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Phil Robertson
Foreign. Welcome back to the duck call room, ladies and gentlemen. We have a special guest in here with us today. If you're watching on YouTube, you've already seen him, but we have Mr. Reed Robertson in the house. Jason, Missy's oldest son.
Jase Robertson
Eldest Robertson grand boy.
Phil Robertson
Huh. Are you older than done, Luke?
Reed Robertson
Yes.
Phil Robertson
Yeah. By how long? Not much. Just a couple. Oh, yeah, But a few months. Yeah. Okay. There you go. I know y' all were right. Yeah, I know y' all graduated. One trivia, all the things. Yeah. There you go. The eldest Robertson grandson didn't graduate together, did they?
Reed Robertson
No, I was a year older than him.
Phil Robertson
Oh.
Jase Robertson
And John graduated three or four years later.
Phil Robertson
Yeah, well, he took a minute. I mean, I knew they were supposed to be there together because, like, John.
Reed Robertson
David knows my birthday.
Jase Robertson
Hey, we'll never forget it.
Phil Robertson
Never forget May 15th. May 15th.
Reed Robertson
I know. If no one else wishes me happy birthday, me and Johnny D, we got each other's back this year.
Jase Robertson
It was like at 11.
Reed Robertson
Yeah.
Jase Robertson
He texted me, said we almost missed it. I said, thank God you did.
Phil Robertson
Look at there, man. But now. Reed, thanks for joining us, man.
Reed Robertson
Thanks for having me.
Phil Robertson
Well, hey, the only reason we don't have you more is because you live all the way up there in Nashville or wherever you call home. Are you Nashville proper?
Reed Robertson
Franklin.
Phil Robertson
Franklin. Oh. Oh, I know what that means. Yeah, that tax bracket a little different down there in Franklin. I like it like he was just.
Jase Robertson
Selling fish on the side of the.
Reed Robertson
Road years ago where it all started.
Phil Robertson
That's where Franklin. Now he's in Franklin, y' all. Now he's down the street from Luke Bryant and all them. It's. It's a good time, man. No, but thanks for having. Thanks for joining us, Reed. It's.
Reed Robertson
Thanks for having me.
Phil Robertson
It's a. You know, we wish that you had come to town under different circumstances, but, you know, it is. It's part of the inevitable coming in, you know, because we lost Feel papa feel to you, which I know is a different dynamic than even a lot of us have. But it was him being your. Your grandfather. So you said before we got to roll. And you want to know what our plan was? A. We don't have one. I don't know what all we're going to talk about, but even before we get into Phil, where does life find you? Now, Reed, I know you got a few kids. Been married for a little bit now. Yeah.
Reed Robertson
Married for.
Jase Robertson
Oh, oh, come on, man.
Reed Robertson
I got married in 2016.
Phil Robertson
Don't worry, Brian ain't gonna listen to Us?
Martin
Not this one.
Reed Robertson
Hey, you'd be surprised. She likes to keep me in check, that's for sure. Now, married in 2016. So what is that, nine years? Nine years, eight and a half years, technically. Three kids. I got a three year old, a two year old and a 10 month old.
Phil Robertson
Are you done?
Reed Robertson
No.
Phil Robertson
Oh, wow.
Reed Robertson
Oh, no.
Martin
I have a big family.
Reed Robertson
I'm trying to ensure that I am a established patriarch one day.
Phil Robertson
Oh, I thought you were going to say broke.
Reed Robertson
You know, you have enough.
Jase Robertson
If you have enough of them.
Martin
What?
Reed Robertson
If you have enough of them. You know, people say one's bound to be a dud, but you never know. You know, I'm. I'm trying to be a good dad. Hopefully that won't happen.
Jase Robertson
We can't go down that road.
Martin
What are you doing, Israel?
Reed Robertson
I own a real estate development company. So I build houses. You know, houses, townhomes, all kinds of stuff.
Phil Robertson
All over in Nashville or just kind of.
Reed Robertson
You know, they say 120 people move to Nashville every day. Yeah, It's a good spot to do it.
Jase Robertson
Good spot to build houses.
Phil Robertson
It is. Yeah, it is. Because, see, Brittany is from there. Well, not from now. She says Nashville, but I think that's because she don't think. Anybody know where Hendersonville is?
Reed Robertson
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Phil Robertson
She was born and raised in Henderson.
Reed Robertson
There's a lot of little towns around Nashville where people just say Nashville.
Phil Robertson
Yeah. It's just easier to lump it all in.
Jase Robertson
Turning into Dallas.
Phil Robertson
Yeah.
Martin
Bridget lives in Franklin.
Reed Robertson
Okay.
Martin
Out there.
Reed Robertson
Yeah.
Martin
Got a nice little farm out there that she.
Phil Robertson
Well, okay. Say we know everybody around.
Martin
Well, it's just, you know, that's pretty country up there.
Phil Robertson
It is beautiful rolling hill.
Martin
It really is. It's beautiful country.
Phil Robertson
Kind of rolling hills, turkeys, deer everywhere, a few ducks around.
Reed Robertson
I had some buddies come down and hunt in January with me, and they were like, I've never seen a place so flat in my life. It's just because you could just see forever and you kind of take it for granted when you go up to Nashville, you know, it's just rolling hills everywhere. And then you're driving. I mean, you can drive for four hours through Louisiana and you don't even go up a hill at all.
Martin
Well, there's not but one, I don't think. But there's one hill in Louisiana.
Jase Robertson
Out Driscoll, baby.
Phil Robertson
Out Driscoll. At a whopping 500ft or whatever it is. It ain't. Oh, but it ain't.
Jase Robertson
Driscoll Mountain is 535ft above sea level.
Phil Robertson
Yeah, yeah. Just barely. I mean, there's even a picture of.
Jase Robertson
The summit on Wikipedia. Some woods, y' all.
Phil Robertson
Y. That just looks like you're.
Martin
You can be climbing it and not even know you're climbing it.
Phil Robertson
Yeah. You get there and, like, why these people put this here? But now, man, that's so. That's cool, man. So after. After. Pretty much, y' all left when Duck Dynasty ended, right? Like, Duck Dynasty rolls out about two.
Reed Robertson
Years before the show ended, y' all.
Phil Robertson
Y' all rolled out then?
Reed Robertson
Yeah. When did the show.
Phil Robertson
In 2017.
Reed Robertson
Okay. So a year before we. We got married and moved.
Phil Robertson
Okay. There you go. And then y' all. Y' all have been up there. You ever see any. Any future leading you back to Louisiana or you like, the Tennessee area? I'm just curious.
Reed Robertson
Oh, we think about it all the time, you know, back and forth. Every time we get up there, we're like, man, we love it up here. It's great. Then every time we come down here, man, all our family's down here. I don't know.
Phil Robertson
Yeah. And that drives just far enough away to be a pain in the butt. That eight hour mark is.
Reed Robertson
Yeah, it was seven. It's about seven hours. And then when we had kids, now it's eight and a half hours.
Jase Robertson
Yeah, well, you had three of them in the span of, like, a couple days.
Reed Robertson
Yeah. Hey, and I'll say this. That's way easier than. Well, I don't know any other way, but to me, I'm like, hey, you're already in the mode, you know? Like, it's already mass chaos. What's another one? You just keep having them, and you never get out of the mode.
Phil Robertson
Let me tell you something. You have them two at a time.
Reed Robertson
You shut a task different.
Phil Robertson
No, he didn't.
Jase Robertson
Basically.
Phil Robertson
No, he did.
Jase Robertson
I'm on read side.
Martin
What do you got?
Reed Robertson
I got three.
Martin
I know. Girl, boy.
Reed Robertson
Oldest is a girl, middle is a boy, Youngest is a girl.
Phil Robertson
Yeah. Have you identified. Do you think you've had your dad yet?
Reed Robertson
No, I don't think so. They're good kids. I'm. I'm biased, obviously, but.
Phil Robertson
Yeah.
Jase Robertson
Hold on. So how many are we stopping at?
Reed Robertson
I want. If I got. If we have another boy next. Two girls, two boys. I think I'm done.
Jase Robertson
But you have another girl.
Phil Robertson
You might.
Reed Robertson
Well, she has seven siblings.
Phil Robertson
Oh, wow. You know, so I didn't realize Brighton's family was that big.
Reed Robertson
She. Well, her family stuff's a little crazy, but, yeah, they're kind of. Her older brothers are all in their late 40s, early 50s, you know. And yeah, so it was a little weird, but, but I mean I'm thinking five kids, so I'm thinking practically and logistically I'm like, okay, I got a Suburban now and if I have five kids, well then I'm going to have to get another vehicle. And I'm like, where do you go? You got a people mover now? It doesn't make any sense.
Phil Robertson
Yeah, church van.
Reed Robertson
I'm like, now I gotta buy a church van. You know, it's like my house isn't big enough. My, you know, it's like, what, what am I doing?
Jase Robertson
We stopped having kids so they wouldn't have to sit beside each other in the car. You gotta have a buffer seat so nobody can hit anybody. Consider that I start hitting.
Phil Robertson
Hey, different strokes for different folks, man. But no, we two was good enough for us. Well, you kinda like, what's that?
Jase Robertson
You don't like people enough to create more of them?
Phil Robertson
No, not, not that I'm telling you right now the biggest factor for me was 0 to 2. Mega shock. I could not imagine going from 2 to 4 and if it were to happen again because then I've read, you know, people that are in stages of life, that we are, which are later parents obviously. Now I'm about to be 40, like, like no sir. But those, those odds happen again, they just increase and it's like, nah man, I think we're good, you know, but it also leaves the door open for adoption force, which is great. Like, I mean there's lots of kids out there that need a home, man, that ain't got one. So if, if we do feel that we need one more to complete our family, we hopefully will remove one from a terrible situation somewhere and give them, give them a shot at a better life, man. So yeah, so that's, that's where we were. Now Britney's all in fact because the boys are a little bit self sufficient now at two and a half or going on three. Like they can do certain things for themselves. So now she's like, she's missing a little bit of that. They need me for everything.
Jase Robertson
She got that baby.
Reed Robertson
Oh yeah.
Phil Robertson
Hey, practice makes perfect, man.
Reed Robertson
Yep.
Phil Robertson
So just practice, keep practicing.
Reed Robertson
But zero to one was hard. And then from one to two, no problem. My life changed none. Yeah, because you know, she's taking care of the baby and I just got one kid. Well, that was nothing, you know, just one. Well then two to defense, two to three, that was, you know, okay, now she's just Taking care of the kids. She's back in her own world. She's like, man, this is great. This is awesome. You know, she only has to take care of one now. She went from two to one. Well, I went from essentially one to two, and now I'm wrangling these two psychopaths.
Phil Robertson
Well, you named one of them Silas.
Reed Robertson
I did. He's. He is the fourth Silas, which is concerning. You know, we named. I mean, I'm the one that named him that, you know. But, I mean, it is a little concerning when you think about it.
Jase Robertson
It's like, what the Silas carried on. So there's.
Reed Robertson
Yep.
Jase Robertson
Silas, your dad, Jay Silas. You read Silas.
Reed Robertson
And then David. Silas.
Jase Robertson
David.
Phil Robertson
Yeah, That's. I saw him last night, and I've seen him around. He does have that Silas look in his eyes. So there's. He just. But it's not a bad. It's just. It's filled with wonder. The world looks wonderful to him.
Reed Robertson
That kid can stick to a story and especially stick to one that ain't true.
Martin
Well, he gets that quite naturally.
Reed Robertson
Yeah. Yeah.
Martin
Anything Slouch himself a storyteller. Yeah. Okay. He gold his own.
Jase Robertson
Times can get tough on anybody.
Phil Robertson
They can, man. And you never know. You rarely see it coming.
Jase Robertson
Hey. Worst time I ever had in my life. All of a sudden, we had a bunch of medical bills for a young man named Carter that was born. And we just bought a new car. And I said, oh, this ain't. This bath ain't mething.
Phil Robertson
Yeah. And that happens to people every day. Like, you're on top of your bills. Next thing you know, like right now, inflation hits.
Jase Robertson
Hey, Al.
Phil Robertson
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Martin
Boom.
Phil Robertson
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Reed Robertson
Yeah. Oh, they were telling stories about me the other night. You know, we were worried about Reed when he was a kid, you know, he used to make up these stories and embellish. And my dad said I'd go and I'd talk to people like, man, I mean, he's just an embellisher, you know? And I'm thinking, oh, you were so concerned. You're the most embellishing person I've ever met in my life. Aside from your namesake who is worse than you. Like, what did you expect?
Martin
That's what I was fixed to ask you. How was it being like son of Jason Robertson.
Phil Robertson
Oh, buddy. Well, look, I know I'm going to give you a minute to think of how you want to answer that because inheritance is real. And Jace may go clip the part of this with he finds out we're talking about him. But I remember sitting in this room before it was this. It was legitimately a duck call room. And J. Scott, I don't know what I'm doing. Ready? I don't know what I'm doing with him. He said, you asked him something. He just.
Martin
Bald face, he's a real problem.
Reed Robertson
Yeah.
Phil Robertson
He's like, I just don't know. He said, I just don't know what I'm gonna do. And then he's like. He said, then you got Cole, who ain't ever told a lie right there beside him. And I'm like, yeah. Oh, this. This is not good. He said, everything I'm trying, nothing's working. And I'm over here like, well, buddy, I ain't even sniffed a kid yet. So I don't know why you're venting to me about this because I am no help. Like, I got.
Reed Robertson
The difference was I was loud and proud of. I was just like, no. But my brother, he saw me and he got sneaky. He was a sneaky?
Martin
Yeah. He was saying all the way. He said, I watched read and he's always in trouble. I think I'll go a different route.
Phil Robertson
Yeah, yeah, yeah. But that was always funny. He was like, I just don't know what I'm going to do with him. He said, that boy, will bald face lie to you? And I'm thinking, well, Jayce, he's 15. Yes, of course. Like what 15 year old male doesn't.
Jase Robertson
It's funny that Jace is upset that somebody else is embellishing a story.
Martin
No, no. Because look, I don't even remember what happened. But I was. I was doing something, you know, and Christine just started cackling like a hand out of control. And she said, you're so stupid. And I said, every time you talk to me, I'm always so stupid. I said, why? She said you kept him a lot when he was a baby.
Phil Robertson
Oh, Tom, I. Jace.
Martin
Yeah. Yeah. And she said and then you wonder why you and him have all this trouble. He said you gave him. He just osmosis a lot of your. What? Who you are. That's why me and your dad can't get along. I'm serious.
Reed Robertson
Hey, you know, you kept me one time when I was a kid and I don't know what happened, but that only happened one time. That was the first and last time.
Martin
No, I don't even remember it.
Phil Robertson
Oh man.
Martin
But me and him have always hit heads.
Reed Robertson
Yeah, well, he's.
Martin
He's worst time. I thought me and him was fixed because. Because he said it about you. One day he said, I guess it's just going to get out that I'm just going to have to just show him who's the man. And said, hey, I'm just gonna. We're gonna have a fistfight and I'm gonna beat the living daylights out of you. One time in the duck blind. Up. You know it. It was. You know, if it got so bad that Phil called a meeting and chewed all of our butts.
Phil Robertson
Yeah.
Martin
And said, hey, when I leave the blind, don't nobody move till I get it. I'm sitting in the decoys with a boat.
Phil Robertson
Yeah. I knew I was a 30 year old man about to take a whooping.
Martin
Yeah. Oh, he.
Phil Robertson
I mean I just thought he was gonna be like Ben Dover.
Reed Robertson
Is that the story where the find a tree story?
Phil Robertson
Yeah, yeah, that's it.
Reed Robertson
Oh yeah, that's a famous one.
Martin
The only thing that's out of the water is my neck. I'm sitting under a buck brush. Okay. And what got me was, okay, he killed one at 125 yards. And I said, you should have killed three. There was three, 500 ducks at 60. Look, we were just nose to know. I said, I said, well here we go. We're fixing to get into a knock down drag out fight.
Reed Robertson
Oh, it lasted for days. I remember him coming home just, I mean steaming.
Jase Robertson
We've got about 18 podcasts on it. Yeah, yeah, it's still going.
Martin
Yeah.
Phil Robertson
As a man who was present for that story, that one was a weird one. I said, I'm about to see a bunch of grown men just start fighting. Oh no, I'm going to have to pick a side.
Martin
Yeah, we going with Bill Robertson out of control. I said me and Jason fixed to both go home with black eyes, missing teeth.
Phil Robertson
I mean I wasn't going to let Jace like put the boots to side or nothing, but like I was always going to stay on Phil side because I still scared to death of him. Right. Like I'm not, I'm not worried about Psy or Jace, but whatever Phil could do to me back then, I was like this fellow right here, like I am with pr.
Martin
Because in that day, back in that day, I mean he looked like Popeye the sailor man.
Reed Robertson
Yeah.
Martin
His form was twice as big as bicep.
Reed Robertson
Yeah.
Martin
It was like this.
Phil Robertson
Yeah.
Martin
He still pulling them stupid nets full of fish like 90ft up from the bottom of Washtow River.
Reed Robertson
Oh, those summers I worked with him, I mean I was my first summer, I think I was 12 and I was every summer for 12, 13, 14 years.
Jase Robertson
You worked for Phil Robertson for a summer?
Reed Robertson
Well, school would get out and I mean getting back to the. I was a handful when I was a kid is I never shut up, you know, that's why I was a bad liar. Because every middle name Silas, everybody middle Name Silas, every 15 year old boy is a liar. But if you don't shut up long enough for it to work, you know, you never get away with anything. That was my problem. And so school would get out. Well, they would say okay, down to filling case, there you go. And I would live there.
Phil Robertson
Yeah.
Reed Robertson
And it was. And it was summertime, you know, so. And he would wake up at 4:30 nets. Oh yeah, he'd wake up 4:30 in the morning and we go till dark. You know, when you're a 13 year old boy, you got all the energy in the world. And he whooped my tail. I mean it was just all I could do to keep up with him. There was one time we were walking back to the rig and we were in knee deep of water and my excuse is that I was wearing waders that were eight sizes too big. But he took off. He just never said a word, just took off. Running high, stepping through knee deep water. And I heard the rig crank up, you know, and I'm like, this dude is fixing to leave me out here. And he but he waited on me and he got back and I said, what was that? And he didn't say anything for about 30 seconds. He looked over, he said, I bet you wish you can do that when you're 65 years old. He could roll, man.
Phil Robertson
Yeah, yeah. You couldn't keep up with him walking through that mess. Especially during the summertime. You just couldn't do it. You couldn't. I don't care how good a shape you were. He was just. He. He grabbed him hooks and. Because he's in tennis shoes like he's in. Just slip on tennis shoes walking through that crap like it ain't full of leeches and mouth and everything else.
Martin
When you was talking about them pecan. Bitter pecans.
Phil Robertson
Mm.
Martin
He cut thousand of things down with a stupid, you know, weed eater blade.
Phil Robertson
Yeah. Beaver blade on a weed.
Martin
Yeah, yeah. Oh, I'd go behind him, spray and will I. Of course, we start for daylight. Yeah, okay. And it'd be four o'clock in the afternoon. I'd say, hey.
Phil Robertson
What gives?
Martin
Yeah, yeah, I'm done. Let's go. He said, no, no, we ain't going.
Phil Robertson
Oh, he looked at you, said, that heat's about to break.
Martin
Yeah, yeah, that heat's about to break.
Phil Robertson
It's gonna cool off.
Martin
Do it for two more hours.
Reed Robertson
Oh, we hopped in the boat one time, and remember Jesse, the little, little rat you had? Jesse was with us and hopped in the boat with us. And we both hopped in there. There's a cottonmouth cooled up, and Jesse killed that cottonmouth. I mean, just was barking. Would fake one way, went the other way, grabbed it, would shake it. You know, we're standing in the boat, I'm freaking out. I hopped out, you know, and all this chaos. He never said a word. Oh, he was going, hey, ho, ho, hey, ho, ho. Jesse kills that. That cottonmouth and he just goes. That's why you got him.
Jase Robertson
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Phil Robertson
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Reed Robertson
Free.
Phil Robertson
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Martin
I went with him. He pulls a net in, empties a buffalo in the middle of the boat where we have Buick. And the next thing, Jesse's on one and there's scales going everywhere. He's biting his buffalo as he's flopping and there are scales flying. Joe. It was ridiculous. Jesse finally stops and he's got scales all over him. I'm talking about.
Phil Robertson
Yeah.
Martin
I said he don't like buffalo. He said no.
Phil Robertson
The original Jesse didn't like much period, other than Phil and Kate. Yeah, yeah. That's all.
Reed Robertson
That dog was killer.
Martin
And Mark told me because he had do it to everybody. Jesse be over on the, on the couch laying down and Phil put that hat in front of him and walk toward him and just if you fool around, he would bite the crap out of you. But as soon as you he'd be loving on you.
Reed Robertson
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Martin
But when you put something put over your face, oh no, here he comes.
Phil Robertson
Phil used to love him.
Martin
He will bite you.
Phil Robertson
He used to love watching people, other people get bit by his dog. It was pure entertainment for him. And like the dogs didn't mean nothing to him.
Martin
He didn't care if he knew you or not, he would do it.
Phil Robertson
He'd say, put this over your face. Walk up there.
Martin
Yeah, yeah. He'd say, hey, here, use this hat. Put in front of your face and walk towards you.
Phil Robertson
That dog. And then eventually, if you didn't pull it down, he's getting bit.
Martin
Oh, yeah.
Phil Robertson
I mean, it was a rat terrier, so it didn't really hurt, but it sure was funny. And he got.
Reed Robertson
When you're eight.
Phil Robertson
Yeah.
Reed Robertson
I mean, it hurts.
Phil Robertson
Yeah. He got tickled every day.
Reed Robertson
Those rat terrors were a character that. I mean, remember jj? JJ was my dog first. And she hopped out of the truck one time while we were driving her front broker, like, oh, her elbow was going this way. I mean it was completely 90 degrees and. And it'd be okay sometimes and something would happen. Here it goes again, you know. And I'm like, pep off hill, that dog. Oh, she'll be all right.
Phil Robertson
Yeah. J.J. lived her life out with that foot going just like that. And then she also had that. She had that dead spot in her eye where she wasn't fast enough from a cotton.
Reed Robertson
Oh, yeah.
Phil Robertson
Like she had a little white spot.
Reed Robertson
I remember that day. I was down there that day. She got bit by a cottonmouth. I mean, they didn't do anything about it. It's her whole face swell up. And he just said, them dolls can handle it, you know.
Phil Robertson
Yeah.
Reed Robertson
And she lost the eye.
Martin
I watched Phil, he walks out on his porch and he swore, yo, there's a copperhead.
Phil Robertson
Yeah.
Martin
And Kay had been out there doing something in her flowers with a. With a hoe. Well, he just grabbed the thing. He just. Look, he chopped that snake up. Okay. Which ain't about that long. In about an inch piece. So the head's laying there. Okay. So the head's laying there an inch piece. Jesse come running up and stuck his nose down there to smell it.
Phil Robertson
Yeah. Latched on, latched on.
Martin
Well, hey, he shook it off and then he took about four steps to just y' all.
Reed Robertson
Yeah.
Martin
Two days later he was okay.
Phil Robertson
The only thing. I've always said there's only thing tougher down there than Phil Robertson were his animals.
Reed Robertson
Yeah. It was survival of the fit.
Jase Robertson
You got to be tough to live there.
Reed Robertson
And on that other street, my dad inherited that from him. Cuz they've got these little dogs at their house, which actually your dad has killed the most animals on Yellowwood Drive. I pointed at Johnny Danger.
Jase Robertson
My brother in law helped him. Let's not get it.
Reed Robertson
That's all the animals came, killed on the street. They live on. Johnny D's father has killed the most. And there are other people's pets in his truck.
Jase Robertson
I shouldn't be sleeping there.
Reed Robertson
That's. That's another story.
Jase Robertson
That was. That one was my. Like, we can't really tell that story because my niece is gonna cry when they find out it was Big Dave and took him out. That dog was sleeping under my dad's truck, and he just got in and started driving. We tried to save him. No. But my brother in law's dog died. He had him for like 12 years. And so he goes and buries him on the back of Big Dave's property. And, you know, if you ever buried your dogs. Kind of emotional.
Phil Robertson
Yeah, it's tough.
Jase Robertson
And so he's leaving. He's kind of, you know, head down, starts passing Jason Missy's house.
Reed Robertson
And.
Jase Robertson
How terrible is that story?
Phil Robertson
Is that the sound it made or is that the break squeal.
Jase Robertson
Oh, that was the sound. And he goes, what just happened?
Martin
And he had to.
Jase Robertson
And then he had to go tell Jay. He's like, sorry, man, just got one of your little dogs.
Phil Robertson
So one of the little white ones.
Jase Robertson
I don't remember. Yeah, it was one of those.
Reed Robertson
They all look the same, but that's what I was gonna say is.
Jase Robertson
And then he had to go bury it next to his dog.
Reed Robertson
It's survival of the fittest there because they. They've got these little dogs. And I asked my dad, this was a couple years ago now. I said, how long have y' all had that dog? Oh, I think she's about 2. And my mom said, oh, no, she's. She's 2 years old. This dog looked like she was 13 years old. I mean, hobbling around, legs sticking out, just matted hair, you know, it just. I'm like, this dog is two years. If you survive two years at their house, you're a wily veteran. You know, survival of the fittest.
Phil Robertson
Always called their street Death Row.
Jase Robertson
The only dog that ever did. Well, there was Dingo. Yeah, that's because we found Dingo somewhere else.
Phil Robertson
Dingo walked up one day.
Reed Robertson
Yeah.
Phil Robertson
Yeah. Dingo knew how to make it down that street because he made it off of the street.
Jase Robertson
I did almost take out one of them dogs on my golf cart.
Phil Robertson
But your dad is always like, little dogs, because y' all had that little Yorkie, too.
Reed Robertson
Well, that's what they have now, these little bitty dogs.
Jase Robertson
That's the one Drew took out.
Reed Robertson
Yeah, Yorkie, which they love that dog. Yeah, Daisy. Daisy.
Phil Robertson
That was.
Martin
Yeah.
Phil Robertson
I felt Bad.
Martin
Yeah.
Reed Robertson
My dad, he has the weird. He always has the weirdest pets, but he get. He does get emotionally attached to him, like, big time. I mean, one time we had this pet chicken and Sonny. The chicken I had.
Phil Robertson
I remember Sonny.
Reed Robertson
And Sonny was a little yellow chicken. And I had a white chicken named Clorox. I don't know how I came up with that, but Clorox didn't make it. Well, it's Sunny. Sonny.
Martin
Welcome to the weird world of the Robertsons.
Jase Robertson
I just had a flash of Jace. Telling that story was the weirdest part.
Reed Robertson
So Sunny was this little yellow chicken we had. You know, she. And it grew up to be a big yellow chicken, which you don't see a lot of. And this chicken just lived outside. We had no coop. We had no, you know, no enclosure, nothing. It would live outside. And every morning we'd go to school, we'd open the door, and Sunny would sit there on the porch, and she'd follow us to the truck, and we'd give her scraps or whatever, you know. Well, then she'd come in the house, and Mia would have her in her bed, you know, I mean, it was like. It was a weird situation.
Jase Robertson
Y' all had a chicken, like a dog?
Reed Robertson
Yep. Well, a cat came, and now I'm.
Jase Robertson
Now go for it. This is the duck call room.
Reed Robertson
A cat came and killed this chicken. My dad said. I know. It was this cat that hangs around. So my dad's. My dad. Every. Every day on his way home from work, he would stop and get a can of sardines. And he'd put the can of sardines in the yard, and he would sit at the dining room table with the window open. I mean, like a. I mean, you would have thought the guy was in a ghillie suit, you know? And he would sit there and wait for that cat to come try them sardines. And look, the cat came one day, but he was real skittish, and he was moving around real quick, you know, grab the sardines and. And. And my dad said, no, we're gonna let him get comfortable first. I mean, this was like a month long. He. I mean, he stalked this chicken. I mean, this cat. Because he killed our chicken.
Phil Robertson
Look, I saw Jace one time. Look, Jace gets like that. I saw him. We were down there, just got done building duck call. Sitting on the porch, just like whatever Phil and K's. And a blue jay crapped on his hat. Like, lit up air above him. Blue. Big old pile of bird crap right on his hat. He Said I'm gonna kill everyone. Every Blue Jay I see for a year just to make. Just to make sure that they don't.
Martin
That I got him.
Phil Robertson
And that boy meant it. He was just mad dog mean at Blue Jays for a hot. Because one of them crapped on his head. He just could not. He said, I just don't like rudeness in a man. You know, he's. He said that's just. He said that's just rude. So him and all of his buddies are about to learn about it. I mean, just. He's a. Yeah. Your dad's a particular individual. He is peculiar. Well, I mean, but the Silas, I think that just kind of goes with the territory. Right? For.
Reed Robertson
It's just in his blood. He just loves to.
Phil Robertson
What's funny is y' all like to tie into it so much and he's your middle name, obviously. Well, then at some level, for some reason, Jace thought it'd be a good idea to pop your middle name. And then he couldn't believe that y' all fought that much. So you know what's coming. I mean, you and David are going to tie into it in about fast forward 13 years.
Reed Robertson
Oh, I'm sure. Well, that's just the nature of man.
Phil Robertson
Yeah. And then he's going to tie into it with Jace, who's his granddad. But y' all all just going to be looking at each other like, why are y' all so hard headed?
Reed Robertson
I think I'm the only grandson that got whooped by. And I think actually Alex, you were the only other grand. Well, she's here.
Jase Robertson
She's.
Phil Robertson
Yeah, Alex.
Reed Robertson
Alex is here. Alex is the only one who. Only other one that got whooped by Phil. Is that right?
Jase Robertson
You got whooped by Peppa Phil?
Phil Robertson
Well, she's been on here. She done told you she's a black sheep of the family.
Jase Robertson
She's headed to a.
Phil Robertson
She is not. She's not hit. This fact. It was less of a whooping and.
Reed Robertson
More of like a ball your fist.
Phil Robertson
Up and bonking on the top of my head.
Reed Robertson
Okay. While he's standing on the step above me, just like a.
Phil Robertson
Why can I see that? Like a whack. A mole. Just bop. Man. I woke up this morning and for the first time all year, when I opened that door to let my dog out, I said, oh. Oh, it. No Summer's here. So you know what comes with that? Sweaty sweat. Stank packages. All the things sweat. But we got something for that. Our friends over at Mando just launched something that takes sweat control to the next level. Introducing the Mando deodorant plus sweat control. Solid stick. It's double protection. Finally, you get the odor control you love with Mando plus powerful sweat control. So if you're a sweat hog like myself, which I am, I'm very much a sweat hog. You got to give it a whirl, you know, one swipe and you're good to go. This isn't your typical deodorant. It's clinical strength. Two times better at controlling sweat than the standard. It controls both sweat and odor for 72 hours. And after just 12 hours, underarm sweat was reduced by 92%. It doesn't just mask odor, it prevents it. 100% of study participants experience all day odor protection. And unlike other deodorants that are loaded with chemicals, Mando uses only premium ingredients like gentle mandelic acid to keep you fresh and dry. No more worrying about sweat stains or those embarrassing pit rings. Just all day freshness and dryness. And as we're, we're, we're full boreheaded straight into the middle of summer. You gotta have it for we're headed there.
Jase Robertson
I mean, I am there.
Phil Robertson
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Reed Robertson
He had one rule. Don't wake me up for my nap. And I came in there hollering one day, oh yeah. And it was. He bent me right, he bent me over right on the couch right there in front of all my, all my cousins and everything.
Jase Robertson
Oh, you were the example.
Reed Robertson
Oh yeah. Oh yeah.
Jase Robertson
And nobody ever woke him up from.
Reed Robertson
Not another one, not another grandkid ever woke him up from his nap.
Phil Robertson
Can I tell you how quiet I used to be walking in there to get something. And we all knew Phil was sleeping, just working there. And I'm just trying to work like go get supplies. And if I open that door and feel wasn't in that chair, I was like, how do I get out of here without making a sound.
Reed Robertson
And Cy used to sleep on the couch right there on his lunch break. And he would wake up, and we would all come and hide behind the couch because we used to count how many times when he would wake up. We'd try to count how many times he burped and farted when he woke up. We used to think it was the funniest thing. Hey, hi, ho.
Phil Robertson
We used to do the same thing every time si Took a leak.
Jase Robertson
Okay, boy.
Martin
No, no. We was all on a plane, and we landed somewhere.
Jase Robertson
Denver.
Martin
Denver. We landed in Denver and went, hey. And I've never been in this joint. So look, I walk going there, and I'm staring at the urinal and click, the lights go out. When they come in, it was, oh, oh, oh, oh, great. Then they turn the lights out, and I literally had to do the m against the wall to try to find the exit door.
Jase Robertson
Never let will before you.
Martin
That's Will. He turned it off.
Jase Robertson
You know, ruling life.
Martin
I said, what are you, like, made me kill myself. Y. Good grief.
Jase Robertson
Was it. It was Dallas, when there was about 10 of us in the bathroom at Texas motor speedway, and there was big old, like, 15 urinals in size at one of them. And then, like, all 10 of us are going to.
Martin
Huh.
Phil Robertson
Hey.
Jase Robertson
Ah, it's some poor random dude.
Martin
It's two or three other people in and out. What in the hell am I running?
Phil Robertson
They all just looking at us like, what are these boys in here doing?
Martin
Good grief, y' all. They. They ran.
Phil Robertson
God. That's what I was videoing. When we talk about that, like, Phil is your papa, man. That's. That's the kind of stories like, yeah, that's neat, man. Because, I mean, it's the same papa stories everybody has. Right? Like, I remember doing the same thing. And something about that generation, too. They all had to lay down, take a nap after lunch. Like, there was never. That wasn't if I need a nap. No, I'm going to take that generation.
Reed Robertson
My dad still does that every day.
Phil Robertson
Yeah.
Reed Robertson
It may come with just something.
Phil Robertson
Make them. With retirement. Yeah. I don't know. Maybe when you basically retire, you just go lay. Well, he took. He started that.
Martin
And I know I'm the only man.
Jase Robertson
Probably on this earth 24 and a half years in military.
Martin
Spent 24 and a half years in the military, and I got a nap every day.
Jase Robertson
Yeah, you're the only one off there.
Martin
Was hilarious.
Phil Robertson
Did they ever get to looking for you, you think? Like, nobody ever reported? Did you have a secret spot?
Martin
Well, no, I was just like. Or you just go home, swab Brook and I'd go back where we live. Yeah, don't take me like, you know, 30 minute now, had an hour for lunch, 30 minutes. I wake up and then walk back, come back in there.
Phil Robertson
Well, you do have a certain skill of being able to sleep anywhere. Well, I mean, the man, anywhere in any position, nap is the.
Reed Robertson
Well, no, no, I love a good nap. I inherited that from him. I sleep anywhere.
Martin
I made the colonel mad, okay? They. We had a big meet one day and he said, hey, I thought you was gonna fix this, y' all. And I said, well, you haven't gave me. You haven't gave me the green light. I said, every time I do something, y' all all get bent out of shape, y' all. He said, well, hey, are you in charge of this or not? And I said, well, you tell me. I said, are you giving me the green light? He said, yeah, you've got the green light. So, hey. Then I went to work. And hey, as always, okay, I did what I needed to do. I dropped 3,000 cards in the computer system and it created about two weeks work for all the item managers, and they are all hitting the roof. So then that's when they come in and told me, said, you don't have a job. And I said, what are you talking about? He said, you don't have the job, but you gotta come in every day. So look, this went on for one year. I come to work and sit at my desk, and everybody's walking by. Nobody talks to me. I've been shunned. I've been blacklist. Okay, well, hey, I done got mad now.
Jase Robertson
You sat at a desk for a year and just folded your arms.
Martin
Oh, it was worse than that. I had my gallon tea sitting on my desk.
Jase Robertson
U.S. government, yo.
Martin
I'm like this, y' all. They come walking by the door. I say, hey, come on in. I got plenty of tea. They would run. I rubbed it in them suckers nose every day.
Phil Robertson
Oh, thank you, Lord.
Martin
And it didn't make what your rank was. If the general come by, sir, hey, come on down. Have glass stay with me. A new major is coming in to take over my division. Hell, that I'm in. So we're watching each other for 90 days because it took him that long. We had military and civilian. It took him that long to interview everybody. So the day of days come, he's interviewing me. To say I've got a bad attitude is an understatement. So we sit down and he says. He kind of leaned forward on his desk, said, what do you do? Well, I just. Y' all didn't give a crap. And I said, well, I'm not being a smart butthole, I said, but I'm gonna answer your question with a question. I said, what have you seen me done? And he straightened up and he said, you know, not a blankety blank thing. I just leaned forward and I said, I'm really good at it. He jumped up out of his chair. And then we're strictly military now. He called me to attention. He said, okay. He said, I got one or two things here. He said, I got the worst NCO in my. In my army, or I may have someone that's been missed, that's been abused a little bit, you know. So he asked another question. And I said, well, here. Go again. I done. I done poke the bear. I said, I might as well go all the way.
Phil Robertson
Yeah, let's get him. Really?
Martin
Yeah, let's really get him, you know? So he asked me, sid. He asked me a question. I said, well, I said, again, I'm gonna answer your question with a question. No, I get real personal now, okay? I said, are you your own man, or are you going to listen to all these people that have been whispering in your ear? I said, they all think I'm an idiot, okay? And I said, that's far from the truth. I said, I'm not an idiot. I know. I know who. Who they're whispering in your ear about. It's yours truly, you know. When I said, are you your own man? He jumped up and now he's pissed, you all know. He said, he started all this stuff. And then he asked me another question. I said, sir, I said, do you know how long I've. Why I'm mad? And he said, no, why are you mad? I said, because he gave me the green light to do my job. And I said, hey, look, I'm in the top 5% army wide. I'm that good at my job, at least 90%, 95% that are below me. And I said, he turned me loose. And I said, hey, they can't handle me.
Reed Robertson
They couldn't handle the truth.
Martin
I said, and they can't handle the truth. And I said, you know, and he said, wait a minute. You're saying it's this screwed up? I said, yeah. He said, well, can you prove it? I said, oh, why can't go further than that. I said, I don't have to prove nothing. I'll Go get you a computer printout from the system and let you see how. So look, this was like. This started at 2:00 clock in the afternoon. It's 4:00am in the morning. We're still talking.
Jase Robertson
Hold on two.
Phil Robertson
That's 14 hours.
Jase Robertson
Yeah. Y' all talked for.
Martin
Oh, no. We thought, yeah, because this guy's new.
Phil Robertson
The only person he talked to longer now was Christine, trying to convince her to marry him.
Martin
Oh, no. Yeah. But anyway, look after me and him. Me and him was like this. He's a major, I'm a six. When they saw us coming, they knew somebody was fixing to get their head chopped off.
Jase Robertson
I've been spending way too much money lately.
Phil Robertson
Have you?
Jase Robertson
Yes, I have.
Phil Robertson
What you been spending money on?
Reed Robertson
Oh.
Jase Robertson
Washing machine. All sorts of things.
Phil Robertson
All the adult things.
Jase Robertson
All the adult things. And it's no fun. So I've been having to take a very much closer look at the silly things.
Phil Robertson
Yeah.
Jase Robertson
And that's where Rocket Money comes in.
Phil Robertson
Yeah. They alert you on. On multiple large charges.
Jase Robertson
Well, those, those are ne.
Phil Robertson
I know you got to have a fridge, but it's still nice to get the alert, get the alert that I.
Jase Robertson
Knew that I was going to, but. But now I'm looking at the other things. Like, I ain't watched that thing in like six months. Why am I still paying for it?
Phil Robertson
Because Rocket Money is the personal finance app that helps find and cancel your unwanted subscriptions, monitors your spending and helps lower your bills so that you can grow your savings. You can see all your subscriptions in one place. And if you see something you don't want, Rocket Money can help you cancel it. Look, Rocket Money's dashboard gives you a clear view of your expenses across all of your accounts. You can even go in there and create a personalized budget to help keep your spending on track. You get alerts on big purchases such as, such as refrigerators and washing machines. And Rocket Money is there. You know, they can help you out. Look, they will even try to negotiate to lower your bills for you. They automatically scan your bills to find opportunities to save and then you can ask them to negotiate it for you so that you don't have to deal with customer service. What a life, man. What a time to be alive. I'm just being honest. Look, Rocket Money has over 5 million users and has saved a total of 500 million and cancel subscription saving members up to $740 a year when they use all the apps premium features. And you know, right now there may or may not be a show that come out that maybe you didn't have access to. Maybe you had to download something and you. There's a good chance you're going to forget about it. But not if you got Rocket Money, because they're going to remind you. You can see your subscriptions. You can choose to keep what you want, cancel what you want, all the things. Cancel your unwanted subscriptions and reach your financial goals faster with Rocket Money. Go to Rocket Money.com today. That's RocketMoney.com RocketMoney.com duck. So, Reed, what's next for you, man? What's. What's just back to life in Nashville as normal.
Reed Robertson
Back to life. I haven't been home in about a month. I was on vacation before this happened, and so drove. I drove from Gulf Shores. We were on vacation. We were there for two weeks. I drove my wife and kids up to Nashville, and I unloaded the car, hopped in my truck, and drove from Nashville to here. Okay, that was a long day. But I hadn't. I've been home for 30 seconds. Just long enough to take a leak. I headed on.
Phil Robertson
And now all of y' all are in Nashville, right? Does that. Is that.
Reed Robertson
Yeah, my brother lives there. My sister goes to Lipscomb, and my parents have a house there, so they're. Well, my mom comes up there all the time, but my dad, you know, he says he's so busy with the podcast that he can't come up.
Jase Robertson
He came and did ours on his day off one time.
Phil Robertson
Yeah, he made sure to let us know it's his day off, too. Several.
Jase Robertson
Man, I'm up here on my day.
Phil Robertson
You can do a podcast anywhere. Oh, wow. Wow. Hunter's really calling Jace out here for not coming.
Jase Robertson
That was the bravest thing I've ever seen you do in your entire life, Hunter.
Phil Robertson
That's because Jace doesn't even know who Hunter is. Like, he can hear that, and he still wouldn't recognize it when he walked in here. Which one of y' all said that? And nobody raised their hand, but.
Martin
Huh.
Phil Robertson
Okay, he must not be here.
Reed Robertson
I'm pointing. Well, he gives it to everybody on his podcast, too. I know. Now, you got to be careful about what you say, because I'll tell him, you know, funny stuff, embarrassing stuff. You know, like, listen to the stupid thing I did the other day. Well, the next thing you know, hey, man, I heard. That was hilarious. Whatever happened when you did this? I'm like, how did you know that? Oh, I heard on your dad's podcast all the time. Everything. I was material.
Phil Robertson
Yeah, well, yeah, I. We're all, in a way, looking for material through other people's things. Right? Like, I mean, you hear some unfortunate circle.
Reed Robertson
We had a situation last night. I said, you're gonna tell that on the podcast? He was like, no. I said, well, I'm on size podcast tomorrow. I'm gonna tell it.
Phil Robertson
Yes. Yes. What happened?
Reed Robertson
Look, I. I got a. I got my. My wife bought a bottle of bourbon at the liquor store, and I pour a bottle. A glass of bourbon last night. And I said. I said, dad, you're gonna have to have a glass of bourbon with me before this is all said and done. He's like, no. I said, look, this week has made me think, you know, it's made me think about a lot of things. I said, I don't want to look back at the end of my life and say, I never had a glass of burger with my daddy.
Phil Robertson
Yeah.
Reed Robertson
And I just looked him right in the eye and said it.
Phil Robertson
He played on them emotionally.
Reed Robertson
And I was standing there.
Phil Robertson
That's the salesman. Watch him now.
Reed Robertson
So he held his glass up. He had an empty glass, and he said, just give me a swig of it. I poured it in his. Poured a little bit in his glass. I mean, as soon as I pour. Ho, ho, ho, ho. Just one. One block of ice went in there, you know, and I had it over ice, you know, and he takes a. He takes a sip of it. He said, that's like. Doctor. What'd he say? Dr. Tisters or something?
Phil Robertson
Dr. Tischen's. Yeah. Mouthwash.
Reed Robertson
Dr. Tischners.
Phil Robertson
Yeah.
Reed Robertson
He's like, that's the word he said. I don't know how that caught on, but I mean, he was j. And like, he's like, my teeth are hurting. I mean, it was. It was the most dramatic thing I've ever seen.
Jase Robertson
No.
Phil Robertson
No.
Reed Robertson
Yeah. Until my mom took a sip. Then that was the most dramatic thing I've ever seen. I mean, they went. They were just on and on about how terrible it was.
Martin
That's a good.
Reed Robertson
Hey, that's a conspiracy. That. That's good.
Jase Robertson
That's a conspiracy. What are you doing?
Martin
Your dad was the most, uh. Oh, it was actually wonderful to see naive young man okay. At his age. He really was okay. And it was. It was. It was a wonder to watch speaking because he was so.
Jase Robertson
That's my turn.
Martin
Purity is what. What I saw, you know?
Jase Robertson
You know what I remember Jace telling us when he was the junior high boys Bible Sunday school teacher, and he looked at all of us and I'm not kidding. You. He goes, I done figured it out. Like, y' all got this problem looking at women, but doctors look at women naked every day. Just be like a doctor. And he was out. That was his whole spiel.
Reed Robertson
And I was like, he told me the same thing Papa Phil told him, except for. I mean, he. He went through the whole thing. I mean, pep off, Phil, I guess when he told him, it was just quick, straight to the point. But he. You know, he went through the whole thing. You know, men and women, you know, they. They do something that creates babies. You know, he's going through the whole thing. I remember. I actually remember not paying attention, which is funny. And I just. I remember coming to. Out of whatever days I was in, and I was like, I probably should have been listening to that. But all I remember was he said, let me tell you something, son. If you have sex with somebody that's not your wife, it will literally rot off your body. And I was like, dude, what?
Martin
And he said, that was Phil Robertson.
Reed Robertson
And I asked him, I said, what do you mean? And he said, look, you just keep that thing in your pocket.
Phil Robertson
That is the Robertson line for way back.
Reed Robertson
And I learned now that that's exactly what Papa Field told. Hey, so keep that thing in your pocket. Which he went into. Hey. Which he told everybody. Gonorrhea, chlamydia, herpes, syphilis, aids, all of them. He went down the list. Which he also would do that in front of 15,000 people.
Jase Robertson
Yeah, he wasn't afraid of that one.
Phil Robertson
Yeah, I hadn't been hanging around long, Phil. He said, martin, you married? Nope. He said, well, you better keep that thing in your pocket till you get that way, son.
Reed Robertson
Which he told me the same thing he asked me when I started dating Brighton in high school. You know, which. Now she's my wife. But he said. He said, brighton met Papa Phil. He said, y' all having sex? I said, no, sir. And he said, all right, well, you keep that thing in your pocket now. Yeah, okay. That's the line.
Jase Robertson
That is. That is the line. I've heard that line many times.
Phil Robertson
You ever thought about how to try? You put that thing in a pocket, it won't get there.
Jase Robertson
I've never.
Phil Robertson
Ain't gonna make it. I don't know. I don't even know what that means. Keep that thing in your pocket. It like.
Jase Robertson
It just means keep your pants on.
Phil Robertson
Yeah, I do, too.
Jase Robertson
Which is good advice.
Reed Robertson
It is good advice, overall.
Phil Robertson
Yeah.
Jase Robertson
Pretty sure you're listening. Best advice we can give today. Keep that thing in your pocket. Won't be no trouble.
Phil Robertson
Oh, it's just like Phil sitting there. Man alive. Well, we always close with a Bible verse. Johnny D. You won't take it.
Jase Robertson
Yeah.
Phil Robertson
You got one for today.
Jase Robertson
June, baby.
Phil Robertson
It's June.
Jase Robertson
We've been looking forward to June in this room. We've been through it in a lot of different ways. Martin's attended four funerals.
Phil Robertson
Four. And three weeks.
Jase Robertson
And three weeks. I've been at three. We went to one the day after Phil's for a dear friend and co worker that worked at the Honey Hole and Duck Commander. And, you know, we've just been kind of. Me and Martin's big joke's been, hey, it's June.
Phil Robertson
June, baby.
Jase Robertson
And that made me think of Lamentations 3. 22. The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases. His mercies never come to an end. They are new every morning. Great is your faithfulness. The Lord is my portion, says my soul. Therefore I will hope in him.
Phil Robertson
Amen.
Jase Robertson
And I'm hoping amen's better than May.
Phil Robertson
Yeah.
Jase Robertson
And I got a feeling it's gonna be.
Phil Robertson
And the cool part is, like, even in May, you saw the hope coming through. Like, even during all those things, man, the hope was. The hope was what kept you going, man. And I think, you know, we're. We're sitting here telling stories about a man who knew that hope, knew it better than probably any of us, and now is resting in that hope. And that's cool, man. It's still. I don't know how much longer we're going to talk about, Phil, but it'll still be a while. And even if we do it every day from here on out, it'll never be enough. Because that's what he meant.
Martin
What I love about this is faith has been turned into fact. Yeah, Phil.
Phil Robertson
Amen.
Martin
We only knew what he knew now.
Reed Robertson
Well, the amazing thing is that none of this would have. None of us would be here doing what we're doing right now or anything we've done the last 40 years. I'm only 30. My whole life without him.
Phil Robertson
Yeah. Amen.
Reed Robertson
We're never going to not be able to talk about it.
Phil Robertson
Amen. I love it, man. Well, we'll see y' all right here in the Duck call room next time we're out.
Jase Robertson
Sam.
Duck Call Room - Episode Summary: "Uncle Si was Banned from Babysitting Phil Robertson's Oldest Grandson"
Release Date: June 12, 2025
The episode kicks off with Phil Robertson introducing a special guest, Reed Robertson, who is Jason Robertson and Missy's oldest son. Phil warmly welcomes Reed to the Duck Call Room, sparking a familial and humorous atmosphere right from the start.
Notable Quote:
Phil Robertson [00:00]: "Foreign. Welcome back to the duck call room, ladies and gentlemen."
The hosts delve into Reed's personal life, discussing his recent move to Franklin, a suburb of Nashville. They touch upon the challenges and joys of building a family, mentioning Reed's marriage in 2016 and his three young children. The conversation highlights Reed's role as a patriarch in his expanding family and his endeavors in real estate development.
Notable Quotes:
Reed Robertson [02:35]: "I own a real estate development company. So I build houses. You know, houses, townhomes, all kinds of stuff."
Phil Robertson [07:12]: "Yeah. It’s a good spot to do it."
The discussion shifts to life after the end of "Duck Dynasty," with Reed explaining how the Robertson family members transitioned and moved forward. Reed shares his contemplation about returning to Louisiana versus staying in Tennessee, emphasizing the strong ties to family regardless of geographical location.
Notable Quote:
Reed Robertson [05:46]: "Oh, we think about it all the time, you know, back and forth. Every time we get up there, we're like, man, we love it up here."
A significant portion of the episode is dedicated to hunting tales and outdoor adventures. Reed recounts hunting trips, including memorable stories about tackling cottonmouths and the dynamics between him and Phil during these excursions. The camaraderie and occasional tensions between family members during hunts add a layer of humor and authenticity to their narratives.
Notable Quotes:
Reed Robertson [19:52]: "We hopped in the boat one time, and remember Jesse, the little, little rat you had? Jesse was with us and hopped in there..."
Martin [22:53]: "I watched Phil, he walks out on his porch and he swore, yo, there's a copperhead."
The hosts reminisce about their childhood, sharing anecdotes that paint a vivid picture of their upbringing. Reed talks about working summers with Phil, enduring early morning hunting sessions, and the strict yet caring mentorship Phil provided. These stories highlight the resilience and unique bond within the Robertson family.
Notable Quotes:
Reed Robertson [17:27]: "I was my first summer, I think I was 12 and I was every summer for 12, 13, 14 years."
Phil Robertson [19:15]: "Yeah. Beaver blade on a weed."
The conversation takes a lighthearted turn as they discuss various humorous incidents involving family pets and interactions with animals. Stories about Phil's dog Jesse, who had a penchant for biting, and Reed's experiences with chickens and other pets add a playful element to the episode.
Notable Quotes:
Reed Robertson [24:38]: "And we both hopped in there. There's a cottonmouth coil up, and Jesse killed that cottonmouth."
Phil Robertson [23:03]: "He'd say, put this over your face. Walk up there."
Martin shares his unique experiences from his extensive military career, particularly focusing on a challenging period where he dealt with workplace tensions and authority figures. His storytelling provides insight into his character and the lessons learned from his time in service.
Notable Quotes:
Martin [37:50]: "I had my gallon tea sitting on my desk. And it didn't make what your rank was."
Martin [43:28]: "They couldn't handle the truth."
A recurring theme is the discipline and life lessons imparted by Phil Robertson. Stories about enforcing rules, such as the infamous "keep that thing in your pocket" advice, illustrate the blend of humor and stern guidance that characterizes Phil's parenting style.
Notable Quotes:
Reed Robertson [51:52]: "He said, 'Brighton met Papa Phil. He said, y' all having sex?'"
Jase Robertson [52:59]: "Which is good advice."
As the episode progresses, the tone becomes more reflective. The hosts pay tribute to Phil Robertson, sharing heartfelt memories and expressing gratitude for his influence on their lives. This segment underscores the deep familial bonds and the enduring legacy of Phil's teachings and personality.
Notable Quotes:
Jase Robertson [53:25]: "Great is your faithfulness. The Lord is my portion, says my soul."
Reed Robertson [54:46]: "None of us would be here doing what we're doing right now without him."
The episode wraps up with the hosts sharing their hopes and plans moving forward. They express optimism and determination to continue honoring Phil Robertson's legacy through their stories and adventures in the Duck Call Room.
Notable Quote:
Phil Robertson [55:00]: "Amen. I love it, man. Well, we'll see y' all right here in the Duck call room next time we're out."
This episode of Duck Call Room offers a blend of humor, heartfelt stories, and familial camaraderie. Through engaging conversations and shared memories, the Robertson family provides listeners with an intimate glimpse into their lives, honoring their heritage while looking forward to future adventures.
Disclaimer: All advertisements and promotional segments have been excluded from this summary to maintain focus on the content-driven discussions of the episode.