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The B.R.O.S

Episode 055: The Grab Bag

Bill and Jose discuss a variety of topics; politics and theoretical scenarios among them.    If you enjoyed this episode or want to ask about being on an episode, send feedback at www.thebrospod.com or to backroomofthesanctuary@gmail.com  Check out the video on our Facebook page

Duration:
1h 3m
Broadcast on:
04 Sep 2024
Audio Format:
mp3

Bill and Jose discuss a variety of topics; politics and theoretical scenarios among them. 

 

If you enjoyed this episode or want to ask about being on an episode, send feedback at www.thebrospod.com or to backroomofthesanctuary@gmail.com 

Check out the video on our Facebook page

(upbeat music) - Hey guys, welcome back to the bros. We're in the backroom of the sanctuary where the conversation happens, where your host Jose and Bill, and we are in the room today. - That's right, we're missing John, unfortunately. He's on a bit of an errand today. We were planning to have a special guest, but once again, as with brother Mattney, it just didn't work out. Scheduling is hard. - It is hard to be scheduled. - I said the easiest part of starting a podcast is saying, let's start a podcast and it continues to prove me correct. - It is, it's true. - Scheduling, getting everything ready. - I think one of the hard parts is getting information ready, getting something to talk about, and something that's hard to do. And I think that's an errand right there by itself. - True. - Not just running and going and do something like John's doing right now, or yeah, what John's doing right now. (laughing) - Yeah, I'm curious. - Well, when he hears his episode, he'll be like, what was that, what are you doing now? - Yeah, that's very true. He probably will forget by that point, honestly. - What did I do? (laughing) - That's great, yeah, another hard part about it is the air condition, they're not working. That's, if your podcast air conditioner goes outward. - Yeah, gotta think about some way to keep this place cool, and, you know, other than having us two in here. - Not working. - Well, huh, I thought we were pretty cool. - We were. - We were cool. - That's true, man. - What happened, what happened? John's gone, so we're not cool anymore. - I think we're cooler. - Well, cool err, not the coolest. - No, you're right. - They're the coolest. - No, so hey, listen, I was just thinking earlier, and I'm gonna get your take on this, but I kind of, so you ever played a video game? - I know, hold on a second, just go on. - I'll let you keep going. - Let me preface this, I guess. - Okay. - You ever played a Pokemon? I don't know why I was thinking about that, but that's a good video game. You ever played a game, and these games, you have to go to these, what are they called? CPUs, the people that-- - MPC. - MPC, you ever go to an MPC player, and then it's like a bubble on top, and it tells you that you, to do something, and then next thing you know, you got to do that to complete a mission. - Yeah, it's like a task, you don't have a quest. - Yeah, you don't have a quest, yeah. So, in this season that we're in right now, I feel like I've been getting hit with a bunch of tasks from MPCs, and I feel like, and I feel like they are MPCs though, and they're not, they're not real life MPCs. - Yeah, they do, do they really? - Yeah, they have no function outside of when you see them, they don't really do anything. - So, here's, I'm gonna give you one of my MPC things here. - Oh, here we go. - Oh yeah. - So, - So, - Netabonit, no. - No, no, no, no, no, no. - No, no, no, no. - So, if you don't know, you know, about this whole presidential, presidential election coming up, if you haven't voted yet, if you haven't put in a vote, you are bound to be, and if you are registered, whether the Democrat or Republican, you're going to be getting a lot of messages from your party. - Is that true? - Yeah. So, one of these messages is like, we need to know what side you're on. You need to text in, and you need to go to this website and fill out this survey. And I'm just like, is this a quest? - Yeah, it is. - Is this a quest? - And you have to. - Do I have to do this? - So, I, - Yeah. - And it's so, it's like, it's telling, of course. Like, I don't, and I don't want to, don't give me wrong, I'm not criticizing democracy here, but. - Does it really matter if I am registered and vote? - Yeah. - If, if me and a hundred thousand of my friends don't, yeah, it's important, but if it's just me, it's really just your mental. Like, it's like, you're just going, oh, I have to do this for, you know, to go with the crowd, but, - Yeah. - You know, it's kind of crazy to me, and I agree, the texting is getting wild, especially the ones that just blatantly lie to you. Like, and they aren't, unless these guys are sitting out there writing texts, right, to hundreds of thousands, it's just, Bill, this is President Trump texting you to see if you will vote for me this night then, but we need you, we need you, Bill. And it's like, it's very specific. - I got a very specific text from the president. - The president, former president. - Soon to be, future president of the United States. - Yeah, I just think it's funny. I mean, I remember playing video games and you get a task and you have to do something. And if, and you bring, or you get done with a task and go back to that NPC player, and then you get rewarded for whatever. I'm just like, man, this whole election thing feels like an NPC game. - They should, and they don't even reward you, they should. That's what, you know. - What's the reward? - The reward in the game. It's $2, I mean, just some. - I don't get XP points. - Yeah, it's true, that's real. - I don't get that, you know. - You get good credit, you get great credit when you... - Student loan debt. - Literally, I love doing, like I'm getting back to the point where I love doing Trump so much, I won't stop. - Oh yeah. - And it's like too far, but it's fun for me now 'cause I'm like, starting to re-discover. - You ask Granny, you want me to do Trump right now? And then while doing Joe Hocha, that's prior. - Yeah, true, I was, if she had said yes, I would have been ecstatic. - Let me just say, there's not very many, like, anything that's not helped by Trump, like songs of, you know, just ads, you know, Bible lyrics. I was saying like, so let's talk about it. - If we get ads, you're reading them. - Oh yeah. - You're reading them straight. - 100%. - Yeah. - This is President Trump, I love Doritos. (laughing) It's, I'm not the only thing that's triangular in orange. We've got Doritos sitting here. - Why did Doritos sort of be composed? - They become, what's it called, political now? - Political, that'd be hilarious, yeah. - Doritos. - Doritos. - I can't eat Doritos without thinking of the political. - That's hilarious. - Oh my goodness, that's something. (laughing) - Man, well we could be like, if he's super racist with Fredos, he'd be like, he'd be like, eating by people who should be over the wall. He's like, you know, all that stuff. No, but I was, somebody was talking to me today and they were like, you know, did you see that thing that Kamala Harris did? The other, she was like, the sky is blue and blah blah blah, it's all she could talk about. And I was like, yeah, but the thing is, and this is like, why bias is hilarious? Trump could do the exact same thing and does on a regular basis. And I could listen to it for an hour and a half. Like just that, just like, you know, the sky is blue, it's very, very blue. We've never seen such a blue sky these days. And we have the green grass, green agrass, and any other president has ever had. We have green as grass. The cows love the grass, we love the cows. And like, I could listen to him do that for an hour, like just of that. But if it's Kamala, I'm just like, she doesn't know what she's talking about. This is the worst thing I've ever listened to. It's so funny how that works. 'Cause he can make dumb, just whatever talk, sound entertaining just by his inflection and tone of voice. 'Cause he just says the most random stuff and never stops. Like he, that's what I'm getting now is I'm starting to develop the pattern of one thing to the next thing to the next thing. And he just keeps going and finally just looks at you like, what are you gonna say to that? You can't say anything. - Do you remember, I think it was in 2016 or something around there? It was when Trump was going for office the first time. And it was Hillary Clinton and Trump. And the moderator, I mean, because they were back and forth and hitting each other like back, back, back, back. But the moderator was like, can you guys just say something good about each other? - And Clinton said, I say Clinton. I think I was Bill Clinton. - Right, right. - But Hillary Clinton, she said his kids are really well off, they're good. And I appreciate how good he's done with his kids. And then Trump said, I'm gonna take that as a compliment, take it as a compliment, you know, it's good. And say, one thing I'm gonna say about you is that you never stop, you never stop doing, you never stop going. You know, even though I don't believe in the same thing you believe in, but you keep on going. I'm just like, wow, I think those are both Jabs. - They're a little bit, yeah, they're a little bit. - I mean, but they were meant to say something positive. - Say something good about your opponent. His kids are pretty cool. - Yeah. - What's good about your opponent? She never shuts up, she never does anything and stops. She always is doing it. - Oh dear. - Yeah. - That's so, I thought you were gonna, like there's so many, like those debates were just gold. It was so good, again, the thing I think, I went in the presidency the first time. You know, it's awfully good that someone with a temperament of Donald Trump is not in charge of the law in our country because you'd be in jail. It's mic drop, it's so good. Like there's so many moments from that debate that made him as a presidential candidate. - Sure, sure. - And roast master, I guess, I don't know. But that's funny, I didn't know that, about saying something nice about each other. They couldn't do it today, I don't think. - No, he's doing a lot of different interviews with different podcasters too. - I've seen that. He was on theater. - Oh yeah, dude, I was about to bring that one up. - I've never seen a man from Louisiana in a suit before. That was crazy. - Dude, you can tell how uncomfortable he was in that podcast. - Yeah. - Like he's usually comfortable and he usually will say whatever, but it was very awkward to see him. - Here's two of my favorite moments from that episode. Theo Vaughn just going, yeah, I took so much cocaine, I thought I was an owl. I felt like an owl. He didn't, no response to that, what can you say? And then the other one was when he was like, you know, we had the best economy, this residence, he had the best economy of any other time and Theo just goes, yeah, my buddy bought a boat during that time. And it's just so funny. - I mean, it's the idea behind that statement was that it was affordable. - Yeah, it was affordable to do that. - It's just such a, you know, it's like so him. That's the thing is, what I love about Theo Vaughn is as a comedian, he is so good at playing what he would say, like as a character, if he's a character, that's the thing he would say. He's like, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And he's so funny at that that you never know when he's telling the truth or not. And then sometimes they'll say something and you look it up, you're like, oh, he's right, what? - I really want to see, I want to see another episode of them, but let Theo be very comfortable. - Yeah. - And that, I think that'll be a different. - Yeah, that's such a difference. - It's because I mean, Trump was, the whole, I think the biggest thing there was about the drugs. The drug thing in America, it was, it was just-- - Yeah, it was. - It was about the drugs in America and how bad it is. And as soon as Theo said something about cocaine, Trump was just like, how is that? Like, how did that make you feel? - Right. - He doesn't know. - He's just wondering, yeah. - He's never done it before. And he's not like something that he's interested in doing. He just wanted to know what it felt like from someone else to do it. And then it's the truth. It's like, I wouldn't-- - The best is when Theo is like, he went and I watched it happen. He went from, if you had some, I do it right now. Like, and to, after he realized Trump wasn't on the same thing. And no, that's when I quit, right there, he's like, oh no, I don't do it anymore. But he's like, oh, I love it, you know? - But if you give it to him, say, it's hard to quit. He said, once you start, you think you can have it under control, you think you're gonna do it for a little bit. Like, just have one thing here and there, but you're never gonna be under control with it. And that's the reality with drugs. And that's why, I think that's the biggest thing about the episode was though, it's like the war on drugs. It's still a thing right now and we're still, I mean, we're still having all these drugs on the street and it's not under control. - Yeah, the drugs are winning. - Yeah. - It really is. - It really is. And we're not, at this point, we're not even fighting. It's like Vietnam. We're just like, we don't even-- - She's about in on the road. - We're not even sending men in to do anything. We're just having enough people there so we can still say we're fighting. But it will never win. - I really don't want the future of America with my kids to be in the midst of all that stuff. - Yeah. - I don't wanna sound like I'm citing, but I want them to have the mentality that Trump had there was like, like, I don't know what that's like. Like, I don't know what it's like. - And I don't wanna, I don't wanna do it. - Exactly. I don't wanna do it and I don't wanna know what it's like. - Right. - And that's what, I don't want my kids to be in that situation where they can't introduce to it. I'd rather them push it away and not give in to peer pressure. I think that's one of the things that we talked about last week was the peer pressure giving in to it and-- - You know when I discovered a part about that episode. - When I discovered about drug use, I never realized the danger of fentanyl. Like, I've heard about fentanyl, obviously, but never realized the true, like, how dangerous it really is. And when I went up to Dothan, one of the messages was a story that Brother Shannon told. And it was one of my, I mean, favorite moments because it was such a good story where he was going to, I think he was, he was getting some upholstery read on. So he went into a carpet store of some kind. And as he's going in, people are, like, there's somebody running out. Apparently, he didn't know this, but carpet stores are like famous for having drug related activities going on in there. So this young man is just laying on the floor dead. I mean, he's not breathing, nothing's happening. So, you know, Brother Shannon, Justice, is not a doctor. You know, he didn't know what to do. So he just, all he knew to do, he went down and started praying for him. - Yeah. - And the cops are on their way. As they pull up, the guy sits up. And, you know, starts to recover. And the cops get there and they ask him. They're like, so when did you give him the shot? And he's like, what shot? I don't know what's going on. He just walked up, has no idea what of anything that's happened. And he was like, yeah. So he was having a fentanyl overdose. And the only way to get him back alive is to have a shot that you have. And it'll get him alive. But it doesn't bring it back like peacefully. You wake up screaming, you come back angry and it's a horrible way to arrive. But he just, this guy just sat up and it was crazy. So then after that happens, after all of it is going on, he goes outside and the cops says he can't leave. They tell him he can't leave at all. So he calls the people, he needs to call him, let's him know what's going on. And he's outside and he's, you know, finally, going in the cop comes out and specks him closely and just like looking up and down and like, what's going on? And he doesn't know. You know, and the cop is like going closer and closer. He's like, all right, you can go, but if you feel bad at all, the second, call 911 immediately. It's like, so what's happening? And apparently, and I didn't know this, but because he had a fentanyl overdose, if you get any at all, any of it on your skin or on your clothes, it will go through your clothes into your skin and you will overdose if you touch it. It's that potent and there's nothing you can do 'cause you don't know. The effects last, you take longer, so you could have it on you and not notice and it could kill you. And he had no idea. And he was like, I had no idea of the danger I was going in and pull that into his message. And it was a very convicting message, but you know, if you've gone into a dangerous place, even with good intentions, you sometimes don't realize how potent that danger can be and how it can affect you. And so you have to be very conscious about it. It was really good. But it was something that I was like, man, I can't believe that, you know, that that fentanyl can get to you like that. And it's just, I mean, that's more, if you see a snake, you could see a black mamba, you'd run, you'd get away from it, you wouldn't let it bite you if you could, but that is just, you're dead. I mean, you just touch something, you're dead. And it's so much more scary than anything else. Sorry if that was too long. - No, no, you didn't do it. - I think that's, I think it's valid. Because literally just saw a video of a guy who was teaching about when you're at parties or whatever, you're at gatherings or whatever. There are people that will just slip that into your drinks and it just, even in your drinks, mixing your ingesting it and it can kill you that way. And they were just trying to be smart about that. So if you're drinking any kind of anything, water, juice or whatever, you need to get a covered bottle and make sure that it cannot be messed with, the tampered by anybody around you. 'Cause quickly, it's just a shake of a hand and plant the nose in your drink and you die. I mean, they said, just enough, if you take a pencil tip, the graphite end and you just dip it into like the fentanyl, just a little bit that's left on the graphite tip is just enough to kill someone. And it's not a lot, it's very minimal. It's very, very minimal and people have to be really careful about it. I had a family member that died from fentanyl and it's scary 'cause one day they're fine and the next day they're just, they're gone. - That's right. - No, but it's an addiction problem and people, the problem is, and I'm not trying to, I don't wanna try to sound like I'm for the purity of drugs or whatever, but sounds bad, but the cocaine that D.L. Varn was talking about doing, he could have easily been a victim of that because it's the same color, same exact consistency and everything. It's mixed into that. It's basically, it doubles in size or whatever and people take cocaine and they lace it with different drugs to make more of a substance and it's pure or whatever and make it laced and sell it and kill people. So that's what happens. People ingest those kind of things and it hurts them and that's the drugs in America. I really am, I really hate the fact that drugs are just crawling over America and it's... - You gotta build that wall. - No, it's true, we do it, we have. No, I think that it's a similar, like we shouldn't discount anybody for their argument on this as we do with other things. I mean, obviously I'm not gonna immediately say if you're like pro choice, I'm not gonna immediately say, okay, that's fine. I have certain arguments, but with this, it's like when you have the gun debate, what is the biggest thing we say about not wanting to take the guns away and make them illegal? 'Cause the people who want them will have them illegally and it'll be less safe. 'Cause they're not going to have like, "Oh, you can't have a bump stock on it." - Law-abiding citizens will give up their guns, but the ones that are not law-abiding will have them anyway. - It will be harder to get sure, but will they be more dangerous because they're not following any regulations? Absolutely. - Just like gun-free zones are very dangerous because people don't have a way to defend themselves. And the people with that are criminals know this for a fact. - Sure, and that's why schools are so vulnerable. - Yeah, it is, 'cause there's no nothing there, but I bring that up because it's a, it could be presented as a similar argument that if we are making these things illegal, we cannot control anything other than just cracking down on everything. And it doesn't work, it obviously doesn't work. And so there's been huge marijuana for blah, blah, blah. If things are made legal, then it will be controlled a lot better because people won't have to go to those illicit sources, they have an option. And I'm not suggesting people do it, but if we're stopping people from dying, if they are wanting to do something, even if I don't agree in it completely, then it is safer on a whole, 'cause I'd rather have somebody do drugs than die from them instead. You know what I mean saying? Like I'd rather have them do them safely under a legal system than also do them and die because they were trying to get them illegal. I see what you're saying, I was kind of conflicted. - I wouldn't want them to do either. - Yeah, yeah, yeah. But if I don't have that option, then I'd rather be safe. - If I couldn't help it, I'd rather it be one way than the other. - And we can't, a lot of times, you know, we can talk to people. - I just wish it would be all gone. That's what I think. I just wish it would be all gone. And just like that guy, I mean, who was it that you said? - Justice. - Justice, I'd be like him and bring Jesus into the equation. Jesus can fix it. Jesus can heal. That one dude should have died. - Absolutely. - And there was a lady in there that said, this is a miracle. And she knew exactly what had happened. And you know, she knew for a fact what had happened to him about it. And I was like, man, that's crazy. That was a crazy story 'cause I'm a sheltered person. I don't deal with all the drugs and like, I think the first time I smelled weed was with you in the car and all that, but now, let me pause. - Hold on a second, hold on a second, hold on a second. - We were delivering DoorDash together. - Yeah, okay, yes, okay. (laughing) I do not do any drugs with a matter. - Sorry, I was like, okay. - It's just like, I was with you. - I was with you, never? - No, no, no, we were, so we were, it was before I started doing DoorDash and Bill was taking me on a route and we were going through a different, it was kind of a sketchy neighborhood. And we were trying to deliver, I think it was some sonic food or whatever. - Checkers or something like that. - We went to go and deliver checkers and we were trying to find the house and we rolled the windows down and we smelled weed and I'm just like, Bill, you smell that, right? And he says, yeah, I smell something. - Yeah. - So, yeah, it's just, I, you know, that smells. - We drove away. - You set me up. (laughing) - We drove away and he's just like, man, yeah. I smelled like weed. I was like, really, that's what that is? I didn't know 'cause I didn't grow up in that environment which I'm blessed but also, it's also dangerous 'cause if I don't know, you know, that's what I've-- - I've had so many people around me manage. I know what it smells like, that's sad. - And it's not your choice. You didn't, you know, partake as far as in your Christian life or anything like that. - Yeah, of course. - It's just like, if I hear a metal song on the radio, I'm gonna know it, not because I choose to listen to it but because I've chose to listen to it in the past. - But yeah, I think the biggest thing is just bring Jesus in. That's the biggest way to resolve all that issue. You know, if you can say America, bring Jesus back into America and let it. That's the thing. It's a school system took God out and now there's no more prayer in school. There's no Bible class in school and the kids aren't able to learn because of the whole, you know, religious freedoms are not thing anymore. It's gonna be-- - Well, they are though. - They're being fought. - That's the issue. And I've talked about this too in my personal life is that there's something, if we wanna have religious freedoms perfectly fine, but those same people who are complaining that they took the Bible out of schools would be horrified if they put the Quran in. You know what I mean? And that's where religious freedom, if they were like, oh, they, every, you know, half the class gets down in their mats and starts praying towards whatever it is. - That's a different way to look at it, yeah. - So you have to, either you add all of them or it's not fair for anyone else to have religious freedom. And I'm a Christian, you know? I feel like Christianity is-- - So you understand that you're the Christian? - But the reason people came to America was for religious freedom from what everybody thought was the norm. And so I'm not going to say because we have religious freedoms and it can only be mine. And so that's why I'm okay with that if you're going to teach them in their everyday life. If you're not, I mean that doesn't have-- - I mean, America was founded on the Christian beliefs and the Christian doctrine. - Yeah, it's true. - It was founded on that. In the Declaration of Independence, with the Declaration of Independence, you find God in it. And that's the thing, is they're trying to take it all out. And that's if-- - Well, I don't think you should take it all out. - No, I'm saying if a country is founded on God, it's founded on Christianity, I think that would be one thing that we teach our country is God and Christianity and what was believed to be the founding of America. And that's my, that's my truth. - It's true and it can be. People can feel that and it's just one of those things that either you believe in the interest of fairness or you believe in the things that are right, you know? But I don't wanna, again, it's one of those things where I don't wanna just be superior to everyone because I don't have to be. Like I could live in, if I'm living in North Korea, I'm still gonna be a Christian. Even if, you know, like it's not-- - Not for long, not for too long. - You're right, that's what I mean. It's like, they're not gonna be like, oh, you celebrate your religion, you know? So it's like, I'll still have that. So even if I'm not, if the country's not doing great and they're not wanting to believe in God, which most people aren't, or at least they're pretending to, but you know, not really living for him, I'm like, I'm still gonna live for him and at least we have at least a little bit of freedom still in our personal walk, maybe not as much in like, you know, obviously our live streams can get taken down at any point if Facebook chose to change their policies on religion or anything. - Yeah. - So it's rough, but we just have to live with it 'cause, you know, the Lord is coming back soon and it will be best for the Antichrist if he tries to take every trace of the Lord before they get gone, you know? - Yeah, that's the truth. - 'Cause the less there are, the less reaction people will have. And then there will be no remnant to look back. - You're right. - Hey, so change the topics here. - Let's do it. - So if you're walking up to a, let's say a gas station or a convenience store, right? You're walking up and there's someone behind you. As you open the door, this person is like, let's say 20 yards away from you. - All right. - And you make eye contact with that person as you're opening the door. Do you just walk in and let them open the door or do you hold it open for them and wait 'til they get there? - 20 yards away? - About 20 yards away, that's just a 20 yards away. - A good like, good five seconds current walking pace. - Maybe. - Pretty good distance. - Five seconds. - Let's just say that-- - I'm thinking about five seconds to cut off. - You're sick. Let's just say they started walking from the gas pump. - Yeah. - And you're at the front door. - Oh, door shut. - Door shut. - Door shut. - I'll slam it now. - You made eye contact with them. - Yeah. - You made eye contact with them. - Yeah. - If somebody did that for me, I would, this is the thing. (laughing) - Would you feel bad that you just, well, after making eye contact with the person, would you feel bad that you just closed the door on them and they walked in? - No. - Or would you wouldn't feel bad? - I would not feel bad at all, and here's why, because I would feel bad as the person walking if I'm 20 yards away and I make eye contact. I'm like, please just go inside. I can open the door for myself, but now I'm gonna feel bad if I don't hurry up. I'm gonna look silly hurrying up just for you. (laughing) It's an awkward thing where you're just like, please don't hold the door for me. - Yeah. - Like, I appreciate the gesture and I'll say thank you. - Yeah. - But if I'm too far away, I'll just open it for other people. That's what I do. - I think, at that distance, I assume they're gonna be fine with opening the door for themselves, unless there's obviously some other stuff. - I've literally been a doorstop. So, I mean, I really have. - Are you worried about getting caught? You're like, - No, no, no, I was trying to be nice to the person behind me. And the person behind me just walked on. And you know how sometimes you see somebody that they touch the door to hold onto the door. And then, as I'm doing that, hold onto the door from the person in front of me. I'm holding onto that door and the guy just walks away. I'm expecting the person behind me to do the same thing so they can keep it open. But I ended up not getting, he ended up not holding the door. So, I'm sitting there holding the door open for everybody else. And as everybody's walking through, I'm getting thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you. I'm like, you're welcome, you're welcome. I'm just waiting for everybody to just walk out. And then finally, I see that last person and then just like, all right. - Time to go, yeah, I miss my party. My party's all over there. - They're already eating. (all laughing) - Yeah, dude. - That's the worst thing I've ever seen. - I mean, where is the happy medium? - Do you think, like, I don't even think they fought that in the olden days when that was common place? - I'm just glad that there's automatic doors now. - Yeah, for real, for real. Who was the first guy to come with that? How excited was he? - I love he's a millionaire. I'm a billionaire. - Yeah, for sure, 'cause that makes the most sense, is that the doors just, that's like, the stuff we talk about today that we want in the future, that's what they did for years. They were like, what if the doors could just open by themselves? - Dude, I remember when automatic doors were first put into places, it wasn't a sensor, it was a button. - Which is not automatic. - Yeah, no, it's a millionaire, it was a button that you pushed and the doors opened and then you walked in. And then sooner, sooner or later, I don't know. - They still have those with a handicap button. - Yeah, yeah, yeah. - Same with that system, you pushed the button and then you walked through and then later on, they ended up putting a sensor way, picks up people there and then they opened the door by itself. Whoever invented that machine, whoever invented the sensor, they opened the doors, that's right, that's the invention. - That's like time travel in the 1900s, right? - Yeah, of course. - That's what we are thinking of what we want now from life, they were like-- - Dude, Tesla's opened their door by themselves now. - Yeah. - You get a button. - Oh my goodness, and it just pulled. - Yeah, it's so crazy. - The Rolls Royce, you only have to touch a doorknob or do not. - And the car gets in before you turn on, it turns on before you get in, sorry. - Or drives to you? - Or drives to you, it's crazy. - Yeah, like this technology is crazy nowadays. - And we're still complaining about not having like-- - You boys are playing cars, we're just playing cars, we don't have anything like that, we don't have a time travel yet, and we're like, we have so much. - Dude, when back to the future was, but a big deal, 2020, I forget what year it was, I don't know what year it was, I forgot, it was one of the anniversaries, but it was the exact date that Marty McFly went to the future and they were flying cars. - Oh, right, yeah. - And I was just like, oh, 2015, it was 2015. (laughing) - They didn't even have shelf driving cars at that point. - We're at the point now, we're just like, we're still being promised to fly cars in the future. (laughing) - No. - What are we getting those? You know, how would they, the F, what is it, what's the F, what is the, the association or whatever for airplanes or whatever, FAA or-- - FAA, yeah, that's what I was gonna say. Like, the logistics of flying cars would be off the rails 'cause you have to go from your house into the air at random points. Do you have military flying cars? Is there routes? Does everybody know the routes? 'Cause like, you have a lot of pilots, but now everybody's a pilot that has one of these things and they could just take off from anywhere. And I mean, terrorism immediately up to them immediately just, 'cause you could just take a car. You don't need to file a flight plan. You don't need to do any of this stuff, take over a plane, no, you're just getting your car. - Air traffic would be crazy. - It would be so bad. - Yeah, LA would be literally like a swarm of bees, like a giant swarm of bees with everybody's zoomin' in. - Yeah. - The smoggiver where you can't see anything. - I think at that rate, I'd rather be driving a car on the street then. - Yeah, at that point, at that point, they'd be like, "Everything's flying cars." - It's a belt. - "Where are they gonna make cars that drive on the roads?" - Yeah, right, it's gonna be a belt curve where everybody's flying, so now there's no traffic on the street and then you go back on the street and then the traffic on the street and you have to fly again. - That's just gonna go back and forth. Yeah, that's hilarious though. The flying car phenomenon that everybody wants, like, tip it up, it's over. I think we can say that we don't want flying cars. - Yeah. - Now the jetpack thing is crazy though. - Oh, the jetpack thing is very crazy. - It's gettin' close, man. It's gettin' close to Iron Man real quick. - Okay, so what was the first one I saw was the water jetpack they made and what was powered by a jet ski. - Right, yeah, yeah. - And then later on made the air powered jetpack. - Yep. - Which is insane how thrust would work and it not heat, like, melt your back or something. - Sure, and then they have gravity now with the jet powered that, unless it's the same one, I don't know how it works, but it does have a jet engine in it, but gravity does their things with their demos and those guys are getting really good. - Yeah. - They were the ones with the two. - Yeah, the ones with the two. - Yeah, the ones with the two. - Yeah, that's what I'm thinkin' of, yeah. - They're so awesome. But that's one of the things that everybody, we thought, dude, everybody thought we were gonna have a jetpack. But there's so many things we should be grateful for. There was a Louis C.K. bit where he was talking about that. He's like, everybody's complaining all the time, but he's like, we have so much to be grateful for. We're off the food chain. You know how crazy it is? Like for thousands of years, this is how all life ended. (screaming) You're getting torn to bits, but now we're off of the food chain. We can eat bread. It's like, we could just walk and not worry about getting torn apart. - Oh man. - I think we're at a top, top, top, top. - Yeah, we are. - We're not even in the food chain. We're not top. - We're now worried about us. We're getting killed by us, actually. That's basically it. - Oh man. - Us in disease, that's all we are doing. - Oh, speaking of that, go ahead and just keep talking about us. - Us in disease. - Yeah, whatever. - Speaking of disease. - Yes, we in disease. - Hold on, that's great. I gotta find this thing. It was really cool. - Yeah, no worries. Yeah, but there's so much that we have that we're not grateful for. I get it. - I didn't understand why you'd be upset. 'Cause jetpacks would be sick if everybody had 'em. But again, it's the same issue of the stupid people are gonna get 'em and cause problems for everybody. - Yeah. - Like the guy on Segway. He went off a cliff 'cause he was trying to avoid a guy with his dog. - Oh my goodness, I can't find this thing. So, there was this thing in the post and see if you can find it if you can. - Okay, what am I looking for? - I'm gonna explain this real quick. So, there's this post that said you're in an arena. And in this arena, you have one hunter, a thousand mice, four hawks. You have 10 wolves, two gorillas or whatever. And you have to choose two of these things and everything else is gonna attack you. And I'm just like, what do you choose? I'm trying to figure, I've been, you got it? - I think so. - Here are the options. - Read 'em out. Let me see what you're looking at. - That's a Reddit. You hear, I'll send it to you. - So, I was looking at that and I'm just like, what do you choose? Because if you're in the middle of an arena and you have to pick two of these options, you have to pick two of these options and these two and these options are by nature, you literally have everything else against you. Everything else. Did you send it to me? - Yeah. - As you, as-- - What is this coming? Dude, this is the upcoming episode. - Hold on. - All right. - Do you want to read out the options? - I'm gonna look at it real quick. Okay, so your options are 50 hawks, 10 crocodiles, three brown bears, 15 wolves, one hunter, seven cape buffalo, 10,000 rats, five gorillas, and four lions. You must pick two that will defend you. The rest are coming to kill you. Which do you pick and why? And so, what's your theory? - All right, I already have an answer for this. What's your-- - I have good reasoning behind it. Are you ready? So my answer to defend me, to defend me. - To defend you. - 10,000 rats and a hunter. - To 10,000 rats and a hunter. - Yes, here's why. The rats destroy anything that's on the ground. They kill anything that's on the ground. That's impossible to defeat. Like, rats are not only to spread disease, but 10,000. That's such a high number, it's great. To have just a swarm of rats. And no one's gonna want to deal with them. And like, I don't care if you've got 15 wolves, but you're just gonna get pulled down. And this is the only thing that could defeat them here would be the hawks. 'Cause they're not on the ground. - So 50 hawks do. - Yeah, so that's where the hunter's for. He's got a gun and then he can just shoot the hawks down and I can deal with the hawks. 'Cause somebody scratched me, if I have to deal with 10,000 rats, the rats are gonna keep everything else away and distracted. Hunter's gonna deal with the hawks. And then I was gonna be free to, I don't know. - Okay, but you got buffalo and you got wolves and you got gorillas and four lions. - Buffalo, the hunter can also take care of the buffalo. All these things are things that people hunt for the most part, except for the rats. No one wants to just hunt 10,000 rats. - His thing is so-- - The gorillas are-- - The hunter is just hunter like unlimited ammunition or something? Because if he's like the unlimited ammunition, where's he coming from with all this ammo? And how is he gonna be able to take all these things with, and what does he have? - Yeah, that's true. - Does he have a hunting rifle? Does he have a-- - All the others are repeating? - That's the other issue is if you don't take the hunter, he has a ranged attack against you. - Yeah? - Versus like, 'cause I get one shot by the hunter. - And what's the communication? - Help! (laughing) - I really think deep into this stuff. - Yeah, there's like a rat in my hat, just pulling on my hat. - Like, do you get to control the rats? - I think you-- - Like you're saying, all right. - So I think it's more like they just know to defend me and just kind of do it. I can talk to the hunter. I don't think I can talk to the rats. But they kind of like just go for anything. - Yeah. - And are just like a sea of destruction. - Could you go to sleep with your choice and not worry about anything attacking you? - In the arena. - Yeah, in the arena. - No defense, maybe not. - You have the 10,000 rats and-- - The crocodiles worry me. I'm not gonna-- (laughing) - They're almost bulletproof almost. - That's what I'm like, I don't know that rats are gonna do much against crocodiles. (laughing) - I'm gonna have to rely a little bit on the hunter and he's gonna be real busy with 50-dog. - Yeah. - 'Cause those things are flying. Those things are moving around a lot. I don't know if I could be. But I don't think there's any... That's like the intelligence build that I would make. It's like the smartest move to do is to choose the thing that can get you from long range, choose the thing that would just destroy you. - No. - And close up because rats, there's just too many to deal with. But if I were to go strength-wise, probably... I mean, the gorillas obviously are there 'cause five gorillas are crazy to deal with in a strength fight. Probably the gorillas in the Hawks, to be honest. - What would be the biggest competitors? - I would say if I had to pick a strength-based attack, not just 'cause I think those are the two best ones. - I'm not gonna say, well, I am gonna say, Harambe is currently not alive. - Yeah, and doesn't really give me enough hope against the hunter if I had to do this. - I mean, some of these comments. Rats, OP, please nerf. I'm a lion mane and it's impossible to win against rats ever. Has nobody here played Dishonored? Rats are top pick by far. - Played what? - Dishonored, it's a video game. - I don't know what that is. - Rats are top pick by far. Man, I'll take just the rats in a large stick against everything else. - Okay, so another theory about rats though is they carry disease. - Yeah. - So they can literally, like with disease, just carry it to anybody or anything. And then the thing that they get, you know, oh man, the theory behind all this stuff is just amazing to me. I just, I don't know. I think the hunter and the rats are the biggest and the best option, the best option. - That's true, yeah. - But I mean, if someone else picked, if someone else was in the arena and they had to pick two and then everybody was against them, I would hope they would never pick the rats. - 10,000, so this guy says 10,000 rats in 100, 10,000 rats because then there's only 95 animals left, 100 because with a gun and hopefully exactly 94 bullets, you can kill the animals while the rats are in destruction. It's the only choice. - They better have a one accuracy, you know? - Yeah, that's where I'm like, it's... - And not shooting someone. - The rats are impossible. - And not shooting someone's ear. I'm talking about like really getting them. - Yeah, really going for them. - Yeah. - Yeah, that's great. - 10, 10. - And then, yeah. - And then. - Speaking of 10,000 rats, there was one rat on the roof. (laughing) - Oh man, but yeah, I mean, you. - I feel like that's, yeah. - The rats are just, you can't do anything against that, so you might as well pick it because otherwise you're dead. The hunter is another one that you can sneak up on you and just shoot you and then you're done. So I feel like the smartest option is to take those out. - Yeah. - And they are, I mean, the rats are formidable defense 'cause it's just a wall of just teeth. - Yeah. So as here was one of my buddies theories is, if you don't pick the hunter, then you just hope that the hunter is taken out by the other, by one of the things that you have, you get to have. - Yeah, you pick up the rifle and ammunition and then you become that third. - That's true. Yeah, the other thing is they don't say what weapons you have which could add to it. - No, you're being defended. - Okay. - You're being defended. - You can't breathe, yeah. Okay, so yeah, you're done if you don't pick rats. - Yeah. - And the hunter is like, again, you can, you can have people take them out. - Wolves are not a bad choice either, though. - Yeah. - If you have rats and wolves, man, what a combo. - Oh, man. - 'Cause the wolves are gonna fight smart. - They hunt in packs. - They hunt in packs. - They hunt in packs. - They don't need to fight smart, but the wolves will. So the rats just destroy everything. Anything is left, the wolves are taken care of. It's fine. Oh, the little games like that. - Yeah. - Just like, what would you do? - What would you do? - Yeah. - 'Cause I like to think of, like that podcast you listened to with that. What was it, Black Mamas versus Silverback Growers? - Oh, man. - A guy's picking the gorilla, like the Mamba's, he's like, I'll take a snake or no. - No. - What was it? Yeah, yeah, he takes the gorillas. - It was a silverback and a grizzly bear. - Yeah, that was. - Yeah. Like, and what he said was, that will never happen in nature. - Right. - Unless, for some reason, a zoo was to take, like, let everything loose, that would be the only reason it would happen. - Well, they'd like UFC it, where they'd set up a match. - Yeah, that would be the only other reason. - That would be, you know what? Forget the animal cruelty, that would be so much fun to watch, though. - Well. - You'd think of how many tickets you could sell if you had a fight with a gorilla and a bear. - Hmm. - That would be so-- - I think the debate would be over it. Everybody would just go there to end the debate. - They would. It would be so much money. They could do it in Vegas. They could do it in the Apex. They could do it in the UFC arena. - You gotta put an extra big cage on that thing, though. Those things are gonna dive right through it, but yeah, that would be crazy, as if they had that. - Yeah. Well, hey, what do you got? You wanna say something different? Something else? Bring something else. Other content up. - I don't know. I mean, we've had a good time on the, we had a good time last week with Brother Caleb. That was nice. - Yeah. - We enjoy getting guests, but it's nice to have, like, you know, kind of the OG squad here. - Yeah. - That's how it started with us doing that thing for trying to family band with that video. And then we're like, we could definitely do this. And then all you got it on and, you know. - Yeah. I think that, I mean, yeah. That was the pilot that started all this stuff. And then, well, you told me about, we were talking about "Mr. Reckman" a lot. Like, that was one thing that really brought us to music. - Yeah. - Very, like, as far as us together, 'cause "Mr. Reckman's" mentality of music was just very straightforward. - Yeah. - And I went to band with him. You've been in band with him. And, you know, he's a, he's, he's a, I don't know how exactly to say it, but he's a leader. - He means teaching looks so easy. 'Cause he's so friendly and conversational when it matters that he'll just get up there and just start talking about whatever. And I can't even do that. I just have to think it through, and he'll just pop up and just kind of like. - And he's a different person outside of school. Like, as a, as a, as a student. Oh, my goodness. - Oh, you're terrifying. - Don't get on his-- - You're terrified. - Yeah, you're terrified of the man. But as a-- - And me and Lainey were on pretty good terms, but even then, I was like, "No, he's got to be careful, you know?" - Oh, me too, me and me, JC and Johnny. Like, we were all really good with, with him. But, and still, you don't want to mess with him. But we went, we went recently to, to Mr. Reckman and a band room that he got. It's a BHS. - Studio B. - Yeah, BHS Studio B, which is one of the biggest studios in Florida. - It's the largest, he said. - Largest studio in Florida? - When he built it, the largest recording studio in the city of Florida. - Yeah, so one of the, one of the largest recording studios, and we went over there just to visit, just kind of hang out, 'cause I haven't been there in about 13 years since graduating high school. And I, the band building looked so different. I went through there and I'm just like, in awe, because I can go, I was giving them the tour of where I remember everything was. But when I was trying to, I was like, "I don't remember anything." - Right, yeah, it's so different. - I was like, "There's the office." And it doesn't look like it's in the same place. But they said, "I assure you, it's the same exact place." It's the same exact place. They just built onto it, built on that way. - It looks so crazy. - So, he's very excited about showing people, the studio, and he wants to show everybody about it, 'cause he takes pride in it. He, it was one of the things that he built. He wanted to make a band room that would be, - An outward. - Facilitate for everything. - Yeah, everything they need and be able to move outward as well. - Yeah, and you have chorus, you have piano, you have band, jazz band, you have all the different music. All types of music that happens is in that room. And it's facilitated because of that. And the idea all came from Mr. Atman's brain. - So good. - And he just wanted to show me that and when I saw it, I was like amazed at the quality of the room and the quality of the band room. I'm just like, this is, this is above anything I've ever even imagined. - 'Cause, yeah. - Well, and when we started going to Bartow, we had, I think, two years that we went, maybe one, it might've been one year, in the actual band room, that you knew so well. And then they tore it down and they moved everything in the band room into the auditorium. - Yeah. - Like one of the worst auditoriums, far sound quality that's ever existed because it was really a basketball court. I mean, it wasn't built for that. And they've done their best with it. But it definitely was something that was a little hampered because we didn't have, we're performing on a live stage. It was a lot different than what we're used to for our practicing and things. But that was such a fun time, too. 'Cause, you know, it was a new experience and they were kind of moving everything around. But then now you see this building and just every detail is thought of. It's so perfect because you've got like, you know, we went in there when it was just being built when I was doing Bartow Adult Band. And it just like, it looked, you know, it's wide. And they kind of, things were there, but nothing's there. And then we'd go back in and everything's carpeted and plussed and it looks so good. But it was so neat. And you can tell when somebody who's in charge makes something like that. 'Cause everything they need is there. And the music storage room opens right up onto the band room. And from that opens right into the parking lot, pull up the gate, back something in, unload it. We're done. And we'll fix it Monday. But, you know, for all these performances and stuff, we would be dragging and you'd go all the way around and you have to pull these different places and it was a hassle. But now it's just in and out and so easy to do. And it's, you know, designed for that feature. - So, just put it in perspective. Imagine doing something for 20 years and having to deal with all the different problems that you've dealt with. And in your mind, as you're dealing with these problems, you're finding solutions, but you cannot implement these solutions because you have no funding. - True. - And now funding comes. And all these solutions you think of, boom. - Yeah, you build problems and then build solutions from that. It's crazy. - It's studio beat. - Yeah. - Literally, that's literally what it is. Like everything that you come through, you're like, you know, you, how many, how many things have you gone through? And you're like, boy, I wish I can just fix this with this. If I could, I would do that. And then 10 years later, you're like, you know what, the money's here, I'm gonna do exactly what I, that's exactly why. - Yeah, it was, it was artistic. That whole building is like an art piece. - It's so good. - And this is, let me say this. When we would do, I've done two different types of competitions with public school. You have MPAs, which is music performance assessment. Jazz MPA, concert MPA, all that kind of stuff. With Calvary, which is Christian school, I did a Sunset State Association of Christian Schools, which is SACs. And they do things totally different. I mean, it's a completely different setup. And one of the things I miss about MPA that I liked is the recording. And so, if you guys don't know, if you haven't done this, so SACs, the way they do it is way most, I think most places probably do this, is you just have two or three judges sitting there judging your category. You perform, and this is how they do it, where SACs is that you perform one song, then you wait while they write down their notes for that song, then you perform your second song when they say they're ready. That is brutal. I can't tell you how brutal it is to watch a choir stand up for five minutes in silence while they're just writing down notes. Nobody can talk in the crowd. - Oh, yeah. - And you're just sitting there like, oh my God. - The same little band MPA. - Oh, yeah. A little bit, but it's more streamlined because you get that chance, because they're just saying their notes. And this is what I love about MPA, is 'cause they have these recorders right next to their mouth. And as they're listening to the band, they're not writing stuff down. They're not, you know, they can be, but most of them are just sitting there in their recording and saying their thoughts and what they hear while they're playing. And you hear it in the background so loudly. I mean, it's great quality. - Yeah. - But to hear that is so fantastic, 'cause then you get that instant feedback of these, I mean, some of these guys are genius, and I've been doing this for so long, that you hear their thought process way more than just scribble, scribble, scribble, and trying to remember what you think of when you're doing this. You know, and it's a hard job. I'm not, I'm not just crediting. But I suggested to my choir director, I was like, how crazy would it be if Saks had that format of just, you record in the back of the room, and that would let you have something to listen back to? And that's where Mr. Ekman took that idea of having that feedback of listening, and he made a whole studio, so every time they play and, you know, they're recording. And so any time they're like, all right, this is the back, that back. And you play and have that instant feedback. I'm like, okay, you hear how quiet the clarinet's are? You don't hear that normally. - Oh, that would have been, that would have been perfect. - It's perfect. Everybody's recording on this, and you immediately get that instant feedback of, man, I should've played that part a little louder, 'cause now I can hear the full mix, and I'm listening for that, and it's so crazy good. And like the way you phrase and everything, you just listen right back to it, and he points out. And it's so easy to just pick stuff out of a recording versus having to pick stuff out while you're playing. 'Cause when you're conducting and listening, you're like, all of it is, there's so much going on that you miss things, you just do. When you're listening to these recordings, and listen back, you're like, oh man, that's what we need to do better. And then you cross, well, I don't know, cross-examine, you cross-reference that with recordings that you've heard of that piece being performed, and you're like, man, I like the way they did that, but we don't do that when we played here. All that is just genius to have implemented. And the fact that it's on all sides, I mean, not just the band is doing this, but the choir, the orchestra, there's so many options. Sorry, I'm talking forever. - No, I like that. - But it's so awesome. - The idea was so terrific when he did this, that I was excited about it. I can't wait to see it fully implemented. It's still being worked on it. It's been like, what, four years now, sometimes, you know? - I mean, it's almost the same concept that's when I tell you, I can be doing a podcast with you. And because it's being recorded, the day that it drops, I listen to it. I look forward to it. When I hear it, when I know what we talked about, I know what we had, I know how we sounded, but when I listen back, it's a whole different experience, because now I'm hearing, now I'm listening, now I can actually be in it rather than just be a part of it. - Yeah, true. - And the music aspect of the band, you play your part as a whole. You can hear that instrument, you can hear that part, you can hear that phrase. And it's not just, here's this collegiate band that played the same piece, listen for your part. Listen for your, no, no, you listen for the part that you actually played, and let's figure out how you can fix it. - Dude, I just thought of this. And as the, like, 'cause obviously you're miking sections up, you solo the sections. You're just like, don't just listen for the clarinets. Let's listen to the clarinets, solo it up, oh listen to that wrong note there, you know? And like, you pull these out, 'cause you can solo it. Obviously there's gonna be bleed, but you know, it's gonna be a big step in doing this. - It is amazing, the amount of stuff you can do with feedback. - Yeah, 'cause you're out of your head. You're not thinking of your part, like even on the podcast, we're in our heads. I mean, we're trying to think of stuff and just have a conversation. - Dude, when we go to listen to this, it's gonna be different. - Yeah, 'cause we're not thinking about what we're going to say. We're just listening to what we've already said. - Oh, you're just having conversation. That's really what it is. - Oh, blah, blah, blah, blah, and you know, we're not thinking about, oh, do I have to, do I have to, you know, do something here? I'm not thinking of what I wanna bring or anything. Like, how does that relate to something in my life? Or something like that, we're just listening to somebody talk, it's fun, 'cause then you hear all sorts of things that you didn't hear 'cause you were busy thinking. I do that all the time, I just come back. Just like, yeah. - Uh-huh. - I try to hide it well, I think I have to hide it well, but sometimes you just come back from taking your own thoughts and like, all right, how do I work this around, you know? But it's still fun, I mean, to have the conversation, to have that feedback and, you know, I should listen more. I should listen back more. - I mean, yeah, I think I always look for people to tell me how it is, 'cause not just me asking, like, I can listen to it and be impartial, because it's me. It's all of us that are part of it. I'm gonna say it was great. Or I'm gonna say that, man, we were not good, but if someone else listens to it and they have their thoughts and they have their ideas of what they like, and they say, hey, that was amazing. I got a lot from that podcast. Or, you know, maybe you shouldn't talk about that next time. You know, like, let's learn from our audience, but that's the same thing about the feedback, is you learn as you go, you know? - I don't know if you guys heard this, but during the last episode, there was a little bit of a clip in there about the pinata, famous pinata comment, and not all of feedback was positive, 'cause Granny was a little upset about it. He said, oh, no, you know, but that's the thing. It's like, that's an episode that we had fun with. - Yeah. - You know, in the moment, I'm sure now we do it a lot different, probably go worse, but, you know, I don't know, we do it a lot differently now. - Yeah. - And not everybody's gonna like that one. You know, that's not the one that speaks to them. - Yeah, everything's, everybody has a different-- - That's what might be my favorite episode right now, but everybody has a different favorite episode, and what they like about it. - You wanna know what my favorite episode is? I'll tell you what my favorite episode is. All of them. - Yeah. - No, no, I feel like, which one of your favorite kids? - I don't know. - Yeah, all of them. - You only have one. (laughing) - Oh, oops. - You got 54 of them. - Hey. (laughing) - Yeah, they know in some reason why, anyway. - But we got, but like, honestly, the one that really like really made me feel like this is a, this podcast did well was the last one, last week, was with Caleb. 'Cause that, 'cause that podcast dove deep into a lot of different topics. I mean, same, very similar topics. But it dove deep into a lot of different, like, you know, speculation, this and that. - Yeah, just talking about it, yeah. - Yeah, it just felt, it was very good. I, I don't think I would have got the whole Peter next to the fire. That was like one of the biggest moments for me was, and we were getting ready to close the episode up. - Yeah. - When we, when we said that. And it just got more and more and more, and then it's just like Peter sitting next to someone else's fire, till this day still is, it's with me because it's like, he was sitting by someone else's fire that they made, they've tendered, they, they've built. - Put the work in there. - They put the work in, they put the work in their fire, but Peter is being warmed by someone else's fire. And when Caleb said, you know, they prayed, they fasted, they worshiped, they sought God. And the people over there are just like, I'm gonna go, where he is, because of his warmth, his fire, I can get, if they're shouting in church, then I'll shout in church, because I'm with their fire. You know, it's not because I'm doing the work, but because they already did it. And I'm just basking in that, in that, you know. - Right, yeah. - Atmosphere. It's like, wow, that was amazing. That, that, and that's a small bit. I mean, everything else was just amazing in that episode. And I just like, wow. - Yeah, and considering where we came from. I mean, talking about the fiery furnace. - Yeah. - And then to bring that in was so good. And I agree with you, that was a good episode. - Yeah. - I love that episode. - Of course. - One of my favorite epic, terrific episodes, I catch myself not actually doing Trump, but doing Trump, if you know what I mean? Like, you're starting to repeat. - Yeah, you can't get yourself with the mannerisms. - Yeah, I just start repeating compliments, and I'm like, there it is. And every time I notice it, I have to do it. Like, and then, you know, everybody sees that I'm doing it, but it's funny. - Only, only you would pick it up. - Yeah. Literally, people just tell me I sound like him all the time, it's very funny. Like, yeah, that's what I'm, I did that today. I was doing an impression of Trump. And somebody was like, you sound just like Donald Trump. And it's like, that's what I'm trying to do. Thank you. - Point out the obvious. - That was the intent. - Yeah. - I started insulting him as Trump. - Just put out the wig and, you know. - But the wig on. - He's like, you're not doing it in your face. I was like, no, I can't do it in my face. I'm, the impression, the vocal impression is okay enough that it gets me back. I don't have to do facial reconstruction just to do this impression. 'Cause I don't find anything he does, particularly appealing. Facially. - Do the face contortion just so you can make your face. Just like his. - The one thing he does that I do like is when he's, he like acts like he's like offended by everything. - Like that. - Yeah, though. - Yeah. - I can't believe you would say that to me. It's crazy you would say that to me. Nobody's ever said that to me before. You know, he'll just do that. Like, I don't agree with you, but I'm not gonna argue with you. - It's so funny, it's so funny. - Oh my goodness. - At the head tilt. (laughs) 'Cause you guys, it's like this. - Yeah, all the, every time. - You have to be watching one video to see that. - Yeah, yeah, sorry. You have to be watching one video to see that. - He just sits forward in his fingers together. - Yeah. - It's like, you know, starts talking bad about people immediately. - Of course. - What a fun guy. - Yeah, fun guy. - We're gonna look back on this episode 'cause it'll be after the election and we'll just be like, man, or we'll be very happy. - Oh, after the election. - Yeah, like, eventually the election will happen and somebody's gonna be listening to this point. They really thought he would win. (laughs) And it's like, you know. Or they'll say, who's Trump? Maybe that's gonna be a thing where no one knows who he is eventually. - Oh man. - I don't know if that's possible. - So what do you guys think? Do you think he's gonna win? (laughs) - Who did you quote in the comments? (laughs) - Tell me what you're quoting. - We're gonna, we're gonna come back to the comments. - We're gonna give you a quest, yeah. (laughs) - We're gonna send you a comment or-- - Of course, a full circle right there. That's great. (laughs) - But hey, if you're listening to this, just put a comment in. Let us know what you wanna hear. Let's talk about for next week. - Very political this episode. If you want more politics, let us know. - Yeah, Bill can do a lot of politics. (laughs) - I'm not a full of questions. - Right. - But yeah, hit the like button, hit the follow button. You know, follow us on all of our streaming platforms with audio. But, you know, I don't know why I go try to list all of them, but we got all of them. We got a bunch of them, Apple Music, Spotify, Pandora. Oh, we're on Pandora, I forgot. - Yeah, Google Podcast, no. 'Cause they're shut down. - They're shut down. Yeah. - That's the piece. - Too bad. - Everybody uses Spotify anyway though. - Yeah, Spotify and Amazon Music, we're on that. And we're on Facebook, so if you wanna watch us on the video, Facebook is where to do it at. - Sure. - So hit the follow button there and see us whenever we jump on Wednesdays. We will see you guys next week. Have a good night. - See you everybody. (upbeat music) (upbeat music) [BLANK_AUDIO]