The Dad Bods and Dumbbells Podcast
The hosts Mitch and Bart discuss fitness, fatherhood, and guy stuff to help men live a great life, have fun, laugh, and get a little more fit in this weekly Podcast.
The Dad Bods and Dumbbells Podcast
Table Topics With Britt, Mitch and Bart (Part 2)
Mitch, Bart, and their guest Britt dive into their Spin the Zin discussions, covering everything from favorite movies to embarrassing songs, revealing surprising connections between personal preferences and core values.
• Top three movies reveal emotional connections – from The Natural and Dead Poets Society to the entire John Wick franchise
• Sports teach kids crucial life skills: teamwork, respecting authority, handling both victory and defeat with grace
• Creative sports mascots like the Wampus Cats and Banana Slugs trump generic Panthers and Tigers every time
• Family vacation spots become meaningful traditions – from New Mexico cabins to Newport Beach houses
• Embarrassing memorized songs connect us to specific life moments, from McDonald's jingles to Tupac albums
• Our favorite movies reflect deeper aspects of our personalities, like Mitch's connection to the "reluctant hero" narrative
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Welcome to DadBots and Dumbbells. My name is Mitch.
Speaker 2:Hey, I'm Bart.
Speaker 1:Thanks so much for listening, liking, subscribing and sharing. We're so glad you're here today. Our sponsors thank you so much to Solutions Pharmacy for helping our hair loss, our weight loss, our PP issues. We're so grateful for you guys. Check it out. It's discreet, it's awesome, it's easy. Enjoy. If you are looking for the physique that you want, don't have maybe you're just trying to get over that hump check out Team Brian Wellness. They will get you on track. Our own Bart will help you and his team will get you where you need to be in the time that you want to get there. And if you are a big boy I almost said fat If you are a fat boy, if you're a big boy, if you're a good boy, all those things check out Big Boys Run 2, our merch line. Check out a run club if you like to run. If you don't, we'd love to get you on the right track to do those things. We're so grateful you're here. Let's enjoy the show.
Speaker 2:All right, hey, this is round two of our Spin the Zin with the 10 Zin, and I got my main man, britt, here.
Speaker 3:Britt, thanks for being here. Buddy, Last episode got really deep. We went to the end of the rainbow, didn't we? Bart?
Speaker 2:Oh, we did.
Speaker 1:I felt that way.
Speaker 2:Immediately after we stopped recording.
Speaker 3:I just fell and sobbed for about 20 minutes Yep.
Speaker 2:and now Bart's a Christian.
Speaker 1:Hallelujah guys.
Speaker 3:Here we we go. It got him probably further away. I apologize, you can't talk about this stuff with your friends, then who can you talk about?
Speaker 2:it is kind of Mitch and I had just talked about, you know, on the episode about our um powerlifting show, just like how close we feel as like friends like yeah, you know, and that's how cool that is, and so I think it was time for mitch to just drop the big question, bart god bart, do you love me?
Speaker 1:all right, so we got five five more.
Speaker 2:Uh zin spins here. Uh, just all over the place with these. They're gonna be a lot of fun. Uh, brit.
Speaker 3:Anything to say before we kick it off some of these are deeper and some of these are like rapid fire fun stuff. So I'm excited about this stuff. Who knows, if it's a good question, it's going to lead to something weird, because we're like conspiracy theories and they're like Jesus. It didn't go to Jesus for conspiracy theories. Aliens or Jesus, I'm into my feet and the light that is a great song Classic. All right Well why don't?
Speaker 1:you give it a spin.
Speaker 3:Let's see what our last five topics are All right Spinderman button goes to top three movies of all time.
Speaker 1:This is our our opinion, each of ours.
Speaker 3:Is this like?
Speaker 1:you can be wrong.
Speaker 3:What it's like in the general zeitgeist of movies. They're the best or your favorite, your favorite, yeah, I don't. We're not trying to be like I don't want to definitive like these are the best movies of all time right because none of us are critics in that way, but I think for you, what are your top three?
Speaker 1:what are what if you are surfing through the channels? You got three movies and it's and you stop and you're like, oh, I want to watch it, and you watch the rest of the movie or whatever's on.
Speaker 3:That's kind of how.
Speaker 1:I measure top movies.
Speaker 3:I have to think of it also as like the nostalgia piece of what, like, really made you go.
Speaker 2:I love this movie. Okay, I'll go.
Speaker 3:Okay, number one, the Natural, with Robert Redford.
Speaker 1:Great movie.
Speaker 3:Great number one the Natural with Robert Redford. Great movie, great movie, favorite baseball movie and it's like one of my favorite movies because my dad and I watched it. So it's like part of my soul that's good. Absolutely Second the Matrix 1999.
Speaker 1:Which one? The first, one the first one.
Speaker 3:It was like so good, Mind-bending, best movie experience. I doesn't get better than this. It's like Kung Fu and you're like are we in a simulation? Way before Joe Rogan talked about it, I'm just saying I'm kidding.
Speaker 3:And then a third for me would probably be Inception. Yeah, oh, I loved that movie because I remember Christina was out of town visiting her mom and this is before we had kids and I went to go see the movie and then I turned around, bought a ticket and went to go see it again because I wanted to be like how do I get my mind around this thing?
Speaker 2:And also that's a cool movie, yeah, and I was like what if I?
Speaker 3:did narcotics? How much worse or better?
Speaker 1:would that movie be? Take some shrooms before you go in. Just on ayahuasca, and I'm just throwing up in the corner experiencing God.
Speaker 3:Maybe that's what you should do Bart.
Speaker 2:It'll be great, All right. Next episode Bart on an ayahuasca trip. I won't take it.
Speaker 1:I'm not taking the bait.
Speaker 3:I'm just kidding no, those are great. Those are my three.
Speaker 2:Those are my three okay review the Natural, the Matrix, the Matrix and then Inception yeah, and Inception can be swapped out with like 74 other movies but, I just remember thinking I love this movie.
Speaker 3:Yeah, it's awesome good one.
Speaker 2:Alright, mitch, I'm gonna let you go next. You want me? Yeah, bud, you know what my favorite are? I don't know.
Speaker 1:John Wick 1. Go John Wick. 2. John Wick 3. Wow, no way. For real, for 100%.
Speaker 2:I thought you were going to say the Passion of the Christ. I don't love Mel Gibson.
Speaker 1:Okay, so I do have a story about the Passion of the Christ.
Speaker 2:Left behind with.
Speaker 3:Kirk Cameron. So when I was in high.
Speaker 1:I met Kirk Cameron before. He's a good dude, I heard he's like really a sweet person. He's the real deal. He is so nice. He's the nicest guy ever.
Speaker 2:I also heard he bullied the network to like get people in the cast kicked off the show because it was too like edgy and not Christian enough.
Speaker 1:No, the issue was growing pains.
Speaker 2:Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1:Was his girlfriend. That was cast, was a playmate. Yeah, there was a yeah, and so he was like I don't, because he just became a Christian.
Speaker 3:he didn't want the temptation, and so they brought up this lady, by the way, this is also Didn't ruin her life.
Speaker 1:She was fine. But the girl that replaced him ended up being the woman he married.
Speaker 3:And this is the show that has. Mike Seaver's best friend is named Boner.
Speaker 2:I know I don't think that's going to fly in today's society.
Speaker 3:I'm not saying like after Me Too, I don't think we're going to be able to have a podcast?
Speaker 1:I don't know, that's what I heard.
Speaker 2:I mean, he didn't tell me that personally, but all that to say, the audience is on bated breath to hear more about John Wick 1, 2, and 3. So my buddies and I no, no, you said John Wick 1, 2, and 3. No, no, you said the Passion of the Christ.
Speaker 1:So we went into the movie theater.
Speaker 2:This is me dating you?
Speaker 1:And we were.
Speaker 3:It was like we were seniors in high school you told this story, where you took off your shirt.
Speaker 1:No, that was Seabiscuit he takes off.
Speaker 2:I have a shirt in every movie which, funny enough, is also about Jesus.
Speaker 3:I don't know if you know that. But Jesus is a horse. It all points back. It's an allegory. He bodies the horse. It's an allegory.
Speaker 1:We were sitting there and it was like all my friends were together and it was right before the lights go down, where they tell you to turn off your phones or whatever, and I go. I heard he dies. Guys, I heard he dies and everybody laughed. You know it's that thing. And then halfway through the movie, you know it's the whipping and the craziness and everybody's crying and stuff and I was like that was a terrible mistake.
Speaker 2:So that's why everyone just turns on you and you're like you.
Speaker 1:You're judas over here look at the jokester over here. So uh, no, I mean I I, how many is it?
Speaker 2:37? Whoops, there is some number that's important there there is a significant 33, 33, 33 is the number I believe I'm just but don't quote me on that my dad, john wick, my dad give us, why john wick not, I get one okay.
Speaker 1:So john wick one, john wick two, john wick three. So for me those are movies that are just genuinely. Anytime there's a guy that looks like he's on the outs or the down or the whatever, and then comes back and is like the man where you, like whoa, didn't expect that.
Speaker 3:That's why john wick one's really cool I think john wick one is almost a perfect movie. Yes, out there with back to the future like.
Speaker 1:that is a great analogy. Back to the Future is another great the John Wick 2, for me, I needed it. John Wick 3 was a little crazy, a little too much. John Wick 4 is not my favorite. I'm never going to say that to my wife.
Speaker 2:What about Ballerina coming out? I want to see it. She has to. It's great, is it great?
Speaker 3:Yeah, great.
Speaker 1:So I say John Wick 1, 2, and 3, because every birthday that's my one request is I want to watch John Wick 1, 2, 3, and 4. Wow, that's what I watch, and every year I know.
Speaker 2:I have the DVDs in. Like this box. Do your family just pack bags and just leave for the day.
Speaker 1:Let's go Next year for my birthday I'm going to say Stacey, I want you to watch all four with me.
Speaker 2:And then Ballerina after that as a dessert.
Speaker 1:It's a terrible idea. I love movies that are like former CIA former, like secret Anybody that's like Taken, yeah, stuff like that.
Speaker 3:Jason Bourne.
Speaker 1:I love Jason Bourne. I love Red with Bruce Willis.
Speaker 2:Where he's like that retargeted yeah. I love Jason Bourne. I love Red with Bruce Willis. Where he's like that retiree yeah.
Speaker 1:I love those movies. I love Mr and Mrs Smith, like those are movies that are just like for me are super entertaining. I loved the guy that played on Breaking Bad, the Lawyer Bob Odenkirk. Bob Odenkirk played Nobody, yeah, nobody, and a sequel's coming out for that, yeah that was a great movie because he looks like an un, like he's a loser, like whatever, and then he's like this big time like secret agent, like black ops guy that kills everybody.
Speaker 2:So yeah, so that's a theme, like one of the things that you know. Once upon and my acting coach said we all have emotional cords that when, like you, you'll you'd see it in a movie you see something happens and you like that's the. That's the moment you just start crying, or like yeah like there's something and it's like and there's a repetitive emotional cords and it like sounds like for you it's kind of like it's that underdog or yes you discounted. Yeah, who like has to come. You know what? What's it? Uhalizer.
Speaker 1:Yes, I love those movies.
Speaker 2:He's so good at creating that. He's just trying to be a normal guy and they pull him back in because he's a Lyft driver. Those are such great movies because it's the reluctant hero he's pulled into becoming. It's God's Out of Three.
Speaker 1:They pull me back in. It's that Ultimately. Yeah, that's out of three. Like they pull me back in, yeah, like it's that. So ultimately, yeah, that's a great point.
Speaker 2:That's what I love, because you are great and every time, like you know, just go entrepreneurial. You're jumping into these big like big ideas, big risks, always taking on these really big like scary ideas that a lot of people would just like bail on. Yeah of people would just like bail on, yeah, and some of them don't work and some of them do, but you're like you're just a risk taker, and I think that ties into that.
Speaker 1:Huh, that's good. That's my thanks, buddy.
Speaker 3:I think one of the things, too is these are standalone because if you did like series or like yeah full franchises, I mean you kind of put on his head but like you could do, lord of the rings, star wars, I mean all that stuff yeah, all of it, but I think the standalone. I do agree john wick would be on my top 10. John wick one really it's.
Speaker 1:It's amazing that makes me feel so much back to the future.
Speaker 2:Yeah is up there like that's good perfect rocky four, I think, is one of the most, oh my god, rocky four is a great thing, everything and the poignancy of like that moment in time, with like with the soviet union or ussr yeah, because now we're all cozy with the USSR.
Speaker 3:Yeah, they're great now Because of that movie.
Speaker 1:Now things are all copacetic. Is that what we're feeling?
Speaker 2:Ivan Drago. And then, you know, of course, there was Red Heat with Arnold. He was Ivan Dranko.
Speaker 3:Ivan.
Speaker 2:Dranko.
Speaker 1:Dranko and.
Speaker 2:Drago, but anyway, okay, yeah, bart, what's yours? Okay, we're doing it again. We're doing a great job at just banter. It's going a little long, but check this out.
Speaker 1:Bart's always watching, so my three.
Speaker 2:First one Emotional Chord Dead Poets Society Great.
Speaker 3:So when I saw it, never seen it, no way Get out.
Speaker 1:I've heard of it.
Speaker 2:Leave town so when I first watched it I was Ethan Hawke Cool, I needed someone to see and believe in me. And that getting on the desk, oh Captain, my Captain. And then I watched it like 10 years later in Peace Corps with all my Peace Corps buddies and it was like all of our favorite movies and all of a sudden, sudden, we were Robin Williams, like inspiring these kids and villages to like give a shit about school, you know, and it's like, but every time I go back to that movie I just like cry every time at the end and I just like it's inspiring and it's such a great story.
Speaker 1:When was the last time?
Speaker 3:you saw it a I'm still he's the desk that people stand on. Yeah, I'm just to say I'm the old curmudgeon, like you know.
Speaker 2:Mr Bunting, there you go, yeah there you go so that's one, two Van Wilder insane freaking second movie I cannot. I love that movie. I watched that movie. I mean, you know Ryan Reynolds when it's first movies of like, really like, stand out as a as a leading man, like. I just think that movie is so classic I'll watch it anytime it's on to my wife's like like what are we doing?
Speaker 3:I saw that.
Speaker 2:You know anyway, so that's my second year.
Speaker 1:Do you know who that was based off of?
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 1:Your favorite comedian?
Speaker 2:Oh, I hate that guy Bert Kreischer yeah it was loosely based off of Bert Kreischer, like the big party animal from Florida. Okay, third one. This is an obvious one, but Shawshank Redemption Sure.
Speaker 3:Have you seen that?
Speaker 2:I've seen Shawshank Redemption I expected a little bit more response, if we had top ten, I think we would all put like Gladiator Braveheart. Yeah, oh.
Speaker 3:Gladiator. The Patriot oh my gosh the Patriot. Yeah yeah, that's a good one. Coco Classic.
Speaker 1:Lilo and Stitch.
Speaker 2:Up.
Speaker 1:Up, I will say Up was a good one.
Speaker 3:Best. That's the first 11 minutes of any Disney movie.
Speaker 1:Oh, if you don't have teary eyes, then you are a dead robot, then you're just like a druid, terrible, dusty soul. So I don't cry during movies.
Speaker 3:Oh, I do.
Speaker 1:I cry in movies where I'm not supposed to we were watching a movie and my wife and my son are super sensitive, and so my son will always come over and snuggle and I'm kind of looking around like let's move on with the story. Guys, you're trying to pull on my heart. I know what you're trying to do. It doesn't work on me.
Speaker 3:Oh, so you're like anti-establishment, you're like, if they try to make you that way, you resist.
Speaker 2:Yeah, just like John Wick, You're just like John.
Speaker 1:Wick your contrarian is that you. That's great. Alright, let's send this in, let's do this that was solid there we go.
Speaker 3:What do you want kids to learn in sports? What do you want your kiddos to learn? All our kids are in sports 10, 11, 12, 13 years old.
Speaker 2:So I'll start on this one, because this is really.
Speaker 2:You know, my kid plays basketball. He's getting, he's playing out a more, a little bit more of a like higher level basketball program now at home court. Shout out to home court and you get a lot of those kids who like, who are way too young and weak to be chucking up threes. But they do it and every one out of ten they'll hit it and they'll be like all the like things that they see from the NBA. And just like these horrible celebrations and and it's just like I lose my mind and what I love about the coach that's working with my son and like the whole organization, it's really about you know, like the fundamentals, teamwork and that kind of stuff and I just like the greatest thing about team sports is that opportunity whether you're a coach or just you know a parent watching to see those kids like start to just trust each other, work together and a kid, a team that doesn't necessarily have the best player but win the game because they just out like team the other team and I think this nobody's that good right now.
Speaker 2:So it's like this is the opportunity for those kids to really feel that where their team dynamic is the differentiator that's good.
Speaker 1:I like that too. I think it's the same for us, and we had our soccer development team. My son's on select team. He's a very good soccer player. We've we've talked a lot about it, but he's not the best and he's very good position player within the team. So he would be a guy that would always be the person that started something, that got to a goal. But yeah, he scored goal. Yeah, he'll have some assists, but, like, what he did got that to there.
Speaker 1:And so what I've been trying to teach him is that you know he'd come off the field and be like, well, I didn't score any goals. It's like, well, the reason that you got to score six goals, yeah, they might've gotten hat tricks, but whatever, it doesn't really matter. Are you a good teammate? How much effort did you put in? What was your attitude when it was all done? And what I've noticed with our coaches is they're very much focused on we're going to put your kids in tough situations where they're going to face adversity and be put in positions that they don't understand as well and they're going to progress and grow and be ready for the next level. And there were many kids during try, so we they all had to try out again for their their own spots and there were many kids in the group that were like I don't want to be a part of the soccer team if I'm not the club A.
Speaker 2:The number one option.
Speaker 1:And you know McNeely was telling me what the kids were saying. I said hey, do you like playing soccer? Yeah, I love it, it's great. You're going to accept whatever the coaches say that you're going to be. It doesn't matter. Yeah, of course, we all want to be the A team. We all want to be, but you're going to accept it and we're going to put our greatest effort in because that's the only thing we can control. Obviously, he got picked for the A team, but it's still that level of attitude of like, hey, you're going to be in a position, that you're not always going to be number one, you're not always going to be the best, but it doesn't change the effort and the energy we're going to put forward. If you want this goal, then we're going to have to do a lot of things to change that. We're going to have to push, we're going to have to do the extra things.
Speaker 1:So I love sports for that reason. It's like not only does it give the team aspect, but also like I never had a goal when I was 10 years old that was like, I want to do this, I want to be this. And now there's guys 10, 11 years old that are like, hey, I want to be this or want to experience this and there's a path. So I I love the adversity that comes with team sports. I love the kids. I love to see the kids lose and how they lose. I love my son to win, yes, but like, how do you respond to adversity? And I think that that's the greatest experience I have, because we I never got that. I didn't get to play sports until junior high, into high school, really competitive sports, until high school, you know. So that's been my favorite part.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I like those things. Learning to lose is one of them. I agree with that. I think I was going to say the one thing I want my kiddos to learn from sports is how to learn to obey an authority figure other than me and his mom. That's good, and they're not going to discipline or talk to or do anything the same way as I do. It's good for him to get in trouble. Yeah, he yelled at be encouraged high fives. They need another adult in their life to learn to say yes, sir, and no sir or yes ma'am and no ma'am.
Speaker 3:and learning authority not just from I mean, your whole world is just your family, your nucleus. And then you get to school and of course school's kind of different because it's like teacher to student, but when you're volunteering to be told what to do and to have this authority, in your life. I think it's just good to learn. I mean, how do you learn to be a good employee until you start working Well? I think, kids that have done sports their whole life end up being really great employees and really know how to work hard.
Speaker 2:Now, I think that's just good.
Speaker 3:Also, my son. Out of 12 kids, he's always like the eighth best. He's not the worst, but he's not the best. He really just wants to be down to clown and he wants to be on the team.
Speaker 1:Because he loves playing.
Speaker 2:I love that and I love that that's cool and I'm like that's awesome yeah.
Speaker 2:And it's also just a sense of belonging and to have, like you know, I think about my son going to middle school and it's, like, man you know, if he's good at basketball, like it gives him a little bit more of a purpose, like as he's getting closer to seventh grade and wants to be on the team, and they start to like you know, just all that stuff versus just kind of like lost in the sauce, you know, which is, I think, every parent's concern, like middle school, specifically, it's on your identity.
Speaker 2:Yeah, and I don't want to make it all about basketball, but I do think it helps like galvanize, like a confidence. It's based on something real, yes, not just like. I see he has a couple of friends that are like confident for no reason you know like, just like default yeah, but you know, to be truly like confident in something that you worked really hard at and like developed, and like to say, hey, I'm good at this, that matters.
Speaker 3:Yeah, that makes sense.
Speaker 1:I like that. Spin this in. Let's go.
Speaker 2:Ooh, zero. Okay, all right, all right.
Speaker 3:This, this one, you wrote down, talk to us about this Best and worst mascots.
Speaker 2:Like which one do you like? That's great. That's so dumb.
Speaker 3:And some of them are pithy, like funny, like I think AAA baseball is the best in all sports of not taking themselves too seriously in a sport that takes themselves very seriously and I think that's the coolest, but like what's the best and worst, mascots, high school, professional college, whatever you want to do?
Speaker 1:Yeah, one of your mind.
Speaker 2:Well, so I grew up in Davis, california, and UC Davis is the Aggies, and so what is an Aggie?
Speaker 3:Well, they are the farmer. It's an agricultural person.
Speaker 2:They're officially the Mustangs. If you go to their practice basketball court they have Mustangs, but everyone just knows them as the UC Davis Aggies and I always just thought, like what a lame.
Speaker 1:And then I come to.
Speaker 2:Texas and I'm like, well, Aggies are kind of a big deal here, I'm like, but it's still lame. What are you?
Speaker 3:You're nothing, you're agricultural farmers.
Speaker 2:Good luck, farmers, you're great.
Speaker 3:Itasca Texas, which is on 35. If you're going towards Fort Worth, okay, okay, Little town, they're the Itasca Wampus cats, I think that's the coolest name Wampus cats the Wampus cats. And that's one, I do think. In Albuquerque, where they have the CERN Institute and they have, like the observatory in New Mexico, they have a AAA team called the isotopes. That's cool Um and then, uh, what's it called? Uh, San Antonio has a double, a team called the chunk class which is Spanish for flip flop. Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2:It's like this really mean flip flop and I'm like this is the best. So in in another california, you see, uh, santa cruz is the banana slugs. Yes, which is ironic. They're terrible at most. Every sport, uh, probably not surfing, they're good at that, probably, but all their teams were like oh, the banana slugs.
Speaker 1:And you're like that's so weird because they're all over, like I guess banana slugs are. I don't like, yeah, that's so weird because they're all over, I guess banana slugs are. I don't know, I don't know, Is that a real thing?
Speaker 2:It's a real thing. That's weird, you see Santa Cruz banana slugs.
Speaker 1:Gross.
Speaker 2:At least it was when I was growing up.
Speaker 1:I don't know if they've changed their name, but I don't think so, because I've heard I would prefer them not to be mundane. Right, Be creative. We were the Panthers in high school. My sons are the Tigers. It's like, okay, the big cats we get it right Mountain lions. Yeah, we get the jaguars Like we get it. I would rather them take a swing and miss, like the banana slugs or the sloths or the you know the. I like the Corpus Christi hooks.
Speaker 1:I mean that's a cool name. Um, you know the round rock express boring like why, why are they a train? You know it doesn't make any sense. So I love teams that have names that just are stupid.
Speaker 2:And.
Speaker 1:I hate teams that have mascots that are just mundane. So I hate the Buckeyes. I think I've established that on this website. So that stupid guy with the Buckeye that walks around in the Buckeye thing Stupidest mascot ever. If you're a Buckeye fan, you're an idiot. I don't want to say anything polarizing, but I think we can all agree that Buckeyes are dumb. And I think you go with like something a little bit more elegant, like a duck or something like that.
Speaker 2:You know, yeah, right, that makes sense, a duck.
Speaker 1:Yeah, yeah, exactly, they can fly.
Speaker 2:They fly in packs. I'm a Lakers fan. The Lakers the name has kind of like the brand. They've done a great job at pulling you away from the fact that they're talking about the Great Lakes.
Speaker 3:They used to be in.
Speaker 2:Minnesota.
Speaker 1:They used to be in Minnesota Lakers. Is that where it comes from?
Speaker 2:Yeah, and it used to be the New Orleans Jazz which made sense. There's no reason for the Utah jazz to be the Utah jazz.
Speaker 3:You know, when I think about jazz playing, I think about a bunch of Mormons in a Salt Lake City just ripping on a two-hour jam session playing. Thelonious Monk. Where is our Redeemer?
Speaker 1:Oh my goodness, are you singing a Mormon? Are you singing a Mormon hymn? Oh? My goodness yeah, it'd be like the Utah Soakers. That would be way better Gross. I was going to say like the nice guys.
Speaker 3:Utah, nice guys, because they're the sweetest people in the world, the good neighbors yeah the great neighbors. One of our neighbors is a Mormon family. They are like delightful.
Speaker 2:With three master bedrooms.
Speaker 3:And five children with three master bedrooms and five children.
Speaker 2:All houses built with three master bedrooms and six children. Some would call it a compound.
Speaker 1:I don't know, it's getting dicey I would you know what I feel about Mormons, because I have quite a few Mormon friends is let them have multiple wives. I mean good luck bro. Good luck I can barely handle one.
Speaker 3:In the best of ways, I'll refrain.
Speaker 2:Spin it again. The only time Britt did not have a point of view.
Speaker 3:Family vacation this summer, yeah where are you going this summer?
Speaker 2:My family owns a little place, an island, oh sorry.
Speaker 3:An island you might have heard of it A castle.
Speaker 2:Kauai no.
Speaker 3:We have a place outside of Red River, new Mexico, that backs up to Kit Carson National Forest.
Speaker 1:Really.
Speaker 3:My parents lived there from like. April until the first Baylor home football game. Pretty much is when they come back, so I've spent my entire life in the summers going there that's every summer cool since I was a baby we loved house New Mexico.
Speaker 1:Well, that's where we go all the time for skiing it's the best and I love it.
Speaker 3:It's my, it's my happy place and your kids love it too.
Speaker 2:Love it. We go fishing and we go four-wheeling and it is the best.
Speaker 3:And I did Boy Scout stuff too. So you know, philmont is 30 minutes away yeah and so I would just go and my grandparents lived there for in the summers growing up, so it's just my, my that's cool, I love it.
Speaker 1:I wish we had. I wish I had that, so that ultimately, I think we we're looking at places in taos like as if like a family place where we could be like that's where we go and you can verbo it yeah, we can't, we don't, but it's not that nice.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I mean, it's one of those spots.
Speaker 1:Yeah, you can verbo it and do all that. So that's awesome. Yeah, I, I would love that. Um, I'm going to. We're gonna go to my brother's lake house in Indiana okay he's got a really nice. They have this private lake. We went last year and my daughter got lice right before we left, so we had to wait a couple days it was awful and she got a real bad bout of lice.
Speaker 1:But this time we're going to spend a whole week there and see my brother and all his kids. It'll be a lot of fun. Your brother, the EMT, yeah, oh yeah, good man Good the EMT, yeah, oh yeah, good man Good listener, he's a good listener, he's a loyal listener.
Speaker 2:Love you, brother. And then I think this is cool because we all have kind of like family places. We're going my extended family it's not like my immediate family, but my extended family has a house in Balboa, newport Beach, yeah, so like right on 9th Street, right there by the ocean, and so we're going to spend about a week and a half there. Actually, we'll leave next week, we'll leave next Thursday, gone like well, this will come out the day it pops up, but anyway we'll be out there Beach, maybe Disneyland, we'll see. I have a really close friend who's a professional baritone opera singer, gabe Manro. Shout out to Gabe and him and his whole family are coming down to spend like a day and a half with us and we're just going to have an awesome time.
Speaker 1:That's cool.
Speaker 2:Newport Beach is fantastic, so that's our, and we do that almost every year.
Speaker 3:Cool, all right. Last question.
Speaker 2:All right, this is the last one it's been, oh look.
Speaker 3:We hit it.
Speaker 2:What do we got All right? Embarrassing song that you still know every word to All right.
Speaker 3:I don't know if I know every word, like if you were at a stoplight and you saw someone and your windows were down and you were just belting it and you would go uh-oh, uh-oh, like you would kind of be like uh-oh.
Speaker 2:Well, I know, like the entire song to this McDonald's jingle that came out.
Speaker 1:It's here.
Speaker 2:Prove it Big Mac, mcdealty, a quarter pounder with some cheese, a filet, a fish, a hamburger, a cheeseburger, a Happy Meal McDonald's. I get a little clumped up, but it's like one of those things that. I don't know why I memorized it Right. Also, we didn't start the fire the entire song oh yeah, Do it.
Speaker 2:Oh, the whole thing that's amazing and in my world history class we did, or US history in high school, we actually had to learn every single piece of information from that song, so we had to know what everything meant All the references, All the references.
Speaker 3:Smart, smart, smart. Buddy Holly Ben Hurley. That's a great way to learn.
Speaker 1:Yeah yeah, it was a cool teacher. Shout out to Mr Cannon, they've done some remakes of that, which is actually pretty good yeah.
Speaker 2:It's Fall Out Boys.
Speaker 1:Yeah, Fall Out Boys they partnered with Billy Joel.
Speaker 2:He gave him approval to do it and I kind of checked out on him.
Speaker 1:I mean it's a great song long time. I mean I know every Johnnyny cash song cool. Even the ira hayes call him drunken. Ira hayes, he won't answer anymore.
Speaker 2:Yeah you don't know it, that's all right.
Speaker 1:How about your old ragged flag? I know that one. How about man in black? I mean orange blossom special. I could. I could sing them all, but that's all we listened to growing up. So we'd be. My dad had all the cassettes and we do a lot of road trips and that's what we listen to. But my probably most embarrassing one is that what we're talking about um natalie and brulia's torn. I'm all out of faith. This is how I feel, cold and I'm afraid I naked on the floor yeah, that's great.
Speaker 1:It's my favorite best song of the 90s. That's's good. What about you, Brett?
Speaker 3:We had an old Jeep and the tape deck had a tape stuck in it so we could only listen to one side of the tape, legendary, and it's all like a mix of tunes that my dad taped off the radio or double taped with a cassette, you know, and one of them was All the Gold in California by Larry Gatlin and the Gatlin.
Speaker 2:Brothers.
Speaker 3:Oh, wow.
Speaker 2:It's like in my soul he's local man.
Speaker 3:Dude. It's great, it's the coolest dude in the whole world. So that's one I still know. I mean All Eyes on Me. Double CD of Tupac Tupac.
Speaker 2:All Eyes on Me. I know, you know that.
Speaker 1:Almost the entire album so good because we listened to it in my friend's.
Speaker 3:Avalon driving back and forth from school we were in like an 8th grade and so, like you know, that was like the one with California Love and all that stuff so that's probably one. I can't say all the words in it clearly, but yeah, that's it. And then, but yeah, that's it. And then I grew up with my grandparents a lot and they'd listen to like Gaither vocal band.
Speaker 2:Oh yeah, and then the Gaither homecoming.
Speaker 3:Love me some Gaither, which I thought was like kind of eye rolling when I was little and now it's like.
Speaker 2:I hear it, I'm like my heart grows three sizes that day.
Speaker 3:You know kind of thing We'd go on road trips.
Speaker 2:You ever well, shel Silverstein, sure light in the attic and where the sidewalk ends. So he himself recorded himself singing or telling all of his poems and we would just listen to him. So I have so many of Shel Silverstein's poems memorized, as him, you know, like the crocodile, went to the dentist and he sat down in the chair and the dentist said Well, tell me, son, what does it hurt and wear? And the taco crowd.
Speaker 1:I'll tell you the truth. I have terrible, terrible ache in my tooth and it's like I just it's just ingrained in your bones, in my bones. I love it like it's just I. I want bart to just sing every song I've ever heard his amazing voice man, I love it.
Speaker 3:We we hit the 10, we did it. The zen 10 is done thank you, guys.
Speaker 1:So much for listening. Brit, thank you for being here man, it's always a pleasure. I hope it's not the last time we get to hang out. I hope we force you to come back.
Speaker 3:Anytime. Yeah, I love this. It's just fun to shit the bull with you guys. Yeah it is.
Speaker 1:It is cool. Next time we'll bring some whiskey and we'll have a good time. But thank you so much for listening to Dab Bods and Dumbbells. We'll.