
Pat's Peeps Podcast
Join our Pat's Peeps family today and be a part of the exciting journey as renowned national talk show host Pat Walsh connects with Friends and Aquaintances. Together, they delve deeper into the captivating world of Pat Walsh's nightly national talk show, all while championing local businesses.
Whether you are a business owner, a devoted listener, or both, we extend a warm invitation for you to become a valued member of our ever-growing community. Don't miss out on this incredible opportunity to join us ASAP!
Pat Walsh
Pat's Peeps Podcast
Ep. 67 Pat's Peeps Podcast Talks St. Patrick's Day, Controversy Over Sneaky Cutting Down of Historic Oak Trees in Freeport, The Return of Sam's Hof brau – Plus a Tribute with Manu Dibango's Beat
Greetings, fellow travelers and keepers of history—Pat here, and I'm elated to bring you along for a heartfelt stroll down memory lane in our 67th episode. We're not just celebrating the vibrant emerald hues of St. Patrick's Day; we're also extending a massive thank you for the overwhelming love that packed our Italy trip to the brim. As we eagerly anticipate the upcoming escapade to Ireland this September, I take a moment to reminisce on the sentimental St. Paddy's traditions, like those cherished cards from my mom, and share a slice of local history with the tale of Sam's Hoff Brau—a treasured eatery scarred by fire but destined for revival.
But it's not all shamrocks and nostalgia; we're also peeling back the layers of a community's struggle with unexpected change. Our guest, Anna, the community outreach coordinator, narrates the shocking felling of historic oak trees along Freeport Boulevard, revealing the jarring disconnect between the intentions of developers and the hearts of the townsfolk. As we review this incident and its implications for the cherished Delta town, we also ponder the seismic shift from the printed press to digital screens—a transition that touches both our consumption of news and our grip on cultural history. And before I brave the number-crunching madness of tax day, I leave you with the intoxicating rhythms of Manu Dibango's "Soul Makossa"—a track that's not just a melody but a vibrant thread in our cultural tapestry. Join us in this eclectic blend of celebration, preservation, controversy, and, of course, a dash of good music.
Hey, welcome my friends. It is the Pat's Peeps podcast man. We are back for a Monday.
Speaker 2:How are you?
Speaker 1:Hey, thank you for listening. Big uptick in listenership last week for the Pat's Peeps podcast. So thank you so very much. As I always tell you, I sure appreciate it. It's a Monday, it's a sunny Monday. Temperatures erupt a little bit today. So beautiful outside as I glance out of my studio windows into the beautiful foothills of Northern California, it is the 18th day of March 2024. For me, it's the day that I today just happens to be a day that I never look forward to, just being straight up, honest with you. So I got to do my tax stuff today Today's the day after me with the tax guy. He's a good guy though, Gene Glaser. He is the man. He roots for the wrong teams, but he's the man when it comes to taxes. Sorry, Gene, but I'm gonna go see Gene today. So this will not be an hour and 15 minute version of Pat's Peeps, but I'm proud to say, Doug, this is number 67. Number 67. And again, we had a lot of listeners last week. It's growing. Every week I'm getting messages from people. Thank you, you know. And other good things we sold out the Italy trip, which is fantastic news. Thank you to Ryan and thank you to Jody for taking the last two seats on a trip to Southern Italy coming up next month. I'm still trying to figure out how I podcast from there while I'm in Italy, but I'm going to try to figure that out because I don't want to lose momentum with the podcasts, Really enjoying it very much. But now we're off to the Ireland trip which we'll be doing in September. Conservative tours, if you'd like to join us.
Speaker 1:You know yesterday was St Patrick's Day. That is one of my favorite days of the entire year St Patrick's Day. When I was a kid it meant so much to my mother, Like when we, when she made breakfast, or six kids in the family, when she made breakfast for us on St Patrick's Day. My mother was in two, three traditions. She loved the holidays so much, which explains why I love the holidays so much. But you know she'd make our breakfast and then, just like on Valentine's Day, right next to our, our breakfast plates would be a Valentine's Day, I mean, excuse me, a St Patrick's Day card. And it just always, always started my day off right, and you were not getting out of the house and going to school if you weren't wearing green. That was unacceptable. You were wearing green on St Patrick's Day. We are Irish, that's our heritage, and so yesterday I mean so I love St Patrick's Day. I mean you look at my 54, 4 F, 100. It's green, it's got a leprechaun on the back. Every day, every day, St Patrick's Day to me.
Speaker 1:So yesterday I was having a. Well, what should I do? Well, I had a couple of plans. I had a couple of plans. The number one thing I did is I put the top down on my Mustang and I drove down to Sacramento and went to one of my favorite restaurants over the years, that is, Sam's Hoff Brow. Sam's Hoff Brow they had a fire and I learned what the fire was about. It was a malfunctioning part on one of their refrigerator freezers in the restaurant. That malfunction and then caused all this damage to the Watt Avenue location of Sam's Hoff Brow and that's a place that I grew up going to.
Speaker 1:Man I, you know mama, took me to, Sam took, took all of us to Sam's Hoff Brow, whether it was at 17th and J or the one on Watt Avenue, particularly the one on Watt Avenue, and you know we get the double dip buns in there for your turkey sandwich or what your, your ham or pastrami or your corned beef sandwich. You know I'd always get like a side of of dressing with gravies I love the dressing and then mashed potatoes and gravy because, again, I'm Irish, I have to have my potatoes. So anyhow, you know it burned and had all this great art that was in there on the walls had been up there for years. There was actually what they called the boxing corner and the boxing corner it was the corner where they had the old photos of boxers, local boxers, and they'd signed their autographs and they had them hanging up in there, Much like Louise's restaurant used to do. You know they have pictures like you know Pete Ranzani and even even announces, you know, just just all kinds of local boxers and and Hank Renner you know people like that who announced wrestling and things. So anyhow, they did lose that because obviously those were one of a kind. They can't replicate it. But I just had in the back of my mind. I just had the feeling that some of that big time art that they had hanging on the walls there was the trains, the North and South train photo coming together, the German photo with the beer steins and all of that stuff which, as I understand this, is just preliminary. But I spoke to someone who was in the know and when I asked him about that yesterday he told me, yeah, that actually Crocker Art Museum in Sacramento is going to replicate those that art, which is just great news.
Speaker 1:That place always had a certain ambience, atmosphere to it. It was in part because of that old art and everything that you'd seen in there for the last 50 years. I also learned yesterday that they used to have live music in there. Now I mean that's going way back because, again, I've been going in there for years and I don't recall live music. I don't remember the Hires Root Beer at the big barrel at the end of the bar, you know the Pickle Barrel and things like that, but I don't remember live music. But apparently there was live music. So anyhow, you know they're trying to get back on their feet, get everything rebuilt, kind of as close as they can is, from what I understand, to what the original was. But on St Patrick's Day they had a truck out there and they decided, you know what? They're going to light up the Hoffbrough sign Sam's Hoffbrough which I heard hasn't been lit up. They have not lighted the sign since the fire. They have lit that sign since the fire. You know, Did I use the right word lighted, lit Suddenly. That sounded very strange. So anyhow, here's the sign is lit up. My mistake, I see.
Speaker 1:I didn't eat breakfast because I was going to go chow down on the corned beef and potatoes and cabbage and when I got there I had a lot of people there. But it was a great sign the fact that here they are doing business as they try to get back on their feet. But this was the corned beef that was cooked, yes, and the cabbage, and it was cooked, but you had to take it home and heat it, so it wasn't hot. So, yeah, that didn't work out. So I didn't get my corned beef early in the day and so I thought well, what do I? So that plan doesn't work out exactly for me the way I wanted it to. But I got my corned beef. I couldn't even buy it because I can't just keep it in my car all day. I wasn't coming right back home, but a lot of people did enjoy it and it's so good to see Sam's coming back alive, man, it's just fantastic.
Speaker 1:But then I was invited to an Irish gathering at the limelight. Now this is my fault, I get it, but this is going to be part two of my day. So my plan is go to Sam's, get the corned beef and potato and then go to the limelight, to this Irish gathering right afterwards, had an all time down, Get over there. There's no one there. I'm like what is going on, man, there's no one here. So I got ahold of my friend, Joe, Joe McNamara. Love you, brother. This dude is Irish man, as Irish as they come, big baseball fan, nephew of the great Johnny McNamara, who was my dad's catcher when they played professional baseball. He was the former manager of the A's and the Red Sox and anyhow, Well I get there. There's no one there. I'm all dressed in green.
Speaker 1:It's St Patrick's Day, For God's sake, it's Sunday. Well, I look at the poster, the link that he originally sent me, and, much to my dismay as I sat there, Well, it was on Saturday, so I completely missed it. I couldn't believe it. I mean to be honest. Really, initially all I did is looked at the time. I didn't even look at the day, because it's St Patrick's Day, it's Sunday, but for whatever reason, he had it on Saturday and I didn't bother to read the print the way. I should have the small print, as they say, and that cost me. So that's how my day went. So I'm like OK, so what now? Now, what am I going to do? How can it? What can I? It was beautiful. So you know what I did.
Speaker 1:I had the top down on the GT, kept the top down, and one of my favorite places to go again, support local business, please. One of those local businesses that I support and have for a number of years is Miners Leap Winery. I love going to Miners Leap Winery. That's in Clarksburg, it's before you get to the sugar mill, but I'm a Miners Leap Winery guy. The loyal is a great guy, he owns the winery out there and he's got a music venue.
Speaker 1:So when I like to get in a good mood which I was already in a good mood, whatever, I'm not going to let that other stuff get me down. I was in a good mood, I tend to be in a good mood, All right, whatever. But I like to go out to the river, out to the Delta, and this is in Clarksburg where Miners Leap is. Check it out for yourself sometime. And A Plus, Relaxed Experience, great product as well. So I went out there and I tell you I just had the best time. Took a little drive. The drive was the fun part, to be honest with ya.
Speaker 2:Happy St Patrick's Day. What a gorgeous day to get out in the convertible. The sun is shining. I hope everyone's having a wonderful St Patrick's Day. I'm headed to Clarksburg. I went over to Sam's Hoffbrough this morning. They had a truck over there where.
Speaker 1:Now I already told ya all that. This is the idea is. I'm out there at the top down taking a ride listening to the Irish music. I don't want to repeat myself about Sam's. Let me see if I the slight reports of their demise. Yeah, so there was a report that they were not going to open, and they were going to open like a God knows what, probably a Starbucks or something. No, please.
Speaker 2:Clarksburg. It's gorgeous. What are you up to on this fine day? Gorned beef and cabbage, couple of Guinness.
Speaker 1:Whatever you're doing, I just wanted to pop in here. I'm going to head to Minor's Leap Winery.
Speaker 2:I'm going to pick up my wine. Whatever you're up to today, I wish you a very blessed day.
Speaker 1:See if I can show you around here a little bit. Ah, I know you can't see it. Theater of the Mind Beautiful day it is Happy St Patrick's Day.
Speaker 2:What a gorgeous day to get out in the convertible.
Speaker 1:Yeah, man. So yeah, that was yesterday Just had a great time. It was so beautiful, as I said like 20 times in the video, but it was Sorry, it's been raining here a lot. So, yeah, I went out and picked up the wine and all that. Just had a wonderful time. Got to meet some really great people Thank you to, oh geez, linda and Eric and, of course, loyal, and just so many people that I saw out there and got to meet. Very, very nice day, very relaxed. And then, um, apparently it wasn't all relaxed yesterday.
Speaker 1:There's something else that happened that I'll get to right now. Hey, before I do that, you know what? Tomorrow's podcast? What is it Podcast? It'll be 68. So it's just, I'm going to digress momentarily, as I always do. Southgate Glass just reminded me of speaking of local business. Southgate Glass, from South Sacramento, is coming in tomorrow night, I mean, come out tomorrow morning, and I've been telling you and I've been seeing on my radio show. By the way, just a shameless plug, I am Pat Walsh, host of the Pat Walsh Show on KMPK Radio, heard nationally and internationally on the I Heart Radio app 7 to 10, monday through Friday.
Speaker 1:But for, as I've been saying, for like 21 years I have had this dream of making my living room, of putting these big glass French doors into my living room, which would then lead out to my new deck. I was about a week and a half away and I was so excited. Oh, I can't wait for another week. Oh, it's going to be great. I got to call this morning. Hi, pat, hey, southgate Glass.
Speaker 1:Why wait, as they say? Why wait? Call Southgate. You know what. They're coming out tomorrow morning. Ah, they had to. They said can we, can we move you up in the schedule? Oh, my God, really. Yeah, we'll come out tomorrow and start. It's going to take them a couple of days. So tomorrow my plan for Pat's peeps number 68 is to do the podcast while they're doing whatever they're doing, like tearing out my wall. I can't believe they're going to tear this wall out. So you're going to put in these big glass French doors. So I'm going to do the podcast. I don't even care, I'm just going to promote them while they're doing it. Whatever, I just got to have fun with it.
Speaker 1:But I'm super excited about that. So thank you very, very, very much, southgate Glass, for coming out tomorrow. You know, like I say so yesterday, when you go to Clarksburg, to Minersley winery or to anywhere out in Clarksburg, out to the Delta, the way I go, anyhow you go out to, you go through Freeport and the little town of Freeport. I love it. That's where I ate yesterday, that's why I finally got my corned beef and cabbage and sat there with a few folks and we just had the best time. And thank you again to all the folks I mentioned before.
Speaker 1:And so this morning I get a message from one of the folks I was having lunch with, or dinner with, I guess, and she sent me this video of, apparently as a friend of her, anna. So when you go out to Freeport, you know you go Fruit Ridge, I mean Freeport Boulevard and Freeport. I just love the little town. So it's lined with these beautiful oak trees, beautiful. It's part of the reason I love it out there so much, these beautiful oak trees.
Speaker 1:Well, this person's friend, her friend's name is Anna. I will leave the person's name out of this, but this person sent me this video of her friend Anna, who happens to be the community outreach coordinator for, I guess, freeport, who tells us that in the middle of the night KB Holmes destroyed 20 of these historic oak trees along Freeport Boulevard in the middle of the night, and so Anna went out and recorded this and KB Holmes apparently this is what I'm reading was able to get the location annex to become part of the Sac City, then got permitted through the city to build some, build some nests out there and remove these 100-year-old trees Absolutely amazing. So I thought I would play for you the video here of Anna going out here and 間 sini.
Speaker 3:Okay. So I'm like, live from Freeport and this construction company, evergreen, came in and cut down the big tree. Sorry, I look like a mess too. I called the lake, called me, I was like in bed. Anyways, cut down this big tree two Sundays ago, starting at 11.30, ended at 2.30. No one really knew the tree was going to be cut down. And now they're cutting down all of the historic oak trees that lined Freeport Boulevard and it is so sad. So I'm down here. The neighbors called me, they knew it was happening and I'm going to use my outreach skills to go try to figure out what the hell is going on. So stay tuned, you'll be with me.
Speaker 1:So Anna is. I mean it's remarkable that to me that they're going to cut down these trees, 100 year old trees. So credit to Anna, who is now walking over to the tree cutting crew here and she's going to be asking them why in the heck they're out there at midnight, why are they doing this at this time of day?
Speaker 3:Hello, how are you? Are you the inspector? I'm the superintendent for the job right here. Okay, who's your inspector? You?
Speaker 2:should be coming right here. Oh, great, awesome. I am Anna.
Speaker 3:Oh, it's okay, I'm Anna, so I'm a community advocate, so I'm a community outreach coordinator here at the. Delta and I've gotten that's good fellow Is that your inspector. He's the one that's running the job right now. Okay, he's your inspector then. No, the inspector should be here right now.
Speaker 3:Okay, so you see just somebody from good fellow.
Speaker 3:Okay, got it. Okay. So I've gotten multiple calls from neighbors because when you guys took this tree out originally, nobody knew that there were trees that were going to be cut down. There were neighborhood meetings regarding this project. Trees were never discussed to be cut down. It happened at 1130 on a Sunday night and by two o'clock you guys were done. And now you guys are doing it again on a Sunday night, st Patrick's Day, and ending your work to whatever.
Speaker 3:None of these neighbors knew that you guys were cutting these trees down. No one in not any of the community meetings that they sat in not one, did we ever discuss cutting those historic people would have chained themselves to it if they had known. So they feel like you're doing something that's illicit. I don't know, I have no idea. I'm an outreach coordinator. This is what I do for a job. I work with the Delta communities fighting the Delta Tunnel Project community organization. This is a historic Delta town that's within the zone of the Delta Protection Commission and all I can see is you guys are cutting down giant historic oaks that run along a historic freeway at the entrance of the Delta right.
Speaker 1:So what's happening? Why are you guys?
Speaker 3:cutting down all the trees.
Speaker 4:The reason we're here at night is because this is the state highway and so our working hours are Sunday till Thursday night, from 9 pm to 5 am. So, coming here on a Sunday night, we're trying to hide it already.
Speaker 3:Well, you haven't posted any signs. You have not distributed any information there's been no e-mails. You haven't collected anyone's emails. I mean, what is there? 22 houses I do outreach where I notify people that are going to be a road closure, and there's 60 houses and it's just me and I do it because that's what you do when you invade a community, right? Very, very peaceful, huh, okay, okay.
Speaker 1:Okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay. There's more to it.
Speaker 3:But, like the ill will that you guys are now creating, they're going to the county tomorrow. You're going to get so many phone calls it's going to be crazy. And now you have made enemies with your neighbors and I know you're not the permanent neighbor and I mean we have, I mean we've gone.
Speaker 4:The reason why these trees have been here as long as they have Is because they're historic. You know, what I'm saying is with this project is we've been waiting on our tree permits. We've gone through the proper channels and we had permits.
Speaker 3:You're saying that Sacramento County permitted you to count down historic hopes. Wow.
Speaker 4:Yeah.
Speaker 3:And they didn't notify any of the neighbors.
Speaker 4:It um.
Speaker 3:Wasn't there a process where people could participate Yep, but nobody knew it was happening? No, it.
Speaker 4:Actually it did because we were supposed to get this permit in, I think, november, december-ish.
Speaker 2:Okay.
Speaker 4:And because we got, because it was so, it was two permits, two tree permits, one for the northern half and then one for the southern half.
Speaker 3:How many trees are you cutting down total?
Speaker 4:Oh, there's a lot.
Speaker 3:Like 30?.
Speaker 4:Probably.
Speaker 3:Yeah, wow, yeah, so, but anyway, You're like literally destroying a historic Delta town. You're like cutting down the tree. I know, not you, but your project, right? I don't mean to be like, but I mean that's you can't understand how incredibly invasive that people that live in?
Speaker 4:No, I understand.
Speaker 3:And it doesn't feel like anyone's like just reached out, literally. A woman called me. She was sobbing Because she sits on her porch and that's her view every day, right, and nobody even told her it was happening.
Speaker 1:Yeah, don't blame her. It's a beautiful view. Yeah, this is disgusting. You know what I mean.
Speaker 3:Like I feel terrible. I'm gonna go give her a hug because she's literally crying and that's terrible and they're all calling me.
Speaker 4:Right.
Speaker 3:I live in Clarksburg. I literally got out of bed to come down here to check it out and see what you guys are doing. Yeah.
Speaker 4:So the tree from the county of Sacramento. Yeah, and it so anyways. So what had happened is there is a process and somebody had gone through and you know, because you have so much time, it's in the newspaper, all that stuff. Somebody raised her hand.
Speaker 3:Was that your only form of notification was just that I don't know, I don't do that. That's bad. I don't do that. I don't do that. That's how you get sneaky stuff in.
Speaker 4:Yeah, I don't.
Speaker 3:That's how you don't get any public participation. Well, we did, yeah, who buys the newspaper I have about a newspaper.
Speaker 4:Yeah, and I don't know that it's specifically the newspaper. I just know the county, the KB, home, kb, home, kb home's filed it. Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 3:Okay, so I'm gonna go down to the county tomorrow and I'm gonna dig it up. And if they only filed something in the newspaper, ooh doggy.
Speaker 4:Yeah, no, it's a whole.
Speaker 3:They didn't have. Did they have any protests whatsoever to this permit?
Speaker 4:Yeah, that's why we didn't get it till just last week.
Speaker 3:Who protested it?
Speaker 4:I don't know. This is tragic.
Speaker 3:This is a really sad day, Like literally, you are standing in the historic town of Freeport. This is like the place where, like California, history started. Oh, I understand it.
Speaker 4:And you guys are just cutting down homes to build like ginormous, disgusting, crowded Blech.
Speaker 3:I mean that's not me. I mean I'm no offense, but that's like what I'm all about, aglan, and the KB home, I mean. I'm no offense, but that's like what I'm all about. Aglan and open space and this watching you guys mow over those beautiful farm fields and I watch them mow year after year after year it made me cry. I stopped going over consumer, I went straight because I felt like you guys were like on desecrated ground.
Speaker 4:I mean yeah, I mean unfortunately that's.
Speaker 3:I mean I know it's how you make the money. I get it, I understand.
Speaker 1:You know a lot of people wanted that to go public. Well, it just went public and it's going to go public again on my show tonight. Thank you, anna, for that great work right there and exposing that. I'm going to find out what is going on. I want to see if I can get someone on my show either my radio show or my podcast to explain this in greater detail. So, as it turns out, I take this convertible drive that I played for you, apparently on the last day, where I could see those gorgeous historic oak trees, so that we can build more apartments or homes or whatever out there. Great job, anna, I guess. Say people wanted that to be exposed, yeah, okay.
Speaker 1:And in the midst of that, another interesting point is she says we says well, you know, they put something in the newspaper. And then Anna says well, gee, when's the last time you read a newspaper? I haven't read a newspaper in how long? That's a valid question. And not to dis newspapers. I actually miss newspapers. I don't appreciate the liberalism of some newspapers. Right, sack B, don't use the term looting because it's racist, and I go on to whatever shoddy. But again, that's a whole different topic. But I do miss the feeling of holding a newspaper because I don't do it. I mean, I do it at work sometimes, but not often. Reading the paper, even hearing the sound of flipping the pages, I do miss all that. Maybe I'll bring that up on my show tonight in terms of does anyone, do you still read the newspaper? But there you go. I'm going to try to help Anna out there and try to get to the bottom of that and expose that a little bit further, because if that stretch of trees is gone, that is a real, that's pitiful, that is an absolute shame. So here on tax day, I'm going to keep this thing to about 30 minutes.
Speaker 1:Today, a quick Monday, pat's peeps number 67. And yet we got to reveal something like that, which I think is very important, quite frankly. But I'm going to finish, as I always do, by playing a record for you that I called from my Rare 45 collection. And today, let's see, I pulled out, I think, this. I don't think this one's ever been pulled out of the sleeve. It is in just like mint condition. It has a date stamped on it. It's on Atlantic Records, light blue, one side says. One side says May 25th 1972. Stereo not for sale. Radio promo. The other side is the same song but it's in mono and it says 1973, atlantic. But the writing on the record says May. Does it say 72? Maybe it says 73. 73 it says Hmm, I think that's what it says Anyhow. So you get the idea. But this thing is in absolute beautiful condition. So in this case it is the same song on both sides, mono and the stereo version and this.
Speaker 1:So let me give you a little back, as I always do, a little background. I do not own the licensing to this, the license to this. I'm just exposing a song that many people maybe not have ever heard of. I'm trying to make any money off it, but people don't need to know about this stuff. 1973 is what it says.
Speaker 1:Anyhow, songs written by Cameroonian saxophonist and songwriter, mono, de Bango or de Banjo, but Bango, I'm sure, released as a single in 72. I thought that said 72. Anyhow, very confusing on this one, but it is the most sampled African song in history, the most sampled. The song was originally recorded as the B side for another song. That I promise you. I'm okay if I could try to pronounce it if you want. Hem de la Can't read the next word. Could they not forget about it. A song celebrating Cameroon national football teams a session into the quarter finals of the Africa cup, a cup of nations football tournament, and they're hosting the games. It was all celebrating that, hosting the games for the first time Anyhow.
Speaker 1:So in 1972, this artist found a copy in a Brooklyn West Indian record store, often played it at his, at his parties, at the loft, and the response was so positive that the few copies of this song in New York City were quickly purchased. The song was subsequently played heavily by Frankie Crocker, who DJ to WBLS, then New York's most popular black radio station, and since the original release was so obscure, at least 23 groups quickly released a cover or cover versions trying to capitalize on the demand for this record. But in 72, american-based Atlantic Records licensed the original mono de bongo version from the French record label. Fiesta released it as a single with a B-side tracking Lily. In this case this is the rare version, like I said, because it's a radio promo, so it's the same song on both sides. Mono versus stereo Doesn't have a Lily on here. This single peaked at number 35 on the US Billboard Hot 100 charts in 1973. The original version of the song Billboard Hot 100 chart was on. At the same time, it also became an international hit, leading to even more cover versions.
Speaker 1:Anyhow, I'm gonna play it for you here. The song is called so Mckosa, so Mckosa, by mono de bongo. Such a cool groove man. I love it. Mono de bongo. Writer, arranger. Vocal saxophone Jorge Arvanitas on the piano, patrice Gallas on the piano, joby Jobs on the drums, manfred Long on the bass, freddie Mars on the percussion, mano Rodinelli on the electric guitar, pierre Zorg on the acoustic. A little so Mckosa. As I get ready to do my taxorosa, I gotta go do taxes. Yeah, check it out, come on now. Thank you for tuning in Pat's Peeps 67. Thank you, thank you, thank you, Thank you, thank you, I appreciate you. I'll be back for Pat's Peeps 68. Until then, we'll see you on the radio.