
Randomness with Heath & Josh
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Randomness with Heath & Josh
Episode 116: Straight from the Horse’s Mouth: Idioms with Heath & Josh
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In this lighthearted and linguistically curious episode, Heath and Josh take listeners on a spontaneous dive into the weird and wonderful world of idioms, sayings, and their unexpected origins. Starting with well-known expressions like “bite the bullet,” “kick the bucket,” and “mad as a hatter,” they explore where these phrases came from and how they became embedded in everyday speech.
The episode keeps a casual and conversational pace as Heath and Josh bounce off each other's humor and stories. Along the way, they also:
- Reflect on phrases their parents and grandparents used
- Compare regional slang from across the U.S., especially Appalachian and Southern sayings
- Laugh over odd and lesser-known expressions that spark both confusion and fascination
- Discuss how language evolves, and how some idioms fade out over time
There’s no rigid format here. It’s just two friends letting curiosity and conversation lead the way through a rabbit hole of linguistic randomness.
Whether you're here for laughs, nostalgia, or some fun trivia, this episode is a great example of what makes Heath & Josh so entertaining: genuine chemistry, quirky banter, and a love for the strange things we say without thinking twice.
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SPEAKER_00:They'll talk about anything and to anyone. They're straight out of the streets of Temple, Texas. It's Randomness with Heath and Josh. All right, we're back. What's going
SPEAKER_03:on, Josh? How you
SPEAKER_02:doing? Oh, it's going well. How are you?
SPEAKER_03:Oh, it's not going well.
SPEAKER_02:It's going well.
SPEAKER_03:you know the whistle in your tongue um yeah so we're back uh it's let's see episode 116 um yeah we're gonna just kind of do some off the fly stuff but we always do hey what have you been up to so we'll start with josh what you've been up to man what have i been
SPEAKER_02:up to well of all the times of the year to to work on a project that involves being outdoors i choose the summer right it's hot so this project is Like the decluttering, the junking of my house. So I've been here, what, 16 years and I've pretty much been collecting stuff since I've had a job. So now it's time to kind of reverse that and start getting rid of stuff. So yeah, you got a little bit, yeah, a little bit. So I hired this company. Do you remember Jason Westfall? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
SPEAKER_03:And actually,
SPEAKER_02:uh, have chatted with him not too long ago. Okay. Yeah. He has a company. It's a full-service junk removal company here in Central Texas. I hired his company to bring out a dumpster. So I brought it out on the Friday, this past Friday evening, and then picked it up on Sunday evening. So I spent three days going through my attic, my garage, and my backyard, and my shed, and just collecting all the junk that I could find. How
SPEAKER_03:big of a dumpster was it?
SPEAKER_02:So that dumpster is 15
SPEAKER_03:cubic yards. Okay. For people that don't know about cubic yards, about how big is that? Well, okay. Half of your driveway, basically?
SPEAKER_02:Yeah. I mean, I couldn't park my truck there in the driveway. All right. Maybe if you had it hanging out in the grass, one or the other, you could probably do it. Okay. It's bigger than a dumpster that you'd find behind a business building.
SPEAKER_03:Right, right. Well, if it's 15, then it's probably like three or four of those, right? I would think.
SPEAKER_02:Three? I don't know. I don't know. It was big. Anyway.
SPEAKER_03:All right. It was big. I would say.
SPEAKER_02:Well, so here's the thing. It was so hot. I had to take breaks frequently and cool off. But when it was all done and said, the total weight of what I got rid of was was 2,280 pounds. That's a lot of
SPEAKER_03:junk.
SPEAKER_02:That is equivalent to 1.14 tons.
SPEAKER_03:Tons. But the question is, you did all that, does it look like you did anything? Because you have a
SPEAKER_02:lot of stuff. Okay, if you look in the attic, yes. If you look in the garage, no. If you look in the shed, no. If you look in the backyard, yeah, the backyard looks better. Looks better.
SPEAKER_03:Okay. All right. I was... I was afraid you were going to go into your collection of Legos and things like that. And I was like, please, Lord.
SPEAKER_02:Just trash that. Let me just trash it.
SPEAKER_03:Well, I jokingly sent Josh... Actually, I sent Jason a message because I knew he was coming out there. I was like, hey, make sure you tell Josh we're going to kick him off the podcast if he gets rid of anything Star Wars related. Star Wars, yeah. So I hope you didn't do that because if you did that, we're going to go ahead and push stop now.
SPEAKER_02:I have a couple of... Lego Star Wars stuff, but I wouldn't get rid of it. So now my next phase is to start focusing on the stuff that's in the house.
SPEAKER_03:Specifically that one room.
SPEAKER_02:No, that's actually a goal that I have is to make that other room a usable room instead of a... Storage unit. It's like a storage unit.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah, it is. It's kind of like a storage unit of just random stuff.
SPEAKER_02:At least I'm not paying a storage unit.
SPEAKER_03:Right, I guess, but you're using a room in your house.
SPEAKER_02:I've known people who have used storage units, and it's like with the amount of money that you pay for that, you could have bought all the stuff that you had in there like twice over.
SPEAKER_03:Oh, yeah, dude. Those things are not cheap. Store anything is not cheap. Even if you store your boat every month in a slip somewhere, it's ridiculous.
SPEAKER_02:I encourage you listeners, if you have a storage unit, I'm not judging you, but consider selling the stuff. Yeah,
SPEAKER_03:get rid of that. Or be like my parents and just add another shed in their backyard and fill it up. Nice. My parents have three sheds in their backyard.
SPEAKER_02:You know, I'm going to shout out to my sister, Robin. She's been on this decluttering spree for several years now. That's kind of how I want to be. I want to start getting rid of stuff.
SPEAKER_03:Right. Did she come over and take any of your stuff?
SPEAKER_02:Oh, she wouldn't. If I offered it, she'd be like, no.
SPEAKER_03:Oh, well, all right. Fair enough. Were the neighbors all looking like, dude, are you moving out? Yeah.
SPEAKER_02:Actually, the one across the street was like, what are you doing? I said, I'm decluttering. He's like, decluttering?
SPEAKER_04:He's like,
SPEAKER_02:dang, what you got in that house? I know. And I was like, I'm doing it all at once. That's funny.
SPEAKER_03:Right on. All right.
SPEAKER_02:So what you been up to?
SPEAKER_03:You know, it hasn't, well, there's been a few things going on, right? You know, Riker's getting ready to go back to school. By the time this episode comes back, he probably will be almost back in the school. Yeah, he will be back in the school because it starts August 13th. Yeah, yeah, but he's started back band camp. Well, I don't know if it's called band camp, but band has been going on already, and it's Monday. Dude, he started on Monday, and he had to be there at 7, and he don't get home till 5. 7 to 5. I'm like, geez, it's like he's working, and they've been doing it every day. It's awesome. He loves it or whatever. It's just so stinking hot. But thank goodness they've been doing a lot of it indoors, and they do have an actual indoor football field, practice field, too. So they're able to do it in there, too. But still, it's just he comes home, and he barely gets in the door, and he goes straight to the shower. And it crashes afterwards. Yeah, yeah. Well, and he hasn't. he got his, you know, he has braces and he had them adjusted and stuff recently. And he hasn't been playing the trumpet as much as he should had over the summer. And so he kind of, kind of blew his lip a bit, um, because they were playing way, you know, a lot. So, you know, he's struggling with that too.
SPEAKER_02:Like has a crack in it.
SPEAKER_03:Like, yeah, they'll do that. Like when I was playing his stuff too, I mean, you'll, you'll, when you, when your mouth isn't used to doing that, you know, daily or whatever, or, you know, a few times a week or whatever it does, it'll, you, you go to, if you play too much, it will literally crack your lip. Ouch. Yeah. Yeah. And especially like if you have chat flips, you're screwed. Yeah. So, but yeah, no.
SPEAKER_02:So during the season you have to keep Carmex and.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah. Yeah. Well, I mean, it just depends, depends on, you know, when it gets cold. Yeah. Because you will, it'll, it'll get, it'll get that way in the summer and stuff. Not so bad, but. He has a tendency to get chapped lips anyway, but those stupid braces don't help. But yeah, so we did that, but we were trying... He did all his trips and stuff like he normally does for the summer, and so I was trying to spend a day with him before all this happened. So we went and had... I took a day off and we went and had lunch. He wanted to see the new Superman movie, which if you haven't seen the Superman movie, it's pretty good. You don't have to know anything about all the other DC movies or anything to go see it. It's got some... It does have... There is a bunch of cameos, so if you haven't seen some of the DC stuff, you wouldn't maybe get them, but it really doesn't matter if you got them or not. Spoiler alert, they have... crypto the dog so super dog is in it which which was it was like comedy relief part more than anything that part but you know what the storyline was pretty good it wasn't like crazy cheesy and the guy that they've got playing them now was really good so and you know I was just happy to spend time with Riker because getting as old as he is it ain't gonna be much longer
SPEAKER_02:yeah I heard some a good take on that movie was that it was very positive
SPEAKER_03:yeah Yeah, it was. It wasn't a lot of like dark, like a lot of these movies get, you know, and they didn't, they didn't overdo it. I know that's a broad term, but it was, it was done well. And it was ended well with a little bit of a cliffhanger. So to move on to the next actually movie, franchise, sort of, opposed to just Superman. So that was kind of cool. And it was funny the way they did it, but I'll leave it at that because I don't want to ruin the whole
SPEAKER_02:thing. Did they address why the logo looks the way it does? No, they didn't. That bothers me.
SPEAKER_03:No, they didn't do that, but they did. So they did do a spinoff. he's there.
SPEAKER_02:That origin? Okay.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah, so that was kind of a little bit surprising. And Bradley Cooper played his dad, and that was kind of this really small role, so that was kind of weird to see. But I'm sure he just wanted to be, he was like, okay, I want to be in a Superman movie. So it was kind of a really small role for him.
SPEAKER_02:I'm just going to focus on the logo here. It's kind of a stylistic S.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah, they changed it.
SPEAKER_02:So, okay. Okay.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah, but no, they just changed it, I guess.
SPEAKER_02:But I guess it's recognizable. If you see it, you're like, okay, the movie from 2025. Yeah,
SPEAKER_03:yeah. And there's some more things that were a little different than the normal ones, but it wasn't over the top. It was a good storyline, but not too crazy, actually. They even worked for the Daily Planet, and then there's always the nerdy Jimmy Olsen. That's the... The little beat writer guy or whatever. They even changed that up a little bit, too. It was kind of funny.
SPEAKER_02:Is there a Lois Lane?
SPEAKER_03:Oh, yeah. There's a Lois. There's definitely a Lois. If you've ever watched The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, if you have not seen that show, go watch it. It is great. The lead in that, her name is Rachel Brunahan, something like that. Anyway, that chick is super duper good. She was really good in that. But if you haven't seen The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, go watch that. That's a great show. Anyway, it's about comedians in like the early times. Anyway.
SPEAKER_02:Well, speaking of cliffhangers. All right. Let me go back and tell you Jason Westfall's company's name. Oh, okay. I didn't even mention that. You didn't mention it? Yeah. So it's called Rhino Junk Haul. Again, it's junk removal. dumpster rental, and trash can cleaning. Shouts out to Jason. If you're in the Temple, Central Texas area, give him a call.
SPEAKER_03:Shout out. What was the name of it again? Rhino Junk Hall. Rhino Junk Hall.
SPEAKER_02:Like the animal, like the rhino with the
SPEAKER_03:horn?
SPEAKER_02:RhinoJunkHall.com. All
SPEAKER_03:right. Look up Jason. Go get your crap out of your house.
SPEAKER_02:That's right. And he'll, like, you hire him, he'll even take it up. I should have done that in hindsight.
SPEAKER_03:Right? Well, and I don't say the price or anything, but when you told me, I was like, oh, that's actually not too bad. Because I figured that would be pretty expensive. That was not expensive at all. I would totally pay that for someone.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, I'll be hitting him up again.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah, right on. All right. Oh, you know what I was going to talk about? Yeah. Man, Ozzy Osbourne passed away. When he put out that first, like the one that has Mom, I'm Coming Home and Crazy Train and all that, I really got into that album and liked it. And then that made me go back and listen to old stuff like Blizzard of Oz and all that stuff. But the show on MTV is what really drew me in. The Osbournes, I love that show. I actually, not too long ago, went and re-watched it again. That's
SPEAKER_02:a fun series.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah, it's great. You got to see a little bit of the inside of how that family, their dynamic and whatnot, and how much fun they have and how much they yell at each other and all the craziness that goes on. And he had just did that show. uh last concert it was like a total saying goodbye and he literally passes away like two and a half weeks later and i was watching the um the live uh funeral procession this morning and it was it was a ton of people man yeah
SPEAKER_02:i you know i saw photos uh of of them and uh sharon Yeah, she just looks totally devastated.
SPEAKER_03:Oh, yeah. I watched the video as it happened, and they're just, and they should be. And
SPEAKER_02:bless her heart, she has always been by his side. Oh, yeah. Through thick and thin. All
SPEAKER_03:the stuff that that dude's done.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah. She's amazing.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah, she was just so tiny and frail looking. She was so thin. And even Kelly, she was super duper thin. Jack looked like how he always does. And, you know, I hope that that wasn't because of, well, you know, Karen's, I mean, Sharon, sorry. Sharon had cancer and I think some other ailments. So I'm sure that's probably part of it. But, man, it's just, it's so sad to see him go. But, man, it was... He was a huge part of music that's now gone.
SPEAKER_02:Rest in peace.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah, rest in peace. As my son Riker posted, he said, sleep well. That's pretty good. But anyway, all right, let's jump into it. After we've been on here for 16 minutes, we're going to get into what we're going to talk about. So we were just, I was just like, playing around. I was like, Hey, let's, let's come up with something, you know, fun to do or whatever. And someone said something to me and I can't remember what it was. It was one of those, you know, that bite the bullet type things. And I'm like, you know what, what are those called? And they're called idioms. And yeah, what is that? Yeah, so it's basically, you know, it's a saying that people say all the time that means something like, you know, like the bee's knees. And so immediately you know that the bee's knees is something cool. It's like, where the heck did that come from? If you look up that, there's not much on it. So that's why I'm bringing it up.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, so it's not a literal definition of the individual words.
SPEAKER_03:Right.
SPEAKER_02:But it becomes more of like a culturally understood definition.
SPEAKER_03:Kind
SPEAKER_02:of meaning of what the words are.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah. And so I thought, let's look back and see where these come from, because a lot of them come from like the 17th century and all these craziness. So the first one on my list, which this is obvious why it's this is bite the dust. another one bites the dust which that's what everybody usually thinks of immediately is the queen song you know another one bites the dust but i went and looked it up and i was like okay it's got to be somebody you know we we know it's somebody that's getting hurt or killed or something well apparently that is exactly what it was it was the context from like a gun fat gunfight or battle in western western time you know whatever in late 1800 to whatever is um when you would get shot or killed or whatever, you fall face first into the dirt. Okay. And then it was, I guess that's where the whole, he bit the dust, man. He's down in the dust and the dirt. And so that's where that comes from, you know, and then now people still use it today because it's just been passed on and on.
SPEAKER_02:So it's like an old Western meme.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah. I don't know. I'm sure there's one out there, but anytime I think
SPEAKER_02:about memes, our memes, the same thing as like, Idioms, they're just like visual forms of idioms.
SPEAKER_03:Maybe some of them, yeah, yeah. Yeah, I could see that. But
SPEAKER_02:anyway, I've got a ton of them. If there was a degree in memeology, I would want that. I should do that. I should become a professor in a university and teach memes.
SPEAKER_03:You
SPEAKER_02:know that's out there.
SPEAKER_03:I
SPEAKER_02:should teach memes.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah, you know that's out there because there's classes on everything. I saw where there's like a class– I can't remember what school it was that was solely devoted to Indiana Jones.
SPEAKER_02:Indiana
SPEAKER_03:Jones? The movie series.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah.
SPEAKER_03:It was an actual class. I'm like, what? Okay.
SPEAKER_02:There's a lot there. There's Nazis. There's the Aztecs, the archaeology. I wanted to be an archaeologist because of that series. Oh, I'm sure so many people did.
UNKNOWN:Yeah.
SPEAKER_03:But screw that.
SPEAKER_02:Right. Who wants to get shot by poison arrows and run over by a boulder?
SPEAKER_03:Yeah. Well, yeah. And it's like, where did that, who made that, that big, huge boulder? How did they do that?
SPEAKER_02:I don't know. How did they build the pyramids?
SPEAKER_03:Yeah, exactly. You know,
SPEAKER_02:aliens.
SPEAKER_03:Anyway, that's the first one on my list.
SPEAKER_02:So now we're going to Josh's. Here's the secret I hadn't told you about. I did a little homework of my own. Oh, okay. So I got a list of Appalachian.
SPEAKER_03:Appalachian idioms? Idioms. Oh, good Lord. That's probably what I should have did. I can only imagine. Dag nabbit. What is it? Dag nabbit.
SPEAKER_02:All right. So here's one. Even a blind hog finds an acorn now and then.
SPEAKER_03:Okay, so am I supposed to guess what that means? If you want, go for it. Even a dumbass can find food from time to time.
SPEAKER_02:So yeah, it means like even an unlucky person or an ignorant person will succeed occasionally. Occasionally.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah, not on purpose, but they will.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, so that dates back to 19th century American South where hogs were often left to forage in woods and even a blind one would stumble upon the acorns. So it's to emphasize that luck and not skill sometimes wins out.
SPEAKER_03:Right on. We all need a little luck from time to time, right? Yeah.
SPEAKER_02:And then a little bit further, there's similar proverbs that go back to German and English folk traditions.
SPEAKER_03:All right.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah.
SPEAKER_03:No, it's just funny because I should have totally did some funny ones as opposed to just all these regular ones.
SPEAKER_02:No, it's good to know the... kind of the mainstream. Yeah. Okay. I want to say this real quick at work meetings. I, I'm like a visual person and I don't speak the corporate lingo. Like let's circle back and let's put it right in it and all, but I will talk like, like with idioms, like, Hey, this, these gotta be apples to apples and oranges to oranges and blah, blah, blah. So I don't know. It's weird. I don't, I speak like in idioms and metaphors.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah, I pretty much do too for the most part because me trying to be serious is just funny altogether. Okay, so here's one that everybody knows, Cool Beans. And I thought this was kind of... I
SPEAKER_02:think that's like a 90s... talk
SPEAKER_03:well it kind so kind of so here it is it says generally acknowledge that people started saying cool beans in the 60s which makes sense because I thought maybe 60s and 70s more of a you know hippie type thing cool beans blah blah blah yeah but apparently in one of Cheech and Chong's movies in 1978 up in smoke supposedly at one point Cheech tells Chong when they're in the in a van that that they're going across into the Mexican-American border that he says, cool beans. And if you go watch that movie, it's not in there. So it's like, what?
SPEAKER_02:That is called, there's a word for that. I'll think about it. But when you think, like the Fruit of the Looms logo, people are like, it was in a Corpaconia. And they're like, was it ever in the Corpaconia?
SPEAKER_03:Oh, yeah, yeah. I got you.
SPEAKER_02:Go ahead.
SPEAKER_03:Anyway, then you were saying about the 90s. Well, it did get really popular in the 90s because if you remember the show Full House, DJ Tanner said cool beans a whole lot, and that's when it caught it on really big time in the 90s. Now, I can remember the first time I heard it from someone that wasn't on TV, and that was, I don't know if you remember, Lori Smith. She used to say it all the time. And she was the only person I knew that ever said it until probably later in life. And she said it all the time. But anyway, that's a cool story.
SPEAKER_02:Across from Jason Stephan on.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah.
SPEAKER_02:What was that?
SPEAKER_03:Avenue S or something like that. Yeah. Yep. Oh, no. Before Jason moved there, I used to hang out with. her and there was another girl she was friends left to live around the corner named lindsey aarons and then uh jamie schiller uh me and mike allman used to hang out with them all the time over there but anyway okay she disappeared
SPEAKER_02:all right
SPEAKER_03:so what you got next
SPEAKER_02:oh so that i that i remember it's called the mandela effect when okay you think something is like oh yeah we grew up seeing that or knowing that and then um but it's, it's, that's not true. So it's like, it refers to the instances of miss or collective miss remembering in large numbers. So a bunch of people think this is what happened, but it's like a false belief. So
SPEAKER_03:I gotcha. Okay.
SPEAKER_02:Um, but, uh, so speaking of, okay. So D you said DJ Tanner made that one phrase, like cool, like, Cool beans. Brought it back into mainstream popularity. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So here's one that was brought back to popularity. It's, don't pee on my leg and tell me it's raining.
SPEAKER_03:I don't know if I've ever heard that one, but all right. So don't pee on my leg and tell me it's raining.
SPEAKER_02:Right. So it's like saying, don't lie to me in an obvious way.
SPEAKER_03:Okay.
SPEAKER_02:All right. So, this was circulated in Southern courtrooms. It's a military slang, down-home storytelling during the mid-1900s. It uses earthly humor to express skepticism. And so, who made this popular again was Judge Judy.
SPEAKER_03:Okay. I've never watched
SPEAKER_02:it. I don't remember her ever saying that, but...
SPEAKER_03:I never watched old Judge Judy.
SPEAKER_02:What? No. I mean, she's like... Leans into people. Is that an expression? Leans into people?
SPEAKER_03:Leans into people? Look that up. She leans into people. She leans into them some bitches. All right. Man, you were saying something I was going to. Anyway. Oh, so like when you were just saying a while ago how you think you remember something or whatever. That's something in Star Wars that a lot of people, they think that in Empire Strikes Back, Luke, Darth Vader says, Luke, I am your father. But he doesn't say that. He says, no, I am your father. Luke, I am your father. So, I mean, think about that. Where in the hell, why would anybody ever say, well, it's raining cats and dogs? You're like trying to think of what in the world? Well, apparently in the 17th century England, it refers to heavy rainfall and they didn't have, they had poor drainage systems. So literally, they supposedly because of that, it would kind of flood is you would see cats and dogs floating away. So it rained so much that cats and dogs were being carried away. Therefore it's raining cats and dogs. I don't know if that's true, but that's what this is.
SPEAKER_02:What else does it rain? It rains, raining frogs. Yeah. Right. So I have, okay. You've probably seen YouTube videos, frogs, fish. Have you seen that? Uh-uh, the raining fish? Fish that comes raining down.
SPEAKER_03:Uh-uh, I guess I've seen that.
SPEAKER_02:It must be like some kind of water spout that pulls up aquatic creatures. Okay, well, how about Raining Men? Do you remember that song?
SPEAKER_04:It's raining men, hallelujah.
SPEAKER_02:So that was by a band called The Weather Girls.
SPEAKER_03:Oh, that is. I thought that was the other guy. What's the, they do the YMCA and all that. What's that name of that band? I don't know. They're all mistaken. They're the ones that, that are all dressed up as different characters. What is the name of that stupid band?
SPEAKER_02:Okay. No. So it was
SPEAKER_03:the village people.
SPEAKER_02:No, it was a song written by Dennis Donna summer, but came at disco hit and was the gay anthem for the weather girls in 1982. Yeah.
SPEAKER_03:Okay. All right. I believe you.
SPEAKER_02:The
SPEAKER_03:internet said it must be true.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah. What else does it rain? What else does it rain? Sideways. It rains sideways.
SPEAKER_03:It rains sideways, Ryan.
SPEAKER_02:What did he say it rained from?
SPEAKER_03:From underneath, Ryan, or whatever the heck he said. Hey,
SPEAKER_02:you put your back against my back?
SPEAKER_03:Hey, Baba, you put your back against my back, we'll just lean up against each other.
SPEAKER_02:Anyway, I ate at the Bubba Gump Shrimp Company
SPEAKER_03:not
SPEAKER_02:too long ago.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah, sucker's expensive. It was good. All right, so let's see. Oh, wait, it's your turn. My bad. All right. This episode is brought to you by...
SPEAKER_01:Intrinsic Design is a residential S-I-C design at gmail.com. You can also check them out on Facebook.
SPEAKER_02:I see. It's colder than a well digger's behind in January. A
SPEAKER_03:well digger's behind in January. So I know what that means, but why? I don't know. I guess well diggers were down low where it's real cold. Is that what it is?
SPEAKER_02:You got it. So the meaning is that it's just very cold. And so they literally were down in holes where it was cold. Okay. So it just talks about a metaphor of the harsh working conditions.
SPEAKER_03:Made me think of it's colder than a witch's tit in a brass bra.
SPEAKER_02:That is another expression.
SPEAKER_03:I ain't no witch's tit. Have you ever seen that movie, The War? Uh-uh. If you haven't seen that, sorry, the kid says that in that movie. It's with Elijah Wood when he's pretty young, but it's called The War. Go check that out. At one point, somebody says something, and the kid's all, I ain't no witch's tit. Anyway, side story.
SPEAKER_02:I'd like to know the origin of that one.
SPEAKER_03:I ain't no witch's tit. No.
SPEAKER_02:It's colder than
SPEAKER_03:a... Colder than a witch's tit in a brass bra? Yeah, we'll have to look that one up. If you know it, post it. Brass bra. Cause it'd be cause that cold. Have you
SPEAKER_02:ever picked up? No, I'm like brass bra. Like who would wear a brass bra?
SPEAKER_03:A witch. Uh,
SPEAKER_02:yeah. It's
SPEAKER_03:just, it's an idiom. Therefore it doesn't have to make sense.
SPEAKER_02:That's probably. Okay. We're gonna have to look up. We should do a weird clothes episode.
SPEAKER_03:Weird.
SPEAKER_02:Who wore steaks as a dress? Was it Katy Perry?
SPEAKER_03:Oh no, that was, um, Lady Gaga.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah.
UNKNOWN:Yeah.
SPEAKER_03:That
SPEAKER_02:would be another episode. Like weird...
SPEAKER_03:Let's see.
SPEAKER_02:Weird clothing.
SPEAKER_03:Here's one. Here's one. Kick the bucket. So it likely originates from... Well, you know what it means. So it means... To die. Okay, all right. So... It says, let's see where they, they hung pigs upside down when they killed and butchered them. They've called them the bucket or the bucker. Therefore they kicked the bucket. But I got to look in closer and it's kind of morbid. It's also when people go to commit suicide and hang themselves. A lot of times they stand on a bucket. Oh,
SPEAKER_02:yeah,
SPEAKER_03:the stool or the chair, yeah. Oh, yeah, yeah. You know what? What's that guy's name? I've been trying to reach out to that guy. I haven't come on the show, actually. I can't remember his name right now, but I know who you're
SPEAKER_02:talking about. Anyway. That's part of their... It's like, do all these things before you kick the bucket.
SPEAKER_03:Before you kick
SPEAKER_02:the bucket.
SPEAKER_03:On the Texas bucket list. All right. What you got? Mine was boring.
SPEAKER_02:And the guy's name is Shane. I can't think of his last name, but... Okay. This one's... A good one. He's grinning like a possum eating a sweet tater.
SPEAKER_03:He's grinning like a possum eating a sweet tater. So he's just very happy, obviously.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, looking overly pleased or smug.
SPEAKER_03:Huh. That one I have never heard.
SPEAKER_02:I have never heard that one. So possums were native to the Appalachian region and often caught raiding gardens. And sweet potatoes were a staple crop. So the saying blends the local vegetation and food to create a vivid image used affectionately or sarcastically.
SPEAKER_03:I don't know. Side note, opossums?
SPEAKER_02:I think the other one would be a shit-eating grin. Shit-eating grin? Yeah. I
SPEAKER_03:don't want to know the origin of that.
SPEAKER_02:But that would be similar to this, though. It's like up to no good.
SPEAKER_03:Just so you know, it's technically an opossum.
SPEAKER_02:A possum.
SPEAKER_03:And then
SPEAKER_02:also— No, you don't pronounce the O. A
SPEAKER_03:lot of people do. Anyway, I call it a possum, too. But a lot of people—so possums look freaking crazy nasty, right? They're actually very nice and docile creatures, just so you know.
SPEAKER_02:Because they play dead.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah. No, they literally, if you—they make this weird hissing noise or whatever, and people think or whatever, they're actually—they're almost like cats. which is really crazy. A lot of people, they're like, but they're,
SPEAKER_02:I'm not going to touch one.
SPEAKER_03:No, you pet them and shit. They don't even care. It's kind of, the babies are like crazy cute, but they just look like they're, you know, they want to eat your soul. But
SPEAKER_02:don't the babies hang on to the mama?
SPEAKER_03:Yeah. Yeah. They hang on to their back until they get so big or whatever. And then they basically kick them off their back and say, good luck and leave them. They're the only marsupial in North America, right?
SPEAKER_02:That's wild.
SPEAKER_03:Only one? Yeah. Crikey. Oh, crikey. Then you go over to Australia and like everything has a pouch and a death sting and whatever.
SPEAKER_02:The murder continent. yeah then that's not yeah
SPEAKER_03:dude have you seen go go just google that crazy animals of australia you'd be like god dang i don't want to go visit there at all it's crazy i actually saw this thing on the news this morning side story uh about how tarantulas are having a big comeback here in texas and lots of people are seeing them all over the place i haven't seen any yet but i kind of want to Whenever growing up with the family's ranch, we would see tarantulas pretty often, but I haven't seen one in a long time.
SPEAKER_02:There was a wolf spider on my backpack at work.
SPEAKER_03:Wolf spider? Yeah. Those are crazy looking.
SPEAKER_02:They're good. They eat the bad bugs.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah, but don't bite me. All right. Was it my turn? Your turn. My turn? My turn. All right. Let's see. Bite the bullet. You know what bite the bullet means? Bite the bullet.
SPEAKER_02:just kind of like bear down and just do it.
SPEAKER_03:See, I always thought bite the bullet meant death. Like how I kicked the bucket
SPEAKER_02:or whatever. It's like, just like grin and like, it's going to be hard. You just got to work through it and do it. Yeah. Bear with it.
SPEAKER_03:Apparently it, the origins are from when sir, when soldiers were in battle and they literally had to bite down, they had them bite down on a bullet as they were, having something amputated or having surgery out in the middle of a field or wherever they were in battle. So they would give them a bullet to bite down on to bear the pain, I guess, for the help with the pain or whatever.
SPEAKER_02:You know how primitive that is? Right. Like, here's a shot of whiskey for your mouth. Here's one for your wound. Right. And we're just going to saw your arm off.
SPEAKER_03:I think that's what Jason did with his tooth that time we were in Colorado.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, he did. Oh, my gosh. You're right. He's
SPEAKER_03:like, just give me more Jameson. We'll be okay.
SPEAKER_02:Oh, my gosh. Irish remedy right there. All right. What you got? Okay. That was funny. I'm glad he pulled through. He pulled through. and survive that episode. All right. This one's funny. Busier than a one-legged man in a butt-kicking contest. Yeah.
SPEAKER_03:I've heard that one many times. You've heard that one? Oh, yeah. Lots of times, yeah. Basically, that's just saying he's just so busy.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, that's it. He's just
SPEAKER_03:crazy busy or whatever. But, yeah, I've heard that one many times, many times.
SPEAKER_02:So it says it was popularized– popularized in the mid-20th century through the show Hee Haw. Hee Haw! Did you ever watch that growing up?
SPEAKER_03:Yeah, I was very young, though, so I only remember, like, I remember, what was the guy, his name was Roy... something. He was the main character guy. Dude, that dude can play the crap out of a freaking banjo, bro. And a guitar. Go look that guy up, dude. He is no joke. What was that guy's name? Anyway, it was Roy something. But yeah, I can remember that. I always remember there was a stupid little scene in between scenes where two farmers or whatever would stand up out of the hay and say something real stupid and then go back down. That was the part that I was always waiting for. Some stupid
SPEAKER_02:crap. And then Minnie Pearl with her hat.
SPEAKER_03:I saw her in real life once. We went to the Grand Ole Opry when I was a kid and she was there. It was kind of cool because I was like, oh, it's freaking the lady on Hee Haw. So
SPEAKER_02:it was Roy Clark and
SPEAKER_03:Or Clark. There you go. And
SPEAKER_02:Buck Owens. Buck Owens. One of the main hosts of the show.
SPEAKER_03:Well, dude, go Google YouTube Roy Clark playing banjo, guitar, whatever. Dude, that guy kills it. He's freaking amazing. Anyway, we really got
SPEAKER_02:on. I grew up watching that.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah. I watched it, too. It's just so long ago. I don't remember a whole lot of it. But let's see. Let's try Cat Got Your Tongue. Yeah.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah.
SPEAKER_03:So you know what that is, right?
SPEAKER_02:It's like where you're just speechless, like you just have nothing to say.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah, you'll say that to somebody. What's wrong with you, man? Can I guide your tongue? Because they're not saying anything or whatever. Right. But yeah, this is kind of interesting. It says, likely originated from the English Royal Navy, where the Cato IX tails was a whip used for punishment. So sailors who were severely whipped and therefore silent from the pain were often taunted with the question, has the cat got your tongue? So then it kind of from there stayed, you know, I mean, I hear that all
SPEAKER_02:the time. I don't think I'd want to speak after that
SPEAKER_03:punishment. Yeah, you're getting whipped with the old cat,
SPEAKER_02:the old
SPEAKER_03:cat and nine tails.
SPEAKER_02:Well, because they're probably talking trash to like, you know, to the person. And then once they got whipped, they're like, oh, okay.
UNKNOWN:Yeah.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah.
SPEAKER_02:Quite now. Okay. I got your tongue.
SPEAKER_03:Okay. I got your tongue. Yeah. You always, it's, it's, I mean, we're talking about some goofy stuff here, but you know, you never stop and think about where all that stuff comes from. Right. All right. What's the Appalachians got?
SPEAKER_02:So don't get too big for your britches.
SPEAKER_03:Too big for your britches. I think my grandma used to tell me that all the time.
SPEAKER_02:So I, I, I think I use this incorrectly because I always say here, uh, in the temple belton area things have seems like the population has exploded and on the the west side of temple especially in belton area it's just like very crowded right so i'm like my opinion is belton's getting too big for its britches
SPEAKER_03:yeah that's the wrong way to use it
SPEAKER_02:it's it is and so how it's meant to be is that you're thinking too highly of yourself yep And so, that actually is attributed to the frontiersman Davy Crockett in the 1830s. So, britches is a rural term for trousers. And the idiom critiques arrogance and reminds folks to stay humble, which is a key value in the Appalachian communities.
UNKNOWN:Right.
SPEAKER_02:All right.
SPEAKER_03:Oh, Davy
SPEAKER_02:Crockett.
SPEAKER_03:Davy Crockett.
SPEAKER_02:King of the Wild Frontier.
SPEAKER_03:Dude, when I was a kid, I freaking loved Davy Crockett. I had one of those stupid-ass raccoon hats and wore it everywhere. Jason did, too. Oh, that's right. He wore it, like, when he was older, though. Like, in high school. Yeah, like, middle school and high school and shit. And I wore mine when I was, like, in elementary school. Because, like, we went to the Appalachian. I don't know. We were in Tennessee or somewhere, Pigeon Forge or some crap. And I was a kid, and I totally got one. I wore that crap. I wore that thing. And I had a harmonica I got, and I took that sucker with me everywhere. But yeah, I think I probably had my, not my Davy Crockett knife, but my Bowie knife.
SPEAKER_02:The Bowie knife.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah, the Bowie knife, which is Daniel Boone. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, from like the Alamo and all that BS. But anyway, yeah, yeah. Yeah. Let's see. I
SPEAKER_02:have to tell you the story about how I buried my brother's Bowie knife.
SPEAKER_03:Oh, go ahead. Tell it. Let's do it. Do you want to hear this story?
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, why not? Okay, so my brother had this knife. It was like a Bowie style, but it was one of those camper hiker editions. So in the... What's the handle part called of a knife? Not the hilt. That would be a sword or something. But in the handle, you could unscrew the end that had a compass on it.
SPEAKER_03:Oh, yeah, yeah,
SPEAKER_02:yeah. A bubble compass. And then it had your survival supplies, like your little... Wire saw. Mini saw. Matches. Yeah. Yeah, matches. I had one of those. Stuff like that. So I stole it from my brother, and I went over to the neighbor kids that were there, and I was trying to impress them by stabbing the knife through my foot. It was like an illusion, right? Yeah, yeah. I would stab it next to my foot, and the younger kids were like, whoa, that's– wow, how are you doing that? That's crazy. Well, I wasn't watching– And I stabbed the edge of my foot with it, like hard. And I was wearing these like new buck, suede leather shoes. And it turned, my foot turned, the shoe turned from like a light brown color to a very dark brown color. And it was just, the spot was expanding. The
SPEAKER_03:blood.
SPEAKER_02:And I was like, I'll be right back. So I ran home. And I ditched the knife in between the fences, and I went inside and I treated my wound. Well, something came over me like this big wave of guilt, and I felt like I needed to dispose of the knife.
SPEAKER_03:Uh-huh.
SPEAKER_02:So later on, I went and took the knife and went back deep into the woods near the house, and I buried it at the foot of a tree.
SPEAKER_03:You'll never stab my foot again, you dang knife. So
SPEAKER_02:was I burying the hatchet? I was going to lead into that, burying the hatchet. So to this day, there's this knife that's buried in the woods. And I told my brother the story. And he was actually a few weeks ago. He was in town for his birthday. He's like, we should go find that knife and dig it up.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah, go get a metal detector or something. I
SPEAKER_02:have a metal detector. Yeah,
SPEAKER_03:you should totally go do that.
SPEAKER_02:Okay, we'll have to do that. But that is a great
SPEAKER_03:lead-in to my next Bury the Hatchet. All right. What's Bury the Hatchet to you?
SPEAKER_02:You've got bad feelings or a disagreement or whatever. It's like, let's just...
SPEAKER_03:just let it
SPEAKER_02:go. Let's resolve it and just be done with it and not bring it
SPEAKER_03:up. Water under the bridge. There's another one. I didn't look that one up, but anyway, like bury the hatchet. I figured that one was make peace and be on our way. Yeah. But that one literally, it goes back to like tribal, like American tribes and Indians, whatever, whenever they would, um, come to an agreement that they were no longer going to fight amongst those two tribes they would literally bury their hatchets or any other uh weapons that they had kind of in the middle of where they were so they would literally that was their thing is we're done being rude to each other we're not gonna we're gonna be nice to each other we're literally gonna bury our weapons in front of each other as as a symbol of you know getting along
SPEAKER_02:and that's where they say like handshakes come from when you can bring your hand forward to another person and show that you're unarmed yeah that makes sense i think i've heard that before that's like or uh even bending bending down right a lot of like exposing your neck and your head and right so it's a sign that you're unarmed and you're friendly
SPEAKER_03:yeah is it weird that every time i see an asian person i immediately bow and i shouldn't be doing that It's just because I see it on TV or whatever, and it's like I don't even know I'm doing it, and then I do it, and then I'm like, oh, crap, did I just bow to that guy? I didn't
SPEAKER_02:know that I did it. Anyway. All right, I'm going to go through a lightning round. Okay,
SPEAKER_03:go.
SPEAKER_02:All right, here's some. He's a few bricks shy of a load.
SPEAKER_03:He's not very smart.
SPEAKER_02:Yep.
SPEAKER_03:All
SPEAKER_02:right. If brains were leather, he couldn't saddle a jume bug.
SPEAKER_03:Same thing? Like, he's just not that smart? Mm-hmm. Okay.
SPEAKER_02:If he's so dumb, he can throw himself on the ground and miss. Or he could throw himself on the ground and
SPEAKER_03:miss. Okay, that's just a you're so dumb joke.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah. And she's got just enough sense to get out of the rain.
SPEAKER_03:Okay. She's just barely, that's like saying I know just enough about computers to get myself in trouble, you know, or something
SPEAKER_02:like that. Yeah. All right. How about she fell harder than a fat hog off a grease log?
SPEAKER_03:All right. Yeah. It's like, what the hell?
SPEAKER_02:Yeah. She's madder than a meal chewing on a bumblebee.
SPEAKER_03:All right. But something had to happen for that, you know, for someone to come up with that. So somebody saw a mule bite a bumblebee or whatever. I guess. Maybe not. Maybe not. But I don't know. He's meaner than a
SPEAKER_02:skillet full of rattlesnakes.
SPEAKER_03:Okay. I don't know why they'd be in a skillet, but all right.
SPEAKER_02:They're so broke, you can't pay attention.
SPEAKER_03:Okay. That's just a joke.
SPEAKER_02:All right.
UNKNOWN:Yeah.
SPEAKER_02:Let's see. Just because the cat had kittens in the oven don't mean they're biscuits.
SPEAKER_04:What the
SPEAKER_02:hell? So I guess that goes back to like the origin doesn't always define the identity of something.
SPEAKER_03:All right. So
SPEAKER_02:just because the cat had kittens in the oven don't mean they're biscuits.
SPEAKER_03:Okay. That was stupid.
SPEAKER_02:And then two more. Let's see. Raining like a cow peeing on a flat rock.
SPEAKER_03:Okay, I have heard that one. That one I have heard before or whatever, but that just means it's raining a whole lot. And actually, I think I've heard a version of that where it's raining and it's so hot that steam's coming off the rock when they pee or something
SPEAKER_02:like that, too. Yeah, some version of that. And then lastly, we've got... It is hotter than a goat in a pepper patch.
SPEAKER_03:Hotter than a goat in a pepper patch. Why would the goat be real hot in the pepper patch? Because
SPEAKER_02:goats will eat anything. Oh,
SPEAKER_03:okay.
SPEAKER_02:And then goats, they're just chaotic and just, you know.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah, goats will eat anything. I mean, literally anything. But, all right. I got one that I made up many years ago. You ready? Yeah. My gopher's poking. You didn't make that up. No, because the original one is I'm prairie dogging. I'm prairie dogging. And so here's the story behind it. So people that don't know what that means, that means you got to take a poop and it's starting to peek a little out to take a look. Well, so many years ago, when I first started working where I work, there was a gentleman that worked with us. And I say gentlemen lightly. And his name was Tim. And... I was using the reference of my gophers poking and he, oh no, no, I was, I was prairie dogging and he was like, he couldn't, he couldn't remember that whenever he was, had to go to the bathroom. And one day he said, my gophers poking. And oh, I was, I died laughing. I'm like, this is great. So much that whenever Cody and I had a little t-shirt business for a very short while, that was one of the best ones is I put my gophers poking on it and people loved that one. But
SPEAKER_02:yeah. You should have stuck with that.
SPEAKER_03:At the time, we didn't have no money. If I did it now, it probably would be okay. But now I got the money but not the time. You know what
SPEAKER_02:I mean? Yeah, you were so broke you couldn't pay attention.
SPEAKER_03:Right. All right, you want to do some of those jokes? Let's do a few before we round this out. Okay, we're going to literally do the mama jokes that you didn't want me to do back when we first started. Let's see. Your mama's so fat she jumped up in the air and got stuck. Your mom was so big before God said, let there be light. He said, move your fat ass out the way. Yeah. Your mama's so fat, she... Let's see. Your mama's so fat, she used a boomerang to put her belt on. Your mama's so fat, she broke a leg and gravy came out. Let's see. I got so many of those if I can just keep thinking.
SPEAKER_02:There's no one about a zip code.
SPEAKER_03:Oh yeah. Like your mama's so big. She got her own zip code. Yeah. Your mama's so big when she's sitting around the house, she sits around the house. Uh, or like, let's see other ones. Your mama's so dumb. She thought a quarterback was a refund. Um, let's see. What are those? I'm trying to think of those other ones. Oh man, I've got so many of those. I used to be the king of the mama
SPEAKER_02:jokes. The band, the far side and their song that they do those jokes. And there's one, um, Your mama's eating Dayton rims, like Dayton's, like they're now and laters. Like
SPEAKER_03:they're now and laters. Yeah, I think I've heard that before. Like the little
SPEAKER_02:candies.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah. Oh, man.
SPEAKER_02:I wish I could remember. Or she'd be fishing in the frozen food section.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah. And then there's like the really stupid, like your mama. So
SPEAKER_02:look up that song, your mama, your mama by the far side.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah. Your mom's so big. She take a shower in the lake, you know, stupid crap like that. And I used to have so many of those back in the day. What's
SPEAKER_02:about the one around the block?
SPEAKER_03:She
SPEAKER_02:walks around the block and she's... Oh,
SPEAKER_03:your mama's so fat it takes her two trips to haul ass. That's the one. All right. Let's round it out. We got it out. Let's round it out with one more idiom. Let's see. Let me find a good one. Let's see. Let's see. Oh, man. We'll have to edit all this silence out. Oh. Chew the fat. Do you know what chew the fat?
SPEAKER_02:Just like sit down and talk. Let's just like sit down and have a good talk.
SPEAKER_03:Any idea where that originates from? Well, you read my list.
SPEAKER_02:Well, if you have ever eaten a fatty piece of meat, it takes a while.
SPEAKER_03:So apparently sailors in the 19th century would literally chew the fat. on salted meat while chatting. So almost like you would chew gum, they literally chewed fat or whatever. And so that got, um, that's how that came about. Chew the fats and around talking. Um, let's see if there's any, another one. I feel like there's one that's better than that. Uh, uh, maybe there's not, uh, Oh, hit the sack. You know, you know what hit the sack means.
SPEAKER_02:They go to sleep.
SPEAKER_03:But it originated from when people literally had hay and whatnot in their beds and in their pillows or whatever. Before they went to bed, they would literally hit the sack to make it more comfortable. To kind of fluff it out. Before they went to bed. Yeah. Think of how good we have it. Oh, yeah. Air conditioning, soft places. But what? My back still hurts.
UNKNOWN:Yeah.
SPEAKER_02:First world problems.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah, right?
SPEAKER_02:We were talking about first world problems at work.
SPEAKER_03:Oh, there's so many.
SPEAKER_02:We were talking about blenders, like the Ninja Bullet versus a malt machine, like a malt blender versus handshaking a shake.
SPEAKER_03:Right. And
SPEAKER_02:we were griping about, oh, it doesn't blend my protein shake very well.
SPEAKER_03:Right.
SPEAKER_02:And then it's like, we'll use that. Well, it doesn't dice up the ice.
SPEAKER_03:Dice up the ice. So... That's a new band name, Dice Up the
SPEAKER_02:Ice. And then there's those little cup blenders that have it built in. And then it's like, oh, but it's too heavy.
SPEAKER_03:The bullet. And they're those bullets or something like that.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah.
SPEAKER_03:So,
SPEAKER_02:you know, this is First World Problems.
SPEAKER_03:Oh, man, we could do a whole episode on First World Problems.
SPEAKER_02:That we should.
SPEAKER_03:I can't remember the other day. It was somebody in front of me, and they were in the line somewhere to eat. And there was a man and a lady, and they were kind of arguing about where– like they were where we, where we were eating at. The other person was like, I didn't want to eat here or whatever. And they're like, well, you said, you know, pick a place, blah, blah, blah. And the other one's like, well, just first world problems. We're over here arguing about where to eat. And there's people over in Africa. They don't got no place to go at all. And I was just like, okay, all right. And I'm like, remember, remember those things we used to say people in Africa.
SPEAKER_02:Here's yeah. The Ethiopians that are, yeah,
SPEAKER_03:there was all those Ethiopian jokes like in the eighties.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah. Yeah. So here's the trick. You tell the person, hey, I'm going to take you to your favorite place.
SPEAKER_03:And they're like, yeah? Well, what is that?
SPEAKER_02:And you tell them, yeah. Yeah, you tell me. Well, hopefully they say it out loud. And they're like, yeah, you're taking me to... Fogo de Chão? Fogo de Chão? I don't know.
SPEAKER_03:There's a couple of restaurants around here recently that they're like, I can't remember the names of them. They're like, the name of them is wherever you want to go is like the name of the restaurant, you know, or you pick a place. That's the name of the restaurant.
SPEAKER_02:Isn't there a bar? He ain't here.
SPEAKER_03:He ain't here.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah. The temple, right?
SPEAKER_03:Yeah. He ain't here. And then what was the other one on the other side of temple that we'd go get hamburger from every once in a while? Where it's at. That was the other one. Where
SPEAKER_02:it's at. I bet Beck would like that restaurant.
SPEAKER_03:Where it's at. But anyway, that was a
SPEAKER_02:random,
SPEAKER_03:random episode. If we ever did a random episode,
SPEAKER_02:living up to the name,
SPEAKER_03:but yeah, anyway. So as always, randomness podcast.com, go check it out. Go to buy us a coffee. Go check out the Etsy shop there. Rhino
SPEAKER_02:junk haul.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah. Yeah. Shout out Jason Westfall. If I lived there, I would use you. Sorry, I don't. The other thing is we have this really big guest coming up that we booked. I'm not going to say any names because I don't want to jinx us, but we did book this person. It's not going to come out until very late August, maybe even into September because we're booked out pretty good. Fourth quarter. Yeah. We're trying, we're trying to get as booked up as much as we can for the rest of the year. Cause there's a lot going on this year. Uh, don't forget about Malapalooza coming up. Um, it's
SPEAKER_02:going to be fun. Yeah. I got it. I got a treat surprise for that.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah. For that's the first weekend of, uh, October at the temple mall. Um, and it's also a family friendly, you know, there's going to, they're going to be doing like even, you know, kids dress up, uh, trick or treat at the little booth and whatnot. Remind me, Josh, we got a box of candy. Um, okay.
SPEAKER_02:Halloween theme going on.
SPEAKER_03:Yeah. Yeah. So, don't forget about that and yeah uh thank you guys for spending time with us again and we'll see you next time
SPEAKER_02:thank y'all
SPEAKER_03:we're gonna go i gotta find the stop button