This Past Weekend w/ Theo Von
This Past Weekend w/ Theo Von

#646 - Hey Patty!!

2d ago1:15:3112,458 words
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Theo is back with a solo episode to talk about the tough origins of St. Patrick, why we can’t let the chaos of the world affect our spirit, and visiting Albuquerque for a Pavia basketball game. He als...

Transcript

EN

I want to wish everybody a happy St.

Patty. Hey, Patty, do, Patty. We used to have this girl boss and her parents didn't

let her do much. You know, when God didn't really let her do much, she didn't have, you

know, she probably had a couple of abilities. But she would, she was in charge of bringing a garbage out to the curb, you know. And we'd be out there about a bus stop sometime and she lugged him cans on out. And it was kind of like, one of the only times she kind of go out and about. And so she'd get all dressed up and even just when I'm put her mom's lipstick on and pull them garbage cans out there. And we'd be like, hey, Patty, and she was smile brush, she's smile. I mean,

she would get all shy sometime and even hide, but she would stop pulling the can and hide behind it.

So she'd be hiding behind that garbage can, but we'd be like, hey, hey, Patty, just kind of, you know, being sweet to her, whatever, just not really flirting, but just, you know, just hey, Patty and her. And she would just be so shy and nervous, boy, hey, Patty. And she'd be pulling that can out there to the curb. But she'd smile so big when we kind of like be flirting at her, you know. And her lipstick, man, she'd smile so big she'd get lipstick on her earlobes, bro.

She was like that, happy it out. And there's something nice about that scene. Somebody get joyed out. Happy St. Patrick's Day. Who was St. Patrick? Let me look it up real quick. Who was St. Patrick? Because I've been to some St. Patty, boy. I've been, dude,

one time I was out, I remember down in Rochester, downtown over there, and people were getting

blasted, they're just like St. Patrick. They don't even know who, you know, hey, Patty, people don't even know what's going on, dude. People out there that's eating cigarettes. And just, dude, they had one dude. He had his kid in one of those wagons, like a little wagon. He had a one year old, just, or maybe a half of one year old, a bitch, probably, you know, just however much half of one is. And that was him, the baby, just a little damn major. Just my

fucker had like a little to go major, just some hair around that bitch. And he'd stacked a bunch of to go orders on top of that baby, bro, just to keep him warm, bro. A baby, stay warm, touch a baby, bro, in a, on its back or whatever, touch it again in an hour, I bet you that bitch still warm. But yet his dude, he was just rolling home, bro. He had like six or seven to go order stacked on that sleeping baby, bro. Much of garbage placed stacked on a down foam on a

pool, cut. What do we got here? St. Patrick. And this is on perplexity. That's what I'm using.

St. Patrick was a fifth century Christian missionary in Bishop. He was born in Britain. At age 16, he was captured by Irish Raiders and taken to Ireland as a slave, where he herded animals for about six years before escaping back to his family. Let's go, patty. Hey, patty. After returning home, he eventually trained from ministry and later felt called back to Ireland as a missionary. Okay. Patrick spent years traveling through parts of Ireland preaching,

baptizing, founding churches and ordaining clergy. He just traditionally regard as the first bishop

of Arma and became the leading figure associated with Ireland's conversion from paganism to Christianity. Dang, he was that dog. He was that Lord dog, brother. We ride here. Hey, patty. He was a Lord dog. The famous story that he drove the snakes out of Ireland is considered a legend often read symbolically. Since there is no evidence Ireland had native snakes after the last ice age. Wow. So there's no snakes in Ireland. They're all working in politics in Israel, I guess. Or America.

Anyway, happy St. Patrick's day to everybody who's celebrating. Got my green home. Got my green. What's crack and do? Not much, bra. Just got back from Alba kick kick kick kick. Alba kick kick. They put so many Kirk Kirk Kirk's in it. You know, by the time you're done saying it, you're going, you already left. You're like damn, I don't know. You know, I was there, but I couldn't say it fast enough. 'Cause they had too many Kirk Kirk Kirk. Alba, Kirk, Kirk, Kirk, Kirk, Kirk. Have you tried the green

Chilies?

When you get there, it's very Latino. It's like a lot of like essays who never wrote in the

essays, bro. You know what I'm saying? It's like a fucking like, but it's also like a lot of hard-working, good people there. A lot of kindness, bro. You know, Mexican culture, bro. They freaking, it's a blast dude. They have a blast, bro. And at most of our laborers in America, most of the hardest workers are made canos. Not all of them are not saying that. And everybody's kind of taking their turn over time. If you look through history, all cultures have taken their time of

being hard workers. And some, you know, some are more prevalent now than others. But it's for sure

they got a lot of Latino there. Latino's are key, a key Latino's. And bro, it's, but you got a lot of

construction babies down there, children born out, even, you know, you'll, you'll, you'll, you'll see in a street to have two kids, even just even the children are involved in trades. You know, I saw two kids just throwing a piece of a drywall back and forth. You'll see a homeless dude, he'll have a sign, but it's written in drywall. And it's really edged really well. And, you know, he's got a base board at the bottom of a sign. You know, like even shit like that, like damn this,

you'll see a dog house there, just the shingles are done really well. There's just like a Latino guy that's drinking under one of the ease of the home. But yeah, man, it's a place you, you grow to love, man. But I'll say this about Albuquerque, bro. They don't like doing two stories on nothing.

Everything is just one story, bro. One, just like only one story. It's almost like for a long time,

they maybe didn't have a ladder. They, and then finally, they got a ladder because there'll be like

50 miles of just one story houses, just like ranch style home, just have you tried the green chileys everywhere you go to eat. We went to a place, I went to watch my friend, Diego's sister was playing basketball out there in the state tournament. And so we went to watch her game and it was cool. It was at the pit where the Lobo's play, where the new Mexico, basketball team plays, and in one their game, they lost their second game, but you'll get them next

year. That's the vibe. And yeah, it was just great, bro. We went to a place to eat called Frontier. Oh, it was so good, bro. It was just so fucking good. Hank, patty. But they also, it's like, no matter who you talk to there, they're just like,

yeah, have you tried the green chileys? Go have a dude in a coma or whatever, and he'll finally

start to say something, but he's going to talk and he'll be like, have you tried the green chileys? It's all, anybody cares about, bro. You could be going to Jay on the, like, how do you plead? No, be like, I've tried the green chileys. It's just, there's something about it, bro. That's just their thing, bro, to green chileys over there. So, but that was all. It was a blast to just to get to go over there. We just went for the day called the game and came back home. What else is going on?

Well, personally, I guess, there's, oh, we're going to, we got this episode, we're going to talk to some bus boys. We're going to talk about the bus boys movie. The tickets, the tickets for the movie go on sale, March 16th. So, so that's going to be wonderful. We have, we have some bus

boys that have just called in and let boys males, we put an all call out for that. So, that's what's

popping. Have you tried the green chileys? It's fucking crazy over there, dog. You'll see a kid in the street just fucking throwing a drill, just throwing a drill to his friend. This is, it's a construction area, bro. The whole place, a lot of people there working construction, but the place looks like it could probably use a little bit of construction. So, it's just a dichotomy over there, you know. But a lot of great people, we had a blast, man. And you meet people, bro.

You meet, I could see why they say a lot of times UFOs landed out there because they got some. They got people this halfway to space out there. And now, like, kick, kick, kick, kick, kick. They got some people that's halfway to space. Hey, patty. Have you tried the green chileys, patty? Like, dude, chill. She's just bringing out the recycling bin. She's shy. Yeah, we'll get into that in a second. What's going on, dude? With me.

I got to check in, man.

complaining culture. Nobody wants to hear that shit. What's going on? I started a thing when I'm taking a break from dating and interacting with women. So, that's been going pretty good. It's nice. I just wanted to, uh, just take a break from like, um, I just wanted to have time to focus on myself and my, and my relationship with my higher power. So, just to try and get some just things

on track better. And, um, you know, I think, like, in the world, like, you're like a magnet, right?

Everybody is like a magnet. I think this is my thoughts. And, and you attract certain things, and your magnet gets attracted certain places. And sometimes it's a great spot. But sometimes you've got to just check in on the magnet, make sure the magnet's working and see what's going on with the magnet. So, yeah, that's what I wanted to do. Um, you know, because I've been attached to some good metals over the years here and there, uh, some precious metals. But I think I just need

to take some time just to kind of look at the magnet and just see what's going on. Uh, you know, just want to, want to, want to, want to try and work on my relationship with my higher power. You know, I've just been recently, I've just been kind of sometimes, uh, uh, I don't know, like, I just hadn't really been praying that much recently. Um, and I was talking to my therapist,

the therapist about it yesterday. I couldn't figure out exactly why. Uh, I think, you know,

sometimes, sometimes, uh, sometimes, uh, sometimes I don't want to do everything I'm supposed to do to take care of myself. Um, and there may not make sense to some people or whatever, and that's fine. But it's like, yes, sometimes I just don't want to do every, like, you know, I'll be doing like so many, like, I'll be doing good things for myself, taking care of myself this way and this way, and this way. And I know it's impossible for us to do everything to take care of ourselves. We don't

want to live like, uh, as, like, slaves to like, um, you know, exactly what we're, you know, every article that comes out or everything we hear, you know, that kind of thing would be impossible for me. But, but yes, sometimes I just don't want to do all the things I'm supposed to do to

take care of myself. Sometimes I want to like, well, I'm not doing that or there's always one that

I'll kind of leave out or I don't know. I think I can't understand. I can't explain exactly what I'm

saying, but I'm trying to, um, yeah, I don't know. I just, sometimes I don't want to do everything and I'm supposed to do take care of myself. Does that make any sense to you, Trevor? It does, yeah, and you're saying, like, you're trying to, now, kind of check in and like, re-center. Yeah, and I was just like, why am I not pret? Like, what am I again? Like, I'm not against praying, you know? I mean, I want a better relationship with my higher power, I think. I think honestly,

part of me scared if I do, if I do, if I do the things I'm supposed to do for myself, then I'm going to have to change, uh, yeah, that I'm going to have, not changing in a bad way or anything, but

just that things could be different. You know, and I won't have, I don't know. There's always a

part of me that wants to be able to say, I'm not doing that. You know, I'm not doing that. I'm not doing that. No, I'm gonna do things my way, you know? So, I don't know what it is, but, uh, but that's been something, um, and so I was grateful today, like, even before this episode, I was just asking God for some help, you know? I was just saying, I just feel kind of sometimes, sometimes exhausted in some ways. I feel like I can't figure out something else. What I'm supposed to do, um, just like

in the world, like, with work and stuff, I can, but I, you know, it's just like, um, yeah, what does God want me to do? Uh, and maybe that's it. Maybe I'm just scared sometimes of asking the God that and trying and getting like a real answer. Yeah, what does God want me to do? Um, and then it's like, you know, and this sounds kind of, I don't know if it sounds

lazy or what it sounds, but, sometimes I get tired of being the one to always have to take care

of myself. You know, I just, I get tired of being that. It's like, oh, okay, here we go again.

I got to be, you know, I got to come to my own rescue, and I know that those ...

the truth, but sometimes I just get kind of tired of it. Um, you know, and I'm not trying

to say anything like I'm doing great. Uh, but that's just kind of some real ways that I'm feeling. Um, I've been doing good about pornography and Matt looking at pornos and hey, patty, and uh, and masturbation or jerk and off or touching your car, buddy. Um, but then I I slipped

up yesterday. So I think part of me has some negative feeling about that, you know, not negative,

but just like, you know, I think I get tired of getting like, man, I'll get to like four or five days, you know, sometimes I've gotten a long time. I've had months, and, but, you know, and then

I'll just like, I don't know. So it's all good. Just trying to be like, just say what's going on

with me. And yeah, and yeah, that's it. Sometimes you just, you jerk off, because it's almost same Patrick's day, but that's not a good reason, dude. You can't be like, I'm jerking off, because it's almost same Patrick's day. That's fucking crazy bro. That's crazy. Hey, panty. Uh, so that's some of what's going on with me. Um, but I'll say this, it has been nice taking a break from like a dating and social interaction, uh, with women has been nice because it

there's been times where it's like, yeah, I have some more time to myself. I have some more time to think.

Yeah. And it gives my brain a little bit more like space to be like, okay, hey, what's going on?

You know, and to kind of check in with myself. So, uh, yeah, I'm hopeful. I'm hopeful that, um, yeah,

just that I can work on the magnet, you know. So that's been happening. What else? Uh, you know, there's people message me a lot of times or we'll tell me, uh, hey, why don't you talk about this thing or why don't you talk about, um, Iran or Iran because people say it different. And, uh, and a lot of people will ask me about, hey, do you, will you talk about this or will you say something about this? This is going on. A lot of different causes that are deer to people's hearts and minds.

And I understand that. And I wish there was that I could talk about everything. Um, sometimes I don't know enough. Sometimes I don't, uh, um, sometimes I'm burnt out from absorbing like, you know, you absorb so much horrible stuff that's out there that's happening. And it just like, it ruins you. It ruins you. It's like, and, and there's algorithms that are set up. It feels like too ruining you. Um, so it's not that I don't care about certain things. It's just that, you know,

I have to take care of myself. I have to make sure that I'm living and, uh, surviving and

make sure that my life is okay and, um, that the people that I'm responsible for through work and

family that, you know, that I'm upholding my, uh, place in their lives. You know, so I think that's it. And not that anybody's asking me to answer about that. But I'm sure a lot of people deal with that word. It's like, people like why, why don't you speak about certain things or why don't, you know, and some of it's just, it's too much. Some of it's, it's too much. Some of it. I don't know enough about it. So I try to, I try to speak up where I can. I try to speak up when I feel compelled.

Uh, and sometimes I feel compelled and I'm, um, I don't know exactly what to say. I don't know enough information. So I want to have people on to learn more. And so now as we have guests set up in advance and so it's like certain guests aren't the space to have a certain conversation with people. So, um, yeah, I'm not beholding to anyone about anything like that. Um, but I do want to say that. And yeah, I'm doing the best that I can, um, maybe in time, I'll be able to, uh, have more

information about certain topics and do better. I can do better to learn. Um, and I try my best. It's hard to know also what is, uh, clean information. And, and that's a scary thing. So, yeah, I'm not apologizing or anything. I just, I want to speak up about that. That I also have to take care of me, um, and show up in the spaces that I'm supposed to show up as a human. And also not to like, you know, I don't, it's tough when you attach, when you, you know, it's just, it's a time to

it's a lot. And I'm sure a lot of people feel that way that it's a lot. Um, but I do see things and I do pray about things. It doesn't mean that I don't know about them. You know, and, uh, yeah,

That's where I'm at with that.

of uncomfort about America's relationship with Israel, uh, the Israeli political leaders. That's what I mean.

I just, I believe that that group is, it is, it just feels like a satanic regime. It doesn't seem,

I feel like they just want to cause pain. They just, I mean, you know, these, they don't even know where all the bodies from Gaza are and they're already moved on to other places that they are attacking and that America's associated now with their attacks. Um, and I don't, I, I believe that that will come here one day. I don't believe that, uh, that the Israeli leaders that they have any intention to, to stop that. I don't see that they have any

care for the American people. It doesn't seem like that. I've never heard that spoken.

And I believe that if we don't speak up now, that our children won't have the chance to speak up,

either by law or by worse. And that may sound crazy to some people. And that's fine.

If it does, if it does sound crazy to you and you think I'm crazy on that point of view, that's okay. I don't, um, you know, I may disagree with you, but that's okay. You know, I do want to, you know, I worked hard to be able to have a voice for myself. And so I hope at least you just respect that, uh, uh, or I hope at least you just see that, like at least I'm trying to say what I want to say. Um, and I don't understand our government's relationship with Israel's leaders,

and with Israel's government. I don't understand it. You know, I just, it feels like there's this war machine, and, and then our soldiers and our put into these spaces, and they're just there to serve in America that they believe in. Um, and it's no knock against them or anything like that. It's just, I just don't, I just, it just feels like it's causing a lot of pain and fear. And yeah, I don't understand our, our, our, our, our, our, I don't understand Trump's relationship.

I don't understand that our political, like why we are so beholden to these, to this government, this is really government that that just seems to be obsessed with, uh, control. And it feels like, like blood loss, like they just like, it's not enough. Like, after what happened in Gaza, I don't seek, to me, I don't, it, I don't see how there could be any other view. Um, but if someone else has a different one, that's okay. That's their point of view.

I'm just happy to be able to, uh, speak up for myself, even if I'm wrong. Even if I'm wrong, there's a part of me that, uh, even though it's feel, I feel scared sometimes that I'm, I'm happy to be able to speak up for myself and say that, you know, um, because it's,

I've, I've, yeah, having a voice has always been important to me. And I'm sure it is to a lot of people.

And they're making laws now. They're, are bills being presented where we won't even have a chance to have a voice at some point. There's surveillance infrastructure that's being put into place. There's a lot of things happening right now and some people are like, well, it's too much

for me to get involved in. I understand that. I understand that. Um, but yeah, I believe that if we don't

speak up now, uh, and it may already be too late, but if we don't speak up now that one day our kids will not be able to. And it's just, it's disappointing to me, too, that, um, a lot of our religious leaders haven't said anything. I don't understand it. I don't understand that. Um, but there's a lot of stuff I don't understand, you know, um, and I think this has been going on for a long time. I do not understand, uh, trumps like infatuation with, or like beholding to this government, but they've had,

you know, Israeli government's been involved in America for a long time throughout countless political party leaders. Uh, so it's nothing new. It just feels very extreme right now and it

Feels very scary.

is helping America. But that's just me. That's just my thoughts. All right, let's move on. Um,

I just had to say that. So I know some people was like, dude, it's too political, whatever,

but that's, I have to speak up for myself. You know, I'm saying I've worked hard in my life to have a place for a voice, and you may not even, everyone hear my voice again. That's okay. But I have to speak up for myself, even if I'm wrong. And it's just a lot, that's a lot of fear. I see of just every day people around like what's going on here. People from different parties to that,

like this, uh, candidate or like this, kind of with the folks going, I have no idea. I have no idea.

But it seems super scary. That's the feeling. Scary. You know, the industrial war complex, just like everything, you know, the fact that, um, we know that our foods are poisoning us just all. We know that the healthcare that when, after your food poisons you, you go to get health, you go to get health care and you get screwed there. It's just, it's, it's crazy. It's crazy. And then we get to date. You start looking at a

maridoo. You get people get to date. It's like as long as I have my vape and I'm able to watch

like some kids do the stanky leg video or something. It's like then I'm thought, you know, it's like we've just like slowly gotten sedated. It's pretty wild and who knows what will happen. But shit went from like kind of seem like kind of mundane in the world to fucking high speed. It feels like, but then you, you can't get so wrapped up and that that's all you're thinking about

and all you're talking about either, uh, because then that is giving, that's like that's what they want,

you know, they don't want us to live. You know, they don't want us to live. They want us to be a live, but they don't want us to live. But anyway, I know that all, all that stuff is a lot, but that's just shit that's been on my mind. Hey, Patty. Do you try the green chillies, bro? I tried them. I freaking, dude, I was there. You're there. You're in Albuquerque for 11 minutes, and some guys coming up. He's fucking got a legal green chillies. He's like, bro, these

bitches aren't even supposed to be here. It's just like, dude, I've tried the green chillies, I've tried them. And they're great. They're great. And we went to a place called, um,

L, can you look it up, traveling? It's kind of by the airport. I think L, Modello.

Look it up. Is it that one? Yeah, bro. L, Modello. And it wasn't beer. I thought I'd go in. It was just people swimming in a bunch of like, Modello beer or whatever. Some guy doing the backstroke, you know? Oh shit. Put some drywall on here. I'm drowning. But it was just like the sweetest ladies working in there. I mean the best, bro. And it was just good, bro. It just felt like dang. If felt like when you walked in there, it felt like your grandmother loved you. Right when

you walked in, homie? Even the gangbangers, they were taking off their face tattoos before they walked in, bro. There was like a lot of respect, though, for El Modello. But it was, uh, yeah, I had a good time over there. And shot out to, uh, my friend Abby Pavia. She's a great basketball player. And she's got a big heart. And it was great. It was great to watch her team, uh, her team play. Um, now let's get into it dog. Dude, St. Patrick's day. Have you tried the green mirror? Uh, damn St. Patrick was

a slave, bro. Did we say that, Trevin? I don't think so. It says right here. Let me see. At about age 16, St. Patrick was captured by Irish Raiders in Taken, Ireland as a slave where he heard it animals for around six years before escaping back to his family. Dang, bro. And then he went back to Ireland, said I'm a change that game dude. That's wild. Have you tried the

Catholicism?

through parts of Ireland preaching, baptizing, baptizing, bro. Don't stay under too long, homie.

You'll be late for work. Founding churches and monasteries and ordaining clergy. Dang, he was

out there in the streets, pushing something that meant something to him. His own surviving writings are the confessio condemning violence against Irish Christians. Amen. Um, okay. I want to talk about bus boys and we got some colors. We had bus boys that called in and uh, I'm a tap in to my, you know, you know, I'm saying I was a bus boy for probably seven years. I bus boyed a couple

of places, a couple of times. I worked with a couple sisters one time over there and uh, the first

Mexican restaurant in our area, um, and these two girls named April and May, uh, they were the chefs and they were any time he came back to get food or whatever. They got furious at you because they was doing some other shit or whatever, smoking or whatever. And uh, and so yeah, you'd have to go out there to tables and the shit was late and shit like that and people left or whatever. Anyway, they invited me to their house one day to party, asked you to bring some beer,

I drank a bus and beer over there and uh, and a dog bit me in, everybody drank all my beer and I fucking had to leave early, but um, what else? I had, I worked as Tucson, Arizona. I was a bus

boy down there. I was one of the first bus boys to use creatine ever in the history of bus busing.

I was probably, I think I was one of the top seven bus boys, South of Phoenix,

probably for a little while. And I say that with my whole whole chest. I said that shit pure as day. I was out there, boy. I was out there. I was on the tables, bread on six, butter on 11, clean up on 43, shit diaper. Some kid, they had a shit diaper over there. Some kid, they brought them in there. I don't even think they ate. They just brought the kid in there to shit in his diaper. And somebody, I fucking wrapped the towel around that bitch and sent him out.

But I was doing it, bro. I was on the front lines of food use and dishware, dirty dishware. I was on the front lines of that shit. So I know the trenches. I know what it's like to go back there. And I have to look at the dishwasher and you bring one more tub and you love that motherfucker because he's in the heat, bro. The steam coming off that fucking hot, the water hose, spigot thing. He's blast in, bro. That motherfucker got shit hanging off his eyebrows and shit.

He got pieces of fucking damp tortilla hanging out of his eyelashes and that bitch is still back there. Blast and then bitches. Getting the platoes limpio. You know what I'm saying? And you can't even look him in the eye when you drop off that last bus tub, damn, bro. That's the pain of a real bus boy. Somebody who's got the tables and the trays and the tubs and the plates in their heart. When you, when you know, bro, like, I can't bring this

to my doll one more time. And sometimes my dad might say, man, like, we attack team, bro. You know, it's like the world was like the world washington Federation, bro. The WWF. Let me limpio a tub for you daddy. Get out there and get you a cigarette. And that's something he'd have a little pocket of camera on this or something on the shrimps. And he'd get out there and eat them bitches by himself. Just to rebuild his conscience and stuff so we could get back. I mean, that's

the death of Vietnam right there for some people. So shout out to all the dishwasher's too, man. And that last tub, sorry, we brought it in there, bro. We know how I felt. But we all had to get the job done. So I want to say that, but we have some calls from busters that have been in the game over the years. People called him. We got to go in and go to a couple of calls of those. But first, I do want to talk about the, uh, about the movie. I just want to tell you

straight up that bus boys, the movie will come out on April 17th. So that's when you'll be able to go to see it. But tickets are going to go on sale. March 16th. So, um, yeah, I guess like, you know, first of all, I got to do this movie with David Spade. And I say this movie like, trust me, there's a big part of me that's just, I cannot even believe that we did this, right?

And we did this ourselves, right? That's what I want to say. You know, I want to hollywood

and uh, and you go pitch TV shows. You do all these, all these meetings, you're always waiting

To hear back.

nothing like me deciding if they thought I had the ability or the talent or the capability

or if my voice should be heard, right? It was always, you know, as the same type of people over and

over again, some schmuck who had never fucking done a day of a moment of comedy in his life, some business, fuck, whatever. You know, you go to all these things. And, and it's, for me, it was a waste of time. For some people, it's great. It's a, it's their stairway to their dreams or to different opportunities and stuff like that. And I had a great time, like I met a lot of

great people. Um, and I got to develop my stand-up, which was the best thing. Because stand-up

was the thing that I like the most because nobody could give that to their kid. You know, you go audition for some role and then some some producers, kid gets it or somebody's son or some bull, you know, but stand-up, they can't do that. Stand-up is you. They can, nobody could give that shit. Look, I'm going to get my son the opportunity. Fuck your son. You know what I'm saying? He's got, you can't withstand him. You got to get up there and do your job. Now, some people

may not like my stand-up, may not think I'm any good at it. That's fine with me. But you have

to get up there and do your job. Nobody, it's a fucking, it's a thin line. And that's one thing I always

want. I always want it out my voice. I don't want to do your shit. I don't want to do your fucking, I don't want to go play some role where you have me playing this stupid red nag and it's just like because you don't even understand that maybe people where I'm from are diverse of thought and are more intricate and aren't just racist fucking people. I don't know. I thought their system was outdated to be honest with you. There's always these are Hollywood, it's accepting everybody.

That's not, it's not. And I'll say that first hand. I just want you to know where some of my energy was coming from and why eventually I started to do podcasting because I just wanted to have my own voice. I don't want to read your lines. I don't even believe. I have meetings with people and I would tell them about my life or about how I see things and they would say that it wouldn't fit this narrative. It wouldn't fit this narrative. And so I got tired of fucking waiting for them.

And yeah, and then so when I got into podcast and it was a place where we could have our own voice.

And I think some of this movie just kind of followed suit. I became friends with David Spay

through Adam E. Get who worked at the comedy store. And it was great. You know, I still remember

the first time that I went to dinner. I'd met David at the comedy called a few times and then we

went to dinner one time and he gave me a Joe Dirt hat dude and it was the best. Because I remember seeing Joe dirt when I was younger and it was just like, I didn't know it was, I thought it was a documentary. You know, because our TV was fucked up and so some of the audio was different. And and I thought it was a documentary about this kid who had gotten left at the Grand Canyon by his parents. And in a game he just such like an affection for this for him. You know, just like a

yeah, because I think I felt like that is a kid anymore. I felt like I got left at the Grand Canyon even though I was right there a bedroom over from my mother. You know, just like, you know, how I felt it matched with how I felt. But anyway, a lot of that's a lot of emotion. But so David and I became friends and he's he's been a great friend. You know, he's got a big heart. He's welcoming me in the circle. He's taking me with him to like fancy parties where they have

fancy silverware and there's fucking, you know, people are stealing shit from the place. Like

that's how nice the shit is there. Like I've been to a lot of places where nobody's stealing shit.

Could people are like, oh, this shit's trash. I already got this shit at home. I ain't stealing more just shit. But I've been to places where they got really nice shit with him. I met John Ham with him. I met John Ham. Yeah, just so anyway, just getting to know him was a blessing. And then we started it was during COVID. We started writing a movie together. And David, even this, I'll say this, he, you know, I ran out of gas one time and he brought me gas. And he almost got hit

By a damn kiss of fear.

it would have killed him. I don't know. He's not the biggest guy, but he could have challenged it.

But I don't, I don't know. But he brought that shit out ran across the interstate and shit

bringing me fucking gas. So, I mean, it's just nice shit, man. And so we started writing this movie. Because we, um, and one thing that we found that we had in common was that we both worked as bus boys in Arizona. I worked in Arizona under, they had this guy Sam Fox. He's a restaurant tour.

He's a friend of mine. He had, um, this was his first restaurant. And I worked there as a bus boy

and David had worked as a bus boy over there in Phoenix. And so we had this relationship a bus and in the desert, man, even when there's water shortages and shit like that, bro. I imagine you got to clean up 20 tables and you got to know water, huh? Who are you now? Who are you now? I was still a bus boy. So I stayed in that shit, man. I stayed in that shit. That was already

Wojima cut. And so that's why I was, man. And so we, we, we kind of bonded on that type of shit.

And then we started writing this movie. Yeah, and, and, and nobody really wanted to help, you know, and that's fine. I'm not complaining. I'm just saying what it was, right? I wanted to let you know where we were at mentally. What was going on with us and our brains and stuff. Nobody really wanted help. We couldn't, um, we reached out to some directors that we liked. They didn't want to deal with it. Uh, our agencies didn't really help. You know, there was some email and back and forth and some

light shit, but nothing really like we're going to take these guys and we're going to believe in them. You know, we're going to really take these guys and do something. There wasn't any of that. And I say that that's true. Um, and so we got to a spot where it was like, damn, we got to make this or just go by our ways. And we'd spend a lot of time together and made it and written it so far and all of that. And so we just put up our own money. You know, we put up our own money.

And um, and then next thing you know, do we were making a real movie? And this is crazy. I didn't think it was real until I showed up that day on set to shoot. Because it just all been emails. It had been David and our writing and we would go meet it as place and sometimes we would get Jimmy John's as soon as we wouldn't, which I didn't understand. But um, but I would get him when we home or whatever sometimes. But um, but yeah, we, you know, we, we, we, we made this. But um,

we, we, we realized that we had to pay for it, right? We have to fund. We, so we put our money in and I didn't realize until the day that we got to set this set. I call it, look, I'm not locked in on all the terminology and shit. So I call it that. I know it sounds high,falutin or whatever,

but until we got to the movie site the first day. And there was like trailers. There was like a

woman would make up or whatever hair conditioner or whatever, you know, hey, Tammy, have you tried the great Jimmy? Yes, I have. Um, and, and we, and we were making a movie. And it was crazy that other

actors were there that we looked, you know, we did all of this stuff. And so that's what's, that's

what we're making, right? That's what we put together. And we did it. We created a movie, you know, and we made something. And it was crazy because you get to the end and I was like, fuck, what do we do, dude? I was so scared. And then you go through the editing and you do all this shit and you start to realize, okay, this is how it is. Um, and so that's what's coming out. It is our movie that we made completely by ourselves that these people said no to, I don't care,

fuck them. You said no to me your whole life, cause, you know, I'm saying, I'm glad you're not on board now. So that's where we're at. And I think it's good, man. There's some funny spots in it. It was a huge learning curve. I'm not saying it's the greatest movie. I mean, it's like a three

million dollar budget or something. And yeah, I learned a ton. Like if I could go back and do

there's a lot of things I would probably like I just learned a lot. Um, I learned a lot, man. About how it would operate just all these different things. So that was a blessing. It was the most expensive course of education I've ever learned in my life. But if you go see this movie, I just want you to know that that's what it is, right? It's something that we made, we made it

Outside of the system.

scenes in there. Do that David does that are so good. Uh, and it's kind of, and it's just like

Tim Dylan's in it, Nate Diaz, Chris Avila, um, Jay Farrow, uh, Trevor Wallace, Jimmy Gonzalez, Michelle Ortiz, uh, Lindsey Normington, Tiago Martinez, and you tried to bring chili, Tiago, Steve Little Skybury, uh, Brent Moran, um, there's a lot. There's, there's a lot. I'm missing

a ton of, uh, wonderful folks. So yeah, all I'm saying is that's what this is. This is a movie that we made

that is outside of the system. And we want you to go see it to support this type of, uh, of thing, because we can do more in the future and we can do it better. And we can help fun movies that other people want to make that, that the gatekeepers don't see, you know, and that's fine. I don't need the gate, you know, I don't even want to go through the gate, because I'm coming up through the dirt, son. I'm through the mud dog. You keep that bitch latched dog. I'll be in the yard.

And that's how I've always been. And so that's where I'm at. That's where we're at with this.

Yeah. So, so thank you. If you go to see it, it's not like, um, uh, what's that move done Kirk or whatever. It's not like that. Okay. So don't think it's like that. It's different. It's not like, um, Sarah Marshall, it's not that, right? This a movie about two

dudes trying to be alive, trying to become waiters. That's what it's about with some love stories

in there and, um, some other type shit, but you feel me. But it's got that bus boy mentality in it, you know, I'll be a waiter or I'll get my shit some other way. But we, even if I work at the restaurant, bitch, we, so that's the movie. It's going to be out. I can't believe it. It's kind of scary too because if nobody goes and sees you like, oh, shit. All right. But that's okay, too, right? I mean, it'll bump me out, but that is okay. You know, uh, I'm proud of like what we've done. I'm

proud that we did something. You know, I feel lucky. I got to do something with David Spademan. Like, you know, I don't even deserve that kind of stuff. And I don't mean that in a negative way about myself, but, um, yeah, he's just such an immense talent. And to be able to just be around him and spend time in the fact that we ended up down this road together and here we are. It's been a blessing. And yeah, I can't even, but like it's weird to say like, yeah, I'm in a movie. I mean,

anybody could be in a movie. I mean, you know, I'm saying Kim Kardashian was in a short one with some cock in it. So anybody could be in a film. But, um, but yeah, that we made this and that our friends showed up to help us make this, man. You know, uh, yeah, and just the actors and actresses in it.

But I think I know there's some funny parts in it. I know you'll laugh. I'm curious. I think I'm just

super curious. Like, what is okay to do in a movie? What is, you know, what could we do different?

I mean, do we got the first day we started shooting? Got moved by a week at the last minute.

Like two days before we got moved by a week because of the fires that were out in California. There were like a year and a half ago or whatever. Well, whenever the, uh, Pasadena fires and palicates fires. So that was correct. I mean, just there was so many things that were like, is this going to happen? But it happened. And, um, yeah. So yeah, there's some, yeah, like there's just so it's just like, I hope you'll find some joy in it. It's a fun. It's light-hearted. It's goofy. It's

dumb. It's fun. Uh, and yeah, it's a dream come true to be able to do it. And I promise you that if this one goes well, we will find other things to make. If I'm not, if I don't do good, and it's, I'm not the one to be in the other things. That's fine. But we'll create other projects that are funny that people want to see. You know, because that's really what needs to happen. You know, at least to respect other people's point of view of comedy. You know, you know, and to

just to care, like, just, you know, I don't mean, I don't even know if I mean voices in our own out there, but it's just like, you know, there's shit that's different. And yeah, I just,

I promise that we'll make other cool stuff, whether we're in it or not, but w...

we'll do something, you know. Um, so yeah, that's where I'm at, you know, so let's get this thing out there, bro. But just one more time, tickets will be on sale Monday, March 16th, you can buy them at busboysmovie.com. So you'll be able to get those busboysmovie.com. If they don't have it in your area, that's okay. It'll notice what areas have been looked up. And then as soon as these first, I think Hunter theaters fill up or something. If we can sell those, then it's going to let us

sell more. So it's an experiment. You know, it's an experiment. And I appreciate you guys as patients. It's, I've spent so many hours editing going through watching, you know, there's so many choices that you are a part of. And, uh, in this, and I learned a ton. And, um, yeah, and just yeah, thank you so much. I can't even believe it. It's just crazy. It even gets to do it. Whether people hate it or love it, I don't give a shit, what the critics think, fuck them, the critics don't

know shit. You know, the critics don't know shit. Remember that. The critics don't know shit.

The critic is some schmuck who's sitting over there, who never did shit. That's the critic.

That's the critic. Some guy with a pen and a fucking, uh, he probably didn't even have a dip in. He probably didn't even have a zen and a cheat in his cheek to fuck him. The critic don't know shit. I hope the critics hate this shit. Fuck them. I'll, look, I'm a critic now. A critics. Y'all fucking suck.

There, boom. How does it your whole job? And fucking four seconds, bitch. Um, all right. Now, let's get to some calls from some bus boys. Uh, some players that been in the game. Boy, you know what I'm talking about? Let's go, bro. And look, I want other bus boys to call in. Some of these are good. And so I want some other bus boys to call in to and hit the hotline. I would like to throw these in from time to time,

just to respect the culture and keep it going. The hotline is always is nine eight five six four nine five

zero three or you can go to the website, uh, theovon.com. There's a place you can leave a

send of video on there as well. If you want to send a video version of you, when we can put that in the

show. Um, so those are the two ways where you can get in touch and communicate as well. If something's going on in your life and is bigger, small, uh, or if you just want to say something or if you're scared about something, you want to get it off your chest. Um, if there's something that you feel like, um, me bringing up on here could be of help or service. I'm going to try to do a better job of doing more solo episodes. It's been hard for me. Uh, for some reason, this this this doing

solo takes a lot of stress. It creates a lot of stress in me. I don't know what it is. It could just be what's going on right now. And um, just the busyness of life. I don't know. Uh, it used to be a little easier for me. You know, have you tried to be huge? But it's just gotten tougher over the years. And so, uh, but maybe that will change, but yeah, I do want to be able to continue to have, um, just more of a personal relationship and maybe that's something I need to pray about, uh, and

can pray about. So anyway, love you guys, the hotline 956649503. Uh, let's get to some calls. Hey, this is Jacob from Cincinnati area. What's up, Jacob? Nice to hear from you. Uh, sorry, you guys are lost tray Hendrix in there. I saw that. Um, but blessings onward, baby. I thought you just came to talk about bus boys. Uh, I used to be a bus boy back in high school. Thank you for your service, brother. My sophomore and my junior year at a pretty high

and restaurant. And um, I think the craziest thing to have in me there. I saw some pitch once,

but that's not, I mean, that's normal shit, bro. That's street shit. You can see a tent anywhere, bro. Close your eyes open and bitches. Might see one onward. I don't know, man. I'm over but got myself fit. Bro, a body's just a big tits on the back, bro. It no nipples with no milk in them. That's all the buddies. Let's hear it. I, uh, is one day I was just working and I agreed to table when his lady was mad. She's like, can I have a loss to this? I said, yeah, let me grab my waist a short quick.

And she started ripping my ass. She's like, you don't need to go tell her this and tell her that just go get me the loss to this. And I like, all right. Well, you know, some time goes by. She gets up to go to the restaurant. So I go over there to check on the on the brother. And he says,

um, hey, man, how old are you? I said, I'm 16. Sir. He's like, oh, never mind. I heard Hawaii ask.

Is that my, uh, my wife loves redheads.

want to meet it. It has sex with his wife and front of him. And, uh, you know, I don't think I

would have done it. Uh, maybe for the right price and shit. But yeah, anyways, the are loving

man. Love you, too, brother, praise God. And I knew almost got, um, you almost got a sex trafficker with everybody there by an urban couple. And, you know, that's the kind of shit, uh, that's happening, bro. When you had high-end shit, anything could happen, bro. You might get sex trafficker, whatever. When you had a low-end place, well, if you had, you know, if you're working out of subway or something like that or more, like a lower tier fast, you know, you look out,

you look if somebody tries to touch your ass or whatever or something or somebody tries to fucking put their hand in your pants real fast and pull it out and get a quick sniffy at egg boy. But, if you had a high-end place, you might actually get traffic, you know, not some fucking hands sniff and dick monkey over there trying to rub on you, whatever. But what I'm saying is this, dude, uh,

yeah, they wanted that ginger boy. They wanted that fucking little firework. You feel me?

They wanted that fucking spicy candle. But that's okay, bro. That's the kind of shit. When you

work high-end shit, you at least get job opportunities, bro. I always tell my friends,

if you're working in a high-end place, you might get a job opportunity, bro. Debra, thank for your service, bro. Type shit. We out, boy, BLM, dude. GLM, too. Kind of. All right, let's hear this. Hey, what's up? The L, love from New Jersey. This is Charlie. Uh, I was a bus boy and my brother's takeouts and the best part about being a bus boy is you can be fed. You got a lot of food in the back there so you can snack on the food and, um, you know,

being a bus boy might not be the best job, but be the best bus boy you can be. Bro, what are you fucking Richard Nixon or something, dude? We're just trying to freaking clean up the

tables, twin. You feel me, dog, but I got you. But I don't, you don't always get food in the

bag, dude. I worked at this one place and they would have soup, but we could only eat it when it was really hot, bro. If the shit got too kind of cool off to do when let us eat it. So he, like, watching kids eat that hot soup or whatever, I got was a per, uh, maybe a PDF file or whatever, but, but we didn't know him that good. We was employees, you know, um, but yeah, but yeah, feel you, do you work at your brother's stake out, and you got fed, bro, it's something like you

was just over there hanging out, boy. That's fucking gentrification, bro. All right, let's take another call here. Hey, Theo, uh, this is Ryan. So I used to bus tables at this seafood place and there's this old guy

who came in all the time. We're talking in late 70s quiet. Always sat at the same two top by the window.

Every single visit he ordered the same thing, a dozen rot oysters and iced tea. Now, if you ever been a bus boy, you know, the rule nobody says out loud, you know, the table leaves and there's food that looks on touch, you know, it's fair game. Yeah, you can have a little. So the guy finishes up, pays, leaves, and goes over to, and, you know, I go to clear the table and there's still a couple oysters. They're still sitting in the shelf. We look perfect. Oh, broad images don't look perfect, bro.

Going near somebody else's oysters, dude, that's crazy, bro. Let's hear it.

Linda Wedge, cocktail sauce, the whole setup. Honestly, you look like you barely touched them.

Oh, bro. Don't, I don't care if somebody even just a little bit touched an oyster, bro. I ain't even show it of it that thing. Now, a scallop, bro, scallop is just a fucking big gay oyster, bro. It's just basically like a bear in the gay community or whatever. But amongst shellfish, let's hear more scallops, they saw. And I'm hungry. I've been running around for like six hours. So I look around the dining room real quick. Nobody's paying attention. I grab one of the oysters,

hit a little lemon and just slurper right down there on three kind of plates. A couple minutes later, I'm back in the kitchen and one of the servers goes, "Hey, did you clear that old guy's oyster stable?" I'm like, "Yeah." And she goes, "Do you do his weird thing again?" Now, I'm already nervous, and I'm like, "What weird thing?" And she goes, "Oh, he doesn't actually eat them. He just sucks on them for the flavor and spit them back in the shelf."

Man, when I tell you these higher kitchen turn and look at me, because by that point, the oyster is long gone. The dishwasher just starts laughing. He goes, "Bro, you ate a second hand oyster. And the worst part about it was just everybody knew this guy did that. Like it just had known thing about him. Nobody told the new bus, nobody told me this.

That's the day I learned in the port of restaurant rules.

If a food still sitting in a customer's plate, there is this probably a reason."

Bro, don't you can't be eating nobody's oyster like that, bro?

Bam, bro. I can't even imagine that. Oh, it makes my fucking lungs hurt right now. Here and you say that, you bastard. Why would you do that? Why would you do that? Why would you do that? I just don't understand why you would do that. God.

Oh, oh, bro, that's bad, dog. My buddy used to be like that boy. My boy, Josh, we used to work over there. Morton, the seafood over there. On a chaffunk, the river down there on Louisiana, matters on me.

And we were bus boys back then, shit, and we was always like trying to finish off a little bit

of food at that. And sometimes the shrimps, I didn't notice the shrimps, if they eat, if somebody eats a peel shrimp, sometimes a little bit gets kind of kept down by the tail over there. And he would peel off that last little outside part and just get that last bit of snack off that thing. He was like that, though. He was like that, bro. He was a real. He got his GD. Let's hear another call on it.

Yo, Theo, this is Jackson. I got a crazy story story for you.

I was a bus boy at, uh, uh, I mean, the worst enemies you could possibly imagine. Oh, which one was it every single one? Let's hear more. I'm talking, like, just people, throwing stuff everywhere. It was a mess. We know he were talking about when you say people as well, but let's hear more.

But there's one time, whole group people, 15 people came in. They seemed nice. They seemed real nice.

Finally, he was a graduate and one of the boys just graduated and the rest of the guys are very happy.

And he decided that they were going to order the all you can eat pancakes, just one of them. And I have to explain to 15, 17 year olds, but you can't buy just one all you can eat pancakes. You got to buy 15 all you can eat pancakes. Let's just say they beat my ass and I had to give them all you can eat pancakes. I don't even believe that story.

They beat your ass at a denny's, but first of all, that might be true. Nobody we even noticed, but need to give them all you can eat pancakes. I don't even believe that. Um, thank you for the call. Do you believe that, Trevin?

I mean, should happens at Denny's bro. They beat his ass and then he's continued to work for the day. Tears in his eyes. I don't know. I appreciate the call Jackson. I just do not believe it.

Is it wrong for me to say that, Trevin? No, I mean, it's a fair assumption. Okay. And I'm sorry you got hurt if you did get hurt. But I don't think you did. All right.

Theo, my brother, I used to be a bus boy slash kind of barback for this steak house in Nashville. And I worked there for like, I don't know a year and a half.

And basically, I would just kind of pick up dishes from the table sometimes.

And, you know, cut fruit for the bartender stuff. But I would, you know, I would clock in at like 330 in the afternoon. And I would leave at like 10 30 in night. And I may be worked. I mean, I'm, I'm maybe did two hours of work while it was there.

And so after about a year and a half, working there, the manager pulls me in an office one day. And who he goes, hey, man, we're going to eliminate your position. We don't really think that we need a barback. And I said, you don't. I wasn't even mad.

I was like, yeah, I was like, I've been working here for a year and a half. And I don't really know what I do to be totally honest with you.

And I've always imagined that that's what it would be like to work for the federal government.

So yeah, that would my experience. Amen, man. That's from a guy Ethan Anderson. Ah, thank you, bro. Yeah, that's a dude.

I agree. I mean, they just voted to let Pat like perverts keep spending money out of a slush fund. Whatever the government, our government is sold us up the river, brother. So I'm just glad that you had a job, even for a little bit. That'll be at one day we'll be in a museum.

Even if you had a job just for a week or something. But like, I'll tell us about what it was like. There would be three people left. That's great, man. That's great stuff, bro.

I said, you don't. Oh, right. Let's see what else we got here. There's a great one, too, that I'm going to play after this.

I've been a bus boy, I don't know for a while, currently on.

Type shit, big dogs stay in the game, bro. Stay in the freaking game, dude. Just wear knee braces or whatever, things are getting bad. Stay in the game. But the wildest story I had was probably I was working at PF Changs.

And I found someone's panties under the table. And I had to get to the back of the kitchen. But nope, thank you.

You to give them to the back of the kitchen for what?

What do they want? I'm some some per back there. Huffin on them bitches, why? Oh, been there, Daddy. We've all been there, huh?

To be, um, can't pay any! Have you tried to greet Julie? All right, let's get one more here. Yeah, dude, the thing you find under the table, bro, I found a molar under one table, one time.

We had to do left his ashes, but he's ashes or whatever, from a thing, fire, death burning thing or whatever, funerals. Trying to think, yeah, panties or whatever, bro. And if that's that PF Changs, he was at, that's his pop. And the PF Changs was nice though.

At a certain time or at, that's, it was nice. All right, let's get one more here.

I love this one, I think we'll probably finish on this one for now.

We'll see. And we might do some more next week next time we do a solo. I like this. I like kind of seeing what kind of people were doing. What, boss boys, tell me about it, boss girls who was out there. When now we didn't have a lot of boss girls, bro. The boss boys had to try to flirt with the hostesses,

but we were kind of too low class for them. So really, the waiter's got the hostesses really to date them.

So boss boys was always out.

That was the thing about being a boss. Well, you're always on your own, bro. You're always this outside of group. You weren't really to kitchen. They didn't respect you to cook.

They respected you to carry the food from the cook to the table. That was it. They respected you to have the food for about seven or eight seconds. That's as much respect as they gave you when you was a boss boy. They didn't respect you to cook it.

They didn't respect none of that shit. They didn't respect you. They said for seven seconds, you could carry this over there.

That's how I'm going to respect they have for you.

Oh, man, here's a call right here. It's from Jason V. Hi, Theo. I used to be a boss boy at a couple different restaurants.

The first restaurant was the burger bar and stock bridge of Michigan.

It was owned by my uncle Danny who was at the end of more veteran. He loved Asian women. He used to tell me growing up all the time. He's like, get you an oriental woman Jason. They put, they claim they don't talk back.

He owned the burger bar and it worked with him. And the manager of the burger bar was my mom. So I worked with my mom. Uncle Danny was the owner and my mom was the manager. And my mom had a relationship where the her first cousin Steve.

That was the son of my uncle Danny and Steve was in the outlaws motorcycle club. Of course road name was push ride. And I eventually got out of that environment and I grew up and I got my own car. And I became a bus boy at the ground round in Jackson, Michigan. I worked a few days a week there.

And I worked on Kid's Night, which was Tuesday night. And they used to have this clown come in. And this clown was named Planko, Planko was in his fucking late 40s or 50s or some shit. And he was named after that price is right game because he and his mom were like really close. And she fucking died of cancer.

So I'm shit. I mean, he just called himself Planko the clown. Planko didn't have a driver's license. I don't know if Planko was ever legal to drive in the state of Michigan. And I used to have to pick him up the work my boss would give me like an extra $20.

If I would pick up Planko and I formed a relationship with him. He would buy me booze all the fucking time, let me smoke cigarettes. And I would pick him up and he put his clown makeup on as we were driving to the ground round.

And he would basically, I don't think they don't think the ground round paid Planko.

I think they paid him in fucking alcohol because he would just give fucking hammered. And he would make these kids like these fucked up balloon animals. Like, not even balloon animals, like balloon items, like yeah, like a fucking hatchet. He would make and like a balloon machine on. And he would just be sitting in the back as I was busing tables.

And he would be drinking and he would be a guy that's fucking hate kids. And I gave Planko a ride home. And after I quit the ground round, Planko actually hooked me up with his dude.

He was friends with and his name was Detroit Rick.

And he used to sell cable, the scrambleers out of the back at Detroit Rick.

Oh, yeah, cable to scrambleers, dude.

That shit was hype, big industry onward.

Next, then it was like a cash-only thing. I made a lot of money that after that, I joined the Army National Guard and I became a recruiter for the National Guard.

I hope this information helps. Thank you for your service.

Thank you for your service, Jason V. That's all, dude. That is, thank you, bro. Thank you. I was losing hope in humanity.

And in myself, and you just restored it with a good story.

I appreciate that.

Sometimes that's, sometimes that's all we need, you know.

Yeah, thank you, bro. That is, thank you for your service, Jason V. And for your service, as an Army National Guard'sman. That's it. That's it for today. Happy St. Patrick's Day. You know, try the green chillies. Try them on St. Patrick's. They try them for St. Patrick's.

Make put them in your St. Patrick's food. That's a green additive. What else? That's about it. You know, hang in there. We'll keep our heads up. We keep doing our best. We live to fight another day. Busboysmovie.com. That's where you can go get a ticket if you like. Busboysmovie.com. Yeah. Anyway, God bless you guys.

Be good to yourselves. Because you deserve it. You know, you do. We have to be good to ourselves. And one day at a time, you know. One day at a time, whatever's going on. If something's tough in your life, you don't have to, you don't think I have to do it for this my whole life or I can't do this my whole life or I can't do this or this it just all you all

yeah, just can I do this today? That's been helping me recently. Can I do this today?

Can I get through this today? But yeah, thank you guys for paying attention and I appreciate the support and um, gang gang. Have you tried the green chillies? [BLANK_AUDIO]

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