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Billy & Lisa in the Morning

Best Of Billy & Lisa: Tons Of Guests + Family Drama

Duration:
32m
Broadcast on:
17 Aug 2024
Audio Format:
mp3

[MUSIC PLAYING] Looking for excitement? Chumba Casino is here. Play anytime, play anywhere. Play on the train, play at the store, play at home, play when you're bored. Play today for your chance to win and get daily bonuses when you log in. So what are you waiting for? Don't delay. Chumba Casino is free to play. Experience social gameplay like never before. Go to Chumba Casino right now to play hundreds of games, including online slots, bingo, slingo, and more. Live the Chumba Life at ChumbaCasino.com. P-T-W room, no purchase necessary, boy, boy, prohibited by law. See terms and conditions, 18 plus. Please come on away. It's the best of Billy and Lisa in the morning. All right, here we go. Good morning, everybody. Welcome into a Saturday morning. Justin here. I have your top five moments from this week on the Billy and Lisa show. We were back from vacation. We had a lot to cover. And we did all that, but there can only be five moments. Let's get right into it. Number five this week was a big holiday if you celebrate it, National Middle Child Day. You know, the forgotten ones. Today is National Middle Child Day. [CHEERING] And appropriately, it won't get any attention. [LAUGHTER] Which is probably true. Any of us, middle child? I am. When he is. Yes, I'm three of four, and then I have two sisters, and I'm the second of three girls. And both my parents are middle children. Oh. And they married each other, so. And producer Riley, I believe, is also a middle child. Oh. Today is August 12th, which is National Middle Child Day. It's a day where the middle children get some attention and love, because they're sometimes forgotten. Very true. Being in the middle. Well, my son Alex is a middle child. I don't think he's ever felt forgotten. And they get a little attitude too. Let us middle children have our day, please. Thank you. Oh, OK. All right, that's short and sweet. [LAUGHTER] But on the phone, we do have Bruce, who works for some. I'm not joking. Some national organization for middle children. Really? Yeah. Hey, Bruce. Yeah, the International Middle Child Union, guys. Yeah, now, Bruce, I've got to ask you-- I mean this question with the utmost respect. Oh, boy. Oh, boy. Yeah. Is there much of a call for you? [LAUGHTER] Well, come on. I'm on the phone with you guys. I do speak to-- I mean, I'm spreading the word. There's much of a call. I feel there is. I feel like we were given this holiday just so everybody could ignore it. And I don't think that's right. I think the middle child syndrome is enough of a burden. So we get this one day. So we get a little attention thrown away. Winnie, Winnie, help me here, Winnie. I think you have your union membership card. Do you have it with you? Yes, I do. It's in my wallet, in my purse. OK, it entitles to all the rights and privileges of union members, which are none. But it's still a cool thing to have, right? Yeah, I love it. I mean, being a middle child is special, you know? Well, Bruce, can you explain to our listeners why this day it was created? What do they feel, middle children? What do you feel? Well, first of all, if you ever felt left out, left alone, or left behind, then you know what it feels like to be a middle child. That's why I think everybody should embrace the day, because at some point in our lives, we've all felt like a middle child, right? Like you didn't get invited to the lunch, or no, you know, how come my friends didn't want to do this? And if everybody knows what it feels to be a middle child. Bruce, I'm more fascinated with you. Is this what you do? I love hearing that. No, but is-- What I do, I-- In my free time, I'm retired. Yeah, this is what I do, especially on middle child's day. On middle child's day, I want to get the word out there. I want everybody, everybody to acknowledge the middle children in their life on middle child's day. That's why I created the union. We had a strike 12 years ago. People started talking about it a little bit. Really? Because I never heard any of that talk. But that's OK, Bruce. Tell me, but Bruce, do you organize events throughout the year for people to get involved with? I put stuff up in the blog. I put the activities for people to be involved with. Right now at the blog, as a matter of fact, smackdadblog.com, you can download. If you're a middle child, download the new Middle Child Act. You can put-- you download it, you're on your phone. The next time you're fielding the middle child's syndrome kick in, you tap a button, and you're going to hear the things that your brother and sister got to hear all the time growing up, but you never got to hear. Things like, we have so many pictures of you. And you know, oh, sure, you could have whatever seat you'd like. Things like that, I'm trying to do. I have middle child Jeopardy is up there. You could play a full board game of middle child-- Oh, I love that. Middle child trading cards, your favorite famous TV and movie middle children. You collect them all, and then forget you have them. These are things that I think middle children can embrace. Oh, Chris, cause the body, your son can be trading cards. That's right. How funny is that? So my son Alex is a middle child, and yet my son, Chris, owns a trading card company. So should he be trading middle child cards? Well, I think these things, they're worth nothing now. Nothing. So they could only increase-- Yeah. Producer Riley, are you listening to this as a middle child? This is important to you. Bruce brings up a good point, because if I think about it, my older brother is the oldest, the prince, the only boy. Then my older sister is the emotional one that everyone needs to hug, because she cries and stuff. And then my other sister is the baby, who just gets whatever she wants, because she was the last kid. And then there's me. No one really cares. I think my son Alex, my middle child, got the most attention. Yeah, because he was acting out, because you weren't giving him enough love and attention. Right. He wasn't the baby with the oldest. Uh, Bruce, what was the name of that website again? It's smackdabblog.com on Twitter, and Instagram, or wherever it's at. Yeah, wherever. At mid-kid union. But fun stuff up there. There's also the Middle Child Masterpiece Theater marathon. Every clip from Middle Child Masterpiece Theater, famous TV in middle children, who are honored, inducted into Middle Child Master-- Give me one example of a famous middle child actor. No, these are things they portrayed middle children. OK, but they're all famous middle child actors. But we've got we've got Dandy Partridge. We've got Sam Brady. We've got Molly Ringwald from Sam Baker from 60 Campbells. Remember, remember, they were so busy planning her sister's wedding that they forgot her birthday. Right. So these are middle child moments captured for time in Memorial and a middle child Masterpiece Theater. So if you're a middle child, Riley, I got to get you a membership card as well. Yeah, we'll get everyone. You can always go to the blog. And you'll feel a little better for about maybe a minute or two, and then expect a real bite. You're forgotten again. Yeah. Bruce, you want to know it's funny? producer Riley just told me through the glass she's on the website right now. She's desperate. Making her feel better. All right, so crazy story last week while we were on vacation, three Taylor Swift shows canceled in Vienna due to terrorist threats. One of our listeners, Brian, actually was there for the show. I ended up leaving there going to Munich. And now he's headed to London to try to get into the Taylor Swift show there this weekend. Anyway, we had Brian on a talk all about it. Number four, we have Brian on the phone. And Brian, you were in Vienna and you had tickets for Taylor's show. Walk us through it. Hey, Billy, so my partner and I were celebrating our sixth anniversary together. And he's surprising with the ticket about a year ago. And so we've had a countdown on the fridge for about a year. Wow. And we flew to London just to kind of kick things off on this-- it ended up being a two-week trip. But we flew to London, saw some shows in the West End, and then made our way over to Vienna. We were there for about, I want to say, two days before the show. Things seem to be going pretty smoothly. We saw more and more fans get to the hotel. They had an area to make a friendship bracelets on the lobby. And then, suddenly, we were walking through the hotel, and we just saw folks kind of-- little girls crying and stuff. And I was like, oh, man, what's going on? So we went upstairs, turned T&N on, and saw that Taylor had or wasn't Taylor at the time. But the promoters had canceled the shows. And I kept thinking to myself, well, we didn't see really that much police presence out today. And so it was a little unnerving, in that sense. There was the energetic vibe in the city. Everyone was so excited, you could tell. Well, we saw in the videos, Brian, of the thousands and thousands of Swifties in the streets of Vienna singing. I think we have a clip of that, don't we, Justin? I'm not-- [MUSIC PLAYING] So, Brian, were you and your partner in the streets singing with everybody else? Yeah, I think-- so we went to a street called Cornelia-- it's in whatever-- touch, I think, Cornelia Street. And we were-- I'd say it wasn't that big of a crowd when we first got there. And then folks just started to think, became more active. And then, of course, another police came and just wasn't so much of a security check as much as just crowd control because of a smaller area. And it seemed like the vibe of the city was back. If everyone had come to Vienna to celebrate, be with friends, maybe they didn't get to see Taylor. But I think they forged new memories that they'd go home with. I think they could always-- you can always see Taylor again. And, well, Brian, you're not giving up, right? Because where are you right now? So we're in Munich. We're seeing Adele tonight. Oh, my god. I love Brian. Wow. This is like the best summer ever for you. So did you buy-- was that planned, Brian? Was the Adele planned? Yeah. So once my partner bought Taylor, we waited a little bit. And then Adele announced the Munich date. We saw her two nights ago for the first time. And we didn't know that she was performing another show tonight. We thought it was a weekend, like all weekend shows. But for this week, she's doing-- I think it's Wednesday Thursday. So their tickets are pretty cheap last minute. So we said, let's go see her again. We don't have to have as good a see through last time. But the screen is just-- I think it's over-- I don't know how many footballs went long. Wow. Because she looks stunning. And you're not giving up on Taylor either, aren't you going to London to try to get tickets? Mm. Yeah, so the plan was always to go back to London, to finish, see some shows on the West End that we didn't get to check off in the beginning. And as it happened, it times well, with Taylor's start at Mumbly. So Brian, if you don't mind my asking, what do you do for a living? Because this is a very expensive little jaunt you're on. I know it sounds very, very expensive. But to be honest, the tickets here are so inexpensive. I think for a Dell tonight, we paid $75 US dollars. Oh my god, that's insane. I saw him doing this, and I don't even want to think about how much we spent going there. Wait a minute. You saw Rodell, and you're going again? Yeah, for so many bucks. Yeah, well, wouldn't you? He's there. Oh my god, what did you pay originally for the ticket year that were better? You don't mind me asking? They were around 400. But we were center-- But that's still not that bad for where you are. Now, you and your partner, by the way, he sounds like a wonderful fellow, so congratulations on six years. Oh, thank you. But you're legitimate Swifties, right? I mean, you've been the speak now tour, the red tour, the 1989 tour, the reputation tour. You've been to all of them, right? Yeah, not both of us, obviously, together. But yeah, me, friends throughout the years, actually are our second month of dating. He surprised me and got us tickets to the reputation tour. Oh, wow. God, I want to date this guy. [LAUGHTER] He is quite dreamy, and his name also happens to be Brian, but Brian's-- Oh my god, oh my god, Brian's. Do you call him Brian? Do you call him Brian guy? What do you call him? My mom and dad will refer to him, well, Brian, you know their tone, right, when they're talking to me. I think my mom has him and her son as B2 and me as B1. Oh, so cute. Wow. Actually, I think we have your mother on the phone here. I'm Brian's mother. Now, before I let you go, Brian, there's some weird connection I knew your dad years ago? Yeah, I guess the dad and I were chatting earlier. And I guess dad worked at Kiss for a year or two. And I was kind of sorting the memories together. And there's some pictures that they have framed in the living room and one pictures with John Stamos and others with them with Madonna. And growing up, I was like, oh, these are really cool photos. But I never knew they were from Walmart, Kiss 108. Like, house parties, basically. Go for a jingle ball. Oh, yeah. And you know, Chris Compton and Mansfield really became big thing. Yeah, before a kiss concert, they were the kiss party. And so, wow, your dad had pictures with Madonna. Was your dad in sales or something? You know, I don't know what he did. He just actually retired from the Massachusetts Trump-like authority. Oh, oh, OK. Wow. So he has a pension. Oh, god. Oh, he's sort of frickin' doing well. And he flipped the time between like Winnifersharky. Wow. And his name's Kevin, right? Good luck. Kevin, yep. Well, give our best to Kevin and give our best to Brian, too. Brian, number two. Me, too. Yeah. You guys know Billy has no idea who Kevin is. He has no idea. I tried to ask him, and he didn't know. Anyway, thanks for calling Brian. Sorry, it didn't work out with a Taylor show. Well, thanks for playing, Brian. I'm sorry he didn't work out for you. That happens. All right, let's get to your number three moment from this week on the Billy and Lisa show. It's Justin here. Happy Saturday. And a crazy story out of Norwood. A 12-year-old had an ice cream stand in his neighborhood, got shut down by the health department. Somebody called, but a restaurant owner in Salem saw the story, stepped in to raise some money. We had that guy on the show. Number three. So this 12-year-old kid in Norwood-- I've got his name, Danny Daugherty. Set up a homemade ice cream stand outside his house. You see this a lot, young kids. They have eliminated stand in the summertime. He was raising money for his brother's special needs hockey team. Following this so far, heartwarming story, special needs hockey team. He's raising money. He's got a nice cream stand set up outside his house. Well, some Karen with all caps apparently called in and the health department shut down the kid's ice cream stand. Unreal. OK? Unreal. We've got the 12-year-old right here and the owner of a place that's stepping in to help. I don't understand it because there's so many lemonade stands out there and they don't get shut down. And it was just really disappointing for it to be shut down. Yeah, we saw that article. We knew we needed to do something as a little family ourselves. We always try and set up stands. We're doing lemonade stands. We're making rocks and trying to sell those. So we appreciate small business. There you go. So that was the voice of Matt Matera. He's one of the co-owners of a place in beautiful Salem, Massachusetts, called Longboards. And we've got his partner Justin on the phone. Justin, you there? What's up, guys? Yeah, I'm here. Hey, I've met you guys. You guys are really cool in your longboards in Salem. The big new one is beautiful. Yeah, I came all great over there. Great renovation. Good for you guys. You've worked a long time and you worked it very hard. So how did you land on this story about young Danny? I've got to be honest, guys. It's pretty funny. I mean, we do stuff like this literally all the time. We just pick a random charity or get back a donation of sales for a day or for a certain item. So we do it literally. I mean, we did one for the Lime Seal last week. And Salem Children's Shared the week before. Yeah, good for you. Does this happen to pop up? Yeah, this just happened to pop up. We said this is ridiculous. OK. And we did a quick little post. And before you know it, I could speak up by you guys and by Channel 5. And it was pretty wild. So you're donating a portion of the proceeds, a good portion of the proceeds from your dessert sales. And Justin, why don't you describe for our listeners as well as Winnie the dessert, your specialty dessert that people are coming in to buy? It is called the world famous bazooki. It is like a warm cookie that comes through our oven. It talks with ice cream and chocolate and caramel. It's legit a really perfect dessert. You know, a pair of that with a nice chocolate martini. And you're pretty much sitting pretty. There you go. I'll be up. There you go. And you guys are right on Pickering Wharf in Salem, right? We're right on Pickering Wharf, beautiful Pickering Wharf. Like I said, we're trying to get back 25% of all the sales of that item this week. We extended it so far. I'm not sure where we're sitting now, but the goal is to make a donation of $1,000 to that kid. So we're hoping to get to that number by Friday. So you cut out and this is extended until when? Till Friday. And the goal is to raise $1,000 for this kid. So that's the goal here. Now, which would go a long way for this hockey team. I'm sure they need equipment and pads and stuff like that. It's especially a hockey team. So folks, if you want to join in and help out the guys at Longboards and help out Danny to raise some money because some Karen got stuck her nose in and wouldn't got the ice cream stand shut down, you got to head out to Longboards in Salem. By the way, it's right on Pickering Wharf. It's beautiful. Beautiful Pickering Wharf. And by the way, right next to the newly renovated Salem waterfront hotel is it happens? You're right. Justin, great job. Say hello to Matt and everybody else there at Longboards. I will. Thanks so much, guys. I love how Justin and his partner stepped up and are helping. Yeah. And apparently, they just do this sort of thing. I mean, they could just do Salem things, you know, all the time and stuff. Look at that. North Shore and South Shore. We're helping each other on South Shore. But yeah, that's basically-- No one is not on a shore, is it? No, that's why he said technically it's on South Shore. It's a land lock. I wonder if the person that called the health department, when they found out that the kid was raising money for his sick brother, felt bad. You're like, wouldn't you feel like an idiot? Either way, why would you do that? Because you just keep driving. Just mind your business. Right. Just stop getting involved. To me, that's the biggest part of this story. Right. Who is that person? No, let me say something to everybody listening right now. Around the entire world, it costs nothing to wake up each and every day and mind your business. Exactly. Yeah. It's free. Minding your business is free of charge. Just worry about yourself. Just worry about yourself. Yeah, God. Someday, your kid is going to have an ice cream stand for a good cause. Yeah. And how much money do you think they're really going to-- we're not talking about thousands on an ice cream stand. You know, I mean, hopefully thousands, but come on. This is what we call a blessing in disguise that now they're going to probably raise way more money than they were going to originally. So it looks like it is a positive. And you know what else? I'll bet the Karen is probably going to go there for a bazooki. The warm cookie sounded really good. A description of it. I'm going to go up afterward. I'm going to be like, what was it? A warm cookie in the oven covered with everything. It's a heavy caramel chocolate. Oh, my God. Yeah. So get out there to long boards and buy a couple of desserts. And some of your proceeds will go to Young Dad. It's a Saturday morning. Good morning, everybody. Best of Billy and Lisa. Justin here. Number two moment. It's all about family drama. We all have it. And sometimes it gets really bad and really sad. But it's a part of life, right? Number two. Hey, guys. So family drama. My aunt, when I was in my early 20s, announced loudly that she thought I was a stripper. I mean, I was in college full time and didn't have time to do that anyway. But so 10 years later, I found out she was sleeping with her boss. I sent my uncle anonymous letters through the mail. And I was like, you need to investigate this, because she's definitely doing that with him. And he did. And now they're divorced. Oh, my God. That was family revenge. Anonymous letters. Wow. Wait a minute. I don't get it. She was in college, just studying, and somehow thought she was-- Someone said that she was a stripper, and they started putting that out there. And she's like, right, she wasn't. So then years later, she got her revenge. She found out that that aunt was cheating on her uncle with her boss, and she put her uncle on the case. And now the big mouth aunt is divorced. Is divorced. Wow. Oh, that's crazy. That's some pretty juicy drama right there. There's a good start. You're the anonymous letter writer. Oh, me. Hey, it's your girl, Sarah, from Maine. And my dirty family laundry is that my stepmother is the absolute wicked witch of the West. And I had to put up with it for years and years and years. And she made it pretty clear she didn't like me, and she didn't want me around. And I finally blew up one day. And now we don't speak, and my life is so much better for it. Yeah, I like that phrase, dirty family drama. I wonder if she speaks to her dad, though, while whoever's married to her set mom. She can clarify that for us. But Sarah from Maine, who we love, she's a long time top backer, lives in Maine, obviously. She strikes me as the type of person that'll cut someone out of her life with no one. Doesn't she? She gets that much. Just from her talk back. And that's all. Yeah, go ahead. I'm sorry. Go. That's OK. My kid's father ended up sleeping with my favorite aunt, my blood relative aunt. One week after we broke up, we were together for seven years. And I found out three months later, after she was sick to my face, slept at my house. Oh. OK. Oh my god. Oh my god. Things are getting better. Auntie's sleeping around. What's up to Auntie's today? As an auntie, I feel like I need to feel weird about this. But isn't it weird? It seems like every family has a weird aunt or a weird uncle, right? That everybody kind of-- Yeah, I love all my aunts and uncles are all great. Really? You like all of them? Yes, I do, actually. They're all good people. I had a really weird uncle. But what am I going to go there? I'm not going to have to now. No, you have to now. He just used to roam around the neighborhood randomly. That's weird, OK. Talking to strangers and yelling at strangers. He was known all over town. As what? As the yelling guy? Yeah. Or it became to be no, Billy's weird uncles out there. Yeah. So yeah, everybody's got drama. Everybody, right? Family drama, yeah. You can't escape it. At least you have any weird uncles? All right, how's it going? That sounds a lot. He's my favorite weird uncles. Oh, he's the favorite weird uncles. He's my favorite uncle. I wish he was my uncle. He's the best, as he goes. My brother and I had a moment where we were not talking after a second child was born. And just to see how upsetting it was for my mother and just family in general that's around us, it wasn't worth it. It just wasn't worth it. And we're well beyond that at this point. Oh, that's nice that they figured it out. Yeah, there's also always an aunt or uncle that it's the big decision at wedding time. Oh, do we really have to invite her out? Yeah. Every family has one of those, right? Yeah. Or the weird cousin. Yeah, oh, yeah. Like, where are we going to sit the weird cousin? Like, who-- A lot of family drama, sadly, our families that end up estranged is really over money. There's always an issue where this one wasn't left any money in the well or vice versa. But it's really sad that that is a lot of family drama. So money is a big thing that I've obviously noticed as well. In my family, it's happening right now as well. I have a cousin who is dead to me. It's actually, like, fight on sight when I see her. Oh, wow. It's, uh-huh. Dead to you? Dead to me. Yeah, and you know, and it has to do with money. It has to do with-- you know what it usually is that as I'm getting older, I'm learning the house, the family house. Well, some people are obsessed with it. I know. Like, your grandmother's house? Yeah, like, you know, your grandmother's house, you know, when they get older and they pass away, or, you know, the house gets passed on. Yeah, yeah. There is so much drama in there. Oh, I've seen it. That's why it's always good if you can put a will together, be so that some of the stuff is already decided. But even with the will, there's still drama. There's still drama in there. But then, like, is that a house you can't trust or something? What's that? Is the house in a trust? It is not in a trust. It should be. Yeah, it should be. I can't really go into the whole story, but-- Well, Lisa and I were talking about this-- No, it's state planning, I was like, thank you. Money, a lot of times, especially with wills in estates, and who's leaving what to whom. You see the true callers of somebody when it comes to money. Oh, yeah, the people. People will go into houses and steal things out of the house before other family members get there. It's horrible. Yeah, yeah. There's some drama right there. How much does he owe you? He doesn't owe me anything. It's not my house. But the person that lives in the house that he's going to inherit some money from is still alive. And he is basically just waiting. Now, this calls for the big payout. Yeah, he wants to be bought out. Now, this cousin you describe as fight on sight. Does he know how much you're working out? He's not going to come anywhere near me. He knows. Yeah, but guess what? Guess what? There's going to come a day where he's going to have to show up to sign a piece of paper to get the money that he wants. Yeah. Just saying. And you'll be there with your quads. Maybe not. Justin has the plan. He's the man on the bus right now. This guy's in trouble. Is this call premeditated? I would just say this. I have not been in a physical fight in 16 years. I don't plan on being one any time soon. OK. If you do, can you let us know so I can come? You can come film it forever. And by the way, I don't think stomping qualifies as a fight. Wow, a lot of family drama. I have three uncles, two who are biologically related, love them, talk to them. The third, he's my uncle by marriage to my aunt. And he's in prison for murder. Good morning, everyone. And welcome back to the best of Billy and Lisa. Justin here. We're at number one, the top spot. And this one is a feel good story. Actually happened in New Hampshire. We had it in our weird story segment. But the person that was a part of the story actually was listening to the show and called in big shout out to Janelle. You get number one. Thank you for your service. This 90-year-old Air Force that was going into a pawn shop in New Hampshire, by the way, right over the border and selling stuff, giving it to the pawn shop because I guess his wife was very sick. And the pawn shop owner or pawn shop person decided to raise money for this veteran, which is such a cool story, and wound up raising a lot of money. And what do you know? She was listening. She called back, and we've got her on the phone now. Janelle, you there? Hi, yeah. Janelle, you are such a good person. They should invite you to the White House. You know the way they do with people, they'll invite them to the White House? Totally. Give them a minute. You're an amazing person, Janelle. Oh, thank you. I didn't expect any of this to happen, though. Well, walk us through the story. First of all, what town in New Hampshire is the pawn shop? So it's US Gold and pawn, and it's in New Hampshire. I don't sell Willow Street. OK, so walk us through the story, Janelle. How'd it go? Me, I trust in New Hampshire. So I help out at the pawn shop there, and this customer was coming in, and he was doing pawns, which is like loans. So he was buying his wife's jewelry back every month. And I don't usually ask the customers why they need to borrow money, but in his case, he was a 90-year-old veteran. So I said, is everything OK? And he said, no, my landlord raised my rent, and my wife had just got dementia. So I told the owner of the pawn shop, and it kind of pulled on his heartstrings. He said, well, we won't take interest from him. I thought that was really nice of him. I wanted to do a little bit more, though. So I started GoFundMe with a goal of $1,500. And it took me a month, but I raised $1,300 between friends and family. And I posted a video on TikTok of me handing him that $1,300. And what do you know? The thing went viral. And as of today, I think we're at $388,000 from people all around the world. Wow. Wow. That's amazing, because when we got the story, it was at $375. And now it's at $380 something. Wow, incredible. And have you spoken to the gentleman since? Oh, yeah. Yeah. He's been with me every day here in all the new messages from people that we're getting. He is just profoundly grateful. He's a very humble man. He's not used to all this media and attention on him, but he's super, super grateful. And I'm sure they've got a lot of bills, a lot of medical bills, right? Yep. So he's going to be using the money for all that. He's going to hopefully use the money. So he'll never have to worry about paying rent again. He's very, very happy. It's amazing. But she shouldn't. He shouldn't have to write a Mariah's. I know. Janelle, by the way, what's the address of that pawn shop? In case I run into hard times, I just want to come up and see you. Hey, we are huge fans of you guys. We listen to you guys here at the pawn shop every morning at the store. So I would love for you guys to stop in. But it's 890 South Willow Street in Manchester, New Hampshire, the US gold and pawn. Oh, so do you have gold in there? Yeah, we have all sorts of things. Jewelry and tools are probably our biggest thing. We got lots of jewelry, tools, electronics, musical instruments. You name it, we got it. Yeah, I hear gold is a good thing to invest in now. It's a good thing to buy. Gold bars. There is. Yeah. It's at an all-time high. Ian, let me just throw out there that we're the only pawn shop in New Hampshire with a price guarantee. We will pay the highest for gold bars. Quickly, what's the name of the pawn shop? Janelle, good boy. US gold and pawn. Janelle, you are a saint. Superstar. It's good to know people like you are out there. But thanks for listening and thanks for calling in. Yeah, she earned that plug. Yeah, totally. I love the sweet story, a shout to her. Also, who's that landlord that raised that poor man's rent? How could you-- I couldn't, I don't know. It's not a landlord win. It's a scam lord. Yeah, yeah. Hello, it is Ryan, and I was on a flight the other day playing one of my favorite social spin slot games on Chumbagocino.com. I looked over the person sitting next to me, and you know what they were doing. They were also playing Chumbagocino. Everybody's loving having fun with it. Chumbagocino's home to hundreds of casino style games that you can play for free anytime, anywhere. So sign up now at Chumbagocino.com to claim you're a free welcome bonus. That's Chumbagocino.com, and live the Chumbalife. 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