Speaker 1:

Welcome to the Kings of the Road 2004, but it's 2023. We are glad that you're here to listen to us. We've got great news that we got contacted yesterday by tinyapplescom and they would like to be one of our sponsors. So, Andrew, could you take it away with our sponsor reap.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, even though it's a very tiny sponsorship, we do like to thank tinyapplescom for growing tinyapples that make you feel like a giant while also enjoying fruit. Now, the saying goes from our days of Johnny Apple seed that an apple a day keeps the doctor away. In this case, it's recommended three to four apples a day to keep the doctor away. Yes, but go seek them out tinyapplescom. You'll feel like a giant while being healthy.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and they shipped to you in a styrofoam box that is unmarked, so you don't have to worry about your neighbors seeing your habits. And I'm not sure why it's important with the tinyapples, but it must be a thing, because they wanted to make sure that we made that known.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that was a strange note there.

Speaker 1:

Maybe people are embarrassed because they don't like other people knowing how giant they like to feel at home in the privacy of their own homes.

Speaker 2:

It's an interesting choice, but either way, we thank you for your sponsorship, tinyapples.

Speaker 1:

If you would like to be a sponsor, we're here, you can reach out to us and we will gladly read to your ad online Well, on pod On pod, on pod On pod. Okay, so we are on day six, day six.

Speaker 2:

Nice, it is October 3rd. Okay, pardon me, I ate some trail picks earlier. Oh, that was a bad idea.

Speaker 1:

You know I love Costco trail mix.

Speaker 2:

It was Trader Joe's trail mix actually.

Speaker 1:

Unsalted or salted.

Speaker 2:

Well, we have. It was happy trekking trek mix. That's good Almonds, chocolate, cashews, pistachios.

Speaker 1:

I have that one. That's a solid one, sweetened dried cranberries and cherries, that's a good one. That's a good one. The king of trail mix for me, like far superior, uh-huh, costco yeah.

Speaker 2:

Costco, costco, yeah, because I-.

Speaker 1:

Does it have M&Ms. And you know what? This Tell me, this was a surprise to us, because it's like one of my favorite treats. And we got it and Emily and I were eating it and we're like wait, that's a peanut M&M. And never before were there peanut M&Ms. And she's like and my first thought was someone at the M&M store made a mistake. They have to definitely put peanut M&Ms into this. I'm like whoo, that's a great win for us. And then I go and I looked at the because I have had years of Costco trail mix no peanut M&Ms, right.

Speaker 2:

Just a nibble of M&Ms. I've never heard of that.

Speaker 1:

And all of a sudden, on the bad boom peanut M&Ms like you're just up in your-. I mean you are just going so far above what you need to do. The saltiness like just a great handful of trail mix.

Speaker 2:

Well, I mean, everybody knows that, like, the point of trail mix is like you want to eat just candy, yes, but you want to feel like you're being a little bit more healthy, so you throw a few nuts in there. My question, though-.

Speaker 1:

So tell me, because I have a question too.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, are there also peanuts in the-? Yes, so peanuts covered in chocolate and peanuts and a thin candy shi Now and then peanuts separately.

Speaker 1:

Okay, here's the other thing about my wife, which this is not what I was going to say. Another question but she doesn't like the peanuts or the raisins, so she's a picker. So then she leaves the peanuts and the raisins. So I know when she's been in the bad trail mix, because the top is just coated of peanuts and raisins so I have to shake it to get a good mixture going again. But now our percentages are off right. Yeah, I know. Yeah, you can-.

Speaker 2:

But she lets the peanut M&M.

Speaker 1:

So that's really only that, Batman Right.

Speaker 2:

Right, but oh, I didn't want to just eat peanut M&M's, because that's not good for you. I'm going to have some trail mix, yet I'm just gonna-. Yeah, that-.

Speaker 1:

So this is a long-standing debate in our marriage, which is, I am of the belief that costo trail mix is a and I'll use the word healthy snack Because and Emily's like no, it's not, it's full of raisins and M&M's and like that's what you're in for, I said, but also has cashews and it has peanuts and it has almonds. And I said compared to other snacks which I'm putting in, like chips, candy, I don't know, yeah, like other things, you grab Oreos Right and the trail mix is far superior to all of us.

Speaker 2:

Well, and also it has trail in the name. And so, like you're just, in the state of mind of hiking, which is a healthy thing, right.

Speaker 1:

And you basically have hiked when you're done, you think yeah, I think psychologically it tricks your body.

Speaker 2:

I'm like oh, I'm eating trail mix. I must have exercised.

Speaker 1:

My heart was going to say this for a little while. Thanks you, Thank you, trail mix.

Speaker 2:

I think trail mix is in its own category. Would you call it a healthy snack? Yeah, Thanks. I got you. I appreciate that. Yeah, yeah, second, I think so.

Speaker 1:

Second question when you were a kid, what did you call it? Because I had a name that maybe is a Michigan thing.

Speaker 2:

I wonder. So I called it trail mix, but I was a Boy Scout or a Cub Scout for a little while. Yes, say it, gorp.

Speaker 1:

Gorp. Okay, so that's not a.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I think it stood for something I don't remember Like what it's.

Speaker 1:

There must be raisins and peanuts. What's the G and O? Not orange Good?

Speaker 2:

old raisins and peanuts.

Speaker 1:

What does it stand?

Speaker 2:

for Fan listener. Yeah, so just send us a, tell us. Tell us what Gorp stands for. Okay, day six Did we eat any trail mix on the road?

Speaker 1:

We had two of.

Speaker 2:

We didn't make our own bad in a Ziploc though, and shake it like my mom used to do, or I remember that the Dowling we used to make the checks mix homemade and recently I was with my sister on vacation and she made some of the original recipe checks mix that my mom used to make. And oh man.

Speaker 1:

Your back is seven year old, Andrew. Yeah with Worcestershire sauce, dude, you know what, though it's one of. I haven't made a long time, but now I'm thinking I should Muddy buddies I don't know what you call. Oh yeah, gosh, those are good, those are so good, like peanut butter, chocolate, powdered sugar and checks, oh, well, that's happening soon.

Speaker 2:

Well, hey, speaking of saltiness, yes, I was a bit salty when I wrote this entry for day six. You know what this actually?

Speaker 1:

lines up well, because we haven't talked about something that was a great discovery on the road trip.

Speaker 1:

I believe which is that hungry Andrew is crabby Andrew, factual, and this is still true, and it happens like Andrew, mostly good mood, great guy to be around, fun to be around, and all of a sudden things start slipping. Oh yeah, that hit a little differently. That joke that didn't land well, got a little snap back, got a little sass Sass back Interesting. Oh, andrew, here's some peanut butter rickstratters Snack. On these and I'll see you in 10 minutes.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, those Quaker Chewy granola bars, or that's like a great terrorist negotiation tool when it comes to crabby Andrew, it's like let's de-escalate the situation. Somebody get him a Quaker Chewy granola bar.

Speaker 1:

Oh yes, and all of a sudden I feel like the energy on a video game where, like you watch it, oh, now we're back out of the yellow red zone, back into the green zone. So I'm just wondering if you were potentially hungry.

Speaker 2:

It is possible. It's so. Yeah, this is a new move that we're seeing here for the first time, so here we go.

Speaker 1:

I can't hit me.

Speaker 2:

Good Lord, it's only day six. That's a good start.

Speaker 1:

That's a great start.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, our gray water tank is full again and our RV smells like piss. I swear to you, we have been up for like 37 hours today. We even took a nap, but kids woke us up.

Speaker 1:

Million percent you have not eaten recently.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, there is a snack needed. Yes, yeah, so, uh, ah, this. So yeah, there's nothing gray water. I go on to talk about that In case you are unaware of what gray water is versus black water you will find out. You will find out, or we'll talk about that a little bit. But so then I said hold on, we are going to dump the gray water. It really is gray you know it really is.

Speaker 1:

It is. It has a nice gray. The black is not black though.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I don't know, yeah, it's different. So gray water, we won't get into the details, it's not very exciting. That's basically your sink water, your shower water, yeah, your sink, it's mostly water and soap.

Speaker 1:

It's mostly water and soap and a little bit of food, and it fills up shockingly quick and that's probably the energy you're getting there because we're going way to second, we have only showered like three times and we are still of the belief that we have to find a place, like a dump station, to dump all this gray water every time, and finding dump stations is not always easy. No, and so and this is again we're back in 2004, friends, so it's pre like road trip apps, where I have an app on my phone now that has all of the dump stations around me that I can find those worked in, and it's it. So we had to ask around, talk to people and we're thinking we need to go and dump this somewhere and that's going to be a whole thing. But what do we decide to start doing?

Speaker 2:

Well, we figured, since gray water is just water with maybe a little bit of soap, probably wouldn't be so bad if we accidentally just dumped it anywhere, dropped from place in the parking lot and dumped it. I think that was the first time we were like that looks like a good spot right there.

Speaker 1:

I mean, we also had the thought of maybe we just open it like an inch and then drive down the road and have it like slowly, just just leave. There are these leaky.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's odd, we had no idea. Huh, oh, right. So uh, getting back to it, scott and I just lost it right there. Living in an RV makes you nuts. Yeah, boulder, effing Colorado. You are sassy, I know. I apologize for the saltiness in the language. I we should have had a language warning at the beginning of this one.

Speaker 1:

We didn't realize that you were going to go so deep into your, into your place. I do not condone this. I think the, I think the frustration that is true and something we just need to kind of pause on is you're in a small space, right, like we're in a small space. We are having to be very and this is easier for you than it is for me meticulous about like after you use something, you put it right back. After you get like dressed, you put your old clothes in the right place after you, you know at all, because without doing like one time it's a mess.

Speaker 1:

It is so fast for it to go downhill in a motor. And then you're constantly also like you're carrying your shower with you, you're carrying your bathroom with you. So the gray water issue you're constantly like, okay, where are we going to deal with this? So not that we're not living in a relatively good luxury because we have a bathroom with us, but at the same time, you don't realize how you just in the shower, you take a shower, the water goes away. You don't think about it again. You don't have the bathroom, you don't. You know it's like all very. Your home is very different than living in RV. Yeah, and so there's, there's more work.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and here we are, not even a week into it, and we're going crazy and writing things like living in an RV makes you nuts.

Speaker 1:

It's also like that probably is about when you like get that first wave and then you kind of settle into oh, this is life now.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it's, yeah, there's just some adjusting.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, there's some adjusting.

Speaker 2:

So the rest of this day looks up after this, and this is maybe one of my favorite memories.

Speaker 1:

I'm really angry at each other. Well, at each other. No, I don't think so.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I do remember being very, very angry in Was it still New England? Was it Boston?

Speaker 1:

Oh, when we were just there in the the gray and it was foggy forever.

Speaker 2:

Not that, but the. We're thinking of two different. Yeah, we'll get there, but I'm thinking of two different instances one having to do with toll roads and another having to do with narrow streets.

Speaker 1:

Oh, and I was thought you were going to say also about, like, where we were for the World Series game. You were not happy about that, oh yeah, that's.

Speaker 2:

That might have been the most sticks.

Speaker 1:

But again, like we didn't, we we did. Well, I was surprised because that could have gone poorly. But OK, I'm sorry, go ahead. You have your favorite thing.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, ok, so this day is was a Sunday, so we went to church. You know, since we slept in the parking lot for I don't know, 10 months, three nights, so far, the service was nice but a bit long winded. Wow, aren't I the critic here? Yeah, I love this is bad. After the service we went to do the high school youth group. Really a great group of kids. Oh, good, something positive. Yeah, scott gave his talk and I thought it went very well.

Speaker 1:

Good job, scott. Oh yeah, we had our talk, remember we we planned a talk that would involve our t-shirts.

Speaker 2:

Oh, you'll have to remind me that. Ok, that's not, yeah, ok, so afterwards two of the girls invited us to lunch with their family. We went to a Chinese restaurant called Spice China. Oh hot, I decided to saddle up next to Clark, the funniest seven and a half year old I have ever met. Our waitress comes to take our orders, so Clark rolls out the Shirley Temple with not one, but two cherries using his fingers to make the request clear.

Speaker 2:

For lunch, he decides to order the scallops. Oh, he chooses. Yeah, he chooses brown rice, and his sister, tricia, tells him they normally get fried rice. He says I want to try something new. During lunch we talked about his army and fleets of aircraft carriers that can turn into submarines. He seemed trustworthy, so I told him my base was underground in Death Valley, nice. Yeah, I also have super low flying jets that are not detectable by radar. He was impressed, I was glad.

Speaker 1:

Yes, so we both have had seven and a half year olds now. Yeah, and I will tell you with a 100 percent certainty. Well, I have one who's coming up on seven and a half and he might be my stallop order Mm, but neither of them are ordering scallops and brown rice at the Chinese food restaurant. No, no, in fact, neither of them are both pissed that there's not macaroni and cheese as an option.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I will have. I hate everything.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, exactly. Oh my gosh, who decided Chinese food Right? So you're just going to have some plain white rice and maybe a couple of noodles? Huh, yeah.

Speaker 2:

White rice with some teriyaki sauce, please. Oh great, Thank you you got it.

Speaker 1:

Just that keeps you alive. And then you have the famous parenting line that I do all the time this is dinner.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, don't tell me you want something to eat when we get home.

Speaker 1:

No, we're not making a snack. There's. No, there's no random cooking happening. I am, I'm paying for the food. Now we're eating the food, yes, and I hear it all, and all of my parenting friends will hear them be like no, no, this is dinner Rock, but Clark scallops and brown rice scallops and brown rice, because you want to try something new I like.

Speaker 2:

So after lunch we get up to leave, and Clark was a bit ahead, so he stopped to talk to a table full of people on the way out. No man, this is Isaac, though, too.

Speaker 1:

Mm. Hmm, he's checked up everybody.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and, and he didn't know these people by the way.

Speaker 2:

No, he just they look like a good group to talk to Because our kids drive into theaudience. And, by the way, when he would talk to me he would grab my arm and play with my bracelet. It was so funny, so like he was so engaging this kid, like he had such a vivid imagination and everything was just so real. But he would like grab my arm when he would talk to me and I had, I must add, a little bracelet or something that he was playing with. So that was funny. So, end of paragraph. I remember it. New thought push up time be right back. Oh, we're still doing push ups. We got up to 25 tonight, 30 tomorrow, yeah, so we're keeping the. Despite our early, yeah, our early story about push ups.

Speaker 1:

Did that happen later, when we realized what it looks like, or did that?

Speaker 2:

I think we realized it early on, when we talked about it a couple episodes ago, but we just kept going cause you know, we gotta be in shape, gotta be fit.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, after scallops and brown rice too.

Speaker 2:

Mm-hmm, mm-hmm. So after lunch, we napped and we napped. Well, I don't know where the heck this group of people came from, but they woke us up. It was okay, though. We headed into Denver to go to a church started by the members of Five Iron Frenzy, which was a great Christian ska band back in the day. That church was called Scum of the Earth. I'll tell you more in the morning. It's almost 2 am and we have to be up at 7 30. I don't know why we're here, sassy, mm-hmm, I do continue this one.

Speaker 1:

So let's at least hear about Scum of the Earth.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, shall we, yeah, let's keep going so Scum of the Earth. Great idea, but not really what I expected in terms of music and message.

Speaker 1:

I think we were both like it's gonna be awesome.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, five Iron Frenzy's gonna play. It's gonna be a concert, have we? It's a cool message.

Speaker 1:

So I think we've mentioned it, but there has been a lot of ska music in our growing up, and Five Iron Frenzy was probably, I would say, one of our favorites as well as one of the more talented like ska bands. Reese Roper was a great, great singer. They just like still like looking back and listening to it. Sometimes. Solid music, Solid music. In fact, I just had to tell us and not that long ago with the, I didn't realize what the dandelion song was saying, how like, how cool the lyrics were. And I'm like, oh, what is it? Allison, these are really cool lyrics about. Like there's weeds, but God sees like a flower. And she's like, yeah, that's why I like the song. I'm like, oh, I just was boop boop, boop, boop, boop. Yeah, I thought it sounded neat, I thought I liked the way the sound she said no, those words are really cool. I'm like, yeah, 20 years later, oh yeah, oh yeah.

Speaker 1:

Lyrics have meaning and it's not just me singing in the shower, la, la, la, la, la la, but they were very good and I think the church were like, yeah, scaband.

Speaker 2:

Not scaband, no, no, yeah, the goal of this church is to reach the scum of the earth. So very, very cool sort of idea.

Speaker 1:

It's like relation six, I think, is that what it is? Paul says like, basically, that he called me even though I am the stomach of the earth, kind of thing, and so it's a verse out of the Bible and he's talking about how he should not be called, but yet God does, and I think that that is a great message as well as so, the vibe of the whole church was basically people who you wouldn't expect in church. I remember they had like a poker night and yeah, you call yourself stomach of the earth, you're going to get a unique crowd.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I think a note that I had was it was very artistic group of people, kind of outcast types. Yeah, a lot of people like you said you wouldn't expect to see in a church and I think that was the exact point is that church has sort of this like oh, you put on your church clothes and you go and you sit and you stand and you sing and you do the things and you go through the motions and you put on yeah.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and then you go back to your messy life and this is just like you just bring your messy life here and you show up as you were. So I think there's a lot more of that message being sort of conveyed from the pulpit, if you will, though in practicality I don't know how much that happens, but anyhow it's a cool experience.

Speaker 1:

Because, yeah, I mean, it's just, it's a unique community, but also, like, I think the problem is that communities being a pastor at church, there's just things we have to do, right, we have to pay the mortgage, we have to pay the bills, we have to do this, we have to get that done, and so it's just practically like tough to keep. Those structure eventually needs to be made, and it's really hard to keep that up, which is a gift for those that can. But then you usually slip into some of those places that you were talking about. We look like this, we talk like this and we dress like this. So I think it's a wonderful thing, though, because the truth is is come as you are, come like you are right where you are and Jesus loves you right in that place. So that's amazing.

Speaker 1:

At the same time, I'm thinking about that place and this is now so find a church where you can be who you are, think is what we're saying, and you should do that and feel safe at church. At the same time, side tangent, is this like the pre-hipster you know what I mean Talking, thinking about that group of people there. The word hipster wasn't a term in 2004, but they birthed the hipster movement out of that room. You know what I mean. Yeah, or is that not how you remember it?

Speaker 2:

All right, no, it was a lot crustier than hipsters Like that's what I mean.

Speaker 1:

It's like the first wave, where they haven't yet they haven't been refined, they haven't gone through the the like oh, I need the tighter pants, I need this type of style of hat with a button on it. You know they haven't yet been refined, but I feel like that's like the origin story.

Speaker 2:

Or if I was. Okay, if I'm missing it and I maybe. Yeah, I'd like to go on record to say I think you're wrong. Okay, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Okay, so they still exist.

Speaker 2:

I just looked them up. Oh good, they do exist, and right on their front page. So, if you're interested, scumoftheearthnet and their statement here says scumoftheearthchurch is an outpost on the perimeter of God's kingdom, finding redemption in Christ Jesus. Oh, that's great. That's cool. I think that sums it up there how they say an outpost on the perimeter of God's kingdom. That's kind of a cool way to say that.

Speaker 1:

That's cool to say it. I wonder if five friends you still involved? Does it mention that at all? Like, is Rhysroper still in, or anything?

Speaker 2:

I don't know. Okay, now to have to be a deep dive.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, okay, listener, you have a task. All right, let's go. Yeah, sure, well, two tasks Now. What was the first one? Gorp, gorp.

Speaker 2:

Second task Gorp. Stand for Rhysroper. Get yourself some Gorp and go deep. Dive on listening to some five iron friends in music and see if they're still involved in scumoftheearthchurch.

Speaker 1:

Thank you for being a podcast with homework. That is what, that's right, that's what ever.

Speaker 2:

we did extensive market research and we found that what people want out of their podcast is tasks in homework to have to go do they?

Speaker 1:

do they? I agree We've maybe hit on new category.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, or maybe, maybe this is what they mean by. The audience likes to feel as though they're part of the conversation. So this is us inviting you in. You're in, you're in? Go Go find this stuff.

Speaker 1:

Listener, let us know You're in Post on our yeah, our comment page on our. We talked about we're going to start an Instagram account, so go Go comment there.

Speaker 2:

By the time you hear this, that Instagram account has already existed for some time.

Speaker 1:

Oh, what? What? You're the future.

Speaker 2:

How does?

Speaker 1:

this work. Oh oh, Smoke Hot dog.

Speaker 2:

Oh, I really. I would really like to encourage you to continue using hot dog in your daily comfort.

Speaker 1:

I do, oh dear Funny jokes that I is not that funny, but when I call people on these coasts sometimes I like saying how's the future?

Speaker 2:

Oh man, I know there's somebody I talked to in Australia pretty regularly, and Was that your first one? I talked to them in the afternoon, but it's like tomorrow morning for them. I'm like we made it through the day, huh Good news Hot dog it's, we made it, it's yeah. It is enjoyable for me each time, every time, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

And he's like boy, that Well yeah. No, I can't get it. It's Tuesday. Yeah, I saw a meme that I sent out Maybe I don't think it's sent it to you that it says happy working tomorrow in.

Speaker 2:

Blint or what? For context, listener, yesterday was yesterday was the fourth of July. Interesting fact about the fourth of July what's that In the? In our American English language, yeah, we don't say the fourth of July, or we don't say the 11th of November, no, not. Typically we say we say July 4th, yes, or June 3rd, right. And the reason that we say 4th of July is because the English say it that way, and so it's just an extra little punch in the gut to be like, yeah, we're celebrating the 4th of July. You know that date when we beat you. I apologize if our listener happens to be in a British person in the UK. That's not good, um, but actually I don't. Because America, because we won.

Speaker 1:

Because that's the one day that we get to say that the facts. I didn't know that. That's a good knowledge. Yeah, knowledge drop yeah.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I don't know if it's true, but it's a cool story. I love it. Did you just make it up? Oh, also, I would like to um, this is a sponsor that Scott and I have had independently for many, many years. Oh yeah, new sponsor. We just got noticed. They're a new sponsor for the podcast. Thank you for subscribing. Yeah, sort of truecom. Yes, no, do you remember sort of truecom, scott? Sort of truecom is your source for creating reports and citing sources that sound true enough to be believed. Right, but you know, maybe there's some truth. Maybe not all the way, but good enough for that research paper.

Speaker 1:

Sort of truecom. Sort of truecom. It's not AI, but it's like it.

Speaker 2:

You know what we basically invented chat, gpt, because that is, I mean, like there's a couple steps that we didn't quite get, but it's essentially the same thing they didn't fully think it out or have any programming knowledge. Yeah, Right, Uh, tell me something about Independence Day in in the United States. Well, did you know that?

Speaker 1:

And we, we could go all day, all day. Give us another topic listener and we'll see what it spits out at. Sort of truecom, mm, hmm, yeah that was fun. I liked the um. I liked the Stomper of the Earth church. I'm glad they're still going. Maybe we should maybe we should reach out to them and see if they want to be a co. Have an interview section.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, that would be interesting.

Speaker 1:

We can also find kind of find Clark. Oh gosh, so Clark. So that's seven. So 2004 he's seven and a half at 19 years. Oh, 26 and a half Interesting. What is Clark doing? Full on employed, probably, yeah, so Clark's doing something. Clark's not living in his parents' basement.

Speaker 2:

Oh we got to find Clark. Clark Also, what a great name for a seven and a half year old.

Speaker 1:

It's a solid name for a seven and a half year old, a great 45 year old name, but going through life as an eight year old, as Clark. I guess the bid up you have is Clark Kent, clark Griswold, clark Griswold, yeah yeah, famous Clark, yeah.

Speaker 2:

So this concludes Denver, right Denver, boulder, colorado in general. This was our first major stop where we spent three days, and join us next time as we hit the road again and see what the road has in store for us and for you, our faithful and trusty listener.

Speaker 1:

Thank you, yeah, I can't wait to venture on to the next state, so see you. Oh, goodbye, we're going to call off. Still Stay trucking.

Speaker 2:

Sliding off from oh, keep trucking.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, keep on trucking, that's good. And then another someone in Suez, the grateful dead.

Speaker 2:

Keep on motoring.

Speaker 1:

Wait, motoring, that was like what was that?

Speaker 2:

What band was that Motoring? Is that Poison? No, no, no, no, no.

Speaker 1:

This is. It's something in the 80s.

Speaker 2:

What are you saying? Oh, I'm going to make somebody upset. It's like air supply or sticks, or it's not sticks.

Speaker 1:

I don't know.

Speaker 2:

Sticks. Okay, bye, another piece of homework. Yep, who sang motoring, motoring. Bye, Bye and good luck playing 193. Now all by какo.