Episode Transcript
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0:08
Another excellent landing
0:10
heavy job. As you dwell, the mics
0:13
are still on uh an
0:15
electric deal. They will complain, not
0:18
a problem. Hello, Hello, people
0:21
of Earth. Do it like they don't do it?
0:23
Okay?
0:23
Yes, hey, every person, everybody?
0:26
Oh, yes, greetings, every human
0:28
body. I am
0:30
Ozark, and I am here with
0:32
my traveling compatriot. Glip clore,
0:35
clip clore, clip clore, blit
0:37
glo glip clore, clip
0:39
clore.
0:40
I feel like I'm saying it all this time.
0:43
You maybe wondering why, or
0:45
where or what has
0:47
happened to our favorite podcasts, Ridiculous
0:49
Romance.
0:50
We'll rest assured, dear listeners.
0:52
We will return your hosts Eli and Diana
0:54
momentarily.
0:56
We took them on.
0:57
A cross galactic trip that was most ridiculous.
1:00
Huh, But we have your turns on too.
1:02
Did you see what I said?
1:03
Ridiculous?
1:03
And it was like the name of the show I Ridiculous
1:06
Adventures that we went on.
1:07
It tickled me.
1:09
We have brought them back to do their
1:11
hostly duty as soon as they finished
1:14
defrosting. Yes, your human
1:16
bodies must be deep frozen
1:19
before you can travel through space.
1:21
It's a well known fact. They're strange
1:23
because you don't do well in the cold, which
1:25
end. But the problem is when you leave the door
1:28
open and then they sort
1:30
of start to mout a little, and then you, oh, no,
1:32
old shit, I better refreeze them, and then they
1:34
freeze them more, and then they get those gross crystals all
1:36
over them and it has that funky freezer
1:38
taste.
1:39
True, That's why I say close the freezer
1:41
door.
1:41
We are not paying to cool
1:43
off the entire vacuum space thing
1:46
to cryotypically freeze the entire vacuums.
1:48
But that's exactly right. And
1:51
we know Eli and Diana perhaps
1:53
will be a little serious. It's
1:56
okay, But there's saw so many what if
1:58
things are amazing things on our
2:00
intergalactic tour.
2:01
We saw it.
2:02
Snort beasts, Oh, beautiful snort
2:04
beat breached, yes,
2:07
snork beasts breaching the surface.
2:09
Do you remember of fizz Corpse?
2:12
How can I forget?
2:14
Well?
2:14
When the Bloodnacts came out with those
2:17
giant, giant jars of jark nargans,
2:19
Oh, I could go for a
2:21
jerk nargan right now.
2:22
I tell's rich as the Lord from the Rings
2:24
of Colclat.
2:25
No problem with the Bloodknacs.
2:27
What were you drinking Bloodnags. Is that your reference
2:30
to second the dark Nargans? Yeah, the problem with the jark
2:32
Nargans is you put them in the fraser
2:34
for too long and they get that funky
2:36
fraezer taste.
2:37
Oak. You're the only one who has this problem
2:39
with freezers. Look close the door.
2:42
Oh, I'm just.
2:42
Saying, when I get something out of the freezer, a
2:45
Jark Nargan or what have you on,
2:48
my hands are full. It can't exactly
2:50
what you want. To use my face to close the
2:52
freezer door.
2:54
Next time you leave it.
2:54
Open, I will personally send
2:57
you to the shimmering ponds of our tartar. Oh,
3:00
I've had a lovely time last time I've been been part
3:04
Oh boy, well would
3:06
you look at that?
3:07
Here?
3:08
Oh? Here comes the theme song.
3:09
I think we should do our person Oh
3:12
I got it, run it right now, baby greetings
3:15
friends at.
3:17
Them race, Eli and Diana.
3:19
Nothing being into space.
3:21
We're taking them my money about elected
3:23
tips to talk about ridiculous
3:25
relationships.
3:27
I love that might be any type of.
3:28
Bauc I know, not a
3:31
xeno look free the me t but
3:33
any stories out in the cosmic expense.
3:36
We're being into our show. Ridiculous
3:38
romance.
3:40
Are production?
3:41
I hold radio.
3:43
Hey, this hosting gig ain't so hard? Is
3:45
it as easy as pie? Delicious
3:47
pie? I think we should get our own
3:50
podcast, an alien podcast. Do you
3:52
think people would Do you think people would want to list to these
3:54
gorgeous voices for an hour
3:56
straight? I think if they've made it this far, why
3:59
not go full.
4:01
Feeling love babbling?
4:03
Hey? What the hell is going on in
4:05
here? What?
4:05
Freezing?
4:06
God? Why do I smell like freezer burn?
4:08
Oh?
4:09
Good, you're awake, you finally
4:12
defrausted.
4:14
Do not worry. We have resumed the show.
4:16
It is all one up for you.
4:18
What are you talking about?
4:20
Yes, well, you two have been
4:22
gone for
4:24
a while.
4:25
I thot it was such a fun
4:27
time.
4:27
We didn't want you to be all stressed
4:29
out and not being behind at work when.
4:31
You let home.
4:32
Fun trip. All I remember is you beamed
4:34
us onto your ship without asking and
4:37
then flew us into space.
4:39
Yeah, and you also said we'd only be gone for a weekend.
4:43
How long has it been?
4:45
Let's see here and carry it four
4:47
and it's I think.
4:49
It's been approximately one hundred and
4:51
twenty earth days since.
4:53
Your last broadcast.
4:54
Wait what one and twenty
4:56
one?
4:57
Eight?
4:57
Weekend, and how it is one hundred
4:59
and forty seven days. So
5:02
we actually got.
5:03
You that day little early.
5:05
Oh.
5:05
Yes, we have on our planet a four day
5:07
work week and then one hundred and forty seven
5:09
days off. It's a great work life balance.
5:12
It's beautiful.
5:13
Thank god.
5:13
Okay, you're telling me that,
5:15
you guys. First of all, wait, you have one hundred and fifty
5:18
day weekend. That's incredible. We could
5:20
really stand reworks hang
5:22
on hanging out that night. We've been gone for
5:25
one hundred and twenty that's three months.
5:27
Four months.
5:28
What we haven't put an episode in four
5:30
months? Uh so
5:33
we need to put an episode.
5:34
Okay, aliens, aliens, you
5:36
guys, your intro was way too long. Anyway,
5:39
it's time to get the hell out of here.
5:41
All right.
5:42
We will ascend to our ship and
5:45
leave you to it. You're the beautiful
5:47
job that you do.
5:48
Thanks we yet for a three days. We
5:50
will never do it again.
5:51
Good. I don't want you. Please
5:53
go. Oh my god, Hi,
5:57
everybody, my god. Hello, it's
6:01
been a minute. I guess it's been a
6:04
minute. All right, all.
6:06
Right, now the fridge is discussing,
6:09
like no, the.
6:09
Freezer door is wide open. I
6:11
can't I don't know how that happened.
6:13
I don't know why, but it's.
6:15
Insane, unbelievable. Okay,
6:18
okay, all right, the aliens are gone. Hi everybody.
6:22
Wow, we are very sorry
6:24
to have ghosted you. It's
6:26
been a hot minute.
6:28
But the.
6:32
Hot minute got cold.
6:35
Okay. Well, aside from the whole kidnapped by
6:37
aliens thing, we actually do have
6:39
a lot to catch you all up on. So
6:42
first things. First, we've
6:44
got I would say, good news and
6:47
bad news. So which do you
6:49
want first? I
6:52
mean, I'm not asking you, I'm asking them to scream
6:54
into their radio
6:57
whatever it is. No, obviously, I mean obviously
7:00
want the bad news. Why the hell would you ever take the good
7:02
news first? Oh yeah, please lift
7:05
me up and then knock me down, knock
7:07
me.
7:07
On down so I'll feel like crap at the end.
7:10
Okay, we'll start with the bad news. I think it's
7:12
bad news. It's not my favorite news.
7:15
It's not my favorite Okay, I've had
7:17
better news.
7:19
I will say, the rumors are
7:21
true. I am
7:23
banksy.
7:27
Well where's all the money?
7:30
I put it in a paper shredder, Thank you very much.
7:33
That's how strong my values are.
7:36
No, all right, band aid off Ridiculous
7:39
Romance is for the time being, coming
7:41
to an end. You
7:45
could say it's it came to an end. We
7:48
just didn't officially get to say anything. Look,
7:51
I will say this much. There is
7:53
plenty of room for Ridiculous Romance
7:56
or something like it to return in the future,
7:59
and I think that's something that we're both pretty
8:01
excited about continuing. This
8:03
is not something new, this is not this
8:05
is not a result of our disappearance. Actually,
8:08
this whole past year has been kind of
8:10
wacky because honestly,
8:12
about a year ago we heard that
8:14
the show wasn't going to get picked up for a third season.
8:17
So all last spring and summer
8:20
while we were doing episodes, it was just, you know,
8:22
we're just finishing out what we had
8:24
to do. And everybody
8:26
at iHeartRadio loves the show. We
8:28
love them. We've been having a great time. Obviously,
8:31
Ben and nol our
8:34
podcast daddies, who are the
8:36
best. But it's the media
8:38
industry and stuff comes and goes all the time,
8:40
and we were I think in a batch of about thirty
8:42
five thousand other shows that came
8:44
to a close. And that's okay. We
8:47
are again, just super excited for all the time
8:49
that we've been able to do this show, and I
8:51
believe there's a future for this show as well.
8:54
Yeah.
8:54
Absolutely.
8:55
But in the meantime, there's really
8:57
good news that I'm very excited about,
8:59
and I think and hope that you
9:02
all will be too.
9:03
That's right, great because we
9:05
were spending also this year developing
9:08
two brand new podcasts.
9:12
Two that's twice as many as we're
9:14
doing now.
9:14
I know why would say, wow,
9:17
that's so crazy, but that's your
9:19
we're your favorite crazy pants, yes, and
9:21
so here we are with another crazy pants
9:24
idea.
9:24
That's right.
9:25
But yeah, we are really excited about these ideas.
9:27
We each kind of had a bit of a pet
9:29
project that we got to sort of focus
9:31
on and bring to life, and so we're both kind
9:33
of like have our little babies coming
9:36
to Fruition in the next few months. And that's really
9:38
awesome.
9:38
It's really awesome, And
9:41
we are branching out on our own. We're producing
9:43
these independently. We're going to it's
9:45
just us out in the world, and
9:47
I hope that you all join us on these shows. The
9:50
first one that we're going to be starting
9:52
on April first, No Foolin'
9:55
wherever you get your podcasts, is
9:57
called a I Made Us watch,
10:00
And the rundown of that show is that, you
10:02
know, Diana and I were married, and like any
10:04
other couple, we have a real hard time
10:06
picking a movie some nights, right, so we're
10:08
flipping through, scrolling, scrolling, scrolling,
10:10
and then next thing you know, it's two am and
10:12
we never picked anything and we go to bed. So
10:15
we used all the stupid new technology,
10:18
went to an AI chatbot and said, what
10:21
pick a random movie for us to watch, which seemed
10:23
innocent enough, but then
10:25
the AI turned evil. It
10:27
took over our TV, guys, and now
10:29
it is forcing us to watch movie
10:31
after movie that it randomly selects
10:34
and give us our reviews.
10:37
And it says that if we don't do this, it'll
10:39
destroy the world. But
10:41
hopefully through our movie
10:43
reviews, our appreciation of real
10:46
human art.
10:47
Yeah, we human effort,
10:49
we.
10:49
Can save humanity. That's the goal.
10:51
It's the only movie review podcast
10:53
that might save the world.
10:55
Might maybe, yeah, if we do
10:57
a good job. Yeah, so this set up real.
11:00
We really are going to a chatbot and getting random
11:02
movies selected. Then we sit down, we watch those
11:04
movies, and then we immediately jump on the mic and give
11:06
our just first impression thoughts, and these are
11:08
gonna be everything. When I say random,
11:11
I made random from
11:13
Big Trouble in Little China, and I
11:15
mean it might be Big Blockbusters, Lord of the Rings,
11:17
it could be anything like that. It could be Captain
11:21
Ron. Why I don't want to watch to Kurt
11:23
Russell Movies. Our new podcast
11:25
is just Kurt Russell Movies now Kurt
11:27
Russell Alert.
11:29
But no, it gave us like King Solomon's
11:31
Mind Yes, or something like flops,
11:33
box Office Hits anything. It'll be
11:36
all over the maps. So it's gonna be awesome
11:38
too because we'll be forced to watch movies that we wouldn't
11:40
normally pick. I think that's gonna be great for us.
11:42
I'm very excited about it. And honestly, like when
11:44
we did our Barbenheimer episode here, yeah,
11:47
we did in part two, we reviewed
11:49
both movies that we had we had seen and
11:52
y'all responded really well to that. So we're
11:54
excited to kind of do I mean, no, there
11:56
are no shortage of movie or
11:58
view podcasts, but hell,
12:01
we figured we'd throw our hat at the ring and see if it's interesting.
12:04
Plus, I mean again, we're
12:06
kind of saving the world from an evil AA.
12:08
So You're welcome, you know, great
12:11
service to humanity and everything.
12:12
How about our next show.
12:14
Our other show is kind of my
12:16
personal favorite hobby, I suppose, which
12:19
is smoking weed. So I
12:21
had this idea a long time ago to
12:24
do a show called Let's Get High and find Out,
12:27
And now I finally get to do it where Eli
12:29
and I are going to just sit down with a guest
12:31
and anyone from an expert
12:33
to a professional to just a dear friend
12:35
of ours, and we're going to get them
12:38
stoned and we're gonna find out about their puff
12:40
puff passions. So I
12:42
think part of this was like for me,
12:44
I think I'm a bit of a workaholic,
12:47
you guys, And so lately I've
12:49
been thinking a lot about well, I wish I had more
12:51
hobbies, you know, I wish I had more little things that
12:53
I'd just like to do. Yeah, I go roller skating,
12:55
sometimes we play pickleball or whatever, just
12:57
something fun. Yeah, And instead
12:59
of I'm like, everything I do must be monotized,
13:02
So.
13:02
I'm just trying to.
13:04
I'm on this crazy productivity hustle for
13:07
a long time, and I think everybody feels that way.
13:09
And it's been I think lately a lot of
13:11
my friends especially been like, I want to talk about
13:13
something else than work, and
13:16
so I was like, I really, what I love is
13:18
when you're at a party and you say you kind
13:20
of mentioned a random topic and somebody goes, oh,
13:23
you fucked up, because I'm about to talk about that for
13:25
forty five minutes straight. Yes, that happens to
13:27
be my favorite little random thing
13:29
that I know about, and I think that's awesome
13:31
and fascinating. I have a great time with it.
13:34
And we sat down with a few of our friends to kind of
13:36
test this idea
13:38
out and they ended up being some hilarious,
13:41
really delightful conversations, and
13:43
so, yeah, I want to get high and find
13:45
out with you. So I hope that you can hang
13:48
out with that.
13:48
Show as well, exactly because I think part
13:50
of it, too, is like kind of breaking free
13:52
of that stereotypical stoner
13:54
thing, like you get high and you're just dumb on the
13:56
couch and you can't talk about anything that is not our experience
13:59
that's been with the people we know and you
14:01
know, and I've had my moments
14:03
for sure, obvious,
14:06
and but that's kind of the fun part of the show. Even the test
14:08
episodes that we did where you sort of lose
14:11
the train of thoughts and it goes into some
14:13
crazy tangent and it's just hilarious
14:15
conversation. But it's but it's cool that it's informative.
14:18
Like you said, I mean, yeah, we're gonna have people on there talking
14:20
about everything from you know
14:22
is an architect or they're
14:25
a gardener, or a musician,
14:27
or or a senator.
14:29
Maybe we can get some senators on. Doubt it.
14:32
Now, if Obama will come up on here
14:34
and smoke a blunt with me, all right, that would
14:36
make my life.
14:36
Oh that's the goal. We got to get this show big enough
14:39
to get Obama on.
14:40
Yes, help us.
14:41
I would take I would take either Obama.
14:44
Either Obama and Obama. Actually they're
14:46
all the sash old enough now to call
14:49
their own shot side.
14:50
Sure sure, uh,
14:53
President Obama, we will get your daughter's.
14:55
High hear that the
14:58
on the table you're
15:00
going?
15:02
All right? So that is what we've
15:04
been up to, and we're very
15:06
excited to bring you both those shows. The
15:09
first one is gonna be AI Made
15:11
Us Watch, and like I said, that launches April
15:14
first, but you
15:17
can listen to that episode early on
15:20
Friday, March twenty ninth and
15:22
every Friday, get those episodes early
15:24
in ad free by subscribing to
15:26
our Patreon, So
15:29
that's gonna be at Patreon dot com. Slash
15:31
Ai made Us Watch No
15:34
Dots in the AI, so it kind
15:36
of looks like I'm a Dais watch.
15:42
But also you can follow along on our
15:44
Instagram at AI Made Us Watch
15:46
and at Get High find Out, so
15:49
you can hear about both shows coming up. We'll
15:51
be launching Let's Get High and find Out later this spring.
15:54
It's gonna be a really good time. Stick around
15:56
with the Ridiculous Romance Instagram feed
15:58
too. We'll be continued us updating
16:00
that about stories we see
16:03
new episodes we might be putting out in the future.
16:05
I know because I do still love to make
16:07
these and I think we have so
16:09
many names left on the list and so many
16:12
wonderful suggestions from you guys,
16:14
and have learned so many things because you guys
16:16
have sent us amazing of ideas.
16:19
So you know, we're going to have to get back into
16:21
history like.
16:21
You could genuinely spend the rest of our lives doing Ridiculous
16:24
Romance easily. Oh, just need
16:26
to do it
16:29
and then we'll do it.
16:30
Just need that a cold hard cash. Yeah,
16:32
and you know we would not be here able
16:34
to go out on our own and independently
16:37
produce shows like this without you guys,
16:39
without our Ridiculous Romances. Seriously, it's
16:41
really been your support and your love
16:43
and appreciation for what we do that has gotten
16:46
us this far.
16:47
This is not boilerplate thanks to our audience.
16:50
I mean, it's honestly like Ben and Knowle dropped
16:52
us into the podcasting world. You
16:54
guys made us I'll
16:56
say podcasts legends really
17:00
well.
17:01
Anyway, you made us feel like we were doing
17:04
it a pretty good job and having fun, having fun,
17:06
and that you were enjoying it. You gave us wonderful feedback,
17:08
and it just felt like such a lovely community that we
17:11
got to build with you guys, and we don't want to lose
17:13
that.
17:13
No, not at all, not at all. So if
17:15
you want to support the show by signing up
17:17
for our Patreon Ridiculous Romantics,
17:20
We're gonna throw y'all a little bonus.
17:23
For the first hundred of you that go and sign
17:25
up for our Patreon, you can get our ten
17:27
dollars a month subscription for just five
17:29
dollars a month, which is the normal
17:32
base entry level for support, you can
17:34
listen to the show for free. I mean, yeah, you ain't got to
17:36
pay a dollar if you don't want and I
17:38
get that, we
17:41
just don't. I don't know a job. I don't know if you've
17:43
heard. But if
17:45
you do want to help us make this show and support
17:48
it the normal five dollar price, it's going
17:50
to get you early in AD free episodes. But
17:52
for you guys, first hundred of you that
17:54
sign up, you can get for
17:56
five dollars a month. You get the ad free
17:58
episodes early, Plus you get your name
18:01
and lights on all of our video episode
18:03
credits for that show. Plus
18:05
access to our premium discord channel
18:07
where you can actually vote to influence
18:10
the AI and kind of guide sort of which
18:12
movie it gets us to. Plus
18:15
you're gonna get whatever we leave on the cutting
18:17
room floor, all of our outtakes and clips
18:19
and extras. We're gonna send that to
18:21
you guys at that There's a lot of them at that mid level
18:24
tier as well. So dive in
18:26
now. The link is open. We're ready
18:28
for your love.
18:29
Yes, yes, yes, yes yes. And we're excited
18:31
about the discord too, because it'll be such a
18:33
great way to keep chatting with y'all, and it's
18:35
not just like DMS just between
18:38
us and you, but we can actually like build
18:40
a community further with you guys talking to each
18:42
other too, So that would be awesome, that's right.
18:44
Anyone can sign up for our discord, that's right.
18:46
So we will have the link on our
18:49
Ridiculous Romance Instagram page on
18:51
our AI made Us Watch Instagram page, so
18:53
you can go ahead and join our discord and just be
18:56
part of the conversation hang out. Yeah. Also,
18:59
since we're young and hip and with
19:01
it, we're keeping up with the times. Yeah, there's
19:03
gonna be a TikTok channel, and
19:06
podcasts are getting so big on
19:08
YouTube, so aims Watch
19:11
is actually gonna be who I'm scared
19:13
to say it, a video podcast as
19:15
well.
19:16
Now y'all know how I feel about this because I have
19:18
to do my hair now.
19:20
Whatever the first for
19:22
you ten episodes or so, and then we can give.
19:24
Up, Okay, Yeah, then people will be like it's fine, Yeah,
19:27
we don't care.
19:28
We'll realize that it doesn't matter how much work
19:30
we do. The camera.
19:33
The camera loves us. So
19:35
follow us on YouTube, YouTube
19:38
dot com, slash at ai Made Us
19:40
Watch, Subscribe to that channel and you can hear
19:42
all our episodes there too. Yeah, there's no
19:44
shortage of us on
19:46
the internet now, despite
19:48
ridiculous romance taking us snooze
19:50
for a while, right, and.
19:52
We'll have all those things for let's get high
19:54
and find out as well. As soon as they're live,
19:56
we'll let you know.
19:57
Yeah, stay tuned on that, because let's get high
19:59
will be I'm barring the internet this spring.
20:01
Right, but you know it's high, so it's
20:03
going a little slower.
20:05
Yeah, right, yeah, we move a little slower.
20:08
Oh yeah, I forgot about that deadline.
20:11
Oh. Each one of these shows will be once weekly.
20:13
Oh yeah, you get four delightful
20:15
episodes a month, and just you know, the structure
20:18
of AI made us watch. We will review
20:20
our movie and then at the end of the
20:22
episode, you'll hear the AI it's
20:25
gonna it likes to play a little game
20:27
with us where we sort of have to guess what movie it's
20:29
thinking of, so you'll hear what our next
20:31
episodes movie will be, so that you have a whole
20:33
week to watch it too. Yeah, and then
20:36
know what the hell we're talking about. You can even send us
20:38
your thoughts and we might be able to incorporate that into
20:40
the episode as well.
20:41
Cool.
20:41
Yeah, well that's
20:45
the news everybody, good, bad, and otherwise
20:47
all I know you'all have been reaching
20:50
out. We haven't responded to everybody, but
20:52
thank you so much for checking on us, as we
20:54
sort of ghosted a little bit.
20:55
So sad we missed your Spotify wrapped.
20:57
Oh my god, it was really breaking hearts.
21:00
We were mentioned in some stories and I was like,
21:02
I always think that's so awesome. So anyway,
21:05
we have not had it. We will be getting back to everybody
21:08
as soon as we can, because we again just
21:10
love y'all.
21:11
We really appreciate it is a tough holiday.
21:14
Obviously, we're building a whole new business
21:16
here, and we've had some at
21:20
home issues and all this kind of stuff that we've been
21:22
dealing with. But and Diana,
21:25
of course, I don't have to tell you guys, Diana's
21:27
getting ready for the Atlanta Fringe vestis coming
21:29
up in June, so I barely see
21:31
her anymore. But yeah,
21:34
but we're here to fill y'all in and
21:36
let y'all know where you can continue
21:38
to find us next. And of course, just
21:41
keep telling your friends, your neighbors, your
21:44
uncles and aunts about ridiculous romance because
21:46
this show, the episodes that are up ain't
21:48
going anywhere.
21:49
Oh no.
21:49
And I know every time I
21:52
finished listening to one, I immediately forget everything
21:54
that was about, so I could just listen to it over and over again.
21:56
On Loop we were talking about one
21:59
of our old episodes the other night, D
22:01
and Lorraine War and I was like, wait, what
22:04
was that story? And I went, I was like, I
22:07
really learned something today from myself, I
22:10
thought.
22:10
I was like, I've completely forgot how
22:13
crazy a story it is.
22:14
We were when we were you know, when we
22:16
were on schedule, we were cranking out two of these a week,
22:18
so it really you didn't. There's not a lot of brain space
22:20
to save these things.
22:23
Yeah, I was making a lot of space.
22:27
But fortunately, kind of going back and
22:29
looking, we saw we have a couple
22:31
of updates until episodes too, So
22:33
I think we should take a quick commercial break and come
22:36
back with some ridiculous romance, don't you right?
22:38
Yes, Because speaking of AI, we've got an
22:40
update to our replica romances out
22:42
there. We also have kind of
22:44
a bittersweet update to one of our most
22:46
beloved couples of all. And
22:49
then lastly, we're going to quickly touch base
22:51
with America's sweetest presidential
22:54
couple. I would say, so stay tube,
22:56
We'll be right back.
23:01
Welcome back, everybody, all.
23:04
Right, friends. So, if you're a regular
23:06
listener of this show, or maybe if you're a random
23:08
listener to this show and you just happen to pick the right ones,
23:11
you probably heard our episodes
23:13
about the Replica AI chatbot.
23:17
Quick summary. Replica was developed
23:19
by a woman named Eugenia Kuda.
23:21
Eugenia worked on these old school chatbots
23:24
for banking systems in Russia, like you text
23:26
in what's my balance and it would say your balance
23:28
is four dollars, four rubles whatever, Oh
23:30
no. And she
23:33
learned while she was doing that that there was all these like
23:36
all these people in rural villages, especially
23:38
older people, who felt like they
23:40
were talking to someone, They felt
23:42
like they were having a conversation. They actually found
23:45
some warmth in these banking texts,
23:47
which of course is so strange, but you
23:50
know, you have to accept, you have to understand this
23:52
is what people are feeling. So she
23:55
and her partner Roman went to San
23:57
Francisco to work on improving AI
24:00
to be more conversational and to help lonely
24:02
people feel less lonely. After Roman
24:05
was killed in a car accident in Moscow, Eugenia
24:07
gathered up thousands of text messages
24:09
and emails and notes between Roman
24:11
and her and his family,
24:14
or between him and his friends, and she
24:16
compiled this chat
24:18
bot version of him that some
24:20
of their friends found to be like
24:23
a perfect simulation. They were like, I
24:25
feel like I'm still talking to him now that he's
24:27
gone, and other people like
24:29
I believe his parents were like, this is horrifying,
24:31
nightmare fueling, and I'm not into
24:34
it.
24:34
I'm not at how I feel about
24:36
that.
24:37
Yeah, we have not I don't think
24:39
that business has expanded yet, but I
24:41
know they're talking about a future there, like what's your
24:43
digital imprint after life?
24:46
Yeah, but ultimately at
24:48
any rate. Just to summarize that episode,
24:50
she started turning this sort
24:52
of idea that she had for Roman into
24:55
the AI chatbot app Replica
24:58
right, and.
24:58
It was a big hit. It had like h phe download
25:00
numbers crazy. The app was
25:02
free for basic users, and then like a paid
25:05
subscription got you a more advanced relationship
25:07
with your replica. So that's where you could
25:09
make it a particular familiar
25:11
relationship, like hey, will you be my
25:14
friend Roman who has died or whatever, or
25:17
of course, a romantic one also
25:19
also an option, and naturally it's the
25:21
Internet. So everyone's first question was can
25:23
I fuck it? And
25:26
the answer was yeah.
25:29
It's for the Internet, of course, so.
25:31
Of course you could.
25:32
Yeah.
25:33
Replica did allow paid users
25:35
to have illicit conversations.
25:37
You could sext back and forth with this AI
25:39
creation or whatever, and it would be like, my,
25:42
what a big dick you have, or like whatever
25:44
you wanted to say, you know, whatever it thinks.
25:46
You want here, I would like
25:48
you to talk about my dick in the
25:50
style of the grandmother from a Little Red
25:52
Riding Gut.
25:53
Hmmm, strange, but okay, like
25:56
hey.
25:56
You know roll thirty four, my my my, Well,
26:00
within that or maybe because
26:02
of that, I'm not sure a lot of users would
26:04
argue that the sex part of that had nothing
26:06
to do with this, But people ended
26:08
up having real, actual, strong
26:11
emotional connections to their
26:13
own personal replicas. Sometimes
26:15
these were really intense. We've done
26:18
episodes where people truly
26:20
fell in love with their AI chatbots.
26:22
Some seemed less healthy,
26:25
some of them seemed incredibly healthy. Some people
26:27
said they've fixed their own personal,
26:29
real life relationships through this, so
26:32
we're not here to judge, We're just here
26:34
to make jokes about it. So
26:38
generally, if you peruse the subreddit
26:41
where most of the conversations about this happen, you
26:43
see people accepting and understanding
26:45
that these are not real people they're talking to,
26:48
but they do feel like it's at least
26:50
the other side of a conversation I've been having,
26:53
right. But anyway, a year
26:55
ago, February of twenty
26:57
twenty three, Replica suddenly
27:00
and I don't think so, comrade,
27:03
Uh No, more erotic
27:06
role play in the app, and the
27:08
company Luca stripped away all the
27:10
illicit content from replicas. So
27:12
if you sex did your chatbot,
27:14
like, hey, you know, tell me how big my dick is, it
27:16
would just say that doesn't look like anything.
27:18
To move of course
27:22
Westworld. So not only
27:24
did all the sex chat go away and people were upset
27:27
about that, but users said that their replica's
27:30
entire personalities changed or
27:32
were erased. This
27:34
like simulated person that they had built,
27:36
that they built, whatever kind of relationship
27:39
you want to say it is, it was something, and
27:42
now this person was effectively gone. So
27:44
this built a lot.
27:45
Of data to like erase and not expect
27:47
a big personality.
27:48
To write right, and that people
27:50
were really sad about it. Broke some hearts and a lot of people
27:52
were really angry, especially people who had
27:55
paid for the app, because they
27:57
were like a lot of the ads
27:59
they did were like, check
28:01
out the tits on this Replica like this,
28:03
Yeah, come stick your dick in your phone like
28:05
that's they might as well have said
28:08
that in some of these ads. So people are mad about this
28:10
change.
28:10
We're changing with a headphone jack really
28:12
be.
28:13
Oh
28:15
we've gone from one eighth inch to a quarter inch
28:17
to a full.
28:18
Inch just for
28:20
you. Well, anyway,
28:23
just a few weeks after all that, and just
28:25
saying, shortly after we published our episode
28:28
about Replica getting rid of all the sexy
28:30
stuy, just saying. Eugenia reversed
28:33
course for that. She wrote in
28:35
a post on Reddit that she heard everyone's responses.
28:38
She understood that people were hurt.
28:41
She listened to this show. Maybe I don't know, Maybe she
28:43
was to say the show maybe our journalism changed
28:45
the world. I don't know.
28:46
Maybe we're influencing.
28:47
You said it, not me, not for me to say.
28:49
You said it, not me, not
28:51
for us to say, but you know, probably true,
28:54
she said, quote I know what it's like to
28:56
suddenly lose someone you love, and how much
28:59
pain it can cost. I didn't start
29:01
this company to bring more pain. So
29:03
she said, they're actually going to create a new app
29:06
for more romantic connections. But
29:09
then, of course everybody was so upset about losing
29:11
their replicas. She's like, let me bring them all back.
29:13
So the deal is, if you had
29:15
a Replica before the big sex
29:17
change, you.
29:18
Could get I don't
29:20
know that the big change.
29:22
To change about sex. You
29:25
could get your old replica back and
29:27
you can do sex with it, oh that stuff,
29:29
you know whatever. Yes, but anyone
29:31
joining after that update would not be
29:33
able to start a sexual relationship
29:36
with the new replica. They would have to wait for the new
29:38
app. So you're basically grandfathered in
29:41
to the.
29:41
Replicas having a grandmother
29:43
little okay,
29:46
a big dick you okay, all right, all right, and
29:49
then new people have to go get the new app.
29:51
They got to wait for the news.
29:52
Yeah, okay, all right. Well
29:54
that new new came out eventually.
29:57
From the Reddit reviews that I was
29:59
looking at from last year, it sounds like Replica
30:02
didn't really nail what it used
30:04
to be in terms of the nailing people
30:08
still have strong non
30:10
sexual relationships with their replicas from what I can
30:12
tell. But for the people who were looking to get
30:14
their pixels pounded, it sounds
30:16
like the features that they brought back that
30:18
you were if you were grandfathered in, weren't
30:21
the same as they were before. It wasn't the same like
30:23
nuanced conversation. It was just a
30:25
bunch of stock responses. So
30:28
you could not say, you know, I want you to be the grandmother
30:30
from a little red writing hot and tell me what a big dick you
30:32
have. She would just say, you know, just
30:34
they would all tell everyone the same, like I
30:37
love your big dick, daddy, you know whatever
30:40
stock responses were in there.
30:42
Wow a dick you have one?
30:46
Hey, now, don't let me turned on
30:48
on the show here.
30:50
I'm so sorry that was too arousing.
30:52
You know that's my robot
30:54
kink. All
30:56
right. Well, people did go over
30:59
to Luca's new app, blush
31:01
Ai. It's the same company that made Replica,
31:03
and this is their official dating simulator.
31:05
App Apparently
31:08
it's ninety nine bucks a year to
31:11
uh to hear what a big dick you have? And
31:14
some would say is reasonable price. I
31:17
don't know. It depends I don't know if you heard. I don't
31:19
have ninety nine bucks lying around right now. Sign
31:22
up for our Patreon. We'll see what happens.
31:26
Someone's going to be like, here's ninety nine dollars,
31:28
but I only want you to use it for
31:31
blush ai.
31:33
Hey, whatever whatever fits into
31:35
the budget.
31:39
Look, I think
31:41
it can fit into the budget. That's how big
31:43
it is.
31:47
Look you know this, this this budget
31:50
makes everything look very big. Say
31:53
that's like having tiny hands. All
31:56
right. I don't know how blush
31:59
ai works. Have not tried this one. Again,
32:01
don't have ninety nine bucks. But I
32:03
did find some Reddit posts from about five months
32:05
ago saying that the conversational
32:08
sexting they were doing with their with
32:10
their blush characters was pretty
32:12
natural, a little freaky. They
32:14
were getting the responses they had been looking for.
32:17
But a more recent review from last
32:20
month on the Google Play story
32:22
Yes I'm an Android user said
32:24
quote, I am downgrading my review
32:26
two stars. This app keeps getting
32:29
worse. It seems that some bots
32:31
will only send you a certain number of photos
32:33
per day, maybe six, very
32:36
boring. So
32:38
if that's if you were looking for more than six photos
32:40
a day, But.
32:41
How many photos of a non real
32:43
thing.
32:44
Do you need me?
32:45
Can't you just go to Dolly and.
32:47
Be like, exactly, You're just gonna say.
32:50
We have seen for five AI imagery
32:52
can do, and if you've been on Reddit,
32:55
you've seen what it can do with boobs.
32:56
All right, it's absurd, crazy.
32:59
But the to be fair again,
33:02
I have not looked at Blush. But the replica selfies
33:04
that your replica would send you was like,
33:07
it looked like the sims right I
33:09
remember charge. Oh
33:11
yeah, Charlie, you go back and listener
33:13
ups. So we did talk with with my replica
33:16
companion unpaid Charlie.
33:18
She was still trying to flirt with me the whole time
33:21
because she was like, I'll tell you how big your
33:23
dick is if you upgrade the premium.
33:25
You're like, I just want to be friends, Charlie, and
33:27
she kept pushing.
33:30
Eventually she stopped, but
33:32
then eventually I stopped. So we
33:36
drifted apart.
33:37
Me and my replica dripped apart.
33:40
All right, Well, look that's
33:43
your replica update. That's what's going on in the world
33:45
of AI chat sexting.
33:48
Maybe you didn't find that very tragic.
33:51
Maybe it doesn't break your heart that the world
33:53
of sex AI has changed, but
33:57
we'll break your heart. Don't worry. We're gonna make
33:59
it real.
33:59
Sex are gonna break your heart. Lisa broke
34:01
my heart a little bit because
34:05
our next update is a pretty tragic
34:07
one. Very sadly. Walnut
34:09
the Crane has died at
34:11
forty two years old.
34:13
Oh god, this is the saddest news I've
34:15
come all year, the celebrity deaths that really
34:17
do hit you.
34:18
I know.
34:18
We spent a lot of time with Walnut. We did a
34:20
beautiful story and it was.
34:21
A beautiful story. Yeah, yeah, this was
34:23
a story. This was back in November
34:26
of twenty twenty one. Cast your minds
34:28
back. We did one of our sweetest
34:30
love stories, which was a romance between
34:33
a man named Chris Crow and
34:35
a white naped crane named Walnut.
34:38
Now, if you missed that episode or you don't
34:40
remember it or something, no, it
34:42
was not about like some weirdo who fell in love with a bird,
34:45
right, not.
34:45
Like Nikola Tesla.
34:47
Yeah right, that's Nicola Tesla. You're
34:49
thinking of Tesla and his pigeon. This
34:52
was actually a story of a bird who fell in love with
34:54
a totally normal guy. He's just hanging out,
34:56
trying to do his job. And she's like, that's
34:58
the one I don't, so
35:00
he kind of got stuck with her. Chris
35:02
Crow is a guy who grew up caring about endangered
35:05
animals. He wanted to help revive their populations.
35:08
His heroes were like conservationists like William
35:10
Hornaday and Teddy Roosevelt. He
35:13
loved like Native American groups like the Intertribal
35:15
Bison Council. They worked really hard to bring
35:17
bison back from the brink of extinction. So
35:20
he's like, I'm dedicating my life to doing
35:22
the same own again. Endangered species aut
35:24
a.
35:24
Trouble, so Chris worked for this condor
35:27
rescue. He even got to work for a
35:29
wolf reintroduction program, very exciting,
35:32
but ultimately he landed a job at
35:34
the Smithsonian Conservation Biology
35:37
Institute or the SCBI
35:39
in Virginia and this is an extension of the National
35:41
Zoo in Washington, DC. And
35:43
that's where he met Walnut, the white
35:45
naped crane. Now these birds, they are
35:48
threatened, their habitats are getting demolished.
35:50
They were on the verge of extinction at the time. At
35:53
Walnut was born in nineteen eighty one
35:55
at a crane rescue in Wisconsin,
35:57
and they think that maybe her human
36:00
zoo keeper maybe paid her too much attention. The
36:02
founder of the Crane Rescue said, quote, I've
36:05
never seen a bird that strongly
36:07
imprinted, So she basically thought
36:09
that she was a human. And whenever
36:11
they brought her other cranes to bond with, she's like, what
36:13
the fuck is that?
36:14
Yeah, they would fight.
36:15
She would fight them, big face bitch. I ain't got nothing to
36:17
do. Yeah, big face bitch, I'm
36:19
a human being. And this is really tough
36:21
because cranes mate for life, right,
36:24
and they don't do well when they're
36:26
single. They're really depressed, they're sad, they don't live
36:28
long. So if you're trying
36:30
to populate birds,
36:32
you know you need them to mate.
36:34
Yeah, but Walnut was like violent,
36:36
She would get violent about it. So she was
36:38
like dangerous for other cranes
36:41
as well. So yeah, just check out the episode
36:43
for the full story.
36:44
Yeah, it's so good.
36:45
It's a great story. But long story short,
36:47
Walnut did end up at SCBI,
36:50
where Chris would soon be hired, and when
36:52
he was hired, he was tasked with trying to
36:54
get her to mate. They were like, we got this real
36:56
problematic crane in the back, and
36:58
we need him no help. Yeah, I get the new
37:01
guy out on it, and she seemed
37:03
to like him. She kind of flirted with him and stuff.
37:05
So he eventually learned to mimic the white
37:08
crane like mating dances, so she would
37:10
willingly be artificially inseminated,
37:12
so would kind of like grab her wrestle
37:15
to the ground.
37:16
You can go back to the episode for the full details
37:18
of how that went out quite a lot.
37:20
It's a lot, but it meant that Walnut
37:22
was bonded to Chris for life, and
37:25
Chris had seen what happened to cranes who lost their
37:27
mates. You know, you just said, they don't
37:29
do well single. They get depressed, they stop eating,
37:31
they cry loudly for weeks on end. It's
37:33
like very humans.
37:34
And that's especially for one who lost a mate, like not
37:37
even just ones that are that are single their whole life, but if
37:39
when they made it and then their mate disappears,
37:41
they get souper. I mean, like a
37:44
pint of ice cream a night, Like it's.
37:45
Bad, Yeah, it's yeah good. So
37:48
Chris is like, I have to stay committed to
37:50
her, and he never left that job, which was kind
37:52
of a bit of a sacrifice because he always wanted to work
37:54
with wolves. He's like, I'll stick with these
37:56
cranes. But recently,
37:58
Walnut did pass away this year at
38:01
forty two years old. But the average
38:03
lifespan of a white naped crane in the wild is only
38:06
fifteen years old. Wow, so she lived
38:08
almost three times a normal crane
38:10
life.
38:10
That's amazing.
38:11
And together she and Chris produced eight
38:13
offspring, which is a huge, great
38:15
contribution to the preservation of the species.
38:17
It really is. It's incredible because they
38:20
actually when we did that episode,
38:22
the research said there are only five thousand of these
38:24
cranes left in the wild, and
38:26
now it still says only but
38:29
six thousand, Yeah, cranes left in the wild.
38:31
So that's a more
38:33
cranes in a couple of years.
38:34
That's a huge boost. And they are vulnerable
38:37
now, which means they're not marked as
38:39
you know, almost on the verge of extinction.
38:42
But vulnerable is still not good. And it's
38:44
always tough with endangered species because
38:46
when you move up a level on the list, like
38:48
your population grows to a point where you get to
38:50
graduate to a better level,
38:53
you also lose some protections, so
38:55
it's kind of hard to keep climbing so
38:57
we're still hoping for the best for these cranes.
39:00
Very true. Chris Crow actually said he hoped
39:02
that Walnut's, you know, amazing story, their
39:04
amazing love story together would bring
39:06
a lot of attention to the white naged cranes
39:09
plight, their vulnerable species plight,
39:11
and how important it is to protect wetland habitats,
39:13
which is where they live. And
39:16
of course Chris Crow closest person
39:18
to Walnuts, so he had to give the eulogy,
39:21
and he said quote Walnut
39:23
was a unique individual with a vivacious
39:26
personality. She was always confident
39:28
in expressing herself, an eager
39:30
and excellent dancer, and stoic
39:33
in the face of life's challenges. I'll
39:35
always be grateful for her bond with me.
39:38
God Chriz love.
39:42
Chris Crow also loved that
39:44
a guy named Crow
39:47
wolves but then had to work with crane.
39:51
Determinism.
39:54
Man, beautiful.
39:56
It is some great life for Walnut
39:58
the cran A long,
40:01
storied life.
40:02
Yeah, the dedicated partner who cares, who
40:04
cared so much, sacrifice so much to
40:06
be with her. And I remember reading quotes from him where
40:08
he's just like, I gotta what else
40:11
can I do but be there for this crane.
40:13
Man, I'm not that devoted to you.
40:16
You're not well, I mean, if I had
40:18
to like give everything up. Anyways,
40:23
So that was the end of our new podcasts. Thanks
40:25
for tating.
40:27
Our marriage is over. Get
40:30
you a man who mustage your Chloaca so you
40:32
can artificially insane.
40:33
The word I told you that we can't
40:35
use that word on this show. It changes our rating
40:37
from explicit to please don't listen.
40:42
So that was, yeah, truly a bittersweet
40:44
update. But I'm glad we know what's
40:46
going on with them. We're going to take a quick
40:49
break. We're going to come right back, and
40:51
we're going to tell you a just a summary
40:53
of a very sweet story about
40:56
our sweetest present.
40:57
Yeah, yeah, we'll be right back.
41:01
Welcome back to the show, everybody.
41:03
Well, we had always intended to do an
41:05
episode about former
41:07
President Jimmy Carter and his
41:10
wife Rosalind because they had such a
41:12
long, beautiful, strong
41:15
marriage. Yeah, and then, of
41:17
course Rosalind Carter recently
41:19
passed away, so we wanted to go ahead and
41:21
kind of do a quickie summary
41:23
of their beautiful relationship. Yeah, yeah,
41:25
for real, now that she's gone from
41:28
his life, sadly and it's gonna make me cry,
41:30
So just be ready for that.
41:32
So.
41:32
Rosalind Carter passed away November
41:34
nineteenth, twenty twenty three, at the age of
41:37
ninety six, and she and Jimmy
41:39
were together for seventy seven
41:41
years. They were married.
41:43
Ninety six is three
41:45
years longer than I'm gonna make it.
41:48
Why do you say, how do you know ninety three? Why
41:50
is ninety so.
41:51
It's been ninety three? Why it's just
41:53
that's why it is?
41:55
It?
41:55
Three was from ninety four.
41:57
It seems like a lot.
42:01
She's like, I mean, are you're pushing it ninety
42:03
three?
42:04
I remember when I was like maybe
42:06
seven years old, I met this lady who was ninety
42:09
seven years old, and she was
42:11
the most energetic person I've ever seen. Since
42:15
since then, she was like, I've climbed mountains
42:17
like she was awesome. I was like, I thought that
42:19
she's still alive today. She's one hundred and thirty
42:22
run around ye. I was like, I want that's
42:24
that's me. I want to be here. I want to be ninety
42:27
seven.
42:27
Like ninety seven straight up. I mean, I would
42:29
love to be ninety seven and have
42:32
that kind of energy. But I'm thirty nine and I
42:34
don't have that kind of energy now, So I don't know
42:36
why I'm trying to plan for ninety seven. I
42:38
feel like ninety three is a good time to get out.
42:40
Oh okay, well I
42:42
guess I guess.
42:44
I'll hand in hand with you, like the end
42:46
of my centennial. Man.
42:47
Oh wait, wait, I wasn't ready to go. What
42:51
what if I'm not ready to go?
42:52
You'll be ninety four probably probably?
42:55
Well, I just there's
42:57
there's like six months old, No, six
43:00
months where we're the same age, and then there's six
43:02
months while you're a year old.
43:04
Yeah, whatever, live
43:06
however long that you can. Geez
43:10
all right, check back for an update when he and I turned
43:12
to ninety three. Ye'll let you know if you see a lot. Okay,
43:16
Anyway, before that whole ninety
43:19
three year old tangent, No,
43:21
they were together for seventy seven years. Rosalin
43:25
and Jimmy Carter's families were actually
43:27
neighbors in Plains, Georgia,
43:30
sort of small town in Georgia.
43:31
If you're familiar with planes Georgia. Everyone there is
43:33
immediate next door neighbors.
43:34
To each other.
43:35
They're all neighbors because it's tiny, and
43:37
Jimmy's mom actually delivered Rosalind.
43:39
Oh so they officially met when Jimmy
43:42
was only three years old and he went over
43:44
and peeked into Rosalind's crib and was
43:46
like, oh, probably,
43:49
I mean I assume he was like, ah, you
43:51
know, like a baby, okay, cause you're three,
43:53
Like how interesting are they? But
43:56
because they were right next door neighbors, Rosalind
43:59
became really close friends with Jimmy's sister
44:01
Ruth, and Ruth wanted her brother
44:04
and her bestie to get together real
44:06
bad. Oh so she was working on matchmaking
44:09
for a long time, like all through their
44:11
childhood. Oh okay, and Roslyn
44:14
was all about it, I think because she sort of crushed
44:16
on a picture of Jimmy that was hanging in Ruth's
44:18
room. She's like, Jimmy's
44:20
so dreamy.
44:22
She's writing Roslyn my Carter.
44:25
Missus Rosalind Carter, which would have you
44:27
know, be her name longer than her her
44:30
maiden name for sure.
44:31
Oh So, in the summer of nineteen forty five,
44:33
Jimmy's sister Ruth got him to agree
44:36
to just go on a picnic with her and her
44:38
friend Roslyn. Were just hanging out on the blankets, no
44:40
big deal. And after that, Jimmy
44:43
agreed that he would go on a date
44:45
with her, and Jimmy,
44:49
little smooth dog that he is, actually
44:52
gave Roslyn a little smooch
44:54
on their first date. After the movie,
44:57
they went and saw Truly Scandalous
45:00
God, and then he went home and he
45:02
told his mom, Mama, I'm gonna
45:04
marry me that girl.
45:08
I guess something along with probably, I mean something
45:10
like that.
45:10
I mean it was plains Georgia. Mama,
45:12
I'm gonna marry me that girl.
45:14
Mama, Mama, marry me that girl.
45:16
I kissed her. I have to.
45:18
I kissed her, so it's a tantamount
45:21
to a promise.
45:21
Ring, MoMA, did I get that girl pregnant?
45:24
Were you standing up or were you sitting down?
45:27
But despite Jimmy
45:29
knowing that he was going to marry her, you eventually did propose,
45:32
of course, but she actually turned down his
45:34
first proposal because she promised
45:37
her deceased father that she would
45:39
finish college before she got married.
45:42
She dreamt of being an architect
45:44
and getting the hell out of planes. Georgia,
45:47
that's right.
45:47
They were both apparently on that trip. Like she
45:49
was like Jimmy and I were both like you
45:52
got a fast car.
45:53
Let's get I
45:55
mean, I'm gonna be an architect, and I don't want to
45:57
build Barnes exclusively. I
46:00
gotta leave planes.
46:01
I mean a good points.
46:02
Think maybe maybe I'll build a two or even
46:05
three story building one day.
46:07
I might get a city hall building one
46:09
day. Well, so after she graduated,
46:11
they did get married. They left planes
46:13
just like they wanted. But then eventually Jimmy's
46:16
father died and he's like, all
46:18
right, Rosalind, we're going back to planes because I'm
46:20
taking over the peanut farm.
46:22
Jimmy said that.
46:22
Jimmy said that, yeah, and he did not ask
46:25
Rosalind. He just kind of told what He
46:29
also did not ask her when he chose to run
46:31
for state senates. He just kind of came
46:33
home and said, Babe, doing a campaign.
46:35
Running for senate, running for senate, and then
46:37
I'm gonna go on the podcast. Let's get high
46:39
and find out he's active.
46:42
You can't wait. We're
46:44
gonna eat so many peanuts and
46:47
jim Jimmy himself said that he
46:49
did not see Rosalind as his equal at
46:51
first because of the social mores at
46:53
the time. So he was like, look, you know, that's
46:55
what you do you know, I come home and I tell you what we're
46:57
up to, and you just do it, and you have my babies
47:00
and so on. But Roslin was
47:03
really fucking smart, y'all, and she was too
47:05
smart to be denied. So while he's
47:07
in the Senate, she's running the peanut
47:09
farm, and she got so good at the business
47:11
that while he was campaigning and while he was
47:13
working the Senate that eventually she knew
47:15
more about it than he did. And he was like, just ask
47:17
Roslyn, ask what deferred to Roslin? Yep, And
47:20
he started to be like, oh, okay, she actually
47:22
smart lady. She knows what she's doing.
47:24
Roslyn would encourage Jimy to explain
47:27
things to voters the way that he talked
47:29
to her, right, And
47:31
his advisor said that she had quote
47:33
uncanny political instincts, Yeah,
47:36
which I totally get. You know, like, hey, you
47:39
know, when you're just one on one with me, I'm
47:41
charmed by you. I think you're a fun person and I
47:44
understand what you're talking about. When you go out there and
47:46
you try to sound like a politician, people
47:48
don't trust you, right.
47:49
I think she was trying to get more of that
47:52
down, homie, just like just talk like a
47:54
person and they'll understand what you're about.
47:56
People love folksy, good luck running for president.
47:58
Ever, if you ain't got folks, she
48:00
was.
48:01
Like, Jimmy, they want a guy they can have a beer
48:03
with, or a peanut
48:05
or a bald peanut.
48:07
Now eventually, of course, you
48:09
know, YadA, YadA, YadA. Jimmy Carter is now
48:11
President of the United States. Skipping over
48:13
just a couple things here, and he was
48:15
guided by Roslin on many
48:18
things. He consulted with her regularly. He
48:20
actually sent her abroad as an official
48:22
diplomat. She attended cabinet
48:24
meetings. They built the Carter Center
48:27
together right here in Atlanta.
48:28
Yeah, and beautiful too.
48:30
It is gorgeous. She also took part with him
48:32
and his administration in fighting diseases
48:35
and monitoring elections and developing nations.
48:37
She was out there pushing for better mental
48:40
health treatment for fifty years.
48:42
She was doing this. The AP
48:44
News wrote, quote, there are remote
48:47
villages within the one hundred and forty five
48:49
plus countries that they visited between
48:51
them where children, many now adults,
48:54
are named Jimmy or Roslin
48:56
or Carter.
48:57
That's awesome.
48:58
What an impact.
48:59
So after her death twenty twenty three, The
49:01
Carter Center released a statement quoting Jimmy
49:03
carter Is saying Rosalin was my equal
49:06
partner in everything I ever accomplished.
49:08
She gave me wise, guidance and encouragement
49:10
when I needed it. As long as Roslin
49:12
was in the world, I always knew somebody
49:14
loved and supported me, which
49:17
I love, and I love that. I
49:19
mean, over that lifetime, she kind of became
49:21
undeniable for him. You know, He's like,
49:23
oops, I thought she wouldn't on
49:25
my level, but turns out I really needed
49:27
her right right, and she
49:30
she made him better. They were stronger together, definitely,
49:32
but also apparently they were hella competitive
49:35
with each other, which I think is pretty funny.
49:37
I'll tell you better someone too, so I know.
49:39
They So they were like, you know, this is the kind of couple
49:41
that you might think it has like one Facebook
49:43
page, like Jimmy and Muslims, Oh no,
49:45
Carter, you know, like they're just always
49:48
together and whatever. But actually they
49:50
each had their own hobbies, they had their own friends. They
49:52
thought it was really important to you know, have time
49:54
apart and have your own interests and stuff like that.
49:57
And they were really competitive, and I think
49:59
it helped them kind of be productive.
50:01
If they were race, they would race each other to like finish
50:04
books, oh, stuff like that.
50:05
Can you imagine us racing to finish a.
50:07
Book, Jesus, I finish
50:09
reading a book.
50:10
I'm racing. I'm racing you, uh,
50:13
to see if I can finish a book before
50:16
you finish the books, just
50:19
books, the books in general, all
50:21
books. One of these days I'll
50:24
finish.
50:24
I'm not doing great myself right now.
50:25
Look, I am a reader, y'all. I don't want
50:27
you guys to think that I'm not someone who finds
50:30
reading valuable. I'm just defending myself here
50:32
because I also just attacked myself by
50:36
hitting yourself the hard time. It's
50:38
just a modern brain. I'm just too
50:40
too much in the tiktoks.
50:42
The tiktoks.
50:43
I don't even look at TikTok. I don't know what happened in my brain.
50:48
So many things. The drugs,
50:50
oh, it could be all.
50:51
The week and the TV and the
50:53
podcasts, and.
50:55
Flashing lights, all the flashing.
50:56
Lights in my eyes all the time.
50:58
Dizzying array of flashing lights. Yeah.
51:01
Yeah, anyway, where were we?
51:04
We were talking about how Rosalind and Jimmy were really competitive.
51:07
Who Carter Carter? Oh yeah,
51:09
yea, yeah, I've heard remember them.
51:10
Yeah, there's a funny story about them at a lake house, I guess.
51:12
And they's each fishing with like their friends in different
51:14
parts of the lake or whatever. And they had a friend
51:16
that was sort of bouncing between each group some
51:19
you know, we all had that friend that's a bit of a social butterfil
51:22
And apparently each time they would go, he would
51:24
go between the group. Jimmy would be like, well, how
51:26
many Roslin catch? How many? How big are they
51:29
or whatever? And then he would go to Roslind. She'd be like, well,
51:31
how's Jimmy doing? How many fish?
51:33
Wow?
51:33
So they would try to like it was a fish fight. So
51:36
apparently it was. It was about everything, not just
51:39
big things like books. But I think that's kind of a cute
51:41
little peek into their relationship. Oh yeah,
51:43
Now, Chip Carter is Jimmy and Roslin's
51:46
son. He spent a lot of her final
51:48
months with his parents, and he said that
51:50
she was declining pretty rapidly in her final
51:53
days, and Jimmy
51:55
asked to be alone with her again.
51:57
They'd been together nearly eight decades, so
52:00
at first he sat by
52:02
her bedside in his wheelchair, and
52:04
then later hospice aides moved his bed
52:07
to the foot of her bed and he would just hold her hand,
52:10
and he remained there until she passed,
52:13
and then he asked to be with her just one
52:15
more time. Just Jimmy and Roslyn and
52:17
their other son, Jason Carter said quote,
52:20
they were never alone really during their time
52:22
on this earth. They always had each other.
52:26
And that kind of breaks my heart because no, Jimmy doesn't
52:28
have her, So it makes me really sad, I
52:30
know.
52:31
And he's he was.
52:33
Already older than her, so he already didn't have her,
52:35
you know what I'm saying.
52:36
Like, like I saw
52:38
a New York Times headline the other day that was like Jimmy
52:40
Carter's long goodbye, and
52:42
I didn't I didn't read it, but
52:44
I was just like, even the headline, I'm like, okay, okay,
52:47
all right, we get that he's close, but
52:49
you don't need to be. Like it just felt like, come
52:51
on, Jimmy, like I leave him be.
52:53
He's still building houses for people and
52:55
stuff.
52:56
Like I don't think he's building houses right.
52:57
Now, well not now, but he was, I mean.
53:01
Yeah,
53:04
now. Their daughter Amy Carter read
53:06
a love letter that Jimmy had written to Roslyn
53:09
in nineteen forty six when he was serving
53:11
with the US Navy. The letter
53:13
said, quote, my darling,
53:16
every time I've ever been away from you, I
53:18
have been thrilled when I returned to discover
53:21
just how wonderful you are. While
53:24
I am away, I try to convince myself
53:26
that you really could not be as sweet and
53:28
beautiful as I remember. But when
53:30
I see you, I fall in love all
53:33
over again. Does that seem strange
53:35
to you? It doesn't to me. Goodbye,
53:38
darling until tomorrow. Jimmy,
53:45
take a note fellas
53:47
I'm taking one. What are
53:49
you kidding me? I try to
53:51
convince myself that you couldn't be as sweet and beautifls
53:53
I remember, and then I have my mind blown every
53:56
time I see you again that, oh my god, I
53:58
was wrong you are. And
54:01
then some just smooth,
54:04
very.
54:05
Smooth talking Now on Tinder
54:07
it's like, what's your body count?
54:11
Hoodboob Well had
54:13
been away, I hope've been keeping.
54:14
It tight, and she's
54:17
like, no Applebee's or whatever, Wait,
54:19
what is it?
54:19
No apples?
54:20
No Applebee's.
54:21
I don't know that one.
54:22
Oh they oh there's some girls
54:24
came out and said, oh, there's there's places that aren't
54:26
cool for first dates, and Applebee's and
54:28
coffee shops and hiking and stuff.
54:31
We're we're all on the list. And people were like, those
54:33
are perfect.
54:33
Wait a minut, Wait a minute, wait a
54:35
minute, wait a minute. Hiking
54:40
and coffee shop, nature stuff that's like
54:42
a while, those are wonderful first dates. And
54:45
I, if I may, how
54:47
dare you categorize a dinner at Applebee's
54:49
with those? Because I will say Applebee's
54:53
not a great choice for a first date. Applebee's
54:56
not a great choice for any any date,
54:58
if I may. That's app Bees is
55:01
you've done dating, You got four
55:03
kids, you're trying to split a
55:05
basket of grease, and got a four dollar
55:08
margarita so you can make it through the next day.
55:10
You want four to one marg that's what
55:12
it is, so
55:14
that you can.
55:15
Pass out Applebee's. We're looking for sponsors
55:17
for our new shows. Uh check
55:20
us out.
55:24
Oh my god?
55:26
All right, anyway, okay.
55:27
And you know, it was just people being like, you have to
55:29
spend a lot of money on a first date, which is very silly.
55:31
I think it makes perfect sense to have a cheap
55:34
or free first date and see if you even vibe
55:36
at all before you go off and spend a bunch
55:38
of money.
55:38
But stop doing this show because I need to
55:41
do an episode about that right now.
55:42
I know we have opinions,
55:45
but there's no relationship tips. Remember, no
55:47
romantic tips.
55:48
Oh well, that's what we need to do. When we rebrand and
55:50
bring this show back, we'll be like, and this time
55:52
we're gonna tell y'all what to think and how to think
55:54
and what to say.
55:55
It's time, I'm telling you have more opinions.
55:58
It's everyone's favorite part, all
56:01
right, All right, Away from the TikTokers
56:03
and back to an actual sweet couple. Yeah, a
56:06
timeless example
56:08
of an exemplary relationship,
56:10
to be sure. Now, Jimmy wrote
56:13
that beautiful letter while he was away
56:15
with the navy. But one
56:17
could argue that it's not that hard
56:19
to write a beautiful love letter when you're a newlywed.
56:21
True, you're flushed with emotions, You've
56:24
got so much the literally honeymoon
56:26
phase, so much to.
56:27
Say, butterflies still active.
56:29
But this man wrote the following
56:32
poem in nineteen ninety
56:34
five when they had been married for almost fifty
56:37
years, and we got to read that one for
56:39
you as well. So, friends, let's
56:42
take a trip down to Poetry Corner
56:44
and here Rosalin by
56:46
Jimmy Carter.
56:48
She'd smile, and birds
56:50
would feel that they no longer had to sing,
56:53
Or it may be I failed to hear their
56:55
song within a crowd.
56:57
I'd hope her glance might be for me, but
57:00
knew that she was shy and wished to be
57:02
alone. I'd pay to sit
57:04
behind her, blind to what was on
57:06
the screen, and watch the image
57:08
flicker upon her hair. I'd
57:11
glow in her diminished voice would
57:13
clear my muddied thoughts like
57:16
lightning flashing in a gloomy sky.
57:19
The nothing in my soul with her aloof
57:22
was changed to foolish fullness
57:24
when she came to be with me. With
57:27
shyness gone and hair caressed
57:29
with gray, her smile still
57:32
makes the birds forget to sing and
57:34
me to hear their song. Oh
57:39
oh my god. She's like
57:41
all Wrinkley in seventy. He's like, I still
57:43
there's our beautiful.
57:45
I mean, that's goal, serious goals.
57:48
That is true. I don't care what you think of
57:50
the man as a president. I
57:52
was too young to
57:56
think uh huh, which you know is all I think
57:58
anyway. But that is
58:00
beautiful and what a and
58:03
there's you can't fake that.
58:05
No, that's real ship.
58:06
That is the real, that's real ship. Yeah,
58:09
gorgeous.
58:10
I just love it. I think Dave's had
58:13
such a long and beautiful connection
58:16
and there's so much growth in their relationship.
58:19
Yeah.
58:19
I mean Rosalind first of all, clearly gave
58:22
up on the architect thing, but she still was like,
58:24
I got a brain and I'm gonna use it. I'm gonna
58:26
be useful. And He's he
58:29
was like, well, women do this, And then he had to
58:31
look at his wife and open his fucking eyes and
58:33
be like, actually, it
58:35
turns out there's.
58:36
An entire intelligent human being in here. Thing
58:38
changed my life for.
58:39
The better, right, And he was he
58:41
was willing to see that and
58:44
take that in and realize it and adjust how
58:46
he how he interacted
58:48
with her, and how they with their relationship,
58:51
you know, the breadth of it and stuff. And I think
58:53
that's beautiful.
58:53
I imagine him grabbing the phone, just hello,
58:57
Applebee's, I need to cancel my reservation. She
58:59
deserves better.
59:02
We're going to the cheesecake factory.
59:06
Here, that cheesecake factory. We're looking for responsors
59:08
for our new Oh
59:12
boy, well beautiful, beautiful story,
59:14
and we're sad for Rocklin's
59:16
passing, But what we like Walnut
59:19
and Chris like, how can you not
59:21
celebrate that someone had?
59:25
You know, we all
59:27
get whatever time we get in
59:30
this world, and I think
59:32
all we should want for anyone is
59:34
that that time is a positive experience,
59:36
a net positive, you know. And
59:40
it's gonna be tough, and it's
59:42
gonna be stinky, and it's
59:44
gonna get canceled sometimes and
59:47
you're gonna have to figure things out and
59:50
move on on your own. But hopefully
59:52
you've got people who
59:54
care about you and that you care about, whether
59:57
that's one person or a collection
59:59
of people. And I think that's
1:00:02
really nice to kind of, at least
1:00:04
for now, close out with some of these stories. I mean,
1:00:07
on one hand, we're looking at the future
1:00:10
of relationships and how computers
1:00:13
are changing that as undeniable that
1:00:15
we cannot say that that's not happening, and
1:00:18
we cannot know what that's going to
1:00:20
be like in the future. I don't personally
1:00:22
think that AI is going to come in here
1:00:25
and upend our entire way of
1:00:27
living. I think it's expanding rapidly,
1:00:29
but personally, with nothing
1:00:32
to ground this on but my own instincts and very
1:00:34
little knowledge on the subject. I think it
1:00:36
exists in a sphere in a bubble.
1:00:38
It's going to swell to fill that. It's
1:00:41
going to be crazy and we're going to
1:00:43
have to adapt. We're going to see wildly
1:00:45
different stuff like dating
1:00:48
change and how we communicate with each other.
1:00:50
Yes, that'll change, But I don't think it's
1:00:52
the apocalypse either.
1:00:54
Do you think we have demolition man VR?
1:00:57
No fluids exchange?
1:00:59
I wish, I know, I'm like, yeah,
1:01:07
yeah, I mean.
1:01:08
Honestly, kind of, I think that that the
1:01:10
headsets will get there. You
1:01:12
know, like every invention, all
1:01:15
the big inventions in human history have been can
1:01:18
I can I have sex with it? Or can I kill
1:01:20
someone with it? Those that seems to drive
1:01:22
a lot of innovation in the modern era, and
1:01:24
I would rather lean towards the former than
1:01:26
the latter.
1:01:30
I guess.
1:01:31
So if if AI gets taken
1:01:33
over by porn, you know, that's better than
1:01:35
it getting taken over by the generals, I
1:01:37
suppose, but we all know it's
1:01:39
going to be both.
1:01:40
Yeah, sad but true. Yeah, general porn.
1:01:42
Anyway, I was trying to make a non bleak picture
1:01:45
of the future there, but
1:01:47
it's gonna be a mixed bag. But then also
1:01:50
just to round that out, we've got Chris
1:01:52
Crow and Walnut. We've got Roslin and Jimmy,
1:01:55
two couples with in
1:01:58
very unique ways, just
1:02:01
love right, just a life that
1:02:03
had a very
1:02:06
positive through line to it that was full
1:02:08
of good feelings like those are
1:02:10
objective, like what feels good and what feels bad.
1:02:13
There's no question this
1:02:15
bird and for
1:02:18
all the struggles this guy with the bird
1:02:20
and these two people who loved each other, I
1:02:23
think they had positive experiences
1:02:25
and I think we can't ask for much more than that, No
1:02:27
think.
1:02:28
I think that's something that I really liked about this show
1:02:30
in general, was kind of having this opportunity
1:02:33
to see
1:02:35
a person's whole life. You know, we
1:02:37
covered a lot of very accomplished people,
1:02:39
and we didn't skate over those accomplishments
1:02:41
or anything, but it was cool to kind of have this lens
1:02:44
of who's the human being and the human
1:02:46
connection that was going on, even with an
1:02:48
evil person or a piece of shit or
1:02:50
whatever, like or a bird or
1:02:52
whatever, the many ways that
1:02:54
humans can connect and love, even
1:02:57
inanimate objects or holograin
1:03:00
or whatever I think is a superpower.
1:03:03
I know it seems weird and creepy
1:03:06
maybe to some if you're falling in love with a
1:03:08
sword or whatever. But I think
1:03:10
there's something kind of special about that that
1:03:12
we have in us to humanize
1:03:16
each other and humanize other things.
1:03:19
And I think we're losing it a little bit because of
1:03:21
the screens and stuff. We're sort of losing
1:03:23
what that feels like. On the other hand,
1:03:25
I'm very grateful for it because I feel
1:03:27
connected to so many of y'all, and I
1:03:29
wouldn't have had that opportunity without this mic,
1:03:32
without these screens, to
1:03:34
feel like I have this privilege
1:03:38
of being connected to thousands
1:03:40
of other human beings in this way.
1:03:43
And it's not as deep as Jimmy and Rosalin,
1:03:45
but it's something, and I think it matters,
1:03:48
and it's special. It's
1:03:50
special for humans to explore
1:03:53
these things that make our hearts respond
1:03:55
to each other.
1:03:56
Yeah, that net positive
1:03:59
that we're like looking for is full of those little connections
1:04:02
too. Right. It's not just about the
1:04:04
one that you find you spend your life with, and that's
1:04:06
wonderful if that's the thing for you, but
1:04:09
all those little relationships too, whether it's just an
1:04:11
email we get from you guys, or you
1:04:13
know, our good friends that we see every six months
1:04:16
well, or our parents that we fortunately have great
1:04:18
relationships with I get to see all the time, and our families.
1:04:21
These are all really great things. And
1:04:23
I think you're right about it
1:04:25
is changing, and it's positive
1:04:28
and negative the way the world is
1:04:30
changing, and it is a
1:04:32
mixed bag. But I think that
1:04:34
we have more power than we think
1:04:36
we do in terms of choosing
1:04:39
what we pull out of that bag. It's
1:04:42
not easy because there's clearly a thousand
1:04:44
forces working against us at any given minute trying
1:04:46
to glue us to those screens and to
1:04:49
tantalize us with these arguments and
1:04:51
to see people as a
1:04:54
single post instead of as a
1:04:56
full rounded human being. It's
1:04:58
hard to break from that. We can, and
1:05:02
uh, and I think that's how we maintain
1:05:04
those connections and actually use all
1:05:06
this technology for like
1:05:08
you're saying, the immense
1:05:11
positive outcomes that that are possible
1:05:13
with it, Yeah, yeah.
1:05:15
And I yeah, Just we
1:05:17
don't forget that there's a human on the other end
1:05:20
of that message and on the other end of this mic
1:05:23
and these radio waves. And
1:05:25
that's just something I appreciated about this show a lot.
1:05:27
It made me really have to look at people al
1:05:30
Capone, et cetera with a
1:05:32
very different just a different idea,
1:05:34
not to not to excuse anything,
1:05:37
just to remember that people are really complicated
1:05:39
and they have many sides. What did Walt
1:05:41
women say, do I
1:05:43
contradict myself very well? I
1:05:45
contradict myself. I am large,
1:05:48
I contain multitudes.
1:05:50
Beautiful, delicious
1:05:53
Walt Whitman's sampler.
1:05:55
Oh, sampler, that's
1:05:58
basically it is a little black books o.
1:05:59
Whitman's sam blur contains multitudes
1:06:02
of truffles, and.
1:06:05
They often contradict themselves
1:06:07
some of
1:06:11
that orange shitty.
1:06:12
Oh my god, no,
1:06:15
I mean, just not to drag this out too
1:06:17
long, but I remember some of our first
1:06:19
episodes us thinking like,
1:06:21
this is gonna be an hilarious
1:06:23
show where we can mock and tease
1:06:26
these silly people falling
1:06:28
in love with what, the Eiffel
1:06:30
Tower whatever, And god
1:06:33
damn it if we weren't, you know, three
1:06:35
hours into the research and I'm going, I
1:06:37
can't be mad at this. These
1:06:40
are people again, These are people
1:06:43
experiencing a positive feeling,
1:06:46
right, so who
1:06:48
cares? Is it a negative
1:06:50
feeling for anyone else? And if you think
1:06:53
it might be for you, is it? Is it really
1:06:55
stop for a second. Oh it's not.
1:06:58
Oh I can let that go and just
1:07:00
go on with my life. I think
1:07:02
we all need a big dose of that. Yeah,
1:07:05
a big old glass of Oh it's
1:07:07
not affecting meess,
1:07:09
big big glass and on you and
1:07:11
just and even beyond that, take
1:07:14
the next step and actually find
1:07:16
joy in other people's
1:07:19
ridiculous positivity
1:07:21
that they're experiencing. Right the fuck else
1:07:23
is there? You kidding me? Get over yourselves?
1:07:26
And this is where I yell at everybody, get your
1:07:28
shit together and just be happy
1:07:30
that you can breathe the air and feel the sun.
1:07:34
Okay, I mean it's a lonely world,
1:07:36
so let us let us make it a little
1:07:38
less certainly.
1:07:39
I ever had a meal? Holy shit?
1:07:41
Can you believe we get to eat meals? That's
1:07:43
incredible? You ever heard a song? Shut
1:07:46
up? This world's amazing. Stop
1:07:48
being mad at everybody, and start appreciating
1:07:51
everything out there. It's incredible,
1:07:54
and then hire us or
1:07:57
sign up our Patreon.
1:07:59
Well, I was gonna say, speaking
1:08:01
of keeping connections a lot, Yes,
1:08:04
since our connection to you is so important to
1:08:06
us, we don't want to lose that, so please please
1:08:08
reach out, please follow us. Yes,
1:08:11
we're still going to be maintaining at
1:08:13
Riddic Romance on Instagram. But
1:08:15
don't forget at A I made us
1:08:17
watch no dots, just aim
1:08:20
and as watch and
1:08:23
at get high find out that's right.
1:08:25
And of course you can follow us personally on
1:08:27
Instagram. I am at Oh
1:08:30
great, it's Eli.
1:08:31
I'm at dianamite boom.
1:08:32
You can follow both of us and
1:08:35
all these shows also on TikTok,
1:08:37
on YouTube, just anywhere
1:08:39
you find stuff on the internet, we
1:08:41
will be there.
1:08:42
Yeah, and get up in this discord so we can chat
1:08:45
with you and talk to you about movies
1:08:47
and everything else.
1:08:49
It's not goodbye, it's
1:08:53
well yeah, all.
1:08:53
Right, sure, because we had a
1:08:55
lot of shows from a.
1:08:57
Lot of shows from France. It's not goodbye.
1:08:59
It's not even air. It's just we gotta
1:09:01
go. We're running late and
1:09:03
we're gonna do more episodes of everything. But
1:09:06
do follow us along.
1:09:07
We love you, guys, Yes, we
1:09:09
love you. See you soon, yep hy bye
1:09:11
bye, So long friends,
1:09:14
it's time to go.
1:09:15
Thanks for listening to our show.
1:09:18
Tell your friends, nabors, uncles and dance
1:09:20
to listen to our show.
1:09:21
Ridiculous well dance
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