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Ever wondered how two people right for each other can transform marriage into a delightful journey, rather than a tedious task? Tune in to this episode, where we candidly discuss the secret to a harmonious marriage and the joy one can derive from a well-aged bottle of whiskey. Reflecting on marriages through generations, we delve into the stark contrast between the older and younger generation's viewpoint towards matrimony, the beauty of patience in a relationship, and the thread of military service in our family.

Next, we walk through some sober realities of life, the role of power and money in shaping lives, and the concerning issue of human trafficking. We shine a light on the commendable work of the unsung heroes fighting this grave issue and stress the significance of finding one's purpose in life. As the conversation unfolds, we delve into the success story of Virgin Group, adult-only vacations, and the unsaid rules about swearing around children.

In our closing segment, we tackle some grave societal concerns. We explore the repercussions of family breakdown on children's mental health, the toxic perils of bullying, and the importance of a secure haven, be it family or friends. We discuss the controversial topic of video games potentially desensitizing people to violence, generational perspectives on success, and the invaluable worth of human life. From the lighter aspects of life like whiskey and cigars to pressing societal issues, this episode offers a riveting blend of topics. We promise you a captivating and thought-provoking journey. Tune in and embark on this fascinating exploration of life's intriguing aspects.


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Transcript
Speaker 1:

You're now listening to the Wilson King Podcast. This episode of the Wilson King Podcast is brought to you by BrightLive. Contact BrightLive for all your wedding entertainment, band and DJ needs BrightLiveEventscom.

Speaker 2:

Brightliveevents at gmailcom or visit us on. Facebook at BrightLive. I'm busy doing other shit. Yeah, you know I was busy. Uh, if you like it, then you should have put a ring on it.

Speaker 3:

I tried to get him talking out of it. He wouldn't fucking listen. After my three mistakes I think he would have listened to me, yeah but then you got married a fourth time. So yeah, but you started way too long, way too. You waited way too long To start. The time you get to your fourth fuck, you'll be 80. I'll be 80?. No.

Speaker 2:

Okay, maybe a little maybe, but it's not that bad.

Speaker 3:

That's not that bad. Everyone complains about marriage, but marriage is great if you get two people that are right for each other. Not saying you got to have similar interests right for each other Big difference.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I mean honestly, as long as you all get along and so on and so forth, marriage is easy, Marriage is cake. I mean, you know, the older generations say marriage is always work, work, work, but like it is. It is but like it's easy, it is.

Speaker 3:

I mean. Well, the work is you have to work through the difference, because I mean two people aren't the same. You have to work through those differences and realize that each person has differences. Respect each other's space opinions. Don't be an asshole to your spells. Took me a long time to figure that one out.

Speaker 2:

You know, back in the 50s, though you know it was cool to do that.

Speaker 3:

I'm just an asshole. I speak most. Most of the time I speak my mind spouts shit out before I could think about it first and I realize I say things that are hurtful without meaning to, because sarcasm and calling people out for doing something that I think is stupid is part of my nature and I have to hold back sometimes.

Speaker 2:

I mean 100%. I mean there was before Deb and I got married, like you know she was. There was like a few weeks where, like she just constantly was like I'm fat, I'm fat, I'm fat, and I was like I was going to. I was like no, you're not. You look fine the way you are. So on and so forth, blah, blah, blah. And then one evening I don't know what the fuck got into me. I looked at her. I was like if you think you're fucking fat, only one person's going to fucking change it. I can't fucking do it for you, only you can do it for your fucking self.

Speaker 3:

And then I said that statement to my own self. Look at your mother and say I'm fat. And I look at her and say I know my choice, I can change it, I can do this shit. I said I'm just making a statement.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but we went out and got us a nice little bottle of whiskey to sip on while we sit here and record.

Speaker 3:

See, this should be our yearly thing. Here is popping open a nice, popping open the cherry of a nice aged bourbon, sampling it, getting a little toasty toasty and discussing life.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, no, we got a whistle pig farm stock West Virginia stock number two. Pretty stoked for this because anything's got West West Virginia and it is. It's like home. But like just listen, it's fresh, just.

Speaker 3:

That was the value option over the whistle pig 15 years. We wanted to get the 12 year, but they were sold out. So this was the the go to option for two Po country boys. Want some nice bourbon. Oh, let's see how she pours.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I remember the ice melted a little bit so you got a good bit of water in there. But that's kind of. I mean, whenever it comes to drinking whiskey, you do want to dilute it down with a little bit of water drop or two water brings out the flavors and stuff, especially when doing like bourbon or rum.

Speaker 3:

Let's see how she tastes. That's fucking that smells good, that smells smooth. That summer stock shit you bought smell like rubbing alcohol. This just smells like a nice bourbon. Let's see.

Speaker 2:

Pretty good, I can sit on that for a while. I can sit on that, I mean. What helped, though, to write is you know, we put ice in our glasses like 20 minutes ago, and let it melt down a little bit, and then do see Not my fault.

Speaker 3:

You had to throw away the science experiment. Huh, not my fault. You had to throw away the science experiment. What science experiment that was growing on the table?

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah.

Speaker 3:

They've been open, let her breathe. You can do like my roommate used to. When I was in got stationed in England as an 18 year old. Very little bit closer to you. Station in England, 18 years old, finally able to.

Speaker 2:

You can have it right here Just talking over it, turn it.

Speaker 3:

And finally able to drink first weekend. My roommate. He comes back with a big bottle of Jim Beam he was from Kentucky and he takes the cap off. I go to put it back on. He grabs it those in the trash. He says we don't need that. I realized really quick that I'm holy shit.

Speaker 2:

Well, honestly, I didn't become a whiskey drinker until probably like the last eight months Year maybe it took me 48 years to really like whiskey.

Speaker 3:

I did the craft beer thing, loved my craft beers and then realized that drinking that shit just made me feel heavy blowed at everything else and realized that I could sip it on ice bourbon Without all the carbs and calories. And I don't feel when I'm drinking all of that stuff and nice bourbons. And if you're sipping on it neat or on the rocks, you're not doing shots and you're not chugging a mixed drink, so you're not getting all fucked up, you're just sipping on it and join it. If we had a good cigar to go with it, it'd be great.

Speaker 2:

I didn't even think about going to a cigar shop.

Speaker 3:

I just thought about the hey, we had a good cigar. Now It'd be nice.

Speaker 2:

I mean honestly, the closest cigar shops are Winchester, fine, and I was just there today, we're not going to smoke in the studio anyway. Yeah, we smoke cigars in here all the time. I'll do it. This is the only room in the house you're allowed to smoke in Cigarettes, cigars, whatever Because I mean, here's the way I look at it. Right, if you bring someone on who is a cigarette smoker, you don't want them stopping every 15 minutes. Yeah, I don't want them stopping every 15 minutes to a half an hour to go have a fucking smoke. You know what I mean. Makes sense. I mean, plus I allow people to vape in here. I mean cigarette smoke is a little bit heavier than vaping. But, but it is what it is. So yesterday, I mean the reason y'all are up here was a pretty dope reason.

Speaker 3:

I mean it's a month late, but it was the best time for me to get up here, considering my schedule and work.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but I mean fuck, we just sat around and celebrated how am I going to say this? Because, like on paper, my grandparents, your parents, it was their 55th anniversary, 55th.

Speaker 3:

What? 55 years together? That is a long time for anyone to be together and not ready to kill each other. Well, I don't know. But the fact that they're still together at the 50th, you don't hear that. One thing you hear about nowadays is oh, they were married for six months, I got divorced. Oh, hey look, these people were married two years, I got divorced. I think where Billy was saying earlier when he says the older generation says marriage is work. I think that is. There is a little bit in that, because I think a lot of younger couples give up too easy. A little bit of hiccup happens and if I you know, they'd fuck up right here. Let's not put in the work and figure this out, because there's a reason why you were attracted to that person to begin with. Now, if it's just animal attraction and someone gets married after six months and their whole relationship was just sex, fucking and no, no deep emotional thing, then it is going to fall apart.

Speaker 2:

Hey man, first thing you attract me in the dead was that dump truck I mean I literally saw your mother show me some gosh, you watch this.

Speaker 3:

And he said he took his nephew to his grandma's house because he said he was working so he could buy a nice truck to get the ladies and the grandma. Basically, the grandmother basically told him that you can find yourself a hot lady like that and she'll help you build a playhouse, he says, but you need to find yourself a real woman that's willing to put into work with you and build something real. Because, he said, playhouses will fall down, fall apart. She says you build that real house that's going to stand because it was built on a solid foundation and that is supposed to be, I think, most. A lot of people do rush into things. I mean I admit I did. There's a lot of jokes in her. All but the last one, I mean, which is literally. Well, the first one wasn't really a rush, we were together for a couple of years before we got. But the second two are, but the last time we probably were together, Jesus cramming me that we were together three, four, five years before we.

Speaker 2:

Longer than that dog. I was three whenever you all got together. That was 98, 99, 2000, 2001, 2000.

Speaker 3:

No we got together in nine years. No, you got together in 98. It was 98. I got out of the military, moved to turn 98. It was 99. Trust me, it was 98. I mean it was 99. I moved up here.

Speaker 2:

So then I was three, going on four. Yeah 2000, 2000,. It was four years.

Speaker 3:

But still that was enough time to get to know each other. We lived together. We realized stuff, and it was. It definitely made it work a lot better than the other ones.

Speaker 2:

I mean, look how long Deb and I were together Fuck. Deb and I has been together since 2019 and just got married last year, in 2022.

Speaker 3:

I can also say that by the time I met her, I was out of the military. Yeah, that's right. I mean in the military, let's face it. I, you know I was going. I was going for that E six position. So I had to have that fourth marriage under the belt and you know, you got to be at least married and divorced three or four times before we become an E six. Yeah, but how many DUI's did you have? I didn't have any DUI's. I was going for divorce is not DUI.

Speaker 2:

No, you need the divorces and the DUI's. I had no.

Speaker 3:

DI's or and no domestic violence or anything. No drug charges. I was too much of a goody. Two shoes.

Speaker 2:

See, that's why you never made E six, that's why I was too, I was too, I was too nice of a person too good.

Speaker 3:

I followed the rules and got fucked, see that's.

Speaker 2:

That's one thing that blows my mind, like if you go and look at, like active duty right, a lot of those marriages I mean, unless they were high school sweetheart it's coming out Like a lot of the marriages were just for the benefits, dependence, dependents, what they call them and that's why the marriages fall apart all the time, or for this reason.

Speaker 3:

Oh you GI, I become a racist.

Speaker 2:

I'm sorry. I'm sorry.

Speaker 3:

But it was. I know so many people that got buried to Korean women, filipino women and shortly after they became American citizens came back to the United States. Fuck you, I'm out of here. It was. It was, I mean, but understandable. It was a. It was a much easier way out of a shitty lifestyle. To begin with. I mean, if people have never traveled to those areas, it's pretty rough way of life over there for anyone, so it's an easy way to get out. I'm not, I mean I'm not blaming them. Do what you need to do. I mean most anyone do within age would get out of a shitty situation. So it's well.

Speaker 2:

I mean killed a man or two, no, the thing that I think is wild in our family, that I think is awesome, amazing in our family, is if you go back through the generations I mean I don't know about like Civil War, revolutionary War, I'll know about them times, but if you go from like, don't talk about no divorce rates, no.

Speaker 3:

Okay.

Speaker 2:

No, I'm going to talk about the fact that, from like World War One, world War Two on, at least one person in each generation has been in the service.

Speaker 3:

Let's see, hey well, your father, yeah, your Great-grandfather, my great uncle, several great uncles, both great uncles, several great uncles, all three great uncles, all three, all four.

Speaker 2:

More than that, I only know Jim James. Well, harry James was in the military Mm-hmm. He was our race.

Speaker 3:

Okay, I'll Jimmy. Uncle red, I didn't know uncle red was in Harry. Oh yeah, of course he. I killed an action. Your uncle David, uncle Ron Ron yeah, everyone but your grandfather.

Speaker 2:

What a fucking, what a pussy fucking pussy.

Speaker 3:

He cheated the system to get out of fucking pussy. Well, that's why he's a liberal, oh.

Speaker 2:

Was go, brandon was was was Dave was uncle Dave, was he volunteer or drafted? I think he was volunteer, wasn't he?

Speaker 3:

I don't know. I just know he's in a Navy and mom yeah, and I know the whole thing was his son that's joined the Navy as well and got stationed on the exact same Aircraft carrier that his father was on do.

Speaker 2:

That's super cool, it is, I mean. And then you go back to World War two. We have dad.

Speaker 3:

You also have several Second cousins that are military.

Speaker 2:

I don't give a shit about them, we're talking immediate family.

Speaker 3:

I don't know if. I don't know if your grandfather Harry, I don't know if he served. I think he he did yeah he did.

Speaker 2:

He served under general Patton in the Battle of the Balge and well in he served under general Patton in World War two as a Combat engineer your great-grandfather used yeah he was, and I don't know beyond that though.

Speaker 3:

Well, dell.

Speaker 2:

I mean technically, does not blood. He's great-grandfather. Yeah, I'm sorry families. He family doesn't have to be blood he he was a Marine in World War two Well no, that was an army, and In the Air. Force? No, he was in the Marines and the Air. Force, air Force, okay, he didn't go Air Force until after World War two. He spent most of his time in France as a General's driver.

Speaker 3:

Still and I thought you had the cushy job as supplies, yeah.

Speaker 2:

I'm not anymore. Not anymore but I Mean I still am technically supply. It's just a different avenue of supply, gotcha, but like our family history, if you look back you know, what at least until World War, at least from World War two on, we've had someone serving just about every single conflict. You know why? Because we're all middle-class, poor motherfuckers that needed a way. Yep, and you know, maybe even the draft, or maybe we were a little bit patriotic. Hell yeah, brother raise hell.

Speaker 3:

I didn't join. I Didn't join for the GI Bill, I didn't even. I didn't even join. I didn't even do the GI Bill. You know that I didn't join to get the money. I joined because that's what I want to do. I want to serve my country and being the chair force.

Speaker 2:

So I joined. My plan was to Go to college, use my GI Bill. You know, do what. You know what I mean. I'm yet to use it and I'm what? 27 going on 28.

Speaker 3:

I mean you barely graduated high school. These get degrees, yeah, but you can use that on Apprentices to right not a parent, but like trade school and shit, because I mean I mean that the skilled trades make good money. I mean you're tackling a skilled trade now.

Speaker 2:

Yeah you're in a program right which I'm in a paid for an apprenticeship program.

Speaker 3:

So all of them are your. Your grandfather did a paid for apprenticeship program. You're a union member Fucking. You'll be voting for Biden next fucking year, probably. You know you union guys are.

Speaker 2:

I'm a. I'm gonna tell you right now if, if, if, my last choice on earth is Biden to run this country, we're just gonna have to just let the people give it back to the people.

Speaker 3:

I got a question why can't they put a spot on there says none of the above. Can we just be single for a little bit, cuz I'm so? I mean I Don't know the options out there. I mean, let's face it, we all know that the president's just a fucking figurehead anyway 100%. I mean, except for Trump. He didn't want to be a figurehead and that's what pissed everyone off, because he didn't want to be, even though everyone says he bowed to that. I mean, yes, we all know people are paying this, and GE and Westinghouse and Fucking George Soros and all those. They, they're the ones that run the damn country. But bring the mic a little bit closer to you. But it's what I said to her speaking to the mic, I Keep moving. That's a problem.

Speaker 2:

Listen, here's, here's, here's, here's something that happens with this show quite a bit is we start talking and people get comfortable right and they forget we're talking into a mic because we're just having everyday Conversations. That's what I'm trying to do. Yeah, you know what I mean? That's literally what it is. It's just you know. You just gotta be a little bit mindful. You know, if I move China, bring it back a little. Hmm, no, no, no, what do you mean? No, no about made a statement if I can say it, say it pussy, say which chips.

Speaker 3:

I said I'm trying to keep forgetting. I got this big black thing in my face.

Speaker 2:

But you know though, in my opinion, the route big white thing to.

Speaker 3:

Either way, I just want to forget.

Speaker 2:

It's in my face, yeah it's the the direction everything's going in order.

Speaker 3:

Women are such good singers. They used to speak into the mic.

Speaker 2:

Anyways, wait, the. The world is a very, very, very crazy place right now. We haven't seen the world be this crazy since World War two.

Speaker 3:

Well, that in the world is bad. It's full of evil people, I mean.

Speaker 2:

And what?

Speaker 3:

and what makes it worse is, with social media and people being to record everything, it's more prevalent. You get to see the horrors that man perpetrates on other man and lesser beings. I'm sorry, the cruelty, the animals, the cruelty to people, that it's just. It makes you question your own human. It's like how can People be like this? How can people sit there and be so cruel, hateful and mean to each other and not want to help and not, or Not not only to help, but want to physically just want to go harm something that's lesser than them or small, and it's just. It saddens me because we're supposed to be. You know, we're the higher creature and we're supposed, but we are. It's sad.

Speaker 2:

Well, have you ever heard the theory that earth is actually a prison planet? That was Australia no, australia was a prison country, but the earth itself is a prison plant planet. It's. It's a theory. So the theory is is like us humans come from the Anunnaki, which is a race of aliens, and all of Mosapians got shipped to earth because we were way too violent to be within the peaceful Anunnaki civilization.

Speaker 3:

I can say that humans aren't good people. I mean, to quote the words of Bill Maher Humans aren't good people. No, they're not. I mean there are good people. There are very good people, true, at heart, 100% good fucking people out there. And there's I'm, and honestly, there's definitely way more good than bad, because if not it would be. But the bad ones are just really bad and they wind up getting away with shit. Because you have good people there that See the good in people and all. There's no way this person could be door and then they get away with the shit. Well, I mean, or we're just so fucking enslaved, we're trying to survive, we don't see it. I Think that's what it is. I mean because, let's face it, how many people get to fucking live? There's a big difference between living and surviving. Most of us just survive, not live.

Speaker 2:

I mean, you know they're, I. I put a big difference in between surviving and living comfortably. And you know you do have people out there that are literally just surviving, but a lot you have more more than people that are living comfortably. But what I consider living comfortably is, you know, say your thing is going to the bar every weekend, just going out having drinks at the bar with friends.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, not falling down drunk. Just few drinks, have fun, shoot some pools of a debt. If you can afford to do that and afford to pay your bills, you're living comfortably. Yeah, you're not struggling, wondering where you're gonna get your next meal. Am I gonna be able to pay rent? I'm not saying you got to have a couple hundred thousand dollars in the bank, but in order to live comfortable in times, you're working your ass off to do it. Now I'm I'm not one of those fucking people that say, oh, we should only have a three-day work. With four-day work, we can only work six hours a day. I, you know what? Yes, I, I believe you need to, because I Also think every member of society needs to be a Active, contributing or they call it a a contributing member to society. You got to do something, mean. I mean it's. I don't care what, I don't care if your teacher, firefighter, janitor, trash guy, electrician, military member, you're doing something to contribute to society and you you're getting paid for doing that.

Speaker 2:

Do you think that Part of the issue, though, is a lot of people they, you know, they work their mundane nine to five need to, you know, be a teacher, be whatever their whatever career path they chose right? Do you think part of the issue, though, is is people never really find their purpose in life? I mean, they might have decided, you know, teachings my purpose, but they never truly found like teaching makes them happy, but it's not Really what they wanted to do.

Speaker 3:

I agree, it's. Yeah, you think this is, this is what I need to be doing, this is my prayer. And some people Realize that purpose and think, no, this is what I should own. This, this is what Would make me super happy, and what I feel that this is what I'm comfortable in, this, when I feel I'm naturally talented to do. For most of those people, that thing right there it scares them to pursue that because they're gonna have to leave what they're comfortable with right now so I've got a, an acquaintance.

Speaker 2:

He's been on the show before. His name is Troy you chauffeur. He prior he's retired Navy. He was a corpsman but he served on the green side, so he was a doc and and uh, so I think it's since 2011 him and his wife has ran an organization called change unchained and it's an anti-human trafficking organization. They built a tiny house village where people who have been victims of human trafficking can come and live, get reintegrated into society, get stable and, like, since he's retired, like been doing it since 2011. So, along with his military career, he's been doing this and he just recently got medically retired and he still is running with it, like he found out that's his purpose and he goes to like Detroit, las Vegas. He goes to these big cities, like you know, las Vegas, I think they go to around soup, the Superbowl, or they go sometime, like it's kind of a set time here, and they help the police officers locate missing children and it's a super great organization that I'm trying to put together. An event Like 20, 24, 20, 25, that's an event that everything goes to that organization, because what they're doing is much needed.

Speaker 3:

That and that's great. He's going and that is that. That is. I wish more people here's the thing I said the fucking government help him with that shit. Every government across every nation. That's one of the things the government does help technically. You know, I'm saying it's one of the things I've never seen one fucking politician run on the platform of there is more people in slave have. There is more people in slave today. Then there was any time when slavery was bad. In the United States it's called human trafficking. I'm sorry Trump. Trump was actually finding these places and weed them out. No, we can't have that because, let's face it, I'm sorry, as I have had a discussion with someone about this. Yes, for the most part, it's rich people that are doing this because they're the only ones that can afford to do it, not saying I want to go buy a 10 year old girl, but if I wanted to, I don't have that kind of money. The only people have that kind of money are rich and, of course, the rich, they're powerful and they can not even the rich, the mega rich, the mega yeah, they can afford to do this and afford to keep this under and afford to keep pay hush money to keep people quiet about it, and it is. It's absurd that it is left to go and it still goes on to this fucking day and they always covered up with other dumb shit Like I'm sorry, last week was last week, week before I feel bad. Five people died doing something stupid, but it covered the fucking news to cover up something else. I Can't remember what it was, but there was something else that got completely covered up that was going on in our government in the world While we were discussing oh, you want to know what it was. Oh, and the fact that we threw a lot of money of Human, naval and Coast Guard resources to locate something that we knew it just to cover up some dumb shit that happened on Capitol Hill.

Speaker 2:

No, fucking Joe Biden's impeachment got passed through the house during that time, but some time ago, wow, oh my god, did I just say that out loud, holy shit.

Speaker 3:

But you know I'm saying they always do shit to take it's and and I'm not saying it's not any Certain that it's everything and let's face it, the whole world was corrupt, it's, it's all corrupted. I'm not saying it's bad humanity. There are, like I've said, there are very good humans out there. There are people that are good at heart and would help anyone with as much money as I have, I mean shit. If I actually played the lottery and won tomorrow, I would be sinking a lot of money into helping with, like Billy said, helping with the organization with human trafficking and people With abused animals and stuff like that, because that's another whole Generic thing that you know species that they are, they have no voice and they have no one to take up for him and completely defenseless when someone starts beating the shit out of them. It's one of those things to where I but it shouldn't have to be private citizens putting money towards these things, but our government won't do it because and any government will do it, because the rich people Well could quit give them money 100%.

Speaker 2:

I mean you know how fucking crazy is it right to ride on. You know we're talking about Ocean Gate Titan submarine. How crazy that was. $250,000 a person to get on to that fucking submarine. $250,000 a person. You ever seen? $250,000 in your life? I.

Speaker 3:

Haven't seen it. I have it, but I haven't seen it. Fair, I mean, I have it, it's sitting in my employee stocks. Yeah and my 401k. I mean I haven't actually held it in my fucking hands and be able to say, here's 250. No, I've never yeah personally had it stacked out and the most money that's ever been stacked out in cash in front of me was about 20 grand and I was like holy shit, and but to be able to spend now what I spend, 250 grand on something like that? No, because how damn that's you know Eighth of my life savings. It's the fact is. But the fact that someone would spend that kind of money, that's. Oh, did you also see sorry to completely jump subjects that virgin Atlantic just Yesterday? They are doing Paid space flights now? Really yeah, I just saw a headline on it yesterday. They announced it. I think it's virgin. No, it's well, it's virgin. Galactic they're doing well. You can paid space flights.

Speaker 2:

You also saw where that st Virgin, the same fucking company, also does cruises, now adult only cruises. Yes, like, think about it right, virgins literally started out as a light, like the virgin company, I mean you should record company begin with?

Speaker 3:

wasn't it Virgin records?

Speaker 2:

the only thing I remember is the virgin mobile back in the day, the prepaid fucking phones you could get.

Speaker 3:

I don't know what was first, but virgin records was also a British virgin records. Are you looking it up? And he's built all the stuff from it. I mean, and mind you, the owner can't remember his name, but he's quite the, he's quite adventurous and it does stuff.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, well, I mean, and then doesn't he also own the US Virgin Islands?

Speaker 3:

No, I thought he did. The United States owns the Virgin. I'm sorry. Us Virgin Islands, because Virgin Islands you also have us the UK and I don't know if anyone else owns.

Speaker 2:

Virginia media is a British telecommunications company founded in 2007, which provides telephone, television and internet services in the United Kingdom. Okay, it's a virgin group.

Speaker 3:

So they, they also have virgin records. Virgin Atlantic, you have the, you have the airline.

Speaker 2:

So it's a venture capital conglomerate founded by Richard Branson in the next pal. That's the name in February 1970.

Speaker 3:

But you had virgin records, virgin Atlantic, virgin mobile. Then you also have, of course, the Virgin Cruises. Now which? Is the only cruise does sound nice, because Not that I don't like children, but I'm at the age now that where I've raised my children, hope I raised them well and and if I want to go somewhere and not hear said like I said, I had screaming kids too and I know what it's like. But I don't want to hear about my age now. Well, that's not on vacation. I.

Speaker 2:

Well, I mean, here's the thing, right, cuz I've been looking in going to like Mexico, to like an all-inclusive resort. That's only resort, the only resorts. I'm looking at her adults only. And it's not because I hate kids, it's because if I'm going somewhere I just want to fucking relax. I don't want to have to worry about little fucking Timmy being pissed off because he couldn't get a virgin fucking Pina Colada or little or someone be like would you watch what you're doing over there?

Speaker 3:

My child is here, please watch your mind. You know.

Speaker 2:

I guess I'm gonna tell you right now, if I'm on vacation, fuck's coming out of my mouth. Every other works. I'm probably so fucking intoxicated, which is I probably should be cut off.

Speaker 3:

Which is why the other night I, walking into your grandparents house, I'm oh, fuck this. I'm saying that's. I'm like, oh, I need to watch my mouth. No, we had. There's actually neighbors with small children living up here. Now I need I try to be cognitive, but your mother jizzled me all the time because our Next-door neighbors at our house have small children and I'll be outside cooking like, ah, fuck, done this, I did. You know the neighbors are there.

Speaker 2:

Fuck them, kids.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, they fuck with my dogs all the time.

Speaker 2:

Man, here's the thing, right. We're in an age right now where whenever you were growing up like Cussing, get you backhanded. My generation, they, if their kids first fucking cuss words, fuck they might be like, but at the same time they find it fucking hilarious. Think about it.

Speaker 3:

Oh yeah, growing up I was scared to death vice I. I'm pretty sure I Was 19 or 20 or older before I ever swear it around my parents. I'd already been in the military several years before I maybe dropped it F bomb in front of my parents because, yes, I was raising you, swear you're gonna get. I mean, I didn't swear much around my friends because I didn't want to get comfortable with it and let it slip around and hand have my father, who has tree trunks for arms and Fucking tree limbs for fingers. Knock my damn face off because I just swore in front of my mother. Dude it's nowadays you have little kids come up. Fuck you. Mom ain't doing that, and okay, I'm sorry.

Speaker 2:

Here's my thing, though right, how bad are those words really? Like think about? They are literally just fucking words. It's.

Speaker 3:

For my generate it was, for some reason they they're swear words and the Bible says they're bad, but I'm pretty sure shit, the only things that I think. Yes, using the Lord's name in vain, you shouldn't do what I. I'm under the religious, but there's nothing saying that shit, piss, pussy, dick, I mean all those cunt.

Speaker 2:

I mean see you next Tuesday.

Speaker 3:

I can't remember George Carlin's fate of thing. Fuck, push, damn fit the things you can't say is a thing you know. George Carlin did the whole.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it's um it's Well think about right. Fuck has so many different uses, right? I got a verb, it's an adjective. Adjective, let you know, man, fuck this fucking shit. You know what I mean. Or hey, I'm about to fuck the dog shit out of that shit. No, what the fuck? Yeah, question it's. It's there's so many uses for the word fuck like it is a. It's Seasoning on a sentence. That's what I look at it. As it's a. It is a sentence enhancer.

Speaker 3:

Now, now I've also realized too if you're born in Massachusetts, at least you just come out of the womb. It's what the fuck, doc? I mean they Trust me, but people up there I don't Of course the way they said to f fuck you man.

Speaker 2:

I need to ask, cuz this is something I've noticed about me and like the service industry, like Going to an enterprise or going to like Safe flight, right, like like going to someplace where, like normally, like they're supposed to be good, professional speaking Does it make you respect the person You're like dealing with a little bit more if you hear them go all fuck my bad or all shit. I didn't mean to do that. Honestly, I'm gonna tell you right now, if I'm in a bar, in a bartender, isn't being all like proper, oh, no, that's now.

Speaker 3:

Here's the thing, though you gotta remember. Most of my clientele's in the south the religious south I Rarely here's one of my clients Ever say a swear word, get very comfortable with them and occasionally can talk and Maybe it will, but for the most part is still considered taboo. Well, just south, to be swearing like that Fuck them.

Speaker 2:

I Mean also I'm very. What's what I'm looking for?

Speaker 3:

and I gotta watch myself because I've been on the phone with my clients but I got fucking my bullshit Sorry, because I'm but and you're also also taught to all. Well, if you're a professional and you're being professional, would you get a?

Speaker 2:

little bit closer to.

Speaker 3:

Mike, if you're being professional, when talking professional, you don't use swear words, because professionals don't use that, because you always hear people also say well, people using swear words Just shows a lack of intelligence.

Speaker 2:

Have you never listened to some of the richest fucking people in the world talk like Grant Cardone, gary Vee, mark Cuban like they don't talk professionally.

Speaker 3:

No, they talk straightforward, they're yeah now here's the other kicker. Too Was I thinking of. Damn it, sorry about, completely sad.

Speaker 2:

Let's finish this little sidetracked, oh no and you know I'm gonna be honest with you, whenever I worked for SOS, I had customers that we just talked Like they would come while we're working. Like, legitimately, let's go with Mike Grudis, oh Don't. Okay, damn, I shouldn't have called out last name, but up at LSC, right, he would come over while we're working.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I'll talk about it's not.

Speaker 2:

But you know, one of one of our contacts at at Place we used to work with literally quite a few contacts would literally come over See how we're doing and just sit there and chat with us, yeah, and talk. And it wasn't talking like professionally, like whatever. I first started, you know, whenever I first came back I was trying to do the professional thing and then I heard them drop and as soon as I would hear them start dropping, like you know, showing that we're just talking, this isn't it. You know, we're the contractor, you're the customer, blah, blah, blah. It was no holds barred, like we just sit there and talk. I can tell you right now there's been multiple times on a job site, whenever I was working there, that we talked politics and so on and so forth. I'd continue to work, but while I'm working I'm sitting there. You know I'm just shooting the shit pretty much. I mean, you know I've been trying to work on one of our other. One of the other customers for SOS is actually Kidding. We're trying to figure out dates right now, but it's coming on the podcast and I'm pretty fucking stoked for that. One cuz like him and I like would get going on a fucking ramble about, like talking About spirituality and, like you know, dealing with your mental health and all that, and I've been in the whole time I worked at SOS. I was like we need to get you on the show, we need to get you on the show, we need to get you on the show. And then I finally leave SOS. It's like, hey, you want to come on the show?

Speaker 3:

Ball term that's gonna ask it's person working ball term.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but you know, trying to get a date set up to bring him on the show, cuz Dude we a lot of the contacts.

Speaker 3:

I oh, come on, you bring him on the show. I gotta be here too.

Speaker 2:

Why, oh, come on, have you ever met John?

Speaker 3:

Oh, that's so much roll, doctor.

Speaker 2:

No.

Speaker 3:

Oh, that's, so much.

Speaker 2:

No, steve's, I'm also trying to work on getting on the show, but I don't ever met the other person, oh. I thought so much. I think Steve finally retired from up there. You need ice, it's a nice. Well, keep chatting.

Speaker 3:

It's a moist mate. Oh, come on. There's random awkward challenges are great, but yes, I well, you just said fuck, oh my god. Yes, I agree, I would rather talk to people that are real, being real and not trying to be fake. I have the time when I am Talking to customers I feel like I'm trying to watch myself About same. I feel like I'm trying to watch myself because I'm so used to Plus the industry man. I mean steel mills, paper, so it's so those industries were talking like that. I actually the ones that have dropped me a few times. I have a few um, I have a few of my clients that are female or Quite of you and Get to talking them and when they start being open to time, it's just like, oh wow, I can actually talk because I've always taught you know, be respectful around women and don't. And Some of them we get to talking and it's like, oh shit, this is awesome, that's um, it's, it's just nice, it's. I would rather more, in a professional environment, for people to be more real instead of trying to put on a persona of I'm this and this and this. Now I will say when I I do have a few customers that have doctor in front of their title. So I tried to at least talk like I'm not a fucking hillbilly from West Virginia and I like I'm a little educated. But I don't try to fake it because let's say I'm not highly educated. But I also want to come off as I should have, rolled up with a pair of bibb overalls and a fucking Corn cob pipe out my mouth. No offense to anyone that does that If I could do what you want. But yeah, it's. You know I'm saying it's. I always try to read my audience when I'm talking to my customers.

Speaker 2:

There's a difference in education, though, right like you know, you might not be University educated, I'm still got a little bit left. I'm educated from the University of life but you know there's a world in education too. You know what I mean. You've seen the world. You've been around the block quite a few times.

Speaker 3:

Yep, let's see that. That's home. Let's see the world through my eyes it's the Peshmoats home.

Speaker 2:

But you know, actually that's another topic that is pretty like Makes me really think right, you know, growing up We've always been told you don't cuss around women. That's disrespectful, blockadee, blah, far around women, don't belt.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, don't grab yourself.

Speaker 2:

But then at the same time, right like, if you look at the world right now, right Like, women hold a lot of positions that are in steel mills, that are very, very high positions.

Speaker 3:

I'm with that I'm all for everyone I mean I'm all for my whole thing is best person for the job. I heard they are and I also feel that the whole thing with they talk about equal pay and shit like that, I'm pretty sure a woman that has a managerial position that's at the same level as a man has In a steel mill, paper mill, any type of industry we work in, they're getting the same fucking rate of pay. That whole inequality of pay. I don't know where that fly and I'm pretty sure it doesn't fall under fucking doctors either. I'm pretty sure of a female brain surgeon Works on my brain. She's gonna charge the same as a male brain surgeon. I Don't know where that weird line is of people with equal pay things, stuff like that, because there's also a lot of other shit that goes into that. I don't care if you have the same education, if a guy walks in and he's only been the job for two years and a lady that's been there for 15 years but the same as you had doing the same job, she's gonna get paid more, I would hope. If Nothing, yeah, that is horseshit. But then again, also when it comes to making Real snap decisions and this is nothing against women and, mind you, there's some men like those too. A lot of times women are Move more by their emotions, and guys Sometimes I mean there are, but sometimes they're not. I'm not trying to call anyone out there, I mean because there's some men. I'm an emotional person.

Speaker 2:

I ain't gonna lie, I make a lot of decisions in life based on emotion, right, but I make more decisions on life based on emotion. Then I do just sitting down a thing in it through, right.

Speaker 3:

But what I'm saying is and this is and and that's the other thing. You can't group everyone into one thing and that's why I'm not saying, I'm saying, statistically, that's the way it is. I'm not saying everyone like that because I, yes, I have to sit back sometimes and also double Guess myself on a decision because, oh shit, I made a snap decision based on emotion instead of sitting around and putting rational thought on it, not saying women can't do that. There's a lot of women do that too. Don't want any women, your audience, being mad that I'm trying to say it's just a, it's a. But honestly, yes, I think everyone should get paid the same. If you're at the same level, same everything everyone should get paid the same amount 100%.

Speaker 2:

I mean, you know, talking to them, you know, the point I was trying to make is is, you know, not cussing around women, not doing this round when it almost Makes it like women are weaker and I'm sorry but they are women mentally, physically.

Speaker 3:

I won't even say physically yes, cuz I know some women. They're probably way stronger than me, probably a lot of women way stronger than me. There's, yes, but they're not the weaker sex, they are the whoop. One can't survive without the other. You have to have them both there. There's no stronger Weaker, because, let's let's face it, everyone's stronger at this, weaker at that. Strong it's. It's a joint thing. Yes, it has been Drilled into our heads for the most part that that's how it is, but we know that's not how it is.

Speaker 2:

I'm gonna be honest with you. I think women are stronger than men. Hear me out. I've never heard a man say I want to get kicked in the balls again. How many women have you ever heard said I wouldn't mind having another kid?

Speaker 3:

Well, that just proves it getting kicked in the nuts hurts more than giving giving birth.

Speaker 2:

Rutrow. Hope that didn't near that. Sorry, don't moving around out there, but no, but like in all seriousness, though, like that. I don't like pain, I don't like pain at all, but going through childbirth takes a strong person.

Speaker 3:

Jesus Christ, yeah that you're the whole process For a conception through gestation, through birth, that they're shit moving and doing that. I'm sorry. That's a yes.

Speaker 2:

Kudos to you, that's all I gotta say. What kudos to you. Females, women.

Speaker 3:

Oh yeah, they do that I mean I'm, we wouldn't be here without them. And and yes, I mean I. I don't know I could do that.

Speaker 2:

That's like an old saying that an old teacher of mine used to have back in the day fourth grade Women can't live with them, can't live without them.

Speaker 3:

Always her can't live with them, can't live with them.

Speaker 2:

No, I had a teacher that he would say all the time, like you know, I mean granted, if you think about it right, you know.

Speaker 3:

I mean unless the plan is nothing but women.

Speaker 2:

Then you kind of fucked.

Speaker 3:

Somehow the, the Amazonians, you know Wonder Woman, her whole species is nothing but women, but they have children. I Know it's fictional, I'm it's a joke.

Speaker 2:

You're speaking of fictional things. I Did you see, like the new Deadpool, they actually convinced fucking Hugh Jackman to come back as Wolverine. I didn't know. There's a new Deadpool. It's not out yet.

Speaker 3:

It's but, but they're. I didn't know they were doing one.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and they convinced Hugh Jackman to come back as Wolverine.

Speaker 3:

Also. So they're doing a new Indiana Jones.

Speaker 2:

No fishposh. There's been like 20 of them. I'm just kidding, but like is fucking. What's his name? Harold Ford is he in this for yeah, why? Why?

Speaker 3:

Cuz, he's Indiana Jones.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but like, why Continue it on with him, right? Like why not do?

Speaker 3:

what you don't watch. Huh past the torch.

Speaker 2:

Yeah like, why not pass the torch?

Speaker 3:

He didn't have a child. I Mean, I'm one of those. If he had got something in had jade, then the Chuck button, you know, nope it's. But like Harrison Ford, he's ageless. Don't like, I mean, it's not. Like you know, did you not like Sam Elliott?

Speaker 2:

Have you not seen him in like the last Star Wars he was in. Yeah, he's looking pretty good. Yeah, sam Elliott them all the fuckers look the same for the last 40 fucking years. Sam, I swear to fucking God, if we ever hear about Sam Elliott dying, I'm gonna be fucking shocked, cuz the dudes looked on the fucking brink of death For the last 30, 40 years. You can't tell me I'm wrong. He's looked the same for a while for a very.

Speaker 3:

I mean, I saw some pictures of him way long ago from, and he does, but yeah, for the last at least 20, 30 years he's there's. There's no difference in the way he looked playing in Um, what the hell is that movie with Nick Cage or yours Ghostwriter? Yeah, he looked no different ghostwriter than the ranch.

Speaker 2:

Well Fuck let's go.

Speaker 3:

He's always had a stash. He's always had this dash.

Speaker 2:

Let's go back even further 1993 and tombstone. Yeah, that was 30 fucking years ago, stash, so 30 fucking years ago you know, it doesn't rock that stash Well who grandfather? Dog, I'm gonna tell you right now pap stashes glorious, so you need to fucking hop off. Oh, come on, it looks. It's glorious.

Speaker 3:

He needs to grow it more. He just if he does the same Elliott thing, let's Maybe.

Speaker 2:

He needs to get to the corner of his lips.

Speaker 3:

Yeah he's gonna go, he's gonna. He's got a fluffy Hitler stash.

Speaker 2:

Now it comes to about right here. That's a hillish-ish. He'll just ask cut off at the nose.

Speaker 3:

Come on now. Well, it seems, start talking like the old cartoon dogs.

Speaker 2:

Honestly, I thought about, once I get out of the military, letting just like my mustache goes so I can start rocking handlebars.

Speaker 3:

Well, you know what I thought when I got on the military I'm gonna grow me a beard now. Two weeks in this day? I can't. Two weeks is the max I can let anything grow on my face and it's got to come off.

Speaker 2:

I can't you just got to get past the itchy face. Why don't you?

Speaker 3:

It's bothering me that I got a day and a half's worth of stubble on my face. It's just weird.

Speaker 2:

No, it's not. I was like I'm gonna get out and grow.

Speaker 3:

I'm gonna grow my hair out back the way it was on, as in high school. I fucking can't do it.

Speaker 2:

Oh dog, look at you now you started going.

Speaker 3:

I just had no fucking hair force. No, I had plenty hair when I got was still in butch it.

Speaker 2:

I've seen pictures of you at like 27 hair already gone.

Speaker 3:

No, I said I don't have a night, that's cuz I did a skin fade with a flat top. Of course it always looked like it was gone. I was back then. I wouldn't have cut it that short row and let it grow because, okay, fine, 30 Was out of the military by that dog, I'm telling you right now, you weren't that long out of the military before your hair was thinning.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I can find pictures right now of like mid late 20s Done your hair was. Your hair's been done for since like 20. Three marriages, three-ass whole little kids. You can't make that excuse. I'm losing my fucking hair. I got no kids and I'm on my first marriage.

Speaker 3:

Jets are pretty interesting relationships.

Speaker 2:

I Mean.

Speaker 3:

You're not wrong. See, there you go. No kids, though, so I guess I can't blame the children listen, we were angels, all of us not a fucking one. All little devils in your own ways I wasn't a little bit.

Speaker 2:

I loved you but I loved you. I never put holes in walls or nothing. No, not at all never, never. I never had anger issues, never picked on my little brothers.

Speaker 3:

I was right to drag you out of the fucking house on the headlock, never, never, had to.

Speaker 2:

Never listen to. You threaten to kill our dog because I was being a little dickhead, and run across the house and tackle you Onto the couch, which you were laughing your ass off about that.

Speaker 3:

Well, I don't want to kill the dog for that.

Speaker 2:

You know you don't remember that day. I remember it playing. This fucking day I've been like playing with Toby and like you remember how Toby just didn't like hoods. So if you had your hood up he'd like start fucking with you. So I put my hood up on purpose. Then I started complaining about Toby being too rough and you're like man fucking, I'll just go fucking, kill the dog. And like I've been fighting with Angela back and forth about going to bed and going to my room and that's whenever you said it and I come running across the house to jump over Angela. She's trying to fucking take clothes out of the washer and like I pick you up and like Tackle you out like over the arm of the couch and you're just like you were mad and then you're just dying laughing because you're like how the fuck to my 10 year old Just do that to me. I remember that playing this day, but I was being a little dick that day, so Most every day, hey. We we all know where them days came from.

Speaker 3:

Most every day. Hey, come on your little brother, wouldn't leave him the fuck alone.

Speaker 2:

Look at him now. They're tough as shit.

Speaker 3:

I'm waiting for the one to snap.

Speaker 2:

We just got playing some like Lincoln Park or you know, like limp biscuit, like break stuff, honestly, and you know what? I hope he fucking listens to this episode. Huh hey, on, give me one second to finish this all. The one brothers problem, and I don't give a fuck if he listens to this or not. It's think about it, right, he doesn't. He plays his video games. He, he does what he does, you know. But you try to show him music and like he does what he does and like he did, it's almost like he doesn't like music.

Speaker 3:

Likes music, but it's video game music. Touche he will listen to. Like music that's played in video games and stuff talk a little bit closer to them. He will listen to music that's like Video game music. Yeah, like music, but regular music or even movies he's. I think he's kind of I'm not even gonna try to I, I just wish he would Reach out more, be more open with feelings, stuff like that, and just I just want him to go fucking punch something one time. Amen, get some anger out, all right, before he blows up on someone at some point in time.

Speaker 2:

Let's take a quick pee-pee break and then we'll get right back into it. We'll be right back in five.

Speaker 3:

That's how to read. You know, man.

Speaker 2:

Right before jumping back into this. You know you just hit the fucks sake. No way thing. That dude has taught me so fucking much Tellin ya.

Speaker 3:

I. I didn't know how to properly crack an egg. Honestly, I don't think I've ever seen that one. You never seen that one.

Speaker 2:

I don't think I have. Just drop the fucker, just drop it From about any height.

Speaker 3:

I mean like don't drop it from the ceiling but, standing above the counter, drop it from at any height. Either now, if you're trying to go for like over easy eggs, drop it right in a fucking skillet, then it'll drop. Give you a perfect crack with no shells and just Pull the shell up out of the pan.

Speaker 2:

If you want to cook, sir?

Speaker 3:

No, like you just drop it in it and then you just pick the shell up from around it. Throw the shell away, perfectly cracked egg. If you're just like, don't eggs for scramble, whatever I, I usually drop them on the counter. I usually put an African down, so if a little bit of yolk spells out but you just drop it and then you just basically pick it up and then Falls perfectly apart. All my life I've always cracked an egg, holding it, hitting him with like a fork or a spatula or something. You wind up with eggshells and shit. I saw that with a video. I mean he watched someone else do it and he's like when and then I tried, I'm like there's no fucking way that that works Well.

Speaker 2:

That's like what his whole platform, though, is there was. He sees someone do something and he's like there ain't no way.

Speaker 3:

So and then he proves it no way, yes or no one, and it fucking at work.

Speaker 2:

Like well, that's how I found out about how jack stands have tabs to hold them. You tell me about that. I've never seen that one. But that's well, it's the whole thing. So they don't come all the way out.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, never seen that one um Tricky it up with the whole sauce. So how you drew the drug the wrong fucking hole to begin with, how do you do the next one? He said I was like that. I didn't know that shit. Did that Fuckin open up a damn soda can with another soda can? That it's like holy shit.

Speaker 2:

I swear that dude's either from Canada or he's from the LP UP. I think it's from the UP, that's not meant UP which, for anyone who don't know what the UP is, that's the upper peninsula of Michigan. But for the talk weird but I mean at the same time though, like even people from the LP you hear talk weird.

Speaker 3:

I mean look not as bad as UP. Look at.

Speaker 2:

Bob. Look at Bob. Bob talks weird as fuck, I don't know. Sometimes I think he's Canadian or he's Troy Grooners illegitimate son. I'm just kidding.

Speaker 3:

Now I met Troy Troy Grooners, old bastard child, down in New Orleans. Did you? Yep, brought us, delivered banding to us, got out of the truck and myself and Stephen Lily birth both looked each other and said what don't like Troy Garner. We had to call Troy. Hey, did you visit, like Savannah about 1920 years ago? This guy that just delivered banding to us looked just like you. But yeah, that yeah, I got there heat. He definitely his videos. And the other guy I like watching is um, I don't know the guy's name, but he'll. The video starts with watching TV and he just shows these clips of shit.

Speaker 2:

Have you ever watched his videos like house sitting at house of cats or like trying to find a gym?

Speaker 3:

Have you ever seen any like showing the weird people working out. But yeah, and you're watching his videos.

Speaker 2:

It's a fuck what is his name even like I don't even. He just pops up and I'm like, oh, I like his videos.

Speaker 3:

I'm gonna say don't do it and he'll pop up watching TV or trying out a new gym, going to a kid's birthday party. But some of those ones he watches is like where is he seeing these things? Because some of these are all on America.

Speaker 2:

They're all American TV.

Speaker 3:

Some of them are British TV.

Speaker 2:

Okay, touche, but some of them are ads that played whenever I was a kid, like the axe commercials I don't know the one I sent you with the cheddar monster.

Speaker 3:

One of the kids like cheddar monster juice, still all the cheddar and he comes over and starts puking macaroni and cheese Into the bowls and or eat it like I'm like I don't remember.

Speaker 2:

Do you remember the axe one, though? Like whenever they came out with like their scrubber? It's loof on one side and it's the like. I didn't I I didn't see the commercial he did with that. Yeah, so like there was an axe commercial whenever I was growing up. Whenever they first came out with like the man's scrubber, like that had the red part on one side, that was like for the hard. You know, just real, really scrub the loof on the other side and they're like got golf balls. It's like man, oh really you use this side.

Speaker 3:

Oh yeah, really clean your balls.

Speaker 2:

Okay, yeah and um. Man, we had some fucked up commercials growing up Like fucked up cartoons. Well, spongebob was supposed to be in adult comedy. Did you know that? Think about sandy cheeks, keeney bottom. Renaes stempy you know, did you let me write watch running stepping.

Speaker 3:

Some episodes of it. They're funny as shit. They are.

Speaker 2:

Honestly, a lot of the cartoons we watch growing up pretty sketchy. Well, look at Courage the Cowardly dog.

Speaker 3:

All those way worse than Roadrunner. Yeah, that got cancelled because it's too violent.

Speaker 2:

But then you got courage. Where you got a fucking old man? They scares the fuck out of a dog, stupid dog. You made me go mad.

Speaker 3:

That shit's good I.

Speaker 2:

Missed the old days of cartoons.

Speaker 3:

He's still got. Well, I haven't seen, and well, now they call it anime or animated motion pictures.

Speaker 2:

What do you mean? They're cartoons, except for, like, if it comes from Japan, then it's anime. Yeah, like Dragon Ball Z Love it. Anything Dragon Ball love it.

Speaker 3:

That's about the only anime I like this is Dragon Ball Z, but it's spelt Dragon Balls I.

Speaker 2:

Think that's the point, dragon. Balls.

Speaker 3:

Well, dude, what I personally like watching the Episodes of Dragon Ball Z were someone what did they call it? Though? The one, really, they're pretty much ad-libbing over what they're saying fuck, what is that called? Like the one I remember where they're talking about um Krillin being someone's bitch and You're just a Yoshi, aren't you? You're green, you came from an egg, I'll drag a ball. Or the one where, um, why does he keep kicking me in the balls? He kicked me in the balls so many times. Oh, I can't remember what that's called. Yeah, it's a good little show.

Speaker 2:

Is it? It's on something, isn't it?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, but I can't remember what it's.

Speaker 2:

I Can't remember what's called either.

Speaker 3:

They're funny episodes though. Now nothing kind of another interesting topic for you music. Did you know that it's been proven that most people that listen to like Dragon Ball Z a bridge?

Speaker 2:

yeah, I'm a fucking dumb. Fuck, it's on something. No, it's a bridge. A bridge, oh yeah, a bridge.

Speaker 3:

Unedited. Unhins, only that a bridge. Okay, yes, some of that shit is just just freaking. Hilarious watching it now.

Speaker 2:

What about music?

Speaker 3:

that music. I've actually Read a few articles of that where they say that like people that listen like heavy metal Should like that like speed, like slipknot and shit like that, actually have higher intelligence. Typically, people with some music are more intelligent than people listen to like your other types of music, up to and including, like you know, your Classical and Mozart, and so my dad that it's well, it's gonna work? Definitely. I don't know. I did it just say it didn't say why they have no reason, why they're just showing that most the you know Like surveying and somebody that's showing that people that say they like the kind of music have a higher intelligence level that people like other type of music. Is it cuz you got a country so fucking hard to hear what they're saying?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but like not all metal. I mean like Metallica's metal. But then you like get into like what I like, you know, like metal core, easy core, go Jira. I don't like go Jira. Well, some other stuff I can get behind, but like I'm not like, hey, let's turn on go Jira today. I mean God. Not big fan of my god either. I'm like I like like a data. Remember bad omens, hall Thorn Heights, which that's like post hardcore um Lorna shore, slaughter prevail Like Granted me, show an angel. All that music today was just to like get on her fucking nerves.

Speaker 3:

But you haven't done it yet haven't done what yet? You said you cannot wait for your mother to come up here, just so you can pick on her and get on her nerves. You haven't done it yet. Yes, I have. Oh yeah, you did that fucking Friday. I'm not a belly when I'm not drinking on the one that you're gonna fucking drive, damn it I ain't driving. Walked into the bar, looked at me.

Speaker 2:

You're not driving either, if he's drinking I weird, you're not gonna treat someone's got to drive home and I, you know I love Angela the death. But what did I have? Like one beer at the house, Maybe two. He's really a head.

Speaker 3:

I don't think you had any of the. You didn't have the Woodford before we left, did you? I had one because you had a tumbler.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, then we ate a meal, and then we ate a meal, and then we went to the bar and then I had To and she almost didn't, you getting cold to cut glass with them, bitches.

Speaker 3:

It's weird how it's so quiet it makes no noise. Yeah, I.

Speaker 2:

Honestly, the fridge is louder than the AC is.

Speaker 3:

I can hear the outside AC over.

Speaker 2:

But you know, and then like we go to the bar and I have two beers and like she's almost like you better not be. I'm like I've had two fucking beers and we've been here for three hours, yeah.

Speaker 3:

I think she, cause she was noticing how many I was getting. She didn't really do. You were still simple. Yeah, you look like the fucking OSI agent in the bar just walking around sipping on the same beer all night.

Speaker 2:

I had to, or I was gonna have someone fucking yelling at me Like I had no fucking choice, like I even tried to sneak a beer in, like I finished my first one, I was like, hey, could you like sneak one on to the table for me and make it look like I haven't touched it yet. But you know, that's the thing though. Like, if you think about booze, right, you have one shot, it's out of your system in an hour. You have a beer, it's out of your system in an hour. Like everything's out of your system and like is like how does she be drinking enough water?

Speaker 3:

Like you drink a beer and then or shot and you drink a bunch of water with it. It doesn't really have much time to process, it's just getting flushed straight through.

Speaker 2:

I mean honestly, I drink McLoughbaugh's, or so it is water.

Speaker 3:

It is water, but it's so good I mean it's something you can sit there and sip and say I'm having a beer and chilling and not. I agree, it's almost like a day drinker IPA. You know it's something you can. It's something you could sit there and be at a party with all night sipping on drinking and not feel too heavy and bloated and not be stumbling fucking drunk. Yeah, and actually drinking bourbon like we're doing right now is going to keep you from because you mix that shit. You're like the shit we got sitting down in the cooler down there right now with the fruit and lemonade and booze in it. You're going to just drink that shit like it's fruit punch and be next thing. You know you're stumbling off the fucking port.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, bourbon, lets you know that, hey, you're drinking me.

Speaker 3:

Well, unless you're mixing it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but I mean the amount of coke that I'm telling you right now.

Speaker 3:

If I fill this glass half with that bourbon and then top it off with coke, I won't taste the fucking bourbon in it. So, I got used to drinking. I mean, honestly, I do that and your mother picks up oh my God, how are you drinking that? But it's the same way I'm with hot food. You know I eat something that's not hot. Other people put it like Jesus Christ, it's burning my day in the mouth off.

Speaker 2:

Dude. I mean like whenever comes to like whiskey, right, look you. You remember whenever I could never get you to taste whiskey sample. And now here we are sharing a bottle of whistle pig.

Speaker 3:

No cigars.

Speaker 2:

Sadly, that's all. I fucked up.

Speaker 3:

Even a dry ass cigar from hiding in your closet. I don't have it. That would be disgusting too. And then need to call Sierra. I'll bring up a couple of her little. I don't really how she gets those out. I can't find those anywhere.

Speaker 2:

What the Swisher's Sweet Cigarilla's yeah.

Speaker 3:

I can never find those. You can get them at Liberty. That's not the only thing I ever smoke. At least it's not one of yours.

Speaker 2:

No, it's a little dispo. It doesn't hit as hard as anything I've ever had.

Speaker 3:

I want to be able to breathe after I do this yeah just because usually I do one of yours and it hurts my chest, I need to push a button, or just Just does like a throwaway thing.

Speaker 2:

Yeah it's disposable.

Speaker 3:

But I didn't do any more than that. I had a dream much harder than that. I was going to be hurting I. You have some of those ones, you get me up, take it and it's like, oh Jesus, it's nicotine than that.

Speaker 2:

Fifty milligrams. Point five.

Speaker 3:

There's been another couple of hits.

Speaker 2:

I'm going to get one hell of a nicotine buzz.

Speaker 3:

That's what I love about quitting smoking and shit. Whenever I do do something like that, I get to get the nicotine buzz, because if you smoke every day and you don't get the buzz anymore, honestly, nicotine is a prime example of heroin addiction.

Speaker 2:

Think about it right, Hear me out. The first time you try heroin, you get that glorious high and they call it chasing the dragon. Whenever you first start smoking cigarettes, you get that nicotine buzz and then and then, the whole time you're smoking you're always chasing that buzz you never fucking get one again, unless you quit for a couple of days. Unless you quit for a couple of days and you get it again. But you're always chasing that first buzz you had with cigarettes. I like that little video I saw with the boy, I mean I mean, granted, nicotine isn't as harsh on you as heroin, but like, if you think about it, nicotine is a prime example of heroin addiction. Yeah, kind of like that.

Speaker 3:

All addiction Kind of like that video you see the little yellow bird going along. You've seen. It passes up a pill on the ground and then it finally drinks or eats the pill and that's flying high and it and it lands on its feet running, then it does the next and eventually, by the end of the video, like it's all gray and it's doing the things and it can't even leave the ground and it just falls into a massive shit, which is what it is.

Speaker 2:

It's what all addiction is.

Speaker 3:

I personally, I know someone that is addicted your uncle.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

I mean we didn't have to mention names, but I'm going to mention a name because I want him to get help, but unfortunately, no one in his family gives a shit enough to want to help him, other than his sister who lives with my wife, who lives 12 hours away and can't convince him and drag his ass to rehab.

Speaker 2:

Well, here's, here's, here's the difference in all of this here's. Here's the difference in all of it. Right, you can ask and beg and plead with people to go and get help.

Speaker 1:

I know you want, until they want to get a want to get help.

Speaker 2:

It's never going to fucking mean nothing.

Speaker 3:

I know that they have to want to. They have to want to get out of that situation and get off of it, but it's hard to. Because they want that, because there's apparently also they need some mental health too, because there's something mentally that drove them to want that high and want to feel good. Yeah, I mean, that's what people drink. I mean, of course, we're drinking, but a lot of times, people drink to escape. I mean escapism. For me, now, too, is also, instead of drinking, I'm addicted to fucking books. I listen to fantasy novels, now. I mean, they're like from the name drop here on Brandon Sanderson. I can listen to this shit like I'm driving down the road, like I don't want to take a phone call, like I'm fucking just into the shit and it's, but it's escapism. It's let you get away from and think of other things. It's, it's all escape. What's sad is, though, is that you have to have escapism to escape. Not saying my life sucks, but life in general is kind of shitty if you are a working class person. Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, well, I mean dude, life dude. Honestly, look at the people that we've grown up with. Chester Bennington, Anthony Bourdain fuck, I'm brain farting on his name from Soundgarden. All the lead singer of Soundgarden? Oh God, fucking, damn it. Back to Google. I knew Soundgarden.

Speaker 3:

I just don't know the Look at the Robin Williams funniest guy. I'm one of the funniest people I've ever actors that I've ever. I'm almost saying that I've seen on screen film voice. Very funny person.

Speaker 2:

Chris Cornell. Look at, they were successful bands, they were successful in life and they still Killed themselves, or you know what I mean?

Speaker 3:

I'd say yes, so it's did any.

Speaker 2:

Maybe I'm wrong about Anthony Bourdain.

Speaker 3:

Anthony Bourdain killed them, supposedly killed them. Yeah, because I was surprised, because I'm like this dude's got the dream job. He travels around and does this and does that, and yeah.

Speaker 2:

But maybe he got Jeffrey Epstein. Well, either way though, you see these people that are successful, have money, live in a nice house. I think they got everything. They think they got every. You think they as everyday people. You think they have everything and they still ended up just ending it.

Speaker 3:

You know what I mean. You see, I've been like I said. Robin Williams is one person you would have never thought the man had Issues. Hit Chris Farley, another guy. Well, you should. He. He didn't kill himself intentionally, but he did because he was trying to find happiness and stuff that he wasn't. It's, yes, it is because a lot of it has to do with society.

Speaker 2:

Have you, and they should they do. Have you ever noticed, though, that some of the people that try to be the funny try to be the lighthearted people, like the class clowns? Some of the most depressed people are the most depressed people on earth.

Speaker 3:

They're trying to make other people happy, to make themselves feel happy, and it's yeah, and it's a notice I mean we have. Let's just face it, and I'm not going to get on to another subject or we'll be here all night talking which I don't care if we are but is the huge mental health crisis in our country, 100 percent the gun violence problem and mass units. It has nothing to do with guns, it's the mental health crisis and let's just face it. The fucking breakdown and families, yeah there are Come. Right now, compared to 30, 40 years ago, there are way fewer full functional family units than there was back then. You have single parents, single families. You have a life growing up for these children. I mean, let's face it, none of them were Gen Xers. You know who. You know we were able to cope with that shit, but that was Joke, but it's. It is up the breakdown of the family unit, the family togetherness, the people getting together, being happy family units, people getting people being there for each other, being the crutch. A child that's being picked on at school, going home and not having a family to be able to back them up and make them feel good about themselves, knowing that, yeah, I got picked on because they think I'm different. But you know what? My parents think? I'm great. They come home to a parent that is working three fucking jobs trying to support and has doesn't have five fucking minutes to spend with them. They can't cope with the feelings and then again they also can't get away to get away with get away from it because of modern technology to where the shit always follows them. I mean, I did some goofy shit growing up and I'm pretty sure if any of it would have been recorded and posted and shown to the whole fucking world. I might have contemplated suicide myself because I did some goofy shit and it's bad. And let's face it, people are cruel and younger people don't know how to. They haven't been around long enough to know how to turn off and how to not be just a cruel fucking person. And some people are cruel because they're facing attention or they're trying to, or they lack attention or they're already abused at home, so they're turned of that. Most of the time, people that are bullies are being bullied at home Because that's what they're being taught. So the bigger person is bullying me. So now I'm a little bit bigger, I'm going to bully this person. It's, yes, a huge mental health crisis in our country.

Speaker 2:

And so what's?

Speaker 3:

worse is, it's frowned upon what, what?

Speaker 2:

what confuses me about all of it? Right, I got bullied in school. I did too. You got bullied in school. There's been bullies in school from the start of time, because you know, what are ruthless?

Speaker 3:

I had two loving parents to come home to that if I spoke that with them, they would reassure me that there's nothing wrong with me. They would also reassure me that you know, hey, if needed, kick his ass. It was one of the things you have to. You have to feel like you are welcome and belong somewhere. I don't care if someone picks on you somewhere, tries to bully you somewhere. If you have a place that you can go to feel safe and secure, it's going to feel much better If you have a broken home to go home to or an asshole stepdad or an asshole father.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but look at the town we fucking live in, just the town I live in. Right, you had more kids from broken homes that got bullied than anywhere else. Berkeley Springs has never had a fucking mass shooting. You, you, you, you Like just getting picked on suck? Yes, it fucking does.

Speaker 3:

We carry guns to school. When I went in, I actually carry them to school, but in your car you had a fucking truck with a gun rack with a gun. And no one ever went out and grabbed a gun at reset or at lunchtime, because all he pissed me off so I might go shoot his ass.

Speaker 2:

No, Well, but look at, look at how many times I came from home from school fucking all upset because I got made fun of because of my stutter.

Speaker 3:

All those because your mother's fucking shitty haircut.

Speaker 2:

No, that that was once I got to high school. But I'm talking about like, leading into high school, right, like I always got made fun of for my stutter. I never wanted to go shoot up the school. Didn't make me feel like shit, yeah, I did, but at the same time like I think, hang on now. But here's the thing.

Speaker 3:

Did your mother ever make fun of you for your stutter?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, all the time I'm fucking with you.

Speaker 3:

And why not? And why? What did I tell you? I would say oh shit, that happens to me too. I get to talking and I go yeah it, yeah, it sucks.

Speaker 2:

Well, but here's the thing that right bullies, in my opinion, prepare you for the world.

Speaker 3:

They do the world's fucking tough it's, rough it's not good, you're also also given everyone participation trophies Best team wins, best person wins but what I can't figure out, though, is my generation. The Gen Xers are the ones that started that shit, because, oh well, my kid didn't, and it's like, well, hold it. I Grew up, and if the baseball team I played on didn't come in first place, oh shit, well, we need to play better next year. I didn't feel like I earned any fucking thing. Well, I mean a second-place trophy. Hey, we're the second-place team, okay. First, loser need to play next, need to play better next year, need to practice harder, need to. It's yeah, I don't. It's also and as far as the shootings go and I'm not blaming it, I will never blame it on video games, because we had video games. My group and I had Cartoons growing up that made it look like it was okay to fucking smack people with a goddamn sledgehammer, shoot people, stuff like that One. There is one cause for a lot of it is the instant access to media. We, we've both already discussed how much you can get on media and see the horrors of the world non-stop. You can just see it. I think you you get desensitized, you don't realize that it is a bad thing to go shoot up people because it you're just seeing violence everywhere. You know, I'm saying you see it, this country, this, this person, this, this day, it's so it isn't such a big ordeal. My guy, growing up as a kid, I I got, mind you, I didn't get news 24-7, I got the local channels that we could get on broadcast TV, tv news at five. Oh fuck, three kids got shot in the drive-by shooting at a school in DC and you're like, oh my god, that's horrible. Yeah, I mean you're, oh god, it's hard. Now. It's like, wow, yeah, fucking, another day, another day in a hood, it's, it's, it's.

Speaker 2:

Here's the thing that pisses me off right now. I'm 11, didn't?

Speaker 3:

bother me that much 9-11 fucked me up. You know I didn't bother me that much the shit I experienced before that. It was like that's fucked up, but well, here, here.

Speaker 2:

Here's the thing, though right, like you know, we want to talk about like gun violence in this country. But what about the knife violence in England, the machete violence in Australia, the bombs that the fucking IRA fucking sets off?

Speaker 3:

I mean, I don't know if they do that anymore. No, but like when I was in England, you'd hear about that fucking every other week. Yeah, like you know, people are gonna fucking kill people. If someone wants to Do some harm to people, they're gonna fucking do it. I can fuck you up with a pencil.

Speaker 2:

With a fucking number two pencil. Yeah, John Wick did it.

Speaker 3:

With a fucking pen. No, yes, you can turn almost anything into a weapon. And if you want to kill people We've been killing people since the fucking stone age If you want to kill people, you're gonna kill someone. Well, here's the thing I can fuck you. I can put the cork back on this body Whistlepick we're drinking right now. He'd be up side of the fuck on me and the bottle they probably isn't gonna break.

Speaker 2:

No, it's gonna hurt and you're beating the fuck on me with it, yeah. It's. Yeah, I don't. I can take your fucking stainless steel water bottle right there and smack you upside the fucking head with it. It's gonna hurt a few times. It's gonna fucking hurt you can take your computer, and I dog that's too expensive, you know what's that fucking water bottle cost? How much I water bottle cost?

Speaker 3:

I don't know, I didn't buy it Exactly, I want how much this computer cost, how much I cost. But it's yes if you want to harm people. It's like I and I try to explain to your mother. I said you know these people that walk into the school with a gun. I said what if they to walk down with an Improvised explosive device? I said you know I'm gonna go get my fucking computer explosive device. You know what if they to?

Speaker 2:

walk down with. Well, look at the Oklahoma City bomber. He built a bomb, a bomb that I'm fucking fertilizer, fertilizer, fertilizer. You can fucking.

Speaker 3:

So I would rather someone walk into a school with a gun, I would rather know violence period, but there, if there's a will, if you want to kill people, you're gonna fucking kill people, and it's. You're never gonna take that away until I don't know. I don't know what the weird thing is and the human genome that makes someone think, oh, to prove my point, I need to go fucking kill people. I don't understand it at all.

Speaker 2:

It's just not enough people has.

Speaker 3:

Trust me, I cringe behind the wheel of my car if I can't swerve out of the way of hitting a fucking turtle that's coming across the road, like literally, if I see one there and I, there's another car coming and I can't avoid it and I wind up hitting it, I feel bad because I'm like, fuck, I just, I just end a life. Yeah, that turtle may have been, it's whatever. That turtle was just trying to get somewhere living its life and someone ran it the fuck over Me. It's it. Yes, I've. I'll stop on the road and move them across the road to their own bitchy route. Here I'll stop all. I picked up a cat on the side of the road one day, was laying on the side, for what the fuck's wrong with the cat? I came up, realize someone had hit it and it was on the side of the road completely paralyzed, crossed everything else, picked it up, carried it to the local SPCA and they looked at it and there's like there's no help for it. Cat was purring, loving, but it really couldn't move anything but its head and they euthanized it and they euthanized it. I I felt horrible, not because I had to euthanize, but because someone hit it and just fucking left it laying there. Why can't all people feel like that?

Speaker 2:

I think it's a fucked up thing. Period, dad.

Speaker 3:

I think it's also fucked up. The humans think that, unless it's a I hear it for all the time where I live what's just a dog, just cat, just an animal? That people think that other lives don't mean as much as a human life. I think all life is precious. I think I. I think I instilled that in you one time, didn't I? When you dropped a fucking rock on a toad or something?

Speaker 2:

No yeah.

Speaker 3:

I never dropped you out there you killed something and I actually got on you about it and said son, you, probably you were young, but you play and I in it. Maybe it sunk in the back of your brain. You thought about it. I said, don't, don't feel you. And and I basically said, and baby was your brother. I don't what's one of your is you. You were on your brother but I was like all life's precious. I don't care what it is, every organism, everything else.

Speaker 2:

I mean you're sounding very vegan on me right now.

Speaker 3:

No, I'm saying all life's precious but at the same time, at the same time, I think anyone that's in their brain that they're a psycho killer or some mass fucked up sadistic fucker and no matter what you're going to do, you're not going to change it because there's a weird switch that is on in there. I think they give them a nice private place on an island to live together with other people and they can just do what they want to each other but keep the rest of normal humanity around. Or maybe those people are there to keep us in check and keep us on our toes so we don't get too comfortable.

Speaker 2:

Well, look at history right. We've always been hunter-gatherers, right up until you know modern age. We've always have been hunter-gatherers, so you always had to be on your toes, you know, or just make money and get fatterers. Yeah, I mean, but if you look through history, it's always been where's our next meal coming from? But we also grew our own food.

Speaker 3:

You know, we were very Raised our own livestock, bartered, traded.

Speaker 2:

But I mean, you know, is raising your own livestock hard? Yeah, it is, but at the same time like Throwing your own crops. But what's the point of doing it whenever you can go to Walmart or Foodline? Oh, I want some corn today.

Speaker 3:

Oh, look, they got corn you know what the difference is, what you can raise all that stuff and be self-sustainable. You're not out punching a fucking time clock for someone else to get rich. You've built your shit and you're growing your own shit, doing your own shit. That's the difference there is. You're doing this for you itself, not to make some rich cocksucker richer. Yeah, I'm not saying fuck the rich and people shouldn't be entrepreneurial and stuff like that, but let's face it. There are some very wealthy people out there that have more money than the fucking country and it's like what the fuck is it gonna do with that money? Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Well, you know, I think that is a great place to put a bookmark in this.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, cause we could go on to many other subjects. A thousand other the deeper we get into this bottle, the more deeper we're gonna get into subjects 100%.

Speaker 2:

Well, I know you really ain't got nothing to plug. Unless you want to plug your SOS stuff, get yourself some more customers. Go ahead and plug it. Where can they find you at?

Speaker 3:

Well, it depends what customers are listening. You never know. You can find me at gwillson, at sosservicenet. Now, what kind of services do you provide For all of your role straightening and coil straightening needs?

Speaker 2:

Hey, if this is your first time listening, thank you for tuning in. If you're a returning listener, thank you for tuning in and giving us all the support you want. Need. We need it. It's awesome to see you all keep coming back. Trust me, he's real needy. You're not wrong. If this is your first time listening, though, you can find us on all socials, at the Wilson King podcast, for updates, a little bit of insider info on the show. You can also find us at thewillsonkingpodcastcom. If you could leave us a review, either on the website or wherever you're listening to us at, and we also have a merch store on the website.

Speaker 3:

You might as well have a bandit, buy another t-shirt.

Speaker 2:

We have t-shirts, we have sweatshirts, we have backpacks, we have beanies, we have snapbacks. We have men's and women's tank tops. We also have coffee mugs. Thank you all for tuning in. Have a great rest of your week. Be safe, be responsible, don't drink and drive Peace.