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The Perspective Podcast

The Soft launch

Broadcast on:
15 Oct 2024
Audio Format:
other

I'm very sure my high school is like, oh my gosh, I wish I was kidding. Okay, well how was everyone's weekend? Like overall, did you guys do anything fun? I just worked the whole weekend. I worked and then I went out on Saturday, I didn't, I had to stay in OKC. I just saw, I just, no, I just picked, I closed my eyes and I pictured whatever it looked like in Norman and I couldn't drive back. How was it? I was going out. It was good. The lines were, no, right when I got there a fight happened right next to me. The dude was like, coked out, like his eyes were like, oh my gosh. And he just started swinging like at random people and at one point he started swinging at me and I was just like, I'm a girl, like where are you swinging at me? Did they talk about what they were fighting? Huh? Did they talk about what they were fighting about? No, so I know the guy, and then my friend knows the guy too because he stole $80 from her. Yeah, so he was like trying to cut the line because you know, Logan's lines are really bad right now because of game days and stuff. So I tried to cut the line because we were-- He got enough fight for that. Yeah. Because the guy behind us was like, hey, just like go to the back so that he just started swinging. Oh, no way. Yeah, he literally started swinging. At least he's doing what everyone's thinking. Yeah. Yeah. I hate those lines. I always try to like stand to the side and like really nonchalant, like I don't want to go in and then they ask me if I want to go in and I'm like, okay, yeah, yeah, because what at least what Loki's does is at least it's packed in there. When you go to like anywhere else, it's like fucking empty inside and there's like a long ass line. I'm like, what? Why is there a line? Like, why is there a line? Why is everyone in Loki's? There's no big question. I loved when everyone was in heist. Yeah, I went to heist too. It was so scary. Yeah. The only thing about Loki's is they're like it's just so old in there and like they're freaking country music and I just can't. You know, I heard, I heard they opened up two more bars. The wagon. The wagon. Did you go to go? No. My friend works there though. Oh, she does. Yeah. Yeah. She works at Luka too. Does she even work at the wagon anymore because last game day she was wearing at the porch? Oh, no, she that it's because a porch owner owns both. Yeah, so he like puts both of the stands in front. Okay. That makes a lot more sense. I was like, dang, she switched fast. I guess it wasn't fun. Oh, no. Who's the owner Jason? Yeah. Jason on both of them. Shout out Jason. Shout out. Maybe we could get sponsored by the porch actually. Yeah. You would. You want to get sponsored by the porch. I think it would be so many. If y'all listen to this, you get a free drink. Give free jello shui. No jello shos there? You just code the perspective. That's good, really. You guys think we should be the real perspective or the perspective? I thought you put the real and like the account description for like just like the official. What is the name because we kind of do the perspective. We're just like the real. I'm fine with whichever. What's the perspective? I don't know. I just feel like the real perspective is like two, two, one, two, two, one, two, two, two, two, two, two, two, two, two, two, two. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Let's get into it. How was your weekend? Are we recording? Yeah. Oh, we are. We are. - Oh, okay. - When I was starting talking about the porch, I turned it on, so it would be really natural. - Oh, okay, that was like five seconds ago. - Yeah. - I was like, what if I said, on record? Okay. - Are we still going? - Yeah. - That's a game. - Just a little ASMR break. - I don't have nails. (laughing) (laughing) - That was really satisfying. - Okay, Gabriel, tell us about your morning. What did that look like for you? Getting up for our first podcast. - I just, I got it up, took a shower, and then I drove here. Probably got up at like 9.15, 9.30. - That's nice. - Oh, do you look close? - Uh, I live over at the Avenue. - Oh, okay, yeah. - Bleep. (laughing) (bell ringing) - Why does I get a bleep? - I don't know. What if like, you get to stop or something, and then what's-- - Will you say it again? - Yeah, I live at the, (bell ringing) - There we go. - There we go. - Ah, now you'll never know. (laughing) You can't go find him, sorry. Try to find him on campus. - No, but I've had a good morning. - That's good. - How 'bout you guys? - Oh my God, we're matching. - We are matching waters. - Oh my God. (laughing) - You both have an essential water. That one's good. That one has a lot of nutrition in it. - Where's your Stanley? - I don't really-- - Yeah, where's your Stanley? - Okay, if I'm being so honest, I, my like smaller, less like more of a child size one, is dirty. And I didn't want to clean it this morning. And so I just, when I stopped at 7/11 for a red bull, I just got water ponholes. (laughing) Some days I just don't have the energy to carry it. You know what I'm saying? - Yeah. - If I don't like really need it, if I'm not gonna be at work all the live long day. - That's why I don't want to carry one around the wintertime because of my hands are gonna get cold. - Oh yeah, I don't carry mine in the wintertime. Is it Stanley? - Yeah. (laughing) - No, we have class today, don't we? - We have class today. - Yeah, I wonder what we're gonna talk about. - I need, we need to do the, whatever. I'll talk about it later. - No. - Let's get into the topics. I forget we're doing this for a class. I know. Okay, y'all. So this weekend, this weekend for me had a lot of, I had a lot of change this weekend. Oh, oh, indeed, indeed. It was, - I never know how much I want to say on here. You know what I mean? Like who's listening to it? I guess people, 'cause we're putting it out. The 12 followers we have right now. - We have 12. - Oh my gosh, to our 12 followers, thank you so much. I thought we had four and it was us. - We have 12. - We have 12. - Yeah, wow. - We're growing. - We're growing. - We're growing. - Expedentially, actually, that's amazing. - We're in my rear zone. - 12 followers. - You guys are gonna go to the top with us. (laughing) - Love you. - I love you. - Like 24. (laughing) - When we're at 50 followers, you guys are gonna be thankful. - Thank you. We're one of the first. - Yeah, I totally agree. - But, anywho, welcome to the first podcast. This is the real, this is Lauren signing in. - Huh? - Oh, I'm sorry. Oh, shoot, okay, hold on. - No. - This is the perspective. (laughing) Sorry, let me do it again, so there's no laughing, okay. This is the perspective Lauren signing in. - Shelby signing in. - Sia signing in. - Gabriel signing in. - That just made me so emotional. (laughing) - Okay. - Okay. So, I'm Lauren. I feel like we should kind of introduce ourselves, you know. - Yeah. - Like take on who we are. I'm Lauren. We're all students at the University of Oklahoma. I started here as a freshman. I actually came in as a psychology major and I switched my major probably like four times. I was psychology, advertising, CMP. And so, I thought you were advertising. No, I'm CMP. But I was advertising for a week. - Oh. - It was, my advisor was so mad at me. I like asked her to switch my classes, all of them, twice. In two weeks. But it all worked out for the best. I'm staying in CMP, but we all met because we were in a social media marketing class together by the grace of God. I was standing outside of the class on the first day and I see this right ahead. I see her finally. Oh my God. And then we started talking. I can't remember what we started talking about. - Like complimented your outfit. - To comment in my outfit. - Okay, yeah. - I thought I had a fire fit. - I had to just ask someone like from the opposite side of first to come help me find my class that I got out there. And then she goes, "Is this social media marketing?" (laughing) They're like, "Yes ma'am." (laughing) - So we sit down in the class together and then guess who walks in. - Oh my God. - A new hot member enters the via. (laughing) The via. Gabriel comes and sits down on the left. We all turn in our heads at the same time. Who's that man? (laughing) Will you please be in our podcast project? (laughing) - And he was right at that day for the rest of his life. - He was like, "Sure." (laughing) - So she's a little back on how he met. (laughing) - That was a good one. - You guys want to introduce yourselves? - Oh, okay. - I'm Shelby, I'm a senior this year. So ready to graduate. I am majoring in marketing and-- (laughing) - I know you were a senior. - Yeah. - Oh my goodness. - What are you? - I'm a junior. - Oh, okay. - But you just were saying that you changed your major a lot too, so. - Oh yeah, I'm indecisive. (laughing) - I am marketing major and then I have a minor in digital marketing and I really want to do something fashion after I graduate. Twins. Twins. - Where have you been? - Shut up. (laughing) ♪ Nobody knows me like you do ♪ - That was so good. - Let me throw a harmonizing. - Oh, is it me now? - Yeah, go go. - Hi, I'm Sia. I'm a junior. I'm majoring in marketing and then I have a, well, on the works, a minor in fashion studies and then I'm going in a fashion too. - And I am Gabriel. I am a junior. This is my second year here and I'm a business marketing major. - Where did you transfer from? - So I started my freshman year in 2019 at Texas State and then, 'cause I was playing baseball there and then COVID happened. - Oh, wow. - And then I went to two different community colleges we heard like Juicos and then I went to UTA for one semester. Then I took a gap year. - What's UTA Arlington? - Yeah, UTA, 'cause I'm from like the Dallas area. I went to UTA for one semester and then I took a gap year and did an internship at Disney and then I came back and now I-- - Yeah, can we hear a little bit about that? - So have you guys been to Disney before? - Do you know like how there's like different parks? So I was working at Epcot and so Epcot, there's like, what's your called? They have like different countries with like restaurants and like shops you can go to and it's like themed. - Oh, around the world? - Yeah, so I was working in Mexico. - Oh, that's so cool, sorry. - 'Cause there was a, like inside like Mexico there's like a small boat ride that was like working on that. So I would like people into the boats and then I would send the boats off and make sure everything was like safe and all that. I did that for eight months and that was fun for a little bit and then it didn't get so much fun. - Oh, I know. - Wait, I've heard T, was it part of the Disney college program 'cause I've heard lots of T about-- - Yeah, there's a Disney college program? - Yeah, I didn't know about that either. - It's like Gabe can obviously, he literally experienced it so he could explain it better but I've heard a lot of like T on TikTok about like people having bad experiences and then I don't know. - Oh yeah, 'cause so it's like if you're a college student you can apply for it and it's just like an internship and like they pay you for it but you have to be in college to do it. And so there's like a, so there's like dorms but they're not like dorms or apartments or like they're apartments but they're like most like mainly dorms so they can like check on you and stuff and you can't have like certain things in them. But yes, I remember there was like a lot of people so there was like four stories I've heard so like people were like, I mean I don't know how far I can get into it but like there are people killing themselves. - Oh, oh my God. - And then there was like a lot like, the place was like sketchy as hell. Like there was like people doing that, there was like a lot of like essay. - Oh my God. - Yeah, no. And then like there would be parties there and like people would get like roof feet at the parties. - Oh my gosh. - Yeah, no. - Is that what you heard on TikTok? - No, like I heard like bad experiences with people like not getting like good accommodations or like having their like shit. Oh, they're having their crap. Oopsies. Like gone through like in their dorms like having their privacy invaded or but that's horrible. Like that's. - So yes, that was part of it and like there's people I know that have like really bad roommates so like roommates like threatening to kill each other and then. - Holy crap. - Yeah, 'cause you so if you go into it you can pick if you want a roommate or you can go into it like blind. And like the like housing they have is so you can either get like a two by two. So it's two bedrooms, two bathrooms where you share a bedroom with someone. Like you're in the same like you sleep in the same room. There's like two bedrooms and then there's like a living room in the middle. And then the other one you could get would be like you had your own bedroom and bathroom but it was like at random so you couldn't pick. But there were people so I had to like room with someone so I was like rooming with or I shared a room with someone which thankfully like he wasn't too bad but there was people that had like really bad roommates and just like you would go and like you would complain like the front office and it'd be like we can't do anything or like they wouldn't do anything. - If someone like they're gonna kill me in my room I'm like what? - Cool and like I don't. 'Cause I think there was like loopholes because there was I know one person she was like I think she was 19 or 20 and her roommate was like 45. - Oh my God. - Yeah now there was like some really like weird shit that happened or weird stuff. - Oh my gosh you should do like an interview or something because that's tea that's horrible but also like that stuff needs to be like addressed publicly so that that doesn't happen 'cause that's-- - But he doesn't he look, he does a lot of-- - Now there's like a lot of like-- - Yeah like that's Disney cruises people go missing all the time. - Okay I haven't even heard about that. - Oh that's a really big thing too. - You know 'cause that's just with like the college program there was like within the parks there was like a whole another like a lot of the people here that worked there are not-- - Make use of all the ways here you'll kill me. - So the program is called Magic is Within You? - No it's called the Disney college program. - Disney college program. Oh yeah, Disney college program or Land of Florida? - Yeah. - I recently heard something about Disney that there was this guy who like for his anniversary trip or something him and his wife went and visited Disney and Epcot and she had like some kind of really severe sensitive food allergy and part of their like trip had accommodations for her food allergies and but still at every restaurant they were obviously like double checking and being like this is allergen free this is safe right? And so obviously they were told guess and his wife ended up dying from an allergic reaction at the park and like a few years later he decides to pursue legal action and Disney's response back to him has anyone else heard about this? - Yeah. - Disney's response back to him for him like suing them was basically that since he signed up for a free trial of Disney plus in like 2020 in the fine print it like means that basically Disney is safe from lawsuit from him because his wife died at the park because he signed up for this free trial of Disney plus in 2020. - That's weird stuff? - Yeah, because apparently like in I need to look it up. - It's like in the terms and conditions for like signing up for a Disney plus account like even if you're just doing like a free trial there's something in there where it's like all of like Disney's like the parks and like everything it's like you can't sue them or like you agree not to sue them over like anything. But I'm pretty sure like Disney came out and said like oh we're like good people, we're not gonna we're gonna let them sue us because like we messed up but they were like gonna push for that originally and then everyone knew it. - I wonder why not just pay. That's, that just makes them look so bad. - Yeah, no I think that's why they went back on it 'cause a lot of the stuff. - Oh they went back on it? - Yeah, 'cause like I remember hearing, 'cause there was one 'cause that I think it was like a resort the they had like a pool area that was like designed to be a beach so there was like a lagoon and then like a sand you can walk up to. But like in Florida there's like issues with alligators. So this was like a few years ago there was a, it was like a little kid he ended up dying 'cause he got eaten by an alligator. - At Disney? - Yeah, like at the resort and then the mother I think is going to sue Disney but then like they went back and like through security and like looked at the footage and I think they found out that like the mom pushed the kid. (gasps) - Oh. - So they kinda like said hey if you wanna like go through with this just to let you know like we have like footage or we can like. - Oh. - So like there's like a lot of stuff like that. - She pushed her own child into the crocodile? - That was like the real part. - And then just to sue them and get money, that's insane. - Yeah no. - Wow. - That guy's name that tried to sue Disney over his wife's death is Jeffrey Picolo. He filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Disney and the owners of the restaurant after his wife died in 2023 from a severe allergic reaction following a meal at Disney World in Florida. Oh yeah, I says Disney backpedals on saying man can't sue over wife's death. He was seeking more than $50,000 in damages. - That's not a lot. - That's not a lot honestly. - For death. - For Disney. - Like if your wife dies all you were asking for is $50,000. - That's all he was asking. - That might have been like the cost of it. - They've been in a lot of. - Like it would have been. - They're always in a lot of lawsuits but they're in a lawsuit right now over there. What is it? They're alliteration like they're drawing of Mickey Mouse. And a couple other cartoons coming up on their 70 years. And there's a lot of like, if they don't pay, I can't, the copyright, it's coming up. - Well so I think the way like that works is you can like file like a copyright on like a character or like an IP or something. But then I think like after 70 years it becomes public domain. So like, 'cause you guys remember like a few years ago, I forgot what it was called. It was like a Winnie the Pooh like horror movie. Yeah so like all those like started coming out because Winnie the Pooh became a public domain. Do I think. - And I think Disney's like did it like that. Disney like went back on a couple of things 'cause of that. - Yeah they weren't a fan of it 'cause they were just like, let me see. 'Cause I know like there's a list. - It was like a raunchy. - Yeah no it was like Winnie the Pooh was like killing kids at some point. - Oh my God. And I can't, they did something. I think they sued or something like that. They did something with it to take you down. - Oh wait, so it's already public Mickey Mouse's likeness from like the, you know classic 1920s cartoon of him like driving the steamboat. You know what I'm talking about? - Steamboat Mickey Mouse, yeah. - Yeah. - That likeness of him is free from copyright. So that's considered public domain now and that was as of January 1st of this year. - I forgot 'cause I think there's like, 'cause there's Mickey Mouse and then there's like Steamboat Willie. - Yeah, so it says the earliest versions of Mickey and Minnie Mouse entered the public domain on January 1st, 2024. So I guess the other like faces of Mickey Mouse or like eras are still not expired. - Yeah, they're still coming. 'Cause I know there's like a list 'cause I think it was like pretty sure like Superman was like another like name that was gonna go into public domain soon. But there was like a lot that were gonna go in which I know that should be interesting to see. - No, but when that like, Winnie the Poohorn movie came out, I remember seeing the trailer for it and being like, is that like made by Disney? Like that's weird, that Disney would like allow that but that makes sense now. - Dude, imagine Disney just went 180 and just allowed all of this new type of like or rated things to come into their play with all their characters. I think that would be cool. I'm sick of seeing Disney so kid friendly all the time 'cause just like tell the truth, they haven't been kid friendly for generations and generations. Like Disney has probably the most scandals out of every corporation and it's all bad 'cause it's like their whole idea is that they're catered towards children and then everything they do is against that type of plugin which is weird. So I'm like, you might as well just branch off of it. I think like just tell the truth at that point. Like be the next to you after. - Oh yeah. - And the key mouse you after. - God. - Can you imagine? - Yes. - That scares me, that's from my nightmares bro. Okay, shall we get into our topic for today? - That's 30 minutes later and-- - I kind of like us just branching off of our like conversation. We could just just intro episode. - Yeah, we could like also have random discussions at the beginning and then get into our main topic. - Okay. I mean, that works. - Unless you don't wanna talk about that. - I was just, I was loving how it was kind of like just flowing off conversation and it was pretty, it was very educational too. - No, I feel like it was. Do we wanna keep going? - I think we should keep going. - Okay. - 'Cause I think if we do this, it'll be a little less like natural. - Okay. - Which is fine. - If we happen to stumble onto Love Island again, I sense, yeah, this like article that came out over the weekend about like a bunch of old contestants that have just come out being like the show producers starved us, like abused us. - Yeah, I love this whole thing. - This whole thing, let me look at that. - Well, yeah, let's take a look at that. (laughing) That's insane. Let's see how long ago they stopped the last season. - Yeah, it says contestants say that producers deprived them of food and sleep, preyed on their anxieties and refused to let them quit. I'm like wondering if that was for this season or if it was for like another season? 'Cause the ones like from this season like look perfectly fine. Like I feel like they wouldn't none of them would wanna go through that, you know? - Wait, how many seasons are they on? - I think there's like upcoming will be seven. This is 11, number of series, yeah, 11, reality show. For the people that don't know, they've got five, they've got 10 on IMDB and it's a group of single people who moved to a luxury villa in the hope of fighting love in the summer of their life. Throughout the series, there are shocks, twists and surprise announcements that will test the relationships between the islanders to remain in their luxury paradise and stand a chance of winning. It's giving paradise run. What is that, do you know what that show is? Like the cartoon show? - Total drama. - Total drama islands, thank you. - Total drama island, I ate that crap up when I was a kid. - It's good. - Can anybody else watch that? I know you did. - I loved that show. It's on Netflix. - You did. - It was just the one, right? Earlier two. - There might be two versions. - I feel like they might've come out with like one of those random TV shows turned into a movie type situations. You remember how they did that with like Wizards of Waverly Place, like just came out with like a random movie? - I feel like they all did that. - The Good Luck Charlie Christmas is. - That was my favorite, I still watch that. - Okay, so our next venture is making a Total Drama Island reality show. It's a Ronald Love Island. - That would be a good podcast name, Total Drama Island. Trademarked. - Easy. - Yeah, I didn't know that. You could just trademark stuff if it's not in the same vicinity of what you're doing. Like if it's a show, we can still do Total Drama Island 'cause it's a podcast, it's different. - Well, unless they have like. - And then like at that point, we can't like go into a TV show after this. - Yeah, we can't remember a TV show, thank you. - It's true. - Okay, I guess we're just the perspective. (laughing) - All right, so when did the season come out? Like did it just come out? - Also, is it live? Like how do they do it? Like do they tape all of it and then release it all? Or is it what? - The way it works is, to my knowledge, they tape it the day of, like we tape today. The producers take all the footage and they edit tomorrow and they post it the next day and they keep doing that every single day. So it's like, their turnaround is basically 24 hours when they, from they post to like. - Oh wow. - It's very fast, yeah. - I think the, 'cause the only other one I know is Sebastian or I think Dave filming all at once, 'cause I know like leaks are a thing with that one. The more like before the season came out, like everyone was already talking about like who won, or like who ended up like getting together. - I wonder why everyone's so infactuated with watching people get together and shows like this. They're so popular. - Yeah, I feel like probably here like a good couple of years, like all TV's just gonna be a reality TV. 'Cause I don't, especially just like stuff like this, like that's all you hear. Even like guys, like they were like, even guys are obsessed with them like. - I was on a date one time and they asked to watch two out to handle in the way that I looked at them was insane. So I'd be like, oh no. - Because like they all just started coming out like recently too, right? 'Cause I feel like they, like now there's all these like spin offs and like different versions of like the same thing. - Yeah, I feel like growing up like, 'cause my sister is older than me, she would always just like watch like the bachelorette and stuff like that. Now is just like all of these like love Island, the two out to handle, isn't there like another one? - Probably is. - There's a lot. - And I feel like they're not even like, at the beginning they were so like romance based. And like pulled you in with the idea of like, this like beautiful like, you know, couple, having this like ideal relationship. But like now like even with the Bachelor in Bachelorette, I know that franchise is getting a lot of backlash right now, especially after I think the most recent season of the bachelorette with Jen Tran, I think that's her name. She's the first Asian American woman to be on the bachelorette, to be the bachelorette. And basically got humiliated on her season. I don't know if any of you guys watch the bachelorette. I don't. I've just seen this like based on Instagram and TikTok. But basically the guy that ended up getting to like the finale and like basically winning the show, like just did it for the clout, did it for like the publicity, I guess. And like after the show basically, it was just like, I don't like you anymore. Oh, no, but and then they like made her come back for like the tell all and made him come back. And like they like set together, you know, like and did this and the whole time it's just so hard to watch 'cause she just looks like she's like, oh my God, you just laughing? Sorry. (laughing) No, I found the failure on it. She just looks like. Wait, can you show us? Make sure you save it. Oh my God, like that's horrible. What a piece of, what a piece of (beeping) Why would you go on a show like that and not even have like an open mindset? I feel like to probably love, that's horrid. And bad for him too, now what? Now he just has that publicity. I would never get with him, yeah. - I felt like that was like almost half, if not more of like all the seasons was like they never panned out or they would like always break up after the facts. And then like come back to you like another season. - You win money on the Bachelor? - Oh, I don't think so. I feel like the, you're like reward quotation marks. I know you can't see me doing this, but it's like the social media following and like the brand deals and all of that that they get from the show. - Yeah, because the Love Island, like the three girls are like the most popular in their men. Now they're like kind of a whole like sponsorship and like they were on the ads for Duncan. Have you guys seen the donuts? - Yeah, Duncan donuts. Yeah, like they have like this whole like new ad. So like that, like they're at everything now, like New York Fashion Week and everything. So I basically like, they're like perfectly fine now. Like they're all like celebrities are all gonna get into everything. So I think that's also why they go onto it because all the other girls like, I don't really know any of them. I just know those three. - Okay, somebody else find out how many couples, like successful couples at the beginning, there has been in the bachelorette and bachelor and bachelor in paradise because only 27 couples are currently still together. So what is that out of? I wanna know. Like how many couples have been made on that show versus how many are still together? - Oh, okay. They always end up breaking up though. 'Cause even when I had like followed this girl that used to be on Love Island and I think her and her man lasted a good three months. 'Cause social media has always got to play an aspect in relationships with your celebrity. - Oh, absolutely. Especially if you're like on one of those shows where your whole brand is based on your relationship and like you're a dynamic between each other. - Some people in social media are freaking crazy though. Like I'll see the comments and they're like, we want her to die, like we want him to die. Like she should be with him, she should be with that. - And you don't even know the person. Like you're just becoming obsessed. - I think that's why a lot, like also like even like actors and stuff like that. None of their relationships ever work out 'cause that's all they see. And then obviously they probably fight over it too. - That's like the jalena. - I was just thinking the exact same thing. - Immediately takes me there. - Those like Selena, I like Selena Gomez, but like die hard Selena fans. I see them in the comments of like Hayley Bieber's posts. If I was Hayley, I would honestly be like so depressed. And especially with the baby now, like oh, there's so many bad clips right now. - Yeah. - Oh my God, I'm so sorry, but every time I think of Justin Bieber and Hayley Bieber, all I can see in my mind is that like paparazzi video that went viral of them where he's like getting in the suburban and he like shuts the door like her. And like she like falls or something. And he like, he doesn't even turn around. She just like gets up. - Or he like skateboards away from her. There's so many skateboards away. - No, but that dude is so like, he like doesn't give like a single like care in the world and he like, yeah. So anywhere like he goes like, he looks just like so like disgusting. Like you'll wear like a tank top and just like big pants. - The like viral, the picture of them that went viral and turned into a meme of her wearing like, you know, that like red dress and the red heels and she has like the sheaks like back. - I think it was for her road. - Yeah. - No, it was for the road launch. And he's like in ripped sweatshorts. Like his butt is like showing because they're bagging solo. Like his oversized t-shirt, like one of his Drew beanies. Do you know what I'm talking about? - You know what? That's actually a really good perspective because I was having a conversation with somebody this weekend and they know a lot of famous people like they know like a Taika and people like that in that world. - Oh my God. - Oh my God. (laughing) - Let me know. - And he does like art and music for all these type of people. And so he was telling me about having a lot of money and kind of like what that does to your mindset. Cause he said that like, he was explaining it as all these Disney Channel stars and people that blow up on Vine and people that go on YouTube, and they make a lot of money, like Emma Chamberlain. They say whenever you make that amount of money where you don't have to worry anymore about where it's gonna come from, you don't have to keep going up. Like you normally, you just like are frozen in that, you know, time span of your life, like H-wise. It's like if you get a lot of money, yeah, maturity wise, exactly. Like if you get money like six, it's gonna be a lot harder for you to meet the standards and like comprehend things the way other people do. People will look at you more like your childish, but like you really, like this way Disney Channel stars are all kind of fucked cause it just doesn't. Like I watched, oh my gosh, I watched Demi Lovato's. She's like four or five documentaries about herself and they're all on YouTube. - Yeah, like even when I- - They're so interesting. - Anytime I think of her, I always like my mind will always go back to her being like a little like girl on Disney. Like I don't like- - I don't like- - Did anyone watch Camperall? - Oh God. - Yes. - I was like such a die-hard supporter of that show when I was little. Like I just loved Camperall and now when I see clips of it, I like physically cringe. - Yeah, I guess I'm bursing like why would I watch that? - I'm like why would I like that? - The acting was just really bad. - No, like that. I just immediately visualize that like clapping scene where they're like walking through the woods doing like the- (laughing) - That's just so embarrassing. - I think it just shows how much too like TV has changed and like acting has changed. 'Cause back then, that was good. Honestly, if I watched any good-look Charlie, see I would still be impressed with this day. 'Cause like what they were working with was nothing. And those, the plots of Disney shows, at that point in time, like the good-look Charlie, there was it's a wavily place and they were like family oriented. Those were, I think those were genius. Dog with the blog, I mean come on. - Yeah. - Who thought of that? - Who thought of that? - That was a good show. - The plots are very impressive. Like Amy having like 17,000 children. - Oh, with Bob. - Bob. - He just has an exterminator. Like it was hilarious. It was so funny. - Have you guys, this is so off topic, but have you seen like the mom, the actress that plays the mom Amy? Like have you guys seen her like on social media anywhere else from good-look Charlie? - No, wait, what? - Like have you seen the actresses social medias? Like the actual actresses? Like what, like videos you post and stuff? - I'm gonna look Charlie. - Yes. - What, the Charlie? - No, the mom Amy. - Oh, Amy? - No. - Okay, so she is like... - It's Justin. - The Justin. - No, I see videos of her all the time, but she's like the ultimate Karen. Like I see videos post it. Like that she posts on her like Twitter or whatever, or Facebook. - Trump supporter. - No, that we hate in this room. (laughing) - No, but I've just heard her say like she's anti-vax. I'm pretty sure like she's done like an anti-vax. And I'm just like, not Amy. - No, Amy. - No, Amy. - Was it? - Was Amy a nurse? On the show? - Yeah, she was. - She was. Well, who's the main character? Like the sister? - Bridget Menler, who's like a genius. She has like a PhD now from MIT. - Mm-hmm. - She like... - She's getting another doctor, I think. - She's started her own business, I'm pretty sure. Like, dang. - Good for her. Did you see wizards away from places like making like a spin-off now? - No. - I did see that. - Yeah. - What? - Like now they'll like, - Oh, we need to look this up. - Like they'll have kids and like the kids are wizards. Like I think Selena is gonna be on there for a couple of episodes. But yeah, I love her for doing that. She always does stuff like that too. - 'Cause it's her and the brother. - Yeah, it's her and the brother. Justin, because I'm pretty sure the younger one like Jake Tios. I think he's like a girl guy like now. Like I don't think he's like... - I think he has something going on there. - Yeah, I don't think he's doin' too well in life. - I feel like that happens to a lot of Disney stars though. I've seen a couple go downhill after a couple of. - Oh yeah now. - Like Justin turned one down from when he first was famous. - 'Cause it was him and then what wasn't Disney but who was the main kid and... - You know what's Noah Sinzneo in it too? Young Noah Sinzneo was in which is a movie place. - Probably he was in Austin and now. - Oh wait, no, I'm sorry. - The fosters. - Okay, can we just look at... - Okay, the actor's name is Lee Ann Baker. Lee Allen Baker. Please, you guys, I just want your initial reaction to her feet, okay, on her Instagram that she posts. - Her feet. - Her feet. - I thought you said her feet. - Oh my God. (laughing) - What if she was selling feet pics? That would be horrible. Okay. - Oh, mama's bad, this is so her. - She's selling character, I'm sorry. - The one in the middle right there? - People cannot be canceled. Honestly, I fuck with their perspective. - The power of (beep) your truth. Sounds like a pyramid scheme. (laughing) - Speaking of truth. Anyways, but. (laughing) - I watched this video, it was a reaction video. Which, I'm a very big fan of reaction videos. I like to watch it with somebody else, even if it's online. And I watched a lot of Cody comb. - Mm-hmm. - He's had a lot of stuff going on recently with Tana Mojo and stuff that happened at VidCon back in the day. But besides the point, I really enjoy his videos. And he has this video where he's reacting with his friend, Noel. And they're watching this young LA couple. It's like a little video that they made together, it's like 29 minutes long. And it's so, it's like a little pretentious video of their love. And it's like, we met at Whole Foods. - Oh. - He was buying celery, and I was buying Rose. Now we're just paying. And we moved in. Like, the, okay, look, KAS war. It was, yeah, it was just, like, all of the ways in which they were in love were just so, like, kind of like delusional. Because they didn't have to, they don't have to worry about anything. They can just be in love, you know? The pay bills. It's like all of that, she got handed to them. But, Cody code does a really good job of like, watching it, and then, I feel like, paving the conversation. And he's on it a lot of heat recently. I feel like we're in a hot topic right now. - Should we talk about it? - Let's talk about it. I don't know much about it, but. - That's why we have the internet. - Oh, sorry. (audience cheering) - So, that's a lot of that. (audience chattering) - Okay, so, okay. I don't even know what this guy does. Like, seeing a picture of him, I don't even recognize him. So, Lauren, can you tell us, like, where he came from? Like, do you know, like, what his, like-- - Cody code? - Yeah, like, what are his videos about? What does he do? - Oh, Cody code is a mostly reaction channel on YouTube, and he has two channels. He has Cody code and Cody code two. Cody code two also has a lot of reaction videos, but some of it is more in person or videos with his wife Kelsey. He also has a newborn baby, his wife Kelsey, and they've been together as long as I've been watching them. And I think I started watching them whenever I was watching Jenna Marbles, so I was definitely, like, newly 13. It's been a long, he's been on YouTube for a very long time. I'm gonna look it up. It was like his big video, I remember, like, back in the day. It was like one of the reaction ones, but it was the one with, like, the tapes. - Maddie Smokes. - Maddie Smokes, that's what it was. - I need to. - Yeah, Maddie Smokes, it was a big reaction video. He's been on YouTube since 2014, and he still is. His genre is commentary comedy, and he basically watches all types of different videos, and he has, like, some things that he sticks with. Like, he'll watch the cut videos, where they'll, like, go on little dates, and then they have the button in between them. It's called the button. That's a big thing. He watches, he has something called that's cringe, and that's where a lot of his, like, when people disagree with him, I feel like they think it's bullying, and he does, like, if that's cringe, and he watches these videos, people post online, and he reacts to them, and normally they are cringing, so it's like, it's not like he's bullying them, but it's like, it's the bit of the joke, for sure. - Okay, but you definitely can't cancel just one person for that, because so many people do that. Like, half of my TikTok is creators doing that, like, showing these just bizarre videos. - Right, right. - So I would otherwise never show up on my free page. - And it's just popular. Like, that's why I think he gets the most. He's getting a lot of heat right now for it, but that's another thing I don't understand about cancel culture, because where was that energy whenever it was going on? Not everyone's to be woke, but I think it's kind of, like, ironic that we wanna, like, oh, you did this wrong in 2014, and now you need to be canceled now. So we're basically, like, I think it's very, it doesn't help growth. Like, it doesn't help the idea of growth. It'd be like, oh, it's been 13 years since you did this, but you need to have, like, you need to go down for it right now. That doesn't make sense to me. - Yeah, that does not make sense. I feel like that always happens. - Wait, he's not, sorry, he's not getting canceled for the videos, right? - No, it's so-- - It's over now. - Yeah, you wanna explain that? - Yeah. - So, does everyone know who Tana Mojo is? That's how you say it. - Mojo. (laughs) That's how you say her last name? - Mm, Tana Mojo. - That's how you say her last name. - Yeah. - Okay. - Oh, Shelby really went into the real pronunciation. (laughs) (laughing) - Well, that's what it says. (laughing) - Tana Mojo. (laughing) - Oh my god! (laughing) - Is Tana Mojo on a hue? - Yeah. - What's she doing? What is she doing? Okay, continuing. - Basically, so she has her podcast called "Canceled" and then they just, and there's also, there's also-- (laughing) Yeah, do you need a break? (laughing) - She just loves you. - I was like, I was like, I was like, I don't know who that is. (laughing) - Tana Mojo. - Yeah. (laughing) (laughing) - Okay, continuing. - Yeah, her podcast. - Okay, her podcast, which is called "Canceled." Actually, they did like a tour together, which is also T because apparently-- - Like her podcast on a tour? - Yeah. - Oh. - Wait, her and Cody Ko did a tour? - No, her podcast in a tour. - Her podcast in a tour, right? - Yeah, which she co-hosts with Brooke Schofield, who is also canceled recently. - Oh yeah, I saw that. - Like all the things that have been going on. - Which, I'll wait and talk about that in a minute, but basically the drama with Cody Ko is that at one of her live recordings of her podcasts, she basically said that she slept with Cody Ko when she was 17, so he would have been 25. - Oh, I did, I've heard of those too. - 17, 20. - And she said that in response to a question from an audience member. - Whoa, you had to get the calculator out. - That's eight years. (laughing) - Gabe was like, "You got me kidding me?" - Well no, 'cause I was in my head, I said, "Nah, do I have work where that's not right?" (laughing) - That's at the University of Oklahoma, like. - Okay. - This is going off topic a little bit again, but I know we're just developing our conversation, so is it okay? - Everything's okay. - Okay. - We're in podcast mode, we'll just edit. - Basically, so Brooke Schofield, her co-host on the podcast, is getting canceled for some racist tweets of hers, that like resurfaced from a while ago. - Okay, so my continuing on just a branch on that, so she's getting backlash because of the racist tweets coming back then? - Yes. - I think it's like Alex Earl, isn't that happening to her right now too? - Yes, it's happening to her. - Like why are they bringing that back out now though? Like that's what I just don't understand. - Okay, I feel that's like the standoms, like the people that are their huge fans, and then something happens on one end, like the Clinton-Cane thing that just happened with her. - Oh no, no. - All the Clinton-Cane is like, "Oh, bet." It's like you're not gonna hate on Clinton. - Oh no, and then they'll bring you up since that. - The Sedona, does anyone know the Sedona, like, Olivia drama? - No, no. (laughing) - Okay, we're going way too off topic. I'll address that later if we have time. But Brooke Schofield had a bunch of like racist tweets come out, and I'm glad you brought up the Alex Earl thing, because it's happening to so many people right now. But here's the thing, like completely negating whether cancel culture, quote unquote works or not. I wanna know why all of these like prominent influencers, for some reason, had a racist phase where they basically just went online and said all of these things, because that's not normal. - Yeah, that's right. I feel like that happens with a lot of people. I think I know somebody else too. - Yeah, and people like make it normalized. They're like, "Oh, you know, well, "she was raised in the South." They're like, "That's just how it was where I was from." - That or she was young. - It's how it was where I was from, and I didn't blast racist, like, stuff online. That's not normal for somebody to have a racist phase online. Why are these influencers that are so popular? Why are they the ones that have these periods where they were posting a bunch of super racist or offensive stuff on social media that just had no standing. They had no reason to post something like that. - Yeah, why are you mad? What did the Black people do to you? - Literally. - Good question. Even Shane Dawson. I was a huge Shane Dawson fan. - I was a huge Shane Dawson, Jeffree Star. - All of them. I love Shane Dawson's video. - I think I watched Jeffree Star's make a video, but then he tried to scare me. That's understandable. - He's an interesting one. - But, like, where did he go now? Like, I never see him. - Oh, he's living. I follow him on TikTok. He's living in a ranch in, like, Montana or something, and all he posts on TikTok now, are his, like, goats that he has, or his rams. Like, he walks his rams through, like, the stores in the, like, super small town that he lives. - Okay, but, like, where are, like, all of his pink cars then? Did he bring the pink cars? - Yes, he did. - So the rams-- - And they're not rams, they're yaks. I just remember that. - Oh, yeah? - He's obsessed with yaks. Jeffree Star is obsessed with yaks. I'm, like, 90% sure. - What a yack is. - What if he lives in this episode and then came back, 'cause I was, like, he has yaks, and he would be, like, no-- - You already know? Like, what if he-- - Actually, they're not yaks. - Look, so-- - No, what's a yack? - What's a yack? Okay, it is, he does have a yak ranch, and it's called Star Yak Ranch. It has a website. Oh! It's, like, a butcher, he sells meats. - Oh! If he starts a little-- - Interesting! - You can buy your meat. You can source your meat from Jeffree Star, everybody. - Honestly, I know he knows what he's talking about when he comes to meat. - Look at their website. Like, this is what he does now. He was-- - So I have it as makeup. That's a huge industry. Well, makeup is so, like, that's his, uh, what's that expense called when it's, like, already, it's just doing it, and you don't have to do anything for it, and it's just putting money in your bank account? But, like, is it anyone even buying it anymore? - Yeah, that, like-- - It's on shop somewhere. Well, the store is somewhere. - What was it? Star Cosmetics or whatever? - There's so much of it. Yeah, those lips were so popular. There's so much of it. It's definitely-- - And the eyeshadow pose. - The eyeshadow. - It's like when everybody had, like, 15 eyeshadow-- sorry, Gabe, we're kind of good. (laughing) - It's like, go off, queen. - Yeah, they still have the operating website. Oh, yeah. - Nope, for real, look at this. - Oh, God, how do you do it? I'm proud of him. - I didn't think that his brand was still a thing. I thought he just did that. - I thought he just did that. I thought he had a good stuff now. - The ranch is just such a different aspect. - But, okay, going back to our original thing, why do we feel like people that are influencers today or, like, have social influence of some kind? Why are they, like, all have that in common? Were they, like, had a phase when they were younger, like, between 2012 and 2018? Seems to be, like, the ideal-- - It's always 2014, too. - Yeah. Like, why? I know that's, like, a hard question that, like, literally nobody might be able to answer, but it's just been, like, really bothering me lately because, you know, you see somebody every single day that is familiar to you, whether it's through, like, your Instagram feed or scrolling through TikTok. That's somebody's being, like, oh, look at this tweet that they made in, like, blah, blah, blah years ago. And it's just, like, why? - I don't know. I feel like I could see two perspectives of how you look at it because, for me, it's hard because I love Shane Dawson, right? And then all that stuff came out, like, the pedophilia things, the ready cis remarks, the stuff with the animals. Like, there's a lot of aspects of it to where it's, like, almost like, why do we get offended by these people whenever they are not, like, directly into our lives? It's like, you're just watching them. It's just, like, watching TV. Like, why do I give a fuck? I don't care. But when it comes down to it, it's, like, you're right. Like, you look at these people and now they're familiar to your life. And, you know, especially when you were younger, like, 11 watching these-- - Oh, younger ones, like, especially, like, Disney Channel, like, if those two people aren't together, why not? - Yeah. - Like, I was always, like-- - That's your life, especially, like, kids nowadays come out straight out of the room with an iPhone 16. - Yeah. - Like, that's all you see. Like, they literally have dents in their heads because they have headphones on when they're so young and they're not done developing. - Yeah, I'm pretty sure, like, even if you're, like, you'll have, like, an iPad or, like, you'll have some type of tech, like, tech. - You've got to. And in this day and age, like, you would be behind if you didn't. - Yeah. - Which is the saddest part. - You're, like, oh, like, your parents can afford. - Right, but to get back to topic, it's like, I see people, like, Shane Dawson, and I see it from a middle perspective, where it's like, okay, I'm white and I'm black. And so, like, the racism doesn't, like, hit me as hard as maybe it would, like, a darker, complex woman, you know? And so it's something that's like, oh, I've loved him since I was 11. Now I'm 18, and all this racism and stuff like this is coming out, and it's like, oh, he said the N-word, or he said this about black people, or, like, made these jokes, did blackface, whatever. And it's like, for someone like that, that's like, oh, those are like my people, and like, you're doing something, like, against me as an individual, in that sense. So I see, I could see how that's very offensive, and like, that's like a cancelable act, I feel, you know? But there's things that are like, those shouldn't be cancelable acts, and like, what was going on in the world at that time span to where you felt comfortable doing that and putting that out? Was it 'cause the internet was new? And like, we didn't think we could, like, back trace everything when you were, like, so young. But he was also, like, in his 20s. - I'm also thinking-- - Yeah, he's like older. - Is someone taking their time out of their day to go all the way back to 2014 to see what they're saying? Like, that's, how does it come back up, is my real question, 'cause it's so many years ago. - I feel like, usually, like, with people getting canceled, it's always been like, something big happens, like, in their career, like, they sound like a big contractor, they do something massive. - No, definitely. - And then, like, people, like, okay, let's go check, like, all of their, like, social medias, and see what, like, they posted back from, like, 2010, or 2011. - And I feel like that brings in the conversation of revenge-canceling, which I feel like is getting, like, a lot more prominent. I know you guys said you hadn't heard any of this drama, but basically, the rundown is there's this lesbian couple in TikTok that was, like, famous, and they're both influencers. One of them's named Sedona. She actually plays basketball at TCU on their basketball team. She's, like, their best player, I'm pretty sure. And this other influencer named Olivia, and basically, what happened is Olivia came out after their relationship ended, and was, like, basically exposing her for, like, all of this abuse, and, like, things that she did to her, and then, past relationships of Sedona started coming out and being, like, yes, she's abusive, blah, blah. Not, like, a few days after all of that started, like, breaking out, it came out that Olivia, the victim in that relationship, like, a bunch of racist things that she said, like, a few years ago. And so, obviously, like, you know, that's kind of an obvious response from, like, and I don't know if it was Sedona that, like, released that. She probably did. In response. Rose, she's so tall. Sedona is, like, six, seven, and this girl is, like, five foot. No, yeah, show, um, show them a picture, so they can-- Is it, like, really, I think-- I don't know which one is-- I know the basketball player. That isn't Sedona the basketball player, that's hers. Yeah, so the really tall girl, Sedona, and then the girl in the yellow dress, I believe, is Riley, her first girlfriend. If she's abusing that girl, oh my god. But Olivia was the one who originally came out, and then a bunch of other girls started coming out and being, like, I experienced the same thing when I was in a relationship with her or whatever. But I've just seen this, like, weird dynamic shift on social media, where, like, you know, everyone can't shut up about the fact that, oh, Sedona is, like, an abuser, and she plays for TCU basketball, and they're, like, not taking any action, like, on her, getting suspended from the team, like, whatever. There's even, like, a petition somewhere out there where there's, like, hundreds of thousands of signatures to get her removed from the TCU basketball team. Fair enough. You haven't done anything. She is six-seven. That was right. But also-- In Riley's four-nine. Yeah, that's-- Oh, that's a-- That's a little-- That is insane. That's insane. But, like, I don't know. I do it. I'd sign it. Get off the team. Well, apparently, TCU released a statement. That was basically, like, her standing on the team has not changed. Like, we don't care. Basically. Well, TCU considered private. Yes. It's a Christian. It's, like, a private Christian university. It's, I guess, yeah, they created-- Side on. Well, I mean, they don't even-- My view on it was, like, they don't even, as a Christian used a university, probably legitimized her relationship with a woman. So why would the abuse be legitimate? Like, if they don't even recognize the relationship? You know what I'm saying? That's a good point. Yeah. They're, like, they might, like, just view it as drama. Like, that's going to blow over, which, I mean, these kind of things always blow over, and people get away with crap all the time. If that's how we treated athletes, now no one would be playing. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, it's, like, with football. It's, like, how many players have, like, gone-- Uh, what was it? Trying to think how to say it. A domestic charge? Yeah. Like, how many football players have, like, domestic charges? Millions. Did you, like, uh-- Even with, like-- So many. Who was it? Do you guys know, uh, this Sean Watson? Sean Watson? That's how I've heard that. He had, like, a, uh, I think it was, like, an allegation, but I'm pretty sure-- Like, I think, like, they settled. It was, like, kind of, like, confirmed. I don't know, though. That he, like, uh, assaulted, like, their massager-- What? At the team. So, yeah, they, like, get suspended from, like, the league for, like, a few weeks, and then, like, he came back, but-- No one really, like, cares for him. You're talking about the Texas coach, right? No? The Cleveland Brown-- No. Yeah, Cleveland Brown's QB. Okay, edit that part out, 'cause I don't want anybody thinking that the Texas coach-- Okay. And there's a Texas coach named Sean Watson, and I was like-- Ooh! Oh, no, D-Sean. Cleveland. Okay, whoa, that popped up fast. Oh. I don't know what's coming. I don't know, he smells like marijuana. Oh, my God. Like, I don't know, I can smell marijuana. Like, I'm sniffing this mic. Oh, it's sexual harassment lawsuits. Um. It's just motherfucking. Oh, my gosh, we're not laughing at that, just so you guys know. Oh, yeah. That's terrible. And, you know, it's so funny. I was talking about this yesterday also. The football players here, the whole dynamic and the idea of, like, being a collegiate athlete trying to go to a league is-- I wonder what the stat is, but I know it's like four out of 120, the football players, basically. Actually, make it. Of making it into the NFL. Into the NFL, or it might be a larger number, probably 12 out of 120. Football is a lot lower than, like, other sports. Yeah. Because, like, there's no-- Because, like, basketball, you have the G League, which is, like, you can sign with the team, but you can play, like, in their G League, which is, like, their under team. And, like, same with, like, baseball. You have, like, a Meyer League system with, like, three different divisions. Or, like, three different teams underneath, like, the main team. So, they tend to, like, take a lot more players than, like, football. Or, like, baseball and basketball take more than, like, football, usually. It says 1.6% of college football players. We're just insane, because that is, like, every kid's first dream. And the way that they treat the football players, especially at OU. Not to cap on us, but it's good to know that they, literally, their classes are on campus. All their classes are online. They get somebody, like, an advisor that chooses their major most of the time and chooses all of their classes. Wait, I have a question. So, if you don't know that it's totally fine, but do you know if it's, like, the, like, main, like, football players, like, starters? Or, like, people who play most often who get those privileges or all of them? No, it's the whole time. Like, all of them, because they want their whole team to be able to play, and, you know. I do have some football players in some of my classes. Oh, some of the freshmen. Yo, oh, no, not all of the football players. Oh, okay, I just wonder if everyone went by, like... Oh, no, no, I tend to have a couple in mind. I'm sure that it depends. I think it's also just, like, price, though. Like, especially in our, like, before, like, you get your degree candidacy, I think those classes, like, I think that's why they go. Probably now, I don't really see any now. I think, yeah, I see a lot less than I did. Yeah, I see a lot less. 'Cause I used to see them, like, always. Oh, I think once you get older, 'cause, like, all those guys don't really care about, like, scholarships, or just here to play football. Right. So, like, they'll just take, like, easy... Which, fair enough, I don't want to be in a class, but I'm like, football, like, eight hours a day. I could totally get that. It's just, it's such an interesting perspective. I feel like people don't even, like, question. 'Cause it's kind of, like, they have this opportunity. They've been playing football since they were two years old out of the womb. They finally got to this collegiate spot. Some of them are walk-ons, so they don't have scholarships, and some of them do have scholarships. I think somebody donated a lot of money recently. It was one of the players. I think it was Stuntzman. Stuntzman, yeah. They donated money to all the walk-ons, so they would have, like, more of a scholarship. Which is so nice. Or, like, the... I mean, NIL money. Is that what it was? I think it was the NIL. Okay. Like, the money they got from, like, advertising and, like, boosters. So, like, scholarship comes from the school, but then, like, NIL. You can, like, that means you can go out and get, like, a sponsor with whoever, and they pay you. But it is a crazy mental toll. I had someone explain to me they're on one of the teams here, and it was, they were explaining how... Even if you get injured, or you have this, like, slight idea that, like, oh, if I'm baseballed, I threw my arm out. I can't say anything. Because it's a business at the end of the day, and you will be cut. Like, there's, like, a contract at the end of the day. Right. Like, it doesn't matter how close you are to your team or your coach. Like, you'll be cut. And that was your chance. And that's it. And if you were in the case, where it's like, oh, your schedule advised and got made for you. And as you're in, like, oh, sports medicine. Because it's easy. They can, like, sway the classes to be really easy for you. And in that way, you don't have to try hard. Or you can get someone to do your school work for you for free. So you can focus on one thing. And then also meet the standard in order to actually play under the whatever SEC. It is that you have to have, like, the certain amount of grades or a GPA or whatever. That's why the classes are so easy. Because it's, like, don't focus on it, you know? But in that case, like, with that statistic in mind, the only 1.6% actually make it to the league. Okay, then what? Now they have a concussed. And, like-- Cussed, under-educated. Like, because they've had, like, you said, somebody doing their stuff. Right. You know, their college career. So when they go out, you know, in the workforce after they didn't make the NFL draft. I kind of think what-- What skills are you left with? Like, what do you have to contribute to a job? I think a lot of them probably just go into, like, the corporate world. But, like, they're probably just not all fair. I think a lot of them do choose to do corporate or they do something with sports medicine, or maybe, like, the broadcast channel. You know a lot about football, obviously. There's a lot of the new broadcast. Right. That's not only where they get placed whenever they're getting advised. But I had just found so much, like, I felt like they were losing so much momentum and being displaced from campus. Because I feel like bring the players in campus, like, let the campus see who they are, what they do. They're so secluded from campus. I like that you brought that up. It's like they have, like, all of the stuff that we have on campus, like, that they need in the football stadium. Like, they have that, like-- Yeah. It's a different world. Yeah. The whole, like, thing is just-- That's why it's so nice in there. Even Hittington. This is another really interesting topic, because I got the experience of living in couch dorms, which is the regular freshman dorms. Most people go in there. It's really large. There's a couple of them. And then I also spent another semester in Hittington. And so we called it Hittington High School when I was there, because of the dynamic of how everything worked. It's like, as if you walk through your hallways in high school, and it's like all the athletes. It's like that kind of energy in there. And it's so interesting to see the class differences on campus. Because basically, in my mind, campus is like a-- It's like a simulation as to what the real world is, in a lot of different ways. And so looking at it from that perspective, whenever I went to Hittington, I didn't even think when I was in couch. Like, oh, couch has mold. And couches had mold for generations. They've been sued. No one cares about couch. No one cares about mold. About the mold. They paint over every day before they do the tours. And oh, you just keeps covering it up, because they don't need to pay for it. Now they're starting to like, oh, slowly take down the towers, because they can build more. Yeah. That's why I had to take down Adam. I think Adam was the worst, so they took that one down. So bad. Like, couch is going to go next. Literally, the mold is so bad for you. Like, there's couch cough. Not to mention the mucus that comes, but if you have pneumonia or asthma or anything like that, you're directly getting affected. And the long-term effects is like depression, anxiety. Like, it's all mental, and it's all related to mold. And so them not doing anything about that for years, and there's most of the population. And you have to live there. Yeah, you have to live there. And then Hittington, going there. There's no mold, obviously. Yeah. There's pokey bowls. There's waggy steak. And the cap is, like, pristine quality food. Like, it is the best of the best. Like, I love living there for the food. But beyond that, like, the building sizes and, like, the dynamics of how it works, and, you know, the safety regulations of, like, who could get in and who couldn't get in. Like, if you wanted to go to someone's room, you'd have to give them your ID, and, like, come back and get your ID when you leave. You can't have anyone in there past 12 o'clock, even if you're a regular student like me. But specifically there for the athletes. And then other dorms. It's not like that. And other dorms. It was, like, yeah. Because, like, in Hittington, I don't know this for sure. So tell me from right. You're not allowed to have people spend the night, right? Mm-hmm. OK, so I know that's the other rule for, like, the freshman dorms, technically, right? But it's easier to get around it, because they don't have that whole-- Oh, yeah, they either get around it. I didn't know they had that rule. Well, OK, so I'm kind of exposing myself. But it's fine, because that was years ago. But my boyfriend lived in couch. And I was living at home in Arkansas on the time, so I would, like, come visit him all the time, like, on the weekends. And it just happened to work out that his roommate was in ROTC and ended up moving with another ROTC person, because he had to get up at, like, 3.30 every morning. And that was not great for Jordan. But basically, I would, like, go stay with him, right? I got sick after every single weekend. I would stay in couch. It was bad. And I always knew it was from, like, just being in the environment. Even on TikTok, we always get, like, videos, like, on my 4U pages, just, like, everyone bitching about the dorms. No. And, like, how they're sick, the couch cough, that's real. Like, one time, he, like, had class on Friday. And so I was, like, just sitting in his dorm doing nothing while he was at class. And I, like, went in the bathroom. And obviously, he shared a bathroom with his, like, sweetmates and stuff. And there was, like, black molds in their bathroom, like, around the, like, little vent that, like, the little bathroom vent. And I, like, scrubbed on it for, like, over an hour. Oh, you're such a good girlfriend. Because I, like, got bleached, and I was, like, this is disgusting. Like, this is so gross. Like, I know they're not coming in their shower. But, like-- They don't check. Colleges are more, I think, they have a lot more leniency, I'm pretty sure. Because it's kind of like, it's their property, like-- I don't know. I think they're shared, like, in the couch cough. Ooh, there's some lore. Honestly, I think that it's just become, like, acceptable. Like, because-- Other colleges are like this, too. Most of them have mold. Because, like, as public universities, right? Like, why are we not-- why are we as, like, students as people who are paying tuition to a university? Why are we not, like, demanding that these things be fixed? Why are we not demanding these things be fixed? Because, I mean, it's not just mold in the dorms. It's parking. It's paying $400 for a freaking piece of plastic to go on your window. And then only being able to effectively use it, like, once or twice during the school year. Because there isn't-- And then being charged. That is your ass if you park anywhere else. And also the liberty of the fact that, oh, we pay these thousands of dollars, and then we can't park on the first four levels of the garage. So we get a limited space anyway. Yeah, it annoys me so badly. Like, the faculty doesn't need that much spots. They don't need that many spots. Like, Dale, they have that whole parking lot. Just for faculty and staff. Oh, yeah. And I used to be able to, like, finagle my way in there and, like, sneak in parking there. And now they just have it, like, completely blocked off. Like, there are signs everywhere. I don't know if you guys have the orphan past it, but there are signs. And there's, like, parking people walking around, like, keeping an eye on stuff. Half of the other day when we were recording, it was like our first recording day. And I was trying to get over here. And I had to park all the way at Campus Corner and walk over here because I couldn't find it in my parking. Oh, my gosh. That parking lot behind Dale was half empty. Yeah. Even faculty. There's so many empty spots. And, you know, there's everyone around me backing up traffic, trying to find spots, too. And everyone's, like, seeing this half empty parking lot and being, like, oh, that's perfect, like, great. And then it's blocked off to faculty, even though it's half empty. Even the first three floors of the parking garage, they're always empty. If I'm being quite honest, my car right now is parking faculty and staff. I'm not moving it. I will probably get to-- You shouldn't have to. At this point, yeah. This year, I refused to get a parking ticket. And I'll just park, you know, wherever. Like, I park behind the building, like, in that little strip area. They have that so you can pick up cameras and stuff like that. But I just park there. It's like a 15 minute thing. And honestly, I don't get, like, over the past, like, game and stuff, which I know, game days are completely different. But if we had better parking for students, we would have more convenient parking on game day. It's just insane because we have so much money as a institution. You've seen it, like, look at this room. Like, we're in a podcast studio. Go fix the dorms. Literally. Professional podcasting studio at OU. Yeah. Using all of their equipment. And we need parking. No. And no mold. No mold. Go focus on the, like, the little details that matter. Because stuff like this is like, this should be conversation. Because, yeah, the athletes get all of, like, the recognition. That's why people go here. Like, it's very understandable how their thought process worked. But it doesn't take away from the fact that, like, we're the fans that go to the stadium and pay the price to watch them. Or the reason why you guys have the stadium. Exactly. What the reason why this school is keep moving. So, I mean, where's the reality of the new jerseys? Right. And, like, it's not like the other programs aren't excelling. Like, this is a number two in the country. And Gaylord is. And, like, number one for broadcast. So it's like, stuff like this is stuff that, like, kind of gets lingered off because of the football. And the other athletes are really good as well. Baseball's really good. Girl softball. I mean, we're great. And, like, $20 million donation to the baseball stadium this year. $20 million. To baseball or softball? It was both, I think. OK. But baseball, I know for a fact. I think it's just, OK, not roasting anybody. But I just think it's hilarious how amazing our girls' softball team is and how successful they've been versus how the baseball team gets so much more accommodations and so much more funding, even though the girls' team has shown more success, right? Yeah. First time we've gotten a female coach's statue, but on campus, was that last year? Pretty sure it's in front of the stadium where all other statues are. It's like their coach because she went champion, championship for 12 years in a row or something crazy. Yeah. And that's-- That's what we deserved. So. And there's so many, like, other, like, little changes. Like, the cheerleading team, they don't get their thumbprint in the stadium. Like, they don't get anything, actually, like, the other athletes do. Like, they don't get the same scholarships. Palm, no one probably even cares about Palm. Palm? Oh, yeah. No, they don't get anything. But I was really shocked to know the cheerleaders don't get Jack. Like, they don't get to go in the stadium at all. That's insane. I feel the cheerleaders are shorty girls. They get their benefits from over there. Oh, really? Yeah. I think most of them are. I don't know if that makes sense. That is weird that they don't get to do that, though. They don't have, like, a locker room or anything. I'm not in here. What? Are you sure? I had a conversation with the cheerleaders, and she was telling me. Because I had thought about joining the team, and she was explaining to me, like, they don't get the same treatment as the other athletes do, which I said that sucks. Like, that's not what I would have expected. Yeah, you would think that-- I think it would probably be split between cheer and Palm just because they're both, like, on the side. Right. But, man, it's crazy that they don't get anything. No thumbprint in that house. You can't even get in? Oh, you can't get in, like, to, like, the thing. Like, all the other athletes can. OK, well, there's people who get in there and who are even like-- Exactly. That's so bad. My point. That's-- yeah. So there's just a lot of things among OU. I feel like we could take. We could fix. We could get backlash from this, like, a few minutes. I just-- I don't think people think about stuff like this, but they should. Because we could get what we wanted if we tried. That's just such a big-- like, that's such a big ideal for me. Because I just don't understand. There's so many things that we as, like, community have the same beliefs about, but don't talk about enough to make anything really cool. Well, nobody acts on them. Like, everybody's thinking it. No one's saying it. Some people are saying it. Very few people are, like, actually doing something about it. But if you, like, think about it in a more, like, in a different perspective. Like, we, as a student, body of OU, like, the people that are paying the university tuition, paying for these outrageous parking passes that only cover, like, a year. Or do they cover a full year or semester? For what, the parking lot? Yeah. It's a full year. It's a full year. It's-- they start in August and they expire in June. OK, so it's not even for over the summer. Oh, no, you have to buy the summer one. Yeah, you have to buy the summer. Yeah. So it's, like, school year round, but not including the summer. Yeah, I think the summer one might be a little bit cheaper, just because it's just, like, the two months. But little life hack, you know, you can, like, sell it back to them, whatever you want. The summer one? The regular one. Like, if you were, like, halfway through the semester and you maybe find a parking spot to park in every single day or whatever reason you don't need your pass, you can take your pass under the parking garage and then they'll give you money for it. Like, they'll give you money back. Like, all of it or just, like-- Or the rest of however much you would be paying to keep it. I don't know. But, like, why not just put that into, like, expanding parking? I'm not sure, because there's a lot of land. OK. If you're going to sell these outgrages, leave expensive parking passes, like, at least make sure that there's parking. Yeah, I'll keep talking. I have to go to the bathroom. OK, Lauren's taking a quick break. Are we going to keep talking? Yeah, she just-- OK. But, like, I keep saying, but, like, I just lost my train of thought, this can all be edited out. Oh, that was loud. Shit, you lost my train of thought. Sorry. I was talking about parking, right? We use the student body. Oh, yeah. Like, the amount of, like, videos I've seen on TikTok. And, like, TikTok's been getting, like, more and more personalized to Norman lately. I don't know if anybody else. It's always like that your fall semester, just because the freshmen will put their intake on it, and then us will, like, we'll be posting stuff that, like, just, like, pisses us off. So, mainly, it's always about parking. Yeah. Well, I've been seeing a crap ton about parking and the amount of people that are saying that they paid for parking passes and then end up having to park out Lloyd Noble and take the bus from Lloyd Noble to campus, because there's no parking on campus. So, they'd end up just parking out Lloyd Noble, which you can-- Oh, yeah, there's a lot of people that do that. You can park at any time without a parking pass and just take public transportation to campus. But these people have parking passes that they paid for, and there's a ton of them, I know, because I've seen it several times on TikTok, like, a crazy amount of times. Even branching on that, though. It's not happening to me this much this semester, just because, like, my classes are either pretty late or they're pretty early, so, like, obviously, nobody's choosing late classes or morning classes. But, like, that 10.30 peak or, like, around noon, I shouldn't have to be coming to school, like, two hours early, just to find a parking spot. Yeah. Like, that was just, like, not OK. Like, and I remember last year, my friend she posted a picture of the parking garage, the line, like, wrapping around. Like, the whole parking garage was just, like, wrapping around. And then another thing, last year, I was trying to find a parking spot, and I don't know if it was someone in the gay lord or something, but they were recording. And they washed me go up and down the parking garage. I counted 12 times. And they were, like, at one point, they just stopped me and they were like, hey, you might want to try somewhere else. I was like, OK, I'll go. But I just, like, me going-- That has to be, like, a universal experience here. Yeah. I mean, I've done that on the parking lot. I did that last parking garage on Elmo. Like, it's just making better freaking parking. Well, it's like for me last year, because I had a class-- because when I found out last year, it was, like, I think 3 p.m. It was, like, before 3 p.m. Like, all the parking was filled. But then, like, after 3, it was open. It's because, also, once I hit set for a clock time, you can park in faculty and staff. Yeah. That's what I do for, like, my late class, so I'll-- like, my class was at 4.30. I leave my house at 4. Because I know I always had that parking in faculty and staff. Yeah, but, like, last year, I had to, like, get to the-- or either get here, like, it was, like, 30 to 40 minutes early. Just, like, be able to get a spot. Yeah. Last year, I think, was, honestly, low-key a little bit worse than this year. But also, I can't really talk because my classes are earlier late. Yeah, see, I feel the opposite. I feel like it's much worse than it was last year. I mean, my prediction's even coming in. I told one of, like, one of these freshman friends I have, I was, like, it's just going to get worse now, because I know a lot of people came in this year prior to all the other years. And I know, like, when last year-- my freshman year, especially the park-- because I was a commuter still then-- I don't think the second or third floor of the parking garage was for faculty and staff, especially for the stadium. I feel like that changed last year. Because I know there are more-- It's the second and third are for faculty and staff. Yeah, that's definitely more of a new thing, because-- I think it was new, because I thought I was third, fourth, fifth, and then in the top, that was for our students. And then only that first floor was for faculty and staff and now it's-- They have also on the parking garage on Elm. They have also, like, extended that to now. It's like the first and second levels or for faculty parking. OK, so I know we don't have that much faculty here. Like, so people who have classes in the Blender, the physical science center, and like the art museum, and then especially the huge music building on the corner of Elm and Boyd, all of them part there. And especially those music majors that are at-- in that building all day, they fill up that parking garage. And then once it's full, people are parked there all day. So like-- Even those commuter lots by-- they call Callaway and by-- Oh, the duck pond lot? Yeah, that one. That one usually gets packed up, too, but at least that one's not just faculty and staff. There's a small faculty and staff, but at least there's that big one. But that one, like, I mean, it remains-- It's far, though. It is kind of far. And you get like-- you can get a parking spot. And as long as it's not between like 12.30 and 3.30. I feel like at those times, it's always like-- there's not a parking spot. Like, if people have like two hours in between classes, they're staying on campus to keep their parking spot. I'm literally doing that today. I'll be on campus until 5 p.m. Until 6, actually. Because I don't want to lose my parking spot. No, another thing. Sorry to any, like, freshmen or sophomores or whatever that hear this. Walk to your class. You guys don't need to be walking, like, parking in the commuter lots. If you live in a dorm where if you're in like a house like a frat sorority, why are you guys parking there? Like, but that's our law. I know so many people who freaking, like, just like won't walk, and they'll just park in our spots. No, I see the little-- I see it all the time. Freshmen, little parking crashes all over the parking lots. And I have always been like, you know? Yeah, I always see all of them. Don't you have your own law? Yeah, you have your own law. Don't you live, like, right there in the building? I understand, like, especially in the winter, it's cold. But, like, we all got to walk. Like, we all have to walk, like-- We all did it. We all did it. Yeah, you have to, too. You have to suffer like we did it. Or, like, get a freaking scooter, like, get a bike. I don't know. There's Vio's everywhere, get a Vio. I hate when people are like, oh, it's embarrassing to ride a Vio. Yeah, it's embarrassing. Like, everyone, I'm embarrassed when I ride a Vio. But do I get places? Yes, I do. See your rides, Vio's? Yeah. I ride Vio's. Proudly, on game day. Oh, my god. Have you guys ever seen someone get hit by a Vio? Yes. Oh, the trauma. Someone got hit last year on the bike Vio. And they were, like, walking. It was a girl. And I just was, whoosh, on a bike because the guy. And he was going right past Dale. And there's people walking, like, in the part where they're supposed to ride. Yeah, I've almost been hit there. I haven't been hit there. I think one-- Oh, my god. Oh, my god. It's, like, very second day of school. Oh, my god. When she gets hit by a scooter, my girl hurt. And I had to just, like, stand up like nothing happened. That girl ate that. She ate it. When I say the bike goes so fast, it was going, like, 25. And I remember looking at it, like, damn, it went really fast. How are you not dead? It wasn't me. I got hit by someone on a scooter. Oh, OK. That was, like, the little-- Boom! They both fell loose. Everyone was walking in. That's another thing. Oh, you need stuff to figure out. Is the people that-- especially the people that buy their own scooters, like, have their own ones on campus? That's embarrassing. [LAUGHTER] But also, they don't have speed regulations on them. Like, the videos do. Like, they go faster. I go five. I get really scared. I'm going to fall off, so I go very, very slow. And so-- Like, you can probably walk next to me. Every time I'm, like, walking to class, and I see somebody, like, with one of those, they, like, fly past. And I always-- Well, players, they go so fast. I'm like, how are you all doing this? But they're, like, trained. They're, like, professionals. Like, professional viewers. This morning, when I was walking over here, this girl was writing a video. And I heard the little gnarly, like, coming up behind me. And so I turned around. And if I wouldn't have turned around and, like, stepped one foot to my right, she would have hit me. Like, she was not-- Yeah. She was not reacting. Like, she would have hit me. And I was like, she just flew past me. And I was like, oh, OK. And even after, like, the bars, I think my freshman year, I was, like, D-Ding. And it was by the font. And she was just, like, wobbling everywhere. Like, she was so drunk on that scooter. And I couldn't, like, stop my car. But I, like, hurried, and I stopped in. She, like, flew. Because another car was coming from that way. Like, there were, like, she was, like, in the middle of the intersection. Like, about to get hit by every other way. Did she make it through the intersection? I don't know. I think she was just on the ground when I turned. Oh, my god. Yeah. But, like, I feel like you should have some type of, like, rule that you can't get on there when you're-- Oh, you can get a DUI. Oh, you can get a DUI. Yeah, that's, like-- I feel like they haven't been as, like, strict with that. But, like, where I'm from in Littorock, like-- police will pull, like, downtown Littorock. Police will pull you over, if you're on a video. Like, if they, like, have any suspicion that you might be drunk, you will get pulled over. And I've seen people get, you know, yelled at by police on campus corner. Oh, I've been, like, if you don't get off of that scooter right now, I'm going to give you a DUI. Yeah, I always hear, like, yelling. I feel like, yeah, that would be easy. You're so, like-- Well, I mean, you are operating. You are operating. Like, I don't think that's what people understand. And I didn't understand, either, because I was, like, oh, we can always just take the views, like, back to our apartment, like, after the bar. But, like, if you're drunk, like, you need to walk or get new birds. Or even, like-- Because you could, like, kill yourself. Like, what if you accidentally, like, swerve into the street and, like, a car hits you? Like, that's reasonable to be able to get into UI for that kind of room. I'm pretty sure, too. Like, you know, just, like, a normal, like, bicycle? You can't ride it if you're drunk. Oh, yeah, no. It's, like, they've-- I feel like Vyos was a gray area for a while, just because they're, like, you know, readily available to everyone. And, like, they're not privately owned. Like, the ones that you can, like-- You just have to, like, get on your app and scan the thing. I'm just, like, imagining if, like, you're a drunken, you're, like, riding a bike. Like, how is that even possible? I would just tip over. I can't even ride a bike sober. I suck. OK, we've been talking for a freaking long time. Imagine this wasn't even recording. It is. It is. Oh, yeah, it is. Ha, ha, ha, ha. It's been an hour and 40 minutes. I think we've got some good stuff out. Yeah. We talked about a lot. Some important things. Yes. Welcome to the soft launch episode. That we didn't talk about releasing this once. We can use that later. Honestly, yeah. Wait, by the way, because I know we can-- what was it? Because I know we have, like, the outline for the episode. Do we need to, like, turn anything in? Like, do we need to take notes on what we talked about and then turn that into her? No, she won't. So we just need to, like-- so even if, like, we turn it, like, this outline, that was, like, it's, I guess, that's-- Turn in for what? I don't know if we need to, like, turn in our shirt or something. Like, we have a milestone workshop next week, I think. And that's basically where we're just going to, like, stand in front of the class as a group and be, like, this is what our podcast is about. We have recorded this many episodes, like, focusing on this, this, and this. We've done this much marketing on our social media and have, like, seen growth or whatever. Just basically a checkpoint, like, updating the class on what we've done so far. Yeah, sure. Because I thought we had to turn in, like, a, like, a sheet of, like, oh, my god. It's just, like, a verbal speech grading thing. Gotcha, gotcha. Workshop. Oh, yeah, you see that. It's milestone workshop number one. I have to have any details, we're supposed to know. Did you talk about? No, basically, what I just said, like, I have heard from my consumer behavior class, and we're doing our milestone workshop in that class today. OK. And so it's basically the same thing. We're just updating everyone on our progress. I see. [INAUDIBLE] I do. [INAUDIBLE] Yeah. Oh, these are things. [INAUDIBLE] Bitch, better have my money. I have class at 1. I have class at 12. Are you going to go home before? Me? You don't have class until 3, right? Yeah, I don't have class until 3. Yeah. Well, we'll just have to close out. And then we'll get to go. What should we focus on after-- [INAUDIBLE] I can focus on-- I can try to make an editing day. I'm pretty busy next two days. I can edit. It's filmed on a little mini SD. You have to put it in the case of an SD card. Do you know what I'm talking about? Have one of those? [INAUDIBLE] Do you? OK, no. [INAUDIBLE] Should someone do that outro? Yeah, I was going to wait until he got that. Oh, yeah, he is. [INAUDIBLE] I'm just trying to see what we should focus on next. Because I know she kept-- she brought up some stuff about-- we need to research what other podcasts are similar to ours that already exist out there and look at their marketing and plan out a marketing schedule for ourselves. [INAUDIBLE] I think H32 is very similar. So what we talk about is just random stuff. And then we think that it was just like, you don't want that. I didn't see us competing in all of us the most. My friend-- [INAUDIBLE] I do, too. My friend, I think she told me one of her friends is in this class and they did a podcast. And they were just so boring. They already released in. They were just talking about why they came to OU and stuff like that. So I'm wondering what they're going to base theirs off of. Who are they? I don't think anyone else has the podcast like that. I know the girls in front of us are doing fashion. I want-- I want-- oh my god. Where did you get that? You just don't notice I have those? Yeah, really? Yeah, really shining in my face right now. Yeah, I have the butterfly right here. And then I have one and one. Where did you get those? I'll give you her Instagram. She's a mor. Oh, she does it? Yeah, was it expensive? The butterfly was 130. And then these are 40. So this is the butterfly over here, those two? I like those ones. Yeah, the butterfly ones stand out. I don't even know you have one another. These, like, yeah, you don't ever see them. Everyone always sees that because they'll shine a lot at the same time. But they last a long time. I've had these on for over a year and a half. How do you get them off? They hold off of themselves. Or if you want to take them off, you can go to your dentist. OK. Bet. Well, you said you said it to me? You're like, I'll send it right now. Should we all get matching to the gym? I'm like, oh, I'm kind of cute. Yeah, this is last six months to two years in our life. When's the next time that we can-- oh, do we have class today? Yes. OK, we'll talk after that then. They really wish me and have more time to just schedule what the marketing will look like. And then grab stuff that we need and organize it a little bit better, because we're supposed to be grabbing the stuff we use through AI. And I don't want to just get to that point. I have to rush all of it. That's just plain accordingly. And then we'll just fill all of the blanks in. Honestly, we actually check. Usually, I can check what her plan is for today. Right now, we just have the [INAUDIBLE] Yeah. Yeah, so I think today we're just going to do our podcast, because she hasn't put a new module out, like a lecture, like notes. Because you know that one day, she just gave us that whole day to work on her podcast. So hopefully, it's a day like that. Hopefully, yeah, that would be really nice. I need to go through and look at her modules, because it's so varied. I need to like-- that, and she has like a lot of like wording. Even her rubrics so much wording. I just don't know where, like, what's next. And none of it's like dated. I know, it's all random. So I've just been taking those quizzes, like if it's good. Good, easy. Very easy. And you can use-- oh, OK. Pretty well. First one, I got a nice. Second one, I got a pretty bad. But they're also not hard. Like, if you did read the chapters, did you do the episodes? I just don't have the book. I have the book, and honestly, like, that whole chapter four was just about Joah and Glow Recipe. Like, that was the whole chapter. Oh, OK. Yeah. So I think that's why she pulls those assignments out. It's a thick book, though, so pretty. I really want to get the book. I know my mom was thinking telling me she could help me get the online version. I struggle reading online versions. It hurts my eyes. It hurts a lot, and then it's hard to get from page to page. Yeah. [INAUDIBLE] Yeah, I'm going to get my hair done. Yes. After this, we'll get a class tomorrow at 8 in the morning. [INAUDIBLE] I didn't even realize she'll be left. [INAUDIBLE] Yeah, that's what we were reading for. Are we doing anything like special or just? Yeah, she wrote down something, and I thought it sounded good. OK. Do you want to learn? Thank you so much, you all. I'll say, OK. Thank you so much, you all, for joining us for our first podcast. This is the soft launch, first episode of our podcast. This is our soft launch episode, and we're just so happy you guys wanted to tune in. Thank you to everyone who finishes this episode. If you finished it, leave us a thumbs up, so we know. If you have any topics that you guys want us to talk about, go through, give our perspectives on. We would love to do that. We have posts in our Instagram bio about topics that you want to hear. Yes. Follow us on Instagram. We're at therealperspective.pod on Instagram. We'll be on Twitter and take a talk soon as well. But this is Lauren signing out. This is Shelby signing out. This is Cia signing out. This is Gabriel signing out. [MUSIC PLAYING] Perfect.