This That And The Other
This That And The Other
72. The Ridiculous Met Gala, Facts About Netflix, When Streaming Prices Climb While Value Drops, And More
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We argue our way through the rising cost of Netflix, the weird logic of paid subscriptions with ads, and how streaming has turned into constant cancel-and-rotate budgeting. Then we jump to the Met Gala, the money and status behind it, and the one moment that made us laugh out loud: Snoop Dogg rolling in with a flamethrower.
• debating whether Netflix is worth the price anymore
• talking through Netflix tiers, ad-supported plans, and premium pricing
• pulling quick facts on Netflix’s history, growth, and revenue
• venting about YouTube ads and the push toward paid upgrades
• reacting to the Hulk Hogan documentary and the long-term toll on wrestlers
• breaking down what the Met Gala is and why it feels so elite
• sharing Met Gala ticket prices, fundraising numbers, and curated guest approval
• reliving Snoop Dogg’s flamethrower entrance as the highlight
check us out next week because you'll hear 73.
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-Thank you so much for listening
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Cold Open And Bold Takes
SPEAKER_02On this episode.
SPEAKER_01The Met Gala Snoop Dogg brings a flamethrower.
SPEAKER_02How about that?
SPEAKER_01How about that?
SPEAKER_02And Netflix, I'm done with you.
SPEAKER_01See ya.
SPEAKER_02Welcome back, episode 72.
SPEAKER_01I just like out my mouthful. You didn't even let me finish my bite. Go ahead.
SPEAKER_02I didn't know you were gonna talk. I was gonna keep talking.
SPEAKER_01I know, but I was chewing.
SPEAKER_02I started watching a documentary on Hulk Hogan. Did you watch it? Did you finish it? No. Oh it's three or four parts. I think I'm on the third.
SPEAKER_01What's it on?
SPEAKER_02Netflix.
SPEAKER_01Well, I was gonna ask you today, let's cancel Netflix.
SPEAKER_02Nothing for it.
SPEAKER_01It went up.
SPEAKER_02Did it really?
SPEAKER_01I think it's like$29.
SPEAKER_02Yeah. Let it go.
SPEAKER_01We'll finish Hulk. And then we'll well, if we just paid for it, so we'll have it for a month. I think that's what it went.
SPEAKER_02Can't you go ahead and cancel it though and you'll still get it?
SPEAKER_01Yeah, that's what I'm saying. That's what I'm saying. Yeah.
SPEAKER_02Well, I'm gonna say she won't forget.
SPEAKER_01Netflix used to be like$9.99 a month. Or four maybe it was$12.99 when we started having it.
SPEAKER_02There's hidden costs, of course, with anything. I don't know how a business is run when it comes to a whether it's a streaming service or something like Netflix. But if you're charging now, all you've got to do is download their app, right?
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_02Alright, so there's no hardware. We're not having to pipe in some kind of cable. I mean, it's not like Spectrum or one of these big companies like that. So they don't have an expense when it comes to that. So if they're charging$10 a month and they're gaining people and they're gaining more and more, why would you need to increase?
SPEAKER_01But they keep going up, and I I'm like, I was really I was really gonna see how much we really used it.
SPEAKER_02We don't.
SPEAKER_01And I don't think we do anymore because we can't find nothing on there. Only time I use Netflix is when nothing else is on and I re-watch Gilmore Girls and Um now when my shows do come back out, like we might get it for that month or something, but then be done with it after it, you know.
Netflix Origins From DVDs To Streaming
SPEAKER_02Now going back to the costs, I understand that they've got all these costs when they they're promoting certain, say like comedy shows and stuff, stuff that they own the rights to that they produce. Of course there's money involved in all that. I'm just saying, so when they do all that, I understand they've got a lot of overhead, but daggum. I was quick and I looked this up on my phone. You see how fast that was? It was super fast. Get some hot facts about Netflix. Netflix is one of the world's leading entertainment companies, primarily known for its subscription-based streaming service, offering TV shows, movies, games, and live programming, funding and early history. Netflix was founded on August 29th, 1997. So they're old. Was it almost?
SPEAKER_01Wow, I didn't realize that.
SPEAKER_0229, 29 years old. Uh, in Scotts Valley, California by Reed Hastings and Mark Randolph. Hastings, a computer scientist and mathematician, and Randolph with a background in marketing, launched it as a DVD rental service by mail to avoid late fees, inspired in part by Hastings' frustration with Blockbuster. The website launched on uh well in 1998, initially with a pay-per-rental model, about 925 titles available. The first DVD shipped was Beetlejuice. In 1999, Netflix introduced a monthly subscription model, unlimited rentals with no late fees or due dates, which became a key innovation. Looks to me like that might be a chancy thing.
SPEAKER_01Oh, yeah. How much was it? Did it say?
SPEAKER_02Uh let's see. It went public. I don't it doesn't say, I don't think. Maybe later on in it. It went public on May 29, 2002, at$15 per share. Should have got in on it. Netflix delivered its billionth DVD in 2007. So that's huge. Headquartered in uh California. January 16, 2007, Netflix launched its streaming service, Watch Now, initially as an add-on to DVD rentals. It began internationally expansion in 2010, starting with Canada, and went fully global in 2016, launching in over 130 countries in one day, reaching nearly 190 countries total. 2013 released its first major original series, House of Cards. Netflix has since expanded into games, live events, and sports, uh advertising supported tiers. It is a member of the Motion Picture Association, blah, blah, blah. Alright, subscribers. So as of the end of 2025, Netflix reported over 325 million paid memberships. You could almost say every person in the US, which I think now we're about 340 million population, but just say almost every person in the US has it. Up significantly from about 300, let's say 301.6 million earlier in the reporting cycle and 260 plus million in 2023. This serves as an audience approaching 1 billion people globally when introducing viewers per household. The company stopped routine quarterly subscriber reporting after 2024, early 2025, focusing instead on revenue, engagement, and major milestones. Largest markets include the United States, tens of millions of subscription subscribers, subscribers. Better out. Yep. Followed by earth, or excuse me, followed by other regions like Europe, Middle East, Africa, Latin America, Asia, Pacific. Growth has been driven by international markets pricing adjustments that you just talked about. And the ad tier. Netflix aims for continued healthy membership growth with long-term targets like the 430 million paid memberships by 2030. Minus one here shortly, there, people. All right, I'll just go over some of their uh how much they make and then we'll I found the price right here. Okay.
Tiers, Ads, And The Real Cost
SPEAKER_01So it started out as in 1999, their first unlimited monthly subscription plan for$15.95 a month. Their streaming only service launched in 2010, 2011 was$7.99 a month. Okay.
SPEAKER_02I thought I thought I said it, but I it was the shares of stock that was good thing to do.
SPEAKER_01Yeah. So now I didn't know this. There's three different tiers. I've never signed up for a different tier. I've never gone in there and done anything different. We just keep getting charged. So you have standard. This is Jody's favorite right here. Standard with ads. Jody loves the ads.
SPEAKER_02So we don't have standard, right? No. Okay.
SPEAKER_01Is$8.99.
SPEAKER_02I didn't know that.
unknownI didn't I didn't either.
SPEAKER_02That's how they get you then. Yeah. So they skip over that part.
SPEAKER_01No ads is$19.99.
SPEAKER_02That's a big jump.
SPEAKER_01Premium$4K plus more screens is$26.99 a month. That must be what we have. I've never gone in there and changed anything about that. I remember. Maybe I did, but I I don't think so. Because I don't think we would pay that much. But yeah. So from$8.99 standard with ads. So does that mean the movies or the shows you would watch would have ads in them?
SPEAKER_02I don't know. Ask the question again. I was reading.
SPEAKER_01It says standard with ads.
SPEAKER_02Yes.
SPEAKER_01So the shows and the movies, they're plugging ads in there.
SPEAKER_02Yeah, it's it's just like it's like Hulu and all the other well it's just like when you pay for Hulu or you pay for the and you got that two minute or three minute.
SPEAKER_01I'm sitting there not I'm sitting there watching a movie with no ads, and then I swap my subscription and it's gonna be with ads now. Yeah. It's weird that they could just throw them throw them in there. Yeah.
SPEAKER_02Well it double, what'd you say, nine bucks?$8.99?
SPEAKER_01It was nine to nineteen to twenty-six.
SPEAKER_02So you go from ads for nine.
SPEAKER_01It says premium plans have more than tripled over the years.
SPEAKER_02Yeah.
SPEAKER_01That's crazy.
SPEAKER_02Well it what bothers me is it's just like you when you pay for it, just let's say Hulu, I keep bringing that up, but you're paying for them, you're paying for a subscription, and then you're still getting ads. That's what bothers me. If I'm paying for a subscription, I feel like I'm paying to not get the ads. My money is supposed to be in re you know, replacing the ads. Right.
SPEAKER_01But it's not.
SPEAKER_02So in 2025, their annual revenue it was was approximately forty five point two billion dollars, which was up sixteen to seventeen percent. And twenty twenty four it was thirty-nine billion. So they're making a little bit. So if you've showed a six that's a double digit increase, that's big. I mean, that's good. That's what companies don't do that. I mean, you have a two or three percent increase, maybe, you know, maybe a half a percent, one percent, but sixteen to seventeen percent, whoo.
SPEAKER_01That's crazy.
SPEAKER_02Yeah.
SPEAKER_01I mean so so yeah. We don't watch Netflix because we feel like there's nothing on there anymore.
SPEAKER_02So they have a f approximately 14,000 full-time employees. Mostly mostly in the US and Canada.
SPEAKER_00What do you need employees for?
SPEAKER_02I really don't know. What are they doing? No, are they now I bet they're talking about maybe the uh when they do this the production side of it, like when they do the comedy specials and stuff that's put on put on by them. But I mean that's of course that's not all 14,000.
SPEAKER_01Did we watch a fight on Netflix not long ago? We do.
YouTube Ads And Subscription Burnout
SPEAKER_02Or something was it a fight or a Yeah, it was uh Paul and uh Tyson. That was Netflix.
SPEAKER_01Was that Netflix?
SPEAKER_02Yeah, they were getting more into the live events, live supporting events, stuff like that.
SPEAKER_01So I mean, I don't know.
SPEAKER_02I I feel like I don't get rid of all that except YouTube. Get rid of all that, then I'll pay for a subscription that I can get rid of these stinking ads. These ads kill me.
SPEAKER_01He loves YouTube, but he can't start.
SPEAKER_02I love YouTube, but the thing is sometimes it's like when you start a video, especially like if uh, you know, there's a certain He don't mean YouTube TV.
SPEAKER_01He watches YouTube Shorts. He just watches not shorts, not shorts. Just videos. Yeah, people putting videos.
SPEAKER_02But I watch live, like uh there's one don't mention his name. Uh one guy that have a two or three hour, you know, live, which I don't watch a whole lot. Watched him regularly, you know, there for a little while. We'll catch him on. But anyway, I might watch 30 minutes of him when he's live. Alright, you click on there and ten seconds into it, bam, it starts with its ad. I'm like, you didn't even give me a chance. You know, you I've got ten seconds of watching this guy spit out two sentences and then bam, you're already throwing a you know an ad in there. Now the five second ad I'm I'm good with. But when it says 55 seconds, that's when I struggle.
SPEAKER_0193 seconds, I think's one of them, too.
SPEAKER_0293?
SPEAKER_01Mm-hmm. One I had not that long was.
SPEAKER_02That's too long. I don't think I've ever had that.
SPEAKER_01But you could hit next and it would go to the next one, it would cut you down.
SPEAKER_02I looked at the I think it's uh when you pay for a subscription to YouTube and and not TV, I think you can get up to three family members. I think it's 19 or 29. I can't remember now. Maybe I'm wrong. Maybe I'm misremembering. It wasn't too long I looked at it.
SPEAKER_01The ads don't bother me. Well I I mean I I can handle it for the most part, but it did it did seem there for a while like we were getting more and more and more ads. It was crazy.
SPEAKER_02Yeah, I think I I've gotten used, yeah. It seemed like the more I was watching YouTube, the more ads they started forcing out. It's like, come on, we're gonna make you buy a subscription. What bothers me is I got used to Netflix, and then when we go to something else like Hulu, and then 15 minutes in, and then bam, there's a commercial. It's like, oh, I forgot we're not watching Netflix, and then that bothers me.
SPEAKER_01We only have Hulu till September because I got a special prize for$2.99. I've got it on my um calendar to cancel it.
SPEAKER_02I'd get rid of all of that. I don't watch any of it. I just need you to.
SPEAKER_00That's all he watches.
SPEAKER_02And I do and I flip through and I flip through until I find a six-minute video and then I watch three minutes of it and then go off of it.
SPEAKER_01Drives me crazy.
SPEAKER_02Drives me crazy too.
SPEAKER_01Well, we gotta finish the Hulk thing before we get rid of Netflix.
Hulk Hogan Documentary And The Physical Toll
SPEAKER_02Yeah. I'd already watched one documentary about him. I thought we had, but this was uh I think like a last interview they did with him. A sit down, like this was a planned documentary about him. Yeah. You know, like four months before he passed away. So it's pretty but he is really beat up. You know, I knew he was in bad shape, but I didn't realize he's walked with a cane and all that. But if you look at all those old wrestlers, my goodness.
SPEAKER_01They gotta be her.
What The Met Gala Actually Is
SPEAKER_02But you know, they uh you know, you know, to keep their you know, muscles, their physique, they you know, they shot up with steroids and did all kinds of stuff, so you do that year after year after year. It takes a toll. And then all the surgeries and yeah. It's crazy. All right, what about the Met Gala?
SPEAKER_01I didn't even know what it is. I mean, I always heard about it, but I've never watched it.
SPEAKER_02I've never been into it, and then I can remember like the day after, you know, people talking about it on the radio. Talking about these weird, or you might get a glimpse or a picture of like a weird outfit somebody's wearing. I'm like, I don't have a clue what it's like.
SPEAKER_01And it's always the first Monday in May. Did you know that?
SPEAKER_02I did. That's what I've got right here.
SPEAKER_01On the first Monday in May. Yeah. And that's that's about all I know. I still don't really know what it is. It's a fundraiser for something.
SPEAKER_02Yeah, the Met Gala, and and we're just gonna talk about this, just some little highlights, some facts about it, because it was very just watching them being interviewed last night and how they were everybody was in line, and it was kind of like next, the next strange person with the strange outfit on, get your picture taken, and then they do their little posing and their little spinning around.
SPEAKER_01Some of them I liked and really thought it was good.
SPEAKER_02And then they've got their assistant or whatever that's fluffing up their dress that's hanging on the ground and they've gotta have the ruffles a certain way and all that kind of stuff.
SPEAKER_01And it was just But you don't even like fashion, so you're not I like fashion and all that. But not like some of this.
SPEAKER_02No, I just think it's very strange when you watch the the elite, the people with money, they think they're better than everybody else, the way they act, and just the way they talk and like I'm better than you.
SPEAKER_01You think? Yeah.
SPEAKER_02You throw it everybody's peasants. Just like the people that fluff up their dress and they just peasant. Move my dress, peasant. You don't know that say that. Yeah, get out of my way, peasant. Yeah. Because I'm somebody.
SPEAKER_01I am too.
SPEAKER_02That's why they're taking my picture. Alright, the Met Galler. Galler.
SPEAKER_01Galler? What?
SPEAKER_02The Met Gala happens every year on the first Monday in May. That's what Amanda said. That's my first sentence. At the Met Metropolitan, I can't talk, Museum of Art in New York City. New York City. I thought I'd get more.
SPEAKER_01I was holding it in because I know you were gonna say that.
SPEAKER_02So it's a fundraiser for the museum's costume institute, which focuses on fashion as an art form. I feel like I need to talk different.
SPEAKER_01You're good. Just go. Spit it out.
SPEAKER_02And this event is serious money. This year alone, the gala reported raising about$42 million with individual tickets costing up to$100,000 each.
SPEAKER_01That's ridiculous.
SPEAKER_02$100,000 each.
SPEAKER_01Do they auction off these wardrobes or anything?
SPEAKER_02Oh, the wardrobes? I thought you were gonna say the seats.
SPEAKER_01No, I don't know the seats.
SPEAKER_02No. So every Met Gala has a theme, and this year's was Costume Art. With the dress code Fashion Is Art. Which that so if if I'm gonna be in this thing and you send me the letter in the mail and you tell me, you know, what the theme is this year and it says costume art with the dress code of fashion is art. I don't know where to start. Because that doesn't tell me anything.
SPEAKER_01Well right, so that's why you go to the um artists to like Mark Jacobs and Don't know Gucci and Don't know Valentino Don't know him or her and all them. That's why you go to them and they they make your What about old Tommy?
SPEAKER_02Old Tommy Hook figure. Is he still a thing?
SPEAKER_01Did we see him last night?
SPEAKER_02You said we I thought I did. I just said it could be a good one.
SPEAKER_01I think that was him.
SPEAKER_02But is he still a I think so? Do people still wear Tommy?
SPEAKER_01I don't know.
SPEAKER_02I mean it was early 2000s. Yeah.
SPEAKER_01I couldn't afford it.
SPEAKER_02Uh basically the idea is that clothing isn't just something to you wear, it's something you create, like a painting or sculpture. The exhibit ties to the Galaxpler's the exhibit tied to the Gala Explores how fashion interacts with the human body and art history. Let's see, we don't want to talk about who I was there. We know Beyonce was there. She hadn't been there like ten years. She had Venus Williams, Nicole Kidman.
SPEAKER_01Some of the people I didn't even recognize, like I didn't know that was Madonna that came out, and she had she had a ship on her head and people holding out things of her dress on like every angle of it or something like that.
SPEAKER_02She you showed me a picture of a person behind another person that was a fake person?
SPEAKER_01A person wearing a silhouette person like it was like kind of like the blue man crew. Yeah.
SPEAKER_02But they were wearing a tan color.
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_02But it wasn't a person. It was like a stitched on person on their back.
SPEAKER_01Yes. Yeah.
SPEAKER_02Kind of like a ventriloquist would be. Oh, yeah. I mean, it was it was crazy.
SPEAKER_01It was crazy.
SPEAKER_02So it says this year lean heavily into experimental, almost surreal looks. Why do they why do you say surreal? I do not like surreal.
SPEAKER_01That word.
SPEAKER_02Surreal. Just say like almost shocking. Say shocking. So surreal. And it says uh heavily into experimental. I think every year you could say that, right?
SPEAKER_00Probably.
SPEAKER_02Because this is crazy. These are not like normal dresses. This is crazy. Uh let's see. I don't see nothing.
SPEAKER_01Well, you want to know who my favorite was?
SPEAKER_02Oh, you know what? I I redid this and I read the one I didn't want to read. How about that? I wanted to tell you uh that it was started in 1948 and the tickets back then was just fifty dollars. That's what I wanted to tell you at the very beginning. But and I was also gonna tell you that um and I can't think of her name now, but so if if you get invited or if you buy if you buy a table.
SPEAKER_01Megan Kelly.
Ticket Prices, Fundraising, And Gatekeeping
SPEAKER_02If you buy a table, and so the people that you're gonna have as your guest at that table, it has to be approved.
SPEAKER_01You heard this on Megan Kelly, right?
SPEAKER_02Oh, I read it a minute ago too on the top.
SPEAKER_01I thought that's whose name you were trying to think of.
SPEAKER_02No. Um in 2022 they raised 17.4 million. In 2023, 22 million, in 24, 26 million. Last year, 31 million, and then last night or whenever it was this week, it was roughly 42 million.
SPEAKER_01And we can't raise this money to find a cure for cancer.
SPEAKER_02Breaking its own record. Well, no, look, we've got to fund this costume art. Okay.
SPEAKER_01Okay.
SPEAKER_02So don't question it. These people's got money to throw away, and we're gonna throw it away at costumes. And there ain't nothing wrong with that. Whatever. Whatever.
SPEAKER_01Winston thinks the printer's gonna get him.
SPEAKER_02Alright, so who actually decides who gets in? Here it is. I do. I've got it right here.
SPEAKER_01Alright, who is it?
SPEAKER_02Let me find it. Alright, so even if a brand buys a table, every single guest still has to be approved by Anna Wintour, the longtime editor of Vogue, and the person who has run the Met Gala since the mid 90s. So the guest list is completely curated. It's not just about money, it's about cultural relevance, influence, and timing. So that's why getting invited is considered a major status symbol. Ooh. So there. That's all I gotta say about the Matt Gallup.
SPEAKER_00I mean from I gotta tell you who my favorite was.
SPEAKER_02Yeah, you go ahead. Now you you had some pictures. On YouTube. Yeah.
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_02That's what I just said. When I was on YouTube last night.
SPEAKER_01Live on YouTube. It was live on YouTube.
SPEAKER_02Sure was.
SPEAKER_01But guess what? Still had ads.
SPEAKER_02Yeah, but you know, if you went right off and went back in, there's no ad it went to it. It went to five seconds one time. Did it? But the other two times it went to five.
SPEAKER_01So my favorite.
SPEAKER_02Anyway, what I was saying was so that's how we found it. And they were interviewing people as they were coming down the thing, and we're just And he kept saying, Are you done with this?
SPEAKER_01And I'm like, Well, I like to watch it.
SPEAKER_02So I stayed on it.
SPEAKER_01And he'd sit there another minute.
SPEAKER_00Are you done with this?
SPEAKER_02We got what, 10 minutes in?
SPEAKER_00You keep asking me. I I like to watch it. I like to see the.
SPEAKER_02But my point being was I don't know at what point you check out and you're on your phone and you're not watching.
SPEAKER_01So I wasn't checking out on this. I like to watch it.
SPEAKER_02That's why I kept asking.
Snoop Dogg’s Flamethrower Moment
SPEAKER_01So we didn't see this person that was my fave. I just happened to see him a video. And it was Snoop Dog.
SPEAKER_02Snoop Dogg is cool.
SPEAKER_01He came rolling in, he had a blue suit on. He went up the stairs. And then he brought out.
SPEAKER_02Or you want me to say it?
SPEAKER_01I forgot what it's called. Oh my goodness.
SPEAKER_02A joint.
SPEAKER_01No.
SPEAKER_02Because I'm sure that was in one of his hands. I guarantee.
SPEAKER_01A blowtorch.
SPEAKER_02Yeah.
SPEAKER_01It was a blowtorch gun or something.
SPEAKER_02I can't they there's no way that they knew he had that because it shot such a flame straight up. Flamethrower.
SPEAKER_01It was a flamethrower.
SPEAKER_02It was a uh as a hazard is what it was.
SPEAKER_01I liked it.
SPEAKER_02Yeah.
SPEAKER_01I thought it was cool.
SPEAKER_02Yeah. But yeah, he uh that blue jacket you showed me, that was something. His whole suit was he's gonna dress however he wants to. He's not gonna dress like some crazy whatever.
SPEAKER_01I mean it was fine.
SPEAKER_02Yeah, that's his nor normal look. Yeah last night. That's for him, no. Or whenever it was. I don't care.
SPEAKER_01Yeah. Alright, you got supper in there waiting on you. You ain't even eat yet.
SPEAKER_02Have I not?
SPEAKER_01No.
SPEAKER_02So if you got a if you lived in California and you got an invite, you went to the mailbox. Or well I guess it's gonna be like your assistant went to the mailbox and then brought you the mail.
SPEAKER_01Or do they hand deliver 'em?
SPEAKER_02A limo pulls up at your mansion in Malibu. I'd go and they come up there and I'd go.
SPEAKER_01I think it's fun.
SPEAKER_02It looked kind of weird though. Everybody was down there like on the sidewalk standing in line. And I'm thinking, you got all these all these highfalutin people, and they're standing in line waiting to get on the red carpet to have their picture taken. I was thinking to myself, how many of those people are complaining like big time because they're having to wait? Because they're not used to having to wait because there's somebody. You know, you know what I'm saying?
SPEAKER_01Yeah, I know what you're saying, Vern. Alright.
Canceling Netflix And Signing Off
SPEAKER_02I don't want no part of it. Well just like I don't want no part of Netflix anymore. Netflix is gone after we watch Hulk Hogan.
SPEAKER_01After we watch Hulk. We'll go finish Hulk.
SPEAKER_02Find something else. I don't know. I won't be able to watch any more British shows, which I don't watch that anymore, but we hadn't watched something on Netflix good in a long time. No, because we got tired of searching and searching and searching and searching. And I got to the point where once you watch something, shouldn't it show up on there that you've already watched it?
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_02Even if it was a month ago. How come it doesn't show that on mine?
SPEAKER_01I thought mine did.
SPEAKER_02Yeah.
SPEAKER_01Alright. Did you tell us what episode we were on to start with?
SPEAKER_02I did. I said it was 72. And I was right.
SPEAKER_01I didn't hear that.
SPEAKER_02Yeah, because the last one was 71. So this one made 72. Oh, okay. Pretty simple.
SPEAKER_01Well, I don't keep up with you.
SPEAKER_02So yeah, so yeah, check us out next week because you'll hear 73.
SPEAKER_01You keep on, you might like it.
SPEAKER_02Yeah. All right. Thanks for listening. I can't say thanks for watching because you can't watch us.
SPEAKER_01Peace.
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