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Jack Armstrong
Foreign.
Joe Getty
Broadcasting live from the Abraham Lincoln Radio Studio at the George Washington Broadcast Center, Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty.
Jack Armstrong
Armstrong and Getty.
Katie
And now here's Armstrong and Getty.
Jack Armstrong
Not live from Studio C. Armstrong and Getty. Yeti. We're off. We're taking a break.
Katie
And as long as we're off, perhaps you'd like to catch up on podcasts. Subscribe to Armstrong and Getty on Demand or One More Thing. We think you'll enjoy it.
Jack Armstrong
Certainly a couple of quick things before I get to a couple of stories.
Katie
Wow. See, that's one of the things about the One More Thing podcast. Sometimes there are swears. Although now Hansen has to label it so he doesn't run it on the air uncensored.
Michael
First one of 2025.
Katie
There you go, Michael.
Katie's Husband
The best outburst ever.
Jack Armstrong
Oh, boy.
Katie
Sorry. That was childish and I regret it.
Jack Armstrong
It was very childish.
Katie's Husband
I loved it.
Katie
Tell you what, your inner child leaves town, you're screwed. I keep mine healthy.
Jack Armstrong
It reminds me we. So one of the fun things we did at Cousin Christmas, we call it, where everybody gets together. My brothers, their families, kids, cousins, grandma, grandpa, everybody. We're there. We did a hot sauce competition.
Katie
Oh.
Jack Armstrong
Based on the. What's that TV show?
Katie's Husband
Hot Ones.
Jack Armstrong
Hot Ones, yeah. So you can buy the home version of Hot Ones and we watch hot. Have you ever watched Hot Ones, Joe?
Katie
I have not.
Jack Armstrong
It's pretty entertaining. Watch the Shaq episode if you don't watch anything else because it's pretty funny. Yeah. They have celebrities on there and then they interview them while they try increasingly hot hot sauce with chips.
Katie's Husband
Yeah, Shaq and Conan were still stupid.
Katie
It sounds really entertaining.
Jack Armstrong
Oh, I haven't seen Conan.
Katie's Husband
Conan's great.
Katie
Funny.
Jack Armstrong
Shaq is hilarious. Guzzling milk. They have milk there to drink. And I mean like crazy. I don't like spicy stuff, so I don't get any joy out of it. I didn't even participate. But everybody else did. Most everybody else did and it was pretty funny. Including my, my, my 13 year old Henry. He did the hottest one, the 2 million, whatever that number is. They got a scale right and it was the hot. They had. Yeah. Candle power. Anyway, he was just. He ran into the bathroom. We just heard him in there and he yelled, God.
Katie
Oh.
Jack Armstrong
That got big laughs out of everyone.
Katie's Husband
It must be a guy thing. My husband, we bought that Hot Ones thing and he did it with one of his friends and he completed it. He walked around like he just Hulk smashed a building. Like he was like.
Katie
Yeah.
Katie's Husband
It was like the biggest testosterone boost I'VE ever seen in my life.
Jack Armstrong
I guess it is a certain can you take it? Thing because my, my brother, the, you know, served in Iraq several times. Guy really likes taking on the hot sauce.
Katie
Wow, how interesting.
Jack Armstrong
What was I leading up to? Oh, these couple of things I came across. I don't know, they don't fit in. I'll do that.
Katie
I was gonna say, you know, I walk around with crippling joint pain all the time, so I'm good, frankly. You burn your mouth with hot sauce. I'm good over here. I got my thing, you got yours? Don't see the.
Jack Armstrong
It's always seemed a little bit to me like I'll take these pliers and pinch you really hard. Is it hurt hurt if I pinch you here? How about if I pinch you here really hard?
Katie
Why you can hold their hand over a burner. Although you're not going to give yourself third degree burns, obviously with hot sauce.
Jack Armstrong
So the, the, the, the hot sauce game thing came with a stack of cards and questions on them. And the way you're supposed to play the game is you can either answer the question or eat the hot sauce. And the questions are like embarrassing or revealing. So it's kind of a, you know, 13 year old. Now we've reached worked up to the really hot hot sauce. And here's the question. The questions were way too filthy and dirty. My, my son chose poorly. I should have looked at the box before we bought it at Target. I was looking through, I mean, just like this is for early 20 something drunk people sitting around. I mean, you know, what was your worst one night stand? And just, you know, just stuff like that. A lot of them.
Katie
But I dug out parenting.
Jack Armstrong
I, I dug out a bunch of the questions that were okay for the family and parenting and then we did those and we didn't end up doing them for the hot sauce thing. We just tried the hot sauce on chips. But this was just conversation starters. I just needed something. We got, we're all sitting around and after like the initial. I don't know if anybody else has ever had this happen before, but you get all the family together and everything like that and there's a big burst of energy. Then that kind of a bit of a lull happens. So now we got to come up with something. We gotta. Well, first of all, you go out to eat like nine times. But when you're, you can't constantly go out to eat.
Katie
So you got so many cookies. I am now a cookie addict. Oh Lord.
Jack Armstrong
But so I dug out some of the questions. And what was the. The one I was gonna do before I get to the final one? Oh, this is a pretty decent one. It was kind of interesting because I'm there as a parent with my kids, and then my parents were there with their kids and grandkids, and the question was, what trait would you least like to pass down to your kids?
Katie
Oh, that's heavy.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. But I thought it was damned interesting, again with the family relations there. It was interesting because my dad said, patience. I wish I. I wish I had more patience. I don't have much patience. I never have, and I don't like that. And I wouldn't want to pass that along. And I thought, huh, I've kind of got that patience. I've got different things that bother me more than that, but, like, my son really has no patience, so. And I have no idea if that's a genetic thing or not.
Katie
Yeah, a lot of it is.
Jack Armstrong
What would your answer be?
Katie
Oh, my God, mine. It. That might be it. Yeah. Yeah, it would be something like that. Yeah. Just patience, ability to. Look, you can make your point later. I'm thinking back to, you know, I was a young parent and ran a little hot, and there were times it took me a while to learn. Look, you can't make the point tonight with your angry, misbehaving kid. Just plant the seed, throw a little fertilizer on it, and just leave it alone. And don't, you know, don't try to close the deal with a kid who's freaking out or whatever. Just let it rest. Something like that. Just.
Michael
I don't.
Katie
I don't know how I'd phrase it exactly. Give me a minute. I could probably come up with it.
Jack Armstrong
But it was interesting to have, you know, hear my dad say it with me there and then I've got one for my mind was procrastination. I just, I. I don't. I wouldn't want to pass that on to my kids. And I have to one of them, but not the other one, so that's cool. Katie, since you're planning to have a family, what trait of yours would you not like to pass along?
Katie's Husband
I would say my anxiety or my lack of ability to identify what's in my control. Like, I tend to worry about things that I can't do anything about.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, I was going to bring that up on the air. It was interesting with a very big group of people and, like, the weather conditions getting worse there, the different levels of being worried about it, given that the result is going to be the Same either way. The person that worries zero about it or the person that is, and I'm not going to mention any names, infinitely worried about it, like to a really high point. The result will be the same way. The same either way, which is really interesting about worry.
Katie
And the challenge in front of you will be the same. Yeah.
Jack Armstrong
And not to be a too much of a downer is like my son who's got a variety of issues. He said, I don't want to pass along my ocd, which was hard. Michael, anything you don't want to pass along to your cats.
Michael
Now? Maybe jealousy. Sometimes you get jealous of others a little bit. A little bit envious.
Jack Armstrong
Interesting. That's a good one, man.
Katie
Yeah, yeah. Oh, speaking of cats, Michael, for what it's worth, our daughter brought her cats with her and they have been. Were in my home for gosh. When did she get here?
Jack Armstrong
I noticed there's an S on there. Is it two or 15?
Katie
Two.
Jack Armstrong
Okay.
Katie
Two cats brothers. Very, very cute little fellows. Oh, my gosh. I'm at least provisionally. I'm not on Team Cat like versus dog, but had a lot of fun with the cats. Really enjoyed their company. Cute little fellas. Oh, my gosh. Yeah.
Jack Armstrong
And then. So one more card and this will be the. The end of the One More Thing podcast for today. The question was, have you ever shoplifted? And there are only two people that had in our big group. I never have. Maybe we answer some questions here. Michael, have you ever shoplifted?
Michael
No, Katie?
Katie's Husband
No. On accident, but no.
Jack Armstrong
On accident.
Katie's Husband
Yeah, I walked out of it. I walked out of a Target with a pair of sunglasses on my head and when I got home, realized it, drove back, returned them, got a crazy look.
Jack Armstrong
That's not triple lifting absent mindedness.
Katie
Yes, absolutely. As a kid, I fell under the sway of some older boys who were not a good influence at all. I was probably eight years old, I might have been nine, something like that. And there are some of the neighborhood boys and they kind of adopted me and that's what they're doing. And I'm like, all. Yeah. It was a good learning experience, though. It honestly was because the. Because we got busted because we were stupid kids and the. Whatever you call the security guy at.
Katie's Husband
This, like loss prevention.
Katie
Yeah, exactly. That's the term I was looking for.
Jack Armstrong
Chewed us out.
Katie
I mean, like really. Till there were tears. And then mom and dad came and it was like, oh. And at that young age, I hadn't fully appreciated that I am a extension of my parents and my siblings. And my family and we have a joke, I probably shouldn't do the accent we do it in. But as, as our kids embark on something, they will say to each other, we will say to them, bring pride to family. And. And it helped me really appreciate that.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, it's a good one. It's a good thing it didn't happen in, you know, modern California up until a month ago that nobody would have busted you, you know, just, oh, all right.
Katie
Could it. Yeah. Built a career as a criminal. Probably a very successful career. So one more thought on the hot sauce thing. While I do not find any joy in seeing who can endure the most pain to their nerve endings in their mouth, the idea of trying to maintain your cool and like, speak coherently while you are dealing with the hot sauce, that is very funny.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. That's why, that's why that show is funny. Just Google the Shack episode and watch it. So on the. Did you shoplift? Two people in the group of everybody said yes. My one niece said yes. And we were all shocked. And. And she said, yeah, she kind of does it for fun. And I have a friend, like, super successful, very smart person who went through a big shoplifting phase in their 20s. And it was just the thrill of it. That wasn't stuff they needed or anything they got like a thrill out of. It's like people who lie for the thrill of it or whatever. So I've never had that. But then my dad shockingly said I did once. I did once. And it was like, for some reason, my dad, now that he's 87, tells stories that he's never told ever in his life. And I don't know if he didn't think we could handle it or what, but he tells stories now that we're like, my brothers are. And I are always like, where. Why were you holding on to this your whole life?
Katie
Right. I had that experience with my 84 year old dad this past summer. He was in the Air Force during the Vietnam War and he got out in the early 70s and he explained, because he'd quote, unquote, explained why to me earlier in my life, but he'd left out like a lot of it, which was. He was fully cognizant of how dishonest the Department of Defense and the White House were being about the war. And he hated it.
Jack Armstrong
Wow, that's interesting.
Katie
And he'd never uttered a word of that to me.
Jack Armstrong
That is interesting.
Katie
Yeah.
Jack Armstrong
So my dad says, I did once. And we're, we're all like, what? Because my dad is super honest law and order guy, which I really appreciate. And he said, yeah, I was in the army, and I was working KP in the kitchen, and I stole something out of the kitchen and took it back to my room. And I felt so guilty about it the next day. I never stole anything again. And we said, what did you take?
Katie
Here it comes.
Jack Armstrong
A gallon jar of olives.
Katie
Well, one of the great pleasures in life.
Jack Armstrong
What the freak are you gonna do with a gallon of olives? You're one thing you steal in your whole life.
Katie's Husband
I'm gonna sit back and enjoy those.
Jack Armstrong
Olives is what you're gonna do.
Katie's Husband
All the dirty markets after a long.
Katie
Day in the kitchen, you're gonna pop a little olive.
Jack Armstrong
Oh, my God. I guess that's part of the whole you grew up without electricity or indoor plumbing thing. You know, the joy of an olive may have been pretty exciting for that person.
Katie
Yeah, it's like when I read Tom.
Jack Armstrong
Sawyer to the kids. They're like, why are they getting so excited about an apple? Well, they didn't have apples. I guess that's what it was when I did a jar of olives.
Katie
Stolen army olives.
Jack Armstrong
The guy that was with him stole a half gallon of ice cream and stuck it under his shirt on the way back to the barracks. They got stopped and had to stand in the hot sun for a while. And that guy's ice cream started to melt, and he became one big wet stain of ice cream. I don't know. I didn't ask where my dad must have stashed the gallon jar of olives, because that's not easy to hide either, but.
Katie
Oh, of all. You don't think. No, surely not.
Katie's Husband
Oh, geez.
Jack Armstrong
You can't suitcase a gallon jar of olives.
Katie
Not with that attitude, you can't.
Michael
Okay, you see what I put up.
Joe Getty
With The Armstrong and Getty Show. Get more Jack, more Joe podcasts and our hot links at armstrong and getty.com. the Armstrong and Getty Show.
Jack Armstrong
So when we go driving around, me and the kids, like, we are going out to eat, and we take turns on who has oxygen, which is a term teenagers use. That's really. That's who has access to the music. I get ox. It comes from auxiliary A. The auxiliary plug, even though nobody uses that anymore. It's all Bluetooth. But I get ox. No, you had ox last time is the way he and his, okay, high school friends talk, if you want to sound hip. But anyway, my. My oldest son had ox on the way back from the restaurant. And so he plays his stuff. I say, okay, here we go with the cop killer rap. And then he's giving him crap. Where's the melody with his various songs? But Kendrick Lamar, Don't Kill My Vibe, we were listening to on the Way Home featuring Good Kid and Maad City Don't Kill My Vibe by Kendrick Lamar. I just. My question was going to be to you. Have you ever read anything or do you have any theories on how musical taste develops? Why some people like certain stuff and other people like different stuff? I got two kids, grew up in exactly the same household. The younger one basically likes the same music as me. He wants. He likes classic rock. He wants to listen to the Eagles and Lynyrd Skynyrd and Bachman Turner Overdrive and that sort of stuff. He's 13. His older brother is all Kendrick Lamar and Ken Carson and Cardi Cardi B. Or would Cardinal Different Cardi, Playboy Cardi, Playboi Cardi and that sort of stuff. And do you have any. Do you know why that is?
Katie
You'd made up all of those names.
Jack Armstrong
I know.
Katie
Still be sitting here with the same look on my face.
Jack Armstrong
I know.
Katie
No.
Jack Armstrong
Do you have any idea how people come to their tastes? No. No. But like with food, don't you kind of assume to a certain extent they perceive it differently?
Katie
Like, yes, the flavor is upbringing. I mean, it can't be a coincidence that billions of Indian kids like Indian food. Right, but.
Jack Armstrong
Okay, well, that on. My two kids grew up in the same house with the same exposure, so I don't know. I don't even know how he found this stuff. Wouldn't maroon me.
Katie
Yeah, I don't have any idea. That reminds me, I came across the woman who has my dream job. I mean, it makes this job look like digging ditches, which I've also done. Talk about that a little bit later on.
Jack Armstrong
You have a theory there, Katie?
Katie's Husband
I'm just wondering if it has to do with his friends.
Jack Armstrong
Your friend group.
Katie's Husband
Yeah, sure.
Jack Armstrong
Maybe that's during your formative years of.
Katie
Forming musical taste, which is probably typically between 8 and 15.
Jack Armstrong
Maybe that's 90% of it. Your friend group. What is going to make you more popular with the people you want to be popular with pushes you that direction.
Katie
I could be part of it.
Jack Armstrong
Like, I don't even know why my musical tastes are what they are. I couldn't tell you.
Joe Getty
Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty. The Armstrong and Getty Show. The Armstrong and Getty show.
Katie
Yeah. You know, I've got a pretty good.
Jack Armstrong
Immune system for Stuff like normal distribution diseases that go around. I usually don't get them. What would it be like if I ate better? I might be impenetrable.
Katie
You're. You're just at the tail end of raising little kids now. You have teenagers. So you have been enrolled in the Marine boot camp.
Jack Armstrong
Right.
Katie
Of. Of immune systems, raising children.
Jack Armstrong
So I've got a number of people in my orbit who take nothing when they get a cold. They don't. They believe it's all BS and they don't take anything. I take a few things. Do you take anything? Do you think anything works? Katie's nodding her head. We'll start with you.
Katie's Husband
I take theraflu.
Jack Armstrong
You take theraflu. I have found that to work. I don't care if it's placebia. If I suffer from placemia, doesn't matter me. As long as I feel better. I don't need anybody to tell me it doesn't. Actually, I don't care. I feel better.
Katie
Like Tylenol or ibuprofen. At one point I was down with the zinc.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah.
Katie
But I couldn't figure out what form. And I just kind of remember when nobody got a cold during COVID Yeah. I've fallen out of. I don't remember what to do anymore.
Jack Armstrong
I got a bottle of. It's immuno Something or other. They say take one a cold first. You first start to get the symptoms of a cold. And it's zinc and a couple other things. And I don't know if they do anything, but I feel like if I take that, if I do get the cold, it's much milder. Again, might be in my head. I don't care.
Katie's Husband
I also use Zycam.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. Which is awesome.
Katie's Husband
I've heard people recommend sinuses and stuff.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah.
Katie
Yeah. I tend not to trust my own experience because the data set isn't big enough. But I don't. I don't know. I have no information that there's anything wrong with taking that stuff. And what the hell at worst is harmless.
Jack Armstrong
But you're not a take nothing guy or.
Katie
No, I am, pretty much. Although I'm thinking now that you mentioned it, maybe I'll take some Tylenol or something. I. Actually. My symptoms aren't that bad other than just overwhelming fatigue at this point.
Michael
Do you guys take Nyquil? That's what I do. And I go to sleep.
Katie's Husband
I'm afraid of it.
Jack Armstrong
You're afraid of nighttime Nyquil?
Katie's Husband
Yeah. Well, with our hours, I don't. If I wake up groggy or oversleep that's not. Not good.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, I can't. Alcoholics are not supposed to take NyQuil because it's basically taking a shot of.
Katie
Alcohol to help you get to sleep. Yeah, I don't for the reason Katie cited. I just. It's hard enough to get up in the morning and be semi sharp.
Katie's Husband
Yeah.
Katie
Listeners of the first hour of the radio show are saying not very sharp.
Jack Armstrong
One thing with giving your kids stuff, you kind of have a better gauge of whether it's actually doing anything or not. Especially when they're little, they're too young to like. And most stuff I don't think does much.
Katie
Oh, right. Oh, yeah, absolutely. You remember when that one thing that was ubiquitous on the still drugstore shelves of America?
Jack Armstrong
It's still in every freaking drug I buy. Every cold medicine you buy still has that phenylalanine or whatever it's called in it. And the government announced it does nothing.
Katie
100% were completely different.
Jack Armstrong
The FDA said it does zero. Zero. It's a nothing. And it's in every cold medicine still.
Katie
You're wasting your time on the phenylhalimena melatonin in here.
Jack Armstrong
Well, how do you say it, Katie? You're looking at it, but so it's on yours. What are you looking at? Right there.
Katie's Husband
This is dayquil. When I had this flu last time around, I took everything under the sun that I could get my hands on because I was trying to get rid of that crap. Yeah, it's in here too.
Jack Armstrong
Every cold medicine in every aisle of every store that sells cold medicine has drugs full of that. And the government announced it doesn't do anything. I just think that's weird. They just counting on that. People don't know because it's fun to say.
Katie
Oh, yeah, yeah. Well, the percentage of people. You know, honestly, we've posed this question in many contexts in recent days and through the years. What percentage of Americans one of us will ask the other, do you think knows that story or. Or anything? Yeah. And in this case, what percentage do you think could tell you? Oh, yeah. Fennel. Elephant ear is. It's, it's. It was worthless. I remember that news story. Be a very, very small number.
Jack Armstrong
I suppose you're right.
Katie's Husband
Okay. This says Fedna Leftrine.
Jack Armstrong
Phenyla freene. That's the way you said. Okay.
Katie
Phenylephrine. Phenylephrine.
Katie's Husband
I like your guys's better. Fena. Elephant.
Jack Armstrong
Well, since it doesn't do anything, I'll call it whatever I want to call it. It's a Bunch of.
Katie
Wow. Oh, man. Unfortunately, necessary guys ever use leeches? Hilarious.
Jack Armstrong
What? You got too much blood in your body is your problem. Right.
Katie
You got to bleed your feet. You don't have the stomach to actually slice open your own feet.
Jack Armstrong
Isn't that what killed George Washington?
Katie
Yeah, well, it hastened his death, certainly. Yeah. I don't know. Why. Well, I'm a bit of a history freak and a bit of a medical history hobbyist and a great admirer of George Washington, that was. I listened with rapt attention and, like, committed it all to memory there in his bedroom where he died, as you're there by his bedside. Probably a recreation, but. And they explained that, yeah, he had. What do they think he had? I can't remember the disease. I didn't memorize it that effectively, obviously, but the doctors. He probably did not have aids. He was an honorable and elderly man anyway, that the doctors, in treating him for what was probably whatever the hell, just kept saying, yeah, we got to bleed the feet and let out the bad humors. And he'd, like, rally a little bit and they'd think, yeah, we probably ought to bleed his feet more until he died of, like, what if you don't have enough red blood cells? Anemia. He pretty much died of anemia.
Katie's Husband
And it was all. All that for a throat infection is what? The interwebs.
Jack Armstrong
Well, you got too much blood is your problem.
Katie
Yeah, streptococcal infection or something. He should have taken some phenahela men a little bit. Elephant.
Jack Armstrong
What's your story, Michael?
Michael
My wife has looked in the closet and says I need to throw away all my old clothes.
Jack Armstrong
Basically because of fashion or size.
Michael
I don't wear them. And it's just taking up space. But, yeah, do. I guess the question I have is, for example, we have some old towels. She wants to change out the towels, but I've told her, hey, just wash them. We can give them away to Goodwill or something like that. She wants me to throw them away. And how often do you change out towels, for example? I mean, do you guys change about every. Yeah, I mean, do you change about every six months?
Katie
No, when we're ashamed of them, that's when you. You get rid of them. But there's nothing wrong when you're embarrassed for people to look at them.
Jack Armstrong
I. I realize my lifestyle is not like most people's, but I don't know that I ever have in my life other than like, they just get lost or something.
Michael
But, yeah, I'm like you, Jack. I just keep the same Towels and keep rewashing them.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, yeah, yeah. I've never, I've never kept.
Katie
30 years.
Jack Armstrong
I've never kept the towel long enough to wear it out. I don't think can it.
Katie
How do you lose them like a bath towel? What happens to them?
Jack Armstrong
I don't know. I don't have the same towels. I don't. Well, I don't have the same towels I had when I was 25, but I never.
Katie
That's what I mean.
Jack Armstrong
That's what I'm wondering too. I've never actively gotten rid of them. You know what I do a lot, and this is not good is I'm. I've moved a lot in my life. I'm bad at unpacking. I'm doing this right now at my house. I haven't unpacked since my last move. Like I bought some new. A new screwdriver last night at the store because I don't know where my screwdriver is from the move. So I probably do that. I got boxes of old towels. I've never opened the boxes, so I had to get new towels. That's probably what I do. But no, I have never thought. Does your wife do this because she wants a different look? Like a different color? Or is it because she thinks they're worn out?
Michael
She thinks they're worn out.
Katie
Well, then get new towels.
Michael
But yeah, but I'm trying to save money and.
Jack Armstrong
So what's a worn out tile? What is a worn out towel?
Katie
It looks kind of thread bare and just blah. Doesn't look nice anymore.
Katie's Husband
Unraveling.
Jack Armstrong
Okay.
Michael
I don't. I just figure if it washes my body and I'm happy with it, I wash them and that's it.
Jack Armstrong
You wash yourself with your towel?
Michael
Well, you know, you dry yourself with the towel, but there you go. As far as saving money, though, I just, I just, I don't want her to keep buying new stuff. And it's just.
Jack Armstrong
Well, this sounds like a thing between you and your wife, but.
Katie
Wow. Yeah. I don't want any involved.
Jack Armstrong
No, I have opinions, but I just. Doesn't seem like a good idea to weigh in. Although I buy high quality towels so they would last practically forever. I'm one of the few things I've always been willing to splurge on. I love the feel of a good high quality towel. Huh? Yeah.
Michael
She wants me to throw them away, not give them away. She says, you can't give those to Goodwill. And I said, why not? They're perfectly fine. And she says, no, no, we've been using them, and I say, well, just wash them.
Katie
You know, I. I would say bring them to said charity or a charity of your choice, and if they want them, they'll take them. If they don't, they will heave them.
Jack Armstrong
Go ahead, Katie. I've got comments, but, no, I'm just.
Katie's Husband
I mean, how bad of shape are they in, Michael?
Jack Armstrong
Can you read the newspaper through them?
Michael
No, no, they're in good shape.
Jack Armstrong
So. And I, I. I do not want to weigh in this on this at all. I'm only asking.
Katie
The lady wants new towels. All right, Katie.
Jack Armstrong
No, I'm only asking. I'm only asking for information purposes. So she doesn't want to give them away because she doesn't think it's cool to give somebody a used towel?
Michael
Correct.
Jack Armstrong
Okay, well, okay. By definition, I mean, goodwill stuff tends to go to people that are pretty down and out usually. And I think they'd rather have a used towel than no towel.
Katie
But you can always donate them.
Katie's Husband
I was sorry to, like, the SPCA or something for the animals.
Jack Armstrong
Dogs don't use towels. I've watched dogs over and over. They just shake.
Katie
I wish they would. Boy, does Baxter like, if we walk him in the rain, boy, does he like to get toweled off. So it's a win win. He's not resistant to it because it feels really.
Jack Armstrong
It's a race between getting the towel on the dog and them shaking him. If you're standing in the doorway or something like that, and they shake, you got hair and splatter everywhere.
Katie
Oh, yeah. Pro tip towels in the garage. You got to be prepped. You got to be ready. Where were we? Oh, yeah. Let the free market function, Mrs. Michelangelo. If somebody wants to buy the towels, let them. That is a coming together of a need and a fulfillment of that need.
Jack Armstrong
Of course, I'm a guy who buys used shoes off of ebay and stuff like that, so, I mean, I think a shoe is way grosser than a towel. You can wash a towel.
Katie's Husband
Yeah. Whenever my parents go through a towel or whatever, my dad cuts it in half and uses them for the gym.
Jack Armstrong
That's a good idea. Or use it just for, like, cleaning my car. Washing my car. Drying. Yeah, something like that. Yeah. That is. I've done that with towels before. That's true. I have done that. They move from drying my body to the. Drying my motorcycle.
Katie's Husband
Yeah, sure.
Katie
Yeah. To the garage. Yeah. There you go. Win, win. Michael, out to the garage, huh?
Michael
Hey, well, thanks, guys. So I'm not throwing them away. That's that's the bottom line. I'm not gonna throw these in.
Jack Armstrong
You're willing to die on that hill?
Katie
Yes.
Michael
Yes, I am.
Katie's Husband
Get a couple more years out of them, Michael.
Katie
Tonight on thc, Towel Hoarders tlc. Now, as far as THC is pot. That's right. Never mind. Well, take two.
Jack Armstrong
TLC is fine. We don't want this to move to a Judge Judy situation where you got Michael and his wife yelling at each other. She wants to throw away the towels. They're disgusting. She says no.
Michael
But as far as clothes go, do you. When you give away clothes, do you worry about fashion at all?
Jack Armstrong
No, we're giving them away.
Katie
Yeah.
Michael
You know, donate them to, like, goodwill or any.
Katie's Husband
Like, somebody's gonna go shopping and go, wow, what dick donated this?
Katie
Right, Right. This shirt sucks. I'm gonna figure out who donated this. Go mocking in their home for nothing. That's what I say, you know?
Michael
Well, thanks for your help, guys. I'm not throwing away those towels.
Jack Armstrong
I understand.
Joe Getty
Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty. The Armstrong and Getty Show. The Armstrong and Getty Show.
Katie
Anyway, back to Katie.
Jack Armstrong
This is.
Katie's Husband
This is just a silly story that I had actually forgotten about until this conversation came up. One of my top favorite bosses of all time, and I think you know him. Paul Hosley.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
Katie
Paul. What a good dude.
Katie's Husband
Love him. So I get off the air in San Francisco and he comes into the. Into the studio and he goes, hey, Katie, I need to talk to you in my office for a second. And he is stone serious. And I'm thinking, oh, boy, what did I say? What did I do? Whatever. So I go into his office and he sits me down and he goes, so what is going on with your car?
Jack Armstrong
What?
Katie's Husband
Yeah, exactly. My reaction, I'm like, what? What are you talking about?
Jack Armstrong
You get out of your car like a dude and it's just weird.
Katie's Husband
Yes.
Katie
It's off putting.
Katie's Husband
Yeah, that was it. And he goes, you're the pictures on your car. And I'm like, the pictures on my car? The only thing I have on my car is a Blink 182 sticker on my window. And he goes, okay, let's. Let's go to the garage. So.
Katie
And the license plate.
Katie's Husband
Yeah. So we walk down to the garage and we go to the back of my car, which is parked right next to the elevator. And at this time. So this is like 10:30 in the morning. Okay. All over the back of my car, below the. The windshield or below the windshield so I couldn't see it. Are triple X porn photos ripped out of a magazine.
Jack Armstrong
Oh, like, oh, taped on there, laying on there.
Katie's Husband
Taped to the back of my car, like. And.
Katie
And we know what sex is play.
Katie's Husband
I mean, oh, boy.
Katie
Bleep that Hanson.
Katie's Husband
Yep. It went all the way up to just about as triple X as you can get. And I world, as they say, yes, more mortified. I looked at my like, Paul, I have no keep in mind. My drive to San Francisco was about 35 minutes. So I drove from home over the bridge into San Francisco with this on the back of my car.
Jack Armstrong
Oh, okay.
Katie's Husband
So I. I go into my text messages because I hadn't checked them. People used to text message me at ungodly hours. And I see a text from one of my friends that says, hope you have a good work morning. And I knew I from this. The second I saw, I went, this dick. It was him. He came, he walked to my house and he taped these things to the back of my car. So Paul and I had a little bit of a laugh about it. We go back up into his office and Paul goes, hey, let's call your friend. And I'm like, okay. So I call him, I call him and I start, you know, fake crying. I'm like, ryan, dude, my boss, really. My boss would like to talk to you.
Jack Armstrong
Really? Oh, my God.
Katie
So this is the appropriate at vengeance.
Jack Armstrong
This is making me uncomfortable.
Katie
This is justice.
Katie's Husband
So Paul has him on speakerphone and he goes, hi, Ryan, this is. This is Katie's program director here in San Francisco, and I just wanted to discuss the images that you put on the back of her car. We actually have security from the building here as well.
Katie
Oh, boy.
Katie's Husband
And you can hear Ryan going, no, no. And then Paul start busted up laughing. But anyway, that.
Jack Armstrong
That's pretty good.
Katie's Husband
The reason this story came up is because we were talking about the weirdest reasons we've ever been called into our boss's office. And my brain went, oh, my God, that happened.
Jack Armstrong
Oh, that is good way to get back at somebody, though. I would not have thought of that. That's good.
Katie's Husband
God, it was mortifying.
Katie
Anyway, if you are doing this job and you get called into the boss's office and you're not fast forwarding through everything you said in your head, you're not doing the job.
Jack Armstrong
Right.
Katie's Husband
Right.
Jack Armstrong
It's a.
Katie's Husband
It was a short walk to Paul's office, but I'm going, okay, what did I. I did this news story, a comment. I'm like, I had no idea at all.
Katie
Boy, the weird.
Jack Armstrong
Go ahead, Joe.
Katie
I was just gonna Say we've, like, had serious stressful issues with people completely freaked out and pissed off, some of them performatively about things we've said. And I'd say two of the three I never saw coming.
Jack Armstrong
No. I was gonna say every time I've gotten in trouble for saying something, it's like something I didn't even remember. I say edgy things sometimes and they go, oh, boy, that might get me in trouble. That's not the one. It's the thing I didn't even think of for some reason that usually ends up with the TV cameras outside the radio station.
Katie
And then there is. I need to come up with a name for it. It's like my white whale. It's the one thing I said once that I thought, that's it. I've ended my career. I shouldn't have said that. Whoops. And I was, I was. I was virtually certain it would be devastating and nothing ever came of it. And you can ply me with booze. You can put me on the rack. Give him a blowy, you can. Or a handy or the other thing. The only other thing might get me. I don't know.
Jack Armstrong
Try it.
Michael
But I gotta go to church.
Katie
I need to get to go to church and have my ears washed out. And I will never admit it. I will never repeat it. It will not be repeated. God.
Jack Armstrong
One time we angered the Asians and every TV station sent their Asian girl reporter to the radio station to.
Katie
That was the funny part of it. And we've seen that sort of thing. If you say something insensitive about like affirmative action for black people or something like that, all of a sudden you find out every. Every station in town happens to have a black reporter too.
Jack Armstrong
Wow.
Katie
And they're reporting on this story. It's hilarious. Once you become aware of it, it's. It's like a hundred percent Italian Americans are angered at the cancellation of the parade. We go to Luigi Perconi for a report.
Joe Getty
Come on the Armstrong and Getty Show. Get more Jack, more Joe podcasts and.
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Armstrong & Getty On Demand – Episode: The A&G Replay Monday Hour Four
Release Date: February 17, 2025
Hosted by: Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty
Produced by: iHeartPodcasts
In this engaging episode of Armstrong & Getty On Demand, hosts Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty dive into a variety of lighthearted yet insightful discussions, seamlessly blending personal anecdotes with broader topics that resonate with their diverse audience. Skipping over the usual advertisements and intros, this summary highlights the key moments, memorable quotes, and the natural flow of conversations that make this episode both entertaining and informative.
The episode kicks off with Jack sharing a delightful family tradition:
Jack Armstrong [01:20]: "One of the fun things we did at Cousin Christmas... We did a hot sauce competition based on the TV show Hot Ones."
Jack reminisces about the family's attempt to emulate the popular show Hot Ones, where participants endure increasingly spicy sauces while answering personal questions. Despite not enjoying spicy foods himself, Jack appreciates the humor and camaraderie it brought to the gathering.
Jack Armstrong [02:00]: "I don't get any joy out of it. I didn't even participate. But everybody else did and it was pretty funny."
The competition led to memorable reactions, especially from Jack's 13-year-old son, who bravely tackled the hottest sauce, resulting in uproarious laughter when he exclaimed in distress.
A significant portion of the discussion centers around the traits Jack and his co-hosts wouldn’t want to pass on to their children. This introspective segment offers valuable insights into parenting and personal growth.
Jack Armstrong [05:27]: "The question was, what trait would you least like to pass down to your kids?"
Jack reveals his father's admission of lacking patience and his own concern over his son's impatience, pondering whether such traits are hereditary.
Katie [06:28]: "Mine might be the ability to look... not try to close the deal with a kid who's freaking out. Just let it rest."
The conversation extends to other traits like procrastination, anxiety, OCD, and jealousy, providing a thoughtful exploration of personal attributes and their impact on the next generation.
The hosts take a candid turn by addressing the question:
Question [08:08]: "Have you ever shoplifted?"
Most participants confess to never having shoplifted or only doing so accidentally, such as Katie's husband inadvertently leaving a store with sunglasses on his head.
However, the highlight comes when Jack's father shares his own brief stint with shoplifting during his military service:
Jack Armstrong [12:29]: "I took a gallon jar of olives... I felt so guilty about it the next day. I never stole anything again."
This revelation sparks a humorous yet honest discussion about the nature of minor theft and the lasting impact of such experiences.
Jack introduces a curious topic about the divergence in musical preferences between his two children, despite being raised in the same household.
Jack Armstrong [16:08]: "My younger one likes classic rock, while the older brother is into Kendrick Lamar and Cardi B. Do you have any idea how people come to their tastes?"
Katie and her husband speculate on various factors such as peer influence and personal experiences shaping musical tastes, acknowledging the complexity behind seemingly differing preferences.
Shifting to health-related topics, the hosts discuss their approaches to managing colds and the efficacy of over-the-counter remedies.
Katie [18:29]: "I take Theraflu... If I suffer from placemia, doesn't matter me. As long as I feel better."
The conversation delves into ingredients like phenylephrine, with Jack expressing skepticism about its effectiveness:
Jack Armstrong [21:14]: "The FDA said it does zero. Zero. It's a nothing."
This segment highlights personal anecdotes and varied opinions on medicinal practices, encouraging listeners to consider their own health strategies.
A humorous yet relatable debate arises when Michael shares his struggle with his wife's insistence on discarding old towels.
Michael [24:11]: "She wants me to throw away all my old clothes... But I keep the same towels and keep rewashing them."
The hosts weigh in with practical suggestions and light-hearted banter, discussing the balance between decluttering and sentimental attachment.
Katie [26:59]: "Bring them to a charity or a charity of your choice, and if they want them, they'll take them."
The exchange underscores household dynamics and the differing perspectives on what constitutes "worn out" household items.
A standout moment features Katie's husband recounting a hilarious incident involving his boss and a prank involving his car.
Katie's Husband [30:35]: "They taped triple X porn photos to the back of my car and had to call my friend to discuss it... It was mortifying."
This story not only provides comic relief but also illustrates the camaraderie and playful dynamics within the workplace, ending with both hosts and guests laughing over the absurdity of the situation.
The hosts touch upon the challenges of navigating sensitive topics and accidental offenses during broadcasts.
Katie [34:24]: "We've had serious stressful issues with people completely freaked out and pissed off, some of them performatively about things we've said."
Jack adds his own experiences of unintended provocations:
Jack Armstrong [34:40]: "Every time I've gotten in trouble for saying something... it's something I didn't even remember."
This candid discussion highlights the importance of mindfulness in public speaking and the unpredictable nature of audience reactions.
The episode of Armstrong & Getty On Demand masterfully blends humor, personal stories, and thoughtful discussions, offering listeners a multifaceted experience. From family traditions and parenting philosophies to light-hearted debates and unexpected workplace antics, Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty create an engaging environment that is both entertaining and reflective. This episode serves as a testament to their ability to connect with listeners on a personal level while addressing universal themes that resonate across diverse audiences.
Notable Quotes with Timestamps:
Jack Armstrong [02:00]: "I don't get any joy out of it. I didn't even participate. But everybody else did and it was pretty funny."
Jack Armstrong [05:27]: "The question was, what trait would you least like to pass down to your kids?"
Katie [06:28]: "Mine might be the ability to look... not try to close the deal with a kid who's freaking out. Just let it rest."
Jack Armstrong [12:29]: "I took a gallon jar of olives... I felt so guilty about it the next day. I never stole anything again."
Jack Armstrong [16:08]: "My younger one likes classic rock, while the older brother is into Kendrick Lamar and Cardi B. Do you have any idea how people come to their tastes?"
Jack Armstrong [21:14]: "The FDA said it does zero. Zero. It's a nothing."
Katie's Husband [30:35]: "They taped triple X porn photos to the back of my car and had to call my friend to discuss it... It was mortifying."
These moments encapsulate the essence of the episode, providing listeners with memorable insights and laughs.