Somebody's back from out of town.
Great, thanks for coming out to the Lincoln that show was great. What exactly? Oh, thank you for that. Oh, oh, Sacramento Lincoln, California. What? What a good show. Exactly. I didn't know what you were saying. You were like, thanks for thanking Lincoln. Well, because I was trying to think it's a stack or Lincoln. It was they said it was something else. Then they say it was Lincoln Lincoln Lincoln Lincoln. Yeah, yeah. Lincoln logs. Yeah, so um, thank you coming out was a great show. You were on fire that night. What do you mean?
“You killed it. And um, okay. What do you mean? He just shrugged me off. No, I didn't. You did. No, because check the tape. I know, but I'll tell you why. Why?”
Because I'm because I know if I said what I was going to say that was going to start a fight. So I didn't say what I was going to say. So we're going to say. I didn't think I had a great set. And now here we go. That's annoying. So that's why I ended it out. Okay. Well, let's go to something better. Fancy was wasted. You're a wasted. I've never seen you that. I've never seen you drunk at all ever hammered. Yeah. You were hammered drink. One drink. You're alive. No, no, no, no. I I I I poured you whiskey. Yeah, Bobby poured you a full glass, but I have to say on stage, though. You had the two biggest laughs out of even both of us. See right see was that's a home run perfect the timing of it. It was so good. What was the second punchline?
It was a big one. Yeah, you got one more big pop. You got two, but he's based on somebody that was on stage. It was a guy personally. Yeah, personally personally. Yeah, personality one word. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And I looked at you as if to say, you know, I'm a generation. It's something you hit the ball sometimes he really hits it hard really huge rippling loud and because that we got a little gift for you here. This says. Hey, bad friends. I found this fancy B special while thrifting and just had to send it along.
“Thanks for the making all the best podcast on the internet. Your number 69 fan Mike shout out to Mike. You of course.”
Gay fancy a shirt. I'm sure he owns. That was an Israeli flag. It is. Wow. Yeah, I hope. Do you own the shirt? I do not know. That does not look good. You think that looks good. That does not look good. Yeah. It's also double XL, which looks. It looks. Is that a decision well? I like so. It's a does he well. What from a thrift store? Oh, that's an anti I'm like what a thriftie does this imagine
on antics road show. Somebody's like, I found this in an attic. It's a residual shirt. Yeah. And they're like these things are amazing. They're very valuable.
You mean a hundred years or no? Oh, yeah. Almost nobody will. No, no more. Only one guy from Spain. He was a man in clientele. Dizzy Wild was founded in Barcelona in 1984. By Swiss businessman Thomas Meyer, the brand. The regenerated with the aim of creating a different meaning.
Dizzy Quad, affordable fashion style that stood out characterized by vibrant colors, patchwork and bold,
Mediterranean inspired design. It was founded on the concept of upcycling, starting with a jacket made from reassembled patches of used denim. So it's old shit that they threw together and then sold to you at a premium.
“Yeah, I mean brilliant. Conceptually it's cool. It's just I think they're using the wrong patterns.”
Execution is bad. I think the idea is good. It is very. Yeah, yeah. But they like I can take this right and then this and put it into a shirt,
but necessarily it doesn't look good. Doesn't look good like. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. You're going to find the right combination, I think. You haven't found your groove. Yeah. The emperor has yet to find his new groove. I'll keep trying.


