Rolling Deep

Ep. 3: Food Trucks and Adam Sandler

Chuck, Easton, and Alex Season 1 Episode 3

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Three friends armed with drinks and a fateful dice roll embark on an unfiltered exploration of life's random corners in this captivating podcast episode. What begins with street food appreciation—tales of authentic tamales from coolers and the undeniable superiority of bottled Coke with tacos—quickly spirals into a maze of engaging topics that will leave you feeling like you've joined an intimate gathering of old friends.

Speaker 1:

I started drinking at 6 am and we're here now. I don't know what time it is, but I'm rolling deep.

Speaker 2:

Welcome back to another episode of you guessed it, rolling Deep. I'm Alex.

Speaker 3:

I'm Easton.

Speaker 2:

And I'm Chuck Got a pretty good episode for you guys today. We got a lot on the mind, got a lot on the brain. So, fellas, you know what game we gotta play.

Speaker 3:

Rolling Hot Hot rolling Chuck, start us out First roll.

Speaker 1:

A six out first roll a six oh man, that's a good day to roll a six, yeah fun fact before we get to the next rolls.

Speaker 3:

Uh, chuck just figured out before the episode that he has to work tomorrow at approximately 2 am. Very factual. We're recording this at about what time? Is it 4.30. Yeah, we're recording this about 4.30. He's got a 6. We'll get out of here in 2-3 hours or so. Chuck will be rolling pretty damn deep by then.

Speaker 1:

It. It'll be good time to go to bed yeah, yeah, something like that.

Speaker 3:

But hey, the good news is is you can't count the one that you already had open before the podcast.

Speaker 1:

So really, we got seven the great news great news, great news some payback. This just in. I'm gonna be rolling deep.

Speaker 2:

Alrighty, so let's see that roll of yours.

Speaker 3:

Alright, three, three Trace. Chuck, do you want to trade?

Speaker 1:

No.

Speaker 3:

Okay, good, I wasn't going to trade with you anyway, alex your turn got a four.

Speaker 1:

A four for a nice four banger over there, so we're all in the top.

Speaker 3:

We're the top, uh, top average rolling deep today. We're all gonna be're all going to be rolling pretty good.

Speaker 2:

We're doing the bottled twisted teas today, switching up a little bit.

Speaker 3:

Why does everything taste so much better out of a bottle?

Speaker 1:

I don't know, but like the glass bottle Cokes or Sprites, I agree, or Fanta.

Speaker 3:

Or like a Coors Stubby in a glass bottle.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, those are nice. You guys ever have a bottled Coke with, like some street tacos? Yes, yes, yes, that's a very good combo.

Speaker 3:

No, I've never had that oh.

Speaker 1:

Really no, you never just was like, oh, I might get the bottled Coke and street tacos.

Speaker 3:

No, no, I was really confused on what street tacos were for the longest time.

Speaker 1:

They're tacos you get on the street. Yeah, actually, I met this lady in Portland the other day and she was rolling around with a cooler one with the wheels and handle and she's like I said I had tamales and I was like, and I was like, nice, nice, I'll take a couple tamales best tamales I've ever had in my life, but they were out of a lady's cooler so, but they were good. Oh, they were fantastic.

Speaker 2:

How much you pay for them.

Speaker 1:

Uh, I think it was like two dollars a tamale really yeah, so I got six. They're delicious, damn yeah I've had a tamale in a long time I'd fill you up. She was awesome she rolled through uh like four out of the five days I was at that spot and it was in like eastern Portland, like kind of by a motor center.

Speaker 3:

I got you. You know what's really underrated, that's also sold on the street. If you've ever been to an MLB game, I know they at least do it in Seattle and San Francisco. But like any time that you walk out of the stadium, there's just like people with grills just walking around like the stadium cooking hot dogs, and they make some pretty pretty good dogs, I agree.

Speaker 1:

Sounds like that's rolling deep, If you ask me.

Speaker 3:

I'm rolling deep on some dogs.

Speaker 2:

Some pretty good dogs. I'm a big sucker for like food trucks, like for, I mean, food trucks are usually like super expensive, but I, for some reason, I always just find myself loving some food trucks, whether it's like a hot dog, a burger or even like a yakisoba noodle.

Speaker 1:

Little place I don't know. I went to this food truck the other day. That was uh, pretty delicious going in but pretty devastating coming out like vitamin. Putin could hire me, because my asshole is basically the atomic bomb.

Speaker 3:

Well, hopefully he never hires you. We would be in trouble oh my god, dude I couldn't imagine being chuck's toilet bowl seeing some stuff anyway, let's get started on our days.

Speaker 1:

How was everyone's day this morning, this fine afternoon morning area?

Speaker 3:

uh, it was pretty good this morning. Woke up, took my taxes in morning, woke up, took my taxes in. Fuck taxes, not a big tax guy, yeah. One. One fun story from today, though, is uh, I took my truck through the car wash and they let you, you know, vacuum it out for free there at the car wash. I was like midway through the vacuuming and I really had to piss like bad, and so I thought I would walk to a little Chinese restaurant across the street, take a leak, and about halfway through my walk I realized that they have now closed it. So I turned back around, hopped in my truck and I was backing out, was backing out really quickly and realized I was going to piss my pants. So I found the nearest private spot, pulled the truck over in an alley and took a piss because I wasn't about to pee my pants.

Speaker 1:

I thought you were going to go with that story that you whipped out the vacuum and just pissed in it.

Speaker 2:

But also would have been very smart.

Speaker 3:

As.

Speaker 1:

Maybe I don't know how much pressure those things got.

Speaker 3:

As I was Hopping back in my truck, though, there was a lady Driving around my truck, so I mean I was hidden, but she definitely knew I was pissing. So there was that. That was kind of a fun story, good.

Speaker 1:

It was a little bit exciting.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I don't really know where you want us to go. Yeah, it was a little bit exciting.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I don't really know where you want us to go.

Speaker 3:

All I'm trying to say is some days it's bada-bing and some days it's bada-boom, and that was definitely a bada-boom moment.

Speaker 1:

Did you get pee dribble though?

Speaker 3:

A little bit, because I was, oh, a little, a small, no, a little small amount from trying to hold it in.

Speaker 1:

Did you go back to the car wash?

Speaker 3:

It wasn't a post pee dribble, it was like a pre-pee dribble.

Speaker 1:

Now real question Did you get your hands wet and wipe them on your pants to make people believe you were just washing your hands? Really intense, Did you no?

Speaker 3:

Believe it or not, there wasn't a nice hand washing station for me afterwards. So I just used an Armour. All Wipe, that's nice.

Speaker 2:

That's kind of like washing your hands. So what was your day up? To Allie, I tagged along with Easton, so I witnessed this whole story and there was no lying up. So, you've seen the pee dribble? Huh, I didn't see the pee-Dribble. No, I actually probably would have had my mom or someone come pick me up if I knew there was.

Speaker 3:

P-Dribble, even anywhere near me. Yeah, I'm wearing jorts, it hides it pretty well, that's true.

Speaker 2:

Tagged along with him, did tax stuff and kind of just hung out.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, no, I went to work today and got there and then couldn't do the job and then packed the crane up and parked her and drove here. I did a little bit, picked up little things.

Speaker 3:

Why couldn't you do the job?

Speaker 1:

Too tall, too tall, didn't have enough stick. I wasn't rolling deep, I was rolling soft too tall, didn't have enough stick.

Speaker 3:

I wasn't rolling deep, I was rolling soft so you're, the crane was too tall.

Speaker 1:

No, the p, so it was a, it was a like a hopper thingy, but it was like 90 feet up and I only have 118 feet of boom, and uh, it was like 30 feet tall and uh, so I could pick it up, but I could only pick it up, you know, 20 feet and uh was enough to get over what it was sitting in oh yeah, I feel you so then I picked some stuff up, like beside it, like other, like pipes and stuff like that it was over at a stimson okay, stimson lumber mill yeah, but that one was that's uh over by uh fourth growth yeah.

Speaker 2:

So, chuck, let me ask you on your way here, to record the podcast today. What did you listen to?

Speaker 1:

um. I watched Hulu perfect.

Speaker 3:

What did you happen to watch on Hulu?

Speaker 1:

well, there's a show.

Speaker 2:

I mean I spit it out family guy there you go.

Speaker 3:

That's what I was gonna say, if you didn't want to tell us the joke you could have just said family guy I like you it was a weird anime. Okay, all right well, chuck likes anime, and that's, that's uh that's all right.

Speaker 2:

When in doubt, anime out, so you watch hulu while you drive, huh, or you just like have it while you're driving.

Speaker 1:

You just like listen to family guy um, no, I have one of those phone stand things and it works perfectly okay to just set it up and I don't, don't tell the police I'm doing it, but okay, okay 95% of the time, I'm either watching Hulu or Netflix.

Speaker 2:

Okay.

Speaker 1:

But here's a real thing that had happened to me the other night and I want to know if it happens to you. But you've been having like a really good dream, like a really good dream. And then you wake up and you're like, oh, I got to piss. And then you go piss and you're like, oh, I got to piss. And then you go piss and you climb back into bed real fast and you're like just remembering that dream, just remembering that dream and then you slip back into it slowly.

Speaker 3:

I've done that, I think, twice in my life. Ever, yeah, I've never recovered a good dream.

Speaker 1:

Really, I recovered that one and man, it felt good. It was like all the stars aligned.

Speaker 2:

Do you?

Speaker 3:

want to share what the dream was.

Speaker 1:

Actually, Alex, you were in the dream.

Speaker 3:

You were in the wet dream, Alex.

Speaker 1:

You were rolling deep in the dream oh no, no, no, it was me and my gram. I was rolling deep in the car and, uh no, we got pulled over. And guess who the cop was? Alex alex right and he goes.

Speaker 1:

Wow, what a change of events what a freaking twist yeah, and he goes, yeah, so you shouldn't be texting while driving. I was like alex, I'm not driving and he was be texting while driving and I was like Alex, I'm not driving and he was like just stay off your phone. And I was like, okay, and he goes, are you drunk? And I was like yeah, and he goes, I'll give you a DUI.

Speaker 1:

And I was like I'm not driving. And then I was like all right, and we started going again and he pulls us over again, he. And he was like I told you not to text, and I was like what? And he was like get out of the car. And then he tased me.

Speaker 2:

And so you wanted to go back to that dream.

Speaker 1:

Well, when I woke up from the dream, it was like before we started driving again, but I thought it was great. I thought it was a great dream. I was also hammered in the dream.

Speaker 3:

What do you think makes up dreams?

Speaker 1:

I think it's part of your mind, like your amygdala or something.

Speaker 3:

The medulla oblongata. Maybe Mama said, mama said Mama said the medulla oblongata. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Shout out Sandman Mm.

Speaker 3:

Shout out Sandman.

Speaker 2:

Shout out Sandman, shout out Tooth Fairy. Yeah, man, dude, he's got some banger movies.

Speaker 1:

Oh I, I was just shouting out the tooth fairy because gave us bands oh, I thought you meant like the rock what remember when he played tooth fairy?

Speaker 3:

I remember that yeah, but isn't Adam Sandler the Sandman?

Speaker 1:

Sandman yeah.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, oh, bedtime Stories.

Speaker 3:

I mean any Adam Sandler movie. That's what I was talking about when I said Medulla Alba Gata. And then that's why.

Speaker 2:

I also said my mama, said my mama, yeah, talking about Bobby Boucher, all right.

Speaker 3:

What do you guys think is the best Adam Sandler movie? Mine, mine's probably, I don't know.

Speaker 1:

Mine's Happy Gilmore.

Speaker 2:

Solid answer.

Speaker 1:

That's where I go.

Speaker 2:

And it has like everything you want in an Adam Sandler movie. Like him, like fighting someone, him being silly, but him also just being badass at the same time yeah, you know.

Speaker 3:

Uh, it took me so long to answer because I couldn't actually think of water boy, but water water boy is my answer, another good one, I think, mine, I mean.

Speaker 2:

I'm not gonna say it's underrated, but I feel like it's not talked about a lot. Mine's Big Daddy, I like Click too.

Speaker 1:

That's your favorite.

Speaker 2:

I think so.

Speaker 1:

What's the one where he has Angelina Jolie?

Speaker 3:

Billy Madison.

Speaker 1:

What's that lady that always does his movies with him?

Speaker 2:

Drew Barrymore, jennifer Aniston.

Speaker 1:

Jennifer Aniston.

Speaker 2:

Jessica with it.

Speaker 1:

And then she yeah.

Speaker 2:

That's a good one 51st Dates. That's Drew Barrymore.

Speaker 3:

But 51st Dates is a banger.

Speaker 2:

I actually watched that not too long ago, Very sad at the end. Well, I mean it's kind of sad throughout the whole thing, but it ends kind of as happy as it can be, I think.

Speaker 1:

How Shea Bird gets them every day.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but then can you just imagine that? Because then at the very end you find out they have a kid and stuff, and so she wakes up and she's like oh, I have a six-year-old daughter and I'm married and I'm on a boat in Alaska. That is wild.

Speaker 1:

Doesn't he do a recap video for her?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, Every day scott like that is, why doesn't he do like a recap video? For yeah, so every day, every day, she watches a tape he made and it's summing up everything she's missed and he explains, like why she's like that that video has got to get longer and longer, like oh yeah every year.

Speaker 1:

It's just like started out as like 30 minute video and now it's like an hour long video. Yeah, really a waste of life. Yeah, when they're 60, it's going to be's like an hour long video. Yeah, really a waste of life yeah, when they're 60, it's gonna be like a four hour long video, so she's gotta wake up, watch a four hour video and then imagine that she like wakes up and she's like holy shit, I'm 85 dude.

Speaker 3:

You know. What's crazy about that, though, is like, could you imagine? Like really genuinely like how does she believe the video? Like I know the movie's fictional, but like, every morning you just watch it and somebody's like this is your life, but you like don't remember it. To be like, how do you know that that's true every single day?

Speaker 2:

because you actually forgot he I mean, yeah, that's true, I don't know. I mean I guess like because I think her dad goes along with adam sandler and like their daughter or some, whatever it is, and she goes up and she's like oh, my dad's here, like she at least has, like that so what happens when her dad, you know, kicks a bucket? Well, I mean she's gonna be sad, but in the morning I'll be all cool until you know. She asks hey, where's my pops?

Speaker 3:

every day, that would suck yeah every single day you figured out that your loved one died oh my god. And then you got a deal that would be torture like every single day you wake up, you're just like oh my god, they died. Like just freak out every single day. Yeah, it's like. Yeah, that happened 20 years ago.

Speaker 2:

You'd never, mourn yeah, I know, like you'd never. I feel like there'd be some days where you might not bring it up. Where's your dad? Oh, business trip, like he went fishing, just like.

Speaker 1:

Say something, just so you don't lie to her I mean maybe, if you're dealing with that you really want to build your relationship off a lie. All right now you're paying me like you're, like, you're starting, you're starting. You're basically the first time you ever meet this lady over again. You're going to start it with a lie.

Speaker 3:

You're like, hey, nice to meet you this morning again. Your dad died, yeah.

Speaker 1:

No, I wouldn't bring it up like that. I'd be like hey, made you French toast. And then, on the French toast. It'd say like your dad died and like chocolate or something.

Speaker 2:

You look very pretty, your brother and dad died.

Speaker 3:

Here's a mimosa. Good morning Also.

Speaker 1:

Your pop's passed Like what it's got to be rough. What other movies do they like where it's like, just doesn't like in the long run it wouldn't like the Longest Yard? Yeah yeah, it's like, just doesn't like in the long run it wouldn't like the longest yard yeah.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I don't actually know what question you were trying to ask.

Speaker 2:

I just threw out another. I was thinking how great is grown-ups?

Speaker 1:

I think that's a fantastic movie, that that's probably my top three, you know what's funny is I was thinking about the Hangover and Grown Ups and I was like Grown Ups is for kids, Hangover is for adults. The Hangover is basically an adult version of Grown Ups. Yeah.

Speaker 2:

I mean yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Am I wrong?

Speaker 2:

I mean no, You're not wrong.

Speaker 3:

It's like the, probably five years prior to Grown Ups.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

Like they could have made a Grown Ups movie before they had kids, really, and it would have been like that.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I mean yeah, you could say, or you can even say like the Hangover is like all right, they're younger, they're like partying and stuff. Then they have kids and then it's like all right, like now we got to settle down a little bit. I just can't wait for the day that I get to you know.

Speaker 1:

Put on the white sneakers and hop on the lawnmower.

Speaker 3:

Chuck's like. I can't wait till I finally have a kid to fetch me beer that is like that's like I can't wait until I finally have a kid to fetch me beer.

Speaker 2:

That is going to be awesome, that's like the best, but Grown Ups is such like a like. If I had to watch a movie 24 hours like straight, it probably would just be Grown Ups. It's an easy. Watch Loki 24 hours straight is wild, all right. If you had to pick a movie to watch 24 hours straight, what do you pick? Home Alone, see that Alone. I feel like that's such a weird answer.

Speaker 3:

The Titanic. Oh dude, you get away with watching it fewer times.

Speaker 2:

That's fair. I guess any Quentin Tarantino movie too, Do Django Unchained or something.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, just like any long, longest movie in the world, whatever that is, I'm watching that one. The longest movie in the world, whatever.

Speaker 2:

whatever that is, I'm watching that one the longest movie in the world is logistics, a 2012 swedish documentary, and it is 35 days and 17 hours long oh sweet, yeah see, I can one watch 135th of that and be done yeah I guess, yeah, but how boring is it.

Speaker 3:

Well, I don't know, it could be interesting.

Speaker 2:

I don't know much about swedens or swedish people there's also a movie called the cure for insomnia, 85 hours yeah, watch that one that's. Yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 1:

That's crazy. Who's like? I'm going to film a movie and it's going to be 35 hours long 35 days. Oh 35 days long.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that DVD is probably fat somehow.

Speaker 1:

It's like part one, part two, part three yeah.

Speaker 2:

Until you get to part 35. It's like oh, you want to download this movie before a flight? Well, it takes up, you know, 200. One terabyte, it takes, you know, a whole iPad.

Speaker 3:

I will have to say, though, grown-ups, I feel it's a great movie. No disrespect to any of the guys involved, I do think it's a little overrated for what it is though. Yeah, with that many and I assume it'd probably be hard, but with that many like great comedians in one show, you would think that it would just be like never ending, like laughing, and I mean it is. I mean you laugh, it's a great movie. But I think it's hard when they make movies like that and put like so many famous people in them, to actually like show off yeah every single person's talent in it.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, like when Adam Sandler's by himself he can really, like you know, show off. But then you put Adam Sandler and Chris Rock and Kevin James and David Spade all in one movie and it's like I mean, adam Sandler's the main character in that movie. Really, I mean they're all in there, but's kind of based around his family.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, Everything and there's a whole shooting scene at the end, or whatever.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, and so Chris Rock, david Spade, kevin James, all kind of. I feel like don't really get to show off.

Speaker 2:

Their comedic talents as much. I mean, they have their moments though.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, moments though, yeah, I mean they do. But I just feel like it's hard to put that many, that many people in one movie and have people feel like they didn't lose out on their talents. You know, I'm saying yeah, make any sense. Like I feel like any movie like that where they throw a bunch of famous people in it, it's kind of like it was a great movie. I'm not saying that it's a bad movie, but it's just a hot take that I don't like when they do that.

Speaker 1:

I'm trying to think of another movie where they did that, and it's on the tip of my tongue.

Speaker 2:

This is the End. That was a pretty big cast, yeah, big names. Big cast, yeah, big names. And I mean you can argue that like seth rogan, I guess, is like the main character and but I think in that one I mean I guess it's like the same size as like the grown-ups cast, it's like five or six dudes and all pretty big names, but I mean that's number two I'm also about to crack open number two. Chuck Chuck, how we doing.

Speaker 1:

I'm about halfway through number two.

Speaker 3:

Number one.

Speaker 1:

Well, no, number two, because that's seven.

Speaker 3:

Where's your other empty can?

Speaker 1:

This one.

Speaker 3:

Oh yeah, okay, yeah. So you're doing it off of a seven count and not a six count, yeah, a seven count yeah, gotcha, that makes sense, but yeah, I mean, I do think they did really well with how they presented that movie with all of them in it, though, and grown-ups.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, like you were talking about. Like you know their old coach died. They're all getting back together like hanging out at a lake house, you know doing whatever. Like hanging out at a lake house, you know doing whatever, and uh, I feel like genuinely anybody. That's like really close to your friends like that's your dream, oh, like one day, you know, like you got your own kids and you all like meet back up and go.

Speaker 2:

You know, have a good time somewheres and and I feel like as a parent I mean I can't assume because I'm not one but you would hope that like, all right, like me and my best friend both have kids around the same age.

Speaker 3:

I hope they both get along and you want to see your kids with your best friend's kids like playing or doing whatever, while you get to reminisce and hang out with your buddies yeah, yeah, I feel like it's gonna be the hardest part about like doing that, like being a parent and stuff, because, like obviously I would love them to be friends with your guys's kids if they're around the same age, but if they aren't, like I'm not gonna really force it I'm gonna still hang out with you guys, like do my thing, yeah, you know, but it's just.

Speaker 3:

I'll always give a shit about my kids more than I will at that point, like making time to go hang out with you guys or do whatever. So like if our kids do become friends, great, that'd be amazing.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

But if they don't like, I'm not going to be like. Well, this is my friend and here's their kid. So just hang out with them. I think naturally they'll end up being friends. Yeah, just because, like if they're around.

Speaker 1:

I don't know if, around enough, they're going to be like they might. You know, you never know. They might be like best friends or whatever, but I think you know the beginning. They might be like oh my gosh, you know really good friends. But I mean, at the end of the day it's like they choose to like still be their friend or not.

Speaker 2:

It's like whatever yeah, and also like he was saying about, like the age thing. It's like if you have a kid before I do, I'm not. I mean, we're not gonna force your sophomore son to hang out with my seventh grade son I will, oh, I'll, let go play catch with Alex's kid. He's like Dad, I don't want to. I'm trying to get into Harvard.

Speaker 1:

I was like I only brought you along to DD, so just get out there and play catch.

Speaker 2:

That's a great reason to have a kid. I have a oh my.

Speaker 1:

I only brought you along because your dad has a drinking problem.

Speaker 3:

Chuck's like I only brought you along so I could roll deep yeah so I could roll deep.

Speaker 1:

Hey, you can't roll deep without a DD now. Come on now, kid, get out there and play some catch. I'll watch it.

Speaker 3:

Dude, I can't wait for like 20 years from now, maybe less, I don't know, who knows 20 years from now, maybe less, I don't know, who knows when we uh, finally have kids, you know, or if we do, as things might change life happens, you know, but, um, I think that it's gonna be great when one of us gets to bring our kids on here oh yeah, oh yeah, for sure, for sure, for sure our kids just like yeah, time to roll deep.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, we're just like hell yeah, brother wow, I'm so proud roll deep over there.

Speaker 2:

This time I'll dd whoever, whoever has a kid first like that, first like hot roll that first time.

Speaker 3:

So we're all gonna drum roll and it's gonna be like yeah, we roll three dice around here. Yeah, it's like, it's like this thing's grown, we're all going to drum roll and it's going to be awesome. Yeah, we roll three dice around here. It's like this thing's grown. We're rolling seven dice. He's like Dad, I literally can't drink 42 beers tonight.

Speaker 2:

I'm like well, we're like hey, at the minimum you're going to drink seven.

Speaker 3:

Just hope you roll all ones.

Speaker 1:

It's so big we just do live saturday event starting in the morning and just go all day.

Speaker 3:

Dude, that would be awesome, like if we did the ron d podcast of the pub but did it like like started the event and then, like five hours later, did the podcast and then we could just take like live, like live people, oh yeah, like live special guests from people that have just been getting hammered for the last five hours we should do like you guys ever watch, like charlie brown, like what lucy does?

Speaker 2:

she has like a therapist booth. I'm like you give her a quarter and she'll like try to be your therapist. That's what we should do. We should just go to like random bars and just try to give like really deep life lessons on stuff so, talking about therapy, I had a panic attack the other day.

Speaker 1:

okay, I had a panic attack the other day and, uh, I just was like sitting there on the couch and it's like my heart started racing and I felt anxious. And I was like sitting there on the couch and it's like my heart started racing and I felt anxious and I was like started freaking out and I did not know why or what it was, but I looked it up and it was like, yeah, here I have a panic attack. Are you ever like that?

Speaker 3:

I've never experienced that, but I've heard about it and I would assume it kind of feels like a heart attack. Well, yeah, it's like I just like, without ever having a heart attack. That's just kind of what I assumed based off the explanation I've heard from people.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it's like your chest gets tight and you feel lightheaded.

Speaker 2:

And your brain's going at 1,000 miles per hour.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and I didn't even know why that was like a thing.

Speaker 2:

No, it's definitely a scary thing and I mean it affects everyone, or sorry, panic attacks are different for our everyone. So I mean all symptoms are different, at least like I think I've had a panic attack. So it's kind of like I feel like my brain goes at a thousand miles per hour and my chest just feels tight and I kind of just attack. So it's kind of like I feel like my brain goes at a thousand miles per hour and my chest just feels tight and I kind of just like, immediately, I'm kind of like alright, I want to go to my bed, put the sheets and covers over my head and I don't want to talk to anyone. I just want to try to figure it out.

Speaker 3:

But some people just aren't like that yeah, it's really weird because I mean, that's just crazy in general and that's why I'm always curious. I'm always curious about the human brain. I would love to get somebody on here that could like enlighten me on stuff I just want to know about, like the whole dreams thing that we were talking about earlier, or even like that Like why do people have panic attacks? Like is it as simple as, like you're stressed out, or is it like because, like a lot of people that I've talked to is like, yeah, the doctor told me I had a panic attack and then it was like you know, you kind of just generally ask them or be like so what were you like stressed about panic and they're like literally nothing.

Speaker 1:

Like I can't, I can't think of a reason why small things could trigger it, yeah, so it's like yeah, sometimes it is just and the thing is is I know someone has a good amount of panic attacks and they're like yeah, no, so you have a panic attack and sometimes it'll feel like it's at the weirdest times, but that's because it's like your mind knows that you can't panic or freak out or be super stressed in that moment of whatever it was, and so it'll hit you when you're like comfortable later in the day or like laying in your bed at night, where you'll just like get super anxious and think about everything that's going wrong. And it's like it's because that's your comfy place. So it hits you when you are comfy, because your mind knows that's, that's an okay, okay place to like have a panic attack so that's uh, that's that I mean.

Speaker 3:

just respect people and be a good human, that's what I'm a firm believer in.

Speaker 1:

I agree, respect everyone.

Speaker 3:

Love everybody and just be a good human. There's no room for hate out there.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and just understand that everyone has their own stresses and their own fields and own things that get them going at the end of the day where they've got gotta go roll deep.

Speaker 3:

Rolling deep's our goal.

Speaker 2:

We want the whole world to roll deep.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, roll deep, get good at something Roll deep in some love. Why don't you, yeah, roll deep in something like that?

Speaker 1:

Yeah something good like that. Roll deep in loving.

Speaker 2:

Well, I think, folks, we're gonna take a brief intermission inter mission mission of the interms sounds good.

Speaker 3:

With the weather heating up, you might be trying to find a good watering hole to have yourself a cold beer or an even better place to get your munch on. Look no further than the allston Pub and Grub. With their great prices and even better service, you are guaranteed to be satisfied when leaving the Alston Pub and Grub.

Speaker 1:

Well, you know what I was thinking. What were you thinking? I was thinking how I'm rolling deep on my third beer, and you know what's crazy.

Speaker 2:

I'm matching you right now. You know what's crazy. Chuck's not rolling deep on my third beer. And you know what's crazy? I'm matching you right now.

Speaker 3:

You know what's crazy is Chuck's not rolling deep on his third beer, I am rolling deep on it.

Speaker 2:

Oh, actually wait. Yeah, what the fuck.

Speaker 3:

Alex is just like nonchalantly trying to agree with him.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I totally forgot. No, I'm rolling deep on the third Call back to the first episode.

Speaker 2:

Chuck claims that he opened one during intermission.

Speaker 1:

I did, you watched it.

Speaker 3:

Watch this, Chuck. I opened this one during intermission.

Speaker 1:

I'm going to set it over here as a side beer.

Speaker 2:

So that is number two for you no, no, oh no, that's crazy See this is number three.

Speaker 1:

You have a different opinion.

Speaker 2:

What do you mean?

Speaker 3:

Dude, you can't just make noise with your mouth. It's your fault for breaking one during intermission. If they didn't hear it it doesn't count. Just kidding, we've never done that. We're on the third episode. I'm just starting to do that because I thought it'd be cool, but the first two episodes we definitely yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so I'm on number three Deal, not number three not number three, number two, that's number two I, there's two chuck's got four beers to drink during the segment yeah

Speaker 2:

segment, and I don't know why you're complaining. It's an easy task for you so real question.

Speaker 1:

Let's say you're on, let's what's the longest trip you on? What's the longest time you've been in a car? Like the longest trip you've ever taken in a car?

Speaker 3:

The longest trip or the longest single session of driving I've been in a car.

Speaker 1:

Either one.

Speaker 3:

A car specifically, or on a road trip.

Speaker 1:

Road trip, car bus, whatever.

Speaker 3:

I was in an RV, does that count?

Speaker 1:

Yep.

Speaker 3:

I drove from Rainier, oregon, to Toledo, ohio, in an RV. It's pretty deep and on the way there we took the scenic route to see some stuff, so it ended up being a little bit longer.

Speaker 1:

Is that it, or you got more to it?

Speaker 3:

No, that's about. I mean, that's about how long it is. I mean I can explain where we went.

Speaker 1:

No, I mean that's fine. Well, I explain where we went. No, I mean Well for car.

Speaker 2:

I feel like I've taken a lot of different road trips. I can't even think, but I know my longest plane ride. What's that? 18 hours, oh nice, where'd you go? I went to Vietnam and had a layover in Japan.

Speaker 1:

Good morning.

Speaker 2:

Vietnam and I was like 7 or 8, so it was pretty hard, especially when my DSi died.

Speaker 1:

What's a?

Speaker 2:

DSi, you never had a DS. It was a Nintendo DSi.

Speaker 1:

It was like the model after. What does the I stand for?

Speaker 2:

Intelligence.

Speaker 1:

What does DS stand for?

Speaker 3:

Digital system maybe.

Speaker 1:

Digital System of Intelligence. Let's look it up.

Speaker 3:

It stands for Digital, digital.

Speaker 2:

Developer System or Dual Screen, because of that? Yep, I had two screens. Gosh, I'm so mad. That's crazy. I thought the 3ds was badass. I remember I had one of these. I just thought the thumb stick was super cool, dude it's so stupid what after the original ds they progressed.

Speaker 3:

We got worse. It might have just been because I was getting older, but also I just thought that nothing beat the original DS.

Speaker 1:

Or like a PSP.

Speaker 2:

PSP was sick. I think the Nintendo Switch is pretty cool.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I like the Switch. I got a Switch.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, when they first came out and I got one, all I would play on it was Smash Bros, and so when I was bored during advisory period I would just play Smash Bros with my classmates and stuff. I think you and I used to play smash bros. I'll smash a bro, sometimes oh wow boy rolling deep anyway boy

Speaker 1:

what a statement from chuck rolls yeah, I roll um, but uh no. I think my longest trip was I went down to redding california, but I was in a semi and it broke down and so from one in the afternoon to about 11 o'clock at night I just sat in a semi truck I think you called me yeah yeah, I was just so bored. I was like watching things and then like I just sit in there. It was terrible, just bored.

Speaker 3:

It's a pretty fun drive though.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, it's a pretty nice drive. You know what another nice drive is? It's the drive out to Westport or Coos Bay.

Speaker 3:

Westport and Coos Bay are two.

Speaker 1:

Just any time you're rolling towards the coast. I guess that's fair Like 101 is just a beautiful drive in itself.

Speaker 3:

Fun fact, I hate road trips.

Speaker 1:

Really.

Speaker 3:

Why is that? I just don't like sitting in a car that long.

Speaker 1:

Now, do you like road trips more when you're driving?

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I would agree on that. I was going to say you're usually the one that drives everywhere and kind of offers to drive, so that's kind of an interesting thing to hear from I would rather drive on a road like more than, let's say, six hour road trip.

Speaker 1:

I would rather drive than be the person just sitting there, because when I just sit there I get like antsy and then, yeah, I can't sit down.

Speaker 2:

I feel that I feel like not even just to be like, oh I want shotgun, just to say I'm in the front seat. But anytime I'm on a road trip, especially with like one of you two or like any like big trip with like some buddies, I just feel like I want to be in the front seat just so because I know like I can keep the other person entertained, kind of. You know what I mean. Like so you guys aren't like falling asleep at the wheel or like being bored, because usually all of our other friends like either fall asleep or like start snoozing or just aren't really doing anything. Because I feel like other, like what you were saying. I feel like if I am in the back, I don't have that responsibility and I do get get anxiety and I do get antsy and I'm just kind of ready to be at our destination.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and also I hate being DJ.

Speaker 3:

I love it.

Speaker 1:

Well, because no one likes my music choices Like they'll like it for the first half.

Speaker 3:

Because you play sea shanties, you do have some interesting.

Speaker 2:

You play like. You'll go from like kanye.

Speaker 1:

Well, I came home on a monday night as drunk, as drunk as could be.

Speaker 2:

You'll go from like kanye to like drake, to like nickelback and that's like all fine, whatever.

Speaker 3:

But then you'll play like some random, like opera, something which is fine, I love it, but then it always seems like it leads into like four hours of opera after that. It was like okay, the first one, that was kind of funny, entertaining, but I'm not trying to listen to opera I don't listen to opera.

Speaker 1:

I, like you know, like older, like you know merle haggard, merle, haggard god you can't go wrong you can't go wrong with merle haggard no, I mean I, I love music yeah, music's great. Um, but I will say that, yeah, there's some things that are on my playlist.

Speaker 2:

We'll say you two have, because I think I have a pretty wide variety of music in different genres. But you two, it's like you guys have like movie soundtracks sometimes or like tv show soundtracks. I feel like I do. Anytime I hear a good tune, shazam this is a great app, very underrated, yeah, like definitely anytime, like like, I'll be strolling around walmart and they'll be playing a song.

Speaker 3:

I'm like man.

Speaker 2:

This is catchy shazam download like, do you ever like watch a movie and you're like that song sounds sick and you'll put your phone kind of close to your TV. I have found some good tunes doing that.

Speaker 1:

You ever have phases of music where you look back now and you're like why did I even go through such a hard?

Speaker 3:

phase.

Speaker 1:

Mine was dubstep. I went like a year just listening to like the squirrels, squirrelics, just hard.

Speaker 2:

I remember you put me on to jason moraz when we were kids jason moraz has been a quarter to two. Yeah, such a great, I feel like we had also bonded over bruno mars bruno mars has always been the man um, I uh listened to this.

Speaker 1:

Um, lady, uh, come back to me on that, I'll remember that. I'll remember the name here, but um, yeah, yeah, I love music.

Speaker 2:

What do you typically put on Me Me? When you get in your car and you start it and you're like, all right, I'm going to listen to some tunes. What do you typically throw on there?

Speaker 3:

The last four songs I've downloaded, unless I've gotten tired of them, and then I just hit shuffle.

Speaker 1:

Have you ever heard of In this Moment, in this Moment, by that's the band oh no. Yeah, you should look them up sometime.

Speaker 3:

They're pretty good. Yeah, usually I just hit shuffle.

Speaker 1:

I like the good shuffle or to hit like you find a good song you like and then hit the on the Apple. You hit the, the creative playlist or whatever yeah, creative station yeah, that's a good one.

Speaker 2:

I, yeah, I'm kind of with there on easton. Like usually, when I first get in my car and I'm driving, it's usually like the first like three to four like latest songs I put on my playlist or downloaded, but right now it's a lot of zach bryan what's your take on fergie?

Speaker 1:

I love fergie. Oh yeah, my london bridge yeah, I just it's.

Speaker 3:

It's pretty crazy. I mean, at this point I got so many songs that like I've forgotten that are really good. So that's kind of the cool part about shuffling it is. I mean, at this point I think I have like I don't know like 12 000 songs or something downloaded into my apple music and so like, if it isn't during this last like three month section, I forget about the song. So that's kind of the cool part about shuffling it and sometimes I just throw it in, shuffle it and then I like re-find a song and it's like, it's almost kind of like the radio yeah, it's like wow that I remember, like this is a really good song that I completely forgot even existed.

Speaker 2:

So it's kind of you guys cannot deny that's one of the best feelings ever, when you have the radio on and you're just listening and then all of a sudden, one of your favorite songs come on and you're like, oh, hell, yeah, because it's unexpected. That is kind of what I like about shuffling, because sometimes you'll kind of forget about a song and then you listen to that song for two weeks straight and then it's like all right, you move on to something else.

Speaker 1:

Like the lady who did Pink Pony Club One and then it's like alright, you move on to something else.

Speaker 3:

Like the lady who did Pink Pony Club, watt's Home Comes on the radio.

Speaker 2:

I like that that's kind of how I am with like. That's why I love like dad rock like Linkin Park.

Speaker 3:

Nickelback.

Speaker 2:

Three Doors Down, skillet, three Days Grace like any like kind of like. I mean anything from like the late 90s to early 2000s, like rock, that's like my jam and that's what I get like super stoked about so either you guys scared of airplanes, starting to get there yeah, with all the stuff that's been happening, kind of, but I've never really like.

Speaker 2:

I know a lot of people I know it's like the most common fear ever being scared of heights and like turbulence or whatever. But I've never really been when at least when it comes to heights I've never been super freaked out, unless I'm like vulnerable, if that makes sense yeah, I'm not really scared of airplanes.

Speaker 1:

I'm scared of the plane crashing on an island somewhere, like lost, just because I feel like I couldn't survive in a situation like that. Just because I feel like I couldn't survive in a situation like that Because everyone would be getting off the airplane in their own way and trying to save themselves. And I feel like my main goal, if a plane went down the ocean and I was still alive, would be find the bar cart, because if I'm going to be on an island, I want to be on an island drunk.

Speaker 2:

And you're going to want to find the small bags of chips and stuff.

Speaker 1:

I don't care about the chips, I just need the bar cart. No, I need those pretzels and then, yeah, let me find the bar cart. Yeah, everyone will be like I got to get out of here. Water will be coming up. I'll be like, hey, man, get out of here. And then later, when I'm on that island, he's gonna be like, hey. So I know you were looking for that bar cart, did you? What'd you find? I'm like nothing. I found nothing. I have a little stash all hidden in the sand.

Speaker 2:

Oh, yeah, do you guys ever uh, you guys ever watched naked and afraid? No, you've never seen naked and afraid no, I like that what's up alone.

Speaker 1:

I've watched that. That's kind of similar. Maybe I don't know, I've never seen.

Speaker 3:

If you watch the new show I don't know what it's on. It's kind of similar. It's called uh extracted.

Speaker 2:

I've never even heard of it.

Speaker 3:

It's like a.

Speaker 3:

It's kind of like a game show type of feel is that the one where their family get to knock them out yeah, so they, uh, so they audition and you can, as far as I know, you audition to either be the survivor or the person in the room and then, if you get on, then you pick your team, which is two different people, to come with you and then you pick who's going to be the survivor or not, but there's, I don't know, I think, 10 people and they all auditioned and then the two people that aren't on the island are competing in games or competing back in the central area to send them supplies.

Speaker 3:

So when they first get dropped off the island, they have nothing, and so then their families, friends, whoever they chose to like be, their two people back at headquarters are like doing things to try to like send them blankets, something to make a fire, like something to make a weapon to eat, or, you know, rope so like in the Hunger Games, when that lady Katniss gets in the burning ointment yeah, and then the other twist to that is that the person that's actually out there surviving can't remove themselves.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, the people, the two people that they've picked at the headquarters, have to be the ones that remove them. Have to like, click the button and actually say like extract them from the island.

Speaker 1:

Honestly, if it was me on the island and I had to pick like two people to like, it'd probably be probably you, e, because you're definitely one, don't know who the other one is, maybe Alex, but I think you'd be like oh no, chuck's looking a little rough out there. We should probably. But I feel like Easton would be like nah man he's got it. He's got another week in him.

Speaker 3:

I'd be sitting there like on just send me home no, which is actually crazy to watch, because there's this one gal that's uh, that's out there trying to survive and she brought her husband and her father-in-law, who seemed to know like there's stuff about like survivalist type of stuff, and she like fully disclosed when she started the episode that she didn't but she like trusted them to get her the right stuff and they're like pretty like confident, like no know what to do, like think that they could do it type of deal. And I watched like a little clip from the episode the other day where she was just like get me off this island and like she'd been obviously they had been there for a long time now and uh, she was like like I need to leave, like you guys seriously take me out, and they're just like shows a clip of them at headquarters where they're just like well, I don't know what she thinks she's doing, but but we're not clicking the button.

Speaker 1:

You're not getting out.

Speaker 3:

But they can't obviously communicate that to them but it just has video footage of her just being like please, I'm ready to go, I can't do this, and they're just like well cool, You're not leaving. Is there a prize in?

Speaker 2:

it.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I can't remember what the prize is.

Speaker 2:

Probably the money of some sort.

Speaker 3:

No, yeah, it's money.

Speaker 1:

But I think it's like $500,000. They're doing all that for $500,000?. I'd rather go on the Mr B show. I get five grand for just showing up.

Speaker 2:

You get $10,000 for being an asshole to everyone. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

It'd be like that one game that I watched, where all the people they picked are standing up there and the money keeps raising.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, oh, once it hit a million, I'd be like see you guys later. I mean, that's what I feel like is not.

Speaker 1:

I'm a good person.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, but you got to realize I came in here to win $5 million and I didn't come here to win $5 million, to give you $3.5 million and split it in half.

Speaker 2:

You're not there to make friends, you're there to win some money.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, it's like all you guys join, so then the people that don't have the opportunity to win a million dollars are like I can't believe that he would do that too, and it's like I will say that I would be the person standing there, but I would never I would never do something.

Speaker 1:

Fuck they could throw two million dollars up there, I would never. And then I go up there and I'd be like I get it though you're watching.

Speaker 2:

You're like oh man, like that guy's a dick. But then it's like, at the same time, if I show up to Beast Games and for whatever reason, Mr Beast is like hey, if you get these five people out, you also leave, but you get $10,000. And it's like well, I've only been here two days. Yeah, that seems worth it to me. I'm probably doing it Well.

Speaker 3:

I think I'd wait off, just because I know how Mr Beast works.

Speaker 2:

Well, yeah, but you get the point.

Speaker 3:

But like yeah, I mean as soon as it got like, as soon as we were clearing, like, I would say, even $100,000.

Speaker 3:

It's like yeah, it's probably about time to start, yeah, being mean. It's probably about time to start taking the money because even like at the end of the Beast games, they just basically made a choice and then it got down to two people and even the guy that took second one like I can't remember like $250,000, $500,000. I can't remember what it was and then the guy that won the whole thing obviously got 10 million, but it was like literally the guy five seconds before that that eliminated himself because he thought you know, like whatever was gonna happen literally went home with nothing.

Speaker 3:

So it's like you literally made it to the final three and probably had like at least like 10 yeah like six, seven, eight, nine, ten chances to walk out with more than a hundred thousand dollars and you didn't, and you didn't take it. And then, all of a sudden, now you're walking home with nothing.

Speaker 2:

Well, that's why but see, that's what I was talking about, where if, like, I'm there for two days and mr beast is like, oh, like, if you're an asshole in this situation, you get ten thousand. But you know, who knows what could happen down the line. I'm probably taking it because, like in that situation, if I'm in the bottom three or in the top three, I might walk away with nothing. And then it's like damn, I spent all this time I came on the show and I'm walking away with nothing.

Speaker 3:

At least you get a little something and genuinely I think he's gonna try to do the next like season, or you know of that.

Speaker 2:

That show was super successful.

Speaker 3:

The budget in that show is crazy, but genuinely I think he can only do it once.

Speaker 2:

You think?

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

I'm sure there'll be a season two.

Speaker 3:

I mean, I'm sure they will, but he's going to have to make it drastically different than the first season was. Because, like we're talking about, like right now, like we would just go on there and be like, well, I kind of I kind of know how this works. Like he's going to offer me 250, like I should just take, like that plays into it, just seeing how it rolled out the first time, and like now you apply or audition to be on the show, get it, and then you're just like, oh well, take the 250250,000 because there's this many. You know it's like there's not that many opportunities, or there, it's like there's not that many opportunities to get $250,000 or more. So it's like you can't for him to be giving away that much money.

Speaker 3:

You have to make it to where, like, the people that are coming on can't have a strategy yeah, like like, yeah, like he if he did do a second season, I mean, unless he just doesn't care about giving away the money. But you can't do a second season and then let people come in being like okay, well, 250 000 is my mark, I'll take you know.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

But that's also kind of what he's trying to do is just like a psychological experiment. So I mean it might work out, just being like well, people have seen this before, so let's see how they react now.

Speaker 1:

It's just like gambling, though, too.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Like you're sitting there in church as $250,000. We have a chance to win 10 million and it's like what kind of gambler are you? And I think a lot of people I know they want to admit that. They're like I'll take this, I'll take that, but a lot of people are chasing that, that big, big dollar sign at the end of it I a thousand percent agree with that you know it's like yeah, I put 100 bucks and I made 300, but I'm really close to hitting the jackpot.

Speaker 2:

Yeah yeah, so we talked about this a little bit earlier. We were in a big movie talk and it kind of got me thinking. During intermission we're all big, pretty, uh, avid movie watchers. I think it'd be really interesting to know I I want to know your guys's answer what is the scariest movie you've ever seen?

Speaker 1:

Mine is a insidious.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's a good one.

Speaker 3:

I will have to say um, I'm not an avid movie watcher.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I was going to say I hate movies. I don't know. I feel like you're always watching.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah, I was going to say.

Speaker 2:

I hate movies. I don't know. I feel like you're always watching. Yeah, you don't like going to the movie theater?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, but the reason why I don't like going to a movie theater is because I can't pay attention through the whole movie. That's why I'm not really an avid movie watcher.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but you're always playing movies and shit on a movie and do laundry. I mean yeah, because I always have everyone always has to.

Speaker 2:

That's the thing. Everyone always has to do laundry.

Speaker 1:

That's, it's not a thing, but I don't, I don't like go, I'm like uh, this is a good laundry movie I, I do.

Speaker 2:

well, I think there's movies that you don't have to pay attention to really, or like you could throw on a TV show and like do laundry.

Speaker 1:

I think I just like do my laundry and I like fold it, pack it away, call it a day.

Speaker 2:

Well, scary movies. You definitely can't.

Speaker 3:

Because I was going to ask you guys?

Speaker 2:

have you guys ever seen the movie Sinister? No, you've never seen Sinister, have you? No, you've never seen sinister, have you no? So is it like tusk? I've heard about it. It's nothing like tusk. So a little background has ethan hawk in it.

Speaker 2:

I don't know if you guys know who that is steven hawking ethan hawk no, I don't know who that is so I can't even name a different movies and but basically the story is he's a like true crime author and he moves into this house where a bunch of like murders have happened and he's trying to write a new best-selling book. And he goes into this house and he finds like an old um, what are those like old, kind of like home video, like has the two big like reels and you wind it up.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, like a movie tape thing yeah.

Speaker 2:

Cassette no, not cassette.

Speaker 1:

I think it's before cassette Big reels.

Speaker 2:

Oh, and you have to play it on a screen.

Speaker 3:

It's a production film. Yeah, an actual production film, exactly.

Speaker 2:

But he starts to notice there's this dude in there and weird stuff starts happening with his daughter. But anyway, this was so, other than like friday the 13th, halloween scream. This was like the first real horror movie I watched and I was probably like eight or nine years old and it gave me like nightmares and I was gonna show you guys a picture of him. This was the dude who was he's like the main demon in it, mr boogie yeah, they call him like mr boogie or something and uh, the audio listeners. You could just look up the sinister movie demon and those of the that have seen it know what he looks like. And this movie gave me nightmares and there's some very scary moments. They had a sequel that wasn't as good and it was kind of stupid.

Speaker 1:

I think my scary movie from when I was a kid that I was scared of most was it.

Speaker 2:

Really the old, the 1990s one.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, the shower scene. So I had a tile shower, so I don't know what it is, but in the shower scene it's the tile shower. So I'd like get really freaked out, real freaked out I feel, like it's not bad yeah it is, it's scary I think, like, imagine, you're like a six-year-old kid and your brother's like hey, come watch this movie with me. And then you watch it and the kid loses his arm in the first like minute yeah, I guess that's kind of fair.

Speaker 2:

But you watch it now and it's kind of like all right, pennywise isn't that scary, he's just kind of a dickhead he's, he's wild and you know, yeah, I I like the newer ones, so the newer it's were pretty good. It kind of reminded me of like I mean it didn't help that uh, finn wolfhard was in it, but it kind of gave me like goonies, stranger things, kind of vibes, like I love the adventure and I loved all that yeah, I've always liked the goonies.

Speaker 1:

That's always a good movie to watch that's a fantastic movie steven spielberg, he's the man.

Speaker 2:

Hey you guys. And who knows if they'll do a sequel Goonies 2? That's probably not going to happen. I mean, in this day and age, they got sequels and reboots to everything.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, they're not going to reboot the Goonies. Where are they going to do it? Cannon Beach.

Speaker 2:

Well, they could. They could redo it and have it be their kids that go on the adventure, or have them.

Speaker 1:

yeah, have Mouth come back. I think he's in jail.

Speaker 2:

No, he's not in jail. Corey Feldman is not in jail.

Speaker 1:

He had something with him Well he's on his own thing.

Speaker 2:

What?

Speaker 1:

did he do? Was it drugs or something like that? I don't think he ever went to jail. Oh, was that the kid from Home Alone.

Speaker 2:

Macaulay Culkin. Well, I mean, I don't know if he went to jail, but you know Macaulay Culkin, the kid from Home Alone. He's married to the actress that played London Tipton on Suite Life of Zack and Cody.

Speaker 1:

Really the one that everyone as a kid were like wow.

Speaker 3:

I thought Macaulay Culkin died, did he.

Speaker 2:

OD. No, he's alive and well and he's married to London Tipton.

Speaker 1:

Who was that one guy that OD'd in a hot tub? That was from like Friends.

Speaker 2:

Oh, Matthew.

Speaker 1:

Perry.

Speaker 2:

Chris Farley. I don't actually know how Chris Farley died.

Speaker 1:

But you're thinking of Matthew Perry and RIP Matthew Perry Was it.

Speaker 2:

Seinfeld what?

Speaker 3:

No, it was friends.

Speaker 2:

But matthew perry was goaded. He was hilarious and he was also in a bunch of other good movies friends I don't think they ever so like what, what?

Speaker 1:

let's say like yeah, seinfeld, friends the office last man standing last man standing underrated show. So which one would you like? Let's say you're doing laundry and you need to put on a show. Which one would be your top one?

Speaker 3:

Spongebob.

Speaker 2:

The.

Speaker 1:

Hashling Slasher. You guys ever seen that episode of Spongebob? That's like a big classic that one.

Speaker 2:

Is the Seabear episode. They want to go camping and the seabear just keeps attacking them and they draw the circle.

Speaker 1:

That one's hilarious I like the dirty dan one.

Speaker 3:

Oh yeah, I'm dirty dan that one's good, or the one where um spongebob wants to give gary a bath never seen I don't think you've never seen that one I, I think I cried during, uh, the one where gary leaves oh, they play the sad song or the one what is?

Speaker 1:

the one with the monkey that shows up, where spongebob is just vibing out in his house.

Speaker 2:

Oh my god that one that one gave me night terrors. Dude, fuck yeah. He becomes spongebob, gets hurt and becomes agoraphobic and he doesn't want to leave his house. And then sandy and patrick come up with the plan to like lure him out and have a spongebob save them from the gorilla. But it turns out patrick is yeah you guys wasn't the gorilla, yeah, but they use like a real gorilla and I think as a kid that freaked me out because I was like why is real life in cartoon so?

Speaker 1:

my question is how come when you see patrick come out of his house it's just like sand, but when you go into patrick's house it's like he's got a couch and a sand tv because the animators were like oh, the kids watching this are six years old, they're probably not gonna think I just want to know who knows Spirato is. What do you?

Speaker 3:

mean who? That is the vampire? Yeah, but like who is that? He's a vampire. He's a vampire, A famous vampire.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, Like the famous one he's been told in stories for like ever.

Speaker 1:

Isn't he like? Considered Dracula in different stories.

Speaker 2:

I think so, but he's up there with Dracula.

Speaker 1:

I'm pretty sure they're the same person. They just come from different they might be the same, I don't know. Look it up.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I mean, I know the episode from Spongebob, but I Well, they just did that Nosferatu movie, didn't they?

Speaker 2:

They did.

Speaker 1:

With? Who was it that played him?

Speaker 2:

Chalamet yeah, but I don't like movies.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, Easton's movie knowledge is all over there. I think it's going to be who, not how.

Speaker 2:

Oh, I put no.

Speaker 1:

For the listeners. He spelled how Well.

Speaker 2:

I'm also rolling deep.

Speaker 3:

So how do you even pronounce that?

Speaker 2:

Nosferatu.

Speaker 3:

Okay.

Speaker 2:

So he's just like a big horror icon.

Speaker 3:

Is that an actual dude though?

Speaker 2:

I don't think he was an actor, because vampires aren't.

Speaker 3:

Well, I know he's not a vampire, but he's like.

Speaker 1:

What's Frankenstein's monster's name?

Speaker 3:

Is there a dude that actually looks like that? Like, is that based off of a guy that they just all said it was a vampire?

Speaker 2:

it's like right here it says like they have a whole cast, but yeah, I, yeah.

Speaker 1:

What's a wikipedia? Hit that I, because that's always a trustful source.

Speaker 2:

Should we be looking up our sources from wik and also folks just opened up the fourth T and the final T.

Speaker 1:

I'm on four beers too, by the way.

Speaker 2:

Three.

Speaker 3:

I will have to say, though, sometimes I go on Wikipedia and I'll just like change something small. You can change Wikipedia, yeah small.

Speaker 1:

You can change Wikipedia.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, that's why Wikipedia is not a credible source. It's because people can go in there and just edit it to whatever they think.

Speaker 1:

I want to see this in action. Can you edit the no? Okay, fine, Anyway. So no, Travato is a vampire.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, but sometimes I go on Wikipedia and I just like change stuff, like, uh, one day I went I looked up the Las Vegas Raiders and then edited the picture to be the Seattle Seahawks and you did that. Yeah, like, just because, like I don't know, or I'll like go into like the Baltimore Ravens Wikipedia page and say that like Justin Herbert's the quarterback, like something that's like not noticeable, but like Justin Herbert is in the NFL, but like somebody that like maybe doesn't have as much knowledge would just read it and then just be like like me, super confident that justin herbert was the quarterback of the baltimore ravens isn't he, isn't he chargers?

Speaker 2:

yeah, he is the charger, look at you where'd justin herbert come from, chuck?

Speaker 1:

the ducks before that I don't even uh. Didn't he like high school? Yep, he played. Didn't he play at springfield or? Sheldon high sheldon yeah in oregon yeah it's like I always forget the only reason I know that is because my lady's a big duck fan, so I knew herbert. And then, uh, her dad puts on the chargers games because of herbert so herbert's a solid quarterback.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, my, my dad.

Speaker 1:

Better than Geno, that's for sure.

Speaker 3:

My dad loves Justin Herbert and roots for the Chargers just because of Justin Herbert. And then every year when they don't make the playoffs or lose out in the first round, then he just goes on a huge rant where he's like I'm done with this team, I don't trust him.

Speaker 2:

I think that's all of oregon. Yeah, we all. Everyone in the state of oregon somewhat, regardless of if you're a chargers fan or not, you somewhat root for herbert oh yeah, I mean, he seemed like a pretty good guy.

Speaker 2:

I've never met him, no, he seems like yeah, I mean, he seems like a cool dude intelligent I was gonna say it's kind of like the uh we were talking about, like not knowing where he played before. It's like Joe Burrow. I always forget he also played out of Ohio. Every time I think of Joe Burrow, I always think of LSU, but he also played out of Ohio.

Speaker 3:

State, yeah, ohio State. We can't be getting a bunch of flack from Buckeyes fans.

Speaker 2:

Sorry, Buckeyes.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, we don't like them, Buckeyes.

Speaker 3:

There's no need to apologize to the Buckeyes, but it was yeah, it was the suck-eyes.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

Anyway, I feel like we're rolling deep pretty hard. Yeah, chuck's pounded that sixth beer. Alex has already hammered and uh, I gotta get up at 2 30. So I'm rolling pretty deep and I think that it's uh, it's been fun, and then, uh, we'll uh see you next tuesday.

Speaker 2:

See you next tuesday my baby, my baby born to work.

Speaker 3:

She's been telling me all night long Gasoline and groceries, and this goes on and on.

Speaker 2:

It's 9 to 5, ain't working, work so hard. I can't work by my problems, I can't take them when I'm gone Ain't working.

Speaker 1:

Worked so hard, my problems Gone. One, two To the four, five More Six.

Speaker 2:

Dance floor Seven. Oh my Good lord.

Speaker 1:

Double shot of whiskey History History.

Speaker 2:

Everybody got to bargain To Pepsi.

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Rolling Deep

Chuck, Easton, and Alex