just to even operate a house back then you had to get up and like
if you want anything it's a lot of work you got to go get it you got to go yeah right if you want
breakfast this is pre-fridge probably right
they had a fridge in there you'd have to put a big ice thing of ice yeah in it and then i mean
you know probably deliver ice every day right i don't know if they delivered it or they brought
it but it's yeah they you'd have to yeah you'd have to go you'd have to get it every day just
to have this stuff work but if you want want anything, it's the most work.
Yeah.
The house is tiny.
Yeah, we have it pretty good these days.
It's not even imaginable how, like, it's what they had to do.
I mean, even my dad growing up had to go to an outhouse.
Yeah.
It's like, it blows my mind.
Every time?
Yeah.
I mean, like, well, you just, i guess you could just go outside you know but
it's like you know we had you know we have a bathroom in our house that i had to get the
toilet fixed and i was like ah i gotta go into the bedroom every time you know what i mean it's like
imagine having to go out back every time sometimes i i wish we should probably bring that back
well you want to go pee outside.
No, let's just separate all of it.
Oh, have the bathroom outside.
Yeah, yeah.
Just have it all out there.
Yeah.
That'd be better for everybody.
Yeah.
That seems like a lot.
It's pretty obvious when it's like, all right, I'll see you on a little bit.
Oh, I don't care about that, but I'd just like to keep everything.
You hit the garage, you go.
You get in your car car drive over to the
drive to the bathroom go to your bathroom house that you have built growing up uh i lived in a
trailer with one bathroom and my brother-in-law would he was a bigger guy he would go to the gas
station if he needed to poop because he was like he was like that's gonna just yeah it's gonna ruin
the house yeah he would just go to the gas station. Yeah, good for him.
Yeah, I've done that before.
That gas station, just like –
They're just like, here we –
And then you just see him grab a paper.
Never buys anything.
Puts the paper back and goes, all right, I'll see y'all in a couple hours.
See y'all after dinner.
Yeah.
And in Japan, don't they separate the bath from the toilet for that reason?
Oh, they're in different rooms?
I thought so because they feel like where you clean should not be where you poop.
It is odd to put them all in the same room when I think about it.
I've never thought about it until now. It's poop. It is odd to put them all in the same room when I think about it. I've never thought about it until now.
It's odd.
It is odd.
Why do you choose?
Why do you put those?
Why not put the oven in there, too?
Well, that's weird.
That's too far.
It's like two unrelated things.
It's where we keep our plates.
Not really.
It's like where you go clean.
It's taking care of your body in there.
Okay.
It's a body thing.
No, put a treadmill in there too.
That's the taking care of your body.
You could.
I mean, yeah.
But if you came over and I had a treadmill in the bathroom.
One's gross and one's not.
Well, if you had a treadmill in the house, I'd be happy.
Sorry. Let's just get a treadmill in the house, I'd be happy, all right?
Sorry.
He goes, let's just get a treadmill.
You know what?
And if you put it in the bathroom, buddy, then I don't worry,
but let's just get it in the house.
So Johnny Cash got drunk one night and performed at the Opry,
and the mic wasn't working right, so he took the mic stand and busted out all the lights on stage.
Oh, there you go.
I've been there.
You know what I mean?
I've wanted to do that before.
He got banned.
With comedy, it's like you need one thing.
Yeah.
Did he get unbanned at some point?
Yeah.
Okay, because his picture's everywhere there.
Yeah.
Now they have a Johnny Cash room.
Yeah, he's like, well, the mic work.
They're like, I don't know.
It's the 40s.
You know?
And he busts the lights. You're like, man,'t know, it's the 40s. You know? And he busts the lights.
You're like, man, that's $90,000.
That's going to cost you.
Like, we barely have electricity at this point.
But yeah, he's what a cool guy.
You had to be just mowing.
That's all stuff that you like to hear in the rock star
and are this kind of like yes
thing
but in the moment
you're like dude just
some dude has to
we're all dealing with
the Mike situation
yeah
and now we don't have lights
now we don't have lights
and then he left
so then he left there
when they said
you're out
out of here
he's like
I'm just gonna drink some more
and then he wrecked
leaving there
and
the cop that came and um the cop
that came and worked the scene was june carter cash june carter at the time's husband oh and
he already had a thing for june carter so his night just got worse wow he's driving back to
henderson he lives in hendersonville right i don't know if this time he was but yeah drove drunk back
oh yeah all the time yeah that probably wasn't even illegal back then
though no if you're trying to catch especially yeah i think that cop right had a couple pops
he goes i don't think everybody was a little like a couple you throw a couple back and you go all
right let's get out there yeah let's mix it up george jones wrote a lawnmower to buy beer yeah
they arrested him yeah you know that story?
Yeah.
You don't know that story?
No.
Oh.
His wife took away all the car keys for him to go out and buy alcohol, so he saw the
lawnmower out in the yard, so he went and got it and rode.
Like down the road.
Yeah.
And they pulled him over.
Yeah.
He was hammered, I'm guessing.
Yeah.
I guess so.
I don't know if that was just the music video that they pulled him over or-
No, I thought in real life they pulled him over.
Maybe they did, because you can't be riding a lawnmower on a main highway.
But you know that story, Dusty?
I don't know that I ever heard that he got arrested or pulled over, but I did, I mean,
yeah, it's very famous that George Jones would be riding the lawnmower.
I thought it was that he got pulled over.
And maybe he did.
Yeah. But so many country songs reference George Jones riding a lawnmower. I thought it was that he got pulled over. And maybe he did. Yeah.
But so many country songs reference George Jones riding the lawnmower.
Yeah.
He was called No Show Jones for a while.
Yeah.
The Possum.
Also that.
Wow.
They call him, because he would not show up to shows.
Oh, really?
Because he was just drunk?
Yeah.
Wow.
There's stories, like Mike Judge has a Tales from the Tour Bus.
I never watched it, but I saw a little clip on TikTok.
I can never find it.
I don't even know where you can get it.
But he talked about how George Jones would like, before a show, I guess he had like some kind of like anxiety, right?
So he'd get real nervous.
And so before the show, he would just disappear and then just leave town.
And he said he would go sit in a hotel and drink and eat fried chicken. And
like his manager would call him. He said this manager called him one time. He answered the
hotel phone. He's like, I knew you'd find me. But yeah, so he used to just miss shows all the time.
I mean, it's crazy that you could do that stuff and still just have a career.
Like how hard it is to keep your career
going i feel like that's the lack of entertainment back then yeah i mean i don't know like you know
what i mean like there's i'm not saying there's but it's like now you just have so much options
that you can't treat an audience like that because they're like okay well i'll just go to
you know i'll look at my phone. There's just a million things.
Right.
And back then was like, what are you going to do?
Who are you going to go watch?
Yeah, who else are you going to go see?
And it adds the allure of it a little bit, but you're like, you know.
I think at one point, though, George Jones was not, none of the promoters wanted to book him because they were like, he may not show.
Yeah.
And we don't want to spend all this money.
Not a bad concern. Yeah. Yeah, I think want to spend all this money. Not a bad concern.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think he had a few resurgences in his career.
So then...
Is he still alive?
No.
No.
They just had a TV series about him, right?
Yeah, George and Tammy, I think.
I have not watched it.
Everything's on some weird streaming network that I don't have.
So I don't watch anything.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I wish they'd just kind of bring it all together.
Put on CMT.
Yeah, exactly.
CMT needs something.
They do.
CMT used to be my favorite channel in the world.
Yeah.
You watch Circle Network?
I do watch it a little bit when I find it.
When do you find it?
Yeah.
I mean, I don't watch a lot of regular TV,
but when I see it on, I do watch it.
When the clouds hit right, that antenna comes on.
Yeah, exactly. You're like, oh, mama, it's going to be a good big night tonight.
Yeah.
So the Ryman did not have air conditioning.
So they're doing all these shows and just in the heat.
Whoa.
And by the late 60s, the Ryman was kind of
getting run down
and the Opry's so big
that there's still
not enough space.
The Ryman holds like
2,300, I think.
So,
they were like,
let's build a bigger,
more modern,
out of,
and downtown Nashville
then was pretty
run down
and just a lot of,
not what it is today
for sure.
So, like, let's go out to find some land
out of downtown nashville build us a new grand old opry house bigger more modern and then the
president of the grand old opry was in houston and he went to the astrodome and i guess there
they have astral world where they got a bunch of other stuff going on too so he's like let's do
more than just the grand old opry house Let's build a theme park year-round.
So that's where they came up with the idea for Opryland.
Yeah.
So Opryland.
I want Opryland back.
Opryland and the Grand Ole Opry House both opened in the early 70s.
I came to Opryland one time when I was a kid.
I loved it.
Yeah.
I want to make it.
Yeah.
I hate that they got rid of it.
It was so fun.
Well, this is, we've talked about before, the ultimate vision vision this podcast keeps growing is to reopen operating but call it nate lane
nate lane theme park i love it i love it i have my i can have my own conspiracy theme ride yeah
i have uh yeah i want to make a nate lane theme. I could do a trip to the moon. Yeah.
I'm planning rides in your park.
Yeah. Yeah.
I'm planning rides in your park.
Well, we all did, but yeah, that would be a good one.
The president, Richard Nixon, came opening night and played piano on stage.
Wow.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Good for him.
And then they took a circle from the Ryman and put it over on Grand Ole Opry stage.
And now performers stand in front of that circle.
Or in that circle.
Yeah, that's the actual.
The circle network.
Yeah.
That's what they call it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh.
Isn't that nice?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah, because if you're at the Grand Ole Opry, you're standing on the.
Yeah.
And they say you can only step in the circle if you're performing there, but I don't know if that's true.
Is that true? You can only step in. I don't know, but I do feel like there is something that, yeah, because when you do,
you know, when you do your first time at the Opry, they'll kind of walk you out there and
let you stand in it. I got to do a, you know, my first time, a thing that the Opry does when I did
the Opry for the first time and that, you know, they film you standing in the circle, you talk
about it. I mean, it's a big deal. I don't really get into that stuff too much, but it is a big deal. I came to the Opry when I was a kid. I don't remember
who I saw, but I was so little, but it's fun to be an audience member as a kid and then later,
not even be a country singer and get to do the Opry.
You found a way to get up there anyway. Yeah, that's cool. But didn't you sing your first
time there? You came back and sang. Oh, I did.
Yeah.
For some reason, they were doing something at the end.
They've never done that again.
But they all came out and held hands and sang.
I forget what the song was.
May the Circle Be Unbroken.
May the Circle Be Unbroken, yeah.
And I just was like, well, I want to go out there too.
So I just walked out and started joining in.
Because it was at the it was like
every performer
I don't know if anyone
invited me
but I was like
I performed tonight
I'd like to say that
did they introduce you
or they didn't say like
Dusty say
not when I came out
with them to sing
yeah
did they introduce
everybody else
I don't know
yeah
but I was like
I want to sing
on the opera too
yeah
I forgot about that
that's great
yeah
wasn't Lauren Alaina and John Crist and some other people there?
Maybe. They had been there before when I was there. I don't know if they were there that night.
I was there.
Yeah. You were there.
Yeah.
Did you go out there too?
No. I left after Dusty went up, I think.
I'm glad it meant so much that you forgot about it.
Yeah. Well, I forgot about the singing. I mean, you know, my dad came and my dad's buddy and they had, you know, metal detectors and Aaron had a knife. He couldn't, he had to go back to the car. I had a knife. I had to go back to the car. My dad had a knife. My dad's buddy had two knives.
Wow.
I mean.
Just, and no one was like giving a little heads up.
No, we had no idea.
No one texted to go, yo, they're not letting knives in.
No, no one knew. We're all from Alabama're not letting knives in. No, no one knew.
We're all from Alabama, all bringing knives in.
I had no idea.
When you did the Grand Ole Opry house last year,
I happened to be walking in with your dad.
And when he goes through a metal detector, it's like the Matrix.
They call it security.
Because he's got, what, the fake hip?
Knees.
Knees and balls. Oh, he's got a bunch going on. A lot. There's a lot in insecurity. Yeah. Because he's got, what, the fake hip? Knees. Knees and, yeah.
Oh, he's got a bunch going on.
A lot. Wow.
There's a lot in there.
Yeah.
There's a lot happening.
Yeah.
So that's just a problem.
Everywhere?
Like airports?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, you see, like, you know, a lot of the older men, but they'd be younger.
They'd have to just wave them.
They just know before you get going, we're going to be, it's going to be kind of
bouncing around over here.
Uh-huh.
Yeah.
Do you know the country singer Dottie West?
Yeah, I know a little bit about Dottie West.
Somebody's going to give you a lesson in leaving.
Somebody's going to give you a lesson in leaving.
She did that song?
Yeah.
Because that, because that song was remade recently.
Dottie West is an older.
Yeah, Dottie West did that song.
Okay.
Well, she's from McMinnville.
Yeah.
It's Dottie West Highway leading out there.
So you might replace it someday, right, with Dusty Slay?
Well, I don't know.
I like Dottie West.
I don't know if I'd like to replace it, but Dottie and Dusty maybe.
Maybe a ramp.
Yeah.
Get a ramp.
Yeah, maybe I get a ramp.
Yeah.
The Slay ramp.
Yeah. maybe maybe a ramp yeah yeah maybe i get a ramp yeah yeah the sleigh ramp yeah she was uh on her way to the opry and her car broke down and i always got through some bad news in here and uh
her neighbor saw her and he was an older gentleman and he said i'll give you right 81 years old i'll
give you a ride the opry and she said well floor it because i'm running late and uh on the way there off the Brawley Parkway, the ramp there off Brawley Parkway, he was
going 55 miles an hour and lost control and wrecked.
And at first, they didn't think she was hurt.
So she said, just treat him.
I think he's worse shape than I am.
But she had some internal injuries they didn't know about.
And like three days later, she died.
Wow.
The ramp at bradley
parkway is just yeah it's always difficult there's two crosses out there for dotty west too
oh is that right yeah there's two different spots so i don't know what's going on there but
i saw it the other day there's two dotty west crosses out there not even really that close
you talk about dotty west a lot well me and hannah hannah likes dotty close. You talk about Dottie West a lot? Well,
me and Hannah, Hannah likes Dottie West. We do talk
about her a bit, yeah. I knew that about, that
she died there. And I know
Dottie West Highway going out to McMinnville.
And me and Hannah always sing that song.
Somebody's gonna give you a lesson
and leave and some, you know, you know that song?
I don't know. I do, but
I know the remake.
You're like a cold-hearted man or something?
I thought that was like Mindy McCready or something.
Jodie Messina.
Jodie Messina, yeah.
Covered it in 1999.
Okay.
All right.
How about that?
Jodie Messina.
Jodie Messina seems to pop up all the time.
I did the opera with her recently.
She was so cool.
She took pictures with everybody.
She's hanging out backstage.
Heads to Carolina, Tails, California.
Yeah.
She's got some hits, man.
I'm doing all right. Yes. That's the other one is it yeah three four names joe d marie yeah that's a lot
they just go by jody messina it is a lot that's a lot we have four yeah well on our way here i'm
assuming we all came our normal way here, we passed the WSM radio tower.
When it was built, it was the tallest structure in the United States.
Really?
Wow.
And second in the world just to the Eiffel Tower.
Isn't that crazy?
That's how big the Eiffel Tower is, basically?
The Eiffel Tower is probably a little bigger.
Yeah.
It's 808 feet now.
It was 878 feet when it was constructed.
I didn't lose feet.
They took off some of the top on purpose.
They gave it to-
Scoliosis.
They gave it to Lipscomb.
Osteoporosis.
They said they gave it to Lipscomb Elementary, which is across the street there, and they
use it as a flagpole.
Oh.
But they took it off.
It said so radio coverage could reach Chattanooga.
Apparently, it was too high and it was going over Chattanooga,
so they wanted to reach it.
But it was a clear channel, whatever that means,
and it could reach 40 states.
Wow.
Just a radio broadcast.
So that's how the Opry came so big because they could reach so many people.
Wow.
Still pretty crazy.
Yeah.
Yeah, I've gotten gigs, corporate gigs,
off people hearing me on the
opry in another state really yeah i mean it's the opry's great yeah it's still going i guess
still like really that strong of a yeah yeah i mean it's yeah i mean and they air it on sirius
xm too so i've i've gotten uh i've done the show it's a little delayed so i've done the show got
in my car, drove home,
put it on the Opry on satellite radio, and heard myself again.
That's fun.
That is fun.
Nashville got the name Music City a couple ways.
In 1871, Fisk University was about to close.
They had financial issues.
And the Fisk Jubilee singers started touring the world,
performing to raise money for the school.
And the Queen of England, Queen Victoria, said, you guys must come from a city of music.
And that was the first time that that had ever been said.
And then it started, WSM later did a radio show called Music City.
And then Johnny Cash had a TV show on ABC, a weekly TV show.
And they would start saying, coming to you live from Music City and then Johnny Cash had a TV show on ABC, a weekly TV show, and
they would start saying, coming to you live from Music City, USA, Nashville, Tennessee,
and that's how the name Music City kind of became a thing.
I thought it was like, but I thought too, I heard that a big reason a lot of the bands
went here because we were so centrally located for touring.
That's why buses are all out of here and that's a big part of it. a lot of the bands went here because we were so centrally located for touring. It was very,
that's why like buses are all out of here
and that's a big part of it.
That's why I moved
to Nashville to do comedy.
Yeah,
it's just like,
I mean,
that's why all the,
if you want a tour bus,
they're all here
because it's just the easiest
to,
the most touring.
The markets nearby
or,
yeah.
You can go do,
you know,
very, like it's, you know – you can get up to Chicago quick.
You can get up to wherever.
But they wouldn't allow – the opera wouldn't allow long-haired country boys to perform.
You had to cut your hair, and people complained about it.
So outlaw country kind of started because they also wanted a certain sound.
You had to use Nashville recording artists.
That's what they were rebelling against?
It was a haircut guideline?
That was part of it.
It was more the country sound.
They wanted to use their own artists, do their own styles.
And Nashville said, no, you've got to use these particular artists.
I mean, these musicians.
And they's like, I want to do my own thing.
And they want to record in Austin, different places.
So the outlaw movement.
Well, yeah.
Well, country music was probably a little more you know
buttoned up and like that kind of stuff and then you have like dusties come in yeah you see like
old school willie and waylon and and all they're all clean cut real clean cut guys back in the day
right yeah and you would have been lil nas x back in the day oh yeah you would have been
i don't know if i'd have been that extreme but yeah. You would have been, is this guy country? People would have been like,
this guy's not real country.
You'd have been the Sam Smith
of that generation.
Yeah.
Yeah, I got my inflatable outfit
in the car.
But yeah, I mean,
that's why, you know,
Charlie Daniels has that
long-haired country boy song
that I really like.
Long-haired country boy
is probably my favorite.
It's a great song.
A Vini song?
Yeah.
I mean, that got a lot that I like. It's hard to narrow one down, but that one boy is probably my favorite. It's a great song. A Vini song? Yeah. I mean, that got a lot that I like.
It's hard to narrow one down, but that one I think is my favorite.
Long-haired country boy, Charlie Daniels.
But you seem like Outlaw Movement would have been your guys.
Yeah, I love all that stuff.
Willie and Waylon and Coach.
Yeah.
Country music.
Johnny Paycheck, really great.
Take this job and shove it.
Yeah.
But he does that Don't Take Her, She's All I Got song,
which it was covered in the 90s too.
Right.
But it's his song.
It's great.
In New Orleans, I found a bunch of people that knew that song
and we just stood outside and we all just sang that song.
I don't know how it happened.
I think they were drunk, but I just love country.
You walk around asking people if they know this song.
We started talking about Johnny Paycheck, and then somebody started singing it,
and we just all joined in.
Yeah.
It was great.
Wow.
I feel like in rap music, there's a lot of people that die from being shot,
and in rock music, a lot of people die from drug overdoses.
Country, I feel like, has a lot of plane crashes.
Yeah, a lot of alcoholics in country.
Well, I'm sure that's true, too.
Who are the plane crash deaths?
I can only think of...
Well, Patsy Cline.
Okay.
John Denver.
Okay, those are big ones.
Jim Reeves, who was huge at the time.
Yeah.
Troy...
Aikman.
No, was it...
Montgomery Gentry.
One of those guys died just recently in a helicopter crash.
Oh, I didn't know that's how he died.
Yeah.
Jim Reeves.
Do you know him, Dusty?
I know that name.
He was huge in country back in the day.
There's a conspiracy theory.
Oh, boy.
He knew Lee Harvey Oswald and Jack Ruby.
He knew them both.
Oh, wow.
And he died not long after the kidney assassination.
Wow.
Now, he was flying his own plane.
There was bad weather.
He lived in Brentwood. He lived in Brentwood.
He crashed in Brentwood.
They probably got him.
But I wanted to share that with you.
Yeah, they probably got him.
I'll check it out.
I guess Jack Ruby owned a restaurant or something,
a social gathering, and he knew Lee Harvey Oswald,
and Jim Reeves performed there.
He's named Gentleman Jim.
That was his nickname.
Yeah.
That's a fun nickname, Gentleman Jim.
Yeah, I mean, some of the country, when it gets too old,
it is not a lot of fun to listen to for me.
Right.
If it's too old.
Like, you know, 60s is maybe the cutoff.
Once you get to 50s, the recording equipment's not as good,
and it's just hard to listen to.
But there are some gems.
Hank Williams, who's the guy?
Oh, man, I can't think.
There's a David Allen Coe's son, Tyler Mahan Coe,
does a podcast where he talks about a lot of the old country,
and he really digs into the stories, and it's really great.
Yeah.
Country music has a lot of royalty.
They like to get a lot of titles.
So who's considered the king of country music has a lot of royalty. They like to get a lot of titles. So,
you know who's considered the king of country music?
I would think
George Jones.
No.
Morgan Wallen.
This has changed
a few times
over the years,
but this is...
The king,
Garth Brooks.
That's a good guess.
George Strait.
Oh, the king.
Yeah, I hear them say that.
Yeah, George Strait.
Yeah, that makes sense.
He's good.
The queen's a little bit
different.
George. George is the best. George Strait is Yeah, that makes sense. He's good. The Queen's a little bit comforting.
George is the best.
George Strait is really great.
All right, the Queen of Country.
Dolly Parton.
Patsy Claw.
I would think Dolly Parton.
I mean, the way they... I mean, some people call her, but Kitty Wells.
Okay.
They might need to update that.
Yeah, maybe.
We might need to overthrow that.
Tammy Wynette's the
first lady of country music jimmy rogers the father country music title still makes sense
so she's the first lady so she's the wife of the president who's the president well george jones
says you marry but i don't i don't know it's meant to be here's one i don't even know do you know
nikki lane no she's known as the first lady of outlaw country I don't think so
do you know uh Colt Ford I do know Colt Ford is he like the king of well Colt Ford I like or
Hick Hop yeah he I like Colt Ford at least the old stuff he had but he started a movement that
I'm not a big fan of what's that that Hick, that hiccup, as they say it. There's a girl that's really gone viral, and I hate to make fun of her because everyone's
piled on her.
I don't remember her name, but it is bad.
I think I saw it.
Yeah, it's not good.
Yeah, I liked it.
Did you?
I mean, I hope she has success, and I hope she makes money.
I don't want to hate on her, but I'm not into it.
But as I was on TikTok, I saw other country girls doing the lip syncing to it.
So it's like, it's got an audience.
There's country girls out there that are like, oh, I love this.
And it's kind of fun to have an outlaw country woman.
I mean, Gretchen Wilson's long gone from the country scene.
She's the real deal, though.
Yeah.
Gretchen Wilson's the, I mean, yeah. She's the real deal, though. Yeah. Gretchen Wilson's the, I mean, yeah.
She's the real deal.
Yeah, yeah.
Like that's everything she says.
I'm a redneck.
You're like, she is.
And I've never met her, but I've seen her out.
Like it's something great about just being like her where you're like, oh, that's – she's all of that.
The most authentic.
Yeah.
And, you know, Trace Adkins.
I've hung out with Trace Adkins a little bit.
He's really great.
Really tall guy.
And he told me that he – now he's told this story since then.
But he told me – I was supposed to open for him and then it stormed so they wouldn't let us perform.
So we sat on his tour bus and he told me that one of his wives shot him with a pistol in the side and it
went through his both of his lungs i think through his heart i think he almost died and yeah he had
some serious it was yeah he's been married a few times. Yeah. One of his ex-wives. Wow. He's telling me that as he's smoking cigarettes, and I'm like, wow, all right, so you have recovered.
You've lived, yeah.
Yeah, but he's-
He's lived a life.
Yeah, he has.
He's great.
I like him a lot.
Yeah.
That's fun.
Some buddies of mine from Lebanon got into a road rage incident with Tracy Lawrence back when he was at the peak of his career.
Tracy Lawrence.
Tracy Lawrence, Time Marches On is one of his career. Tracy Lawrence. Tracy Lawrence,
Time Marches On is one of the best.
Do you know Tracy Lawrence?
No, I was thinking Fast Car.
That's Tracy Chapman.
Yeah.
What do they do?
I don't know what
the true story is,
but they somehow got into
an altercation going on I-40
and Tracy Lawrence
pulled out a gun
and fired a shot.
Oh, wow.
I love it.
I love it.
Tracy Lawrence got robbed.
He was walking a girl back to her hotel room.
Some guys robbed them and I think shot him.
Wow.
I like Tracy Lawrence a lot.
I heard a couple of things about him back in the day,
but he had a really – a lot of Paint Me a Birmingham, Texas Tornado, great stuff.
What did you hear stories about him?
I don't know.
I think just him being an alcoholic and just having some stuff going on.
Yeah.
And I can't verify, so I don't want to say it, but I.
Oh, there it is.
It's in the thing.
Oh, what's it say?
It's reported.
So the, it says that he was charged with reckless endangerment of unlicensed firearm after confronting and following home two teenagers on a highway in Wilson County, Tennessee in April of 94.
So that's your friends.
Yeah.
How about that?
Yeah.
So they reported it.
I'd imagine your friends would have called and reported it.
Yeah.
Yeah. Oh, this imagine your friends would have called and reported it. Yeah. Yeah. You know.
Yeah.
Oh, this was your friends?
Yeah.
Oh, geez.
Yeah.
They said he fired a shot.
Does that, or did that say he just pulled a gun on them?
Well, it says reckless endangerment.
Yeah.
So I'm sure he might have fired a shot.
But I mean, I would imagine, yeah.
Well, this is what I'm talking about with real country.
Yeah.
I mean, people out here shooting and.
Don't be.
What were your friends doing?
I don't know.
They may have started.
They may have cut him off or who knows.
I mean, they didn't know who he was at the time.
Yeah.
They're just driving home from downtown Nashville to Lebanon, and there's some guy in a pickup
truck.
They were being dumb.
He was being dumb.
Yeah.
He just happened to be a huge country singer.
Wow.
Colt Fuller was pretty-
Just back to that. It ford was pretty but just
just back to that i mean he was pretty fun for the time because there was no country
rapper you know so it was a pretty fun i mean bubba sparks is he still doing stuff we had
i don't know jelly rolls the big one yeah i did one of the first few times i did the opry they
colt ford was on it and they presented him with some sort of award okay for how many albums he'd
sold or something.
He's still active.
Yeah, still writing a bunch.
Dirt Road Anthem, that was such a huge song at the time.
Remember that?
He did one with-
Was that with John?
Oh, okay.
He did one with John Michael Montgomery.
Yeah.
Okay.
How about it?
He was a professional golfer.
Colt Ford was.
He was?
Oh, yes.
I've played with him.
So now this all makes sense.
You thought it was Larry the Cable guy, but it...
No, I...
Yeah, he's a great golfer.
I golfed with him at Legends.
He's an unreal golfer.
Yeah, he's a professional golfer.
I know, I know.
I remember the day.
Now I remember it.
I didn't remember it at the time.
Wow.
All right, yeah.
I might have his number, actually.
He might be here.
I think we're buds, yeah.
Yeah.
Garth Brooks is by far the most best-selling country artist of all time.
Almost doubles the next one, George Strait.
Garth Brooks still any no songs on streaming
services you can't find him on spotify he's not on youtube why is that i don't know that's just
what he does you have to buy it yeah i think he doesn't uh like them or like they don't pay and
they don't you know whatever reason yeah and i heard someone saying that they think he's
missing out on the next generation because everybody just streams now.
But I'm sure if he's the most selling of all time, he could care less.
He sold out.
He toured and sold out, whatever.
I'm sure when it's – yeah, they're not – I thought about it with Elvis this week because we were saying like – look at like with Elvis.
We were looking at his like who are you going to see their house?
Who –
Presidents. Yeah. that's about it yeah I
could think of someone that I'm like who am I gonna go see where they were born right and and
so then Elvis like with Elvis he's making so much money that are at like their their thing the estate
the estate is and then they just made the movie, Elvis. So you're like, there's another 40 years.
Yeah.
Because the movie's a big movie.
And it's like, if there's any dwindling of maybe like people are getting old and they're kind of forgetting about Elvis, the movie comes out.
40 years now.
Now, anybody that's 20, when they saw that movie, they know what Elvis is.
And you just got them until they're 60. And all you got to do is come up with this.
Yeah, so this shouldn't – Garth Brooks, he has all the money in the world.
He has all the status, whatever.
You don't think at a certain point you're just like, well, let's think about legacy.
His legacy is there, though.
And if his legacy is not giving into that, I mean, he doesn't need it.
But if there's a whole generation of uh people with no access to
his music at all they they do have it i mean other countries like i know in ireland all that
these guys are such big country fans that like it's just you're not gonna get he's bigger than
it is hard like you know i got a big country music playlist that i put together on spotify but i
i can never add any of my fun Garth Brooks songs.
You know?
So, I mean, it's a loss for me.
What do you think Garth Brooks' signature song is?
I think Friends in Low Places.
More than the dance?
Yeah.
Yeah, I don't even know the dance.
And I'd listen to it on the way home, but it's not on Spotify.
You don't know the dance?
I mean, I'm probably wrecking it.
I don't know it by the title like the other one.
I know probably every Garth Brooks song, but yeah,
Friends in Low Places is probably the most.
You know, Mark Chestnut cut that song first,
and it did not take off for him.
Yeah, I've never heard of Mark Chestnut.
That's probably why.
But Mark Chestnut had a bunch of hits too.
Oh, yeah.
Bubba Shut the Jukebox?
Yeah.
But he covered that first, and it did not take off.
Huh.
What about Lynyrd Skynyrd?
What is their signature song?
Well, Sweet Home Alabama.
More than Freebird?
I would think so.
Freebird, everybody yells out Freebird, but everybody knows Sweet Home Alabama.
I think Simple Man should be the big one.
Tuesday's Gone is probably my favorite.
Simple Man's's incredible but yeah
tuesday gone but i hear sweet home alabama outside of alabama more than i ever did in alabama oh
sure yeah indiana it's like i remember driving to indiana it's played everywhere like yeah yeah
as soon as you hear that very opening people just get excited yeah yeah yeah yeah leonard
skinner has you know a lot of people seem to not believe that or not know that they died in a plane crash, most of them.
The lead singer, at least.
But they have six albums before that.
All incredible.
All great.
Anything that happened after that, I don't know.
Reba McEntire's band was another one.
Died in a plane crash.
In a plane crash?
Yep.
Wow.
Yep.
It's a lot.
A lot of plane crashes.
But Leonard Skinner.
Jim Croce.
Southern Rock. What they were doing back, Leonard Skinner,. A lot of plane crashes. Jim Croce. Southern Rock.
What they were doing back,
Leonard Skinner had their plane
was like, should have been checked on.
Probably.
No, that's what it was.
I watched the documentary.
It was like,
they were going to take this last flight
and then get the plane checked on.
Yeah, okay.
I saw that too.
Yeah, they're like,
I mean, this stuff,
they're flying back then.
Like, I mean, you know,
it's very much like, you know, they're just like, let back then. Like, I mean, you know, it's very much like, you know,
they're just like, let's go, we're partying, you know, whatever.
Yeah.
So Garth's by far the best selling.
George Strait's had the most number ones.
Alabama's the biggest country band.
Dixie Chicks.
My Home's in Alabama by Alabama is so good.
That is a great song.
Yeah, Alabama's a really great band that, you know, I love them.
Old Flame, I saw, I opened for them in Iowa one time, and it was great.
And then they talked about the song Old Flame, and they talked about, you know, kind of like how that one David Allen Coe song they say is the greatest country song ever written.
Yeah.
They said that about Old Flame, and I think it may be.
I think it's really, really great.
It's up there.
It's the greatest country song ever?
Yeah.
It's up there.
So Taylor Swift's not on this list, I'm guessing?
Maybe they don't consider her.
At a certain point, they stopped counting her.
Yeah.
Yeah, Shania Twain's the best-selling female artist.
Yeah, I mean, I think Taylor Swift's like best-selling artist maybe ever, right?
Or one of them.
Up there, for sure.
That's why I was...
But she left country long ago.
She left country, yeah, but I was...
Even if you only include those.
Oh, yeah.
I was wondering.
I think the best-selling album of all time
of any music in the United States
is The Eagles' Greatest Hits.
Eagles' Greatest Hits.
Eagles.
Oh, not The Eagles.
Not The Eagles, yeah. Eagles' Greatest Hits. But worldwide, it's still Thr hits. Eagles. Oh, not the Eagles. Not the Eagles.
Eagles' greatest hits.
But worldwide, it's still Thriller.
Okay.
Because Michael Jackson's so big in other countries, too.
Yeah, I mean, he's another one.
You go see his house.
Yeah.
Would you go see his house?
He's from Gary.
Yeah, I mean, how many artists can you name their childhood home?
I can name his.
I can name Tupelo.
Yeah, I know his because it was a house of horrors, wasn't it? I mean, how many artists can you name their childhood home? I can name his, I can name Tupelo. Yeah.
I know his,
cause it was a house of horrors,
wasn't it?
I mean,
he had like a terrific childhood.
Yeah.
But.
And Gary.
So you can't even like go outside and cheer up.
Yeah.
You're just.
You gotta go to Michael Jackson's house.
They're like.
There you go.
Like Elvis is like, there's a proper, like, and they might have a proper thing.
They have a proper, they have the church he went to.
I mean, we all know that probably Dolly Parton's from, you know, Sevierville.
And she's got Dollywood.
But I don't know if there's anything for her childhood home or not.
Well, I think you would go to Dollywood.
Like, that would be.
Yeah.
And maybe if you grew up, you know,
a certain poor,
I mean,
the house is gone.
Yeah.
Well,
obviously they said they bought,
they didn't buy the house to keep it,
but he went,
but when he went back and did a thing there before he was super famous,
but he was like,
he went back there and played.
He bought the house.
Cause he was going to do something for like kids and,
you know,
like make it something.
And,
and the laying around it and then but
they he figured they were gonna knock the house down because it's old and just build something
else on it and they did it and then he got super famous and then they were like smart enough to
like let's keep it yeah yeah i mean like you know like let's say i got to elvis fame right you know
i mean we all know that's on the way. My childhood home
is a trailer and it's already gone.
Yeah.
It's gone.
I don't mean to bring the podcast down.
Tornado?
I don't know. It's just gone. It could be a tornado.
Yeah. But the ditch is still
there.
Tusty Slay's childhood ditch. Yeah. Put a sign out there. Yeah. But the ditch is still there. Yeah, well, I mean. Tusty Slay's Childhood Ditch.
Yeah.
Put a sign out there.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Here's Michael Jackson's home, by the way.
Oh, they do.
There are nine kids in that little house.
Yeah.
And I'm guessing they've done a lot more to the yard,
because it's a pretty nice yard.
Yeah.
Yeah, it looks good.
Well manicured.
Yeah.
All right, I guess that's a good place to stop.
All right.
We did it.
That's good.
We tackled country.
We did it.
I love country music.
Yeah, we tackled it.
All right.
I'm about to head to Cordon.
I'll be somewhere.
I don't know.
All over.
I'll go to Joe's special.
I'm coming to Europe, Oslo.
All that stuff's coming.
A lot of stuff in March, April.
And we got more dates.
More stuff's coming.
We're announcing more stuff.
Yeah, look at this.
London, Dublin, Oslo, Brussels, Amsterdam.
Yeah.
So a lot more stuff coming.
And we will keep announcing.
This weekend, I will be at
Blue Ridge Comedy Club
In Bristol, Tennessee
Birthplace of Country Music
Maybe I'll go to that museum
I'll be there Friday, Saturday
See if Aaron can set one up
Blue Ridge Comedy Club
This Friday, Saturday in Bristol
Please come see me
Your Bridgestone's officially sold out, Nate
It's sold out, Nate.
It's sold out on that.
I believe it's, yeah.
I was going to, yeah.
I don't know if it's true.
We have not made a big announcement about it yet,
but it's, yeah.
I think it's sold out.
That's amazing.
Click it and see.
Yeah.
It's, there's.
I think you can still
get single seats.
There's, yeah, not much.
Like, can you zoom in?
Yeah.
Yeah, look at that.
Like, go look.
You can zoom around.
Save that for Brian's fans.
Yeah, you can zoom around.
Like, stay.
You can't go out too far.
It's going to, yeah.
It's like that.
Look at that, dude.
That's what's left.
So, it's wild, dude.
It's insane.
A lot of people for that show have asked me, is there going to be a meet and greet?
And yes, there is.
Meet me in Concourse H, and I'm going to take you down, bring $20 cash.
Don't look at Nate.
Just stand over on my corner.
But yes, I will give you a meet and greet.
No, there will not.
That's going to be a bit of a zoo being at home.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So there's just like those single little single tickets left so it's
yeah essentially it is sold out it's exciting man yeah it's wild dude it's crazy it's like
16 000 some people what about you aaron where you at this weekend i'm in west bend wisconsin
at the bend theater so i think it's like i think it's like an hour outside of milwaukee if you're
in the wisconsin greater area come out and see me.
Then I'm in Lowell, Arkansas next weekend at the Grove,
and then Nashville, Zanies, and St. Louis.
So come on out.
All right.
I'm at Portland, Oregon Helium this weekend,
and then Corvallis, Oregon at a theater there.
So it's going to be great.
Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Portland, Sunday, Corvallis.
It's going to be great.
All right.
Boom.
All right.
Well, thank you.
We love you.
Have a great week.
We will see you next week.
Bye.
Bye.
Nateland is produced by Nateland Productions and by me nate bargetzi and my wife laura on the audio
boom platform 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