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You Hate To See Us Leave But Love To Watch Us Go

You Hate To See Us Leave But Love To Watch Us Go

Released Friday, 1st March 2024
 1 person rated this episode
You Hate To See Us Leave But Love To Watch Us Go

You Hate To See Us Leave But Love To Watch Us Go

You Hate To See Us Leave But Love To Watch Us Go

You Hate To See Us Leave But Love To Watch Us Go

Friday, 1st March 2024
 1 person rated this episode
Rate Episode

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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