Pat's Peeps Podcast

Ep. 260 Today's Peep Could be A Deja Vu, Did I Play This Record Before? How Climate Shapes Music Listening Habits, Car Dealership Experiences and the "Sales Badger" and "Sail On" on this Cloudy Spring Day

Pat Walsh

When rain taps against your window, do you reach for Pink Floyd? When summer heat blazes, does Sublime suddenly sound perfect? This fascinating episode explores how our musical preferences adapt to weather conditions, offering a wonderfully personal glimpse into the psychological connection between climate and soundtrack.

Pat celebrates a record-breaking week for the podcast while announcing an exciting upcoming birthday interview with Grand Funk Railroad founder Mark Farner. The conversation meanders through his brother's frustrating 300-mile journey to a car dealership only to discover Gorilla Glue holding a fender together, launching into hilarious "badger" car salesman commercial parodies that perfectly capture the universal dread of automotive shopping.

The episode's true heart emerges when Pat examines his weather-dependent music selections, sharing how acoustic Jethro Tull feels right on rainy days while Sublime hits differently during summer heat. This leads to a fascinating exploration of déjà vu - that strange sensation we've experienced something before - complete with scientific explanations and personal anecdotes about memory triggers.

Vinyl collectors will appreciate Pat's spotlight on a rare Beach Boys 45 of "Sail On Sailor" featuring the famous original pressing error (missing comma!), demonstrating how deep musical appreciation extends beyond casual listening into historical significance.

Whether you're a weather watcher, music lover, or psychology enthusiast, this episode offers something uniquely thought-provoking about how our environment shapes our listening experience. Have you noticed your own musical weather patterns? Share your thoughts with our growing Pats Peeps community!

Speaker 1:

Hey there, welcome to the Pats Peeps podcast. We are at number 260. That's right, my friends, today is a Monday, may, the 12th 2025. Days away from a birthday. I may have a special guest. I don't usually work on my birthday, but I may have, you know, because your birthday is so I don't know, it's just your day. I've always looked at it. I'll do what I just want to do, what I want to do on my birthday. God knows how many more I'll have Hopefully many, but I think I'm going to have a very special guest joining me on my podcast on my birthday. More to come on that news.

Speaker 1:

First things first, though, as it is a Monday, like I said, may 12th, today I look out my studio windows into the beautiful foothills of Northern California, gold country, my friends, and what happened to the sun? Where did it go? I was loving the sunshine. Today, though, spring continues. It is now gray, with a slight hint of the sun it's trying to peek through. Actually, I think it'll be good for some of the plants, some of the I don't know, just for the gardens and things people have been, you know, and every weed eating is a whole thing up here, which is just a nightmare. I can't stand the weeding but uh, but the whole neighborhood's like that, but anyhow it's a gray day with some sun peeking through. How about that? Uh, very happy here that today to report, to say to you thank you, because I think last week was probably for whatever reason perhaps it was Barry Manilow joining us.

Speaker 1:

Whatever the reason we had our one of our biggest weeks ever here on the podcast. It was my biggest week on the podcast for our community here, the Pats Peeps community. You know, the only week that was actually bigger and got more people listening was in March when my son, timothy, passed away, and I don't it's hard for me to mark that as any kind of weird milestone or success, considering people were just wanting to know, maybe, what happened to my son, because people are very caring, so you know. So that was a special circumstance, but without and I guess you might say on the flip side of that, on the good side of things, you know, having guests like Barry Manilow on is a good circumstance, which it certainly is. But I would say that almost all the I mean all of the podcasts, not almost all all of them of the podcast we got a lot of listens last week.

Speaker 1:

So, again, I guess what I'm trying to say as I ramble on is thank you. I mean, I tell you it means so much, you know, and people telling their friends, you know, I people saying they're going out of town, they're listening, and I could name names, but I don't want to leave anyone off the list, just like I don't want to leave anyone off the list. Say thank you, by the way, to those who showed up. By the way, I'm pat walsh. I host the pat walsh showing kpk in sacramento kpk radio 93.1 fm 15 30 am streaming live everywhere on all your platforms. But I, uh, we have this community of people, just not only the podcast, but on the show. And thanks to everyone who showed up for this birthday party. I'm not really going to call it a birthday party. It really wasn't a birthday party, but some people were kind enough to bring gifts a few days early for my birthday, which is Friday. But it's just like this community of people that have gotten to know each other. I probably mentioned it before, just through the show and through the podcast. So I wouldn't mention all of you and or all of them, but I don't want to leave anyone off the list. And, by the way, if you want to join us, feel free get in touch with us. I'd love to hear from you to join our and we did karaoke during our gathering. We did did karaoke. Everyone sang so well the other night. It was quite amazing, I have to say, but just kind of talking to everyone was really cool, you know, getting to know everyone out there. So thank you to everyone. I'll say at least Darlene with a Y, because she's the one that corrals everyone up at the Darlene with the Y Ranch up in the hills, and thank you to her that this keeps going, keeps growing Will.

Speaker 1:

Looks like I'm going to have a very special guest, another rocker on my show, this time a rocker on the Pat's Peeps podcast on my birthday. As I said, I don't usually work on my birthday, but it looks like Mark Farner will be joining us. Grand Funk founder, Grand Funk, grand Funk Railroad, is going to be joining me on the podcast, which I'm really, really looking forward to. That conversation We'll go in depth with him. We'll have more than eight minutes. Ah, hold on, I dropped my record. I don't want to ever drop these records, my little 45s. They're very rare, don't want to abuse those. So, yeah, I'm looking forward to having Mark Farner. If those of you are rockers and you're into Grand Funk, grand Funk Railroad, then you'll enjoy this conversation.

Speaker 1:

I think Yesterday was kind of interesting. My brother called me, my brother Steve. God bless my brother, steve man, all your brothers and sisters too. If you have none, god bless you, your family, whatever, all of you. Steve calls me up, he's ah Pat, I drove down.

Speaker 1:

Do you know anyone who's in the car dealer business? I said no, I don't, and then I will not repeat what I said after that. But I'm not a big fan of going to the car dealer. I'm just letting you know I don't like going. I don't like the experience of going and buying a car. It's interesting to think about getting that new car and the new car smell. It's great to have that new car. Don't get me wrong. It's the experience of dealing with a dealership. You know what I mean dealing with and I mean no offense. If you're a car salesperson, I know you're just doing your job, but I just don't enjoy the experience because there's so many people involved. You know the whole thing. It's not you, never, it's well known. It's not just me, but Steve calls and he's like ah man. I's not just me, but Steve calls and he's like ah man.

Speaker 1:

I said I don't know anyone, steve, and I don't want to get into any stories with him about any of this from my end, anyhow. But I was there to listen to my brother's experience, to which he began to tell me he went to Hayward. They're looking for a car for his son, william, and so they drive to Hayward. Now, my brother Steve, he isn't all about driving to Hayward for nothing, but in this case it must have. He must have really needed a car or saw one online, as he said. That looked really good and too good to believe, or whatever the case may be. So he drives down there. Ah yeah, to drive a round trip of 300 miles.

Speaker 1:

That doesn't make me happy. He can be very grouchy. I love you, steve, but in that regard where he's got to drive like that for something like that, he can be a little grouchy. Now, if we were going to a concert, that'd be one thing, but this is to go deal with the car sales experience and he's like man. I'm telling you, pat, this I I can't listen in.

Speaker 1:

In order for me to even relay this story, relate the story to you. I need to clean it up so much I can't drop all the F-bombs that were used. Pat, I'm telling you now, man, beep, beep, beep, this little weasel beep Trying to get me to run around, making me sit there like I'm some chump. This weasel ass bleep. Poor Mary. Mary's my sister-in-law. She's got to listen to me. I'm grumpy, turning into a bear. Now we're going to drive 115 miles, 20 miles back. She's got to deal with me. I feel so bad. I was in such a crappy mood. This is my brother. I'm listening to him. I'm telling you, pat, these weasels, you know, here's. I love the uh. Like this is like where I can't remember where this is, tennessee or wisconsin, I don't remember. Where is this? Uh, anyhow, doesn't really matter. You know, I'm sure you'll hear it. But here's the car. Like this is the badger, the car salesman badger.

Speaker 3:

Well, selling the car is just like fishing, wilbur you bait the hook, you throw it out and then you reel them in real slow. You ask them questions about their family, what they do, you act like you're interested and once you get their trust, kabowie, you just sold a car.

Speaker 4:

Tired of being badgered? Then come to Johnson Kia of Durham. Durham. Great deals, great service, no badgers.

Speaker 1:

It's the badger salesman. Here's the sexist Badger. This is great.

Speaker 3:

Can I help you, ma'am?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I'm interested in this SUV.

Speaker 3:

As soon as your husband gets here, I'll be more than happy to show you all the features.

Speaker 4:

Actually it's for me.

Speaker 3:

Well then, no need looking under the hood. Here's where the cup holders are, and there's a rear view mirror. That's where you can put on your makeup. And this is the steering wheel here. It's what you use to drive with. Hey, honey, come on back here.

Speaker 4:

Tired of being badgered, come to Annie Johnson Automotive Dealership. Great deals, great service, no badger.

Speaker 1:

I love that one. Let's see, I got to do it. Sales badger.

Speaker 3:

Excuse me, don't talk to me. I'm on my popcorn break. Do you know what time my car is going to be ready? Do you see this suit I'm wearing? I don't talk to me. I'm on my popcorn break. Do you know what time my car is going to be ready? You see this suit I'm wearing? I don't fix cars.

Speaker 4:

I sell cars well, they've been here over three hours and do I look like I care? I don't tired of being badgered. Come to any Johnson Automotive dealer, oh God.

Speaker 1:

Oh crud, that makes me laugh. I was listening to the music earlier. My music changes. My musical tastes change depending on the weather and I listen to a lot of music. Okay, I love that badger. When it's raining like this, like it's raining today, off and on, anytime it rains and it's been nice, does your mood change? Does your musical mood change? If you're a musical person, mine changes drastically, like today. Here's what I was going, what I was. So this would be like uh, this is my rainy day, moody music. I would have like jethro tull acoustic.

Speaker 2:

There's a haze on the skyline To wish me on my way, just like that.

Speaker 1:

It's almost like I mean, it's just Now. But if it's summertime, well, let's see. What else would it be. Oh, this might be like rainy day music for me. I don't own the rights to this rainy day music. Pink Floyd Shine On my rainy day music Into the gloom. Does your musical mood change depending on the weather? So if that would be like my wintertime, my summer music, like now, all of a sudden, let's say, it's 100 degrees out, it'd be something like this. It would change to maybe I'm just thinking of examples Summertime music Pats Peeps, 260.

Speaker 1:

When you grab ahold of me, you tell me that I'll never be set free. You know, like sublime, but I'm a parasite. Creep and crawl, I step into the night. Two pints of booze. Yeah, tell me, are you a parasite? Yeah, that'd be it. You know, the other song, another one that would be on my list, would be the one. You know, maybe, that I chose my rare record spin today. Yeah, sublime, sublime, badger. Let's see how about this guy. Here's the Chick Magnet. Let's see how about this guy. Here's the chick magnet.

Speaker 3:

Test drive. Be careful now. It's a real powerful engine. Now we got here 240, I don't know what they call it, but it's good, it's powerful. Hey, you know what? This is a real chick magnet. We can make us up some chicks in this car. You like chicks?

Speaker 5:

Actually, I've been happily married for 42 years.

Speaker 4:

Oh, I'm sorry to hear that. Tired of being badgered, come to Johnson Chrysler.

Speaker 1:

He's been married for 42 years. I'm sorry to hear that.

Speaker 5:

Actually, I've been happily married for 42 years.

Speaker 3:

Oh, I'm sorry to hear that. Actually I've been happily married for 42 years.

Speaker 1:

I'm sorry to hear that as he's eating his uh, all right, one more grady the badger, here we go great.

Speaker 3:

Are we ready for this test drive?

Speaker 1:

yeah, all right, here we go this one hello.

Speaker 3:

Hello. This is Grady over here at Ranklin and Shanks. Oh, it's you. Hey, you bought a car from us last week. We just want to know how your experience was Well it was terrible. Your people were rude. When I came to pick up the car, I had to wait for hours and I stood there in the rain. And then the car finally came. Well, it was dirty and it smelled like a sock.

Speaker 4:

We aim to please. Tired of being badgered? Then come to Johnson Hyundai of Cary.

Speaker 1:

Oh man, I can't stop with these.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, you're going to look good in that car, so we ready to sign this deal.

Speaker 1:

Well, we really love the car. Yeah, we love it, it's just, 340 is as high as we can go a month you're kidding me.

Speaker 3:

Right all the paperwork I had to do. I look at your credit report. You got a lot of money, so then let's do the deal tired of being badgered.

Speaker 4:

Come to any johnson automotive dealership.

Speaker 1:

There you go I gotta hand that to you, johnson. Make it fun of yourself Self-deprecating. I love that. Whoever came up with that very, very good idea? Wow, you know, when I was looking at this record that I pulled from my Rare 45 collection today, I was sitting here thinking, because you know, know, when I'm doing these podcasts, I'm trying not to play the same record twice, and I knew that at some point, if I really didn't keep track which, honestly, I'm not being honest with you on that I should be, but I'm not I for some reason, I think well, my mind will be able to remember if I put it in or not, and it might be which leads me to wonder if I've played this one before or not, or featured on my Pat's Peeps podcast, or whether or not it's deja vu.

Speaker 1:

Anyone have deja vu? You ever get that it could be deja vu? Anyone have deja vu? You ever get that it could be deja vu? Hmm, I need to think about that. Yeah, people, you know my brother going back to the car salesman thing he does not like. See, now I'm having a deja vu. Right now I can't escape it. Once you think you're having it, you can't escape it, or I can't, hmm.

Speaker 1:

So my brother did not buy the car, said there was Gorilla Glue under the fender holding it together, said pat, like I'm so dumb I'm not gonna even notice that there's gorilla glue holding the fender together and they won't knock any money, any money off of the. You know they won't discount the car, he says. I pointed out to the guys like, oh man, I would have never looked under there and even seen that. He says really, and I guess apparently they had all these safety checks or inspections or you know, the car was inspected numerous times that's according to my brother, which you would imagine. They would at least inspect the car, I guess, before they sell it. What do I know? Anyhow, he's like, yeah, it's all held together with gorilla glue. And then, you know, gorilla glue breaks down over time and he starts explaining all of this stuff.

Speaker 1:

But a lot of people they don't like going into the dealing with a car salesman. You know why? Because there is this perception of dishonesty. I'm not suggesting that car salesmen are dishonest, I'm just saying there is this perception. You know, like high pressure tactics, they're not being honest as you go through the process of, you know, the sales process, they're not being transparent. A lot of people think they're being pressured to make a quick decision May not be getting the best deal. You know how it is, especially if they really don't know what they're doing in terms of negotiating with a car.

Speaker 1:

I don't, I mean, I feel very self-assured, I don't feel like I can. I'm going to let anyone rip me off. But guess what? I know for a fact when I've been ripped off and I can, I know, I look back on it now and I go, oh, they ripped me this, this person did that, I. I remember them and again, when that happens, I mean the reputation takes a hit. You know of that occupation. I'm not trying to again Occupation. I'm not trying to again, I'm not trying to. You know, put anyone down who's working in that occupation.

Speaker 1:

There are very honest car salesmen too that work very hard and very long hours. To those who are honest and don't rip people off, hey, here's to you. But there is that perceived dishonesty. Some are known for using manipulative tactics. Making false promises, trying to get the customer to buy it can make things very unpleasant. The process. They might be aggressive. They may try to employ these strategies that are more aggressive, making you feel like you better buy it immediately. You're going to miss out on this. This is the deal can make you as a customer feel uncomfortable and awkward. You know the whole thing lack of transparency, negotiation challenges, um, some of the customer service lacks, to say the least. That's not the only business it would, but you know, some customers report being treated poorly by the car salesman lack of respect, lack of attention to pay to their, their needs. Also, a lot of customers are not really that comfortable negotiating prices on their own. Maybe feel like they're being taken advantage of by the salesman. They were trained to maximize the profits. Plus there's, you know, buying a car. That's a pretty significant thing, right, it's a big financial decision. So then you hesitate Did you make a mistake or am I being taken advantage of?

Speaker 1:

In your mind it starts ringing up like a cash register. Then you take that pen in your hand and you're on the verge and they have you in that office and they've got that lengthy piece of paper and next thing you know you're signing like 20 different things. You just sign, sign, sign. And they know no one's going to go and read all the fine print on this. Right, you're not going to go through it. Maybe some people do. But they'll just tell you right, they guide you through it. Yeah, this one here. This means that you'll be in blah, blah, blah and you know for so many miles or whatever. You know the coverage, blah, blah, just sign there. Okay, signing Because you want to get out of there, because they wear you down.

Speaker 1:

I remember one time in 1999, I kid you, not August of 99, might have been the end of July 99, I was in the place for 12 hours and that's where much of the disdain for the process, you know, really happened for me, 12 hours, it was unnecessary. Process, you know, really happened for me, 12 hours, it was unnecessary. This vehicle was on the showroom floor, this four-wheel drive chevy four by. So I bought it took 12 hours and there's other things. But anyhow, I'm not here to bag on car sales people. I'm just telling you where that got me thinking yesterday. I I might bring that up on my show tonight. Is there probably people that would share all kinds of stories about that?

Speaker 1:

Again, I don't know if I'm still having the deja vu or not, but I kind of felt like I was having a deja vu, you know where you uh, it's like that phenomenon where you feel like you've already done this, like I'm still kind of feeling that right now it doesn't happen. Very often they say it is an illusion of memory. I mean, you have a. I looked up deja vu. Here's what it says. Despite a strong sense of recollection, the time, place and context of the previous experience are uncertain or impossible.

Speaker 1:

Approximately two-thirds of surveyed populations report experiencing deja vu at least one time in their lives and the phenomenon manifests occasionally as a symptom of seizure auras. Yeah, some researchers have associated chronic or frequent pathological deja vu with neurological or psychiatric illness. Well, I don't have them very often, rarely Experiencing. They say deja vu has been correlated with higher socioeconomic status Probably not the case with me either. Better educational attainment who knows, excuse me and lower ages. That's obvious. Obviously the case for me. With the lower age thing.

Speaker 1:

People who travel often oh, people who travel often, frequently watch films or frequently remember their dreams are also more likely to report experiencing deja vu than others. So I do travel. I don't watch a lot of films, but I do remember dreams. Anyone, do you remember your dreams? Hmm, that's another one that might be kind of interesting. I'm thinking of all kinds of stuff for my radio show tonight. I can ask about deja vu. Car salesman, yeah yeah, car salesman, uh uh yeah, because maybe people have uh opinions and thoughts on that. Uh, the first, by the way, the term was deja vu for issues by emile borak in 1876, who was a french philosopher whose book which I will not try to pronounce the Future of Psychic Sciences in English, thank you included the sensation of deja vu as presented by Emil as a reminiscence of memories.

Speaker 1:

Experiments have led scientists to suspect that deja vu is a memory phenomenon. We encounter a situation that is similar to an actual memory, but we can't fully recall that memory. This evidence that's interesting, found by by meal, helps the uh again, boric, I hope don't know if I'm saying that we're correct, I mean no disrespect, but anyhow helps the public understand what deja vu can entail on the average brain. It was also stated, uh, by this gentleman that our brain recognizes the similarities between our current experiences and one in the past, left with a feeling of familiarity that we cannot quite place.

Speaker 1:

Throughout the history, they say there have been many theories about what may cause deja vu. Does this happen to you? Does everyone have deja vu? I don't want to get into like this. There's medical disorders, pharmacology, there's a split perception explanation May happen if a person experiences a current sensory experience twice successfully. The first input experience is brief, degraded, distracted. Immediately following that, the second perception might be familiar because the person naturally related to the first.

Speaker 1:

Anyhow, memory-based explanation, research associating deja vu experiences with good memory functions that's great because I feel like I have a good memory, particularly long-term memory, they say. And I feel like I have a very good long-term memory. They say and I feel like I have a very good long-term memory, implicit memory, recognition memory, which enables people to realize the event or activity they are experiencing has happened before it and okay. So right there. That's key to where I'm at right now. So again, just to recap that, at least for my clarity, research has associated deja vu experiences with good memory functions. Again, I feel like I have an excellent memory, particularly long-term, which I do have.

Speaker 1:

That Implicit memory, recognition memory enables people to realize the event or activity they are experiencing has happened before. When people experience deja vu, they may have their recognition memory triggered by certain situations which they have never encountered, hmm, by which they have never encountered. Hmm. That's fascinating Because, again, it feels like I've played this record before, but maybe I'm having a deja vu Because there's part of it that I'm going to say.

Speaker 1:

That's where it hit me. Like did I say that before, or did I just know that, or did I say that on my Pat's peeps? Yeah, there's a lot to go into this. I don't want to get into all the depths of it, but yeah, so there's. I just you know the similarity between the deja vu eliciting stimulus and an existing or non-existing but different memory trace, they say, may lead to the sensation that an event or experience currently being experienced has already been experienced in the past. Thus, encountering something that evokes the implicit associations of an experience does this make any sense? Because there's going to be a pop quiz that evokes the implicit associations of an experience or sensation that cannot be remembered may lead to deja vu.

Speaker 1:

In an effort to reproduce the sensation experimentally, bannister and Zagwill which, by the way, one of my favorite morning shows, I'm Bannister and I'm Zagwill, remember them, late 80s Used hypnosis to give participants post-hypnotic amnesia for material they'd already seen. When this was later re-encountered, the restricted activation caused thereafter by the post-hypnotic amnesia resulted in three of the ten participants reporting what the authors termed paramnesis, paramnesius, paramnesius, paramnesius. There you go, anyhow enough. It's deja vu, for God's sakes, patrick. With that in mind I still don't know if it was a deja vu or not this record that I pulled, which is on a light yellow record label, which is on let's see here, what is that? Brother Records Boy. It's so tiny Brother Records, pale yellow. So tiny brother records, yellow, a pale yellow. Nothing written on this sleeve, very different sleeve, okay. So, oh, this song reminds me of summertime as, because it's mislabeled, the song is mislabeled on the record and original pressings. So this is an original pressing, so the title is mislabeled on the original pressings and I have that original pressing where it is mislabeled. That's what I'm looking at.

Speaker 1:

Song by an American rock band from the 1973 album Holland, primarily written by Van Dyke Parks You'll know exactly who I'm talking about and Brian Wilson with Ray Kennedy, tandon Ulmer, jack Riley. The lead singer of the song is Blondie Chaplin, making this one of the band's few well-known songs not sung by Mike Love. Of course I'm talking about the Beach Boys, not sung by Mike Love, brian Wilson or Carl Wilson. This song was released as a single in 1973. This song was released as a single in 1973, backed with Only you that's the B-side peaked at number 79 on the Billboard Singles Chart. 1975 reissue of the song, also backed by Only With you, charted higher at number 49. So this is the original version. So that would have went to number 79.

Speaker 1:

Brian wilson himself um, okay, either I played this or I truly. Again, I'm going back to the deja vu. I I may have played this. Brian Wilson himself later stated it's the only song that we did. He says that I absolutely do not like at all. I never liked this song. However, he personally selected the song as one of the 19 track selections for the compilation classics selected by Brian Wilson, saying I love how this song rocks. So it just depends on who you're listening to. I guess the song is perhaps the only perennial Beach Boys favorite to still live on on classic albums, album, classic rock albums, rock stations I'm trying to say Classic rock stations. Album rock stations, I'm trying to say Classic rock stations, album rock stations, fm radio formats of the present day. So even though originally he was like yeah, you know I don't like this song we did, it's still out there on the rock stations. I like it. It's the Beach Boys. Sail On Sailor, sail On comma Sailor. I sail in ocean. Mine has no comma.

Speaker 5:

I'm sailing ocean through restful waters and deep commotion. I rest the waters by Neptune's waters, sail through the sorrows Of life's marauders, unrepenting Of the empty. Sail on sail on, sail on. Caught like a sewer rat alone would I sail, bought like a crust of bread. But oh, do I wail. Seldom stumble, never crumble. Try to tumble, my eyes rumble, feel the stinging I've been given, never ending, unrelenting Heartbreak. Searing, always fearing, never clearing, persevering Sail on sail, on, sail on.

Speaker 1:

I gotta say this is actually one of my favorite Beach Boys songs ever.

Speaker 5:

The gale swept seaways.

Speaker 1:

I can see why that one has remained on the FM rock stations. Don't own the song, not trying to claim I do, I'm just trying to play it. You know I always have to say that Flipping it over, here's the B side, just letting people know what's on the B, what would be on the B side of Sail on Sailor. But again, it's Sail on Sailor. That's the original pressing Sail on Sailor. There's no comma saying sail on sailor. There's no comma. But if you, when they redid it, they did it correctly Sail on comma sailor. So I have the sail on without the comma, all right. So the other side is, like I said, this is called Only With you. I'm not sure if I know this one, 1973. Let's see, here we go Beach Boys Only With.

Speaker 2:

You Love so many things that I feel I've only felt with you, only with you. And then there are the things that we do, that I've only done with you, only with you. Before, love had always had their ups and downs, until the love I finally found, I know one thing for sure, there you go, Beach Boys only with you.

Speaker 1:

Flip side of Sail On Sailor. Thank you. Thank you so much for listening. Hey, would you check out patspeepscom? Please Check out our businesses. We're going to have a little gathering soon. Can't wait to tell you about that. It's coming up. More information on the way. Have a beautiful Monday. We'll see you on the radio All.

Speaker 2:

I want to do Is spend my life with you. All I want to do Is spend my life with you. Yes, it's true, I want to spend my life with you.

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