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The AdopTwins
A podcast from two adoptees about Life, Loss, Moving On, and Growing Up.
The AdopTwins
Adopted Adventures in Acting and Parenting
In this episode, the Adopt Twins Meg and Billy delve into a lively discussion about acting auditions and the challenges of booking roles. They touch on the successes and near-misses of Meg's child—aptly nicknamed 'the tiny human'—in the world of entertainment. Dive into their reflections on adoption, the amusing realities of therapy, and the emotional resonance Meg finds in BTS's return. With laughter and heartfelt moments, they share how family, therapy, and unexpected encounters shape their adventurous lives.
Follow us on IG @theadoptwins
visit us on the web at https://adoptwins.com/
Hi, this is Meg.
Speaker 2:And this is Billy.
Speaker 1:And we are.
Speaker 2:The Adopt Twins.
Speaker 1:Meg and this is Billy, and we are the Adopt Twins. Welcome to a podcast from two adoptees who are navigating life loss, moving on and growing up.
Speaker 2:For our adopted friends.
Speaker 1:We hope to bring you a familiar point of view, submitting for work, and I've been auditioning a little bit and I've been booking, nothing but the tiny human has a manager now. Hey, congrats to the tiny human. Yes, yeah, and so for everything he submits, for he gets called for an audition for about half of them good and then from there he gets shortlisted most of the time, but he hasn't booked anything yet is he mostly going for uh film?
Speaker 2:um, it's been all sorts of things.
Speaker 1:It's been all sorts of things. It's been like promos for different like TV shows that are coming up, some commercial stuff. I'm not sure if there was any film stuff yet. Through the agent, I think I have had some with him, but previously to signing him, um, so, yeah, I, so I've definitely um, it's I I don't know about for you, but for me being around actors always kind of makes me a better actor, if you will. Yeah, here, I'm never around actors at all, but hopefully the tiny human starts booking and so then I'll be living with an actor.
Speaker 2:It's. I couldn't agree more. It's. It's so important to like have the immersion where it's just hey, can we, can we talk shop real quick Right.
Speaker 1:And have people understand it.
Speaker 2:Oh yeah, and have people like be respectful of the process.
Speaker 1:Yeah.
Speaker 2:Where? Yeah, I, that's, that's. Yeah, that's awesome. But I can imagine, yeah, that part of connecticut kind of hard to be like all right. Well, here we are again, the 17th day in a row on set, like that's yeah a little different so, so I was hoping Malcolm could have helped me out.
Speaker 1:He did text me back, by the way, though.
Speaker 2:Oh, he did.
Speaker 1:Yes, and he said that he would pass my name along. So whether he did or not, I want to just, in my head, assume he did. But the movie takes place in the 70s and you know, asian people weren't around in the 70s.
Speaker 2:It's a small world. Proved anything, it's that the history. Contributions from Asian culture Don't matter.
Speaker 1:Exactly We've done nothing. I'm choosing to believe. That's why I haven't gotten the call.
Speaker 2:Makes sense. Probably he'll video you With BTS Be like hey, sorry it's been a while, but we love you. Here's a thousand dollars.
Speaker 1:Today is BTS day.
Speaker 2:Oh, that's why I've been having such a good day such a good day.
Speaker 1:It's their anniversary from when they debuted. Their oldest member, who was the first to go into the military, came home and he gave a performance and he kept saying I haven't sang in a year and a half. I'm so nervous, I'm embarrassed and blah, blah, blah. And he did a beautiful job.
Speaker 2:Oh, my gosh, oh, if every serviceman returning followed that trajectory, that would be hilarious for culture. Welcome home, now perform. I've really seen some shit guys. No, no, no, no, no, no. We don't care about that. It's time to sing and dance.
Speaker 1:He said I haven't adjusted to life yet, this poor guy. And I cried so much too, just the whole emotion of everything. My favorite member, who left in September and last gave an update in August where we could see him. He wrote a little thing in September that said I'm here, and then has been radio silent since we finally got a picture of him because they all took a day off, a day of leave, to welcome Jin home.
Speaker 1:Oh nice welcome Jin home. Oh nice, it is a beautiful couple of days, though. I bawled my eyes out because I missed my child a lot yesterday, and I bawled my eyes out with my therapist this morning, and I bawled my eyes out watching Jin's performance. So, despite all that, it's a beautiful day. She did say that she doesn't think my meds are working, and I should call a psychiatrist, though.
Speaker 2:You win some, you lose some.
Speaker 1:Exactly. You know, I've learned through therapy that you just have to celebrate the little wins and BTS is coming back together. There's no more so-and-so is leaving. It is now all so-and-so is back.
Speaker 2:You know what? I don't think you need any more meds. You got everything you need, knowing that the world is going to be just fine that's right, because bts is coming back they're coming back they are, and next time maybe they will.
Speaker 1:Um, well, I guess in october. Well, I mean, I will be there when j-hope gets out of the military, and j-hope is from the same hometown as I am, oh interesting yeah, I fly on the 16th and he comes home on the 17th and I didn't even plan that, like I looked that up today, when each person's like discharge day was gonna be so maybe I'll see him around, we'll see.
Speaker 2:It sounds like it sounds like fate that's right, that's right but I could never date him because we could be related. You know, that is one of the things that us adoptees always have to keep in mind. All right, we're going to take a chance If it starts to feel a little familiar. We're going to have to stop what Never mind. I should have kept that. To stop what Nevermind I should. I should have kept.
Speaker 1:I should have kept that thought inside, but I don't like I've found myself finally in my life being attracted to Asian men.
Speaker 1:Hey, get it. And so I um was talking to this guy over winter and we never ended up meeting. It became a whole thing. But anyways, I was like where in Korea are your parents from exactly? And then he was like I don't know, I'll ask them why. And I'm like, well, because I just always have this fear that I may be related to someone. It's like oh, I was like yeah, Adoption foreplay 101.
Speaker 2:Hey, could you be my brother? What?
Speaker 1:Do you by any chance know if your mother gave a child up before she had you?
Speaker 2:No.
Speaker 1:How about after? Because, you know, I don't really know how old I am.
Speaker 2:Could you call them and see if they have any friends who did that? Can I actually video?
Speaker 1:with them. I'd like to see how much I look like them yeah.
Speaker 2:Is it okay if we order appetizers first, or? Oh, you want this now.
Speaker 1:Okay.
Speaker 2:I see why you've dated non-Asian men in the past. Yeah, that's fun. That's fun, that's fun for all.
Speaker 1:Yeah.
Speaker 2:What a journey.
Speaker 1:So my kid is learning to write and those types of things. First grade he just finished and they had him do this thing about his mother for Mother's Day, all these fill-in-the-blank things, and I've seen a lot of hilarious ones online and stuff. People post them and everything, and so at one point on it, most of it, fine, yes, makes sense, sure, uh-huh, uh-huh. He did say I was like 16 feet tall, though, so that's something. But then when 16 feet, yeah, 16, um she he said um, something about. I don't know if it said what I like. I think it was like what I like to do, what I like to wear blah, blah, blah, kind of things, and it said what I like to wear bts clothes, what I like to do. My mother is and I could see, because it wasn't erased very well, a two and a six and that was erased, but I'll take it 26.
Speaker 2:I'll take it 26, perfect.
Speaker 1:Yeah, he erased it and put question marks in, and when I was looking at it and he was explaining it all to me, he's like yeah, that's because we don't know how old you are was explaining it all to me.
Speaker 2:He's like yeah, that's because we don't know how old you are, he's like.
Speaker 1:That's why there's question marks, because question marks mean you don't know, I'm like mm-hmm, yeah, yep, fun telling the teacher all about that one yeah, oh, he had to do one about his teacher for the end of school and there's a picture that he had to draw of his teacher and it's this person and a big like word bubble coming out that says stop oh my god and I'm like what, what is this?
Speaker 1:he's like she always tells us to stop whatever we're doing, stop, stop. And I'm like did miss, did your teacher see this? And and he was like, yeah, I'm like what, what did your teacher have to say about this? And and he was like I don't know. But as I was walking away, heard her say to the other teachers that were there oh great, he drew a picture of me yelling.
Speaker 2:That seems like it's on her. I'll be honest yeah, maybe yell less.
Speaker 1:Right.
Speaker 2:But I'm not a teacher. I can never, I can never, no.
Speaker 1:I could never.
Speaker 2:But no, that is that is. That is funny to see his perspective of the world and how, what, what he picks up on and what. What is just general truth is for people that I am a 26 year old giant giant that sleeps all the time in bts shirts, slumbers in bts, and the teacher, who has a life outside of school with family and bills and hopes and dreams, is just a monster that screams well, leo's now obsessed with broadway because he's learned his teacher goes every month to Broadway. Ooh, okay.
Speaker 1:So it's gotten me to be like. He's been asking to see Aladdin on Broadway since he was two and a half. But I'm not bringing a two and a half year old to see Aladdin, no, but I did finally buy tickets for this summer, so he will finally see it. Oh that's exciting. His other side bought tickets for the Lion King for a few days after I bring him to Aladdin.
Speaker 1:And the Lion King is my favorite Disney of all time and it was the theme of my baby shower for my child, so there's that He'll figure out why you love it so much. Yep, I've been doing the lotteries for the shows because I've learned, since I lived in the city, that you no longer have to like be there and do all this stuff. It's all done online.
Speaker 2:Oh, that's nice.
Speaker 1:And you find out ahead of time like a day ahead.
Speaker 2:As opposed to what are we doing tonight? We'll see, okay.
Speaker 1:So it's been amazing and there's been a few that I've won, that I haven't been able to go to for various reasons, and I'm very bummed about that Did win tickets to one on Saturday. I did have my tiny human that day, and so I started looking up online on if it was appropriate for children or not. I'm like, what should I do? What should I do? And then I'm thinking about the source material, because everything on Broadway now is based off of a movie that was based off of a book.
Speaker 2:Yeah, that's the vibe that I got.
Speaker 1:Yeah. So I'm thinking about the source material and I'm like, well, I think a lot of it's just going to go right over his head. And so I decided, OK, let's bring him. And so his first Broadway show was not Aladdin. His first Broadway show was actually the Great Gatsby starring Jeremy Jordan.
Speaker 2:What Wait? Is that a musical?
Speaker 1:It is.
Speaker 2:Okay.
Speaker 1:What yeah, jeremy Jordan plays Gatsby.
Speaker 2:Okay.
Speaker 1:Gatsby.
Speaker 2:Disney, you're going to love Gatsby.
Speaker 1:Kept asking him, like you know, during intermission, after everything, what do you think he's like? I liked it and I was like did you understand it? He's like no. I was like in my head, okay, good, and then he's like it was a little scary. I was like like when, like the when, and I'm trying to think of how to say it. And then I was like when Gatsby died, he's like no, no. Then what was scary? He's like just the whole thing. I was like okay, he's like, but I liked it. I was like did you like like the dancing and like all the like props and costumes? He's like yes, and I said okay, and I just left it at that. I well, no, I didn't. When Jeremy Jordan came out on stage for the first time and the whole audience went wild, I said I must go to university with him, ooh. And he said what? And I was like Grandpa would let me go. I'll tell you later.
Speaker 2:Welcome to your first Broadway show, mommy's bitter.
Speaker 1:So when we're leaving the theater, I was like it's all on you now, kid. Because I will just be a stage mom. That is what I was born to do Not actually be the star, but to be the mother of the star.
Speaker 2:Jeremy Jordan up there. You have five years to work with him, otherwise mommy won't love you as much. Look at him. Look at him and say I'm going to be your co-star and then say I'm going to be the lead and you'll be my co-star. Thanks, grandpa.
Speaker 1:So as we were leaving the show, I was discussing with him about how you know, after Broadway shows there's the stage door and sometimes people like to go and try to get autographs from the stars and everything he's like. I want to do that.
Speaker 2:Nice.
Speaker 1:I said okay, and so we went and they came out pretty quickly. The lead female, ava I can't remember her last name right now she came- out Wait, Daisy. Yes, he was dressed up in a nice button-down shirt and nice dress shorts with a bow tie and suspender, and it was all a matching Spider-Man set.
Speaker 2:Oh, that's kind of fun.
Speaker 1:Yes, and she was like I, like your suspenders. We just stared at her. I'm like say thank you. So he did. Oh, I told her also that it was his first Broadway show and she asked him a couple of questions about it and he didn't really answer or respond or anything. So when Jeremy came down the line, I was like, well, I'm not going to really talk about him because he doesn't clearly want to talk to anybody right now. And that's OK. He has his own personality and I can't force him to do things.
Speaker 2:Yes, ava, so I was like what?
Speaker 1:do I say to this one? Oh, we did this movie together. Oh, we did this TV show together. Oh, we know these people. What do I? What do I? What do I say? What do I say?
Speaker 2:Wait, so what did you say?
Speaker 1:Not really much of anything, just hi.
Speaker 2:Perfect yeah, that that is exactly what they want. They want to go home and watch Netflix for.
Speaker 1:I don't mean this to be offensive or anything, but I think I dodged a bullet because he's not aging very well.
Speaker 2:Oh my God, this is on record now. It is Like does he have? Does he like? What's your definition of not aging? Well, I mean, not all of us can be Asian Meg.
Speaker 1:Yeah, you know.
Speaker 2:Not all of us can be Asian Meg. Yeah, you know, not all of us will look for 26 when we're not.
Speaker 1:I mean I could be 26.
Speaker 2:You're not 26. That one, that one, you need to kind of give, give into.
Speaker 1:Okay, fine, fine, not 26, but yeah, but he looks.
Speaker 2:What does he look? 80? Like the crypt keeper now.
Speaker 1:He definitely does like he did 10 years ago. Okay, I haven't seen him up close in 10 years.
Speaker 2:Right. We're talking about Jeremy Jordan is who we're talking about? Yes, the 39 year old Scorpio, jeremy Jordan.
Speaker 1:He's only 39?.
Speaker 2:Yeah, he's 39. He was born the same year. I was Geez, really, Do you think? Oh, my God, all these pictures online. He's so young and cool.
Speaker 1:Yes.
Speaker 2:Yes, I agree with the pictures online. That's not reality.
Speaker 1:No, but he's got a name to him. When they see my audition videos, they're like oh, that's not reality at all, but we don't know who she is Next.
Speaker 2:They probably say but at least she looks young.
Speaker 1:Can we just have her stand in a corner somewhere and not say anything?
Speaker 2:There's nothing wrong with being an extra. It is very good work and honest. It's awesome Fun time an honest what's awesome?
Speaker 1:fun time? Absolutely. You get to be all sorts of different people and you get to work on projects multiple times, get to do all sorts of cool outfits and you work more often. So if it's just that you like to be on set and you like to work, being an extra is great, oh yeah great, oh, yeah, you get fed. Yeah, all the time.
Speaker 2:All the time they're like let's keep you piggies happy. Yeah, Get over to the trough again.
Speaker 1:Nom nom, nom, there you go and then you much weight so you can never get the lead roles.
Speaker 2:Yeah, that is that, so it seems like it's by design.
Speaker 1:Yeah.
Speaker 2:I had a blast this this year in chicago. I got to get to, got to be on chicago.
Speaker 1:Med got to be on chicago fire really oh yeah, got to be on chicago pd yes because he's moving everything out of new york and over to Chicago.
Speaker 2:Yep Power Force. I got to do that. Just got to do something called Mr. I don't know if it's Mr Wonderful, but it's based off of, like a friend of Steph Curry's Mr, like it's yeah, some guys does a lot of sports memorabilia but his friends with Steph Curry. So that's another show. But I got to see myself all kinds of times on uh on this past uh season of the core shows of chicago that's great.
Speaker 1:Yeah, I have friends that have been working on svu for over a decade and they work multiple days a week and they're just cops in the station and they get invited to all the cast parties and wrap parties and everything Yep.
Speaker 2:Sometimes you get to be a stand-in, I got to be a stand-in, so that was pretty cool, like it's at first. You know, I've kind of like was like poo-pooing on the idea of being an extra, like an actor. Wait, what do you mean?
Speaker 1:Well, poo-pooing on the idea of being an extra, like an actor's access.
Speaker 2:I'm an actor. Wait, what do you mean?
Speaker 1:Well, you poo-pooing on actors' access.
Speaker 2:Yep, 100%. Such a moron, I'm such a moron, but 100%. Had the time of my life. Everybody's so cool to hang out with we're all. Some days are easy. It's like hey, hey, the rain is back. Oh my gosh.
Speaker 2:There was one scene where there was a car in the side of the building for I think it was chicago fire which but they needed to have a news van pull up and like. Then it's like oh, we got to keep these news people away. That's what the leads were saying, you know. But the van was so old that they needed to jump it every time. It stayed stationary for more than 15 seconds. The day went at least two hours longer than it should have, because a cop car continuously pull up to it, jump it, pull back and then, and then we had to go. Then, when it's where it was, the cop car had to go back and jump it so it could go back to one.
Speaker 2:And it was like this yeah, it was incredible, like one of the actors on it I don't I can't remember who it was, but like they're a little bit older and they had them jumping over sort of a wall in order to get to the place faster, and they were just like dude, my knees, man. What are we doing right now? How are we not getting this up news van? That can't stay on. It can't stay on. How is that possible? This is a show that spends money and it's a Dick Wolf production and the car can't stay on. Yeah, it was great, though, just having great conversations talking to people about how I'm about to be a father and they're like are'm having a boy or a girl, and I'm like I'm having a little girl and they're like I'm a girl dad. It's awesome. And just having amazing conversations about just how it's so fun to play with them, how it's so fun to see them grow, how they're their best friends.
Speaker 1:They're best friends. See, I miss that because like, especially if it's like a show that you work on often and it's like a core thing and other people are core and you get to know them so well. It's like a family and I miss that feeling because I don't have that anywhere.
Speaker 2:Yeah, really, it's my church. I feel like I definitely have the feeling of like I don't care what it is, just get me on set. What are we doing? You want me to sit down in a crowd of 30 people and be in the far back corner pretending to eat something? Let's do it. What's your story? Oh my God, maybe we can work on something later on down the line.
Speaker 1:Exactly the networking, the getting to know each other. There's so much downtime where you just get to talk to other people and get to know their stories and what they're looking for and what their work, what they've been in and decided. I will no longer require the role of day player.
Speaker 2:Do you have somebody who's looking to direct traffic perhaps, but no, it is. There is just like a wonderful familiar thing.
Speaker 1:Personally, I was about two months into doing it consistently and I got the opportunity to do a labor gig for setting up an event here in Chicago. I was there for three hours and I walked away.
Speaker 2:I was like I can't do this anymore. I'm sorry, I'm done. These people have no idea what's going on. This is heavy. Where's my food? Where's my makeup team? Where's my hair team? Did you really just bring me a Chipotle burrito? I'm sorry. I'm used to having a steak, a chicken, a seafood buffet. I'm used to having a sandwich. I'm used to having a green smoothie.
Speaker 2:I'm used to having my ice cream at the end smoothie I'm used to having my ice cream at the end. I'm so glad that I went through this on my journey because I would be insufferably incompetent in so many ways if I had found extra work and been okay with it in my younger and more vulnerable years. But now that I'm there and okay with it and happy to do it, oh, it's so hard to just be like yeah, I'll do some real work, yeah, I think that's part of the reason why I have such a hard time.
Speaker 1:My therapist was like you really don't like work and I'm like I don't. It was always. And I was talking to a friend of mine last week and I was like this is the longest I've ever been at a job, because he was saying he's just been there for 10 years and he's like wait, what I mean? Because I always did freelance work, whether it was marketing or whether it was acting. I never had like this thing where I had to go day in and day out and do certain things over and over, dress a certain way and talk a certain way. Well, I mean, I did kind of have to do that with set, but like you know, it's not in the same way. Like I got to be different people I get to.
Speaker 1:yes, I had to be there at certain times but it was just, it was more play, it was more fun.
Speaker 2:And it's never the same scene.
Speaker 1:Right.
Speaker 2:It's like, even though it's like Unless the fan's not working.
Speaker 2:Exactly. But yeah, it's, yeah, it's, it's if, if, if you're wired for it, because you know a lot of people aren't wired for it. There's people that I was on set with that were like, hey, so we're supposed to be out of here at five, right, and they're like, yeah, but we're not done yet and they're like, oh, I'm just going to go, this was fun Bye. And it's like, oh, okay, it's just some people, it's not their thing. I'm sure that they're okay in other aspects of life, but they tried it. It's not their thing and that's fine.
Speaker 1:But for people like us, some of them come back over and over again and do the same thing over and over again, because I've worked as a PA in holding, having to sign people in and out and having to have these discussions with these people.
Speaker 2:Whoa the same people.
Speaker 1:Yeah.
Speaker 2:And you can't, you can't just be like, so you're going to stick around.
Speaker 1:Yeah, but we're not done yet. Yeah, but I have to go and do this thing, but you're supposed to have open availability. Yeah, but uh, something came up, but we're gonna turn around and you're supposed to be standing there, like it needs to match. Well, I'll see you next time uh and and off you go.
Speaker 2:it was. It was. It was pretty fun, though. Well, the first fire like episode I worked it was cause I was like brand new. They're like oh, we can feature that feature, but like we can use you. We've never seen this bald and white mother before.
Speaker 2:And it was like to get, because, like I did it just to get the feeling back of being on set, because if I was going to do something of substance that was going to pay, the last like pay, pay. Like the last thing I wanted to do was show up and be like gee willikers. I'm just so happy to to to be on this set for the first time in ages. Oh, it's such a transition process. You know what I mean. Everybody. I just wanted to be able to be like Exactly, I just wanted to come in. I wanted to John Goodman To be like all right, I'll be in my trailer just reading my books.
Speaker 2:When do you need me? All right, here we go and I kill it and you guys move on. Great, but the first set on fire, they brought me in and they're like all right, so we're going to be staging everybody else. Some people are going to be walking this way, some people are going to be like in beds pretending to talk to doctors. You, on the other hand, you're going to stand right here with this mobile computer slash diagnostic unit that's on wheels. It's a full computer, full Mac, everything's on, and you're going to wipe the lens as the two main actors come in, or the two actors in the scene come in to pull around a corner and have a scene and I'm like great.
Speaker 1:And they're like yeah, so here's how it's going. Have a scene and I'm like great, and they're like yeah, so here's how to wipe the lens.
Speaker 2:Um, that means like when you pass in front of the camera at a very distance at times yep, and so this was a moving shot and the camera operator was on a wheelchair, being pulled back, and I had a one foot um, pretty much a one, maybe less than a one foot margin of error to shoot through.
Speaker 2:And on the other side were two other cameras that were in a small space because it was a um, it was a setup inside of a ER station area, okay, and so there was like a little hallway going through the center administration area and that's where the other two cameras were set and I needed to book it and it was like welcome back to set. By the way, you're not going to get any credit, you're going to be just a blur, but you have to do this and do it right and your margin of error is zero. So it's like okay, here we go. This is fun. This is like a little puzzle to to figure out and, like you know, there's no, there's no character work really to think about, but it's fun to be like all right, this is a. My role in this particular thing is to nail this, so let's just nail it.
Speaker 1:So how many takes did it take for you to nail it?
Speaker 2:I was consistent, so it was it. Basically, I think it took, I think they did it, I think they got two takes per angle. Okay, because they were flying, I did. Actually. I was talking to like the p, the um, the assistant director who was in charge of pas, and just like kind of tongue-in-cheek I was just like, so what's my motivation for this scene? He's like, oh, you want a motivation? Yeah, your motivation is this is the last shot of the day and we all want to go home and that is the director's second second ad, for anyone who's curious second, second ad.
Speaker 1:I was like fantastic, I got, I got it I love it if you become friends with the second ADs. It's a really good thing to do because there'll be times where people don't show up and they're like, oh, call so-and-so, see if they're available and they can come right now.
Speaker 2:Yep, I was lucky enough to get those phone calls this time. They were very much like hey, you're on a list of five people. If you respond first, you got it.
Speaker 1:Good job, Billy.
Speaker 2:It feels good. A little teaser I worked on a project that's based on a MMA fighter recently.
Speaker 1:Oh.
Speaker 2:But the director's previous was a movie called Market Value Okay, about an illegal adoption.
Speaker 1:Oh.
Speaker 2:It's a feature length movie. I think I watched it on Tubi Hmm, and it'd be fun to discuss it, because it was was almost for me like watching an alternate reality of could have happened in my teenage years.
Speaker 2:Okay, cause I did want to ask what we should do as far as a watch along, cause I'd love to do a watch along with our viewers and that that sounds interesting that might be the thing and, like I'm in good, good graces, you know, with the director, with dell, um, you know, shout out to gaia, yeah, dell directed market value, so maybe I could chat with them, see if there could be some conversations or even contributions in the watch along that might be kind of fun.
Speaker 1:I'd love that. Yeah, We'll keep that on the short list for watch, along which I hope a lot of you will join us, for We'll make sure to give you plenty of time to know about it and we can have a little date all of us. That would be fun. I would love to all have a little date all of us.
Speaker 2:That would be fun. I would love to all have a little date. Everybody bring their popcorn.
Speaker 1:Exactly and bring your own and don't do anything weird. If you liked this episode of the Adopt Twins, I urge you to pull over if you're driving, or stop what you're doing and take one minute to take out your phone and text someone you know that you think would also like the Adopt Twins. Send them a text that says hey, I've been listening to this podcast and I think you'd like it. Let me know what you think and send them a link to the show. Word of mouth is the best way to spread the hilarity of the Adopt Twins, so stop gatekeeping us and let someone else know We'll catch y'all soon.