A lot of you are familiar with the DNA project and have been rocking with us for a while, but some of you aren't.
Speaker AA lot of you are faithful listeners of the podcast but aren't familiar with some of the other work that we do.
Speaker ASo I just want to take a quick moment to explain to you a little bit more of what we do.
Speaker ASo you're getting married, or you have a friend, a cousin, a sister, somebody you know who's getting married.
Speaker AOkay, you've booked your venue, caterers, photographer, all that good stuff.
Speaker AWhen it comes to live music, most people have no idea where to look.
Speaker AWe have you covered.
Speaker APicture this.
Speaker ADuring the ceremony, while guests are being seated, or while the bride's walking down the aisle, during the cocktail hour, while guests are just mingling and having a good time, don't forget about dinner music.
Speaker AThat's very important to set the mood while guests eat.
Speaker AAnd we definitely can't forget the party.
Speaker ALet's get the party started right now with the DNA project.
Speaker AWwwdnaproject.
Speaker ACA for more information.
Speaker BHeart, my friends, you don't even know.
Speaker AYou don't even want to know.
Speaker BDon't want to know what's on your heart.
Speaker BHey.
Speaker AI was like, who's gonna bring the energy tonight?
Speaker AAll right, welcome to character.
Speaker CYeah, welcome.
Speaker CWelcome to the DNA airwaves.
Speaker CWe're here, we're partying.
Speaker CWe're recording in the evening for the first time ever, I think, right?
Speaker BEver.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BThis is the latest recording.
Speaker CWe're trying it.
Speaker AWe're seeing how it feels.
Speaker CWe have Anthony, not at his finest hour.
Speaker CWe have Doriki Palmer, always at his finest hour.
Speaker CAnd we have me, Matt Kessel, Larry David.
Speaker AOops.
Speaker CYeah, we were just talking about.
Speaker CThat was private, but we were just talking about how I started watching curb your enthusiasm.
Speaker CAnd I'm coming to the confusing realization that of all cinematic and television characters, I might identify the most with Larry David.
Speaker CAnd he's a real person.
Speaker BFunny.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker BI wonder who I would identify the most as.
Speaker BI identify a lot with Bill Burr, actually.
Speaker CBill Burr?
Speaker CYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker AThe gal them sugar.
Speaker AWho'd I be?
Speaker BYeah, you are the gather sugar.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker BVersion.
Speaker CLike, when I listen to Bill Burr, I know that type of guy.
Speaker CBut, yeah, you're right.
Speaker CI don't identify with that.
Speaker BHe speaks to my soul.
Speaker CWow, interesting.
Speaker CI understand you so much better now.
Speaker CI love Bill Burr.
Speaker CI know so much of his work.
Speaker COh, speaking of left out here.
Speaker AYeah, that.
Speaker COh, no, it's a Bill Burr thing.
Speaker CWe can talk about that.
Speaker COh, got you, Billiam Burlington.
Speaker ASuper left out.
Speaker BSo this is the first time we've all been together in a while.
Speaker BHow is everybody?
Speaker CYeah, yeah, good.
Speaker AIt's been a minute.
Speaker BSummer is basically over.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CI don't know.
Speaker CSeptember can be pretty summery.
Speaker BYeah, that's true.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CI was out in a t shirt this morning and it was very cold and I had to go inside.
Speaker AYep.
Speaker ASummary.
Speaker AYeah, I know the last few mornings have been quite cold, actually.
Speaker BReally crisp, so.
Speaker AAnd evenings too.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker ACrips.
Speaker AYeah, man.
Speaker ACripps P.
Speaker ACrips P.
Speaker AIs that your name?
Speaker BCrips P.
Speaker BCrips P.
Speaker BHave I ever told you that one time someone thought my name was Greasy?
Speaker AGreasy?
Speaker AGreasy.
Speaker AI feel like you did tell us, and it's funnier the second time, but how dear that was.
Speaker ANo, no.
Speaker CWhere did it happen?
Speaker CI don't remember the details.
Speaker BIt was like, oh, no.
Speaker AYeah, tell me.
Speaker AI was gonna try.
Speaker BI don't wanna say where, but it was like one of, like, a big job that I.
Speaker BAnd she was introducing me to people.
Speaker BAnd then, like, my boss's boss is just kind of like half ass paying attention.
Speaker BHe's like, oh, this is our new hire, Dorique.
Speaker BHe's like, nice to meet you, greasy.
Speaker BAnd I'm like, he didn't even ask for clarification.
Speaker BNo, I think he did.
Speaker BOh, no, I think he went greasy.
Speaker BAnd I was like, uh, all the guesses, you thought greasy?
Speaker BNo, Doriaki.
Speaker BAnd he's like, okay.
Speaker BThat's what he said.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker BAnd just like, shut my hands.
Speaker BLike, get out of here types.
Speaker AThose types.
Speaker AMandy, how'd you feel?
Speaker AHow'd you feel at that moment?
Speaker BI felt violent.
Speaker AI thought you were gonna say violated, but violent.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BNo, violent.
Speaker BLike, I felt like, fair enough.
Speaker BPay attention.
Speaker AYou know, you better listen up.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CThere once was a Tim Hortons employee at a Tim Hortons I frequented named Schweitz.
Speaker CAnd one time he was amazing.
Speaker CLike, he just got everything done very quickly, didn't speak much English.
Speaker CAnd one time I approached him and asked him, how is the orange juice here?
Speaker CAnd he said, yes, and gave me orange juice.
Speaker CThat is my story.
Speaker CI feel like that's a Larry David story, and then I have to buy it.
Speaker AOh, I see what's happening.
Speaker AYou're becoming the character that you identify with.
Speaker CThis is a true story.
Speaker BThat is a Larry David story, though.
Speaker AWe do become who we.
Speaker AWho we envision ourselves being.
Speaker ASo cool.
Speaker ALarry, for the rest of this podcast, which is about 25 more minutes, because if you know Anthony, it's almost my bedtime, fellas.
Speaker AI got, like, literally now what do me depends on the night.
Speaker ATonight, it's about 08:00 now, if we're getting that much into detail.
Speaker AAnd I'd like to be in bed by 945, the latest.
Speaker BHmm.
Speaker CWow.
Speaker BThat's fair.
Speaker CAnd then you wake up, 230 in the morning.
Speaker ATo be honest, I'm just feeling tired, and I don't want to wake up early.
Speaker AI would like to sleep from 945 till 745, and I'll wake up feeling very accomplished tomorrow if that happens.
Speaker AThe most accomplished.
Speaker CWow.
Speaker BWow.
Speaker B945 to 745.
Speaker AThis is my goal.
Speaker BGood luck.
Speaker ASomeone's listening.
Speaker ALike, wow.
Speaker BTake anything to fall asleep or.
Speaker ANo, I do have some melatonin.
Speaker AI don't usually dabble too often, but I took it once, and I.
Speaker AIt's one of those, yeah, super.
Speaker AOne of those things where you'll take something in the anticipations, like, yes, here we go.
Speaker ABedtime.
Speaker AAnd then either you knock out hard and wake up, like an hour later, and I'm wired for the rest of the night.
Speaker ALike, stuff like that happens, so.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker AI can't mess around.
Speaker AI'm tired now, so I just got to get this going.
Speaker AMatter of fact, if you guys don't mind, I'd rather just not lose this tired momentum and peace, if that's cool.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BDo you want to go to bed?
Speaker CStay on camera?
Speaker BYeah, just go to bed on camera.
Speaker AJust want to see people do that.
Speaker AClose friends do that, I'm sure.
Speaker BOh, that's funny.
Speaker BImagine someone's just like, yo, I'll just sit this one out for 2 seconds.
Speaker CYou guys ever done that?
Speaker CThe.
Speaker CI don't know why I still want to call it skyping, zooming, or facetiming with someone without talking, like, for hours and falling asleep and stuff like that.
Speaker CI've seen people do that.
Speaker BI've seen it, too.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BIt's not in me to do.
Speaker BI'm not the guy, pal.
Speaker CI do that.
Speaker CIf I was in prison and I had facetime, very different in that situation, for sure.
Speaker AFall asleep talking to you.
Speaker BMaybe when I was younger, I think my brother's gonna punch me for sharing this, but when I was younger, my brother and his girlfriend would just stay on the phone silently, like, they wouldn't say anything together and just, like, sit there curled up in their beds, just like.
Speaker BAnd they were like, did you say something?
Speaker BNo.
Speaker BAnd then they just kind of, like, sit there still.
Speaker BIt was.
Speaker BI joked about it at the wedding because it was always a phenomenon to me.
Speaker CThis was when evenings and weekends were already a thing.
Speaker CYeah, exactly.
Speaker AOh, man.
Speaker ABarely daytime minutes.
Speaker BYeah, it was.
Speaker BIt was weird.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnyway, yeah.
Speaker BNow they got that out of the way, right?
Speaker AYou know what?
Speaker AThey deserve better than this for me.
Speaker AI got to pull it together.
Speaker AI may be tired.
Speaker BAll right, let's go.
Speaker BWhat do you got, captain lead?
Speaker AThis.
Speaker AMe and Matt had talked about one thing, and you and I, Doriki, had talked about another thing.
Speaker ASo whoever says I first is gonna be the one who.
Speaker ACan you give us clues to talk about the thing?
Speaker ANo, that's it.
Speaker AThen you say I or Doriki, just.
Speaker BCause you said, who said I first, but didn't say what was gonna happen.
Speaker COh, okay, fair enough.
Speaker BTook a while to reveal what was gonna happen.
Speaker BSo it's like, let's rush into the eye.
Speaker AThere's no one rushing.
Speaker AAll right.
Speaker AJust quietly do it.
Speaker BNo, I said I already after I found out.
Speaker AOh, wow.
Speaker AI had missed that whole thing.
Speaker AWe, like, hit the climax and fell flat because I wasn't paying attention.
Speaker AThat's cool.
Speaker ASo, man, I'm gonna need a lot of energy for this.
Speaker ASo member Doriki?
Speaker AI'm just joking.
Speaker AWe had talked about the five or a bunch of things that musicians should stop doing, and I was like, right, I was in that place, and I was just like, man, they gotta stop doing.
Speaker ADid I tell you?
Speaker ANo, I didn't.
Speaker BNo, you didn't reveal it.
Speaker AI revealed it even better.
Speaker ASo this will be a surprise to you, you and all of you.
Speaker ASo I'm going to break them down.
Speaker AI'll just spit them out, because I don't really have time and the energy.
Speaker AI'm just joking.
Speaker COh, I remember.
Speaker ANo, you don't remember.
Speaker AYou're supposed to be surprised.
Speaker AYeah, we talked about it briefly, too, right?
Speaker CYeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker ASo I'm going to spit them out, and then we can talk about that for a little while.
Speaker AAnd if you guys think they suck, then maybe you fall into the category of these people that I'm actually sick and tired of dealing with.
Speaker AIn no particular order, though, because I hadn't got that far.
Speaker ASo these are the top five things that I believe musicians need to stop doing now, exclamation mark number one.
Speaker ALet's see if you're surprised by any of these at all, too.
Speaker ANot replying to emails.
Speaker CAre these?
Speaker CBecause I feel like they're all going to be pretty specific to any professional, I guess.
Speaker CNo, you're going to get into music here, too, but never find the email.
Speaker AThis is a podcast for musicians.
Speaker ASorry, I know.
Speaker ANo, you're right.
Speaker AIt could be for anyone.
Speaker AI'm sure if you're a postman, this is going to apply to you too.
Speaker AYou got to reply.
Speaker BBut that one's transferable is all he's saying.
Speaker BNo.
Speaker BAnd I agree.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ANo.
Speaker CIf you're a post person and you're.
Speaker CAnd you don't reply to emails, might be specific.
Speaker CAwful.
Speaker COn a federal level.
Speaker CPostman.
Speaker COkay.
Speaker CAll right.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CThe guy in the short.
Speaker AI don't know why it sounds different.
Speaker AI've actually never said post person before, so I'm ashamed of myself.
Speaker AYou're right.
Speaker CMy band has a band.
Speaker CNo, please go on.
Speaker ADo you really?
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker CIt's on our second album.
Speaker AHow many albums do you have?
Speaker CThree.
Speaker CAnd there's a fourth one coming up.
Speaker ACool.
Speaker BPlease continue.
Speaker COkay, so number one.
Speaker AOkay, don't.
Speaker CDon't reply to emails.
Speaker ANo, no.
Speaker ADon't tell them not to reply to emails.
Speaker CBecause people who do not reply to email.
Speaker CSorry.
Speaker BDoing that.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker AStop doing that thing.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AI'm not gonna tell you why.
Speaker ABecause you.
Speaker AThere's so many reasons why you're gonna miss.
Speaker CGive us a couple.
Speaker CIt's your list.
Speaker AYou're gonna miss out on work.
Speaker AIt's gonna seem like you don't care.
Speaker CI.
Speaker CYep, yep.
Speaker AIt drives me.
Speaker CSeeming like you don't care is massive.
Speaker CCuz nobody wants to work with somebody who appears like they don't care.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AThat's.
Speaker AThat's a huge one for me.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AIf you're not.
Speaker CPeople want to be in a fun environment when they're at work.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AYou want to be.
Speaker AWant to keep me happy or professional.
Speaker BYou know, bare minimum, it doesn't need to be fun, but you want to.
Speaker AGet the job done, you know?
Speaker AAnd I get it.
Speaker ACause the musician side is the creative, so it's not.
Speaker AIt's tough.
Speaker ANot everyone has that balance between, you know, the administrative parts of it and being a musician and creative.
Speaker ABut it's important.
Speaker AIt's important.
Speaker AThis is how we communicate.
Speaker BAgreed.
Speaker AThank you.
Speaker AI got that off my chest.
Speaker AI'm actually starting to feel better.
Speaker AOne by one.
Speaker AI can't wait to get to number five.
Speaker AAlright.
Speaker BAlright, let's go.
Speaker AOkay, so number two.
Speaker ANumber two.
Speaker AOh, man.
Speaker AThis might be okay.
Speaker ANot having solutions when a problem is presented.
Speaker AFor instance, somebody saying I'm like, hey, hey, Doriki, I'm no longer available for this thing that I had said.
Speaker AI'm available for the end.
Speaker AShould that be the end, though?
Speaker BYou taught me this.
Speaker BTo be honest with you, as a music maybe.
Speaker BCause you have a lot more experience in this situation, and I've seen personally what you do in that situation.
Speaker BSo I already know that it's a no no just by your standards.
Speaker BBut I never knew that it would probably be in the musician's best interest to get a replacement for them.
Speaker BSo can you explain, maybe why you feel so strong?
Speaker BI agree with you.
Speaker BI just want you to kind of express why you believe so strongly as the musician.
Speaker BIf you are canceling, why you should find someone to replace.
Speaker ANo fair.
Speaker AThat's a good question.
Speaker ABut first, I want to ask Matt, what are your thoughts on this?
Speaker ABecause you're a musician as well.
Speaker CI mean, you're free to do whatever you want if you don't want people to call you back.
Speaker CIf we look at this from the business point of it, which, admittedly, most musicians, including myself, need to get better at, you're a skilled laborer, and replacing you isn't something that can just be done, you know, with indeed a day before.
Speaker ARight, right.
Speaker CSo when you do that, you're royally messing up a bunch of things.
Speaker CYou're messing up Anthony's reputation.
Speaker CIn this case, you're messing up potentially a wedding or whatever.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CAnd you're not making money.
Speaker CAnd ward travels.
Speaker CIt's not.
Speaker CThe industry is big, but it's not that big.
Speaker CPeople talk.
Speaker CAnd, like, I was doing a favor for.
Speaker CI was working for.
Speaker CFor a friend doing sound, live sound.
Speaker CAnd the keyboard is their new Anthony.
Speaker CLike, it's everybody's.
Speaker CAnd he had only nice things to say about you, by the way, and the summer song.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker CAnd.
Speaker CSorry, that's my opinion.
Speaker CI went on a tangent.
Speaker ASummer sauce, what is yours?
Speaker BSummer sausages.
Speaker BIf you make an album, you have to call it summer sausages.
Speaker AWhoa.
Speaker APeople will take that so wrong.
Speaker CNo, that can also refer to your picking fingers.
Speaker BBoom.
Speaker CAutobiography.
Speaker ADog.
Speaker AYeah, that's actually a really good breakdown.
Speaker ASo I'm gonna leave it right there.
Speaker BOkay, fair enough.
Speaker AWe're just flying through these.
Speaker AI think if this was a morning podcast, I'd elaborate a lot longer on these points, but, uh.
Speaker CBut I like these lists.
Speaker CWe should do more of them, because it's actually, now that I'm thinking about it, the whole top five thing.
Speaker CBut we're gonna make it more interesting because we have experienced personal touch.
Speaker CNumber three.
Speaker BNumber three.
Speaker ANumber three.
Speaker AThis one's funny, but it's not funny, but I can see how it happens.
Speaker ASee what I'm doing.
Speaker BI don't know if I should laugh, then.
Speaker BI'm so scared.
Speaker AHold on.
Speaker AYou decide.
Speaker AAll right, showing up unprepared, but solely based on talent.
Speaker AThat's the thing.
Speaker AYeah, so that's the thing.
Speaker AAnd this is something, as a musician, you can really get by doing maybe in other things, like public speaking, you could probably wing it.
Speaker AWhen you've put in the time and you're in music specifically, when you have the ear that you can kind of just play along.
Speaker AYou don't really need to know the song in every situation, but you can pretty much fake your way through a lot of situations that can become the norm pretty quickly, especially when you're piling on work.
Speaker AYou start to show up cute for a little while, but the.
Speaker AI guess the cuteness of it wears off pretty quickly and it catches up with you.
Speaker AAnd again, goes back to the reputation thing that Matt had mentioned earlier.
Speaker AWhat are your takes on that one, Matt?
Speaker CI saw this meme.
Speaker CNo, I'm not one of those guys.
Speaker CNot at all.
Speaker CI'm obsessively.
Speaker AI know, I know a prepper.
Speaker CBut I've had times where I thought I could wing it, and I, like an audition and I messed it up.
Speaker CAnd, you know, it was a band I wanted to play in, but I think a lot of musicians have had that sort of situation.
Speaker CYou kind of learn that.
Speaker CWhat's that saying?
Speaker CSmart people learn from other people's mistakes.
Speaker CSo I'm an idiot because I learn from my own mistakes.
Speaker AFair enough.
Speaker AMany of us are.
Speaker CThere's a meme that I saw, and I forgot the actual meme, but it was like, a person that's freaked out.
Speaker CAnd the caption said, the musician that said that, they know the song well enough when they reach the second half of the bridge.
Speaker AOh.
Speaker BCause they're freaking out.
Speaker ACause they have no idea what's going on.
Speaker CCause nobody remembers the second half of the bridge.
Speaker AYeah, right, right.
Speaker AAnd if you can make it that far, you get some respect.
Speaker AYeah, yeah.
Speaker CCause you can remember the verse, the chorus, and then you think you remember the bridge.
Speaker CAnd then the second half of it comes, and you're like, what the hell is this part?
Speaker AYeah, they added a new part to the song.
Speaker CYeah, but, yeah, that's no good.
Speaker CAnd we've had that a couple of times in our band, where we were looking for a keyboardist and a few classical pianists showed up.
Speaker CAnd they had this smugness about rock in general.
Speaker CIt seemed like they felt.
Speaker CIt's something that I've seen a few times that they felt like, because it's rock and classical is more complicated, which it isn't.
Speaker CNecessarily that this should just come naturally to them and it's not a problem at all.
Speaker CAnd they came unprepared.
Speaker CThese people that can play Rachmaninov and Bach and stuff would come unprepared and mess up, not be able to play.
Speaker CSo that's my opinion.
Speaker CWhat do you think?
Speaker AYou asking me or you asking D?
Speaker CD and then Anthony.
Speaker BOh, he's a rapper.
Speaker BI kind of echo everything you said.
Speaker BI feel like it's frustrating when you practice so much and then see someone else clearly not giving a shit.
Speaker BThat bothers me because I know the amount of work I put into preparing for a performance.
Speaker BAnd so when I see someone during rehearsal not ready, and then at the show, they barely made any, you know, improvements from the rehearsal, it's like, you know, it's hard.
Speaker BIt's tough.
Speaker BIt's tough.
Speaker AYeah, yeah.
Speaker AThere's like an arrogance too, right?
Speaker ABecause even if somebody can show up and kill it, and to the crowd, it was a great show, but to the rest of the guys or gals or.
Speaker BThat's a good point, too.
Speaker APersons on stage, it's still like, yeah, but you didn't know the song.
Speaker AWe're not.
Speaker AYou're not fooling us.
Speaker ASo after a while, that can kind of wear on you too.
Speaker ALike, you stop calling that person.
Speaker ASome people slide by because they're just that good and you still call them and you know who.
Speaker AYou know who you are.
Speaker CHave you ever done that, Anthony?
Speaker CHave you ever just looked at a cue sheet and just.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CWhat key it is?
Speaker COkay, I gotta keep going.
Speaker AYeah, I found myself.
Speaker AI found myself super guilty of that.
Speaker AWhen I started going to the.
Speaker AThis is funny.
Speaker AIt's therapy.
Speaker AWhen I started going to the CCM type churches, the music was easy at a level that I just wasn't really even listening to it.
Speaker CThat's what I was wondering about, if.
Speaker AI'm being honest, especially when there was like a chord chart on stage for me.
Speaker AYeah, give me the roots.
Speaker AI can hear the rest from there.
Speaker ASo, yeah, I definitely went through a phase like that, and I know a lot of musicians have, so I'm still on your side.
Speaker AI'm not trying to call you out in a negative way, I'm just trying to call you out as a friend.
Speaker AJust do better.
Speaker CIt's just part of the truth of CCM.
Speaker CI'm sorry, there's.
Speaker CNow there's a really big delay.
Speaker CSo I always think you're done and then you move on to the next sentence.
Speaker AI'm never done.
Speaker CDo you want to say something else?
Speaker ANo, I'm done.
Speaker BI'm never done.
Speaker BDo you want to say something else?
Speaker BNo, I'm done.
Speaker CWhat I was going to say is that CCM, and this is in no way, I don't mean this in a negative way, but CCM has.
Speaker AYou can.
Speaker CPart of the appeal is that you come to church, or in the sense of live music, is that you come to church and there's new songs every week and just everything is new and fresh and shiny every week.
Speaker CAnd with that in mind, it's the music sort of morphed into this.
Speaker CI guess there's templates involved, but it's just the songs are written in the kind of way where skilled musicians can just grab them and switch them quickly and learn a new one.
Speaker CAnd it's very rewarding for the audience goers because there's a new, amazing, exciting, big production every week.
Speaker BFair enough.
Speaker CPart of it.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CLike, if it was a different type of music, do you think you'd be able to pull off the type of shows that you see CCM churches put on?
Speaker ANot as easily.
Speaker AI mean, it depends on the type of music.
Speaker ABut definitely that formats, like, super easy.
Speaker AYeah, yeah.
Speaker AAll right, let's move on.
Speaker AThis is a big one for me.
Speaker BThis is good.
Speaker BSo far so good.
Speaker BLet's keep this momentum going.
Speaker ANumber four.
Speaker ATell them where it hurts, son.
Speaker ATell them where it hurt.
Speaker AThis is where it hurts.
Speaker AThis is where it gets me at the heart.
Speaker AOh, man.
Speaker ADouble booking.
Speaker CThat's kind of like number two.
Speaker AThat should be.
Speaker ANo, no.
Speaker ACause number two was like, just literally.
Speaker AMaybe something came up.
Speaker AMaybe you had, I don't know, an emergency, but you couldn't take the time just to say, but try this guy, or.
Speaker ABut this, or, you know, whatever.
Speaker ABut I have a different set of strings.
Speaker AJust like, here's your.
Speaker AHere's the problem.
Speaker ABut this one is straight up double booking.
Speaker ALike, I have a calendar, but I somehow don't use it properly.
Speaker ASo does that book myself for multiple things?
Speaker ABefore I came on tonight, I was mid conversation about a double booking that I'm about to find out about.
Speaker AApparently it happens a lot.
Speaker BOh, my gosh.
Speaker AIt happens.
Speaker BReally?
Speaker AYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker ASo, I mean, not everyone does it, but the thing is, it's.
Speaker AI guess it's just patterns, right?
Speaker ABecause the people who do it, do.
Speaker BIt, do it often.
Speaker BSo it's always a repeat offender.
Speaker AYou're not surprised.
Speaker AI guess it's just behaviors.
Speaker ALike, if you were to do that, I would be surprised.
Speaker ABut there's some people who do it like?
Speaker AWell, I guess.
Speaker AI guess I should have known better.
Speaker ADo you have your hand up?
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CWow, that's a huge delay.
Speaker CI had my hand up, like, last week.
Speaker AYou know what?
Speaker AI think it just clicked in.
Speaker AI was like, are we at school?
Speaker BI saw it a while ago.
Speaker AYes, we are at school.
Speaker AAnd I hope you're taking notes and listening.
Speaker AThat was hilarious.
Speaker CIn Israel and some other countries.
Speaker CBut when I was a kid, we wouldn't raise our hand up.
Speaker CWe would raise a finger.
Speaker CAnd when I moved here and all the kids had a full hand up, I was like, that makes so much more sense.
Speaker CWhat was the point of the finger?
Speaker CWhat a.
Speaker CYeah, it's better.
Speaker BI like it.
Speaker BIt's humble.
Speaker CWhat?
Speaker CGood point.
Speaker CIt is kind of humble.
Speaker CUm, what.
Speaker CWhat I wanted to ask is if these are repeat offenders.
Speaker CWhy?
Speaker CHow do you even get to know that they're repeat offenders?
Speaker CWhy don't you stop calling them?
Speaker AThere's a really honest answer.
Speaker ASometimes they're just really good.
Speaker CYeah, there's just.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AUnfortunate truth.
Speaker ASome people are hard to replace and you're willing to take certain.
Speaker AIt's like you're in a weird, abusive relationship.
Speaker AYou're willing to take certain things that you shouldn't because there's other things that are really good that you might not get otherwise.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker CSo you're telling me the talent people can get away with things that other people can get away with?
Speaker AStop talking about this.
Speaker AI feel like the more we say it, I'm gonna slip someone's name.
Speaker AI really like to move on.
Speaker AGetting really uncomfortable here.
Speaker ANo, because you know who you are.
Speaker AIf you listen, then you know, and you're gonna hit me up and be like, I'm really gonna try and stop double booking.
Speaker AI'm gonna be like, you're not.
Speaker ABut yeah, it happens.
Speaker AAnd that's the truth of why these people are allowed to get away with it, because the talent.
Speaker AAnd it sucks.
Speaker AI guess when you're a certain level of good, at least in your, like, your community, it's.
Speaker AIt's, uh.
Speaker AYou can't even really find yourself a suitable sub.
Speaker AThat must do something to your.
Speaker AJust your overall, like, maybe not ego, but yeah, I guess it is your ego, regardless of it, if it's arrogance or not.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker ALike, if you trap can.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAlmost any other people are trapped.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd is it always the highest bidder wins in those situations?
Speaker BSo, like, if they would, they're obviously gonna follow the money.
Speaker BIt's not really just like the fact that you booked them and paid them to deposit or whatever.
Speaker ADo you know, that's.
Speaker AThat's the thing.
Speaker AI mean, it would make sense if you're leaving for more money, right?
Speaker ASometimes opportunity or.
Speaker AI don't know.
Speaker AI don't know.
Speaker AI'm not always saying it goes against me, so sometimes it might work, but overall, I just.
Speaker AI just think that there's a better way.
Speaker AAnd there's a.
Speaker AThere's probably some systems that we have in place and technology to avoid that at this point.
Speaker AI guess, easy to make mistake of booking yourself to be in two places at once.
Speaker ALike, would you book yourself or a doctor's appointment and a dentist appointment at the same time?
Speaker ASomething would tell you that, you know, it doesn't work.
Speaker AI don't know.
Speaker CBut yeah.
Speaker CDoriki and I had very similar experiences multiple times when we had the studio, which I don't actually think we talked about on the air yet.
Speaker BNo.
Speaker CBut yeah, the news is out.
Speaker CMaybe we'll talk about it later.
Speaker CBut we would have people that, for whatever reason, either they were a one of a kind talent, it happened more than once, or they were wealthy and it was their production.
Speaker CBut everybody, there'd be weeks of coordination, white glove decision making about how can we make this experience as incredible and as easy and soft as possible for this talented.
Speaker CRight, Dorika, you can think of a couple of times like that, right?
Speaker CAnd we all show up and like, don't look them in the eye or whatever.
Speaker CDo look them and call them the doctor or call them the whatever.
Speaker CAnd they are.
Speaker CThey don't eat this, they don't need gluten, they don't have celiac, they just don't eat gluten, don't talk about that, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Speaker CAnd everybody be ready at this time.
Speaker CExactly.
Speaker CAnd then we're all ready and we're all waiting and we all literally have white gloves on.
Speaker CAnd then the person is 4 hours late.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CAnd that happened multiple times, often.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CIt's just what it's like when you have the power over people.
Speaker CNot everybody is willing to still be a decent person.
Speaker BIt's a good point.
Speaker BI've seen that happen a lot.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AGross.
Speaker AI guess.
Speaker CYeah, it's sure true.
Speaker CThey're also paying for their time.
Speaker CBut what was even the point of making us prep then, right?
Speaker CTo what end?
Speaker CEgo, like you said, maybe.
Speaker BSo let's repeat what was number four again, just to refresh my memory.
Speaker ATrying to make my heart stop.
Speaker ADouble booking, double book yourself to be two or three places at once at the same time.
Speaker AOn the same day.
Speaker ADouble booking.
Speaker BAnd is this next one your most biggest, or is this just a random list?
Speaker CDid you read it for most, at least?
Speaker AShould have put it in order.
Speaker AI feel like double bookings.
Speaker AThe worst of it, I was gonna.
Speaker BSay, because I feel like double booking is your time.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AYeah, that one hit me hard.
Speaker AMaybe I didn't even realize.
Speaker AHow was that me?
Speaker BNo, I think.
Speaker BSorry.
Speaker BI think the not finding a replacement is your biggest one, you know?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo they're probably.
Speaker AThey're pretty close.
Speaker AIt's a pretty one beam right now.
Speaker ASo, Dirky, I gotta ask you something real quick while we're on the air.
Speaker ASure.
Speaker AYou busy tomorrow at one?
Speaker BWhy?
Speaker AOh, yeah, I'm just joking, obviously.
Speaker CNo, no, don't tell me.
Speaker APretty quickly.
Speaker AOh, are you busy?
Speaker CBecause that's what people do.
Speaker CThey go, why?
Speaker CAnd then you go, but are you busy or are you not busy?
Speaker AOkay, different question.
Speaker AAre you available tomorrow at one?
Speaker BIt depends for what, though.
Speaker ANo, I'm just joking.
Speaker AI'm messing with you.
Speaker ABut in reality, if you needed to know and if we weren't on the air, you would just quickly check your calendar.
Speaker BYeah, absolutely.
Speaker AOkay, so that was just a quick segue, because I'm learning how to do this podcasting a little bit better at a time.
Speaker AAnd this is number five.
Speaker AAnd I thought number four hurt me until I got to this one.
Speaker AAnd really, you know what?
Speaker AThis is annoying as hell.
Speaker AAm I allowed to say hell?
Speaker AI'm just.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BWow.
Speaker BAm I allowed to say hell?
Speaker AI'm pretty sure that's as far as.
Speaker COnly if you want to go there.
Speaker AWhoa.
Speaker AYou meet me off air, Larry David.
Speaker ASo, number five.
Speaker ANumber five is if I say, hey, man, you free on the 21st at 03:00 easy thing to say was.
Speaker AWould be let.
Speaker AAnd you're familiar with this one even as.
Speaker AYeah, easy thing is.
Speaker ALet me check my schedule and get back to you.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AHow long should it take for someone to get back to you?
Speaker AJust in real life?
Speaker ALet's pretend that this isn't a music thing.
Speaker ALet's pretend that this is just other parts of real life.
Speaker AReality.
Speaker A15 minutes.
Speaker AWhat do you say?
Speaker BDepends if you're driving.
Speaker BIt depends if, like, what you're doing at the moment.
Speaker BYou're asked, yeah, but if you have access to your computer or phone, the answer should be fairly quickly.
Speaker AFair enough.
Speaker COr at the very least, you can say, sorry again, I thought that I'm talking when you're not, but we were talking at the same moment.
Speaker COr at the very least, you say, let me see.
Speaker CI'll get back to you in 5 hours or whatever, but if you specify.
Speaker AAnd you might forget to be like 7 hours.
Speaker ALife right in the way.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BDay tops.
Speaker BI guess you're right.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ABut the point is, you get back to people, and it's not consistently a battle.
Speaker AAnd here's what I'm gonna say to musicians.
Speaker AIt's not all you.
Speaker ASome of you are great.
Speaker AYou're all great.
Speaker ASome of you are great.
Speaker AAnd it doesn't take that long to get back to someone.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AIt should be a pretty quick thing.
Speaker ASee, you made Doriki sigh.
Speaker AHe was just like, yeah.
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker BThat one touched home.
Speaker BThat one touched home.
Speaker BIt's tough.
Speaker AIt is a tough one.
Speaker ASo this is a teaching moment.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AWe have a lot of fun here.
Speaker ASo these are just some things for you to consider.
Speaker AAnd you might say, you know what?
Speaker AI do that no one cares.
Speaker AIt doesn't bother anyone.
Speaker AIt's just me or it's just Anthony, or it's just Matt.
Speaker ABut no, you know, it's a courtesy thing.
Speaker ASo these are just a few tips to just be a little bit more professional as a musician.
Speaker AYou're a really creative, talented guy.
Speaker BOr gal or non binary.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AThank you.
Speaker AOr Larry David, now that you identify.
Speaker CLarry David.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CMy new identity.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CMy pronouns are Oy and Vay.
Speaker BOy and vay.
Speaker BThat's funny.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo if this didn't help anybody else, to be honest, it helps me.
Speaker AI feel a little bit better now.
Speaker AI'll probably sleep like a baby tonight.
Speaker AThis might be the reason why I haven't been sleeping, actually.
Speaker CSo you have to get this off.
Speaker AYour chest on behalf of all this nonsense.
Speaker AThank you.
Speaker CCan I add a number six?
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker AWe can keep going.
Speaker CEngineers, too.
Speaker CBut let's talk about musicians.
Speaker CMusicians that don't know their place.
Speaker AOh, you have to break that down.
Speaker CUm, when a rhythm guitarist think they're a lead guitarist or that they feel like they could showcase themselves better at a certain part.
Speaker CWhen it's not about them, it's about the vocals or the song.
Speaker CIt's about the song, really.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker COr.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CDrummers, and I've been very guilty of this myself.
Speaker CDrummers that just play too many fills that don't fit because they believe that it showcases their skills better.
Speaker CEven though the audience doesn't understand which chops are.
Speaker CThey just know, tight or not.
Speaker CYou know, that's true.
Speaker AIt's a feeling.
Speaker CAnd they're not supposed to do that.
Speaker COr, you know, backup vocalists that have too many trills and lines when they know that they.
Speaker CThe best way to serve the song is to be a backing, a backdrop to the lead vocals, things like that, you know?
Speaker AYikes.
Speaker COof.
Speaker BNo, I agree with you.
Speaker AI'm gonna be honest.
Speaker BDon't overstep your boundaries.
Speaker BIt's just stay in your lane, and.
Speaker CIt'S not about a power thing.
Speaker CIt's about.
Speaker BI agree.
Speaker CIt's about the art.
Speaker CIt's about the music, about putting on a show.
Speaker CIt's about entertainment, harmony.
Speaker CYeah, but at the same time, I think there's something to be said about, like, busting balls when someone isn't doing it, you know?
Speaker ATrue.
Speaker CBeing, like, you're doing too much.
Speaker CStop that.
Speaker CDon't be a dick.
Speaker BThat's always a weird one, too.
Speaker BLike, do you guys, like, is that the musical director's job to kind of rein that in?
Speaker BOr, like, have you ever, either of you experienced the time where you could have, you know, told another musician, like, hey, just settle down there, superstar?
Speaker AYeah, I guess it does come down to the music director, if there is one in place for the.
Speaker AWhatever it is.
Speaker ABut, yeah, yeah, it's definitely something that has to come up time to time, unfortunately.
Speaker BWhat about in a band, Matt?
Speaker CYou know, in my particular band, we're very close friends that have known each other for a very long time, and we've all discovered our favorite bands together at the same time, and we've so.
Speaker CAnd we're all interested in multiple instruments, so for us, it's never been like that.
Speaker COkay, luckily.
Speaker CLuckily.
Speaker CBut I can tell you that it's hard to find other people to play with.
Speaker CI feel like not just playing with those two guys sometimes, you know?
Speaker CAnd it's because people bring their egos and people bring whatever other baggage.
Speaker CBut I've definitely worked with bands where you just have drama, things happening like that, where musicians.
Speaker COne musician wants this line in there and the other one doesn't, and they actually, like, fight about it like kids.
Speaker CIt's a little silly.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CAnd I would understand that if somebody had, like, an artistic vision that was being trampled.
Speaker CBut these can be small differences that really are just about.
Speaker CI want to be right.
Speaker CI want you to be wrong.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker CThat's not really the place for it.
Speaker ANo, no, I hear that.
Speaker AYeah, that's a big one, actually.
Speaker AI was trying to intentionally, but I looked.
Speaker ALooks like I kept it more to the, like, professionalism and admin side and you.
Speaker AAnd hit him right in the heart, what you do.
Speaker BCreativity.
Speaker AYeah, yeah.
Speaker CBut it's also a business thing, right?
Speaker CLike drummers.
Speaker CYou're a rhythm machine.
Speaker CThat's what you're hired for.
Speaker AKeep the time.
Speaker CThat's your business.
Speaker AGroove.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CUnless Anthony the MD looks at you and goes, Phil, and then you go.
Speaker ADo a little more.
Speaker AYeah, you'd be listening on my topic.
Speaker CDo you have one?
Speaker BNo, I don't, unfortunately.
Speaker BI think you guys had a sweet list, and I don't really have much to add to that.
Speaker ASo you busy tomorrow?
Speaker AOne?
Speaker BI'm not.
Speaker CI thought you were gonna offer him to do a pod.
Speaker COh, because you don't want to do them in the evening, that's why.
Speaker CThat's misunderstood.
Speaker AOh, gotcha.
Speaker CAnd you were just giving an example.
Speaker CThat was just the perfect time.
Speaker CWhen we finish our service.
Speaker AMakes sense.
Speaker AMakes sense.
Speaker AYeah, it could have been that.
Speaker BThat was a great list, though, Anthony.
Speaker BAnd I appreciate you sharing that with us and everyone listening.
Speaker BI think maybe we should try and do some more lists and break them down.
Speaker BNot all the time, but I'd appreciate some more lists.
Speaker BLike, I think Matt maybe like studio etiquette and just kind of like some things that you hate, you know?
Speaker CSure.
Speaker ASuspense.
Speaker AI want to hear them now.
Speaker AYeah, that would be a fun one.
Speaker AI'm sure we could come up with.
Speaker CSome other cool ideas and we can make a version for home studios too.
Speaker CThose work differently.
Speaker AThat's interesting.
Speaker BYeah, very good.
Speaker BVery good.
Speaker BBefore we go, I did another podcast while you were gone, Matt, and we talked about something that me and Anthony kind of were really not ignorant on, but we just don't really know much about.
Speaker BAnd I was always curious.
Speaker BCause I know you know a lot about basically everything.
Speaker BYeah, you just have knowledge on everything.
Speaker BAnd I wondered how sharp your music, your canadian music knowledge is.
Speaker BSpecifically.
Speaker BYour black canadian music knowledge.
Speaker AMore specific.
Speaker CProbably not.
Speaker CDepends on.
Speaker AAnd we're going historically.
Speaker AWe're going pre what?
Speaker APre ninety's what we're saying or what?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BPre ninety's would be a good start.
Speaker CProbably not.
Speaker BThat's when I started.
Speaker CGreat.
Speaker APre ninety's black canadian music, Matt.
Speaker AGo.
Speaker AWhat?
Speaker BWhat do you got?
Speaker BWhat's the query search for?
Speaker CI think I'm done at the nineties.
Speaker CI think I got Shaggy.
Speaker CLike, I'd have to think pretty hard.
Speaker BWait, Shaggy's not even canadian.
Speaker AYes, he is.
Speaker BHe got, Shaggy's not canadian.
Speaker CWhat?
Speaker ALike, yes, he is.
Speaker AHe born in Canada.
Speaker CMocha.
Speaker COnly.
Speaker BShaggy isn't canadian.
Speaker CThat's somebody.
Speaker COh, Drake is looking it up.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CMy only example is Shaggy, and he's not even canadian.
Speaker AHe's heavy in the canadian market.
Speaker AI don't know if he's.
Speaker BI'm not sure that's a good, good impression.
Speaker BBut yeah, we were kind of the same way.
Speaker BSo me and Anthony were gonna see if you knew anything.
Speaker BYou could drop some, like, knowledge on us or a good place to start, but nobody knows, you mean, you probably know Oscar Peterson, right?
Speaker CI was just gonna say Oscar Peterson, but does that even count?
Speaker CLike, that's a legend.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, this is just from.
Speaker BThat's kind of.
Speaker BMe and Anthony got stuck at was like, damn.
Speaker BAnd then we found a weird list of, like, people that we didn't even think were really worth mentioning yet in terms of just canadian music legacy.
Speaker BBut I mean, I appreciated the list regardless.
Speaker BBut, yeah, we just wanted to see what you knew.
Speaker BAnd I think in the upcoming podcast, we're probably going to start really digging deeper into, like you guys said, pre ninety's anything.
Speaker BMaybe even start with the eighties and go back.
Speaker CLet's do it.
Speaker BReally curious into finding out a little bit more on that, the history of black music in Canada.
Speaker BAnd I think at the same time, you could even drop some jewish knowledge on us and go a little bit deeper, for sure, you know, that culture and their historical music as well.
Speaker CI think up until like, since World War two and up until somewhat recently, anything like America was where it was at the culturally.
Speaker BRight, everybody?
Speaker CAnd I think it was especially extra hard for black people in Canada to be taken seriously when, like, the cradle of modern music is just south of their border.
Speaker CSo I feel like nobody wanted to invest.
Speaker CBut now, even when you're scrolling through TikTok, you're hearing like, russian music and music from everywhere.
Speaker CAmerica is no longer in the lead, in a sense.
Speaker BYou don't think they're in the lead?
Speaker CWell, sorry, I shouldn't say that.
Speaker CAmerica's people are catching up.
Speaker BI think people are catching up, catching up.
Speaker CAnd even so, for a long time, we're going to hear the vestiges.
Speaker CLike, if you listen to K pop, which is a totally different thing, but if you really break down K pop, it's all american music.
Speaker BYep.
Speaker CIt's drums, guitar, you know, major minor scales, and like, european american music that has gone through the mill and now ended up in.
Speaker CIn the east, and now they're doing something totally different with it.
Speaker CBut the point is, I don't think K pop would have been popular in the eighties without the Internet.
Speaker CAnd with America having more of a stronghold on the free world, quote unquote, I don't know if I'm getting out there, but it feels like canadian music now.
Speaker CLike, do you think it's a coincidence that so much canadian music is big now in the world?
Speaker BI don't think it's a coincidence, but I think when you find a giant superstar like a Drake, I think he opened up people's willingness to give canadian artists more of a chance.
Speaker BAnd I think that you get that when you get any big artists, they always tend to bring a couple others around.
Speaker BLike when the UK has a little run, you get some other big uk artists that get to come cross over into North America.
Speaker BThat's my opinion.
Speaker BI might be wrong, but it wasn't.
Speaker CJust Drake, it was Bieber.
Speaker BRight, yes, exactly.
Speaker BSorry.
Speaker AOf course.
Speaker CAnd that was kind of before Drake.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BAnd the weekend.
Speaker CYeah, yeah, the weekend came through Drake.
Speaker CBut it's.
Speaker CI just think people are more open to not american music now.
Speaker BAbsolutely.
Speaker BAnd I think the Internet obviously was a catalyst for that, you know?
Speaker AYeah, that makes sense.
Speaker AOpen the doors.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CThat's kind of bewildering that none of us can really think of.
Speaker CI mean, I'm an immigrant, whatever.
Speaker CBut you guys can't even think of artists from the nineties.
Speaker CI guess it just.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CWhat did they do?
Speaker BNo, we can.
Speaker BThe nineties, it's like eighties.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AWell maybe we need to talk to someone who's a little bit older than us and see Alan Cross.
Speaker BThat's a great place to start.
Speaker AAlan Cross?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AOnly he'd be a great one.
Speaker AYeah, I'm sure he'll know some.
Speaker ASome gems.
Speaker CYeah, he could definitely rock, but sorry.
Speaker BI'm sure he could steer us in the right direction.
Speaker BLike he has a plethora of knowledge even.
Speaker BAt least be able to name drop Mister Alper.
Speaker AI'm sure he'll have some.
Speaker BThat guy too.
Speaker BYeah, actually, yeah.
Speaker BBetter.
Speaker ACould we get better both on Mister Cross?
Speaker BOf course.
Speaker AInteresting conversation.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker BIf anyone could do it.
Speaker BI believe you could, to be honest.
Speaker BBut that would be an interesting conversation.
Speaker BI wouldn't.
Speaker BTell you what, I want to hear them talk.
Speaker ALet's do this.
Speaker AAll right.
Speaker ALet me go to sleep.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AIf I dream it, I'll wake up in the morning and I'll email them both like a three way call.
Speaker AEmail.
Speaker BYou're crazy.
Speaker BYou're crazy, girl.
Speaker CWe have a disease.
Speaker BYeah, only me and Matt.
Speaker BMe and Matt.
Speaker BGet it?
Speaker BNo, I know you won't get an if you could.
Speaker BYou're a smart man.
Speaker BThat's it.
Speaker ACrazy man.
Speaker ABut you said you crazy girl.
Speaker AWho's Jay Martin?
Speaker ARemember that?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BHow's he been?
Speaker BShout out to Jay in the radio.
Speaker AWaves and things like that.
Speaker CMaybe he knows.
Speaker CHow old is Jay Martin?
Speaker BTen years old than me, I guess we'll just.
Speaker ALet's just ask everybody.
Speaker CAsk everybody.
Speaker AAnd then when we.
Speaker AIn a couple of weeks, we'll get back together and we'll revisit this conversation.
Speaker CWhite, black, just jump to anybody on the street and be like, name a black artist from Canada from the eighties.
Speaker CGo.
Speaker BI honestly want to film that and just kind of, like, make that the preface of, like, this whole, you know, movement, because I'd love to just stop strangers on the street and be like, what do you know about black canadian music before 1990?
Speaker BAnd watch them go.
Speaker BJust like me and Anthony went, like, Americans.
Speaker CWhen you ask them about Canada.
Speaker BExactly.
Speaker BY'all live in igloos.
Speaker BYeah, unfortunately, we went to visit someone in Washington, and they genuinely thought that.
Speaker BAnd they also thought that we bathed in, like, evian water.
Speaker BLike, he's drinking Evian.
Speaker BHe's like, y'all bathe in this, don't you?
Speaker BAnd I'm like, what?
Speaker AWhere did that come from?
Speaker CIn California, they asked me legitimately if we hunt our own food.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AWow.
Speaker BIt just like, yeah.
Speaker AWho are we?
Speaker BSome of the things they genuinely believe, like, the aboot thing was really weird, too, because they were like, why don't you say aboot?
Speaker BAnd I'm like, nobody says aboot.
Speaker BI don't know.
Speaker BAnyone says aboot.
Speaker CThey say aboot.
Speaker CAbo.
Speaker CThere's, like an o.
Speaker BThey were saying aboot.
Speaker BAnd I was like, I don't know.
Speaker BAnyone says aboot.
Speaker BGet out of here.
Speaker BSome aboot to punch you in your mouth.
Speaker CWell, on that note, Anthony's literally, look at Anthony.
Speaker CYou're about to melt out of your chest.
Speaker BEyes are getting close.
Speaker BAnthony's sleep potting right now.
Speaker AI'm gonna wake up in the morning.
Speaker AI'll be like, wait, did we talk about the list?
Speaker AWas that real or was that a dream?
Speaker AIt was real.
Speaker CYou'll have to wait a couple weeks to hear when it's released.
Speaker BGentlemen, enjoy your night.
Speaker BAnthony, get some rest.
Speaker BThank you, guys, for listening to another episode.
Speaker BUntil next time, good night.
Speaker CSweet dreams.
Speaker CBodybuilder.
Speaker BSummer sausages.
Speaker ASummer sausages need rest, too.
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