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Pat Walsh
Pat's Peeps Podcast
Ep. 56 Pat Walsh Visits Content Sent by You (Peeps), Including Home Depot Workers, I Wanna Vote, Could This Happen in the U.S.? And What's Blowin' In The Wind on this Windy Leap Day?
Facing down an impending storm from my Northern California studio on this leap day, I couldn't help but experiment in the kitchen, leading to a fiery culinary concoction of bacon and sriracha that'll kick-start your appetites. As the winds howl outside, I share these cozy moments and reflect on the heartfelt content you've all sent, which fuels the show's direction. From DIY triumphs to trips to Home Depot when local gems don't have what I need, I muse on how these choices shape our lives and the future paths of Pat's Peeps.
Today, we pay our respects to the multifaceted Fred Gwynne, whose talents stretched well beyond his iconic Herman Munster portrayal, as I recount tales of his military valor and artistic achievements. Yet, it's not all serious business; a listener's controversial clip spurs a candid debate about where to draw the line with humor in our politically charged atmosphere. It's a dance of discernment, balancing the light-hearted and the profound, resonating with those who remember public figures as more than just their renowned roles.
Transporting us back to an era defined by its music and its message, "Blowin' in the Wind" becomes the centerpiece of a musical voyage. Here, I explore the anthem's deep roots in protest culture and its resistance to the British Invasion's imprint on American music. Closing on a somber note, the enduring ballad "Flora, the Lily of the West" reminds us of the power of jealousy and the redemptive grace of forgiveness. It's a storytelling session that wraps our time together, leaving us to ponder the passions that drive us and the choices we make in their wake. Join me, Pat Walsh, as we brave the storm and explore the profound through tales and tunes on Pat's Peeps.
Welcome my friends. It's a Pat's Peeps podcast. We're at number 56, 56 on a leap day. It's a leap day. It's 29th day of February. It's a bizarre looking day outside, as the storm watched bruise, to quote Ian Anderson of Jaffro Toll.
Speaker 1:29th day of February 2024, on a very gray, blustery day, looking out my studio window here in the foothills in Northern California, literally the rain just now started, but the wind has been coming in in the last hour or so and I hope, wherever you are listening and I thank you for listening, my name is Pat Walsh, host of the Pat Walsh Show on KBK, and I heart radio as well but I hope, wherever you are, that the day is treating you right and today, being a leap day Weather wise, we have a what is supposed to be a huge storm coming into our area here in Northern California like record breaking snow amounts, and I mean Tahoe is going to get just smashed, but we're expecting high winds with some, perhaps some, power outages. I probably mentioned this yesterday, so I'm not going to get way into that again, but the fact is I'm just now starting to see the beginning of it with the rain, and I was just told that Friday, tomorrow, right tomorrow, you know, I may be snowed in again. So, without going into the conversation I was in yesterday, it looks like that could happen. We'll see, but we'll see. So I may or may not have electricity tomorrow to do Pat's peeps 57, we'll see. But either way it'll come, come around soon. But that's where we are weather wise today. And I have the fire going in my wood stove and now I've had to open my windows because it's so hot in my studio here. But you know I, by the way, also just a little thing that I found out this morning. I looked, I created something new to me. Maybe you've done this.
Speaker 1:I'm very experimental when I cook, I like to do things. I mean I only I don't like a whole bunch of varieties of food, so I try to be experimental with the foods that I do like. So this morning it occurred to me one thing I never tried is I looked into my refrigerator and saw that I had bacon. I can't go without my bacon. I have to have bacon, everything in moderation, but certainly bacon is in the mix. And then to my right, in the door of my, my refrigerator, there I saw rooster sauce, sriracha, and I say, have I ever done bacon and sriracha sauce together? You know the answer is no, but I'm gonna give it a shot. So I took the bacon, put it in a bag, doing a little sriracha, mixed it up, fried that bad boy up and ma'am telling you oh lord, that was good, ain't me? Zandy used to say so. A little tip you may want to try that if you ever get the opportunity. Two of my favorite ingredients together how can you beat it?
Speaker 1:You know, and thinking about my podcast and thinking about some of the stuff that I can do and some of the directions I want to go with this, I thought we'd have a little bit of fun today. One of the things as a talk show host and a host of a podcast that happens is you get a lot of people thank you, by the way a lot of folks who are fans, who listen, and they will send you things, links to a variety of stories and a variety of just the things that are going on in the news that you know may or may have not been featured in the, in the national evening news on tv or radio, and I get so many of these things that I'm not even sure what to do with them at times like I can't get through everything on my show. Some of it is kind of outlandish. There's certain things I can't play on the radio, but then it occurred to me, as I said, that I could play them on my podcast and a lot of them are a lot of fun. So please keep those coming. I get those on in my social media, particularly in messenger, on facebook, private messenger, things like that, which is where I'm going to go to today, because I have just so many of them and I thought why not share some of these and then we can comment on them and see what you think, because they're good man. But I can't really get bogged down into sitting and watching videos all day long. You're going down that rabbit hole. But I certainly can if I'm doing a podcast right and if there is someone entertaining, which they are. So I'm going to give credit where credit is due, thanking you for sending me this content stuff I probably would not have seen. I even have one that I picked out today that I'll play at the end Got a record. We'll play that as well, but today, why not? Let's do this.
Speaker 1:So one of the things as I begin this, one of the things I've been doing is working on my home I play that all the time and working on my home Remodeling. One of the things I'm getting ready to do is build a beautiful fence on my property. I can't wait. I'll be planting trees in a garden, putting up a fence. But over the time, you know, I go to these places. I try to go local. I use all the local hardware stores that I can Hills, flat, lumber, wherever I can go, find a local hardware store, whether it's owned by Ace in, you know, like Loomis or what have you.
Speaker 1:But sometimes you have to resort to going to the big boy. It's just the way. It is Nothing wrong with that. Someone owns that too. But I'm more of a mom and pop guy.
Speaker 1:But I am not going to lie and say that I've never been into, of course, home Depot, because occasionally you need things from Home Depot. I go to the mom and pops, but they're, you know, sometimes they don't carry everything. They carry the main things but not everything. So I go into the Home Depot and if you go into the Home Depot I'm sure you've done this before and you're trying to find something and I get that they have these people wearing vests and you walk up you can't find what you're looking for, so you go up to the person who's wearing a vest Many times are very helpful. I mean, I got to give them credit. Until today I'd never looked at their age or anything.
Speaker 1:I didn't care. I don't care what your sex is Sometimes I don't care, you know, whether you're homo or heterosexual, I don't care what your skin comes. Just help me, please, it's all I care about. Then it occurred to me today I think I've used a curd three times now. I'm sorry it came to me today when someone sent this and this would be Tim that according to this gal in this video Kimberly Whitehead, I guess might be her name that she does care. Like sometimes you go into the Home Depot and you're talking to them and they're like yeah, I know right where it is. Come on this way. Other times, like you know, I have no clue. Let me see if I can look that up on my app. And I think, well, I could look it up on my app. I mean, I just kind of thought you worked here, but a lot of times that doesn't happen, and that is what Kimberly Whitehead addresses in Tim's video.
Speaker 2:Transition glasses. They buy focus. He got a mustache.
Speaker 1:Hold on a second, let me get. Let me get. Let me make sure I get this whole thing. I want to get the whole video on there for you. I want you to do everything she says. Let me see.
Speaker 2:He's not a hipster, he's an old guy. Gene want to talk about your project more than you want to talk about your project. Gene comes to the store with a tool belt. It's his tools. They come with him and they leave him with him. Gene didn't just ride tractors, gene.
Speaker 1:What we're missing here is she's saying that everyone should there should be an age limit. I don't know why I can't get back to that. Maybe I'll play it at the end and then start it over. But but she's saying Gene.
Speaker 2:No, what the hell are you talking about? He got experience.
Speaker 1:You should be 45 or older to work there.
Speaker 2:Only people I see in Home Depot now is Brianna with the baby hair, somebody named Xander with a dog collar and a tail. Listen, go to Starbucks. We're trying to build some shit. I'm sure you have a speciality, but I know it's not hex bolts. I don't want to see you working in Home Depot unless you was born in the 50s, the 60s, if you was born after microwaves came out, if you was born after segregation, you don't got the clout to be working here. You going to Home Depot, ask them for something. They got to look in the app. Bitch, I have the app. Gene didn't need the app. He had the app up here. You should not be working at Home Depot unless you already had a career. You should be your second career.
Speaker 2:You should already be in pension checks. You just do this for fun. Bring back them. Grandpas, and I'm not playing One thing about it. Home Depot employees there need to be a minimum age requirement and I'm talking about like 45, 50 something. What happened to Gene in?
Speaker 1:them. Bring back the grandpa, she ain't playing. Oh man, she's so. Right, man, I don't know, I'm not, you know, going to discriminate age wise, but talking about the dude with a dog tail or the dog collar, uh, the Brianna here I, whatever, I don't know anything about that. But, tim, good video, and she does make an interesting point. And now I'm sure that every time I go into the Home Depot somehow I'm going to be thinking about that. But um, so let's move on to another one. This one was sent to by a listener, George. George, a good guy, george, I always appreciate you listening. George sent this to me. This is something, and I'll just tell you what he said about the video. I'll tell you what George said and then we'll play it. So George says this could happen here. Watch out. This is a reel by Laura Lawrence. Mansour Tech, ai entrepreneurship. Here we go In China for example.
Speaker 5:God, this is going to happen here, I think too, although maybe people will fight it. If a traffic camera catches you jaywalking in China, the digital ID system has you, has your blood now has your genetic code, has your photograph. It can identify how you walk. So even if you can't see a face, you can be picked up by gate. It will convict you of jaywalking and take money out of your bank account, with no intermediating due at all, and show a picture of you to the people in the neighborhood so they know that you have jaywalk and reduce your social credit score. And if your social credit score falls below a certain level, then you can't buy drinks from a vending machine, you can't play video games, you can't go on a train, you can't get out of your 15 minute city. All that's already in place in China.
Speaker 1:When China, wow, wow, that's scary, isn't it? Sometimes I think things are conspiracies. Maybe that falls under conspiracy, but obviously he's pointing out facts. This has happened in China. If Trump were to criticize that he would be seen as a racist. But I digress. But yeah, I mean that's scary, just to take the money out of your account. That's why I say get the government off of your back. That's one of the reasons I love Ronald Reagan. Get the government out of our lives. And that is terrifying that that could, that it is happening in places and that it perhaps could happen here. So, george, thank you for the video Very interesting.
Speaker 1:Cecilia is a great listener to the Pat Wall Show, both the podcast, the Pat's Peeps podcast, and my radio show. For many years I have worked with the gentleman that she is that she sent me a video in regards to this person. Thank you. I've been friends with this guy for many years now it's really going on. I mean it's over 30 years well, about 30 years, I would say, with Tom. But Tom Sullivan is a national talk show host. He began the same station I work at the same station at Rush Limbaugh became famous from is KFBK, and so Tom Sullivan is our afternoon host on KFBK and, like I say, cecilia is a great listener to the radio station and she isolated this clip from the Tom Sullivan. I thought we would enjoy this one together, cecilia. Always thank you for listening and thank you for sharing this with all of us from the Tom Sullivan show. Hope you don't mind, tom. Here you go, thanks.
Speaker 5:Joe Biden needs a new campaign song.
Speaker 1:Tommy, tommy, tommy. I will not. I cannot confirm necessarily in my mind, that she was a great singer, but I absolutely appreciate her good sense of humor. Again, that is from the Tom Sullivan show. Listen to Tom Sullivan afternoons on KFBK, mid days on KFBK, and nationally, of course. Thank you, cecilia.
Speaker 1:Next up, this one is from Darrell Darrell, another good listener. Darrell sends me a variety of things here. Matter of fact, he sent me a couple. I haven't even seen the other one. Maybe we'll take a look at this, but this one's pretty funny. This is a for context, what it is. You can imagine a front porch, beautiful day, beautiful morning. It looks like Sunny day, sunny coming out of. She's white for context of this particular video, blonde white. She's stepping outside I don't know if she's just getting ready for a day just stepping out on her front porch and at the same time a mailman who happens to be carrying some package and who happens to be black, which I would never point out, but that's the context of this particular video. He walks. He walks up at the same time that she's walking out of her house and it frightens her. The best part is his response to her in which he says I'm not OJ, here we go, let me see.
Speaker 2:I'm so sorry, I'm not OJ.
Speaker 3:I'm so sorry, I was supposed to say you did someone, you have a good day. Happy new year.
Speaker 1:I'm not OJ One more time.
Speaker 2:I'm so sorry, I'm not OJ, I'm sorry.
Speaker 1:I like their fist bump at the end, by the way. I like the fist bump at the end, very nice. I don't know what this one is, I don't even know if it's still there, but let's find out. Darrell sent this one to me a few days ago. He says I needed to hear this today, something I forgot or I forget. Let's hear, let's see what's. Let's see what's. Oh, okay, let's pray for. Oh yeah, okay, we can do that for a second. There you go.
Speaker 7:For this Wednesday. Dear God, as the dawn breaks and sunlight fills the sky, I come before you with a heart full of gratitude for the gift of another day. Thank you for the restful night's sleep and for the opportunities that lie ahead. As I rise to greet the morning, long-reminded of your enduring faithfulness and boundless love, grant me strength, lord, to face the challenges that may come my way. Help me to navigate the twists and turns of this day with grace and resilience. Guide my steps along paths of righteousness and lead me to opportunities where L can serve you and others with joy.
Speaker 1:To make a wallace. I think there was a AI-generated thing because it said L, so I'm not sure what that meant, but I think that perhaps was AI-generated in some form or fashion. But thank you for the videos, darrell. I appreciate that Richard sent the video. Richard sent something that I thought I would share with you. It's not a video but I thought I would share with you because it's very interesting. I learned something here.
Speaker 1:This is in regards to Fred Gwynn. If you're a fan of classic TV, fred Gwynn played Herman Munster on the Munsters Love that show, loved Herman. Grandpa, Lily, lily, the whole family loved it. Marilyn, which Patrick was in, that little Eddie, eddie Munster Anyhow. So Fred Gwynn, he was also an actor, of course, in movies and a variety of other classic TV shows. And such A little interesting fact about Fred Gwynn.
Speaker 1:He was petty officer of third class Fred Gwynn of the US Navy, veteran of the Battle of Saipan and the Battle of Tennian. Frederick Hubbard Gwynn, born New York City, july 10th of 26th. He enlisted in the US Navy and in 1944, he served as a radio man third class on a submarine chaser in the Pacific Theater. Fred was a veteran of both the Battle of Saipan and the Battle of Tennian, and Gwynn was honorably discharged in 1948 with a rank of petty officer third class, according to the Veterans Administration. After the war Fred attended Harvard University. He was an aspiring painter, drew cartoons for the Harvard Lampoon and then later became president of that publication. And then, upon graduation in 1951, fred Gwynn returned to New York, worked several jobs such as creating a commercial artwork and copywriting at the J Walter Thompson Advertising Agency we created. I should say His first big break came in 1961 when Gwynn was cast in the role of police officer Francis Muldoon on the comedy series Car54, where Are you Remember that? That show aired until 1963. And then the following year Gwynn was cast as Herman Munster in the, as I mentioned, the aforementioned favorite sitcom now in syndication everywhere, the Munsters 1313, mockingbird Lane. He was a regular on Broadway. Fred was cast as Big Daddy in the 74 Broadway revival of Tennessee Williams cat on a hot tin roof and his final on-screen role was out of Judge Chamberlain Haller in the 92 film my Cousin no-transcript. That marked the end of his acting career, which spanned 42 years, according to the VA. Petty officer of third class Fred Gwynne passed away July 2nd of 93, the age of 66, too young and lies in rest at the Sandy Mount United Methodist Church Cemetery in Finknsburg, maryland.
Speaker 1:Never to forget Fred Gwynne. Very nice, richard, I thank you for that. I learned something about Fred Gwynne. I had no idea any of that. So thank you for enlightening me and, in turn, enlightening all of us who happen to be listening. Coming off of that, how about some humor? Gordon's sending me this one. This is the first podcast or any broadcast I've ever done. We hear a few curse words, not from me, but why do I care if someone else is doing it on my podcast? I'm not even sure who this is. I hate to say that. Maybe it'll say in the video, but I thought it was kind of funny in a way. I may or may not agree with the entire thing, particularly the racist quote, but that's just me Think whatever you will, but Gordon sent this. It's called. I kind of want to vote. Let's take a listen. There we go, hold on.
Speaker 4:But, like I said, I don't even do research. I just go off of like vibes and I don't like the vibes that Trump invited and give me. I don't. I don't like their vibes at all, man, they make me feel like America is this one big party right, like we're all at this house party. And then somebody at that party was like okay, I'm going to introduce you out of these two guys, and one guy is like the guy who he gets so drunk. He just says whatever's on the top of his mind and occasionally it's some racist shit Trump. And the other guy they brought out is the guy who, like he's so high but he tries his best to convince you he's not high, but the more he talks, the more you're like dude, you are stoned. They brought out these two guys and they're basically like all right, like one of these two has to drive you home. That's why I don't want to vote. I'm like I just wow. I kind of want to vote.
Speaker 1:I don't want to make it some points there. I don't know who that is. Anyone know who that is? It doesn't even credit the comedian. I'm not sure who that is, but anyhow, you make some points and talking about Biden being stoned, all right. So, speaking of Biden, I chose one here I thought I would share with you. It kind of caught my attention. I thought it was pretty funny. Dana Carvey does a really great impersonation of Biden and here he is doing a little, doing a great impersonation of Joe Biden, dana Carvey.
Speaker 8:Have you noticed that Biden's got a little feisty? Hair lately, because when he first came out he was like a soothing.
Speaker 1:Make sure I said that right, dana Carvey, of course Sorry, dana, I appreciate that.
Speaker 8:Biden's got a little feisty hair lately Because when he first came out he was like a soothing grandpa offering you Butterscotch from his coin purse. I don't know I'm not right, but Biden came out as a really sleepy, sweet grandpa and he was like he's always repeating this story. You know, yeah, I went to Scranton, I grew up in Scranton, pennsylvania. My dad, my dad lost his job. No joke, I'm not kidding around here. No human being in the world thinks that's a joke. Then he would do the number thing Number one, the one part, number two, what the guy said, number three you know the drill, come on. No, we don't. Now what he does is he kind of whispers and then he yells. He's like we know how to get natural gas, because we can't get it.
Speaker 8:We know how to get it. That's what we do. We get the people. That's private the public, the private, the pirates of the Caribbean.
Speaker 1:Man, he does a great job. He does a great job on that. I saw a guy last I don't know who it was, but there's a great Trump. I was laughing so hard, but I again, I don't know what that guy's name is, but great stuff there by Dana Carvey. Here's one for you. This was sent by Ken, and this woman is making a point that I think I happened to agree with wholeheartedly. I don't even know who she is. Let's take a listen here. Here we go. Here we go, let's see, Hold on, let's see if we can do this. Well, okay, that one. We're having some kind of a glitch with that one, but that's okay, it doesn't matter, it doesn't matter. So let's, instead of doing that I really enjoy this Please, if you find a great clip like that, something you think might be great for the show you know, keep them coming, because I'm enjoying it, I'm learning from them, they are very entertaining to me. So keep them coming and we'll feature them in future Pat's Peeps episodes.
Speaker 1:So let's get to some music to put the final touches on today's Pat's Peeps 56. Excuse me, so again, as I always say, went to my record collection, my extensive rare record collection, my 45 record, seven inch records, and I pulled this one out today and it is an absolute classic and it comes from a certain era. I mean, this is an era that I was a very little kid when this particular era was going on and it really was like just the beginning of the 60s, at least in my mind. It was like the. It was the folk era. You know the folk era, man. I remember going to a friend's house, greg Pimentel. I lived in Valley High, one of the places I grew up. We go to his house and his dad was in one of these folk groups. His friends would come over to put on vests and things and stand there in the living room where they'd play folk music and I thought, geez, this is so cool and very different. But I was a young kid. So this is a song, as I say, that is a classic written by the great Bob Dylan in 1962.
Speaker 1:It is not Bob Dylan, though. It was released as a single, included on his album the Free Will and Bob Dylan in 63. It was described as a protest song. It does pose rhetorical questions and back then, of course, those questions, the biggest things on people's minds were peace and, you know, war was going on Vietnam, freedom. And the refrain from this song has been described as impenetrably ambiguous, whatever that means, which in itself, I think, is that Either the answer is extremely obvious it's right there in your face, come on or it's like what? It's what? Do? What now? Okay, In 94, this song was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame.
Speaker 1:In 04, it was ranked as number 14 on the Rolling Stone magazine, which blows now of the 500 greatest songs of all time. But I don't give a rip what Rolling Stone magazine says. Honestly, anymore I used to don't care now. But this is not a song by Bob Dylan. I mean, it is a song by Bob Dylan, but it's done by a different artist.
Speaker 1:So let's play it. Oh, let me, before I, before I put it on, I want to. I want to read you. Oh, hold on a second. No, no, no, it's not Okay, don't start. I want to read you what it says on the record itself and let me take it off the turntable.
Speaker 1:So this is a very old label. This record looks like it has seen a lot of time on the turntable. This one is not pristine. This has got a lot of stickers on it. One of the stickers says 1963. It's on Warner Brothers record label, white and pink. Promotional, not for sale. I'm playing this not, it's not. I don't own the rights to this, as I always say, not trying to make any money. I'm trying to expose this to people who don't know the background of it, don't know who wrote the song and perhaps would be interested in finding out more about it. But this is the third album by Peter Paul and Mary, released October 1963, just like the record sticker on the record says, a few months before the arrival of the Beatles heralded the British invasion and that is when the folk music genre ended, is when the Beatles showed up. It's a classic. It's blowing in the wind. Here's Peter Paul and Mary Adilentune.
Speaker 6:How many roads must a man walk down before they call him a man? How many times must the cannonballs fly before they're forever banned? The answer, my friend, is blowing in the wind. The answer is blowing in the wind.
Speaker 1:How many years? So the leadoff single of Bob Dylan's, blown in the wind and sold the phenomenal 300,000 copies in the first week of release, july of 1963 reached number two on the Billboard pop chart. Sales exceeded one million copies. Spent five weeks atop the easy listening chart and the second song from that, don't think twice, it's all right. Another song by Dylan peaked at number two. This was in the. This version in the folk genre, again released June 1963. Peter Yerrow on the vocals and guitar, noel Paul Stuckey on vocals and guitar and Mary Travers right there on vocals, edgar O Dehaas on stand up bass, dylan on the liner notes, corey Feinstein on the cover photography and Bill Schwartau on the it was the recording engineer went to number one in 1963 on the Billboard 200. But let's flip it over and see what's on the other side of this record, shall we? The other side of this record is let me hold on a second. Take it over here for you. Okay, there we go.
Speaker 1:The next record is a song called flora by Peter Paul and Mary. Interesting melody, sort of a haunting melody. Lyrics very poetic. Again, this is a folk ballad and it's kind of a love story takes taking a tragic turn. It's about cheating man discovers that flora has been unfaithful to him. So you hear about the man's heartbreak and you feel the betrayal in this describing is in his encounter with flora and how she mesmerized him. But as the song progresses it's obvious that his emotions are unraveling. He is now in a desperate state and in literally sheer desperation and violence, as the man uses a dagger very interesting to take revenge on flora's betrayal. So here it is, from Peter Paul and Mary Flipside, a blown in the winds called flora, the original vinyl.
Speaker 6:When first I came to louisville, my fortune there to find. I met a fair young maiden there. Her beauty filled my mind. Her rosy cheek, her ruby lips, they gave my heart to no rest. The name she bore was flora, a lily of the west. I courted lovely flora. She promised near to go. But soon a tale was told to me that filled my heart with woe. They said she meets another man who holds my love in jest. And yet I trusted flora, the lily of the west.
Speaker 6:Complexities, love, betrayal, destructive power of jealousy way down in yonder shady grove, a man of low degree. He spoke unto my flora there and kissed underneath the tree. The answers that she gave to him like arrows pierced my breast.
Speaker 1:So very captivating storytelling. It reminds us of you know, how fragile relationships can be right and how to forgive and how important it is to forgive.
Speaker 6:I stepped up to my rival. My dagger in my hand, I seized him by the collar and I ordered him to stand. Wow, all in my desperation, I stabbed him in his breast. I killed a man for flora.
Speaker 1:Thank you for listening. That's flora. Wow, that's, I just learned some. I never heard that one before. Oh, lord thank you for tuning in Pat's peeps 56, 57 coming tomorrow. Have a happy thursday.
Speaker 6:I had to make my plea.