
Luke has been practicing piano, and he has the tape to prove it…but can he be vulnerable enough to share that tape with us? He and Andrew also discuss buying the naming rights to one of Seattle’s premiere NFL practice facilities.
Loading summary
Luke Burbank
Little BG on me.
Andrew Walsh
I do.
Luke Burbank
HR means Human Resources here at tac.
Andrew Walsh
My name is Eric Rossdale.
Luke Burbank
Some people call me Cool Eric. They called me that once. Some young people, too.
Andrew Walsh
Some.
Luke Burbank
One young person did that. I love people.
Andrew Walsh
To say that another way.
Luke Burbank
I love people. And that one's got a little more fun to it, doesn't it?
Andrew Walsh
Tbtl. Mmm. Mmm. Thought I was shame eating in private.
Luke Burbank
What is this is shame eating?
Andrew Walsh
I don't think we have enough time for that tonight. As I tried to explain before, you cannot get honey from a hornet's nest. I just don't think there's any science.
Luke Burbank
To support that, buddy.
Andrew Walsh
There's some very basic science out there supporting that.
Luke Burbank
Trust me, pal. What a fun, terrifying joke. That's science. These are facts.
Andrew Walsh
In science, we call that a hypothesis. You find something to back it up.
Luke Burbank
And we can talk. Now, if you excuse me, I was watching Mama's Family.
Andrew Walsh
This will be blown way out of proportion. You have my word on it.
Luke Burbank
Well, all right. Hello, good morning and welcome, everyone, to a Tuesday edition of tbtl, the show that just might be too beautiful to live. Definitely. First, sharks. My name is Luke Burbank. I am your host. They just want you to be normal. And clearly you're not. Coming to you from the Madrona Hill studio, perched high above the mighty Columbia, where the weather promises. The weather forecast promises maybe a little drying out, a little decent weather for the big Thanksgiving holiday, which will be a welcome change of pace around here. We have a very special episode of TBTL coming your way. It's episode 4345 in a collector series. Let the Fun Begin Special. Because I'll violate various HIPAA regulations related to my own body, wherein there is a war currently raging.
Andrew Walsh
The combustion becomes an explosion between two.
Luke Burbank
Forces, the pro and the anti biotics. For some reason, I'm taking an antibiotic and now I'm also taking a probiotic. And those things, they seem to be at odds with each other. We'll get into that. We'll also try for the third time to talk about this stupid Tropicana juice jar container situation.
Andrew Walsh
Are you sure? Okay.
Luke Burbank
Or maybe we won't. I don't know. Maybe the new bit on the show is we just never. It's like Jimmy Kimmel bumping Matt Damon at the end of the show. Is he still doing that? I don't know if I've gotten to the end of a Jimmy Kimmel episode in a long time. I'm part of the problem with this fractured media landscape in That I don't watch anything start to finish anymore. Generally speaking, I just watch clips of things. But I always listen to this guy. He is the longest running cobra of the show. Maybe best known for his depictions of the tall ships.
Andrew Walsh
This shiny guy always worries.
Luke Burbank
He is Andrew Lewis Walsh and he is joining me right now. Good morning, my friend.
Andrew Walsh
Good morning. I'm gonna quiz you. I'm known for my depictions of the tall ships, their grace in their what? Their grace in their what?
Luke Burbank
There are three words that I use interchangeably here. One of them I know isn't the one, but it's grown up because of the other two.
Andrew Walsh
So I think it's mutated almost right.
Luke Burbank
Well, it's like the reason that I play the number 35 on roulette. I'll explain. So I think it's maybe best known for his depictions of the tall ships, their grace and their. I think it might be power, but sometimes I've said splendor. So power and splendor. That's like the numbers 23 and the numbers 14 on the roulette wheel. But then sometimes the ball bounces in between 23 and 14 and that number is 35. And that's when I say majesty.
Andrew Walsh
Majesty. He may be best known for his.
Luke Burbank
Depictions of the tall ships, their grace and their majesty.
Andrew Walsh
See, you've. And again, this tape came from my previous work life. Right. Like, I have a stronger connection to this tape than you yet. Because you've made it your own. Because you've put that Burbank stank on it. Which didn't you literally just have to open a window in your studio because you had too much Burbank stank in there?
Luke Burbank
I'm slightly concerned about that. Andrew. I have been, you know, on days when I don't go down to the lake for my jog, I will use. I've got a treadmill here in the old Madrona Hill studio. And there are some days when. And I was jogging a little too close to air time for us. So I do that. I go down, take a shower, come back up. And when I came back into this studio, it smelled like a 24 Hour Fitness that hadn't been cleaned in 25 hours. And it's concerning because I don't know what the long term ram. Because you've been in here, it's a pretty decent space that me and Walt have worked hard on. And eventually when it's all. When everything is operational here, it should actually be like a potentially functional, like studio apartment that has a little kind of audio studio area. But also I don't know over time if I'm, if I'm sweating it up like a sweathog in here too much. I don't know, is that going to seep into the, into the pores of the building? Am I, I doing permanent damage right now? My way of mitigating it is opening all the doors and windows and running that fan, the one, the ceiling fan. And that seems to kind of take care of it. But again, I don't know what the impact over the long term impact. We haven't done any longitudinal studies of what a husky 200 pound guy jogging away while listening to the Ezra Klein show does to a physical space.
Andrew Walsh
I'm doing some research into whether or not we have room in our headline for today's show is it smells like a 24 hour fitness that hasn't been cleaned in 25 hours. Is that a possible show title? Only technology will tell whether or not that's an option.
Luke Burbank
How many characters do we get?
Andrew Walsh
I guess we'll find out. We're really going to stress test the system after the show today. Good. I guess to close the loop on the tall ships thing you've said for so long you've bastardized it to say their grace and their splendor that I thought that that was the original word but we were.
Luke Burbank
I have it here. Do you have it?
Andrew Walsh
I got it right here. And we were sprucing up the TBTL shop page on tbtl.net, which by the way, if you are looking for a gift for somebody for Christmas that's TBTL related. Go there and we some new shirts and designs and some old ones and a cool water bottle that says ish on it. You can check it out. For some, as I say, last minute gifts would actually be well ahead of the curve. Well, if you want to get them in time for the holidays, you should get them now. But anyway, all of that is to say we have this tall ship shirt and I just wanted to mess around with what it would look like if we actually put the words grace and splendor on it like along the top. But then I was like wait, is it actually grace and splendor? And so I went back to the original ship.
Luke Burbank
He'd be best known for his depictions of the tall ships capt their grace and power.
Andrew Walsh
And grace and power is the word. And I. And you had said that earlier. You're absolutely right. But I had forgotten that. So then, I mean I knew we weren't going to use this but just so that It.
Luke Burbank
I actually thought it was a cool design.
Andrew Walsh
Yeah.
Luke Burbank
You put grace and power on it.
Andrew Walsh
Yeah. And John found this cool image of a tall ship that we're using, and we are using that. But, you know, sometimes when you're mocking stuff up, you just want the clients to. This is the first thing I learned in design class, Luke. My Design tutorial on YouTube that I've been watching is, you want to make it. You want to give the perception of.
Luke Burbank
How's your raw honey company?
Andrew Walsh
I haven't. I haven't picked up that tutorial since the last time I talked to you last week. But my raw honey of my beakers. My beakers bees. Anyway, you want to give the client the perception of options. Right. And so I gave you one that said grace and power along the top of it. And I knew that we were not the type of potty. I mean, a tall ship and like, sort of a piratey. Not piratey, but kind of a ship faring font that says grace and power. It was a little. It was aggressive is the wrong word, but not exactly our notoriously chill vibe. So I knew that you would read that you guys would not be into the grace and power tall ship. Like, what if you saw somebody with a. If you didn't know what TBTL was and you saw somebody with a big ship on their shirt and it said grace and power tbtl, you'd get a different vibe from the podcast than what we're putting out there. Right?
Luke Burbank
Yeah, I would think it was some sort of. At best, a very serious, deep, historical look at the history of tall ships. At best.
Andrew Walsh
Yeah, but it could be military adjacent.
Luke Burbank
Or also the name of a worship band from, like, Oak Hill, Texas, that's, you know. You know, touring now. Like, they got so popular at whatever his name is. Haley Joel Osment's church. No, Joel Osteen's church. Haley Joel Osteen.
Andrew Walsh
You know that Kendrick made that. Are you saying that because that's the exact.
Luke Burbank
Oh, no.
Andrew Walsh
Kendrick made in one of those raps where he was going back.
Luke Burbank
Oh, he did.
Andrew Walsh
Drake. Yeah. He dropped the wrong name in there. But they were doing it so quickly that it went up. It went to print that way. And that's.
Luke Burbank
Oh, that's pretty funny. Have you heard the latest on. On this whole thing, which is that Drake is now apparently suing over what he claims was the sort of. Actually, I don't think he's suing yet. What he's doing is. He's in a. He's an. Excuse me, that's my Alarm telling me not to talk about Drake.
Andrew Walsh
No, no, no, I saw this too. We got it. We got to air it out. We have to. The only way out is through on this one.
Luke Burbank
Yes, that's right. Basically it sounds like, you know, they not like us. The Kendrick song, which I, I sensed it to be quite a phenomenon but of course I live in the us I look at a lot of TikTok. Maybe I'm in the places that it was being really, really celebrated. And Drake's people are exploring their options around suing some folks over artificial inflation of the song. Through bots.
Andrew Walsh
Yes, bots. And his record label, I believe the record label that he works with, he filed these pre court documents to explore the idea of suing over the fact that they faked. Can you imagine losing a rap battle and then saying, well, I'm going to get some lawyers and try to prove that those numbers weren't even. It is, it is so cringe.
Luke Burbank
It's definitely getting a ride home from the rap battle from grand at the highest level. And to be honest. Now listen, if Drake is, is provably somebody who's, you know, been a, you know, somebody who's, you know, broken the law and has had, you know, sexual relationships with people that it's illegal because of their age, et cetera, if that, if that stuff is all proved out, then that's a whole other catego that's like now we're talking about Diddy stuff. Now we're talking about somebody who's a, you know, a predator and a criminal. I don't know if that's ever been proved, if it will ever be proved. So we have to give him, I guess, the benefit of the doubt and just say this is just simply like two rap guys that don't like each other.
Andrew Walsh
Yeah. And we should just mention for people who weren't following this closely that those are the kind of the accusations that Kendrick levels at Drake in one of these songs. They went back and forth last summer with like, I don't know, a total of like probably 10 tracks of dissing each other back and forth.
Luke Burbank
And it certainly seems like the pop culture fire hose that I drink from has kind of declared this like unanimously a W for Kendrick la. There seems to be. I'm just wondering, I'm wondering how it's playing in Toronto is my question. Like, you know, because the, like, I wonder if there is, I mean Drake is. I don't think Drake is an unpopular performer at this point. I'm sure that if he came to play the Modus center down here in the Portland area. He would sell a lot of tickets. Like, I don't think he's, as the young people say, cooked, but I do think that they're. I guess my question is, how do you actually decide who won the rap battle, Grandma?
Andrew Walsh
Well, I will say in this one, and again, I know I'm not reading the reviews in the Toronto Star, but I'm pretty sure that it is. Well, I'll tell you what. One person is playing the super bowl and it's not Drake. Like, I mean, everybody.
Luke Burbank
But he is playing the Gray Cup.
Andrew Walsh
What is that?
Luke Burbank
That's the Canadian Super Bowl. It just happened. I believe he was the Winnipeg Rough Riders against the.
Andrew Walsh
But, but like every.
Luke Burbank
We have a lot of listeners. I will not. This Canadian erasure will not continue on this program. We love you all and we appreciate you.
Andrew Walsh
This is not me. This is not a statement on Canada.
Luke Burbank
When I, When I deploy. Deploy the Gray cup as a punchline, I'm being a little. I'm being a little snarky.
Andrew Walsh
It is interesting that it's kind of like the Gray Cup. It does sort of seem like. Yeah, sort of grayed out. Anyway, I'm. I just learned about it. I'm not here to dunk on it. My point is I don't do allow dunking in the. I don't think anybody is on the fence about who won that rap battle. Like, anybody who is paying attention. And again, like, I'm hearing these words come out of my mouth and this is the wrong mouth for this shit to be coming out of, to be honest with you. We should probably. Now that I'm hearing it, I'm very self conscious. I want to get. Get off this topic as quickly as possible. But like, I was following it, you know, kind of closely at first. And then I mean, everybody says, like, I mean, that's usually the first sentence. It's probably the first sentence of Wikipedia, of that entire era of these two going back and forth is probably like. It became very clear that Kendrick owned Drake. Like, everybody knows that. Like, I mean, Kendrick's, you know, his. I believe. Was it the last or second of the last song? And I'm blanking on the name of it. You would know better because it's all over TikTok. But you know the one where he, where he does level those accusations, it ends up becoming such a. Yeah, yeah. It ends up becoming such a banger that you just have like clubs like around the country of people just like totally partying to a song that is Essentially a diss track. I mean, you don't have that a lot. Like, he just absolutely mopped the floor with Drake.
Luke Burbank
Well.
Andrew Walsh
And then got invited to perform at the super bowl, which is, like, kind of the highest pop culture honor, I think.
Luke Burbank
I mean, the fact that the most damning allegation and also probably the most difficult one to prove and the one that gets the closest to slander is also the catchiest part of the song, and it's probably a minor. Like, by the way, I did get my piano in the mail last night. I did do about two hours of practice on my new piano, and I do have flashcards, and one of them is a minor. And I tell you that I cannot look at. I cannot look at a flashcard that has a minor on it and not hear that line from Kendrick.
Andrew Walsh
Wait, wait, that's really cool. Let's stay here for a second. So the teaching technique is you learn certain chords, how to make them with your fingers. I literally don't know how to play piano, so I'm.
Luke Burbank
Nor do I.
Andrew Walsh
Legitimately asking. And then once you sort of, like, learn, you practice by flipping over a card, and it'll give you a chord, and then you got to make that chord.
Luke Burbank
Yes. I went with the approach that I like to call all over the map yesterday, which was. Got the piano, took it out of the box, charged it up. And then our friend Kat Solin also had reached out to me and has been learning piano and linked to an app that she's used, like a teaching app that she says has been really helpful. So I, like, download that teaching app to my phone, and I start doing the lessons there a little bit, and it actually seems like it's going to be pretty helpful. But of course, I go from playing, like, you know, the very rudimentary notes of Ode to Joy. Da na na na na na na na na na na na na na na to like, well, can I play Easy like a Sunday morning? So then I go on the Internet, and I just go, like, what are the chords? To Easy Like a Sunday Morning by the Commodores? And then I look at the flashcards and I. So I. And basically, it's. If you want to play it really badly, like I did, it's mostly three chords. That song. I mean, you can play most of it with. With these three chords that I can't remember off the top of my head. But so then I get the flashcards, and I go to the corresponding chords, and then I just memorize those three things, and then I just kept playing it over and over again last night. So I guess I kind of know three chords. But the problem is I think all of my hand position is really wrong. Like, I think, like when I say all over the map, it's like, I'm sure that if. And I actually. I enjoyed this so much last night, Andrew. I can't even tell you. Like, it was so fun for me and I started thinking, I wonder if I need to actually go maybe take some real lessons from somebody, maybe a retired music teacher, you know, sit in their dining room at the piano and play. Because my guess is there is a foundation to this whole thing that if you learn the foundation correctly of like where your hands go, you'll be better set up to like play things that get increasingly more complicated. Because what I did last night was I just like learned these three chords and I just put my fingers where it kind of made sense. But like, I don't know if that sets me up. Like, even when you're playing guitar, like the whole idea of how you make these sounds happen is so you can move between the different finger positions in an efficient way. I'm sure that if I keep going at this rate, I will learn how to do a couple things on the piano and it will be. It will set me up for disaster if I ever want to try to go above slowly playing three chords. Yeah.
Andrew Walsh
And maybe, I mean, people are often concerned about forming bad habits early on. Yes. I don't know.
Luke Burbank
I already have terrible habits. I think.
Andrew Walsh
Here's what I want to hear you play, by the way. Let's see here. This is the first thing.
Luke Burbank
Oh, I wish.
Andrew Walsh
Oh, this is way more. It's like kind of a. I thought it was going to be more kind of plucked out key by key. This is a piano tutorial for Greensleeves. Greensleeves, I believe, was one of the first songs I learned on guitar. I want to say I learned various things.
Luke Burbank
I forget that you can play some guitar.
Andrew Walsh
I can't. Like this was. I took some guitar lessons when I was in, I think maybe seventh grade. And then throughout high school, like just here and there. And then I definitely got in with some long haired hippie folks in college. We literally sit around with our acoustic guitars on, like quite seriously. A grassy knoll outside of my dorm. Wonderful.
Luke Burbank
Grassy knolls.
Andrew Walsh
Wonderful. One of them, actually. One of them, now that I think about it, wasn't a guitar he carried in a guitar case. Well, whatever.
Luke Burbank
Was it a lute? You were going in a darker direction.
Andrew Walsh
I really was going in a More Boondock Synced direction. But. But anyway, all that is to say, you know, I have fond memories of that and I had some friendship, but, like, I also somewhat cringe at the stereotype of me being a kid who doesn't know how to play guitar, but just wanting to be part of that sweet sport.
Luke Burbank
Have you played Dream Sleeves? You were playing guitar?
Andrew Walsh
Well, yeah, but I was like, you know, like, it wasn't chords. It was like note by note. And literally it's like kind of an easy thing I think you can sort of pluck out. It was literally the first thing I think in like, whatever. I don't know if it was an actual lesson or a lesson book I was following, but yeah. So we gotta get you playing some green sleeves.
Luke Burbank
Now. Here's the question, Andrew. I actually made a little recording of this last night of my three chords that I learned, and mostly because I just wanted to send it to Becca. I have it here. Should I play it? It's very cringe because I'm also singing, which I do not feel very good. I feel like it's interesting to the listeners, but I feel like it's going to. Either one of two things will happen when people hear this. I'm also in the midst of trying to download this from my phone, which I don't know if it's gonna work or not. I'm kind of in the midst of two things will happen. One, someone will either think, hey, that's actually pretty good and I'm trying to show off, or they will think, God, that is embarrassingly bad. And either way, I think I feel sort of embarrassed. But I do think it's good content.
Andrew Walsh
You've been getting good reviews because, I mean, you've been in a singing mood lately.
Luke Burbank
I kind of have been in a silly, singy mood.
Andrew Walsh
I don't know if everybody knows this, but you picked up your guitar and played a little.
Luke Burbank
And something's happening inside me and I.
Andrew Walsh
Dummies video this week, which you can get via the TBTL newsletter. If you go to tbtl.net, you sign up for the newsletter. You get a new video and newsletter every week. But you can also check out the hey Dummies playlist on Too Beautiful to Live's YouTube channel. You can hear Luke playing a little. Was it Wilco or Sunvolt?
Luke Burbank
Maybe it was Uncle Tupelo, but good memory. You're right in the. You're right in the neighborhood. Somebody was asking if I like the music of Uncle Tupelo, and I would saying, I really? Like this one song called New New Madrid, which I looked up, by the way. It's a town in Illinois.
Andrew Walsh
Oh, okay.
Luke Burbank
Because it's, you know, it's spelled like Madrid. So I used to see the song written. I was like, oh, there's a song by Uncle Tupelo called New Madrid. But then I would hear this other song that I thought they were saying, roll me under your mattress.
Andrew Walsh
Oh, yeah.
Luke Burbank
And then only later did I put it together. No, he's saying, roll me under New Madrid. And I was like, and again, peace and love to the fine folks in New Madrid, Illinois. But I was like, God, that is just so American. We love to take a city from somewhere else in the world and then mispronounce it.
Andrew Walsh
Yeah. And put new in front of it.
Luke Burbank
Yeah, yeah, exactly. So, yeah, I've been in a silly singing mood. I think I'm channeling my inner Howard Stern, which I already said. You know, he's been learning guitar, but what he's done wisely is he's not singing. He's just playing. And the playing of the music is pretty. Even if it's bad, the instrumentation, it's fine. It is what it is. When you start singing, there's a level of vulnerability there that I think, again, is embarrassing because it's either, like, the person listening thinks you're trying to flex, or you're being unself aware at how bad it is. Like, again, neither one is a particularly good look. That's the thing that I'm most nervous about here, playing you my progress on the piano.
Andrew Walsh
But anyway, before you do that, can we, like. I want to talk to you. I want to have a serious conversation once in our goddamn life. No. About my reaction to when you picked up. I need to choose my words carefully here. This is not criticism, but I do want to choose my words carefully. When you. So you start by introducing the hey Dummies video. You do not have a guitar at the time, and you're just sort of answering this question, straightforward. And then you say, you know, this one song is one of the songs I know on guitar. And then you pick up a guitar that is off screen, and you start strumming it. And then when you start to sing, I'm very surprised for a moment, and the feeling I had. Now you need to. You need to understand. Let me. Let me say what I'm gonna say and then do some emotional cleanup afterwards.
Luke Burbank
Okay.
Andrew Walsh
No, no. I was shocked. I was astounded that you were singing. And I was like, oh, well, that's not bad. And then I was like, oh, well, no, he can sing. And then in a very, very short period of time, I had this feeling of like, absolute, like, shock that you were doing that you were going for it.
Luke Burbank
Yeah.
Andrew Walsh
And then you go for it. And then like, oh, right, Luke can sing. And then like, yeah, he's. As long as I've known him, I got to know him in karaoke clubs. I know it's a different vibe, but like, I've seen and heard Luke sing probably a thousand. Yeah, Dozens, if not hundreds of times.
Luke Burbank
It felt like a million times I.
Andrew Walsh
Heard your voice, you know, like, I. This should not be a surprise to me, but the reason why in the moment, as I'm like kind of editing the hey Dummies video, I'm like, oh, he's going for it. That weird feeling I had had literally nothing to do with you. It had 100% to do with me. I never sing. I'm so self conscious about it. I do not sing into microphones. I've been in karaoke places many times with other people, like a karaoke room kind of situation. And by the end of the night, everybody's maybe doing a sort of a sing along. And I'll be kind of maybe swaying and singing along. But then some bonehead will put the microphone in front of my mouth and I literally turn into like, you know, seven year old Andy again where I like, zip my lips. You know, I'm just like, no, I. The sound of me singing and letting down my guard in front of a microphone is just horrifying to me. And it's not like one of those things where I feel like I'm missing out. Like, oh, people have tried to talk me into doing karaoke. Like, I'm unhappy not doing karaoke. I'm happy not doing karaoke. I don't need to do that. That's not something I need to participate in. But for me, it is laying everything so bare and so naked. Like, I was thinking, like, if you had taken off your shirt, I think you know what I mean? Just been like, oh, it's not.
Luke Burbank
Well, wait till next week's hey Dummies. When I'm doing it, it would be.
Andrew Walsh
Like if I were doing a hey Dummies video and somebody said, hey, tell us about that medicine you take. And I'm like, oh, yeah, I poke it in my belly and I just disrobed in front of the camera and took my injection thing and poked it right into my big old belly down here. Like, you might say, hey, Andrew, nothing is wrong with your body. Like you are as God and sausage made you, but you would still be shocked.
Luke Burbank
Sausage is only God spelled backwards.
Andrew Walsh
Like I would let sausage.
Luke Burbank
Nobody don't research that.
Andrew Walsh
But anyway, like, you know what I mean? For a split moment where you open your mouth to sing, I was like, oh my God. And then I was like, wait a second. No, no, no. Not everybody is as scared of this as you are. And you've heard Luke sing before. You know he can sing. It's different. It's more vulnerable what you were doing on tape there than in a karaoke room at 1:00am Exactly.
Luke Burbank
Because, yeah, you're definitely at an extreme end of the spectrum. And you might think because I have such a show off demon and because I've done karaoke a trillion times, again, always while loaded. I think that's also kind of a factor in this is that like, I don't think I've ever done karaoke sober. I think the times outside of like when I was in high school, you know, choir, the times that I've like performed singing a song of any kind in front of people, not with alcohol in my system. I can count on one hand.
Andrew Walsh
Were you probably, you were doing those Stephen Wright jokes as a kid, not.
Luke Burbank
Drunk, but on a tremendous amount of coke. How many bouncing off the ceiling, how.
Andrew Walsh
Many Luke Burbanks does it take to steal a Stephen Wright joke? One and a fifth.
Luke Burbank
Exactly. But so I have also kind of a bit of a complicated relationship with it because even though it is something that like, yeah, if, you know, we're out with the crew and, and drinks are being had and the, you know, the karaoke mic is being passed around, I'll probably go and try some. It is also something that if I'm in the sober light of day or the sober light of making a hey Dummies video is actually really embarrassing. And I'm, I get. So yeah, I do have really complicated feelings around it. Even though I am somebody who's. Who's not nearly as shy about it as you are or you know, as kind of anti doing it as you are. So I guess what I would say here is because I also, I don't want to put you in a weird position. I'm going to play this is. This is like more vulnerable than the hey Dummies video on the guitar because I don't know why. Just because it is. I'm gonna play it and then can we just go right into the donors?
Andrew Walsh
Sure. Okay. You do not want no follow up.
Luke Burbank
Conversation you know what I'm gonna do?
Andrew Walsh
I'm gonna turn off my camera. Will you just actually turned off my camera. I'm muting.
Luke Burbank
Will you. Will you. Thank you. Will you actually, if you will, you run to the post office and check our P.O. box? I'm just going to play this. I don't want you to have to give me any reaction, good or bad, to it, because that's another thing I know that you dislike almost as much as your own having to perform. You having to perform a response to me and my. Whatever level of piano I've achieved here last night, I don't want you to have to deal with it. So here we go. Just nobody judge me, okay? This is two hours into trying to become a virtuoso piano player. I know it sounds funny, but I just can't stand the pain, girl. I'm leaving here tomorrow, girl. It seems to me I've done all I can. You know, I've beg, stolen, borrowed. That's why I'm easy. Easy like a Sunday morning. Oh, we were so close.
Andrew Walsh
The. Was that. Thank you for being a T. Oh.
Luke Burbank
This is what piano sounds like. I didn't realize the contrast I was going to create there. Going from my rudimentary hammering into Leany, being like a professional musician.
Andrew Walsh
Can I. It's funny. I want to tell you something that I was reminiscing with Lenie about when I saw her this weekend.
Luke Burbank
Oh, nice.
Andrew Walsh
It wasn't something that she was privy to. I was just. I was reminiscing and telling her a story. And the story revolved around the old karaoke days when you, me, Viv's group of friends were all hanging out together pretty intensely back, what, 15 years ago now, Luke was that 10 years ago. It would often be. We'd be out late, we'd close. Literally close the bars down, then like a 1am want to keep the party going. And we'd often end up at sbk. The. The karaoke rooms down at the bottom. That's right. And apparently that place is still going strong. And I'm very glad to hear it.
Luke Burbank
I owe him a text message, by the way.
Andrew Walsh
Oh, really?
Luke Burbank
Yeah, he and I are, like, buddies now. And his daughters get. His daughter's getting married in. In Portland, and he was wondering if I had any recommendations. And I got to put him and Becca in touch because she knows the scene down there.
Andrew Walsh
Recommendations, Places and events.
Luke Burbank
Yeah, venues. And they're different because he's a, you know, Seattle guy. But anyway.
Andrew Walsh
But anyway. Yeah, so that. That was Kind of a thing that was happening a lot in our social life was like going to sbk, which is, again, it's like karaoke rooms. You could bring booze in, but they were kind of strict about making sure that you had. You. You had to get your banquet license. Banquet license ahead of time. Are you Ming that you.
Luke Burbank
Well, I'm. I'm not sure the legality of, like, three in the morning alcohol there. In other words, you could definitely bring your own alcohol if you had a banquet license. But there was this much less legal thing that we would do a lot, which is why I'm very chuffed that. Chuffed the word. Yes. I'm very happy that Shinji didn't totally, A, call the cops on us and B, hate me for life, because I felt like there were so many nights at about three in the morning when we'd roll up with all kinds of beer in our pockets and things and no banquet license and, like, sort of. Look, can't imagine that we were doing it legally. I mean, he was just. I think sometimes he was like, you can't do that. But he was never, like, mad at us.
Andrew Walsh
No, he was.
Luke Burbank
Which I would have been mad at us if I was the person operating the establishment. Yeah.
Andrew Walsh
But all of that is to say I had one memory in particular where we showed up. It was very late at night, early in the morning or whatever. And I think we had booze, but we didn't have any mixers. And then that's when I realized. I don't know if you remember this or remember me telling you this. That's when I realized that literally right around the Corner was the 24 Hour Fitness that I both belonged to and went to quite regularly at that point. I remember I was going to 24 Hour Fitness at that location every day on the way.
Luke Burbank
Nice.
Andrew Walsh
Yeah, it was pretty good. It was like, right there in Seattle. Yeah, exactly.
Luke Burbank
Next, Andrew at his old.
Andrew Walsh
Yeah, I haven't been. I don't even. Yeah, I don't belong to 24 anymore. But anyway, all that is to say, it was a very, very, very weird feeling when I went to my gym at probably 1:32 in the morning, drunk with the mummy, and sort of just like walked in, punched my numbers into, you know, gain access, then just walked straight to the Powerade vending machine to get us some. To get us some mixers that I could then fix those.
Luke Burbank
Incredible.
Andrew Walsh
I was kind of proud. I was kind of proud of it. I mean, it wasn't even Gatorade. It was Powerade. I Don't know if they, if they had soda too. But I do remember being like, wait, I have an idea of where we can get mixers. And I'll tell you what it's like. If you're a kid and you find yourself at school after hours on a Wednesday, it's sort of like a weird feeling like, what am I doing here? You know? And being at the 24 Hour Fitness at 1:30 in the morning, drunk looking for mixers in the vending machine was a very strange feeling.
Luke Burbank
Again, way to problem solve. Those were really, those were fun days. I don't know how we did it. I think the, I think that the way we did it was we weren't 48. Like I would die from that now. I think, like, I don't know how in any universe we functioned the next day. Like, and I don't remember, let's say that that was a Saturday night. My memory isn't that. This for me anyway, the Sunday was spent like in bed and you know, until 5pm Like I feel like like kind of semi normal life went on. But there's no way we were getting home before say 4 in the morning.
Andrew Walsh
But you were. I've always been a big sleep in guy, but you've always been a big nap guy, especially back then. So you were probably, you were probably never thought of that.
Luke Burbank
You're either a sleep in or a.
Andrew Walsh
Nap guy, or you're somebody who lives a balanced lifestyle. But neither one of us.
Luke Burbank
I don't know what. That doesn't sound like anything to me. Jessica Haley in Boston, Massachusetts is our first donor. We want to thank today. By the way, these, these names that I'm reading to you are folks who are supporting the show with a financial donation. And it's critical to the mission. It's the only way we can do tbtl. And we are so grateful to folks like Jessica. Thank you also to Christine Pernula in Renton, Washington.
Andrew Walsh
Oh, great. That's where the VMAC is, right?
Luke Burbank
Yeah, the vmac that was without power. Yeah, I feel like that didn't get talked about enough during the Seahawk game. Like, I don't know what that impact is on a professional football team. They talk about like, oh, you had to fly across the country and the time zone is different. How about you have no power at your training facility all week? Seems like a problem.
Andrew Walsh
Do you know that? I don't know why I'm admitting this. I don't think I should admit this actually. But it wasn't until you I listened to so much just like talk radio in the background. And I've heard things millions of times that I should have, like, sort of that I should have absorbed, you know, internalized in some way, but somehow I can just hear something over and over and never, like, think about it. And it wasn't until yesterday that I realized what VMAX stands for. And then when they said it, I'm like, yeah, I've heard that a million times. So I never knew what V. Max stands for.
Luke Burbank
Is it something with Virginia Mason? It is.
Andrew Walsh
It's Virginia Mason V. Mac Athletic Center, I'm sure.
Luke Burbank
Oh, sure. You know, Virginia Mason Athletic Center. I don't think I ever knew what the AC part of.
Andrew Walsh
I mean, I'm. I think that's it because I heard somebody say it all out or something about Virginia Mason being like the sponsor or something. I'm like, oh, right, vmac. Virginia Mason is just named after that health care provider, right?
Luke Burbank
Yes. That's still, I guess, a going concern. I wonder if. I wonder if the naming rights to a facility like that are. They have to be similar to the naming rights to a stadium, right? Like, at some point it will be. They lost power at Doge. At the Doge training facility. Like, it'll get. It'll have some other name at some point, probably, right. Virginia Mason keeps re upping.
Andrew Walsh
That's what I. It's kind of that. That's little mental journey I went on yesterday because you're like, we're sort of used to. I mean, since I've lived in Seattle, I moved here in 2009, the place where the Seahawks play has changed names three times. I think you and I have tried to revisit before.
Luke Burbank
The stadium.
Andrew Walsh
Yeah, yeah, the stadium. My brain always turns into mush when I try to remember them all.
Luke Burbank
West west west field at 1st century link, now Century Link. And now it's Lumen.
Andrew Walsh
Now it's Lumen. Yes. I always forget what it is even called now because I still think of.
Luke Burbank
It as Lumen is. The Lumen is the kind of name that I say this. I've said this on show before. It erases itself from your brain as you're reading the words.
Andrew Walsh
Yeah, there's something. It's so generic and I don't know why. It's not bad, though. Boy, it's not bad compared, like Lumen, basically. I think CenturyLink changed their name or changed like name. So it wasn't a changing of hands so much as, hey, we're rebranding. So therefore this thing rebrands too. And Lumen, man, it sounds like light lumens compared to what else is out there. Yeah. Yeah. But anyway, all that is to say that, like. Yeah, like, if you have the. I can't think of the VMAC as being anything but the vmac. Not that I have any connection to it. I've never been there. But I just hear so much bullshit radio come out of that place, and they're always talking about the VMAC this, the VMAC that. It would be really weird just to wake up and one day, and it's just like it's something else. I mean, it could be tbtl. I mean, how do you feel about the TBTL act? The TBTL Athletic Center?
Luke Burbank
Absolutely. I mean, we've been having some side conversations with. With John Sklaroff about, you know, trying to really kind of push the brand in some unorthodox ways, and that could really. I mean, that's a moonshot for us. That would probably kill our entire yearly budget, but it's worth looking into now. When I was a kid, the Seahawks.
Andrew Walsh
To name it, for one week, would blow our yearly budget. One afternoon.
Luke Burbank
Could we. An hour, Andrew. Could we afford to have the naming rights to the vmac for one hour? If you like.
Andrew Walsh
And we get to do a show there. We get to do one show there. And for that one hour, it's called the TBTL app. Back.
Luke Burbank
If you, like, broke down what Virginia Mason is paying on a yearly basis, and then you broke that down on an hourly basis. It's actually. That's like a. That'd be an interesting stat to figure out if we could afford. If it iron. If iron. I mean, it can't be. It can't be. It can't be, you know, hundreds of thousands of dollars an hour, because that would be unsustainable even for Virginia Mason. But I wonder if it's like $1,000 an hour. Like, I wonder what? Which, by the way, would be our yearly budget for anything. When I was a kid, the Seahawks always started training in Cheney, Washington. They played in Eastern Washington, and they didn't play any games there, but it was always, like, clips of the Seahawks doing things in Cheney, Washington. That was where their training for preseason was, and it made me so excited. And then they would eventually come over to this side of the mountains, and then they would. Their training facility was in Kirkland.
Andrew Walsh
Okay, so it wasn't the jeans.
Luke Burbank
No VMAC. No VMAC. See, I think of the VMAC as brand new. It's probably 15 years old, 20 years old.
Andrew Walsh
I feel like that's what's been around since I've been here. But I could be wrong about that.
Luke Burbank
That's still. That's one of those things that, that came around when I already had fully formed ideas around what Seahawks preseason and training camp looks like and smells like and sounds like. So it will forever be like a fancy new thing to me, the way.
Andrew Walsh
Any REM album after Monster is brand new to me, even though Monster came out in, like, 1995 or so.
Luke Burbank
Exactly. Hey, speaking of sports radio, our friend David Locke is in Redmond, Washington. Now, why is that sports radio? There was a host, I don't think it's this David Lock, but there was a host on KJR years ago named David Locke. Locked on Sports with David.
Andrew Walsh
Oh, that's good. You gotta go with Locked on Sports if your name is David Locke.
Luke Burbank
David Locke. Not our David Locke. Who's.
Andrew Walsh
Our David Locke is Locked on tbtl.
Luke Burbank
He sure is. And thank you, David. We appreciate you. You. The Locked on Sports David Locke who was on kjr. He, he really kind of like sort of blew my mind around the idea of mobility and radio show hosting, which was. He had been in, I think he had come up to Seattle from Utah. I think he had been doing sports radio in Utah and maybe had done something with the Jazz or something. So he came up and he was hosting, I want to say, maybe the night show on KJR or something thing at some point. But he also had some kind of house down in the Wasatch Mountains, and he would do his show. Like when he would go back to Utah, he would just get on. I mean, it was AM radio. It was probably like a. What do you think that would have been like a. Not even a Telos. But what was like a. What was the lowest level?
Andrew Walsh
Well, remember, the Telos was pretty low level. That was phone quality, right?
Luke Burbank
Oh, Telos. You could go, you could go up to L2 128 on a Telos.
Andrew Walsh
Oh, well, you know what? There are not to get super nerdy here. Telos is a brand name. And the original Telos, you're right, because telos did make ISDNs later. But we also had, we called them just like the isdn. We had a device that was called a Telos that was nothing but just a phone line. But you could hook your board into it and everything.
Luke Burbank
Yeah, I think he must have been on that. He was probably on whatever the most rudimentary G7 to. By the way, Sarah Sund in Boise, Idaho, up there on the bench is like, please, more G722.
Andrew Walsh
Talk more. I'll let you guys stay in my driveway again if you.
Luke Burbank
Is there one person in America listening to this, Andrew, who knows what the hell we're talking about except you and me?
Andrew Walsh
Yeah, I think we have a listener who works for kqed, right?
Luke Burbank
Oh, good. So them.
Andrew Walsh
And maybe they might be too young to understand what we're talking about, but.
Luke Burbank
Like, I just remember hearing David Locke, and I remember him saying, like, I'm in the Wasatch Mountains. I also thought it was cool that he wasn't trying to pretend that he was at the studio. Like, that was. Because then it was for me. I was like, well, this is cool. This guy is somewhere else. He's still talking about the Sonics. He's still talking about Seattle Sports, but he's in the Wasatch Mountains right now. And, like, that made it seem cool to me, not like I felt disconnected from him as a listener. And also, it made me think, well, this could be a thing you could do from places that aren't the radio station. The funny part was I probably didn't even work at a radio station. Like, I was probably dying to get my foot in the door of a radio station, but I was also already thinking about getting my foot out of the door of a radio station. Like, could I have a house in the Wasatch Mountains and just talk about the Sonics at night? Could that be my life?
Andrew Walsh
I want to hear this.
Luke Burbank
The Jazz change their offense. They went from 30th overall worst in the league. Lockdown sports, baby. 7th best. They went from 30th shooting to 5th best. How did they do it?
Andrew Walsh
They did it in two manners.
Luke Burbank
One, John Collins has been integrated at a much higher level. He's setting five more picks.
Andrew Walsh
So that's David Locke. Not our David Locke, but the world's David Locke.
Luke Burbank
I mean, we haven't ruled out that.
Andrew Walsh
That's true.
Luke Burbank
We haven't. Officially. I would. I would be shocked. I feel like I would know, but it would. Probably not the same David.
Andrew Walsh
Probably not. But, yeah, that's just off of his Instagram, because, as you said, he's still. It says the Voice, or let's see, The Utah Jazz radio voice and still longtime sports broadcaster in Salt Lake City. And it looked like he had a podcast for a long time, but I can't get any of those pages to load. So I'm guessing that the podcast maybe. Oh, wait. Maybe he's still doing Locked on Jazz podcast. Yeah. So he's out there he's doing it. Thank you, Dave. David.
Luke Burbank
Thank you to our David Locke. Thank you to our Sarah Sund. And also thank you to our Jenny Evans, who's in beautiful Carlsbad, California, California. Carlsbad. Every time Carlsbad, California comes up, I quiz you on two fun facts about Carlsbad, California.
Andrew Walsh
This is. This is not where the caves are. This is where the caves are.
Luke Burbank
I think there are caves there.
Andrew Walsh
Okay. This is where the Carlsbad caves are. Okay.
Luke Burbank
And it's also where a very, I believe, a very famous skateboarder hails from.
Andrew Walsh
Tony Hale or Tony Hill. Yes.
Luke Burbank
These are my medals from skateboarding.
Andrew Walsh
Tony Hawk, of course.
Luke Burbank
Tony Hawk, good one.
Andrew Walsh
I mean, it's the only skateboarder I could name, obviously, but I believe he's from Carlsbad.
Luke Burbank
I think he lives there now. I think he might be from there or was from there. And then also it's where Legoland is.
Andrew Walsh
Oh, yes. So if you ever step on Carl's bed, it's gonna hurt real bad. I really got you. That's a really good parenting humor there.
Luke Burbank
Yeah, I love that. That's a great joke. And then look who it is. It's our friend Amina Al Saudi out there in Washington, DC.
Andrew Walsh
I'm sorry I couldn't talk to you in Philly. I saw.
Luke Burbank
I talked to Amina for both of us.
Andrew Walsh
I know, but I like. I like to talk to Amina too. Boy, that was such a weird feeling of seeing so many people I know and love, but, like, I could only wave to them from above and say, like, I'm sorry I haven't talked to you in two years. I'll talk to you in another two years when I don't have Covid.
Luke Burbank
Maybe this was. Now I'm. I feel like I'm going to. I'm going to. I'm in danger of going up close to something that might seem sort of hurtful. I don't mean it to be hurtful. Okay.
Andrew Walsh
Towards Amina?
Luke Burbank
No, towards you. I would never say anything hurtful about that.
Andrew Walsh
No, just say something about Amina instead. Whatever you're going to do.
Luke Burbank
Okay. I. First of all, let me start by saying I think that in my mind and also in things I've said, I have at times slightly overstated how much it can drain your social battery to be out with folks, particularly out with like, a large group of listeners. In other words, I don't think. I think you have said to me before that it is really fun for you and it's fun to see all Those folks. And I've kind of. Because you talk so much about, like, Dartbot and things like that, I've sort of. I've kind of miscategorized you in my mind as somebody who, like, would. Would rather do anything than socialize. And I don't think that that describes you Right. So. So I don't want to sound like I'm making. I guess what I'm going to say.
Andrew Walsh
I had a little fomo, if that's what you're asking. I don't have. I think that's good for you, and I don't have. That's good. But I did. I mean, listen, when we do one of those TBTL events, it is a chance to see a lot of people, listeners who we've known for years and like, is socializing. Can socializing be exhausting? Absolutely. Is a whole weekend of prepping for a show, doing technical setup for a show, doing the show itself, and then doing a bunch of social.
Luke Burbank
Buying a Phantom of the Opera outfit.
Andrew Walsh
Buying a Phantom of the Oper outfit, putting it on. I. Every now and then on my phone, I come across this photo, a selfie I took of myself, because you guys never saw me in the Phantom outfit until I came out or something. So I think I took a Phantom photo legitimately.
Luke Burbank
One of the funniest things I've seen in like five years, by the way, your entrance to the Philly show.
Andrew Walsh
This selfie of me, though, maybe I'll make it the show pic. I'll send it to you. It might be too terrifying, honestly. But anyway, no, I really did. I did not want listen, because I know that some listeners were like, well, you're getting what you want anyway. You have Covid, so you can't hang out with us. And that I really cringe at that being the narrative because, no, I really did want to celebrate with everybody. It had been a long time since we'd had the TBTL get together. And I will tell you something that I shouldn't probably admit, but do you know that I did get to socialize a little bit that night? Anyway, I'm not going to say her name because there's no need to oust her here, but we had a friend at the show who's a longtime TBTL listener and a close personal friend of mine who said, I believe the text was, shut up. Covid isn't real. Get over here.
Luke Burbank
And I said, this is news to.
Andrew Walsh
Me because, you remember, my symptoms were not bad. I had a really, really bad fever the night before the show, or you.
Luke Burbank
Might have been on far tail end.
Andrew Walsh
Of the whole thing, but, like, literally, I never had. Aside from having one really bad night and kind of day of shivers and fever, once that broke, I was totally fine. I could walk around as a norm, but I knew that I was carrying, as I like to say, a viral load. But anyway, I had a friend who's like, listen, I've got it a bunch. I've had it a bunch. I'm not going to get it again. I'd like to see you. So below our hotel was the perfect situation, which was one of those outdoor. There was a cafe. It was a bar or whatever. It was like an Irish pub, I think. But they had built one of those outdoor cafe areas probably during the COVID epidemic. And so it was sort of like kind of open air, but it was covered and protected. And so we were able to sit out there for a couple of hours and catch up and eat some apps. And so I felt like I got. While you guys were all partying across town, at least I wasn't like, just in my hotel room watching Monk. You know what I mean? And that really didn't.
Luke Burbank
Which is totally how I pictured you.
Andrew Walsh
That really meant the world to me, honestly. And again, that person knows who they are. I'm not calling them out here.
Luke Burbank
That person was RFK junior.
Andrew Walsh
Dear, dear friend, we're working on your.
Luke Burbank
Impressions for the new administration. Exactly.
Andrew Walsh
It's gonna be a long four years.
Luke Burbank
What I was gonna say is, I think a FOMO is good for you because it means that the next live event we do, you're going to be champing at the bit. You're going to be shutting the bars down. You're going to be carrying around multiple tens on your shoulders, and just. You're going to be at full.
Andrew Walsh
I'm going to be shouting strong like bull for some reason.
Luke Burbank
It's going to be incredible. Like, move over, Genevieve. There's a new feats of strength person in the house, and it's Andrew Walsh, so.
Andrew Walsh
That's right.
Luke Burbank
Anyway.
Andrew Walsh
Hello, and welcome to Top Story Worry.
Luke Burbank
Let's see. I. I don't want to belabor this, and I mostly said the whole thing at the top of the show, but, you know, I've had this kind of eye thing going on on my left eye. I basically have like a little gland, a duct or something that got kind of clogged. I'm, by the way, convinced that it was the result of Visine. It was the. It was. It was because of Visine, because I don't Ever use. I don't ever use Visine or eye drops generally, but when I was doing those, I mean, this is so ironic, right? Because I was doing those overnight flights and then having to go right into a television shoot. And I thought, well, I should probably use some eye drops. So if I. I was on a red eye, and I didn't want to have red eyes. And so I've. In my life, I think I've maybe used, like, eye drops two times. And it was probably those two shoots. And shortly thereafter, I get this weird clogged thing in my eyelid. I asked the doctor about this. He said a very. In a very doctorly way. Well, we can't rule that out. Which was helpful. He's like. Because I was like, you think it could be Visine? And I want him to say, yes, it happens all the time with Visine.
Andrew Walsh
Yeah.
Luke Burbank
He was like, it could be. I don't know.
Andrew Walsh
Drake is suing Visine right now.
Luke Burbank
So I like. So anyway, I don't know what caused it, but I got this, like, little kind of sort of gland or whatever duct that blocked up. And now the one in my right eye is still there, but it's getting very, very small. It is reducing. It's going away. The one in my left eye is not. It's getting larger. Actually, that's not true. It's just larger than I would like it to be. It's kind of a little unsightly and also just feels weird. It's not painful. But I went to the doctor and they gave me antibiotics. And then I told Becca about this, and she said, well, let me give you some probiotics. So she's. She takes probiotics, like, all the time. Very healthy person. And so now I'm taking probiotics. But I said to her, I go, what is. How in the world does it work that you're both taking an anti and a pro? She's like, they always tell you, if you take an antibiotic, take a probiotic. I'm like, well, how about just less of an antibiotic?
Andrew Walsh
How is the system.
Luke Burbank
Or skip them both. I can't believe that the system is take a thing that antis your biotics, but then make sure you're taking something that pros your biotics. These are. These could not be more opposite expressions of what you want the biotic. What you want happening to the biotics in your body.
Andrew Walsh
Well, there must be, you know, they're good. They're good and bad, right? And so anti is probably tamping down the bad and pro is maybe amplifying.
Luke Burbank
One is a devil and one is an angel. Literally sitting on the shoulders of your biotics.
Andrew Walsh
I was gonna say I don't wanna, you know, tell Becca her business but maybe she shouldn't tell us our business. And maybe I should be antibiotic and you should be probiotic or vice versa.
Luke Burbank
Ron and Don, that's taking on. We flip a coin and decide who' anti and who's pro.
Andrew Walsh
Exactly. Let's give them all 4. It just seems like it's not, it's not an interesting show if you're presenting both the antibiotic and probiotic, you know, positions.
Luke Burbank
Well we'll see which one wins out because right now they seem to be, it seems to be a stalemate because this little thing on my eye has stayed exactly the same in terms of its, its size. I have been really leaning into the hot compress thing Andrew, because everybody, everybody including Chad Listener Chad said I was floored when you brought up your eye issue today. I've been dealing with the exact same thing for a couple of months now. And also with Kaiser.
Andrew Walsh
Oh that's yeah, your provider.
Luke Burbank
I mean this is like a real similar journey. He said I started in urgent care because I didn't know where else to go. Then I was referred to optometry which seemed weird to me too, like I wasn't trying to get glasses. I was prescribed some antibiotics and told to do the hot compress three times a day. Then I had a few weekly follow up visits with optometry. Unfortunately no positive change before they finally referred me to ophthalmology a month later. And now we're getting somewhere. That was when they finally agreed to go through with the procedure you were talking about. Here's the part I'm not loving, Andrew. Chad says it was pretty unpleasant. I'm not going to lie. But I'm very glad they did it. That was about three weeks ago and apparently it may take another month before it's all better. Hopefully yours isn't as bad Anyway. I just thought it was really weird that you were dealing with the same specific weird I thing. Maybe it was election stress. Signed Chad.
Andrew Walsh
Now this was sent in before you went to the doctor and got more like kind of solid answers about what you were dealing with. Having read this now, do you still.
Luke Burbank
Think that you're evening? I think, I think, I feel like. Well it's timestamp. November six o'clock at night. November 21st. Was that Thursday when I talked about this I thing or was it maybe Friday show?
Andrew Walsh
I'm not, you know, I don't want to die on this hill because I clearly have been wrong about things before, but I feel like I remember seeing this and sort of thinking, oh, like, I think I saw it come in. And then the next day you had your results. But I could be wrong about that.
Luke Burbank
Okay, Very possible. But I'm a Chad. I really appreciate you reaching out. Out. I'm also, I have to say, a little disheartened by the news that Chad is two months into this journey and also that he's only, like, part of me just wants them to, you know, get in there surgically and just, you know, excise whatever this little thing is on my. On my eyelid. But. But part of me also holds out some sort of hope that, I mean, I'm like, five days or something into this course of antibiotics. The other thing Becca was like, said to me was like. She was like, now you understand that you will finish this course of antibiotics. Like, that's apparently also a thing.
Andrew Walsh
Yeah, that's the whole thing.
Luke Burbank
You.
Andrew Walsh
I've never understood that. But they're always like, you got to take. You gotta. You don't just stop when you're feeling better. You got to take the whole thing.
Luke Burbank
Regardless of if it, like, fixes the thing, which, by the way, it's not, and you have to finish. But, I mean, I think I have, like, two days left, and it's. Again, things aren't getting worse, but things aren't really getting better. I also got a blue sky. Somebody blue skied me on the topic.
Andrew Walsh
Somebody.
Luke Burbank
Hey, I would take that as a. You know, let's see if I don't know how to get, like, wait replies. Is that what I'm looking for? How do I find somebody who blue skied at me?
Andrew Walsh
Like, I think you have, like, a notification.
Luke Burbank
Is that in my timeline, there's, like.
Andrew Walsh
A notification button, I think, somewhere on that app where you can sort of see.
Luke Burbank
Well, somebody. I'm. I'm so. Wait. Oh, okay. Gotcha. Gotcha. Okay, I'm finding it now. I just wanted to say thank you to this person who reached out about the same topic. It was. Looks like it was Jonathan who said, I heard you discussed a chalazion on episode 4342. That's the thing in my eyeball or a sty. I've had a few hot compresses help along with an ointment your GP can prescribe. So I've been. Both Chad and Jonathan and the doctor were like, go do hot compress on It. I am going hot compress crazy. Not to be confused with Hot Cross Buns, which I'm also learning on piano right now.
Andrew Walsh
I don't know that song.
Luke Burbank
You're not familiar with that song?
Andrew Walsh
I don't think so. I don't like the name of it.
Luke Burbank
I think it's like Hot Cross Buns is one of the songs you learn on, like, recorder when you're in third grade.
Andrew Walsh
Why is it called Hot Cross Buns? I don't like it.
Luke Burbank
I don't know. I can't even sing it for you. I can't even identify it musically, but I just know that it's like a. You probably learned Hot Cross Buns on. On recorder at some point. It was one of those songs that's very easy to play. It might be like, duh duh duh duh duh duh duh duh duh duh duh duh duh duh. Anyway, I'm putting the hot compress on like crazy, hoping that it will somehow fix things. And it doesn't seem to be making a big difference, but I'm trying. So anyway, that's the update with my. Okay, this is.
Andrew Walsh
The visuals that go along with these piano tutorials on YouTube are absolutely mesmerizing and relaxing. They show a keyboard along the bottom of the YouTube screen, and then you see almost Tetris style, green and blue lines or dots coming down, aiming at one of the keys. And it shows you how I was.
Luke Burbank
Watching them last night.
Andrew Walsh
Oh, it's so mesmerizing. I don't even care about learning piano, but I love watching this.
Luke Burbank
It's honestly kind of Guitar Hero, right?
Andrew Walsh
Oh, I've never played Guitar Hero, but yeah, that would make sense.
Luke Burbank
Like, even yesterday when I was on this app that our friend Kat recommended to me, it's kind of fun because it's. You're watching basically the keys light up on the, you know, on your phone or on the computer or whatever. And then you're mimicking it on your keyboard and. Oh, this is. What's so smart, is that it uses the microphone on your phone to listen to how you're playing.
Andrew Walsh
Oh, right.
Luke Burbank
So it's like, do this and then you do it. And then it's like, okay, try again. And then you try it again and it's like, pretty good. Try it one more time. And you try and you're like, screw you.
Andrew Walsh
And you throw it across the room.
Luke Burbank
No, but I really was having the thought. I was like, this is great because I don't feel as judged by this app as I would by a human. I know I started out saying I maybe want to go take lessons from a human and which I kind of do. But I also appreciated the anonymity and the non judginess of it just being a frickin app. Listening to me go, you know, bang, bang. Like hitting the wrong key. And it's like embarrassing, but it's just the phone going like, okay, nice. Let's try it again, let's try it again. And then, hey, you did it. Let's move on to the next exercise.
Andrew Walsh
Can I ask you a question that's going to get us way off track?
Luke Burbank
Isn't that the people have to hear about Tropicana orange juice?
Andrew Walsh
Andrew. Shoot. This is like literally the fifth day that we've had that.
Luke Burbank
You know what? It's fine. We'll just, we'll just, we'll kill both of those stories. One, because who cares? The Tropicana one. And B, because the Jaguar one. Let's not give any energy to the Piers Morgans of the world. How about that?
Andrew Walsh
Well, I don't know how long. I don't know if this can sustain a, a punting of the other topics out of the way, but let me just say this because it's more of a question, but isn't that one of the named discrepancies in the movie Groundhog Day? The fact that he learns piano but he keeps going in? Because you said you go in next to an older woman with whitish bluish hair and she's gonna sit down in her living room and show you. And I believe that that is the exact trope that they sort of go for in Groundhog Day. But for him to learn each day, is he going in each day? Like by the last day, wouldn't she be like, why am I giving you a lesson? You've come in, you have this entire piece down already. You know what I mean? At what point does she like, why are you coming to me? By the time you know, half of that piece, whatever it is, I don't know what it is. By the time you have half of that piece down, like, she'd be like, you don't need me. You're beyond what I can teach you. Probably right?
Luke Burbank
I mean, logically, yes, but honestly, like, she's going to turn down that $8 an hour.
Andrew Walsh
Yeah. I mean, it's hard out there.
Luke Burbank
You, you really expect her to just like, you know, you know, sort of cut her own bottom line by telling Bill Murray, you know, sir, you don't need lessons. I mean, she's gonna keep getting that sweet, sweet moolah.
Andrew Walsh
But I mean, those are the scenes I want to see though, right? Like when he comes in, he's like, I need lessons. She's like, okay. And then he's like, okay, well I'm working on this piece. And like, at what point, I assume, like, is a piece like that? Is it like, do you learn it in order, you know, or do you learn like broad strokes all the way through it and then you sort of fill in the details and the flourishes? I don't know. I don't know anything about music. But it does seem like that relationship between him and this woman is gonna get a little bit weirder and weirder when he walks in there every day and she think he doesn't know him, but he says, I want a piano lesson. But he's really got a pretty 90% handle on this piece.
Luke Burbank
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Like he's better than her, but he's.
Andrew Walsh
Like, but I need help finishing it.
Luke Burbank
Are you pranking an elephant here? I think I have the wrong takeaway from that movie too, by the way.
Andrew Walsh
Which is, I think, terrible person at all times.
Luke Burbank
Well, no, no. It would be fun to be trapped in the same day for the rest of your life. A day in which you were a complete, complete friggin badass. Even though you would never get to have a long term relationship with Andy McDowell, but you would get to be so freaking cool in the minds of everyone every single day. Like the premise of the movie is it's no fun to you sort of be trapped in the same day because you don't get to move forward with any of the people who cares. I will take the same day of just ruling Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania.
Andrew Walsh
But I think you would rest, you would get bored. The same Internet.
Luke Burbank
I'd like to try it for a couple of years.
Andrew Walsh
You want to cut couple of years on that? You want a couple of years on that? I would definitely not. I think a year and I'd be going out of my damn brain.
Luke Burbank
Really?
Andrew Walsh
Yeah.
Luke Burbank
Just because of the repetition of it all.
Andrew Walsh
Genevieve brought this up recently. I guess somebody asked Harold Ramis one time, well, how long was Bill Murray in your mind actually trapped in this? And it was an amount of time that was tied to his belief in Buddhism. I think there's some sort of really period of time that's like 10,000 days or something. But I'm saying that off the top of my head, I don't know what it is, but it was actually rooted in his sort of faith and belief system.
Luke Burbank
I guess I just like really enjoy the part. I enjoy the progression scene where he's just like getting like he's getting so good at piano. He's saving the guy who is choking on the steak. He's catching the. Is it like a baby falls out of a window or something? Like he's just going around doing all this like amazing stuff. And I was like, I want to live in that day. And again, I, I understand the premise. I just think this is where I'm shallow and I just want people to be impressed by me. And, and that's why I would also, you know, that is a movie that I watched in high school for credit.
Andrew Walsh
Oh, really?
Luke Burbank
Yeah, I think I watch it.
Andrew Walsh
Well, I don't remember that. Did you have to write a report?
Luke Burbank
I think we had to take a quiz on it. I. When I went to Nathan Hale for my senior year because Jesus Creek had shut down also I was kicked out for getting someone pregnant. It was like, does. Are you really kicked out if they kick you out? But then also the school shuts down. Like I wonder which, you know, which thing is the. You know, it is the sort of more important factor. But anyway, I go to Nathan Hale and I wanted to get on the radio station there and you had to take Intro to Radio. And the class was. Was very interesting because it was taught by this guy. I think his name was Mr. Nielsen. I really liked him, but I think he was like a. Maybe an engine, like a broadcast engineer for the local Christian station or something. Like a person who I think had a fairly limited experience of like, you know, being the mic talking into the microphone person. And so the things that we did in this class included we watched the Clint Eastwood movie Play Misty for me where Clint Eastwood is a Monterey disc jockey. He's stalked and his stalker likes to call in and say, play Misty for me.
Andrew Walsh
Yeah.
Luke Burbank
And the whole point of us watching the movie was to learn that we should use a made up name on the radio so we won't get stalked.
Andrew Walsh
Oh my God.
Luke Burbank
And then we watched Professor. We watched Groundhog Day. I think because he's a weatherman in it, if you remember, he's actually there to cover Groundhog Day. I think that, I think those. That was, that was enough to have us watch those films.
Andrew Walsh
Oh my God. You know, that reminds me, in college, and I've mentioned this to you before, I actually took. It was like I basically finished college in. I had to take a semester off or something. So I basically finished it in four years, but I needed one extra semester. And this was like, you know, it was your typical. Like, I needed just to fill out a few elective points or whatever. And so there were certain classes that were sort of earmarked amongst the student body that you could go to just to, like, you know, easy classes just to fulfill your most basic obligations.
Luke Burbank
Easy like a Sunday morning.
Andrew Walsh
Easy like a Sunday morning. And one of them was a class on comedy. And I don't even think it was comedy, Right.
Luke Burbank
It was just comedy as a concept.
Andrew Walsh
As a concept, if I recall. And it was the biggest joke of a class. We did have to do a standup routine and we did have to take a test. And I told you it was a very proud moment of my life when the professor called me out of class and told me, you don't have to take the test. You did so well with your standup routine. I've told you that before. It was a very big, very big moment in me. And I said, well, I need to start a podcast. He said, what's a podcast? I said, you just wait, professor. But anyway, this guy, he was one of those guys who had been with Kent State for years and years. In fact, I believe he was one of the few professors who was even there on May 4, 1970, when the shooting happened. Or maybe he was a student at the time, but he was just like a lawyer, longtime legacy guy on campus. And this class was ridiculous. And one of the. I think we had to watch two movies. And I don't understand why, other than I think he liked them. One sort of made sense. I mean, sort of. But it was the movie about the late night wars. Was it just called Late Night where they had.
Luke Burbank
Yeah, and it was like Leno versus Letterman. Leno versus Letterman.
Andrew Walsh
And they had the impression, you know, they had those, like. Yeah, not so great actors who looked a lot like them. And I think they recreated the scene where Leno was supposedly, like, in the closet listening while they were negotiating the late shift. The late shift. One of them was the Late Shift because I guess it was about the comic industry. Luke. The other one was Bull Durham, for reasons I still don't understand, like, yes, a movie with comedy in it, but not even, like a comedy. You wouldn't describe Bull Durham as a comedy classic. Maybe I was fulfilling my baseball obligations too, in. I'm not sure. But, yeah, those were the two movies. I have not seen the Late Shift since, but I think it's a terrible movie.
Luke Burbank
Is it Possible that the guy who is playing Letterman in the Late Shift is our pal John Michael Higgins of We're the number one show among sinking riverboats.
Andrew Walsh
Did he play Letterman in there?
Luke Burbank
Well, I'm looking at the Late Shift Wikipedia page and it lists the stars as Kathy Bates. I don't.
Andrew Walsh
She maybe.
Luke Burbank
Is she a producer or something? And then it says John Michael Higgins and then Daniel Roebuck. And my guess is that the. John Michael Higgins and Daniel Roebuck are the, you know, Leno and Letterman. And I know that John Michael Higgins wasn't playing Leno.
Andrew Walsh
Yeah, it was him. I'm looking at the cast right now. John Michael Higgins is David Letterman. I didn't. I never ever made that connection.
Luke Burbank
And then as far as Bull Durham goes, I made hell of a movie. But I'm trying to figure out the comedy aspect of it or the, you know, how. How it sort of. I mean, I guess there's, you know, there's some. There's some comedy in there, I guess. Right. Some. Some droll moments. I mean, it's some irony or whatever you want to call it.
Andrew Walsh
Yeah, I mean, he calls. He calls the batter meat. You know, like. That's funny.
Luke Burbank
Sure, that's what I remember. I think it's the pitcher.
Andrew Walsh
Right?
Luke Burbank
I think it's Tim Robbins's characters called meat.
Andrew Walsh
Oh, no, I thought he would refer to that to the batters. Like your meat. The pitcher would say that to the batters. I mean, listen, you know more about baseball and movies, but I thought that.
Luke Burbank
The whole thing was. All I know about Bull Durham is I think there's a freestanding bathtub that somebody either has sex in or is about to have. That's my takeaway from the movie. You were young when you saw it.
Andrew Walsh
I could tell what age you were when you saw it.
Luke Burbank
There's a claw foot bathtub and I think Susan Sarandon is in it. That's what I know about that movie.
Andrew Walsh
That would make sense. Let's see here. Bull Durham, 1988. Nuke brings the heat scene. Should we. I mean, this is kind of long. So you have. You have Tim Robbins on the mound and he's the pitcher. Right. And if I recall, he's the only person who like, they play for a minor league team. Right. Obviously, the Durham Bulls.
Luke Burbank
The Durham Bulls and the Durham Bathtubs.
Andrew Walsh
But he's the only guy who's gotten a taste of the major leagues. So in this relatively small world, he's sort of like. He's the. He's the kind of cagey veteran. Right?
Luke Burbank
The Kevin Kevin.
Andrew Walsh
Oh, that's Kevin Costner.
Luke Burbank
I think Kevin Costner's had as we coffee.
Andrew Walsh
Robbins.
Luke Burbank
So he's kind of the like, you know, the sage.
Andrew Walsh
Okay, yes, yes, yes. So in this scene, okay, maybe you're right. So this is Tim Robbins on the mound here, not Kevin Costner. Yeah, you're right. I've messed everything up about this. So let's keep going.
Luke Burbank
Shake him off.
Andrew Walsh
Throw. Okay, so Kevin Costner is the catcher behind the plate.
Luke Burbank
He's crash or something.
Andrew Walsh
He's going to be the one who's telling Tim Robbins what to throw here. This is such a bad idea. Time out.
Luke Burbank
Hey, why are you shaking me off, huh? I want to bring the heater to announcement with author. To announce your what? To announce your presence with authority. This guy's a first ball fastball hitter. He's looking for heat. Oh, yeah?
Andrew Walsh
So what? He ain't seen my heat. All right, me. You're right. He called him meat. He called the pitcher meat. And of course, what happens here is.
Luke Burbank
I'll spoil tips the batter, right?
Andrew Walsh
He tips the batter to prove his point. Yeah, the. Yeah, so the catcher tells the batter what's coming.
Luke Burbank
I was immediately laughing during that dialogue, ironically, which means maybe your professor was onto something.
Andrew Walsh
And I gotta say, you don't even get the visual of it, but Tim Robbins sort of like trying to be tough, but also like kind of backing up from the mirro presence of Kevin Costner while he's saying, I want to establish my authority is actually really good physical comedy. So I guess professor, professor, legacy man. Good job.
Luke Burbank
Wait, you mean because he had a legacy at Kent State?
Andrew Walsh
I can't think of his name. No, I can't remember. Well, wait, I mean, do we want to do this? Should we look it up? I'll bet you there's some record. Did I ever tell you that after I told you I had some random memory on this show? Like a. What do you call it when you recover an old memory? I had a recovered memory on the show of me. Me lending my voice because I was in broadcasting and I was there for the 30th anniversary of the May 4 shootings. And so there's like, you know, student groups and actually the radio station. Everybody was doing, you know, various commemorations and the. There was some student group, like the May 4th committee wanted to put together a CD ROM. This is when you and I were talking about CD ROMs a while back, which was like, you know, kind of pre Internet or like early, like you would put a CD into Your computer. And it was like you had a small, little contained Internet that could teach you about something like maybe the May 4th shootings or maybe Clint Eastwood, like the one that. Talking about this. So anyway, all of that is to say I said, yeah, that's right. The student group asked me to do the voiceover on that, but I guess that's lost to history. But one of our listeners went into the Kent State Digital Library and actually found a reference number for that. Like, we couldn't get the actual audio because it's not available online. But it is like I am credited as a voiceover, I guess, you know, contributor on this May 4th.
Luke Burbank
If we have. If there's somebody who lives near Kent State and they can go to the media library, theoretically, this is physical media that exists.
Andrew Walsh
Yes, I believe this is physical media that you could potentially get here. Let's see here that. I found it. Oh, it was our buddy Michelle. It was our buddy Michelle who dug into it and found like the page where the Day the War Came Home. Produced and directed by. Oh, Kevin Necessary. Yeah, he was kind of a buddy of mine. Oh, I'm just going down memory lane. Here it is in the special collections. It's cd.
Luke Burbank
His name was Kevin Necessary.
Andrew Walsh
Yeah, yeah, he's. He's still doing something. He's in media.
Luke Burbank
Last name in.
Andrew Walsh
I think if you Google him, he's still doing media, I think in Ohio, in Cincinnati or something. Luke, check this out. This is special collection CD ROM number 0001. My man.
Luke Burbank
Okay, listen, we can find that.
Andrew Walsh
Narrated by Andrew Walsh. Let's see here.
Luke Burbank
If we were able to get our hands on that, would you be cool playing it on the show?
Andrew Walsh
Yeah, I mean, I'm sure I'd find it a little bit cringy, but also it wasn't like. I mean, I have some. I'm going to whisper this part. I have some tapes. Like, I'm literally looking at some reel to reel tapes that I don't have the ability to play anymore that has like my old, like, school projects on them. Like, I did a bad 60 second commercial for the Hudsucker Proxy where I mostly just like pulled a bunch of tape from it and tried to limit my amount of voiceover in it. It was so clunky and so terrible. I think I edited that on tape. I have other things I need. I made. Made a. Was it a radio commercial for Calphalon Pans? Was the. Was the assignment like that? Shit, if I ever had the ability to play it, I don't think I Would, like. I think I would just die hearing that. Like, I mean, you played your piano thing earlier, and that took some. That took some. Some literally dead. Yeah. So, you know, maybe I just need to be braver. This.
Luke Burbank
Why don't we just play it Going into the donors, I feel like, yeah, this.
Andrew Walsh
I feel like if this were to. To become available, I wouldn't relish it. But on the other hand, it went through some sort of editorial process. This was me reading somebody else's words and generally approved by whoever hired me to do it or, you know, asked me to do it or whatever. So, you know, it's. It's not as embarrassing as me doing a Hudsucker voice.
Luke Burbank
Well, I mean, of course I would love to hear this, but I bet you that your voice would be almost unrecognizable, miserable, just because of how young you are. Even Becca said to me the other day, she was like. She was actually looking up the your Last Meal podcast, which our friend Rachel Bell does, and she goes, you wouldn't believe it, but we were in Powell's, and we saw Rachel's new book was in Powell's, and it's like, open sesame. And I said, oh, yeah, that's. My friend wrote that book. And she said, oh, you know, I went to that show the other day, and you were the first episode, like, randomly, I think. I don't know if it just. If it generates, you know, old episodes. I don't know how that. How that works, because that was years ago. And I go, oh, I forgot that I was on that. And she goes, yeah, you sounded so young.
Andrew Walsh
And I was like, it wasn't that long ago.
Luke Burbank
I mean, I might mean maybe I was 40 instead of 48 or.
Andrew Walsh
Yeah. I mean, because. Yeah, that. I mean, that started on Cairo radio. I guess time is moving rather quickly for us. But, you know, I'm saying the last.
Luke Burbank
Three years with you, Andrew, have really.
Andrew Walsh
No, I understand.
Luke Burbank
No, I really grizzled me.
Andrew Walsh
You know what I'm realizing here? And I guess I could do this. Although, again, the topic is a little bit heavy. It's about death on Kent State campus. But I'm seeing that my friend Lauren Worley, this is probably how I got. I was pretty good friends with Lauren, who I'm still friends with on Instagram, and every now and then we'll check in with each other, and she was the associate producer on this thing. I'll bet you she's the one who asked me to do this. I could reach out to her. She might have. Yes, she might have a copy. I mean, does she have a DVD ROM player that she could even. I mean, there are bigger cats.
Luke Burbank
I feel like we could find one of those. Swing a cat at your local Goodwill. I mean, not a. You know, not an alive cat. No, take a stuffed animal cat in there and swing it. But you'll hit some kind of CD ROM situation. So. Well, anyway, no pressure, but I just think that really where we've landed with the show is competitive cringe, where we each have to present. Each week, we have to present some piece of audio that makes us feel deeply uncomfortable. Comfortable. That's how we keep the show fresh and fun. I think that we'll probably need to wrap things up there today, Andrew, because I am off to interview Moshe Kasher.
Andrew Walsh
Oh, I love Moshe.
Luke Burbank
Yeah, I love him, too. He's a. He's going to be part of this podcast that Livewire is putting out called Damp January, where we're talking to different people about drinking and not drinking. Moshe describes himself as the boy king of Al Alcoholics Anonymous. He was in AA when he was, like, 15.
Andrew Walsh
Oh, that's right.
Luke Burbank
And he's got some interesting insight on the whole matter.
Andrew Walsh
He grew up fast, didn't he?
Luke Burbank
He sure did. He sure did. So, anyway, that's gonna need to do it for today's episode of the show, but we're gonna be right back here tomorrow with more imaginary radio for you, so please do tune in for that. In the meantime, have a great Tuesday. Take care of yourselves, and please remember, no mountain too tall.
Andrew Walsh
Good luck to all. Power out.
Podcast Summary: TBTL: Too Beautiful To Live
Episode #4345: It Smells Like A 24 Hour Fitness That Hasn’t Been Cleaned In 25 Hours
Release Date: November 26, 2024
In this special episode of TBTL: Too Beautiful To Live (#4345), hosts Luke Burbank and Andrew Walsh delve into a mix of personal anecdotes, health updates, and pressing pop culture topics. The episode kicks off with Luke humorously referencing his clogged eyelid, setting a light-hearted yet authentic tone for the discussion.
Notable Quote:
Luke Burbank [00:00]: "Little BG on me."
A significant portion of the episode revolves around Luke's unexpected health issue—a clogged gland in his eyelid, suspected to be a side effect of using Visine eye drops. This leads to a broader conversation about the simultaneous use of antibiotics and probiotics, a topic that often confuses many.
Key Points:
Luke's Experience: Luke discusses his dilemma of taking both antibiotics and probiotics, questioning their opposing effects on his body's biotic balance.
Luke Burbank [02:01]: "I'm taking an antibiotic and now I'm also taking a probiotic. And those things, they seem to be at odds with each other."
Scientific Insight: Andrew counters Luke's skepticism by highlighting that the combination is a common medical recommendation to mitigate the adverse effects of antibiotics on gut flora.
Andrew Walsh [00:40]: "There's some very basic science out there supporting that."
Practical Solutions: The hosts explore practical approaches to managing this balance, including the importance of completing antibiotic courses and the role of probiotics in maintaining gut health.
One of the episode's highlights is the intense discussion about the ongoing rap battle between Drake and Kendrick Lamar. The hosts dissect the potential legal ramifications Drake faces due to Kendrick's recent diss tracks, which allegedly contain defamatory content.
Key Points:
Legal Concerns: Drake is contemplating legal action against Kendrick Lamar for allegations within Kendrick's lyrics that border on slander.
Andrew Walsh [10:18]: "...his record label, he filed these pre court documents to explore the idea of suing over the fact that they faked..."
Public Perception: The hosts debate the public's reception of the battle, with a general consensus leaning towards Kendrick Lamar's dominance in lyrical prowess.
Andrew Walsh [11:37]: "There's a fractured media landscape... Like, anybody who is paying attention..."
Cultural Impact: They also touch upon the broader implications of such high-profile feuds in the music industry, emphasizing the fine line artists walk between creative expression and legal boundaries.
Luke and Andrew reminisce about their karaoke days, sharing humorous and often embarrassing stories that highlight their longstanding friendship and shared history.
Key Points:
Luke's Karaoke Antics: Luke recalls his jamming sessions and the resulting "stank" in the studio from his intense workouts and subsequent showers.
Luke Burbank [04:23]: "It smelled like a 24 Hour Fitness that hadn't been cleaned in 25 hours."
Andrew's Reluctance to Sing: Contrary to Luke's more open approach, Andrew expresses his discomfort with singing in public, adding a relatable layer to their dynamic.
Andrew Walsh [17:35]: "I never sing. I'm so self conscious about it."
The hosts take a moment to acknowledge and thank their donors, emphasizing the critical role these supporters play in sustaining the podcast.
Notable Thanks:
Jessica Haley from Boston, Massachusetts
Christine Pernula from Renton, Washington
Sarah Sund from Boise, Idaho
Jenny Evans from Carlsbad, California
Amina Al Saudi from Washington, DC
Luke Burbank [33:11]: "We love you all and we appreciate you."
A lighter segment involves discussions about obsolete media technologies like CD-ROMs and their place in today's digital landscape. The hosts share memories of their early experiences with these formats, blending humor with nostalgia.
Key Points:
Luke's Voiceover Project: Luke reminisces about his early voiceover work for a Kent State University project, underscoring how far they've come in the broadcasting realm.
Luke Burbank [63:29]: "We have a listener who went into the Kent State Digital Library and actually found a reference number for that."
Andrew's Cringeworthy Recordings: Andrew confesses to having old tapes from school projects that he finds embarrassing, highlighting the personal growth both hosts have undergone.
Andrew Walsh [72:07]: "I think I would just die hearing that."
As the episode winds down, Luke hints at an upcoming interview with comedian Moshe Kasher for another podcast focused on Damp January, where they'll explore themes around drinking and sobriety.
Notable Quote:
Luke Burbank [75:39]: "He's gonna be part of this podcast that Livewire is putting out called Damp January, where we're talking to different people about drinking and not drinking."
The hosts close the episode with their signature blend of humor and camaraderie, promising more engaging content in future episodes.
Final Thoughts:
Episode #4345 of TBTL: Too Beautiful To Live masterfully balances personal storytelling with relevant cultural discussions, all while maintaining the podcasters' characteristic humor and authenticity. From health dilemmas and celebrity rap battles to nostalgic memories and donor shoutouts, Luke and Andrew deliver a rich and engaging experience for both loyal listeners and newcomers alike.
Notable Quotes for Reference:
Luke Burbank [02:01]: "I'm taking an antibiotic and now I'm also taking a probiotic. And those things, they seem to be at odds with each other."
Andrew Walsh [10:18]: "Only technology will tell whether or not that's an option."
Luke Burbank [33:11]: "We love you all and we appreciate you."
Andrew Walsh [72:07]: "I think I would just die hearing that."