
Super Familiar with The Wilsons
Marriage 2.0 with kids…and all the side quests!
Super Familiar with the Wilsons is a weekly comedy podcast about second marriage blended family life, and the beautiful chaos of parenting, aging, and figuring it all out (again). Hosted by Amanda and Josh, partners in life, love, and side quests, each episode dives into real-life stories, quirky observations, listener emails, and spontaneous tangents that somehow always circle back to relationships, resilience, and the absurdity of modern life.
Whether you’re navigating your own second act, raising kids who don’t want your help, or just wondering why birds seem to aim for your head, you’ll find humor, honesty, and heart here. Expect: offbeat storytelling, second-marriage dynamics, parenting fails, philosophical detours, and new friends you didn’t know you needed.
Familiar Wilsons Media produces content to bring people together. We are curious, hopeful, and try not to take ourselves too seriously...admittedly, with varying degrees of success.
Super Familiar with The Wilsons
Find us on instagram at instagram.com/superfamiliarwiththewilsons
and on Youtube
Contact us! familiarwilsons@gmail.com
Super Familiar with The Wilsons
Six Seven KPop Demon Hunters
Marriage 2.0 with side quests and kids. Amanda and Josh tackle the mysterious “six seven” meme, a KPop Demon Hunters obsession, and why Topgolf isn’t putt-putt (or dueling pianos actually dueling). DoorDash diplomacy, an alarm titled “Play with me, Daddy,” HRT patch wins, and a backyard Baby Saja rap battle. Listener mail checks rapture rumors; The Birdcage is your homework. Also: the family dog’s dental drama. Funny, warm, a little chaotic—Super Familiar with the Wilsons is parenting humor, marriage chats, and Gainesville life in one.
Super Familiar with The Wilsons
Find us on instagram at instagram.com/superfamiliarwiththewilsons
and on Youtube
Contact us! familiarwilsons@gmail.com
Familiar Wilson's Media. Relationships are the story.
SPEAKER_02:You are made of meat, my friend, all the way down.
SPEAKER_00:The following podcast uses words like and also woo. If you're not into any of that shit, then now's your chance.
SPEAKER_01:Three, two, one.
SPEAKER_00:Run.
SPEAKER_01:Super familiar with Welcome to Super Familiar with the Wilsons.
SPEAKER_04:I'm Amanda.
SPEAKER_00:And I'm Josh, and we are the podcast about marriage 2.0 with a bunch of side quests and kids.
SPEAKER_04:Speaking of kids, Josh, we went outside to play with Winthrop tonight because he makes me feel sad when I don't take him outside.
SPEAKER_00:Yes, I was there.
SPEAKER_04:And I played soccer in flip-flops, and I'm looking down at my foot now and it is bruised.
SPEAKER_00:It's a poor choice that we could. Don't think that we can call what you were doing playing soccer.
SPEAKER_04:I kicked the ball once or twice with my flip-flop on.
SPEAKER_00:I don't think that I've ever told you this, but I have to tell you that when I get home at night, well, this part you know, when I get home at night, uh I'm just usually really exhausted from my my job. Yes. And all I want to do is just sit around. Yes. But have I told you this that I have an alarm set on my phone?
SPEAKER_04:No.
SPEAKER_00:Yes. The alarm simply is labeled Play with Me Daddy.
SPEAKER_04:Oh, that's so sad.
SPEAKER_00:No, it's just a reminder that I gotta not let his like every day I see that notification, I gotta remember not to let his childhood go away from us. Because he's already. I feel like we talk about this every week, something that he has said that just doesn't feel like something that an eight-year-old says. But I still think of him as a four-year-old. That's part of the thing. Like you left for four days. Wherever the hell you I went to Tampa. Um, whatever you supposedly were doing. Work. And I was trying to get him out of the house um on that Monday because you left Sunday and you came back on Sunday.
SPEAKER_03:That's not true. I left on Monday, but okay.
SPEAKER_00:It felt like you left on Sunday. No, you didn't. Yes, I did. Was it the Tuesday then? I guess it was the Tuesday.
SPEAKER_04:Oh, right, because I took him to school on Monday. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It was Tuesday.
SPEAKER_00:It was the Tuesday. The first day that you were gone.
SPEAKER_04:Yeah.
SPEAKER_00:First morning that you were gone. I I got up and I got up late, right? Because it's always difficult for me to get up on time if you're not there. And sent him downstairs to do his things. I got myself ready. I had fixed him a breakfast and I'd given given him his clothes, and like a fucking idiot assumed that that was he's eight and everything will take care of itself, and then I can just come down and we can go. When I got downstairs, he had done none of the things.
SPEAKER_03:He just sat in front of the TV, yeah.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, he did, yeah. And so I had to take the dog out because that's the thing that you usually take.
SPEAKER_03:I usually do, yeah.
SPEAKER_00:So I said, Winthrop, eat. Yeah. So I take the dog out. Of course, the dog takes ages.
SPEAKER_04:The dog knows when you're in a hurry.
SPEAKER_00:No, yeah, he's he's a very mean little thing. And hopefully, when he gets his surgery tomorrow, they remove his attitude.
SPEAKER_04:Are they are they in his teeth that need to come out? Is that where his attitude is?
SPEAKER_00:I don't know where it is, but he's got a big attitude. So finally I get in, and there he is, Winthrop, still not having gotten ready, still having a breakfast? Ate no breakfast. And so I said, Winthrop, we've we gotta go now. Uh turned off the TV. Of course, he pitched a fit that I turned off the damn K-pop demon hunter soundtrack that he's fully obsessing of fully engaged in um hyperfixation mode. Oh my god. And I said, Winthrop, we're not gonna be able to have you watch a little bit of TV in the morning. And he says to me, No, Daddy, it's a tradition.
SPEAKER_03:It's a tradition.
SPEAKER_00:It's a tradition. Yes, the pass down through through the Wilson forebears to you, Winthrop. It so as he just comes out with these things.
SPEAKER_03:It's a tradition.
SPEAKER_00:And I what?
SPEAKER_04:No, I was gonna say that's like when we went to volleyball and we hadn't been there in a while, and he sat down and he looked at me and he goes, refresh my memory about how volleyball works. Yeah, that's it. What eight-year-old says, refresh my memory.
SPEAKER_00:I don't know. I don't know. F5 my memory is what he should say, because that's the way they said it. I I should invent my own like language. Oh yes. F5 would be, you know. Refresh. Refresh, yeah.
SPEAKER_04:Well, because six seven is surely driving you insane.
SPEAKER_00:I still don't understand what six seven means.
SPEAKER_04:I don't think anyone really does.
SPEAKER_00:If you're listening to this podcast right now and you don't know what I mean when I say six seven, me neither. It's a thing that the kids say now. They just say six seven, but apparently they don't know what it means.
SPEAKER_04:They don't. It doesn't mean anything, really. It's just they they it's just a thing. Um, but yes, no, I am downstairs with him and I say, Winthrop, put your clothes on. I hand him his clothes, and then I will go into the kitchen and start making his lunch and making his breakfast, and then continue to say, put your clothes on. And he eventually does it, and then I have to say, eat your breakfast, eat your breakfast, eat your breakfast. See, this is a problem. You weren't down there continually saying, Eat your breakfast.
SPEAKER_00:Well, whatever it was, we finally got it going, and then the next the Wednesday morning was a little bit easier because we had already kind of forgotten that you know that you were a thing.
SPEAKER_03:So thank you. So at least I am no longer a tradition in this family.
SPEAKER_00:Traditions are easily broken. I don't know. Um, but no, yeah, it was it was I by the time Thursday rolled around, we were we were cooking with gas. We were doing well.
SPEAKER_04:Well, I should have just stayed gone.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, well, no, because I didn't sleep.
SPEAKER_04:I don't sleep when you didn't sleep well either. I I miss you, I know. I miss you when I'm gone. And the thing is, like I went for work, right? And we were all there. It was lovely. I have a lovely group of Gen X women friends that we all live in different only two of us live in Gainesville, and I wish that we could be together all the time. Like I'm actually tearing up thinking about how much I love these women and how really important I think that you know, female friendships are, as are male friendships. I'm just a female.
SPEAKER_00:And we I don't need you to go having male friendships.
SPEAKER_04:We had a fabulous time, and it's like we didn't even say goodbye to each other. We all just left after lunch on Thursday, and I walked out of the hotel and I texted them, um, bye question mark. And they were like, Yep, I'm already at the airport here, but we don't like we didn't feel the need to make a big deal about it because we were in each other's lives all the time. And but I am not the person that's like, let's go out, let's do all the things when I'm on a work trip. And I love seeing my friends. We had a great dinner, but I was in bed by 8:30. Like, I they were having like late night karaoke. Some of these people were, and some of these people were going to to trivia, and no, thank you. I want to be in my bed, I want to be like cozy in this bed and not have to tell anybody to go to sleep, but I didn't sleep well either. One because I miss you, and two because these pillows were messed up. There were five pillows on this bed, and each one of them was a different thickness. Like it started out with flat and it went to Mount Everest. And like I could not decide what angle my neck needed to be at, and I'd fall asleep one way and wake up on another one and hurt. It was a problem. Also, I faced the runway of Tampa International Airport, so I could hear planes too. Now it was on the bay and it was beautiful. I went with um my good friend Jessica and we had dinner and we watched the sunset. Like we went right at it, it was beautiful, but on the other side of the hotel, airport, sun, not sun country, southwest to be exp it's exact. I watched all the southwest planes take off and land.
SPEAKER_00:Did was there a window or did it was it just open air?
SPEAKER_04:It's just no open air. I just yeah, yeah, it was a window. Goodness. It was a nice hotel, but I but we had food and it was like it wasn't good food. Like the first night was like an it was supposed to be like a family dinner. You weren't there, and it it was like they had dueling pianos to entertain us, but I'm confused by dueling pianos. Are they supposed to be battling? Is it like a rap battle for pianos?
SPEAKER_00:I think that that's the original conceit, but that's not what it is anymore. Now it's just a couple of people playing piano together.
SPEAKER_04:And in my head, they they play like Billy Joel, or they play like Garth Brooks, or they play these songs, but no, they were playing like well, they were doing K-pop Demon Hunter songs, but then they were just also playing, I don't it was like Shake It Off. I don't know. I was very confused. They were just playing the same song together.
SPEAKER_02:Right.
SPEAKER_04:There's no dueling, yeah. No, there was duading.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah.
SPEAKER_04:Maybe they misspelled it. Maybe it's supposed to be duading pianos, I don't know. But anyway, so then the next day I went to Top Golf.
SPEAKER_00:And I you went why why did you go to Top Golf?
SPEAKER_04:Because it was an event. It was it was an event, it was supposed to be like a team building event.
SPEAKER_00:Okay, t team building, the worst. Go ahead.
SPEAKER_04:Okay, so but you've not been to Topgolf.
SPEAKER_00:No, I don't I assume it's like putt-putt. I've been to like putt-putt. I've been to these indoor putt-putt things. Is that what top golf is?
SPEAKER_04:No, no, no, no. Topgolf is open.
SPEAKER_00:Okay.
SPEAKER_04:You are elevated, okay, and it basically looks like a giant batting cage. Like it goes all the way out. There's um netting like above and all around, like a fence.
SPEAKER_00:So it looks like it looks it's a- You're describing a driving range.
SPEAKER_04:It's a driving range, but it's wider. So it's like kind of almost like a baseball diamond.
SPEAKER_00:Okay.
SPEAKER_04:And there are these big targets on the ground, like giant targets. Like you, so it's like you're almost like you're playing darts, but by hitting the golf ball. Okay. And they all have trackers on them. So it it calculates for you like bowling on the screen, and it gives you points for like hang time, it gives you points for however many miles an hour it goes. Like it has all of these metric points. And then it has different games you can play. Now, I played zero games. I sat and drank my club soda with Lyme and just watched the people because I had a migraine all day. And so I just sat and watched the people do this. But it was open air, it was lovely. There, um, you can order food, there's a bar, and it you could like program the games. So there was one that was Angry Birds. So it had like an Angry Bird, like you look, remember how I used to play Angry Birds on your phone and what it looked like? It was a structure with the little angry pigs, right? It would show that on the screen, and then the golf ball, how far you hit it and where it hit would knock down something on the screen. That's cute.
SPEAKER_00:That's cute. Yeah, yeah, yeah. No, I mean it's cute. Yeah, I could see where a bunch of dudes would get into it. But isn't your workplace mostly not dudes?
SPEAKER_04:No, no, no, no, because it wasn't my team is mostly not dudes, but it was like four or five teams from my work there. So there were a significant portion of dudes. But there were, I mean, a ton of women. I mean, actually, the pro the game that I was sitting and watching, um, I was for sure certain this one dude was gonna win, but was beat handedly by a not dude.
SPEAKER_00:Oh, well, very good. Love that. Yeah, it was good.
SPEAKER_04:It was good. So it was interesting. I was all like, because my dad played. I mean, I grew up, my dad was gone all the time playing golf. My brothers played golf. Um, he would occasionally let me drive the golf cart. He taught um lessons once he retired. He worked at a driving range, and golf is just not in my blood, like it is everywhere in my family. Makes sense if we're Scottish. I guess that makes sense. Although my DNA has been updated, and I'm back to being Irish and Scottish.
SPEAKER_00:That sounds dirty. How is your DNA updated?
SPEAKER_04:Well, because the the ancestry.com, they're constantly refining their their data pools, I guess. And the more samples you take, the more you can narrow it down. And so uh it told me I was like 3% Irish. Well, I'm back to being 30%, I was like 12% Scottish and 3% Irish, where I grew up thinking my whole life I was Irish, but it now has refined and it's updated since the two years ago that I did it, and I'm now like 30 something percent northern Irish and southern Scottish. Maybe I was like born in the the the water.
SPEAKER_00:Well, very good though. That must make you happy because I I know that that you like growing up you really held on to the fact that you were Irish.
SPEAKER_03:Yes, but I'm Northern Irish. Okay, dairy girls.
SPEAKER_00:Okay, well, I don't know how I feel about that then, as long as you're not like that slag one.
SPEAKER_04:Oh my god, you are a horrible, horrible person. Anyway, I went to Top Golf and it was fun, and then um Thursday I came home and by then you guys had figured out how to do life without me. So that's fine.
SPEAKER_00:One of the ways that we figured out how to do life without you is that I ordered DoorDash every day.
SPEAKER_04:That's and the thing is like you can cook. Like you are a good cook. Why did you not cook?
SPEAKER_00:Huh? Because I didn't want to.
SPEAKER_04:But you didn't. He didn't go to sleep.
SPEAKER_00:Well, try to go to sleep. Yeah, I was just tired. Um, and I got some good brisket, so there you go. Brisket that Winthrop loves? Okay. Parents out there, does your kid do this? One night he absolutely loves something that you give him for the first time, the next time he hates it. Yeah. How does that happen? How does that happen in like 12 hours where where he loves something and then he hates that very same thing?
SPEAKER_04:This from the kid that eats the same damn grape jelly and crustable in his lunch every damn day for the whole school year. I don't know. I the only thing I can tell you is because you wanted him to do it.
SPEAKER_00:No, that's exactly what it is. He's such a contrarian. Yeah. And I don't know where he gets that. Sorry about that because you that's you. Um, but that pisses me off, man. It makes me like I was gonna say it makes me- Not want to feed him. No, no, no. You kind of have to. No, um, by law.
SPEAKER_04:You're morally obligated and legally obligated.
SPEAKER_00:I was gonna say it makes me not want to tell him to do things because I just know that he's more likely to do what I want him to do if I don't tell him to do it. But I also can't reverse psychology him anymore. No, oh no, he knows he stresses that out. Like he does this thing where he will well, he will just talk nonstop or he will sing nonstop. Especially now because of the K-pop demon hunter thing, he's just singing these damn songs just endlessly. And so I will go to redirect him, I'll ask him a question, and he will say to me, You're just asking me that because you don't want me to sing.
SPEAKER_04:Yeah, no, he knows.
SPEAKER_00:So, like, I don't know what to do. I don't want to be like, um, I don't want to raise my voice at him because he doesn't like that, and I don't like doing that, but he there's certain things he's got to do, and I gotta tell him to do it.
SPEAKER_04:Yeah, I don't know.
SPEAKER_00:And he's so hard-headed, or maybe he's just inertia boy that once he's in a direction, it takes the will of God and all of the force of Einstein's gravity to move him to a different trajectory. I don't know what it is, but he is nigh yon impossible.
SPEAKER_04:You know, I started to say, well, maybe we could like feed into this demon hunter thing and tell him that Guima, which is the, I think I said that right, the the massive demon is gonna take him if he doesn't do these things. But one, I don't I think that that's what we grew up with church, and so we shouldn't do that, tell people the demons are coming for them. Yes, I'd rather not. Second of all, tonight he was talking to me about it, and the the the whole conceit of this film is that the main girl is part demon, but she's trying to hide it.
SPEAKER_00:She's got a little of the devil in her.
SPEAKER_04:Yes, she's trying what was her daddy too. Um, and she's trying to hide it, and then eventually the whole can the whole point of the movie is like not hiding who you are and being full of yourself. And so he said to me, you know, in the movie where Ginu says something to Rumi where he's like, but you're a demon. What if she just said, Yeah, I am, and then she went to be with the demons? Like she just was like, and I'm no longer a demon hunter, I'm just a demon. I was like, Well, the movie would end, but also I'm glad that she made a good choice to like he was like, Oh, really? Like he was disappointed. I think he wanted her to just give in to the demon.
SPEAKER_00:It's just he's he's feeling the calling of his own. Yes. Um, you know, I didn't know that this whole K pop demon hunter thing was like a cultural thing. It's like a phenomenal. Like, I just assumed that it was just like a little thing that he had grabbed onto. No, no, no. But like frickin' everyone's talking about this damn movie. And this is why you're a better parent than I am.
SPEAKER_04:I am a good parent.
SPEAKER_00:Because of what you just did. You just talked to him and told me about like the plot using the actual character names and the plot of the thing. Don't fucking know anything about this thing. It's like it's torture. It's torture for me.
SPEAKER_04:You should let yourself watch the movie because let myself let I'm keeping myself watching. You are though. I think you like you are you are.
SPEAKER_00:There's no one part of me that wants to see it, and the other part of me is keeping all of me, does not want to see it. All the parts of me are like, it's cute and it's funny.
SPEAKER_04:And didn't we have didn't you guys watch it like like the the older children were into it?
SPEAKER_00:Oh, yeah, they were. Andrew is the 21-year-old and Daniel's the the the over 21-year-old.
SPEAKER_03:And they're 25 and 23, but okay.
SPEAKER_00:Andrew is not 23. Is he? Jesus. Okay. Um anyway, the two boys and Daniel's partner, Raven, um, came over, and they were so Raven has seen it before, and she she loves it. She loves it, and she teared up at the at the appropriate part. Oh, yeah, no, and uh happy I was for them too, because they they took the heat off me while I was I was about to say fixing dinner. No, while I was calling DoorDash. DoorDash. They were watching this damn movie, but I just I can't make myself watch this thing. I just can't. It's it's cringe.
SPEAKER_04:It's oh my god, you're cringe for saying cringe. I was aware of it being this massive thing, but he was never into it, so it wasn't part of our lives. Like it was super big this summer. Oh, was it? Oh, yeah. It's been around that long. It was super big this summer, and they did a thing where they sold Netflix was like, Oh, watch me capitalize on this. So they put it in the theaters as a sing-along. Imagine that if you had to do that.
SPEAKER_00:Nope.
SPEAKER_04:And like uh people I that I work with were taking their kids to the theater to see it for the sing-along, paying lots of money to go do it. I was aware of it, he just was never interested in it. And I think I asked him once if he was interested in it, and he said no. But it was about three weeks ago or a month ago, you had to work late. And so I told him if he got a shower, he could get in bed in our bed and we could cuddle and we could watch something. And he said, Okay, and then he said, Well, we might as well just go ahead and watch K-pop demon hunters because everybody's talking about it.
SPEAKER_00:I see.
SPEAKER_04:So he was like, not super like I need to see this, but kind of like it's cultural capital and I need to be able to talk about it.
SPEAKER_00:Yes.
SPEAKER_04:But I think he's hitting after the big like everybody's kind of like chilled on it a little bit. It's still a big deal.
SPEAKER_00:No, it's still a big thing. I I'm still I'm hearing about it more now than I ever have, in fact.
SPEAKER_04:Well, isn't that the Bernie Maiden Mayhaw syndrome? What is that called?
SPEAKER_00:Bader Minah. The yellow car syndrome. Yes. Yes, yes.
SPEAKER_04:I think that's what that is. Anyway, he is going to be baby saja for Halloween. We are having a Halloween party in which a good friend of ours is coming, and he and his wife and his kids, he is also dressing as baby Saja, and baby Saja raps in the movie. And so our child has challenged the 40-year-old to a rap battle. He's already decided it's gonna take place in the backyard.
SPEAKER_00:Oh, jeez. Yes, this eight-mile part two, eight-year-old mile. Oh gosh. Anyway, y'all heard of K-pop Demon Hunter? I should title this episode K-pop Demon Hunter too.
SPEAKER_04:I mean, people look at Google and you'll get some you'll get some lessons.
SPEAKER_00:If you want to email us, familiarwilsons at gmail.com. If you want to talk about K-pop Demon Hunters, I will hand the email straight to Amanda. But we have a couple of emails I want to catch up to. Now, we didn't um broadcast last week, so these are these are from a couple weeks ago, but but we haven't read them yet. So, first we have our friend Leo catching up with us. He says, First of all, the flashback game you play is now a TV show called The Perfect Line. Oh, it's a great show, whereas the host provides the anchor. If it's broadcast in your area, I recommend checking it out because I think you'll enjoy it too. So there you go.
SPEAKER_04:I did not know that. Thanks, Leo.
SPEAKER_00:He goes on the talk of the rapture drives me nuts every single time I hear it. Of course, we had that rapture threat a couple weeks ago and we did an episode about it. He said, first and foremost, it's not biblical. The concept of it was first introduced in 1830 by Margaret MacDonald, then popularized by John Nelson Darby through his movement known as dispensationalist theology. Bet y'all did not know that you were going to get some big-time Christian history uh knowledge uh in this podcast. It became popular and basically accepted as truth in 1909 with the publication of the Schofield Reference Bible. I think that's Schofield Reference Bible. What's sad to me is that every time some nut job proclaims it's time, there are those who, especially in disenfranchised populations, who sell everything, quit jobs, and so on only because they believe that time is up. I saw far too many videos this time around of this happening, and it literally broke my heart. Yeah, no, they they take advantage, you know. They're like, you need to get rid of all your stuff, so give it to me. Um he continues on. Amanda, I also love fall, but I hate the early sunsets. Before long, it will be getting dark at 5 30. I do not like that, Leo. I agree. Not sure about you guys, but I hate the feeling that the day is almost over at 4 30. Yeah, I'm not a big fan of that. But this at the same time, it makes the evenings and the nights feel longer, which I do like that. So I don't know. It's it's there's a plus and a minus, although we are creeping uh up to that time where people start to get seasonal, what is it? Defective disorder. Yeah, yeah. In other words, they get depressed because it's colder and it's darker longer. And so, y'all take take care of your mental health and know that that's coming. Lastly, Josh, I knew you couldn't resist the siren call of meat for much longer. It doesn't mean you have to be a meat glutton. Yeah, it does. Without a doubt, I love veggies equally as much as meat. Haha, not me. Um, and then he ends with, I think I'm starting to figure out why you didn't tell me I left Miami. Now that reference is from a show that we did quite a while ago. So good on you, um, Leo, for the callback. So there you go. Thanks, Leo.
SPEAKER_04:Did you hear, did we talk about the all the people who were saying the rapture were gonna happen? And then when people were coming back and saying, Okay, you said it was gonna happen, and it didn't that the what some one of the reasonings was it was because that God didn't know that we no longer use whatever calendar that he thought we used, and so the date was wrong.
SPEAKER_00:You're saying that God had purchased the wrong planner.
SPEAKER_04:Yes, that's basically what they said.
SPEAKER_00:Okay, very good.
SPEAKER_04:Yeah, anyway.
SPEAKER_00:We have another letter here, another email from Dan Belson. Oh goodness, he says good day. Censor it. I don't need to censor it. What are you talking about? Censor it. We don't censor on this program. Good day, Wilsons. He says, after listening to your latest podcast, I knew I had to get in touch with three pressing matters. So pressing that we're reading them two weeks later. A, after last week's antics, it appears that Muffy is indeed a hero and should be treated as such. Please pass on my kind words.
SPEAKER_04:I will. So a little update if you didn't listen a couple weeks ago. Muffy took care of a very drunk, very impaired, I think she was slip something, girl, and took her away from very suspect man and went to the ER with her and made sure her family was there. So these girls out there, Gen Z girls out there taking care of each other. Thanks, Dan. We'll let her know.
SPEAKER_00:Two, he says, I'm shocked that you haven't quit your job already, Josh, to seek fame and fortune in the podcast game. Don't be afraid to go down the right wing grifting route. Please ensure you pronounce the word route as us Brits would say root.
SPEAKER_04:That's incorrect. Thank you. And also no no magas here. Thank you.
SPEAKER_00:No. Um, but I am gonna go seek fame and fortune in the podcasting game.
SPEAKER_04:That's just in the in the self-help world.
SPEAKER_00:Yes, I've started a new podcast with uh John Spence, who is a very well-regarded business uh I won't say influencer, thought leader, that's the the term that I'm looking for. But I started a podcast with him about leading and uh and finding an awesome life. So it's it's pretty cool. You should check it out. It's called Notes for an Awesome Life with John Spence.
SPEAKER_04:Um it's really good. I enjoy it. Yeah, so I listen to it because I enjoy it and not because you told me to. Because I wouldn't do it if you told me to.
SPEAKER_00:That's right. You and you and Winthrop. Lastly, he says, finally, great news on the pre-menopausal situation. Josh, you're an absolute legend to get through such a tough time. What a man. Yeah, for the update that he's talking about is Amanda now has the hormone replacement patch firmly nestled on her buttocks.
SPEAKER_04:Upper buttocks, but yes. But I mean, I do I do feel different, right? Like I'm I'm I got a couple heat flashes or hot flashes, what do you call those jokers? But it's much, much better. It's much better. Like I feel like I'm a little chipper.
SPEAKER_00:You're a little you're a little chatty tonight, aren't you? I know I am. Yes, that's the Amanda that I love. I love you. Um, okay, so again, if you if you want to write us um familiarwilsons at gmail.com.
SPEAKER_01:No one likes to be told what to do.
SPEAKER_00:And now is the time in the program where we tell you what to do. Amanda, what should we do?
SPEAKER_04:If you are on the TikTok, I need you to go over and I need you to follow Jay Womstead. That is at J. Womstead W-A-M-S-T-E-D. He is a middle school teacher in his 20th year of teaching, and he will explain 6-7 to you. If you have any questions about any of the memes or any you've got some children in your life and they're saying stuff you just don't understand, Jay Womstead will explain it to you. I I I find him I find him amusing. I enjoy it. It's and it helps you keep up with the kids.
SPEAKER_00:So you do know what six seven means?
SPEAKER_04:Means nothing.
SPEAKER_00:Well, can you give me anything? Give me anything about six seven.
SPEAKER_04:Yeah, I'll give I'll send you Jay Womstead.
SPEAKER_00:So you where does it come from? Do you not know any of this?
SPEAKER_04:It's like debated, right? So there's this rap song that's got six seven in it that maybe it came from, but now all these middle schoolers have just picked it up and they say it to drive adults crazy because it means nothing. And they'll walk around and go 6'7, and it means nothing. And then there's this little hand thing where you do your hands up and down going 6'7. And I was at the homecoming parade with the children because oh, we didn't talk about UF firing their head coach.
SPEAKER_00:I was we also recommend that. That's a recommendation. Fire your head coach.
SPEAKER_04:I mean, it if they've lost a significant number of games, but also I've many, many feelings on the fact that we're still paying out the last head coach. But anyway, I went to the homecoming game with the children, and there were kids all around yelling at the floats, six seven, and doing this just to try to get the people you know when we were little and we used to go honk, honk at like semi tribes.
SPEAKER_00:Yes, yes.
SPEAKER_04:In the 70s and the 80s, this is the new thing. They try to get the people to do six seven.
SPEAKER_00:I dislike it severely.
SPEAKER_04:Okay, well, go go watch Jay Womstead on TikTok.
SPEAKER_00:My recommendation is if you can get yourself in front of a TV and watch the movie The Bird Cage with Nathan Lane and Robin Williams, do that. Very funny. It holds up very well, and especially in the climate in which we find ourselves today.
SPEAKER_04:I am you and Muffy were having a grand old time watching it last night. It was very cute.
SPEAKER_00:Alright, Amanda, that's all there is. There is no more. Final thoughts, anecdotes.
SPEAKER_04:I mean, I'm awake and I'm ready to just keep chatting, but you look very tired.
SPEAKER_00:I am very tired and you're stressing me the hell out. I don't like it when I'm tired and you're like this because it just makes me feel like like I have to stay up and I don't need you to stay up.
SPEAKER_04:You can't, you just can't get what you want, can you? Like you just I if I'm tired and I don't want to leave the bed and I'm all like whatever, you're like, I'm worried about you, and get up and let's go do things. And now I'm like, let's I'm here and I'm ready to do things, and you're like Alright, here's the list of people without whom we could not produce this podcast.
SPEAKER_00:Many thanks to them. To Antonio, who once tried to explain cryptocurrency to a pelican. Josh Scar, our official fact checker, though we asked him to stop checking our facts. Danny Buckets, who earned his nickname the hard way, by making sure that he's the one in charge of bringing buckets to a pool party. Chicken Tom, still not confirmed whether he's man or myth, or just very ambiguous. Matt, who says he's just Matt, but we've all seen the cape. Monique from Germany, International Corps. Correspondent and supplier of world class I rolls, Joey.
SPEAKER_04:Joey.
SPEAKER_00:Ryan Baker, who once baked a cake so dense it formed its own gravitational field. Leo, sound engineer and full-time cat whisperer. Refined gay Jeff, curator of taste, tone, and subtle shade. Oh yes. Mark and Rachel, our relationship consultants, who keep reminding us that communication is key, and we keep forgetting where we left those keys. And to Dan and Gavin, the creative duo currently developing a musical about Wi-Fi passwords. And of course. And of course, special thanks to you for listening.
SPEAKER_04:Alright, friends. I'm gonna be awake for the next like 20 hours if anybody wants to email me at um familiarwilsons at gmail.com. And also think of the podcast pup tomorrow. Wilson Wilson is getting three of his teeth removed because he's an old man and doesn't brush his teeth.
SPEAKER_00:So, folks, go brush your teeth. And be kind of message. All right.
SPEAKER_04:Bye.