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hey real quick
Brother and sister, originally from Alabama who are now both Nashvillians, break down anything and everything. Trying our best to find the humor wherever we can. Hosted by Amy Goodgame and Marty Booth.
hey real quick
Spring Has Sprung?
Welcome to hey Real Quick.
Speaker 2:Yes.
Speaker 1:Where spring has sprung, I think.
Speaker 2:A little bit, and then it goes back down and goes. No, it's hail and wind.
Speaker 1:Yeah, we bought a bunch of potted flowers a couple weeks ago and they've been in the dining room a lot. We didn't know there was going to be like tornadoes.
Speaker 2:Every other day for two weeks. Snow, and all that when we bought them right, it was nice that day yeah, it's, it's the teas you know yeah, it's been.
Speaker 1:The tea's been going on a while it's been going on a while.
Speaker 2:Well, I'm in a t-shirt and a sweatshirt, like a proper sweatshirt. Today it's 59 for the high. What is it? April 10th, 11th, some business something gracious I mean a lot of people say wait till may 1st for certain things like planting flowers in the ground and stuff, and a lot of people say at least till april 15th.
Speaker 1:That's what I hear these days I should should have waited until April 15th.
Speaker 2:I did.
Speaker 1:This is how old I am. I did pine straw.
Speaker 2:I saw, I do pine straw, I did pine straw instead of mulch.
Speaker 1:I don't know why it took me 47 years to figure out that mulch is heavy and I don't like that anymore. So I was like why don't I just do pine straw?
Speaker 2:I'm telling you, and it kind of breaks down over the winter and the rest of the year, and I just put a fresh thing around it.
Speaker 1:Yeah, it's way easier yeah, I think it's cheaper oh, I think it is cheaper too, and you don't get that when you buy mulch yes you get those, that one, or you get those bags where it's just like, oh, this is pre-mold. There's like already mold in it.
Speaker 2:Yeah right, oh that was on sale. Yeah.
Speaker 1:Which yeah? I don't enjoy that.
Speaker 2:No, no. Where do you get your mulch? I mean your pine straw.
Speaker 1:Pine straw. I bought it at Lowe's this year. And I guess I got the. I didn't get the normal bale.
Speaker 2:Okay.
Speaker 1:I got it's.
Speaker 2:Is it?
Speaker 1:roll no, it's in plastic. It's called clean straw? I don't know, but whatever.
Speaker 2:What are they cleaning?
Speaker 1:it. It's kind of like it's supposed to be compressed.
Speaker 2:Okay.
Speaker 1:So you get like it's like buying two bales.
Speaker 2:Oh, okay.
Speaker 1:So it takes less room in the car you get no pine straw in your car. Yeah, so you can just throw it in there.
Speaker 2:And.
Speaker 1:I looked at the price. It's about the same price as buying two bales.
Speaker 2:Maybe like a dollar more. Okay, it's easier.
Speaker 1:I'm just trying to do it easy.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I get mine at mulch. Stop on nulls that's probably cheaper but but it's just, they've it's. You used to come in bales like the rectangle, but now it comes in rolls. You just kind of almost roll it out and then you kind of you have to kind of toss it a little bit like spaghetti before you make a pasta salad or you know what I'm saying. Like when your spaghetti sticks together.
Speaker 2:You want it like oh, ours is like it looks like three feet of pine straw yeah, it's got to settle yeah, it's gonna take a minute to settle a couple of hail storms yeah right, we'll probably have a couple more in the next one. Yeah, last night did y'all have hail?
Speaker 1:uh, no, we had some storms pop up, we did too the wind.
Speaker 2:My car is covered in those little like whirly burly things. You know that are like little, they look like wings on a big bug.
Speaker 1:Yeah, like a propeller.
Speaker 2:Yes, get those. And then the squiggly things that have the little green seeds on them. I wish I could draw y'all a picture. My car is covered, looks like it just like went through a coating of that stuff, but yeah. Man it doesn't even make sense to wash a car anymore, not right now.
Speaker 1:I don't wash my car.
Speaker 2:You have a garage.
Speaker 1:When I buy a car, I just base my color on what doesn't show pollen. That's why you always go beige or silver. You know what I'm saying Something you don't have to clean all the time. I'm going to say this pollen, or that's why you always go beige or silver.
Speaker 2:Or you know I'm saying something you don't have to clean all the time I'm gonna say this and this is true and I saw it on my phone. But comparing, like the 80s to now, with pollen with car colors. Nobody gets a color oh no, you might see a red, but people like they showed a parking lot. You saw all kind of colors.
Speaker 1:I've seen that.
Speaker 2:And now it's like gray and silver and gray and silver and black and white and gray and silver. Oh, it's a navy blue and I'm like, oh my gosh, they're right, we have a silver car and a gray car.
Speaker 1:Yeah.
Speaker 2:Then one son has a navy car. Our daughter has a navy car.
Speaker 1:Our daughter has a gray car, our son-in-law has a silver car. Yeah, I think we stopped colors. Yeah, the most popular color is white, which, if you ever which doesn't seem right, but when you're in a parking lot or car line yeah god forbid um.
Speaker 2:There's a lot of white cars yes, there are a lot of white cars and a lot of charcoal or, yeah, I work in charcoal gray when you see like a green or something yeah, you're like. Look at them people stepping out with the color. I anyway it. I don't know. I'm trying to be like maybe in my next car I'll pick a color yeah, I feel like.
Speaker 1:I feel like you get tired of the color, though unless it's like an older car like if it's a cool car like a yeah just a unique car.
Speaker 2:Yeah, get the baby blue or something but you can find your car that's true, yeah, you know I'm saying I almost gotten somebody's rav4 the other day at target. I'm like there's a rav4 right by mine yeah and I was like, okay, there's my and you know I have my bags and stuff oh, I've grabbed the wrong door handle before and I tried to get in. Ooh, that's scary. Yeah, Because I think all the RAV4s are the color gray I have From 2019 to 2023. Anyway, I digress. But the weather it needs to be heating up before Easter, because Easter's late anyway, so there's no excuse.
Speaker 1:Weather April 20th I feel like it'll be nice by then.
Speaker 2:I hope so. So you mulch, we mulch in Pine Straw. Randy's always mulching, but we do that in the spring and then usually we get something. Try to get something for the porch. That's usually my.
Speaker 1:Oh, that's what we do hanging baskets. I don't know.
Speaker 2:Well, I'm talking about front porch. I'm talking about one pot. Can I keep one pot of flowers alive?
Speaker 1:We'll see. I'm just renting that pot.
Speaker 2:Yeah, what's your standard purchase? Are you like impatience? I have no patience with flowers, marigolds, what are we talking? Petunias?
Speaker 1:I don't know flowers. I could run and grab the little cards they stick in them.
Speaker 2:Oh yeah, I know we got some begonias which are going to be gone in about two more weeks. Yeah.
Speaker 1:And then I don't know, we got one that's like three or four things. Mm-hmm, oh, yeah, it kind of looks like if you just stuff the Amazon rainforest in one little pot.
Speaker 2:Yeah, no, it's a mixed planter. It's a thing people do. They put a filler, a thriller and a spiller.
Speaker 1:Okay, that makes sense yeah.
Speaker 2:And it dies in stages which is nice, right, you get to watch it little by little.
Speaker 1:The thriller goes first, I think, or the story.
Speaker 2:Sorry.
Speaker 1:So it's basically just stuff our dogs can eat on the back porch.
Speaker 2:Yeah, that's good Little greens, mixed greens.
Speaker 1:But yeah, I guess we do potted plants. I ain't getting in the ground and doing all that stuff.
Speaker 2:I know.
Speaker 1:Which I was always confused growing up was perennials or annuals. Because it's especially as a kid it's confusing. Yeah, because annual you're like. Yeah, I want it to come back every year.
Speaker 2:Yeah, but it means you got to annually plan it every year.
Speaker 1:Yeah, it's like a yearbook. You got to buy one every year. Yeah, did y'all get your annual? We used to call it that remember, instead of yearbook. Oh yeah, I still call it annual.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I don't know it feels wrong, but yeah, anyway, sorry, go ahead yeah, which I don't know, I threw mine away but I talked about that's lighter.
Speaker 1:My house is lighter with no yearbooks.
Speaker 2:That's heavy. If somebody finds it. Ooh, that's way heavy.
Speaker 1:Man yeah, sorry, I'm getting off the topic, I know. But speaking of being old, which I feel 20 years older than what I am Like, when. I go do stuff. I feel 60, 67 is is about right. That's what I feel like. That's where I'm at, like when I gravitate towards somebody in a store yeah they're never younger than me no. I'm when I spark up a conversation or something happens organically yeah, they're about 70 yeah and I'm like I can hang with you right.
Speaker 2:Um, they already know what's gonna, what's gonna happen to you in the next few years they. They've already been on the other side, like it's okay, you like sports, you want to play horse.
Speaker 1:Shoes. But yeah, I was at, I guess. Well, I bought Pine Strong because it's lighter. That made me feel old. And then I was at you'll never guess Costco. I've never been so excited. I got home I was like this is probably not going to work. I bought a three-pack of reading glasses, put them on, I was like I'm probably not even going to like them. Did you get?
Speaker 2:the right strength.
Speaker 1:I was like man, these are amazing. I probably could have gone a tad more.
Speaker 2:What are you? 1.5 right now.
Speaker 1:I'm 1.5. Okay, I mean, I could rock a 2.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I mean it'll make it, but if you get it too strong you get a headache and you kind of feel nauseous.
Speaker 1:I mean I've got a headache, but like yeah.
Speaker 2:I've got a low grade all the time headache. Yeah, I like a 1.75 to a 2, but 2 is really what I need. But my progressives are 1.75. But yeah.
Speaker 1:I feel like.
Speaker 2:You get excited by the reading glasses because you can't see anything.
Speaker 1:It was right there on the end. So I'm walking in, I'm like I'm just getting some lemons and I'm getting some a little bit of chicken.
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 1:Just a couple of things and stuff for school lunch. Oh, reading glasses.
Speaker 2:Yeah, right, oh yeah.
Speaker 1:Which? Have you ever wondered? Why the writing not so much at the Costco ones, but like at a CVS or something we have once again derailed from spring we're going to come back to it? Yeah, we will, maybe we won't.
Speaker 2:But we're at CVS.
Speaker 1:That's stop number three right there, Hello it's Costco CVS, but I'm saying like when you go somewhere and you're trying to figure out what reading glasses you need and you stand back and it says can you read this line? No, but why is it so small? Only glasses You'd be like. Are these 1.5? Right, you need glasses.
Speaker 2:It's like when Ellen DeGeneres talked about in her standup like you need scissors to open scissors, yeah, in her stand-up, like you, need scissors to open scissors. Yeah same thing. You need glasses to know which glasses you're getting.
Speaker 1:Yeah, it makes sense.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I don't get that, I don't either. It should be fat, big, like. It should be like one to two inches big the strength.
Speaker 1:And if you think you don't need Regan glasses, go grab a shirt or a pair of pants or something and just grab that label. Mm-hmm and figure out how to wash that in Bangladesh or wherever Like it is. You can't read any of it.
Speaker 2:No, mm-mm.
Speaker 1:Which I do, that I'm like just throw it in the washer, yeah just wash it on cold.
Speaker 2:I a washer. Yeah, just wash it on cold. I don't know. Yeah, figure it out later. Cool iron, if necessary. First of all, who's got a cool iron? Everybody, because it's off. If your iron is off, it's already cool, it's cold. Put your hand on it and then cool iron ain't gonna do nothing. For, if necessary, it's not necessary or possible wait a minute to use a cool iron on clothes.
Speaker 1:Are you is cool iron. Are you? Is that real?
Speaker 2:Brother, it's real, it's on labels. Cool iron if necessary.
Speaker 1:But does that mean iron it with an iron that's not on?
Speaker 2:No, I think them people are talking about. What does that mean? I think they mean put it on the lowest setting possible. That's not cool. No, put your it on the lowest setting possible, that's not cool.
Speaker 1:No, put your iron on the lowest setting and touch it. It ain't going to be cool, it's going to burn your hand.
Speaker 2:Cool iron. What does that mean? Cool iron, if necessary, it's real, it's real.
Speaker 1:That should be warm iron if necessary. No.
Speaker 2:It's on tons of stuff. Look it up, it's on tons of stuff. Look it up it's on tons of stuff. And I always go first of all. It's not necessary.
Speaker 1:Okay.
Speaker 2:Because it's not possible to use an iron cool.
Speaker 1:A cool iron setting on a garment's care label means the fabric is heat sensitive and should be ironed at a lower temperature to prevent damage.
Speaker 2:Okay, Just say, put it on the lowest setting.
Speaker 1:It says Good gracious. It means you should iron it at a low temperature, typically around 110 or 230 degrees Fahrenheit, not cool, 110 is Celsius.
Speaker 2:Yeah, yeah, yeah, those people should be locked up. Cool iron if necessary. It's like when Jim Gaffigan said or Brian Regan said hey, I'm just, I'm sending it out like this yeah, is that the serving size? One half cup. Yeah, I just, I'm just going to see what happens. It's like somebody was like I'm tired of making these labels, let's put a joke on it. You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 1:I feel like those same people are in charge of spring.
Speaker 2:Yes, like oh, it's spring, yeah, well, it's 32. Yeah, the weather gods are all confused right now Cool spring if necessary.
Speaker 1:Yeah yeah, I never knew about cool.
Speaker 2:Yeah, cool iron if necessary.
Speaker 1:Wait a minute. Now there's one that says cold iron.
Speaker 2:What I don't know that can't be, that can't be right, but y'all should check your labels, because it's a hoot. It's a hoot.
Speaker 1:Yeah, they don't make no sense yeah it doesn't make any sense.
Speaker 2:Now, I don't iron anything.
Speaker 1:I don't iron, so it doesn't matter.
Speaker 2:Well, some people say they never, ever, ever, ever. Iron.
Speaker 1:I never iron anything.
Speaker 2:Well Ever. How are your button downs?
Speaker 1:Yeah, what about them? I dry them until the dryer's tired.
Speaker 2:But Randy will be like this, collar's not laying down.
Speaker 1:Oh, I don't iron it, robin does Okay.
Speaker 2:Somebody's ironing it sometimes Like if we're going somewhere nice like somebody's wedding, I guess. And he's not wearing like suit pants, I will iron the dress pants. Actually, does that make sense?
Speaker 1:Actually we cheat, so the only thing that messes up on my shirts. I try to get the wrinkle free or wrinkle resistant.
Speaker 2:Yeah, yeah, yeah, so I just dry it yeah.
Speaker 1:The only thing that can ever be a little funky is the collar.
Speaker 2:Yeah, the little flip yeah.
Speaker 1:So the last two times we went somewhere that I couldn't wear a T-shirt. Mm-hmm, yeah, the same T-shirt I wear all the time. Robin just hits it up with the Steamer. No her, she straightens her hair.
Speaker 2:Her hair straightener?
Speaker 1:Yes, Because it's the same size. So she just pops that hair straightener on my collar. You don't even have to cold iron hot iron it nothing O-M-G.
Speaker 2:So there's, your life hack If ladies have got a hair straightener or men and you don't want to iron and you just want flat collars.
Speaker 1:Just buy a hair straightener at Costco next to the wreath and glasses. That is brilliant, robin. It's already warm. She's getting ready anyway. She's like here. Just what shirt are you going to wear?
Speaker 2:Oh, my God, this is why she makes big bucks Good gracious.
Speaker 1:This is why she makes the big bucks Good gracious.
Speaker 2:Oh my gosh, that's amazing.
Speaker 1:Yeah, Because it's just I mean two collars, it's brilliant, it's collar size.
Speaker 2:It should be called hair straightener, slash collar ironer, collar Flattener, something Steamer. I thought you were going to say steamer.
Speaker 1:We do have a steamer.
Speaker 2:I know we used to have one too. I have a travel one. Who's travel?
Speaker 1:Okay.
Speaker 2:I only have a travel one, because when my daughter got married I got one for the veils. Yeah, or like to steam some people's dresses and stuff.
Speaker 1:I always think it's funny when I see anything travel size like a steamer.
Speaker 2:Yeah, who does?
Speaker 1:steam. Well, it's like I don't steam stuff now. I don't steam stuff now but it's like well, if I do start, and then I'm going to travel.
Speaker 2:It's going to be when I fly to California.
Speaker 1:Yeah, I mean, I vacuum, but I don't have a travel vacuum cleaner.
Speaker 2:I know yeah, right.
Speaker 1:I mean, I guess you can travel with it, but yeah, or like ironing boards.
Speaker 2:Sorry, speaking of cold ironing, it's like Dusty Slay right there.
Speaker 1:Well, that's half the reason.
Speaker 2:I don't iron Because I'm like I ain't sitting that up and it makes that like ring-wraith sound like.
Speaker 1:It's like sitting up a ping-pong table or like a folding table. Oh yeah, you know you're like I'll just eat. It's so loud yeah.
Speaker 2:Yeah, well, anyway. So special care, clothing items, there you go. Cool iron if necessary, but back to CVS and Easter. What are you going to eat on Easter? What do you eat on Easter?
Speaker 1:Eggs.
Speaker 2:Ham. Why is ham a. Thing. It's a ham, yeah, easter ham Okay, I don't know I don't know.
Speaker 1:I mean, I would always say Martin's Barbecue, but I don't think that's an Easter thing, it's not, but they are advertising.
Speaker 2:Order your stuff now. I just got an email from them. I don't know why. Yeah, I don't know what, if you have Martin's Barbecue wherever you are.
Speaker 1:You should order it for Easter. What is?
Speaker 2:the standard Traditional Easter dinner or lunch.
Speaker 1:Cadbury eggs would be my choice.
Speaker 2:Ooh Ooh With the stuff in the middle.
Speaker 1:No, it's like the milk chocolate ones, oh okay, like a. Reese's one Traditional Easter menu.
Speaker 2:Mm-hmm, okay, stuffed eggs.
Speaker 1:Some typical dishes include honey-baked ham, pot roast, pork chops and fish. Yeah, so basically everything but hamburgers and steak. Basically, Some popular side dishes include scalloped or mashed potatoes spring vegetables and dinner rolls.
Speaker 2:Okay, we're going to need some more sides if my family's coming. Yeah, we're gonna need some more sides if my family's coming. Yeah and oh, because people have already eaten a chocolate bunny by then. Anyway, remember that. Remember.
Speaker 1:When you're little, you're all like on hyped up on sugar yeah you go to church oh yeah oh man, I'd have a headache which, uh, I went to get my hair cut the other day at the Handsomizer. What's up Hashtag whatever Soccer. Moses, soccer, moses, love it AKA. And they're having a soccer match tomorrow. They're playing Salt Lake City, so they're doing like themed um, like a themed tailgate. Nice, uh, so one of the dishes, I guess, because it's salt lake oh, at his place. Yeah, yeah, yeah, sorry outside his barber shop um. So I guess it's because you know salt lake mormon, mormon community, like midwest or whatever yeah, yeah yeah, so like yeah, one of the things we're doing is funeral potatoes.
Speaker 2:What is that? Yeah, I did not know. And now I know, do I want to eat them or what's in it?
Speaker 1:These are to die for.
Speaker 2:You got to die first, before they serve them.
Speaker 1:It says it's a Midwestern and Intermountain West casserole dish, typically made with frozen or queued potatoes. That didn't sound too bougie.
Speaker 2:I know where those are.
Speaker 1:Cream of chicken soup cheese and a crunchy crumb topping.
Speaker 2:That's just potato casserole. Shredded is called hash brown casserole. That's all it is.
Speaker 1:The dish is commonly served at funerals, potlucks and picnics. Those three things are quite different, especially the first one and last one One of these things is not like the other.
Speaker 2:Yeah, oh, my goodness.
Speaker 1:Yeah.
Speaker 2:Two are happy functions.
Speaker 1:The other one is not. One is pot no luck and gets Sorry, wait a minute. And gets its name from a traditional place at the after-funeral dinner table.
Speaker 2:Y'all. That's just an item on a table at a southern potluck. That's all it is. Potato casserole.
Speaker 1:While the origins of the dish are unknown, many associate it with the LDS church, where relief societies have prepared it for grieving families for years.
Speaker 2:Latter-day Saints yeah, Okay.
Speaker 1:Yeah, but why does potatoes help? I mean, I've never been so sad and been like, oh man, I don't know I forgot why I was sad these potatoes are amazing.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I mean, it's not supposed to Take away the sadness, it's just Like where we're from. It's like it's filler. It's a covered dish. It's got some butter in it, some cheese in it, and it's gonna. It's gonna make you feel good. It's comfort food. That's all it is, and you need to bring Some fried chicken and some green beans and a side of rolls with it. I'm hungry right now.
Speaker 1:Let's go eat it. And kids that cover dishes? They're only eating rolls and drinking sweet tea.
Speaker 2:Oh yeah, their whole plate's yellow.
Speaker 1:Yeah, Rolls mac and cheese.
Speaker 2:And they're getting hyped up on the sweet tea because it's also got caffeine in it.
Speaker 1:And there would always be a dessert. Are them little wedding cookies? Somebody bring, yeah dessert. Are them little wedding cookies? Somebody bring Little Danish cookies, or something.
Speaker 2:Oh yeah, wedding cookies. Yep, they're white. They got the little powdered sugar stuff on them I always just look for our mom's dish, yep, I'd be like that, ain't her. Nope, nope, nope. There, it is the baked beans. You want Linda Booth's baked beans? That's the ones I'm eating. Yeah, because I ain't eating nobody else's baby.
Speaker 1:Love the rest of y'all.
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 1:Don't trust your cooking. I don't know how many pets you got in the house. I don't know how many litter boxes you got in the kitchen or what, but I ain't doing it.
Speaker 2:We ain't getting a floating cat hair today, does your cat like Jell-O. If you love it, you'd be like, hey, do you know who made the so-and-so? You know you're at a southern potluck. If you're like, do you know? No, I know that dish, that see, that crystal dish. That's her potato salad.
Speaker 1:Well, that's the one and you kind of I be like, okay, there's eight people in front of me yeah would there be another serving and if not, you just bail on that side and you could tell the funky one, there'd be like three different mashed potatoes, two be gone and then one's like untouched and everybody's like don't eat her mac and cheese or whatever, mashed potatoes yeah, funeral you eat it, you, you. We're gonna need another funeral cat, uh funeral potatoes.
Speaker 2:Funeral casserole on deck yeah, um, I would ask mom we'd be in line.
Speaker 1:I'd be like, hey, mom which yeah or she'd be like get that one oh yeah, oh yeah, you'll like that.
Speaker 2:That means that ain't nasty this is not tacky. I mean, maybe it is, but it's. This is what. This is what's going on at the fellowship hall you know, it's just what's happening, and you know what?
Speaker 1:we appreciate the effort, yeah, but it's somebody would bring a kentucky fried chicken.
Speaker 2:You at least know what you got oh man, if you had a bucket. I mean, if you weren't sure, just go for kentucky fried chicken, because you know what it is I forgot about that, yeah somebody brought kentucky fried chicken, you'd be like, yeah, I wonder if the ladies who like made it from scratch, are like I can't believe they even did that I wonder how many people bought bought Kentucky Fried Chicken, dumped it in a platter and took it to the church.
Speaker 1:I bet a lot.
Speaker 2:Because their breading is not as thick and crispy as like a normal homemade one. I guess have you ever made homemade fried chicken?
Speaker 1:No, I ate it, but I didn't.
Speaker 2:You ate it growing up.
Speaker 1:I barely make.
Speaker 2:Yeah, no, I'm just asking Like ever, have you ever made it?
Speaker 1:No, I was too tired to make dinosaur nuggets and I'm like how do you not get the grease all over?
Speaker 2:I know there's fried eddies and all that mess and stuff, but I'm talking about like a skillet, like your mom would like get the oil hot and then put it in the skillet. What are we wiping that stuff with? Clorox wipes for the rest of the night, Like it's splattering all over the place. I don't know Anyway.
Speaker 1:Yeah, you don't need Gosh, I want some fried chicken right now.
Speaker 2:Ooh, that is not good for the cholesterol. Anyway, back to spring. No, but seriously, easter Ham. I thought about making a hash brown casserole Because I was like, yeah.
Speaker 1:I can't. Why don't you make funeral potatoes?
Speaker 2:We should do that. Yeah, whatever, and I'm not doing scalloped, first of all, ain't nobody doing that from homemade.
Speaker 1:What is?
Speaker 2:scalloped. It's like where they shave them. They're like little chip things.
Speaker 1:Just scalloped potatoes, yeah, like potato chips, or just real thin. Oh, I know what you're talking about.
Speaker 2:Scalloped, thinly sliced or cut? Ain't nobody doing that? Who's doing that?
Speaker 1:It's potatoes, nobody cares Anyway.
Speaker 2:Anyway.
Speaker 1:Well.
Speaker 2:If you were doing an assorted potted plant of Easter food, the filler would be the potatoes casserole slash funeral potatoes.
Speaker 1:The thriller would be Kentucky Fried Chicken.
Speaker 2:Ooh, yes, and then the spiller would probably be like a coconut cake or something.
Speaker 1:Ooh.
Speaker 2:Over the side and something to wow it. Mmm, mmm, I'm hungry, anyway. So yeah, but we got to make our Easter plan. We're all doing it together, right? I guess, yeah, all right. Why don't you get a bag of them? Reese eggs?
Speaker 1:Everybody puts off Easter, though, Like Christmas you plan that out for Easter?
Speaker 2:It'd be like what's today?
Speaker 1:Good Friday, oh, what are we doing on Easter?
Speaker 2:I know, I know, yeah, what else do your boys like? Sides-wise.
Speaker 1:Side.
Speaker 2:Side dishes, I mean yeah, stuff like that. Not green beans, so much.
Speaker 1:Congealed salad.
Speaker 2:Do they? They do love that, don't they that Coca-Cola salad.
Speaker 1:I get Coca-Cola or Dr Pepper. Why is it always a drink?
Speaker 2:I don't know. And who's wasting Coca-Cola and Dr Pepper? Remember, I would put that in my Like a roast. Yeah or pork in a crock pot, because apparently.
Speaker 1:A little tenderizes it.
Speaker 2:Yeah, it also eats the battery acid off your car battery. So I'm like, oh, I don't know, should we be cooking with this?
Speaker 1:you might want to put your reading glasses on reba coke, or just throw it in a crock pot. Have you seen that crazy stuff?
Speaker 2:like what's that?
Speaker 1:rusted nails or whatever.
Speaker 2:Yeah, they pour coke on it, or you can put like a t-bone steak.
Speaker 1:I don't know why you do this, but in like a thing of coke. Yeah, I don't know what it is like two weeks or whatever like the bone is like gone, like it'll eat it.
Speaker 2:This could be, this could be fake, but whatever then again, our grandparents drank coke forever well, I mean, if you drink, it's different because it's yeah, yeah you don't let this sit on your arm and wrap it in cellophane for two weeks. Let's go straight to the bone.
Speaker 1:Anyway, anyway.
Speaker 2:Okay.
Speaker 1:Well.
Speaker 2:So Easter.
Speaker 1:Happy Easter.
Speaker 2:Yeah, happy.
Speaker 1:Easter Meal planning.
Speaker 2:Meal planning.
Speaker 1:Good luck with that.
Speaker 2:I hope it's warm outside. Bring your ferns in.
Speaker 1:Yeah, hide the eggs in the snow. Have fun.
Speaker 2:Or hide them in the ferns on the patio.
Speaker 1:Or just throw them up in the air and they'll fly to the neighbor's house.
Speaker 2:It's a little windy, a little windy.
Speaker 1:Yeah, all right, have a good one.