Metropolitan Weddings Podcast
Metropolitan Weddings Podcast
Meet The Wedding Pro - Robie and Rachel with Live Events Missouri
Step behind the turntable with Robie and Rachel from Live Events Missouri as they orchestrate the symphony of a perfect wedding day. Discover the intricacies of not just spinning tracks but weaving memories, where a DJ's touch transforms an event into a story. Our guests unveil the seamless blend of professionalism and playfulness necessary to keep the spotlight on the couple, while ensuring the dance floor remains an epicenter of joyous celebration.
The art of entertainment extends beyond the music, embracing innovation with many different photo booths and cold sparks that elevate the ordinary to the extraordinary. Robbie and Rachel guide us through the magical world of bespoke wedding experiences, where every snapshot is no-crop perfection and every spark is a safe, enchanting spectacle. They share the secret to personalizing the big day, from the curated soundtrack to the customized ceremony, ensuring each couple's narrative is beautifully underscored by their expertise.
Tune in for an episode that promises not only to spark your imagination but also to reveal the heart and soul poured into crafting an unforgettable matrimonial celebration.
Welcome to Metropolitan Weddings. I'm Meg, I'm Dawn, and we are here to educate couples with information from wedding professionals in the industry.
Speaker 2:Our goal is to make the wedding planning process as seamless as possible by providing you with insight from industry professionals.
Speaker 1:Okay, couples, let's get this party started. Well, hello listeners. Today we are here with Robbie and Rachel. Are we going by, robbie, or should I do Dennis?
Speaker 3:Yeah they're interchangeable. He's the man with many names Robbie with 1B.
Speaker 1:Would you please introduce yourself in your business.
Speaker 4:I am Robbie with 1B and I work for Live Events Missouri.
Speaker 1:What all does Live Events Missouri do?
Speaker 4:Wedding.
Speaker 3:Oh no, we're not doing this you do like 50 things.
Speaker 1:Robbie with a 1B.
Speaker 4:DJ and C.
Speaker 5:Photo booth A fish hand.
Speaker 4:Live stream Cold sparklers Audio visual. I think that's it, oh.
Speaker 5:Free projector.
Speaker 4:That's audio visual. Okay, and then arcade attraction yeah.
Speaker 1:How do those transport anyway?
Speaker 4:Oh, just in our van. That's pretty easy.
Speaker 5:Got that thing Okay.
Speaker 1:I don't know why. I thought it was going to be harder than that. Like no.
Speaker 3:It's because you're thinking back to the old school days and when you went to the arcade and it was like don't tilt the machines.
Speaker 1:I'm remembering George, or it was at Kramer trying to get it across the street.
Speaker 3:Yes, yes.
Speaker 1:All right, well, so you're not trying to do it, you're not hulking it there, you're putting it in advance, got it?
Speaker 4:I really want one of those soda machines like Tom Hanks had in big where he like threw a roll and stopped at it and it stood out of soda. That would be so awful, but I don't drink soda, so it has to be like little tiny bottles of water.
Speaker 1:Why do they have to be little, tiny bottles of water?
Speaker 4:Well, I mean just they have to be the size of a camera, right?
Speaker 3:We're just shoot them out All right, okay.
Speaker 5:Oh I don't know.
Speaker 4:Oh no.
Speaker 1:We're gonna. We're gonna make something happen. We're gonna.
Speaker 3:we're gonna call a guy, let's call it.
Speaker 1:Okay, so I didn't write down all the things on the list and I should have, but let's start with DJ.
Speaker 4:Okay.
Speaker 1:So first and foremost, would you say first and foremost, is that the, is that the largest portion of your business?
Speaker 4:It is large DJ and entertainment.
Speaker 5:That's what got us started with the DJ portion, so I don't feel like it is, first and foremost, okay.
Speaker 3:So what's kind of your mission statement with the DJ side of things?
Speaker 1:So with DJ and entertainment, we I don't know if the listeners have already listened to our previous podcast, but you have a fun story into the business. You've got a cute. So if you were to truncate that and just give us like the quick version of how you ended up in the DJ business, go.
Speaker 4:Rachel, you want to go Sure?
Speaker 5:So my dad he was actually the DJ for my mom she was singing and her form and he was playing music and behind the sound system and we had all of the sound equipment in our living room and he would play Queen and I go in there and dance to it. So I grew up with that as my. You know.
Speaker 4:Some child says like Thanks, yeah, I wanted to do it Child like when I was 11.
Speaker 1:How brief of a description do you want?
Speaker 4:you have seven more seconds.
Speaker 1:Okay, a little less brief than that.
Speaker 4:I think the industry changed a lot and I found that satisfaction in events and I think that it's more gratifying because you actually get to see people tapping as you get to watch them dance, whereas if you were in a studio you were just talking to a microphone and that would be it, but definitely feel like I got the long end of the big.
Speaker 1:Rachel, can you confirm?
Speaker 5:100%.
Speaker 2:I don't believe it.
Speaker 4:I believe that oh my gosh.
Speaker 1:Okay, so I'm going to sneak this in here, even though you're probably both going to kill me that I did.
Speaker 2:I'm nervous Right now, you both.
Speaker 1:So amongst the merchants listeners, we have voting, and this time we started something new, which was the merchants would nominate someone in the industry that they felt goes above and beyond and that when they see this merchant walk into the wedding and it kind of brightens their day because they go the extra mile and they make everybody's good to go and they, they do extra things and they make everyone's life a better place. And both Robbie and Rachel were nominated for this VIP award this year, or MVP my apologies, mvp award. We don't know the winner, but I just wanted to throw it out there that you guys are like this amazing team of what you do, but it's also translating in your personalities and you're just like general want for the wedding industry to be a better place and to bring everyone together.
Speaker 5:So I thought the winner should should know that I'm just saying and I say that a lot and metropolitan wedding, I think, is really brought a lot of us vendors together and super appreciate you guys for that.
Speaker 1:The question is are they competing against each other in that category? They are. I didn't put them as a team. I put them separately because they were nominated separately. Interesting, yeah.
Speaker 2:They're the they're the best person when that's going to be an interesting night when they go home, if one of them wins.
Speaker 4:I heard that. I heard that now.
Speaker 3:Here's my next question who are the people to vote for this?
Speaker 1:Well, are you a merchant? Did you get a link?
Speaker 4:I.
Speaker 3:Did get a link.
Speaker 1:Okay then. So Robbie and Rachel, oh dear.
Speaker 3:Let the campaigning begin.
Speaker 1:Things, you guys do what would be okay. So DJ and entertainment is like probably the big one. And then after that, what is your? Is it photo booths, is it?
Speaker 3:so hold on hold on hold on.
Speaker 1:Can I ask them a question real?
Speaker 3:quick Just cuz I'm genuine, I'm genuinely curious about this card? No, no, it's about. It's about business, Okay so. You know I don't believe in kickbacks. Come on now, that's not my gag.
Speaker 2:Okay, so anyway, it's bribery the same thing as a kickback.
Speaker 3:I mean, if we broke out a thesaurus, kickback bribery, you can cutesy it up however you want.
Speaker 3:There you go we love that about you so, going back to this, I may or may not accept that $50. I, that's right you did so talk. Talk to me real quick because I know you guys and I know that you guys are Very successful and you're at a lot of weddings and your business does really well. But as a client, like what is the approach that you guys take on the DJ side of things, from how you, how you approach an event, how you get ready for an event, how you work with the clients and how you build the experience for them?
Speaker 4:So we want the client to know that we are incredibly chill, like everything is going to be a smooth sailing ship for them and that they are the center of attention on their wedding day, like when, when the actual event they come, they are the center of. Not Our goal is to attract that attention to them and just remain calm, remain chill and pass out onto them. Because they're so stressed, we freak out after the phone call and some like, oh my gosh, you got a breakfast and we got to call this and we got a. I miss music that doesn't exist and we're only gonna do. But they don't have to know about that except right now.
Speaker 1:But you're not bringing that oh good.
Speaker 5:I just got the phone with a bride who was breaking out about timeline changes and I'm just like, honestly, it happens at every wedding, no matter what, and we are there as vendors to make it work, and I'm hoping that you're not even looking at the time on your wedding day. Let us worry about that. So I think that is a lot of how we try to make sure that we're working together with the vendors there as well To make sure that that wedding room have that day and a special moment and they don't have to worry.
Speaker 4:Well, it's right, that's one of the professionalism I'm not sure if you guys ever noticed or not, but I have. I have a very dry sense of humor and I I try to correlate that into Into events when they're stressing, like I want them to be happy, I want them to smile, and it's humor, you know, if they're receptive of that, you know I want them, give that to them. You know that is my gift to you. You know the people also bring them happiness, whether it be through music or you know it's your humor. You know make them make them laugh.
Speaker 4:You know, when they're standing at the altar and I'm officiating and you know the groom or whoever is just like on 10s and needles. You know, just use a little wit and you just watch that stress, leave their body and it, you know it reflects. You know they after the ceremony, a lot of times they'll leave your shoes and they'll be like, oh my gosh, you know you saved me from a stroke. Or you know I was freaking out and you know Just that quick little sorties ad joke. You know that's that's a little on my stress and that's the goal, that's what I want.
Speaker 3:So I love that. Don actually showed me something that popped up on Facebook the other day and it was a picture of Robbie officiating a wedding and Robbie was laughing and the couple was dying laughing. So you saying that it just immediately took me to that picture of like yep, that's kind of what it is so funny.
Speaker 2:I was sitting here thinking about it too, maybe, and there's the dry sense of humor.
Speaker 3:Whatever it was, the picture made for a beautiful memory for them as well, so that that was pretty awesome. So, when you do approach the music as a DJ for these events, how much of it is like pre-structured Playlists, type of DJ lists that you've seen have worked, and how much of it is them putting their own type of music into the mix?
Speaker 4:I can hate playlist so much. There's no creativity, there's no part in a playlist and it absolutely reflects on a dance floor when the DJ is allowed or knows how to read a crowd and, and I guess I should say, expose their craft. That's where the true heart is. That when, when a DJ shows up with a spot by playlist and just kind of sit there and twiddle the thumbs for four hours, you know, but he's gonna enjoy that. It's not fun. You know it's not responding to what the crowd responding here. Excuse me, it's not. Yes, I hope you guys that it's up. I'm a little my words. It's not. It's not what it's all about. Yeah, yeah, as far as formalities like first-hand take song, things like that, of course, obviously we're gonna ask for requests in the planning process. Obviously we accept do not play with. Obviously we're open for live requests during the event and we'll try to.
Speaker 5:You know, we'll try to save those in when appropriate, but we're not DJs when I would like to say that a couple of dudes send us, like a lot of times, top ten requested songs that they want and that shows us what their vibe is and what they're going for and that helps us as DJs to be able to know what we need to play, what the bride and groom are hoping for wanting, for, what their vibe is, and then we can use our Create to be on top of that and continue to pass that dance floor with those top ten requested songs. I was beginning work for that night which, in the last two years, those pop and requested from literally every bride and Taylor Swift.
Speaker 5:Yes, baby Rachel and.
Speaker 3:I are swifties. It's all good. I didn't know you were a swiftie.
Speaker 1:Freaking what.
Speaker 3:You're a swift.
Speaker 1:All right, I don't know if I classify myself as a swiftie, but she's amazing. I didn't.
Speaker 5:How do you?
Speaker 4:not love Taylor Swift and, like every one of, her songs.
Speaker 3:Yeah, what was that, robbie?
Speaker 4:Jeff, your husband is going to California. Yeah, uh, outside lands.
Speaker 1:I will also tell you that yesterday he was getting ready for work and listening to Taylor Swift, so I just outed him.
Speaker 2:I'm dumbfounded by this.
Speaker 3:I would have never guessed this, because I know your husband and I know the music that he likes.
Speaker 1:We have an extremely wide range of musical tastes, but Taylor Swift is one of the. It's not like I only listened to Taylor Swift. I love.
Speaker 2:Taylor Swift. I'm so shocked.
Speaker 1:Do you guys?
Speaker 2:hate Taylor Swift? No, no, I don't hate her.
Speaker 1:Then what's, then what's the.
Speaker 3:I mean, I don't hate her, but I don't listen to her music.
Speaker 1:I mean, I'm not, I didn't but, I, didn't know.
Speaker 4:I don't know You're not listening to that radio station.
Speaker 2:Okay, well, we're breaking down barriers here.
Speaker 1:We're going to have a whole Taylor Swift conversation on a different podcast, because we don't have time because next we need to talk about photo booths.
Speaker 2:Well, you can have Rachel in and you too can host. That's because I clearly have nothing to add to the Taylor Swift conversation.
Speaker 4:Oh my, God, you just brought her back up.
Speaker 2:She can't let it lie. I was just inviting Rachel in for a podcast.
Speaker 1:Thank you, we're going to start we're Rachel and I are we're going to start our own podcast with wedding merchants and we're going to find out what their favorite Taylor Swift song is, and then we'll just take it from there.
Speaker 4:Oh, you guys are going to have anybody giving you a song.
Speaker 1:You know what's funny? Like, I have a friend that just does not like Taylor Swift and then the other day she was like oh my God, I didn't realize that was a Taylor Swift song and I was like gotcha, she, gotcha, she's everywhere. You can't not like her Well what it's worth.
Speaker 4:I am not. It's not that I dislike Taylor Swift by any stretch, I just it's not my jam. Yeah, that's not what I'm doing. No, my jam. I think she's a brilliant marketer. Um, if she's ever looking for a side profile, I totally hire her to market. You know a little DJ's and Silly Old South West Missouri.
Speaker 3:You'll have to wait till her contract is up with Travis Kelsey.
Speaker 4:Yeah.
Speaker 1:Did you guys want to talk about photo booths or Taylor Swift? Either one I'm up for either. Yeah, so you guys have a glam booth. That's kind of your new fun. Well, it's not. Even is it new. You've been doing it for a minute.
Speaker 5:Been a while In a couple years, yeah.
Speaker 1:Oh years, when have I been?
Speaker 4:Oh, all of them together Maybe a year and a half a year, I don't know.
Speaker 1:So tell me, what makes a glam booth a glam booth.
Speaker 5:All right, so it's black and white photos, so it takes you back a little bit. But, um, I need to have a white backdrop. It's no crop, so it's just a classy face on a photo booth. Very simple but very, very classy. When those pictures come out, they do customize it, so it's actually right on that photo. Usually it'll have like their names and dates in the corner on the bottom and it pops. It's just a really nice look.
Speaker 4:It definitely sees to the minimalist and it also is incredibly classy.
Speaker 1:It sounds like it. I like the black and white. There's something really fun about black and white photos in a photo booth especially. So, and then you have other kinds of just kind of photo booths that are different styles as well.
Speaker 4:Yeah, absolutely, absolutely. Like in close retro booths, we have open air booths, we have full length mirrors, mini mirrors and glam booths Dang.
Speaker 1:One of each. So let's.
Speaker 4:And Son knows how to do all of this now.
Speaker 2:Oh, thanks, you did a good job teaching him.
Speaker 4:You did a good job teaching him. You were a photographer for 800 years, I mean.
Speaker 2:I was. It was that long.
Speaker 4:I mean, it definitely shows that you know, it shows he's good Awesome.
Speaker 2:Aw, you'll appreciate that.
Speaker 1:Okay, so there's such a list. Let's talk about cold spark. What is cold spark. Why is it called cold spark?
Speaker 4:There are these sparks that are cold.
Speaker 1:Mm, hmm, and how? What do they do? Okay, did they spark little or big?
Speaker 5:Different. We have three phases of cold starts, that they can go three different heights. Oh, we can pull that and kind of like a sparkler fountain but it's a little bit bigger than just one that you would get, you know, for July. And if you look on our website, there are videos and pictures and they add so much extra to those special moments.
Speaker 4:Here's the thing that I've learned about cold sparks, so I love sparkler exits, like the handhold sparklers. However, they have a very short life span. Right, we have two or three hundred guests that you're trying to coordinate the all light sparklers off at the same time. When the math comes out, how long does the program really have with all of those what's lit before they burn, you know, before they burn out? Whereas with cold starts they're all remote control. They go off whenever you want, for as long as you want. That way you're not in a rush and it's just different.
Speaker 3:You know, it's just I gotta say they add like a really cool extra element to pretty much so many different moments through the wedding, like we've seen them for first dances and I've seen for exits, I've seen for entrances, I've seen people do them at the end of their ceremonies Like they're so cool because they they are by definition cold, correct.
Speaker 4:Yeah, they come out. It does come out about 68 degrees. It might be a tad bit warmer than that. Well, it's with your hand in it when it's. You know what's coming out and it tingles a little bit, but I mean, doesn't hurt you. You know it's not dangerous, totally safe.
Speaker 3:So these are things that can be used inside right. Well, using that, your lighting expert inside.
Speaker 1:Yeah, yeah, they're 100% like a wow factor. They just they're just exciting, they're attention getting and they're they're fun. So I'm assuming that photographers way prefer those to the sparkler exit, just for.
Speaker 2:Yeah, they're awesome. They're awesome and they put off a lot of light, so in the evenings outdoors, yeah, they're really nice to have.
Speaker 4:When, the, when they're hand sparklers Is that what you call them?
Speaker 1:I've never heard anyone call them a hand sparkler.
Speaker 2:You just named them.
Speaker 4:Yeah.
Speaker 2:I just made up the new word.
Speaker 4:Yeah no, when they're traditional sparklers with cold spark. They both compliment each other and it's beautiful.
Speaker 2:Yeah, yeah, yeah, I agree with that.
Speaker 1:But then you don't have to try and light like yeah, like you said, like 200 of them at once in the 30 second time period.
Speaker 4:Yeah, and I've never, you know, I've never seen it happen. But like little kids at a sparkler exit, those sparklers are red, hot and like what happens if you put your hand down and it burns little kids, you know, I don't know, that always scares me and like then you always see like there's always someone outside with a bucket of water or sand or whatever to extinguish your, you know, your sparkler and a lot of that will throw them on the ground and those metal sticks like those are kind of hard to see and then you know they can poke through your shoe or oh well, that's not easy.
Speaker 1:That's a good point.
Speaker 3:about the mess too, I hadn't really thought about that the mess, and there's also some venues that don't allow sparklers. Yeah, so if it's a, if it's a matter of them worried about an open flame from a sparkler, these are totally different.
Speaker 1:True.
Speaker 4:No flame yeah.
Speaker 3:Yep no flame.
Speaker 1:Go through your list again, because I know it's hard to keep up we touched on a fish. Who does the officiating? Is it you Robbie? Is it you Rachel? Do you ever tag team?
Speaker 4:Well, it's not only me, there's myself, and then we've got a couple of others that work with us as well.
Speaker 1:What's that process like for the couple? What?
Speaker 4:do you mean?
Speaker 1:Well, like, if they choose to use live as their officiant. Do you guys like sit down and do a live? Do you guys like sit down and talk about their story? Do they submit a questionnaire to you? How do you find out about them in order to like officiate? I don't know how do you do that.
Speaker 4:Definitely a questionnaire, definitely a planning process. There are so many trigger questions that we ask we want to know their web story, we want to know how to do that. Yeah, we want all the week.
Speaker 1:Do they get to audition? You guys like stand you up in a line and ask you questions. How do they? How do they choose which officiant they get?
Speaker 4:It's more of a mugshot line. When you call that and people are in jail and they are trying to take out the bad guy what's that called the lineup, the lineup. That probably picked our DJ as well.
Speaker 3:Number number four. Please step forward.
Speaker 1:Say I now pronounce you no, no, no.
Speaker 3:Is this the man you?
Speaker 4:would like to be in all of your photos Number four.
Speaker 1:Please step back.
Speaker 4:I think it's a good thing for you guys to bring up.
Speaker 3:So when you do officiate weddings, you always try to keep that in mind.
Speaker 4:Absolutely, and that kind of goes back to the DJ thing and like the not being super egoistical, like we don't want to do the center of attention, we want the client to be the center of attention and that. You know that goes in a lot of different directions. But yeah, after that, you know that. First kid, why do you want my head in that picture? You know.
Speaker 5:I mean.
Speaker 1:Okay, well, we were running out of time, but I want to touch on a few more things just for our, because you do so much. You're not like an ordinary merchant that we talked to, where it's one business, you, your business model, hosts a long lineup of stuff, so you also do what we were going to talk about lighting, or we do like yes monogram lights.
Speaker 4:We have moving headlights, like by moving light. I don't know.
Speaker 5:Yeah, and we'll light up the dance floor for open dance. We make sure that we keep those off until we open up the dance floor so that the bright room can get some good photos in without our circle lights on the bright, beautiful dress.
Speaker 4:Yeah, that brings up another point. You know we talked about, you know, moving. I'm the officiant moving for that first pitch or whatever Same. You know same-less lighting. You know we're not going to turn on, you know, moving dance floor lights or anything until those formalities are finished, because we don't want to obstruct the photographer. You know blue and red and green laser dots on a bright dress is the last thing she wants when she's sharing her first dance with her. You know, with her spouse, and it's just. You know. I know those are just two tiny little pieces, but there's so much legwork that goes into perfecting Warren's wedding on the entertainment side, like there's so much thought and stuff that clients don't even know exists, like they don't even know that we're doing. And again, those are just two little pieces of puzzle.
Speaker 1:So I do want to point out that I hear from you guys over and over and we've done podcasts and talked to you in different ways and every single time I do think to myself the amount of like just expertise and professionalism and like experience that you guys bring to the table. It's not like you're going to sit there in your consultation with a couple and say these are all the things we're not going to do, so it's not like you're even saying these things out loud. But when you think of the list of things you've learned along the way of popping out of the thing or setting the lights differently for imagery and all of these things, it just it really adds up to being the whole package as far as not just the amount of things that you do, but the amount of experience you bring to the table and professionalism.
Speaker 4:Thank you for that.
Speaker 1:Yeah.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I think it kind of goes without saying, even just the fact of lights.
Speaker 3:Yeah they understand the importance of lights, right? So I think a lot of people that approach weddings, that we've talked about this on podcasts, they've never done it before, they have no idea. So they may come to a wedding and just be like let's do this and this and this and this and this and we don't need to mess with that we don't even mess with this Whereas somebody like Robbie and Rachel are like wait a second, like let us handle this and I promise it will be what you want it to be, but you don't understand that that's how it has to go, right.
Speaker 4:Yeah Well, we don't want them to even know that those things can be an issue.
Speaker 3:Yes.
Speaker 4:We want to take that away. Look for it even comes up. We don't want that to even be a question in their mind in the planning process, more on the day of. I don't know if that makes sense.
Speaker 3:Oh, absolutely. I think it kind of goes without saying that there's a reason why you guys are professionals and why you should hire professional.
Speaker 2:There's a lot of value, I mean just talking about the lighting and then we're talking about you know he was saying how he steps out of the photo. I mean, there's so many efficiency that just stand there and you automatically know like, hey, this is what's best for the couple, for their photos. You know, you're thinking ahead. It just takes someone who's been in the industry a long time to not only think about their job but the jobs of everybody else around them and how to make it a better situation for everyone. And the outcome at the end for the couple is even better because of your experience and professionalism within the industry as a whole.
Speaker 4:Well, you know, that's the same with DJ, like if you know the lighting groomer, whoever having the first dance, and we're in direct line of the photographer, I'll totally take a knee, I'll pull the laptop down so that it's not too intuitive and you know, I'll hide and put that done with that. Well, I guess it's not a new trend, but a trend that we love is like the global laptop dance, being in private, which I think is like the most elegant thing that you can do at a point like that. I think every, every couple should do it. But during that time, we'll hide, like the only people in that room are the wedding room and the photographer. We hide behind the booth like we want to be completely invisible during that time. And again, there's just so many little things that go into it that I don't even want to know what to give you a perfect day and don't think about it.
Speaker 2:So I totally get where you're talking about the formal last dance. I have to say that I thought you said the formal lap dance.
Speaker 3:I'm so glad you said that.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I did. I looked at Megan. I was like, did Robbie just say formal lap dance?
Speaker 1:New trend 2024, formal lap dance. Is it a formal lap dance?
Speaker 3:I'm like whoa, whoa, whoa. You're going to have to tell me more about this. It's private.
Speaker 2:He did say it was in private and he hides.
Speaker 3:Robbie, you may have just inadvertently invented something.
Speaker 2:So let's, just in case anyone thought the same thing Adam and I thought it's last L A S T, not lap.
Speaker 4:L A P.
Speaker 1:They're both at the end of the night.
Speaker 2:And they're both in private. One, just a little more private than the other. So here's what I'm hearing live events.
Speaker 3:You offer a formal last dance or a formal lap dance at the end of the night. I don't think you know, Did you hear Rachel's?
Speaker 1:laugh was like huh, no, we're not doing that, Shush it Adam.
Speaker 4:I mean I guess I see lap dances at weddings, like when they do the product or the cooler or whatever.
Speaker 1:I think that's what we're thinking. We're not promoting that kind of stuff Directly following your professional. They're so professional.
Speaker 2:Let me tell you about the formal lap dances.
Speaker 3:That's. That's the end of the console. So are you guys going to do a formal lap dance at the end of the night? Just super straight faced.
Speaker 2:Oh my gosh.
Speaker 1:I don't know how to wrap this up.
Speaker 2:after that, I just just ask him for the digits.
Speaker 1:Just, we definitely need your digits.
Speaker 4:No no, no, I'm here. How do they get a hold of you?
Speaker 1:They call us, they can email us, they can text us, they can Facebook us, they can Instagram us Pretty much any mode of communication.
Speaker 4:They buy. They can reach out. You want like URLs and phone numbers and stuff. A couple of those. Yeah, ok, phone numbers 417501980.
Speaker 1:a couple of those yeah.
Speaker 4:Okay, for number 4175019886. That number forwards directly to our personal cell after hours 24 seven. You know, if you're stressing, you know before they're lying or have questions late at night, reach out, we'll totally, we'll totally help you. We'll totally take that stuff off your plate. And then our website is dj417.com, or our handle on socials is live in Missouri, perfect, excellent. Well, I guess we need a new handle called Liza Dance Lab. Dancers Live in your lap.
Speaker 1:Live in your lap.
Speaker 3:Live in your lap.
Speaker 2:Where did you pull that from Meg? That was pretty good.
Speaker 4:I don't know he's tying the jack a little bit.
Speaker 2:Oh man.
Speaker 1:Okay, when we air this, adam, can you see us out with Taylor Swift song.
Speaker 3:No, I'm going to see us out with Genuine.
Speaker 2:Good grief.
Speaker 4:You said, you could just head us out with some 311 or death phones. There you go. Thank you guys for cracking us up, did you hear him?
Speaker 3:I heard him Okay, yep, yep, yep.
Speaker 1:Oh my gosh, you do Thanks for cracking us up today.
Speaker 4:Yeah, thanks for putting up with our immaturity and lack of professionalism.
Speaker 2:It's called fun.
Speaker 1:Just behind the scenes. You're very professional.
Speaker 3:Awesome. Thank you, guys, thank you Bye.
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