Rolling Deep
Just your three favorite helluva good time activists! We ROLL DEEP! Roll deep on drinks, Roll deep on gambling, Roll deep on sports and after a few drinks we’ll start ROLLING DEEP on a whole lot more! You can always follow us on the instagrams or the tiktoks at rollingdeepod! As well if you would like to hear our take on some of your favorite subjects you can email us at rollingdeepod@gmail.com! I hope you’re rolling as deep as we are!
Rolling Deep
Ep. 7: Chuck Returns!
Chuck returns to Rolling Deep with a perfect dice roll of six while the hosts discuss everything from belly button science to dangerous wild animals and debate the ethics of extreme sports.
I started drinking at 6 am. We're here now. I don't know what time it is, but I'm rolling deep.
Speaker 2:Welcome back to rolling deep.
Speaker 3:I'm easton and I'm alex and I'm chuck wait wait, wait.
Speaker 4:I missed you guys. I missed you know all the listeners out there and you know work just uh, they don't care that. I have other things I want to do in my life, I guess.
Speaker 2:Yeah they're just like here. I'll give you money, give up.
Speaker 4:Yeah, they're like, I'll give you money. We hate rolling deep.
Speaker 3:Work.
Speaker 4:Actually my boss the other day said we should, instead of using a regular dice, we should use a D20.
Speaker 3:I told Chuck, I'm all right.
Speaker 2:He's like yeah, instead of using a dice, you should just play Russian roulette. Yeah, at one point you guys will all die.
Speaker 3:Yeah, yeah. He basically said let's see who can get a DUI faster. Yeah.
Speaker 2:All right, Well, welcome back Charles. I think you know how this works, so here's the dice.
Speaker 4:Oh, thank you, I'm going to roll a big six today.
Speaker 2:Ready.
Speaker 4:Six.
Speaker 2:God dang Welcome back.
Speaker 1:What a welcome back.
Speaker 4:Well, it happened because it hit the rubber part but, I'll take it. I'll take a six yeah, I might have been joking when I said that, but you know, five man, we're rolling deep today so if I get a four, I I think that is because no, you gotta get a six no, the past few episodes we've had like three, four, five or four, five, six, oh god, four, see it.
Speaker 2:Oh, four, the old six, five, four action.
Speaker 3:Well isn't that wild, it was pretty wild.
Speaker 4:With that being said, I'm going to be rolling deep.
Speaker 3:And Chuck, you didn't crack that one, so technically you're about to have seven.
Speaker 4:No, that's not no, because I woke up drunk this morning and I hey man, I didn't invent this.
Speaker 3:And then I just kept drinking.
Speaker 4:I haven't stopped. I'm rolling deep 24-7 right now.
Speaker 3:So you, technically, have been rolling since 6 am.
Speaker 4:Well, technically I was rolling since 9 pm last night.
Speaker 3:Well, I think we should start off this episode by going over some questions we got asked on the Rolling Deep Pod Instagram. Every once in a while we'll probably post. If you want to ask us any questions or for some advice in life, you can go ahead and message us, email us. And we got some questions and all three of us got some questions.
Speaker 4:Yeah, what was our email?
Speaker 3:again. You want to shout it out one more time yeah, rolling deep pod with one p at gmailcom the rolling deep pot, one p. So the first question, the first question we got, was why is easton's belly button so deep? Why is it Easton? Why is it so deep?
Speaker 2:I don't know, I was born. Well, I'll tell you something Belly button cord was cut a little short, I guess.
Speaker 4:Easton's belly button is so deep that if he was on one of those survival shows he could probably throw a month's worth of food in that bitch.
Speaker 3:I like that.
Speaker 4:Big old licorice rope. Yeah, like everyone's hungry, he's like well, I had this hidden licorice rope in my belly for the last four days yeah, I mean it is.
Speaker 2:It is pretty deep. I I can't really explain it. I think that's a, uh, umbilical cord thing, like I don't know if that means that it's too long or too short. But well somehow, when it was cut, and like how they wrapped it, it must have just made it deep, I don't know yeah, how does that work?
Speaker 4:how do you get an audi like an audi belly button?
Speaker 2:I think you just cut the umbilical cord like way long, and then they just like trim it no, they just like roll it into. And then they just like Trim it no, they just like roll it into a big ball and just jam it in there.
Speaker 4:Really, no, I don't know. I just don't know why. This is very Well, because I know people with Audi belly buttons and I'm like how does that even?
Speaker 3:happen. I wonder what the percentage of people from inners or outies to what's the innies, innies, I guess.
Speaker 4:Outies to innies.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I want to know the percentage.
Speaker 4:I don't know what would you do if you had an Audi Alex.
Speaker 3:I would think about it way too much.
Speaker 4:I think, I think about. Well, my thing is one you wouldn't have to worry about Lent in there. Yeah Two about lint in there.
Speaker 3:Yeah too, sometimes you know, when you're getting rowdy things, get in there. Getting rowdy things, get in there. What would possibly get in there?
Speaker 4:yeah, well, sometimes you get things, get in there, you know, and you're like what the? They gotta? Like you know, grab a tissue. You know, get it out. They got to, like you know, grab a tissue and you know, get it out.
Speaker 2:So it says right here that an any belly button. You can't directly get an any belly button. It is determined by how the umbilical cord heals and the natural variations in the scar tissue. If you have an, Audi and desire any, you can explore cosmetic procedures. Oh yeah, but also it says the same thing for an outie. It says an outie belly button or a protruding navel is typically a result of a normal variation in how the umbilical cord heals after birth or can be caused by medical conditions like umbilical hernias.
Speaker 2:Oh it's good to know. Yeah, I always thought that it was how long or short you cut the umbilical cord, but I guess in both cases it kind of says that it's basically how it heals, I guess.
Speaker 4:Hmm, so you're just healed deep? Yeah, because you're always rolling deep rolling deep, healing deep.
Speaker 2:Yeah, yeah, pretty much. Tyler wants to know what's your craziest blackout story my craziest blackout story.
Speaker 4:Well, I was blacked out, so I don't know I have a.
Speaker 2:I have a pretty wild story about Chuck blacking out. I can't necessarily tell about an experience where I blacked out but Charles, one time um we were camping. Like usual, yeah, we were camping up in the up in the wilderness and, uh, a wall tent, which I'm not sure if anybody knows what a wall tent is, but it's a big canvas tent. It has a lot more space than a normal little Coleman pup tent or whatever, and you can put a wood stove in it. So me and Chuck would basically Live out there.
Speaker 2:We'd kind of live out there, hang out in the wall tent for quite some time, and our goal was to always just like see how hot we could get the wall tent.
Speaker 4:Yeah, we get that thing fucking burning yeah.
Speaker 2:So we'd just pile wood inside the wood stove and the wood stove would just be like glowing, like orange, and we'd, you know, just see how hot we could get it.
Speaker 2:Well, one night we proceeded to have quite a few beers and, uh, some little bit of whiskeys and uh yeah, david's gym beam rolled out yeah, we had some gym beam and uh earlier in this camping trip chuck had gotten a little schwasty and uh was pissing in the corner of the tent and I like yell at him for it, like whatever. And he finally made it out. And so then that night we were like all right, like we're for sure, like getting chuck outside to take a piss. So he's like okay, he's like I gotta take a piss. We're like chuck, you gotta get up, walk outside, like. And he was like yeah, yeah, I know, and we're like here, we'll help you walk outside he's like no, no, I got it.
Speaker 2:Well, he proceeds to trip over our friend david, trip over another table after he caught his feet and then fall like head first into the wood stove right and just kind of bounced off it laid on the floor. Luckily the wood stove was like coming down off its heat. I mean it was still like pretty hot. But he was laying on the floor and he didn't realize that his shoulder was still just like resting on the wood stove and me and david started freaking out, got him up, got him outside to take a piss. We never really even noticed anything. But yeah, then the next morning he wakes up after we got him back in to bed and uh, he was like why is my shirt stuck to my shoulder? Or like I don't know, it might have been, you know, like whatever. Yeah, we finally had it pulled off and he literally had like a dick looking imprint of like a burn, just like covered his shoulder. Yeah, because it was the leg of the wood stove.
Speaker 4:So then it like had that base part, so it made like balls.
Speaker 3:So it looked like you got branded. Yeah, I got it, I still have a scar to this day from that.
Speaker 4:I wouldn't change it for the world. Well, when I crash out, I crash out pretty good.
Speaker 2:It just could have been a lot worse had the wood stove had been like humping as much as we had had it going before.
Speaker 2:It was like we had already heated ourselves out and we were kind of like letting it get cool again. But I mean it was obviously still hot but it could have been. And we were kind of like letting it get cool again but I mean it was obviously still hot but it could have been because you, I know you nailed it with your face first, but it was like for a real quick second so I mean like if it was really like screaming hot, your face would have just like pretty much just got like I'd have been like two face from batman, but I mean luckily he's still got a face well, I hear the story of easton.
Speaker 4:It's not really a blackout moment, but I did watch him finish a bottle of I think it was hennessey one time in my hot tub yeah I like, I like seeing him, I like through the window. I seen him like put it back, and I walked around the corner and he was like yep, finished her off. And I was like what?
Speaker 2:Yeah, drinking in a hot tub gets you if you've never done it. Sneaks up on you, because you feel totally fine.
Speaker 3:You could have 12 drinks and feel perfectly fine, but the second you stand up it hits you like a freight train.
Speaker 1:It's all over.
Speaker 2:Oh yeah over and you're done dude, I remember that one night I think I think at least you two were there and then I think david might have been there too that we were drinking in my hot tub and we finished in canada the next morning and we had like 142. It was a stupid number. Yeah, we had like 142 cans, just like sitting on the deck.
Speaker 3:We like door dashed Just like piles. We door dashed Applebee's. So there's just like bags of Applebee's and a bunch of beer cans.
Speaker 4:See, that's money.
Speaker 2:Oh yeah, it was pretty cash.
Speaker 4:That's rolling deep.
Speaker 3:Wings, breadsticks, beer cans, but it was all good, but it was all good, anyway.
Speaker 2:So we got uh. What our next? Our next question is uh, how many belly button shots have been taken off you?
Speaker 3:chuck off me yeah, has anyone ever taken a belly button shot off you, a body shot? Off you, uh once, man, you don't have to say names, but it was a lady.
Speaker 4:He was mad oh, it was your girlfriend yeah, okay, really only one person has but it was like a shot glass I'm sitting on oh, so they didn't pour alcohol into your belly button no, I don't think anyone would do that lucky, my belly button would be the best shot in the world because you'd get so much alcohol, but then also but you might need a funnel
Speaker 3:yeah yeah, we need a straw.
Speaker 4:Okay, so we got like another question, or?
Speaker 2:yeah, we got. Uh, let's see from dylan underscore dylan, there's an absolute baddie at my gym. Do I go for her and how would you all go about it?
Speaker 4:um, that's a tough one I'd uh, I'd sneakily throw, like more weight. If she's hitting the bench like you know, throw an extra 10, 10 on there on the machine she's using. Yeah, so then she needs help to get the weight up so like you know late.
Speaker 4:You know people are at the gym they like do their set and then sometimes they go get water or sometimes they have to use the bathroom. Whatever, you wait for that moment where they walk away just a little bit. Throw an extra 5, 10 on each side, wait, wait until they need help and then be there.
Speaker 3:That's what I think you should do. So you do the Superman slash Night in Shining armor approach yeah you sabotage them so that you can be their hero.
Speaker 2:I'd probably go with the old classic Pick up a five pound weight, trip over something in the gym, throw it at her and then just be like oh shoot, I'm so sorry, do you want to go to dinner sometime? I? Like that, I like that that always works out in the movies yeah, yeah, yeah the guy just like drops a 45 pound weight on a girl's toe and he's like, oh gosh, so do you want to go to dinner tonight?
Speaker 4:I'm so sorry. Let me take you to dinner to make up for it.
Speaker 2:Yeah, then they just forget that her foot's broke.
Speaker 3:And then I just, I just, embarrassed myself a lot, but we actually have a lot in common, so let's date or or when she's next to you, like, let's say, you're hitting a set on something and you might be able to ask for help.
Speaker 3:I was going to say that I think that's your best way, because I feel like if you're by yourself and you're a lady out at the gym, the last thing you want is a guy obviously hitting on you. So if you go up to her and you're like, hey, if you don't mind and you talk to her in between while she's doing a set, or if, if she's like grabbing water, like chuck said earlier, if you're like hey, can you spot me real quick and then strike up small conversation, just get to know her, yeah do that for like a month and a half and you'll be dialed in.
Speaker 3:I don't think a month and a half, but yeah like don't do it right away, don't be like hey, thanks for helping me, uh, not crush myself. Apple bees, apple bees yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2:You just throw a five pound weight at her every day for a month and keep saying sorry, and then finally you're good to shoot yeah, just be like hey, can you spot me?
Speaker 3:and then just take her to the treadmill and have her stand there and be like just catch me if I fall, then you.
Speaker 4:Then you turn back around and go.
Speaker 2:Hey, you like my dumb truck or like, or or like or like, if she's benching, just like, really like, cutely and sneakily, just walk up and then, just like, put a 45 pound weight on one side of her bar, so then, and then just let it go. So she's like, oh gotcha she's just like click, oh shit, you know. And he's like do you need help getting that up? Do you help getting that?
Speaker 4:up, I like that, I like that.
Speaker 2:Or when they're squatting, maybe you find a chair and throw it underneath them but, um, I think, I think we've all agreed that you're like yeah, yeah, you should go for a deal.
Speaker 3:Yeah, why not?
Speaker 2:Send it yeah.
Speaker 3:Got a deal on.
Speaker 2:Get after it. I have faith.
Speaker 4:But I think stores in general give me anxiety Because like I think it's the lights in there, because some stores like do it more and I feel like the more like homeier stores like that don't have those, like bright LED lights. You know what I mean? I mean like this, the white light, I don't know something about it, just like the people and the lights are really bright and everything just like happening. And then it's like why are we here?
Speaker 4:I just I just don't like it. If that was, if I had a fear list, that would probably be number five on it. Bright shitting in public uh no, suit stores like just grocery stores grocery stores, winco, I a lot of anxiety at the winco, especially on a saturday. Get weird people in there.
Speaker 2:Some smell like piss, it's just can we just formally come out and say wawa isn't good? What's wawa sandwiches right whatever it is, it's just from the midwest, so it's not really that good oh is it just because it's from the midwest? Yeah, I have. I literally have no clue what wawa is. I thought it was a grocery store.
Speaker 4:Well, I didn't know it was so. Obviously it's not that good.
Speaker 3:Wow.
Speaker 4:Wow. Well, the thing is I'm 24 years old If I haven't heard of it now. It can't be that good.
Speaker 2:Yeah, wawa, it's a convenience store.
Speaker 4:Nah.
Speaker 3:Oh, I thought it was like. I thought it was like a sandwich place.
Speaker 2:I actually totally take this back. I think these are actually Pretty baller gas stations. What am I thinking of? I was thinking of a grocery store.
Speaker 4:I don't know.
Speaker 2:Yeah, like look at all these gas stations.
Speaker 4:Geez, that gas station looks money. Oh yeah, I bet they got a real good roller dog section yeah, yeah, dude, I hate when you go into a place and they got those roller dogs and you look at them and you know they've been there for like eight hours. It's like switch your dogs out.
Speaker 2:It's pretty cool. Yesterday I was at a Seattle Mariners game and, uh, I went to the game, got a slice of pizza. The lady, like slid the slice of pizza to the cashier and then the cashier they're like yeah, that was checking me out Like literally looked at the pizza and you could kind of tell that it had been there for a while, turn around, threw it in the trash and was like I need a new piece of pizza what's that one that?
Speaker 4:uh, it's like a school. I think that's having you can get two free things at their um concessions. It's like a college or whatever oh yeah I, I saw it somewhere but you get two free, two free concession items every game and it's like man. Honestly, if I went to that school, I'd be getting that every time there's a game.
Speaker 3:How much time we got.
Speaker 2:Yeah, it's Coastal Carolina University.
Speaker 4:Yeah, coastal Carolina yeah.
Speaker 2:Yeah, they're giving out free shit. See, that's Coastal Carolina University.
Speaker 4:Yeah, coastal Carolina yeah, yeah, they're giving out free shit.
Speaker 2:See, that's money. This school is offering free concessions, hot dog, popcorn, nachos and fountain drinks at every home football game.
Speaker 4:See, that's so money. Where is?
Speaker 2:that Carolina. Yeah, like Coastal Carolina, we got to go there. I think it's in Louisiana.
Speaker 4:Louisiana. I will say, though, that at Autzen, for the Ducks, Autzen Stadium they load their nachos. They load their nachos up and I love it.
Speaker 2:Yeah, they got to give somebody. They got to let the fans go home with something positive.
Speaker 4:Yeah, and that's it. That's all they've got is the nachos. Well, you give them the nachos and they're filling it up. It's a weighted plate of nachos.
Speaker 2:And they're like the Ducks are doing really good, but they won't make it anywhere in the playoffs, like they usually do. So here's a massive nacho.
Speaker 4:Here's a massive nacho, yeah, and I found this place that sells the Ciders, the Tallboy Ciders, there. That's pretty money.
Speaker 2:Yeah, coastal Carolina is in. Oh, that would make sense. South Carolina.
Speaker 4:I was thinking it was probably in Carolina.
Speaker 2:It's not Louisiana. It just so happens that coastal Carolina is in. South Carolina.
Speaker 4:Is it on the coast of South Carolina?
Speaker 2:I assume it is probably the case too. Let's go to maps here.
Speaker 4:What's your go-to?
Speaker 2:Yep, it's right there At a game. What's your go-to like?
Speaker 4:yeah, that's right there at a game like what's your go-to? A hamburger, hot dog, nachos?
Speaker 2:depends what I'm watching hamburger or hot dog nachos I mean no, I mean like, like.
Speaker 4:Let's say you're hungry at a game, what's your go-to?
Speaker 2:hear me out. Slice pizza if they have it, if not pretzel and cheese.
Speaker 4:Alex, what if they don't have pretzel and cheese?
Speaker 3:then probably nachos if I'm watching a baseball game, hot dog for sure. But any other game chicken strips, burger, pizza, whatever but if I'm watching a baseball game, for sure I have to get hot dog yeah, that makes sense, but I was at the mariners game.
Speaker 2:I literally I mean I didn't really look, I guess, but I mean I did go to like a couple different spots to get like a beer that also had concessions. Literally never, I mean I'm sure you can find it somewhere in the stadium, but I never once saw a hot dog, really Any of the concession stands I went to yesterday.
Speaker 3:Isn't that one of the big things, though?
Speaker 2:getting a Mariner dog, that's what I thought, but literally I went to one that only had pizza, the other one only had nachos, the other little stand had closer corn dogs, but still no hot dogs on the menu.
Speaker 4:There wasn't any dog boys.
Speaker 2:No.
Speaker 4:There wasn't people walking around being like got your dogs.
Speaker 2:I got hot dogs. I would have to say I bought a bear. As soon as I came in, I bought an like an IPA, like a 16-ounce IPA. As soon as I walked in the gate from one of the guys with just like the walk-around coolers hanging around his neck, I gave him a 20% tip because really he did convince me into buying the beer. Like we were just trying to go to like the gift shop or the team shop and we were walking by and he was like you need a beer.
Speaker 2:And I was like that's enough convincing you got me that's enough.
Speaker 4:Convincing like you, you're right, I probably need one, yeah, and then it's kind of hard to say no. And someone says you need a beer and you're like I especially after you got to drive all the way to seattle yeah, and then uh park, you have deal with all was it good, did they win?
Speaker 2:oh yeah, they won on what. Nine to two, nine to one, who'd? They play uh texas rangers oh but I will have to say the that guy got me all excited. And then he, you know, then the old classic flipped around, uh, flipped around the phone there and it had the three options to tip button.
Speaker 2:So I mean, he convinced me. So I gave him the one nice little tip there. I just hit the, you know, I think it was like a 20%, and then he, and then he screamed big tipper. Then he was like, and I was just like, thanks, thanks for the beer man I took like two more I took like two more steps, looked at my phone and I had a receipt on my little uh app there that said that beer cost me a solid 1892 like I really shouldn't
Speaker 4:have gotten that big, doesn't that's by a really big tipper, big tipper. But that's funny.
Speaker 2:Anyway, I think, I think we'll take a little little little break. Skier, anybody you'd like to shut up before? Before we take our intermission here.
Speaker 4:Shout out the people for being amazing. Boom Done.
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 3:Shout out our listeners.
Speaker 2:That's what I said I'd like to shout out a few of my little cousins Cam, lacey, tyler and Grayson. You guys are awesome, keep living life and keep rolling deep in all the things that you guys are awesome, keep living life and keep rolling deep and and all the things you guys are doing these days I'm opening this before we start, so that's a cheap cut anyway, shout out cam tyler, lazy grayson.
Speaker 2:Here at Rolling Deep we like beer and fun. You know where else has beer and fun? The Alston Pub and Grub. If you're like me, you're always thinking about where you're going to get your next cold one. To make your decision simple, try out the Alston Pub and Grub. Who doesn't like a good time with great people? Welcome back to Rolling Deep.
Speaker 5:Black dress with the tights underneath, I got the breath of a last cigarette on my teeth. And she's an actress, but she ain't got no need. She's got money from her parents and a trust fund. Back east to tongues Tongue Always press to your cheeks While my tongue is on the inside of some other girl's teeth. Tell your so. I Don't trust me. Never trust a vegetarian.
Speaker 1:So who won't trust me?
Speaker 4:What do you think it'd be like to be a vegetarian?
Speaker 2:Dude, that'd be tough.
Speaker 3:I kind of bet. I don't think I could handle it.
Speaker 4:I love protein. I'm a big pee guy big protein guy yeah, I like taking a piss. I like pissing, I like protein, I like everything that starts with a P realistically, I'm into that brother. Yeah, so do you know that Alex has a guy doing his yard right now?
Speaker 3:So sorry for the listeners. If you can hear in the background.
Speaker 1:I have someone mowing the lawn.
Speaker 4:I mean that must be nice to have that.
Speaker 3:Hey man, I've been heading my bets. First minute NBA both scores.
Speaker 4:Both scores, that equals Weed Whacker 9000. Well, I'm on drink number 8, not 8.
Speaker 2:Everybody's just trying to aspire to be Nigel.
Speaker 3:Nigel did set a new. What do you call it? I'm on drink number 4 now, nigel did set A new standard for rolling deep.
Speaker 4:Yes, that's why I think we should get a D20. A D20?.
Speaker 3:I just feel like that's a bad idea, why It'd be a four-hour episode.
Speaker 4:And we can cut it into two. Just play the intro again.
Speaker 2:I think we should build a rolling deep AR.
Speaker 4:Rolling deep. Ar build Winner gets $1,000. What do you mean a winner? Well, whoever has the best build. Yeah.
Speaker 3:But we have to get hammered beforehand.
Speaker 2:Yeah, we'll get hammered, we'll have the competition, and then we'll get hammered after we crown a winner.
Speaker 3:Oh, and so then we'll be hammered judging yeah.
Speaker 4:Okay, well, we could be hammered. We're not shooting them. Yeah yeah, we'll probably be the best judge of how they feel when they shoot it, because. I don't really shoot a lot of guns.
Speaker 2:Actually they feel when they shoot it because I don't really shoot a lot of guns. Actually I have a rule I have never built an ar, but uh my brother-in-law has uh quite a few that he's built and uh I know that uh he's tried to get me to shoot a couple of his and I've always told him that I don't want to shoot any until I shoot my own I like that yeah, so until I build my first ar, I won't shoot one look at you, I like that yeah, I want to.
Speaker 2:I want to shoot my own first.
Speaker 4:I don't want to shoot a bunch of other people hey, don't want to lose your ar virginity to someone else's gun I like that, yeah, that's solid and uh.
Speaker 2:So I know he's really anxious for me to have built one and I just haven't got around. I'm a busy guy busy guy. But you know, I've always thought it'd be cool. I've never. I always had a hard time Understanding Like what goes together. I guess I understand like the uppers and the lowers and stuff, but For building a gun. Yeah, like building an AR or something like that.
Speaker 4:Wouldn't you have to like put in your own barrel, and all that?
Speaker 2:I don't know. See, that's where I'm getting. See, I don't know, I don't know. The part that I don't know is that, like I don't know what limits me, like if I'm trying to build, say I want to build a, I don't know, I don't even know exactly, but say there's like an M4, or say like an AK-47 or I don't know. It's always confused me because, like see, I don't even know enough to start naming off like these different types of rifles.
Speaker 2:But I don't know, like I know kind of like the calibers, like you have like a .223 and a 9 or a 6.5 or even like standard caliber rifles, odd 6 or you know 300, I kind of. I kind of get the levels to all that. But as far as like building, I don't know if like certain pieces like the uppers is obviously like your action and everything else right, and your lowers is just your trigger and your. I mean, what would that be when you put the magazine, I guess? Yeah, but I've always been confused on like, say, I was trying to build like this type of gun, Like does it really matter what I buy, or can I just buy like a really cool, like I don't want to screw myself, like I buy a lower and a really cool upper and then all of a sudden I get it and it's like oh well, that's gonna be a two, two, three and you were trying to not build. Yeah, like you were trying to build this, but when you bought it, this isn't really it's not gonna work.
Speaker 2:This doesn't really match for what you were trying like. I don't know, there's a lot of like random pieces that go together to like make what you're trying to make, I guess I bet that I understand that I've never.
Speaker 3:I have no idea about any of that kind of stuff and I've do you have to build your own ar?
Speaker 2:no, you don't have to, you can go buy it, but I always just thought it'd be fun to because I know a lot of people build, like, build their ars.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I'm don't know a lot of people who don't like yeah, but you don't have to like you can go down to uh eminent and just story and just buy like I think they had a scarf for sale like a couple months ago. Like you just could have bought a complete AR that's already built. But that's kind of like the bro thing, which it's like who really gives a shit if you want to buy it? Yeah, if you want to buy it, yeah, it doesn't really matter, but that's kind of like the thing that.
Speaker 4:Is it cheaper to build it?
Speaker 2:I don't know, but I do know that that's kind like the, the flack that you would take if, like you bought a pre-built ar people would like give you a shit about it.
Speaker 4:I'd be like no, you didn't, you didn't build that. I'd be like, no, I built it, don't worry about it sweetheart, it's like you bought an ar.
Speaker 2:Wow, like you're stupid you know, kind of thing to where it's like you just that's kind of like the aura around it is that it's like you don't just go buy something like that, like it's a cool thing to build it, and if you just go buy your ar, then you just catch shit for not building it?
Speaker 4:yeah for not building it. It's just like anything you know. It's like it's like, uh, those bro dozers or whatever trucks.
Speaker 2:It's like yeah like, because you don't ever see hear anybody being like oh, you bought a house instead of building it, like you know. It's like, like, like, wow you didn't build your own.
Speaker 4:What a pile. You didn't build your own dome. Come on now. Yeah, like like what others like.
Speaker 3:It just makes no sense. The only thing I can a gun and a computer. That's about it.
Speaker 2:I can't think of a whole lot of stuff that like no one's ever like ooh, you're a weed whacker, you wouldn't have bought that from the store. Like. You know that it's just a you know.
Speaker 4:It has a two-stroke engine.
Speaker 3:Yeah, it's like oh man, you could have just built it Honda. Civic. You didn't build it your own car. Yeah, it's like.
Speaker 2:I could have built it, I guess, but it would have just took way more time.
Speaker 4:Dude it took me about six years to try and figure it out but I could have done it.
Speaker 2:You know what I've always wanted to get into.
Speaker 4:What.
Speaker 2:Long-range shooting. Yeah, I feel that honestly yeah, I've always like wouldn't it be cool just to be like? To be able to shoot like a mile or something yeah, that thing's like 10 000 yards yeah got it let's just blow that.
Speaker 4:I don't know how. What? 10 000? How much is a mile?
Speaker 2:Miles, what 5,000-some feet. It's like 5,400-something.
Speaker 4:How many yards is a mile?
Speaker 2:Well, it would just be that divided by three, so 10,000 yards. Is that what you said earlier?
Speaker 4:Yeah, I don't think that's possible. Let's do a conversion on that, yeah, a little.
Speaker 2:Yards Two miles. I don't think that's possible. Let's do a conversion on that. Yeah, yards Two miles.
Speaker 4:Yeah, but wouldn't it be cool just to be like, yeah, I can hit that 10,000.
Speaker 2:Yeah, that'd be. 10,000 yards is 5.681818 miles, wow. So I don't think anybody's ever shot eight, or what's the longest shot?
Speaker 4:can you look that up? Yeah, wouldn't it be cool, alex, just like. Yeah, that's 100 yards. Wind's going due east.
Speaker 2:I got it some chris kyle american sniper exactly, yeah that would be pretty cool the longest confirmed sniper shot was made by a ukrainian sniper sniper who hit a russian officer from 3 800 meters in parentheses 2.36 miles away oh, hit a person two miles, yeah, two miles from 2.36 miles
Speaker 5:and domed officer. Yeah, officer.
Speaker 2:Yeah, it also says this record-breaking shot was achieved by a custom-made anti-material rifle and it said the previous record was held by a Canadian sniper who shot a target at 3,540 meters, which is 2.2 miles.
Speaker 4:Still two miles, like you can barely see two. I mean you know what I mean 140 meters, which is 2.2 miles, Still two miles, like you can barely see two.
Speaker 2:I mean you know what I mean, like you can see two miles, but like two miles is a long way. Yeah, the top three recorded snipes of all time was 2.36 miles in Ukraine, 2.2 miles in Iraq and 1.75 miles in Afghanistan.
Speaker 4:Who's the 1.75 guy?
Speaker 2:He's an Australian sniper.
Speaker 4:Oh, so US isn't even on the top three, huh, no, well, we got to change that.
Speaker 2:Yeah, but I'm not into shooting humans, Charles.
Speaker 4:Well, neither am I, but like two miles is crazy. Yeah, I'm thinking like 200 yards.
Speaker 2:You know two football fields like be able to hug maybe 300 yards yeah uh, the longest recorded shot killed in ISIS was the guy that we just talked about, from Ukraine, canada.
Speaker 4:That's just so crazy. The.
Speaker 2:US. The United States has the one, two, three, four, five, the sixth longest snipe in America or in international history.
Speaker 4:Does it say their name?
Speaker 2:I don't know. Let's find it out.
Speaker 4:But yeah, no, that's crazy. Two miles, that's like. Oh man, that's just hard for me to even comprehend. You can barely see that shit. I can barely see 100 feet in front of me um.
Speaker 2:the longest recorded sniper kill by a US soldier is 2300 meters uh, by sergeant brian kremer, who was a member of the us army, and he made this kill in october 2004 during the iraq war. The shot was taken with a Barrett uh M eight to a one rifle. And let's do the conversion on that real quick 2,300 meters, meters, two miles, so 2300, 1.429 miles that's still crazy. Even a mile shot's crazy yeah so basically one and a half miles, yeah, so basically one and a half miles.
Speaker 2:That's nuts. Yeah, that's getting out there a little bit. Yeah, honestly, like I've always talked about that with like obviously hunting and war is like way different yeah, like animals or humans and stuff and you know, obviously they give tags and regulate it and whatever else.
Speaker 2:But I've always talked that like honestly, if you shoot like because I know there's some people out there that like go hunting and just like spot from a long distance and then shoot some, you know, poor deer from 850 yards out, it's like, yeah, I mean I get it like you still filled your tag and I guess that's the point of getting the tag and going hunting. But really I feel like at that point it's not even hunting. I feel like it's only hunting if you give the animal a chance. You give the animal a chance like 850 yards away. Yeah, like that and like that thing doesn't even know you're there.
Speaker 4:At that point it's just like feeding, like even like four 600 yards oh no, I mean there's.
Speaker 2:It's like I feel like hunting. I mean I I like hunting any more than the next guy, but I'm a firm believer of giving the animals a chance.
Speaker 4:Yeah.
Speaker 2:I'm not some psycho killer that just wants to wipe out every deer. It's like I want to go hunting and it'll be fun to be out there and hopefully you know I see something find see something, get something. But at the same time, I want to feel like they actually had a chance, just because, like you know, it's like they saw me, I saw them, but then they didn't move yeah, it's like they had, you know if they would have been on top of their game or whatever, and like ran away.
Speaker 2:It's like, yeah, maybe I wouldn't, but just to shoot something out of the blue, I was just like feeding on a hillside it has no clue that you're even looking at it from across.
Speaker 4:Yeah, you're on one hillside, you're on another.
Speaker 2:You just bang that sucker it's like like literally don't even know you're there yeah, then, like then no thought in their mind is like oh, I'm gonna drink from this stream yeah, all of a sudden they just get freaking whomped like well that's like those zebras in africa.
Speaker 4:I watched this video this little little zebra getting taken out by an alligator and was like, did it have a chance?
Speaker 3:I don't know and that's why alligators are on my fear list really they're on your fear.
Speaker 4:What else you got other animals on your fear list? I I don't know, and that's why alligators are on my fear list. Really they're on your fear list. What else you got other animals on your fear list?
Speaker 3:I don't know if I have?
Speaker 4:Have we even? No, we haven't gotten so what's? We went through one, through five.
Speaker 3:What's a six, seven, eight? We've mentioned the fear list, but we've never.
Speaker 4:No, we went through one, through five.
Speaker 3:Yeah, but we went through one, through five.
Speaker 4:Yeah, we did, oh no we didn't, we didn't, we, we. We talked about one of my fears can we go through?
Speaker 3:one through five. I don't know if I want to go through one. What's one through five?
Speaker 2:but what's the most dangerous animals on? Like your list.
Speaker 4:Like my list, yeah, like your uh, polar bears, lions, because are the only two things known to hunt humans.
Speaker 5:And other humans.
Speaker 4:technically, but anyway, polar bears, lions, rattlesnakes, black widow.
Speaker 3:You have a lot.
Speaker 4:It's just top five, and I'd probably say seals.
Speaker 3:Oh five yeah like. Uh, seals, I feel like, is an underrated pick. I feel like seals are not talked about enough uh, not seal.
Speaker 4:Uh, what's it? Yeah, there's a c, it's a seal, um, like the big ass ones.
Speaker 3:Sea lions, sea lions, yeah I'm thinking, and this isn't in any particular order, but I'm just gonna say bear so grizzly.
Speaker 4:Polar black all the bears yeah.
Speaker 3:So bears, I'll say bears, hippos, alligators, alligators what else am I? I just don't like snakes, like any kinds of snakes, and then chimpanzees. Just because I think it came out like two or three years ago If you guys have seen the movie, nope, they had a little reference to an incident, I think it happened in the 90s there was this girl who owned a pet chimpanzee and it was a show chimpanzee, I think, and they were best friends. And then one day the chimpanzee attacked her and ripped her face apart and mauled her. And I don't know if you guys have you guys seen that.
Speaker 2:I haven't seen it, but I've heard.
Speaker 4:I've heard about it no, I've looked, I've looked I've looked up the photo.
Speaker 3:Yeah, you've seen it and yeah and then that girl ended up on oprah, and I think it was in the 90s well, that was 2000s. You want you ever watch a documentary, chimp crazy no, I've never seen the docket, but the closest thing I've seen is no they they bring, they bring that up in chimp crazy.
Speaker 3:And it wasn't like she was the lady that was on oprah, that was, um a lady who, uh, owned the chimpanzee yeah, I know, yeah, so it was like, but it was like her and I'm doing this in air quotes like her friend, right, like it was like and, but the creepiest part is well yeah, yeah, it was her friend, yeah but the creepiest part was you can find the 9-1-1 call, because then that girl's friend like came over well, she died the no, I think her friend died.
Speaker 4:Her friend died and the owner no, the owner died and she was the friend of the owner who made the 9-1-1 call her friend, the lady that got like mauled.
Speaker 3:Yeah, yeah, so you can hear the 9-1-1 calling dude. It's gruesome because all you hear is the chimpanzee in the background going crazy. Because I think back in the day like, and that's like kind of part of the movie Nope, is that? Back in the day it was fine to record with monkeys and animals and stuff. But now it's a little bit more Because chimpanzees they're freakishly strong.
Speaker 4:For their size. There was in that whole documentary thing I watched. There was a dude or whatever and the chimp bit his nose off and tore off like part of his face and it's like well, and so they're like why?
Speaker 4:they're strong as hell, but they're also like, intelligent as fuck well, the thing is is like most of these places, like keep them in cages and and keep them in these. Like I mean 100 foot, 100-foot, maybe 100-foot Habitats, habitat, but there's like four chimps in there or like if they're by themselves, it's like a 20-foot by 20-foot little cage and it's like Imagine like being an animal and being in that cage. Like you're smart enough to understand things, smart enough to like, realize but realize, but like at the end of the day, like you're just in a cage yeah, I always and you're not smart enough to realize. Why am I in this cage?
Speaker 3:so then someone rolls in there and it's like I need to get out of here I always get mad anxiety watching those videos of like little kids going to the zoo and they're like looking at gorillas or lions and they're like panting like hitting the glass. Yeah, you see the lion, like basically trying to eat the kid or something, and everyone's just laughing yeah, but that shit's scary.
Speaker 4:Yeah, I think um wild animals are pretty wild if you ask me pretty pretty wild.
Speaker 3:They have that name for a reason there is. Yeah, most wild animals are pretty terrifying. Even with all that and this whole conversation, I want to go to one of those. You ever seen those wildlife safaris Like zoos that you can drive through? Yeah, drive through. Yeah, I want to do that.
Speaker 4:Yeah, there's one over by Bandon Yep.
Speaker 3:I think it's in Winston Oregon.
Speaker 4:I've drove past like four times, but you've never been well, I was in a semi, oh, so you couldn't really.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I've seen those rules on people driving I don't know if they give you like peanuts or what, but they give you like food to like feed the animals.
Speaker 4:Yeah, we see videos of like ostriches, like, like basically putting their whole like head in the car I went to one when I was younger up in uh washington somewhere with uh, my gram and uh. We went there and it was me and my cousins and it was like you saw like golden eagles and bears and other things, but they had their own, they had an area.
Speaker 3:They had their own.
Speaker 4:They had their own. It was more like 100 foot by 100 foot and it was all like they had their own situation going on. There was trees and other things involved and all the animals in there couldn't be rehabilitated, like they couldn't be sent back out to the wild for one reason or another. Yeah, like the eagles, like it was a golden eagle and it got hit by a car and so it couldn't fly anymore, so it had. There was other reasons why they couldn't be sent back to the wild and I think one of the bears was like had some issue with it, and so it's like those situations. I understand putting those animals in like a zoo or like a wildlife area where it's like, yeah, give them all the stuff they need. I understand you can't put them back into the environment because of situations you know.
Speaker 2:I'm going to let you guys guess here, just cause this is not what I expected to see either. What do you think the most deadliest non-human living being is Spider On planet Earth.
Speaker 4:I'm guessing spider.
Speaker 3:I feel like at one point the first thing I thought was hippo, but I feel like hippo spider is a good guess. Just for the sake of this, I'm gonna say snake it's a mosquito what, yeah, that makes the mosquito? They carry disease.
Speaker 2:Yeah, it says insect. It says these insects are responsible for the most deaths globally, primarily through disease transmission, and they kill an estimated 800,000 people annually that's nuts.
Speaker 4:It is nuts number two number two is snakes though though. Oh okay, Where's spiders at?
Speaker 2:Well, I don't know, I don't have spiders on here, it's mosquitoes. Mosquitoes, snakes, dogs.
Speaker 4:Dogs.
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 4:Same type of reason Dog attacks.
Speaker 2:Yeah, it says snakes. While a wide variety of snake species are dangerous, the most venomous or the most likely to attack humans in these areas, they inhabit cosmos deaths. Well, and then the dogs, it says. Rabies and fatal diseases transmitted by dogs is reasonable, it's pretty high yeah but, I just thought like dog
Speaker 4:attacks, would like you know when I was at work talking about snakes, when I was in Hermiston or whatever the guy was like, they had someone who got bit by a snake.
Speaker 3:Do you know what kind of snake?
Speaker 4:Well, they didn't, and so they had to try and find the snake, to figure out what kind of snake it was. It ended up being a not very, very venomous snake, but it was a pretty big snake, um it wasn't a rattlesnake, or? Nothing. No, it wasn't a rattlesnake.
Speaker 4:I actually, I actually have a crazy story um, and then they had like a whole safety meeting about it and they're like, yeah, so if you're in a dark area and you're moving things, just be aware that there could be other other critters in there, and I was like I'm sitting in the crane, I don't really need to listen to this.
Speaker 2:Yeah, but yeah, that is wild. The my, my snake story I had came from my sister, though, which is pretty wild, cause like I didn't know this about snakes and I don't think it's like a commonly known thing about snakes I mean, unless you're like a snake person and if you are, you're probably gonna pick up on this story like pretty quick. But my sister said she had a friend, like when she was in college, that had a pet snake and like had had it for like a while, like since she was still in high school and stuff. And uh, all of a sudden, one day, like it was starting to get pretty old, I guess, and she said, all of a sudden, like one day, it just like completely stopped eating. And they were like what's it? Like she kept putting you know food out for the snake and whatever in it just wouldn't eat. Second part of the story is that she would sleep with the snake. Some people sleep with dogs. She would let the snake basically Out of the cage.
Speaker 2:Yeah, she'd just sleep with the snake. It was her pet and she'd had'd just like sleep with the snake like it was her pet and she'd had it for like quite a few years and like whatever else. Well, you know, time went on and like the snake just like kept not eating and uh, she said that like the snake would was just like acting weird. So she thought it was like getting sick. Like when it was laying in bed it would like not stretch out but it wouldn't like coil up, like it would lay, lay all like like lengthwise in the bed. Well, it was like two, three weeks went by and they finally were like, all right, like we gotta take her to the vet, like some, something's not happening. You know, we got to take her to the vet, something's not happening, something's weird. And yeah, then the vet basically told her that the snake stopped Sizing her up.
Speaker 4:Yeah what.
Speaker 2:The snake was just sizing her up. It wasn't eating, so it could stay hungry, and the reason why it was laying out on her bed was to try to stretch itself itself out long enough to be like the size of her oh, just see like it was like an anaconda I don't. I mean I don't know what type of snake, but yeah she.
Speaker 2:He said that like weird, like that's, basically the snake had stopped eating so it could have enough room to have her. And then also it was just basically it would coil up, go lengthwise, and it just kept doing that day after day. And then she said, basically if it would ever got to where, like she, the snake had stretched itself out far enough to be like the length of her, it would have tried to eat her.
Speaker 3:Yeah, do snakes have like a high iq?
Speaker 4:I have no clue. I don't know, but I watched a. I've seen a video of a snake eating like it was like a.
Speaker 3:It was like a bigger, like it was a lamb or something yeah but like it was an anaconda, but it like literally had the whole lamb inside of it and you could like see the imprint of the lamb like I know like snakes could do that, but I'm just kind of think because, like, the only like and I'm doing this in air quotes like smart animals I know are like dolphins I know have like a high iq and then monkeys and like, well, dolphins are from outer space, so yeah, this says uh, that snakes are capable of surprising intelligence and learning abilities, going beyond what was previously understood.
Speaker 2:Studies have shown that snakes can learn to find specific locations, recognize familiar people and even weigh risk versus reward. While they may not have the same level of cognitive abilities as mammals, they demonstrate remarkable problem solving and learning skills see you just kind of made me more, uh, scared of snakes.
Speaker 3:Uh, I remember as a kid and shout out, shout out my dad here. If you guys have ever seen jackass 3, one of the scenes in it is uh, they prank one of the guys who is deathly afraid of snakes by basically having him fall into a fake or well, a pit full of fake snakes, like rubber snakes you would get at like a joke store, like a dollar general or whatever, and he falls in and he like freaks out for a few seconds. But then he realized like oh, they're toy snakes, fake snakes. But then they have this reptile expert dump like boa, constrictor, anaconda, like all like these bunch real snakes.
Speaker 2:I remember watching that at like eight, nine years old, just being terrified because for some reason in my brain I thought, well, that's gonna happen to me, like my friends are gonna dump a bunch of real snakes on me, and I remember being terrified you know, what freaks me out, like even a little bit more than snakes, but kind of like this similar situation, I think it was on fear factor is, uh, cockroaches, yeah, cockroaches, just like like, because isn't that kind of like a thing that you it's like super hard to kill a cockroach, like you can't just like stomp on it, or anything.
Speaker 3:They, I'm pretty sure, and I might be wrong here, but they are hard to kill and I know they like eat flesh too, like if you do.
Speaker 2:Yeah, oh, I didn't know that like that's kind of like a well, not a well known thing, but like, uh, like european mounts for like animals, like, say, you kill a nice buck and want to get like a european mount, that's like one of the ways that they've talked about it is that basically, you just set the head with with all the skin, like whatever in it. If you have the access to them, you can just set the head inside of like a box of cockroaches and the cockroaches over like a certain amount of time. Like there's a lot of research. It's not like you can just have them, like you would kind of have to know like the length of time, but yeah, they'll just they'll literally eat all the flesh off the head and then you just pull the head out and then it'll be like completely clean of all the meat and like the brains and not like they'll, they'll eat it all.
Speaker 3:Do you think you would? Because I think everyone's kind of had those moments like you're watching fear factor or like something like jackass or just any tv show with like your family and like you're watching and you're like, oh yeah, I could do that. Do you think you could do fear factor?
Speaker 2:I feel like I could probably do fear factor, I don't know. I mean some of it gets me. I mean I don't know if this is the definition of being scared, but like I'm not scared of heights. But also, if this is scared of heights, then I am scared of heights, I would just be scared of falling, but I'm not scared of falling at like a certain height. Like I'm not scared of the height in which I would fall, I'm just scared of falling. Like you could put me at 10 feet up and I'd I feel like I would be just as scared if I was a hundred feet up, Like it wouldn't necessarily like you're kind of like I'm I know what you're saying Like I'm kind of the same way, like I'm not necessarily like scared of look out the window of an airplane and be completely yeah, like I can.
Speaker 3:I could do that. Or like I want to do skydiving and I I genuinely think, just because I know like, all right, I'm with the trained professional, like I know I'm gonna be okay.
Speaker 2:But if, for whatever reason, it's like hey, I'm gonna dangle you by a fucking shoestring, but you're 800 stories up, then I'll be like, all right, I'm a little scared yeah, like something like that, but then again that's not like like I don't know, I don't know what scared of heights is defined by, but like I'd see that as like not scared of heights. You're more scared that the shoe screen is going to fail.
Speaker 3:Yeah, no, exactly, and you're going to fall to your death. It's not really necessarily the height in which you would be falling. You'd be fine of being like 100 stories up and you're in a skyscraper and you're just like looking out of a window. Yeah, or something. Yeah or like.
Speaker 2:I can't remember where it was. I think it might have been like in the stratosphere in Las Vegas. When you can go clear the top and you can stand on the glass. Yeah, like you're fine there and like look straight down, like that stuff doesn't.
Speaker 4:Because, you know you're not going to fall.
Speaker 3:A lot of people that get some and that's why a lot of people are scared of airplanes. Some people it's because of the turbulence.
Speaker 4:Some people. It's like they look out the window and they're like, oh, I can't do that. I'm more scared of like minimal high. It's like 40 feet up or like 30 feet up, something like you could fall, but you could like live, but you'd be like severely injured, oh yeah, like you'd break your legs.
Speaker 4:I would rather be like 100 feet up, knowing if I fell I'd die, like I don't know what it is like. I would rather fall that far and, you know, take an L, then like fall 20 feet and like break my leg and be immobile and like maybe break my hip or maybe like hit my head and be out of it for how many, how long it is, or do something where I'm like immobile or something for like a super long time dude I I think I have more fear of I have this exact tiktok.
Speaker 2:That will explain what you're talking about. That I watched the other day, which is like fact to me, but here it is.
Speaker 5:I will never go bungee jumping for the simple fact that if something were to go wrong, they cannot give me the skydive guarantee. Anthony was a skydiver guarantee. The guarantee is that if something goes wrong up in the air, you're fucking dead. You're dead, okay, because there's only two things that can happen while skydiving Either your parachute eventually opens and you float down to safety, or it does not. That's it Okay. The skydive guarantee is that if your parachute doesn't open, done Close casket, don't even let the family see the body. It's over Bungee jumping. Oh my God, there's a plethora of things that could go wrong before you die, and that's the problem that I have with it.
Speaker 5:I'm like so with that Right, because best case scenario if something were to go wrong you go all the way down, the bungee snaps back into the people that are watching you fall, and then maybe you plummet a good 15 feet, break your legs, maybe 20 feet, whatever, right, that's best case scenario, worst case scenario that bungee snaps back right up inside your fucking anal cavity, right up your ass, coming at you a thousand miles an hour. Oh my God, then bungee jumping is not that high. Yes, I understand that it's high enough that if you didn't have a bungee on, you would absolutely plummet and die. But the bungee's slowing you down right before it snaps up into your asshole and then you fall a good 20 feet, break your legs. You're still conscious, you have a bungee shoved so far up your ass you can't even feel your legs anymore and you survive. No, no, I will never go bungee jumping, for a simple never go.
Speaker 2:That's the deal is basically. He's just talking about like, if you go skydiving, the parachute doesn't work. You die yeah like you know what's gonna happen yeah like if they're like there's no, but like you bungee jump and it's like all of a sudden the bungee gives like a little bit of spring or something and it kind of like slows you down and then you're like paralyzed for the rest of your life, but you still live like well, and that's like I know.
Speaker 4:There's a lot of people out in the world who live paralyzed.
Speaker 3:Yeah, yeah I, I always just wanted to know the, uh, the feeling people get. You guys ever see those like videos of, like the people that go on the, the what is it called? I think it's called like the slingshot, like roller coaster, the one that's like super fucking tall and it like launches you up in the air, but there's always like, uh, the guy that operates it will always be like, oh, you don't have your seat belt on and the person's like, wait, I don't. And then they'll just like launch them. Yeah, like, for example, or like the same thing with bungee jump.
Speaker 3:They'll be like, all right, three, and they'll launch it yeah yeah, I want to know what that's like, because I would be freaked out.
Speaker 4:Yeah I, I just don't think I could. I I'm not gonna go skydiving, I'm not gonna go bungee jumping I'll go skydiving eventually.
Speaker 3:I want to do it bad no, I don't.
Speaker 4:I mean. What's the point?
Speaker 3:I just want to see what it feels like.
Speaker 4:Yeah, I get it and it's like an adrenaline high, it's like a whole thing. But it's like, at the end of the day, what's the point? You go out of a helicopter, you fall whatever how many feet and then you land.
Speaker 3:Yeah, but you're with the trans professional. I'm scared of a lot of other things, but skydiving just isn't something I'm.
Speaker 4:Scared of P-dribble, but not of skydiving, yeah.
Speaker 3:I'm a weird guy, I'm an interesting guy and wild P-dribble.
Speaker 4:yes, skydiving nah.
Speaker 3:I don't know it's just something about me.
Speaker 4:I guess I can see it. How are you not scared of like you're with a trained professional? But you know, if they pack their chute wrong, you're dead. They're a trained professional.
Speaker 3:I trust them.
Speaker 4:There's a hole in your chute, you're dead. I trust them. It doesn't matter if you trust someone. I trust a lot of people in the world but at the end of the day, if something happens that goes wrong, you're dead.
Speaker 3:Maybe next episode we'll talk about my fear list and we'll let the listeners judge if I'm too scared of stuff.
Speaker 4:You are. You're not scared of skydiving, but you're scared of pee dribble, and that just confuses the shit out of me.
Speaker 3:Well, guys, is there anything else that we should uh?
Speaker 4:thank you for listening to the rolling deep podcast. Welcome welcome find us at rolling deep pod chuck with one p chuck I'm so happy that you're back one p rolling deep pod yeah, exactly yeah dot com, but we, we missed each other.
Speaker 3:Actually, I don't know if we had.
Speaker 4:we don't have a dot com, but like rolling deep pod at gmailcom with one p, yep yeah we're send us your skydiving info all right.
Speaker 2:Yeah, maybe we'll all go skydiving for rolling deep sky not a fucking chance all right, well, if we don't get anything else, you can find me in hell before I'm on a fucking helicopter, jesus christ okay, yeah, that's the six talking, but uh, thanks for listening and uh, to stay updated on our specials or new episode releases, follow our instagram at rolling deep pod with one p. You can also send us an email at rollingdeeppodwith1p at gmailcom. Once again, thanks for listening and remember with enough drinks, you too can roll deep.
Speaker 4:And stay safe out there. Don't do anything we wouldn't do, which is everything. Live your life to the fullest and never go skydiving.
Speaker 2:I wouldn't be living your life to the fullest.
Speaker 4:All right, be scared of P-Dribble Always be scared. Don't walk out of the bathroom with your pants unzipped. Just make sure they're zipped up before you get out.
Speaker 1:Sounds about south are in our midst. He won't get the last laugh. It's the last thing he did and he used to roll around in that red dirt mud. Now he's skipping town in that roster south of blood. Don't stop going south, cause they'll let you play your music real damn loud. Don't stop heading, heading south, cause they don't understand the words that are pouring from your mouth Rolling deep.
Speaker 2:Rolling deep. You understand them words.