Drink about something

Kendrick and Capone

Jendsey Season 1

Need a unforgettable Valentine's Day with a simple dinner at Red Lobster that turns into a comedy of errors? We sure do, and it's all here—starting with those delicious yet infamous biscuits that caused some unexpected digestive dilemmas. Add in a misplaced wallet, later found at home, and you've got the makings of a classic tale of dining out mishaps. As we share this adventure, we also chat about quirky habits like practicing silly accents and using pop culture phrases for mic checks. With a sprinkle of humor, we even tip our hats to Seth MacFarlane's comedic genius and reflect on the rewarding rollercoaster of raising a children.

Our conversation then takes a scenic route through the history and humor of Lake City, Florida, a place steeped in intrigue with stories of Al Capone's visits and oddly named towns. We reminisce about childhood dreams of staying at the SpongeBob villa in Punta Gorda and how our tastes have matured over the years. But some things never change, like our love for a good Super Bowl halftime show—speaking of which, we chat about Kendrick Lamar's electrifying performance and our mixed feelings on the evolution of rap music. It's all about balancing nostalgia for the classics while appreciating fresh takes from artists like Eminem.

And there's more! We're thrilled to give you a peek into our exciting plans for a true crime series, where we’ll unravel fascinating cases like Bernie Tiede's, portrayed by Jack Black. With our Couples Killers miniseries on the horizon, we're juggling work, storytelling, and band practice while keeping the mood light with a nod to Jake Peralta from Brooklyn Nine-Nine. Plus, we're bringing a friend into the mix, someone who learned from a prominent prosecutor, to add depth to our upcoming segments. Join us as we set the stage for these gripping stories and promise you engaging content that's worth the wait.

LET US KNOW WHAT YOU THINK!!!

Speaker 1:

Hey, Jesse.

Speaker 2:

Lindsey Hello.

Speaker 1:

What you drinking today.

Speaker 2:

I'm having one of these Mango Vista Bays.

Speaker 1:

It's pineapple.

Speaker 2:

Oh, it's pineapple. Yes, it is, it's Pineapple. Vista Bay. You got me girl.

Speaker 1:

Got from an Aldi special. They're good yes. And they're only $12.99 instead of $17.

Speaker 2:

And it's good for my tum-tum, because we've been having tum-tum. We went on a Valentine's Day dinner to Red Lobster and our tum-tums are like still.

Speaker 1:

So, okay, the whole reason why I chose Red Lobster was because, well, first of all, it's been like 12 years since we went 12, or almost 13. Oh no, it's been 12 because we will be celebrating our 13 years soon. But I've been seeing in on facebook. Other friends have been like y'all need to stop sleeping on red lobster, the food is great, the service is great and they need the business, blah, blah, blah. So I was like all right, let's go nostalgia and go to red lobster for valentine's.

Speaker 2:

I'd have been happier with just some takeout and getting it done at home.

Speaker 1:

So we go and I mean it was good. We got like a surf and turf thing. The steak sucked, but everything else was good and tasty, but the aftermath I think it was the biscuits. I don't know what the fuck it was, but we have been uncomfortable all night. My stomach has finally settled.

Speaker 2:

It was those fucking biscuits.

Speaker 1:

Jesse is still working on his.

Speaker 2:

We ate six biscuits between the two of us we ate three each.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, we ate three each, but they were small, they were small, but still I think that's the only thing that we both ate really together. Yeah, and we don't eat bread like that I had lobster. Yes, I had crab and shrimp and steak, oh we both ate the steak. That's what I was telling you this morning.

Speaker 2:

And it was kind of uh.

Speaker 1:

It was uh, yeah, I know you're not supposed to order steak from a seafood restaurant, blah, blah blah, but sometimes it's good. Yeah, and it was part of the meal that we wanted. So we were like okay, let's do it.

Speaker 2:

Had to try it and, um, we're not gonna try it again.

Speaker 1:

No, we're done. We're done. Red lobster, sorry, you're done, unless you can redeem yourself and sponsor us you're done, yeah you sponsor us, we'll go back.

Speaker 2:

We just won't eat your steak, no more yeah, we had a good valentine's day, though, yes even though you thought you lost your wallet at red lobster. Yeah, we left. I came home and I set it where I always have set it and I'm particular and it slid behind, the little thing.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, he's very Sagittarius when it comes to that.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but it slid behind the thing into a dark hole and so when I looked in the same spot, it wasn't there.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, because all of our furniture is black and the corners are dark at night because we have a low low lighting in our room.

Speaker 2:

I'm bucking back to rid lobster.

Speaker 1:

Go to the same table like 10 minutes later because, yeah, we're only two miles from everything. I'm like where's?

Speaker 2:

where's my wallet? And they're like no, I just cleaned the table off and people were sitting down like or they had just sat down and they were correct. Nobody took your they were correct and I was like they're bursting bus, done stole mine. I'm canceling cards and whee.

Speaker 1:

So then, this morning, while I was what a tard. In the bathroom We'll just say it that way I see a wallet flying by my head. It scared the shit out of me. I had a flashback to something that I was never even a part of.

Speaker 2:

Well, I'm laying there and I look over, scared, the actual shit. I look over and I look in the little spot that's supposed to be. I'm like, wait a minute, I can reach my hand back here. Big hole, there it is, boom, and I just throw it, throw it toward.

Speaker 1:

You need to clean your corner, sir yeah, hats and be clean recording stuff yeah, all that. We need to get organized. We're going to clean, we're going to yeah I'm excited I, we're going to. Yes, I'm excited. I mean our room stays pretty organized, but his corner is.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I'm not a messy, no, we're not messy, we just have clutter but got a lot of stuff, yeah, and it's accumulating.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, we keep our house clean and sound soft Clinting Cl.

Speaker 2:

So tell them what we were mic checking to.

Speaker 1:

Cool whip.

Speaker 2:

Cool whip.

Speaker 1:

We were going, stewie, I watched the whole TikTok.

Speaker 2:

What was the one we did, schnolzberries?

Speaker 1:

It tastes like schnolzberries.

Speaker 2:

And it's more like the facial expression Than saying it. The schnolzberries taste like schnolzberries.

Speaker 1:

He cannot make a British accent without squinting his eyes and I'm like you look chinese and I'm like no flare your nostrils yeah and move your mouth in a certain I don't even know the word, and you can do it without squinting your eyes. And he can't do it I can't do it yeah, it's like all right, hold them wide open.

Speaker 1:

So last week I saw like well, two weeks ago now I saw a whole tiktok with seth mcfarland literally having a conversation with himself, going back and forth between brian's character and stew that's a whole nother level of add that we are never gonna be on farland's genius and you know what the goat and his, his singing voice is absolutely phenomenal. It's very Frank Sinatra, very jazzy.

Speaker 2:

You know Silas has a lot of those same traits, really as aggravating as sometimes it will be oh God, Raising ADHD, Look ADHD-h. Adhd. We'd age in two more Ds.

Speaker 1:

As ADHD adults, raising ADHD children is horribly challenging because at our age with the ADHD, we get extremely overstimulated very quickly.

Speaker 2:

I'm being old and impatient too. We're just like we're so easily triggered.

Speaker 1:

We're in our get off my lawn stage and fuck them kids stage. We love our kids, but we are in the fuck them kids stage, but we love them and that's only allowed to be said by children or by children, by adults who love and would die for their children, but biologically, like we should be grown, they should be.

Speaker 2:

I mean, we started late with Silas, but they should be grown on up and out. Well, not really I have. We started late with Silas, but they should be grown on up and out.

Speaker 1:

Well, not really. I have classmates that are just having babies. Oh feelings.

Speaker 2:

Oh, they got it going on. I feel so bad for them.

Speaker 1:

One of my coworkers had her first and only child at 40 years old. And she's an amazing kid, but she only had one, and that's a big difference.

Speaker 2:

That's a big difference. Yeah yeah, we only had one, and that's a big difference. That's a big difference.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. So we just talked about our first serial killer. Yes, Eileen Warners Rest in peace. I guess.

Speaker 2:

Ashes.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, wow.

Speaker 1:

What did you think of that story?

Speaker 2:

It was a lot more than I knew. Yeah, so that's something I didn't know her childhood and just different scenarios and situations.

Speaker 1:

Well, Monster gives you a little visual perception of what you can imagine her childhood is, Of course they're not going to put it all in. And you know, last night, while I was doom scrolling, while very uncomfortable, I'm starting perimenopause, so my night sweats are happening and we were having the tummy problems from a lobster but I actually found out that there is a huge backstory behind Charlize Theron with her own father.

Speaker 2:

Oh.

Speaker 1:

That I want to deep dive and cover that later on, so maybe that's why she embraced that role.

Speaker 2:

And I love how you start with the brokenness and it builds up everything that was really good. It's a good story.

Speaker 1:

And some people don't want to because of the adult that they become and the horrible things that they do and you know it's a fuck them, but at the same time that's what causes them to be who they are, because all the time you will see people go through things like that and come out of it. But those are the chosen few that can.

Speaker 2:

but statistically, most people that go through childhoods like that, they don't necessarily become serial killers, but they struggle in their adult life forever right and so you're, you're being able to compare with all the other podcast stories and things that you've listened to, which is what I will never catch up. And you're, you know, you have a big what, what you have a, you know, a big influence on everything that you've heard already. So, and I'm starting to see patterns and trends and things and and brokenness for sure.

Speaker 1:

And it's a very small pocket of people that don't go through some kind of trauma?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, they don't go from zero regular Joes to snap.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it all starts in their childhood, progresses in their teenage years and full embodies itself in their grown years, some of them, actually, it happens in their teen years, as we discovered with Tyler Hadley. But at the same time, tyler Hadley did not have a bad childhood and he wasn't a serial killer, but he had unattended mental health issues and he was coddled where he should have been deeply counseled.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Thoroughly counseled he was the baby and and his brother probably got more attention and his parents were good people and they probably just didn't want to see that they were raising a monster that's the one.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I was talking about talking about feeding in too much and not saying the no you gotta you don't ever want to think that your child could be capable of anything like that.

Speaker 1:

And then, when it's right in front of you, sometimes it's too late, or like in in. In their case it was too late when they really realized how how deep it went I say no to to silas on purpose, just to teach him silas has adhd with odd and um. I've really started noticing that coming out and his preteen hormones going on here his puberty yeah, he snaps right into Defiant. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

And I have another child that's had the same exact thing and there's just not my other child that had it. We medicated him and it didn't help whatsoever. I don't know, I don't even, I don't want to say it made it worse, but it didn't help at all. It didn't make it better. He still struggled every day. There were days where I had to leave work to go get him from school. So it's just, I would love to just find a good answer and honestly, I don't think, unless you have a lot of moolah, that you can never really um achieve your full therapy goals no, but silas is going to get a lot more nose, he's gonna have to learn, learn that he doesn't get it right, then yes, yes, yes, he'll get more.

Speaker 2:

No, no, no, yes he gets the nose, and that's a good thing and you know it's not like we're keeping him oppressed or beat down by anything emotionally.

Speaker 1:

You've got a great life, but he can be very disrespectful he does. He has done more than we got to teach him that that's not right.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so that's good. It's a good thing. So, yeah, we had a great Valentine's. We hope everybody else did too, and we're spreading the word and building, and we had a bunch of downloads last week. It was really good. I'm so excited.

Speaker 1:

So movement there, thank you to all of you that are continuing to listen to us.

Speaker 2:

The feedback is good, the bands are good it was so sweet.

Speaker 1:

The other day I was in the break room at work eating my lunch, because I work doubles on Sunday. Well, it's considered a double. It's really only a nine-hour shift, but in the restaurant business.

Speaker 2:

It's like a one and a half.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, in the restaurant business that's considered a double. But I was talking about the case that's coming up and somebody that didn't know was like oh my God, you have a podcast and we have gotten some business cards with our little scan code on it. Gave her one of those, and three other people that were in the break room were like yes, and it's amazing. So that made me feel good.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I've heard nothing, but good, yes, I'm not thinking that we're amazing. By any means, I'm not trying to say that.

Speaker 1:

We're not bad, because I listen to us every week, and so do you.

Speaker 2:

Let us know what you think about it too. So that's what I like, I like the feedback.

Speaker 1:

We do have some five-star reviews on Spotify. I don't know if you noticed that. Yes, wow, I'm missing some of that, but that's the app that we. That's the platform that Jesse and I use. We have the Spotify family plan, so that's the one that we see more often, and we'll have to check on YouTube. We'll have to check on all the other stats.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, for sure, for sure.

Speaker 1:

I other stats, yeah, for sure for sure.

Speaker 2:

I know itunes is always the one where people are the most, and I found a cool one. Uh, back on, uh, back here in town again where al capone, and came to lake city, and at one time I'd read back in the.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, we have a very old uh hotel that's still in existence in our downtown area that al capone frequented back in the day and they had said that Lake City was the top crime rate in Florida in the 30s here in our little town. Well, I bet, because it was probably there wasn't a lot going on here. What did you have you?

Speaker 2:

had Atlanta Lake City.

Speaker 1:

You had Jacksonville back then.

Speaker 2:

Well, yeah, but I'm saying if you're coming straight down south from Chicago, that's true, yeah because we're the gateway.

Speaker 1:

If you're coming into Florida, we are the first stop on 75. We're like 10 miles up as far as 75 and I-10 meets, and then you can go on to Jacksonville or you can go on up to Georgia.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and you went down 441, 40, 41, and 441. So it was like that was the north and south route. Oh, so 90 wasn't even the way 90 was western, so you went to Tallahassee. Okay, yeah, you're right, you're right, there was no I-10 or I-75.

Speaker 1:

Because I'd take a 90 west home from Jacksonville to avoid bridges.

Speaker 2:

Right, and that's-. Your girl don't like bridges that's where we lie is 10, 10 and 75 meets. But those roads wasn't there in the 30s you had a dirt road that went all the way to New York, so he would come down from Chicago and then go from there on down and after Atlanta. That's what you hit. You hit Lake City. There was no Ocala, there was no Gainesville, because Gainesville didn't move from Lake City and become a Gainesville until the 40s. Right, I think so.

Speaker 1:

So yeah, yeah, we don't know a lot of history about our state because, I mean, honestly, it wasn't pushed on us. No, all we know is we got some history about St Augustine because it's the oldest town Right In Florida, and then some on.

Speaker 2:

Key West In the United States. It's the oldest town in the US.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, that's right, it's the oldest town in the US, and then we got some on Key West because it is the furthermost. Yeah, and that's really only towns I remember learning about.

Speaker 2:

So there's a lot of dirt in Lake City, though, if you go back far enough, yeah.

Speaker 1:

So Sarasota was named after Hernando de Soto's daughter, and we got Rat, mouth, boca, raton and the punta gorda. You look that one up yourself. Oh, I already know what that means. But uh, that's where, um, they have the pot. The spongebob villas that silas. So when silas was little, he was obsessed with the um family, the FGT.

Speaker 2:

FGT-vers yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, they do that thing at the end. And after they had acquired some wealth with their YouTube videos, they went to stay in say it again.

Speaker 2:

Fat bit, I mean Punta Gorda, yes.

Speaker 1:

And there's a SpongeBob villa there and Silas was like I want to stay at SpongeBob's house. I want to stay at SpongeBob's house and I was like I don't think we ever will, but let me go ahead and look up the price of it. It was very nice, but it was like $1,500 a night. A night, yeah, we're not there, buddy. No, no.

Speaker 2:

No, it's not happening. The most expensive trip that we paid for is Rockville, and that's camping. There's a no for you, sus.

Speaker 1:

Yes, there's a no, there's a no buddy and several years later he still follows that family. He's watched them grow up, all his little boys.

Speaker 2:

That's good, because all of our childhood stuff it was like a five-year fling for most anything that was. You know, we got my thundercats for a while transformers peewee yeah love you, paul ribbons.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, rest in peace, yeah nothing wrong.

Speaker 2:

Nothing wrong with all the uh stories there garfield and friends.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, peewee didn't touch anybody else, he just touched himself.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but he was in a place where you can do that. I would think.

Speaker 1:

But we won't go into that.

Speaker 2:

The mop boy there knew.

Speaker 1:

Yes, my latest obsession this week is how many of you guys have learned the Kendrick Lamar dance from the Super Bowl.

Speaker 2:

Sunday show. I've seen you practicing it. Yes, I've seen you. She went at our UPS driver with it.

Speaker 1:

It was Amazon, oh Amazon.

Speaker 2:

Yeah Well, whatever Our parcel delivery service, she's bucking up, so me and Jesse no longer give a shit about football.

Speaker 1:

We haven't for a while. So I worked Sunday night and came home, was scrolling through Facebook and half my timeline said it was amazing. Half my timeline said it was horrible. So of course I'm going to go look it up and I'm going to learn everything about it. And I looked it up, I watched the whole thing, I loved it. Then I went through the whole deep dive because Jesse and I haven't listened to modern rap in about 15 years, um, other than the new eminem not really yeah, other than the newer eminem albums, which will play as soon as they come out.

Speaker 1:

so I wasn't really familiar with, uh, kendrick lamar's music. My one of my besties is obsessed with him, so I was like you know what? I'm'm going to watch this show and I was obsessed. I went through the deep dive on the Drake and Kendrick beef and I was like you know what? The way this whole thing was coordinated was genius.

Speaker 2:

And I'm here for it. I didn't know, because I watched it myself twice before you even mentioned it to me.

Speaker 1:

And that song is catchy as fuck.

Speaker 2:

I was like wait a minute. It's in my this is. I don't know anything about any of this music or the songs, but with how stripped down everything is and ever. Everybody knew him, but I'm not.

Speaker 1:

We're getting old, but uh well, we're stuck in our genre on the second time, though, I was like this guy, wait a minute.

Speaker 2:

He's putting words in there and he is a lyrical genius and it has a lot of meaning to it. So me being a fan of of people that put anything meaningful in their lyrics, like Rage Against- the Machine.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, because of course you know I had to.

Speaker 2:

Google the lyrics, Especially if it's political or anything like that, and if it means something that's hip-hop to me and I'm way on hip-hop. Yeah, because we grew up with he's more of a hip-hop artist for sure. Yes, he's hip-hop for sure, yeah, so there, yeah, there's where the line tupac big, I mean gangster rap, and then with the outcast though, but when?

Speaker 1:

you got outcast, though it's more hip-hop, you know they. Yeah, we love that range of. We had our gangster rap, we had our hip-hop. We loved the 90s r&b also.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, very much so we still go, we have our whole days yeah.

Speaker 1:

We do, but we'd be listening to Boyz II Men and shit.

Speaker 2:

Acting like we can sing.

Speaker 1:

And you know, have you given the new Ginger Album a listen yet?

Speaker 2:

No, well, I heard two songs so far.

Speaker 1:

I got halfway through it and it's good so far. I'm going to finish it, but yeah, so I learned my coworker Bestie, my work Bestie. She's a lot younger than me so we don't hang out on a regular basis but she's always invited to the barbecue. We hang out when we can. But she was like I want to learn that walk. I was like I'm going to learn it and she was like bet, then said and then I told her. I said I got this shit down, pat, and she's like send me a video. So I sent it to her and she's like period.

Speaker 2:

I mean awesome, though Listen.

Speaker 1:

It's very simple.

Speaker 2:

It's simple, that's what's awesome about it. And they'll bring back. Remember the Running man? When they brought the Running man back, I'm like wait a minute, dude, I would be out of breath that one but at least it was to one of our songs that we grew up with.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, they did bring.

Speaker 2:

They brought an old song back and slayed an old dance. Yeah, yeah, they slayed the old dance. It was not even close. I'm like okay, we call it the new dances are a lot easier to learn they are. Do we used to sweat our asses off?

Speaker 1:

I mean like sweat it was a full-on. You better bring you a gallon once a month happening yeah, and we were drenched and smelly from head to toe. I bet the teachers hated us.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah because I can't stand a stinky kid we used to go ham on the dance floor and I have no rhythm and then and then we would slow it down. Boys to men I look like can we go to the end?

Speaker 1:

and then we had to do that one dance where you hold your hands out like this yeah. Yeah, you had to be arm length apart. What was it called SOS?

Speaker 2:

That was called the Bible Belt Dance. Was it Save Our Students? Yes, salute Our Students.

Speaker 1:

Salute Our Students.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, we had those once a month we would walk from, like the middle school over there, the Richardson Center right.

Speaker 1:

Yeah to the little dance spot. Yeah, richardson Center right. Yeah to our little dance spot. Yeah, we would all hang out. It was so fun.

Speaker 2:

And it was like the goal was to try to find a cool spot to make out.

Speaker 1:

I didn't do that.

Speaker 2:

You were like I'm going to go hide over there?

Speaker 1:

Well, I didn't either. I was an ugly fat child. I knew how to dance, though.

Speaker 2:

I was a big goof boot and walrus out. I was way off beat.

Speaker 1:

I had a curly bob and not much. I looked like a woman already, where most people still look like a kid, so I was off putting a little bit.

Speaker 2:

Well, I didn't really have a serious girlfriend until high school, high school, so a little bit of interacting was, you know, just growing up A few things. I just want to tell you guys about a few cases that you know just growing up.

Speaker 1:

Few things. I just want to tell you guys about a few cases that are going to be coming up, so you can be prepared and ready. So I was going to go right, right from Gainesville. Ripper is next Danny Rowling. That's going to be a two parter.

Speaker 2:

I can't wait.

Speaker 1:

And then I was going to go right into more serial killers but couple Couples killers. But I'm going to break and do a single parter episode of I think it's Bernie Tied or Tied or Tied, it's spelled T-E-I-D-E. Jack Black plays him in a based on a true story movie called Bernie. I invited you to watch it with me several years ago when we first downloaded Peacock. It was on Peacock. You fell asleep, but I watched it twice.

Speaker 2:

Really it was that good.

Speaker 1:

And it's based on a true story.

Speaker 2:

I'm going to have to get me some wake-up medicine.

Speaker 1:

I Googled the story and I want to cover that one before we go on into our Couples Killers miniseries.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, because honestly, at 55, 55, 60 hours a week that I work, oh yeah, it's hard for me. Still wait a minute, I'm comfortable.

Speaker 1:

I am some kind of mutant creature where I don't require a lot of sleep to thrive. So yeah, I'm yeah, she gets up and goes so much more than me you work longer, I mean if I worked as long as you probably wouldn't be 4 be, I get up at 4.30 most days, yeah when I've had to get up and be up from the time you are. I'm pretty exhausted.

Speaker 2:

You would be like me. Yeah, you'd be an old sloth like me. It's very Slothy.

Speaker 1:

It's very weird to wake up that early.

Speaker 2:

Shitty sloth yeah it's very strange.

Speaker 1:

I know millions of people do it and props to you, Like my bestie, one of my besties I have three lifelong ones, but she has to get up earlier than you and drive 30 minutes and work the same amount of hours, but she only has to do that three days a week. So when she's done with those three days she's done, done.

Speaker 2:

Done and laying in bed for the whole day. Sundays are my catch up day, tuesdays are hers. I edit and lay in bed a lot, but now I've been band practicing on Sundays too with a new singer.

Speaker 1:

I'm excited. I hope it works out because I cannot wait to go to shows again.

Speaker 2:

He's learning the vocal fry and his cleans, he's getting confident. So that and his cleans, he's getting confident, so that's the thing. And I'm there to be his little cheerleader, pump him up and get him going, so that's cool. I ain't excited. Maybe we'll hit the stage in a few months.

Speaker 1:

That would be exciting because we got to start. We got to get our countdown to Rockville started.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yes, it's coming up in May We'll talk about that. Next month We'll start really doing it. Yeah, we coming up.

Speaker 1:

We'll talk about that. Next month We'll start our countdown to Rockville. We finished our rewatch of Game of Thrones. Now we're starting back on House of Dragons. Is it House of the Dragon or House of Dragons?

Speaker 2:

House of Dragons.

Speaker 1:

Is it? I think it's House of the Dragon, maybe I don't know, hey, google.

Speaker 2:

You don't have to look it up, they can tell us. Somebody tell us.

Speaker 1:

House of Dragon.

Speaker 2:

Oh, you got to look it up, you got to know right now House of the Dragon it is the Dragon Of the Dragon.

Speaker 1:

Yes, it's House of the Dragon.

Speaker 2:

Of the Dragon.

Speaker 1:

Okay, shut up Google, Love you.

Speaker 2:

We didn't invent it.

Speaker 1:

No no.

Speaker 2:

Thank you, Gen X.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, we're going to give that to them.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, we were a little young, millennials. We were a little young to be inventing shit.

Speaker 2:

We're two years away from Gen X.

Speaker 1:

But we're elder millennials, elder Elder Millennials, millennials which they call Xennials. So we're in between yeah, it's cool. Yes, and that's cool.

Speaker 2:

It's cool, it's cool, it's cool, it's cool, it's cool, it's cool, it's cool, it's cool, it's cool.

Speaker 1:

So and then?

Speaker 2:

A buddy of mine at work did that the other day. I was like, and you're cool, I can't never do it, but yeah, lindsay can do it.

Speaker 1:

Peralta.

Speaker 2:

Peralta.

Speaker 1:

Love you, jake Peralta. Sir Jacob Peralta, that's from Brooklyn Nine-Nine, so yeah. So, coming up, we've got Gainesville Ripper, or Danny Rowling, aka Gainesville Ripper, then we'll have Bernie Tide. I'll get the pronunciation of his last name, right.

Speaker 2:

Why don't you ask Google, bernie? I will, I am See what Google says and we'll go with that. And then Because?

Speaker 1:

Google knows everything. Then we'll have Google knows all. Ian Brady and Myra Hadley you can't be us without Google. And then we'll have Paul Bernardo and Carla Hamaka.

Speaker 2:

And they're on Google too.

Speaker 1:

They are.

Speaker 2:

Everything's on Google, are you done?

Speaker 1:

I'm trying to skip it, and that is actually all I can remember from my roster. It's not in front of me, but so yeah, we got coming up.

Speaker 2:

You have a Googleplex of things coming up.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

A whole Googleplex.

Speaker 1:

Say Googleplex again.

Speaker 2:

No, not, I'm going to leave you hanging.

Speaker 1:

And Jesse is. He's networking, he's getting them bands flowing in. Yeah, we're tagging them and they're listening to us and it's flowing. My vision is coming to life.

Speaker 2:

Blossoming it's blossoming.

Speaker 1:

It's a little bud right now. It's a little bud still.

Speaker 2:

I got her a hibiscus for Valentine's. She loves it, yes.

Speaker 1:

I do.

Speaker 2:

And it's blossoming.

Speaker 1:

Hibiscus is my favorite flower. When I ever get up the nerve to get more ink, that's what it's going to be I'm going to get some hibiscus on my arms and the color of my children's birthstones.

Speaker 2:

I think it'd be cool, on your shoulder A little hibiscus flower.

Speaker 1:

Fuck you and the shoulder pain.

Speaker 2:

I'm telling you, Oasis in Gainesville is where it's at. Shout out to Oasis. Oh yeah, Jesse's still waiting for his tattoo to fall out because it was so painless. I was telling him. I was like are you even putting the fucking ink inside me right now? Are you even doing anything, goose?

Speaker 1:

He goes to Gustavo Goose, goes by Goose.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so if you're in the Gainesville area, check out Goose.

Speaker 1:

Yes.

Speaker 2:

At the Oasis Tattoo Galerai over there by the Hippodrome.

Speaker 1:

So check out. We're now 17 episodes in. Check out our backlog. We now have enough episodes for you to go on a long trip and not even notice it by listening to us. And then we've got thousands more coming because I have enough content saved right now for three years.

Speaker 2:

I might even nut up and do the Capone thing. Yes.

Speaker 1:

That would be awesome because it was a crime spree that happened while he was here for a couple of weeks.

Speaker 2:

Crime spree story. It's dirty, it's dirty. I'm not gonna say anything. Y'all gonna have to find out.

Speaker 1:

Well, all crime sprees are dirty and you know, with modern technology that's really all that can happen anymore, which is good. Serial killers can't really happen anymore, but crime sprees can.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and you found out a little something about some DNA on a big, famous one.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, jack the Ripper. So when we cover him, we now know who to call him. Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Awesome, we'll see you guys this Friday and we're going to cover the Gainesville guy that does the Gainesville stuff. Yes, In Gainesville.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, he starts far away from Gainesville and it's a long journey before we get to Gainesville and then it ends in Gainesville.

Speaker 2:

We're going to go visit the little Gainesville memorial thing Apparently it's big. I don't know anything about it.

Speaker 1:

I don't either, and I want to go see that it's there A friend Amanda was like how in the fuck don't you know anything? About this shit. I just learned about it two years ago.

Speaker 2:

On the second part, I'm going to call a buddy of mine that studied underneath of one of the main prosecutors for that.

Speaker 1:

So that's, exciting, that yeah, so we'll give him a holler and he runs a little thing that you can download on roku too, called wolfman presents awesome yeah, so can't wait to have a chat with wolfman wolfman so, yeah, we'll give him a call when when I'm done telling jesse the story and then he can give us his insights at the end of episode two or the second part the second part of yes, yeah, all the stuff yeah.

Speaker 2:

So you're going to you're probably going to tell me some of the out, the backstories and the stuff he did outside of Gainesville, and then we'll give him a holler on the second half.

Speaker 1:

That's cool, absolutely.

Speaker 2:

Super, super duper yeah.

Speaker 1:

Cool, cool.

Speaker 2:

Super duper. Yes, Cool, Cool, cool, cool cool cool, cool, super duper.

Speaker 1:

All right, we're going to wrap up our little recap. We will see you guys Friday.

Speaker 2:

Yes, bye, bye. That was me that said the bye this time.

Speaker 1:

Okay, bye, okay bye, okay, bye, bye, bye, bye, bye, bye, bye, oh, bye.

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