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This episode is brought to you by State Farm. Listening to this podcast Smart move Being financially savvy Smart move Another smart move Having State Farm help you create a competitive price when you choose to bundle home and auto bundling. Just another way to save with a personal price plan like a good neighbor, State Farm is there. Prices are based on rating plans that vary by state. Coverage options are selected by the customer. Availability, amount of discounts and savings and eligibility vary by state. Springfest means more sun, more fun and more free at Lowes. Keep your yard in line with an additional free EGO 56 volt battery when you buy a select Ego mower, trimmer or blower. Plus keep landscaping fresh with stay green. 1 cubic foot garden soil 5 bags for $10. Our best lineup is here at Lowe's. Valid through 4 a while supplies last selection varies by location. Soil offer excludes Alaska and Hawaii. Dallas, Texas I'm headed your way March 27th and 28th Spokane, Washington I'll see you guys April 3rd and 4th Buffalo, New York I'm headed your way. I'll see you guys Friday, April 24th and Saturday, April 25th. Get your tickets now on my website at ryancickler.com hey guys, I just want to say I thank you, thank you for the love and support of the Baltimore Junkyard series. It was so much fun to go back and finally get the podcast with my brothers, my family, my friends and then seeing the response from you guys. We're absolutely going to do more. It's all self funded, it's all stuff I fly back. You know. These are men who all have families, they all have jobs and they carved out two 10 hour days to come sit with me in a junkyard and a working junkyard by the way. We're interrupting that business in 113 degree heat, in the rain, in the lightning, in the thunder, day, night. So man, we cranked through two days, shot a bunch of content and gave you three months worth of stuff and I loved it so much I want to keep doing it. So thank you for your support. Keep looking out for more. And this is the final episode. The Way Back the Baltimore Junkyard Series Part 2 hey baby, we gonna be here all day. We gonna be here all day baby. I like that kind of party. Foreign what's up guys? Ryan Sickler here. I'm back home in Baltimore, very excited to be here to do something that I've been wanting to do for a long time. You guys been asking for years to have my brothers on, old friends, family and I'm finally able to make it happen. Make sure you're subscribed. You're going to get episodes for a while. We got a bunch of them coming your way. Wait for you guys to see this. Welcome back to the Way Back. Everybody. Ryan Sickler here. This is the Baltimore Junkyard series. We are live on location. You're seeing it on tape in the rain, in the heat at Auto Recycling of Baltimore llc. I'm super stoked to bring this series to you guys. It's been a long time in the making. These are the final episodes here. You've already seen the solo eps with everybody, so we've got a big group here tonight. I'm going to introduce everyone starting to my right over here, this is Chris Sheeler. Great to be here. This is my brother, Derek Sickler. Hello. This is my other brother, Todd Sickler. Hello. This is my cousin, Tim Demo. This is Shannon Patterson over here, the owner and proprietor of Auto Recycling of Baltimore llc. And this is our brother over here as well, Chris Lamb. Thanks for having me. I'll give you a teacher. As you mentioned about this teacher that the one that just really burned you that, that for the class that we shared together was Mrs. Geist, the art teacher. Because when I, when we had the, the sketches due every Friday, I never did the sketch. And you do. You take time and do the sketch and it's like, it's. I would put out of 10 elaborate work into. And then. And I just, I just forgot about a scribbly quarter. You would literally do Washington on it and she, she go 10 out of 10, that's fabulous. Every time he's doing them right when she's saying turn them in, he's just doing this. And then I'm like, this just got 10 out of 10. I'm over here taking my time. And he would say, honestly, look at this. Is this, is this a quarter with George Washington on this thing? She get. Well, he's. He's really trying to do it right the best he can. And then we would take the backs of the, the backs of the, the previous class that turned in the, the painting just, you know, they signed the back for the Gracie Gradum. I would just paint over the back and just say, re. Sign it. Steal some paintings. She would go like, this is lovely. This is lovely. But she finally caught onto it. Like she goes, bring that up here. I'm like, oh, it took you like whole semester. Here's a story I want Todd to share mostly. I'm going to give you the mic after I say this. Let's talk about. Let's talk. What was mom's apartment or townhouse after she kicked us out and you moved in with her to behind Carol Town? Was it Tim Dan Court? What? Tim Dan Court. Name of the road. Is that what it was? Behind Carol Town. Where she lived with Keith? No. You and mom and Keith, her husband. She got remarried. What was that called? That road? You remember? I remember I spent a lot of time. You said shell bark or something. Shell bark, that's it. Tell everybody the time that you caught mom with her husband. Oh, I think he called me. Are you calling us? He goes, he gonna call me. He came home and called our mother giving her new husband some head. And she didn't know you saw it or does she know now? She. Sheila traumatized. He needed to tell somebody. He called the wrong. Over here. He goes. He goes. I said, todd, you know? He goes, I said, you saw. He goes, yeah, she came up off the head. Call somebody. Tell him what I just saw. That was therapy back in our day, right? He just couldn't live on that alone happen. All right, I'll be over. I'll see you tomorrow. Don't tell nobody. See you tomorrow. All right, I'll see you. How many times did he play? 1. It's in the Heat of the Night. Is that what. Who? Phil Collins. Didn't he play Phil Collins? You're talking about Phil Collins? In the Air Night? Oh, my. Just Blair nightly. Wait, he played. I don't know anything about that. Yeah, we had. He had like a sound system in the basement and a big TV back then. Yeah. Second husband and he used to play into the Air the night. That big. That drum solo. He would just crank it up every single time. I remember that. And Top Gun, too. Yeah, it sounded like the Maverick was in the house. No, the Jets. No, they're not. Not the song. The afterburner, like through the house. Well, you probably wanted to make it loud so you hear mom slur. That's why I play that music to the camera. For dinner. For dinner, yeah. You could have had that. Real nice, Mom. Real nice, Mom. That would be ridiculous. Hey, Keith. Yeah? What was your next interaction with him? How'd that go? Did he see you? Did he lock eyes with you laying back there? You're darn. Come on, Maverick. Oh, my God. Let's do one of my favorite all time stories about Also. This is also what I find weird too. Do you remember you had that house up there? You would smoke weed and thought you were with a toilet Paper and a dispenser. Thinking that was going out the window. And everybody could see Mouth there. Yeah. Right. When mom caught you, remember you. You. You came and made me tell you that. Just. Just tell mom you're smoking with you, so it'll be okay. I had to go tell Mom. Yeah. Todd's, how old are you? After that. That happened at school. How old are you? He was in high school. Yeah. Do you remember you had that little tiny room. And we would come up in there and it would be. The Spice Channel would be on. And we're just watching people get pounded out with no penetration and no finishing. You remember? Just come over, sitting there. What's going on? Guys over here like, yeah, let's play some NHL hockey. This is a girl over here getting pat this. Titties are bouncing around. And we're just. What's five of us in there just watching this? And Mom's like, what are you doing in there, Todd? Like, just shut up, Mom. You don't remember that? You remember that? Yes, unfortunately. And I think before that, we used to watch it Scrambled in Shannon's basement. Right. Does anybody remember that? I remember you put it on. You put it on three and like, some other channel or something. There's been other people that have talked about teenagers doing that. All right, let's talk about the time that we're all in the room and just coincidentally, Derek's there. And Derek's hot about Troy Griffin. He is pissed off about Troy to this day. Maybe you could tell us what it was. We don't even know because this is. You're probably 19, 20, probably at this point. Cause Todd's still in high school, but we're out of high school. And you are going off like, fuck, Troy. Troy shows up here. I'll whoop his on site. I'll put it. Let him come in my face. I will him up right now. And within a second, that door goes. And Troy Griffin walks in and you go, sub Troy. You remember? I don't remember that. That's what we throw around. Do it, do it. That's what we throw around. What house was that was at that same place where he. Troy did a lot of dumb. That probably deserved it. But you're like, we're out of high school. So it wasn't a high school. You were just going all. You were gonna kick, like you had a press conference for a fight, basically. And then he showed up, he said, what's up, Troy? Oh, man, you were going nuts. I've been an angry person for A long time. But for him to walk in right off the heels, let him show up. What's up, Troy? It was like that. Never would have been Troy anyway. I always liked Troy. It wouldn't have been a fair fight. Can we talk about the time Troy ran from the cops? Were any of you with them or. It was all him. So he was doing drug. Okay. We could tell the story though. I believe the dead had come to town. Yeah, you should probably take it easy. Well, that's. Can I just tell the truth? Because the truth is plenty. This motherfucker's running from the cops. Turf and yards run. Was it in the thing? Was he in the thing at the time? Z24. Right. But what you don't know, it wasn't. Don't run from the cops in the neighborhood. Two things you don't do. You don't do drugs on school property. You don't do drugs on any school property. That's mistake number one. And then the cops come, and then you don't run from. I don't remember. We might have been playing soccer or something. I'm pretty sure it was just up at Eldersburg hanging out by the swing sets and all that shit. And then he took off running. You know why we didn't do any drugs in high school? Because we signed the paperwork and Mr. Promise not to get. We had to sit there. We had to sit there in gym class and forge people's signatures all day long. So we did a number right? So like we would just sign left and right so we could get some people's name. I was. I was the aid for Ms. Derwin there. And I would just be. I just fill out the prom promises all day long. Just makeup names. John Smith, Harry Balls. Whoever it happened to be that day. So, you know, speaking of Darwin's aids, my senior year, I was her aide. And who. Who was the girl that lived down from. You had. They had a big. Sandy Hartman or Jewel. Oh, Tiffany, Gilner, Gilbert. So they're. They were in the gym class when I'm the aide and I'm sitting there, you know, acting like I'm not listening to what they're saying. They're getting all this beer delivered it. We're gonna put it in your shed. I thought this was the other way around and called you. Maybe it was. But I was in. I was thinking, called you and year year. I was the one that went out. You were like all of them. You might have been doing something with your drive. You were doing something. I had a doctor's appointment or something. And you knew you were going to be off. And I went to the pay phone. I'm like. And you got it. And we get a pay for him right off on the three story. I was gym aid. And I think I told her I didn't feel good. No. Well, you left early now. I think you were home from school for some reason. And then years later, I broke down and told her about it. She had all them parties. Susan's still friends with her. We can work off those details still. Yeah, yeah. How about we all learn how to drive from the stimulators at Liberty High School and the stimulators. Yeah, the stimulators, right. They were up top. You come right out of cafeteria in that hallway, first doorway on the left, right? Yeah. That's 100% right. We go in there, we sit in our fake old 70s, just like this right here with a wheel and everything right there. No wonder nobody could drive back then. Right? But we were already aces by then because we done worked at the junkyard driving at 12. And yeah, adults around the junkyard, like, we would try to learn how to drive. You just run into a car and just bag it up and get out. We're like, hey, that fender ain't no good no more. Right. You know what I mean? All right, so let's close out on the. The final big story, the Preakness fight. Now, who. Who was there for that? I know. Derek, Todd, me, Timmy. I remember. Was that the one where Headline got knocked out of the chair? Does everybody remember Headline getting bum rushed? He was sitting in a little. Is it the one buses. This is after the show, after the breaking out all the windows in the bus. They were pissing off the bus next to us, and then people were trying to come over and kick our asses on the bus. Set it up, and I want to hear what every single person remembers. So Preakness is the second leg of the Triple Crown. It is nothing like the Kentucky Derby. It is everybody and their goddamn mother. A hundred thousand people at one time would pack the infield. People were tripping on acid. They would let you bring as much alcohol as you could carry at one time. People were bringing the recycle bins full of liquor and beer and stuff. Then they changed it. One person had to be able to carry it over the turnstile. So you just had to get a strong friend for that. And people are getting fucking wasted. This particular time, we meet at the park and ride across from Haight Funeral Home, and we have two school buses taken. I mean how many? Probably 50 people. 60 on each. 30 on each bus or something. Right. So we, we meet at park and Ride across from Hate's funeral home. We have two school buses. You come out Timmy to the end, your brother Gary come out to the county from the city. And we, we're on these buses. Kegs in the back of these buses. It's probably 7am and then these buses head to Preakness. Now the main, the race isn't until. I mean it's like four. Okay. And I think the bus has left itself. Building a great wardrobe is all about finding pieces that feel good, mix well and last. And that is exactly what you get with Quince. With premium fabrics and well thought designs, they make everyday essentials that not only feel great, but are dependable even as the seasons change. I mentioned their Polos in the past. A great option if you want something that's casual and comfy while being business ready at the same time. And as the weather heats up, I'm looking at their plain cotton tees too. Quince works directly with top factories and cuts out the middlemen. So you're paying for quality, not just some brand markup. 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Was it by pimo to finally separate those urinals so couldn't sprint across them. If you've never seen it, it's called the running of the urinals. We could put a clip in here, but these drunks are going top to top of the spot pots and getting pelted with unopened beers to the dome. And like it's. That was probably dangerous far. The people would shake the beers off, try to knock video game in real life wet from rain sometimes just slipping off of this just insane. So it is a free for all. And now we're getting out of there. I'm in my school bus. I got both my brothers are in there. The only two people that I'm sure that we got to get on this bus. Be responsible for my cousins. They're not on there yet. There's a bus right next to us and it's not any farther than my cousin sitting right here like you. We definitely could have reached out, held hands and this guy and this girl who are on that bus and we have no idea who these people are. They walk on that bus. They walk about three quarters back. And I don't know what the they said to these people, but these people pounced on this guy and girl. They. These people up, they threw the dude out. They took the girl like a suitcase, threw her down the steps. And I was like, holy, these guys are crazy. And then they just start opening their windows and spitting at our bus and throwing at our bus. So we're, we're, you know, there's no cell phones, but get the back here. Hurry up. You know, we're putting the windows up and this guy decides he's gonna be Mr. Peace and Love and he gets off the goddamn bus. And we're like, do not go over there, do not get on that bus. He's shirtless. He goes over, he gets on the bus. And again, almost just coordinated. They. Yeah, what, what are you saying? And he goes three quarters away back. And then a second later, I mean, just. They jumped on this motherfucker, they beat him. I emergency exit opened the bus out of the back, I jump out, I he's. They throw him out where I drag him shirtless back over. He thanks me, I get him on the bus, tell him, give Timmy that microphone. Describe his body after he got on that bus. So he got to the middle of that bus and he went straight lateral up in the air and it just, it got crazy. And by the time they backed him off that bus, he got out. He had bite marks on his neck, on the back of his back, of his triceps, on his calves. I mean, he had. Would you bite a stranger? You know, I mean they were everywhere. They weren't fighting for their lives, they were doing it the about I would bite you if you're killing me. And I gotta get out of there. They're just like, hi, I heard, just taking bites out. He had bites, his nose is pushed over here. He's all up. And now we're like, holy. They get off the bus, they start bashing our windows. It's getting crazy. And now there is a full on between these two little tiny ass buses. I'm not, I'm not embarrassed to say I'm terrified. Like this is terrifying. Then Timmy comes, he gets on Gary, our cousin. This is Gary's brother, deaf. Deaf as he doesn't know who's on what side. He doesn't even know what's going on. Gary's out there, just rock him socks. He's just punching that team. It didn't matter. But he didn't hear it. Imagine being deaf and you're in a riot. He's just turning around, hitting anything coming in his ass. He's in a tiny little space too. Just rock himself. He was doing a 360, sucker punching everybody. So I had to get off that bus to go after him because he was gonna die. We woul get and I'm in the bus. I reach down, I'm grabbing his hair, I'm like, get up here, it's us. Get the up here. He gets on the bus. These guys are people up. The cops come in, they're pepper spraying in between the bus, they're beating people. We had a big black lady was all about that bus driver. There's maybe 12 people on our bus. We probably got, like, we said 30, 35 that should be on the bus. You remember we started with, right. She fired that bus. I'll never forget her bounce. And she driving through this, moving the people out. She's screaming, I didn't pay for this. I'm getting the out of here. She rolls her over and she goes, y' all ain't getting your security deposit back. That to this day, makes me bus. Here's the best part, though. This side of the bus looked like it had been to Vietnam. This side of us, perfectly fine. Perfectly fine. Just the left side of the bus had been beat to. But you didn't bother coming around this side. Up there. This side. Your boy that got off that bus, though, he was drunk as hell. Looked like Joe Dirt. He had a. Didn't he have a ponytail? He might have had a ponytail. Yeah. That dude was stupid enough to get off and walk off our bus. I always thought he was a little tougher dude. He walked into a bus of 40 dudes that learned. Oh, he learned. I didn't. I wasn't rushing to get him either. Like, wait till he throw. Throw it. Throw his ass out. They threw him out like a suitcase. Am I lying? No, no. They carried him like a suitcase off of that. They threw him out like he was trash. Like he was trash. He looked like a trash bag going out. They just beat their friends up. What do you think's gonna happen when you go in there? I got this. I'. Okay. You got. You both jumped in Gary's ass when that happened. After you got. What the hell are you thinking? You know, you like. He almost got us tore up. He's just out there, 360, spinning on people. Get the. On the bus. This lady's leaving right now. She running through crowd everything. That lady plowed through and got us to we get Back to Hate funeral. That dude never made it back on the bus either. The dude that got that thrown up like trash? No, he did. Yeah. Yeah, he. I pulled him up on the bus. I got him back up on here, and I was like, you're going to get all of us killed. We get back to Hate and it's. Honestly, we had so much room on that bus. And then when the second bus got back, these were in the row sitting in the rows. And she left so many people there, they all had to get on one bus. It was terrifying. Probably her bus there that she was responsible. I'm sure that's why she said you're not getting your security deposit back. That fight, that riot, channel 13 actually they had a helicopter go over and they were take. They were doing videos of it and stuff. It was terrifying. There might be a VHS if somebody was shooting it somewhere. It was terrifying. On a school bus, bro. We're getting. They expected that to happen though, I mean after a while because I have a friend who runs one of the bus companies service department and you know they had glass guys and already for when that happened because yeah it was so prevalent back then. You're out there for 10 hours just getting just ripped and I mean you think that it's hot now. I mean that's. You know you could catch a day where it was like 80, 90 degrees and you bacon. It's 10 hours if you were late. I mean like we got there, I mean leave eight at night. I forgot it being that late. It was 6:40. Was it always that late? They ran that race. Yeah, we were there till 7 o' clock after. If you remember during that 12 hours there were women picking up their shirts, you know, show me your titties. Thought the group doing that. And they were doing that the whole time. And then you had at least two, two males that day. Ran out onto the actual track, made it to the. They play. Really? Yeah. Oh yeah. Oh that was. That was. That was insane. I don't think it was that year. But that was later. Yeah, yeah, that's out there. I think it was just punch. I think he went out and did a little karate kid on that. He tried to do on that horse. He had to be on drug. Was it while the horse was running? Yeah, absolutely. Comes in. If you a guy's chances up, I think they just run around him. That's like a 1500 pound animal running 40, 50 mile an hour over top of your ass. Oh, it's out. There's a video out there. When I worked that overtime in law enforcement, that was the only time I could actually take off my buttons and my badge and my name and all that stuff. We didn't wear none of it and we knew we were gonna, we were gonna crack our night sticks. Are those rounds we were banning? We were going to hit people that day and Benimo people. That's how drunk people got at those things. People. That's why you can't take alcohol in anymore, Is that right? Yeah. You can't take coolers or anything. No alcohol in the infield at all? No. They're. They're selling you booze. Yeah, they sell as much Booze as you can get down. But now it's so. It's. It's a beer. It's. You gotta buy it from us. But you can still get up. Yeah, but it's Gonna cost you 350. No, the top of the line ticket now is almost 800 for the ticket. They've always been expensive. What about an infield ticket? Turf side terrace, under the 10. All the crap inf. Like all that and it's $800. It's like. It was like 760 this year. Shan and I did that for a few years. He was my guest. I would come pick him up in that race. I think I might have seen three horses. That's what I'm saying. The whole time you're so. I saw a horse also. Here's the funny part about that is it's not just one race. At the end of the day, they're running all day. Races all day. One horse count, one end. How many horses I. That's why they sold those shirts. It said horses. There were horses used to say that on it. Christmas, Carolyn. Do you remember Christmas Caroling at mom and boyfriends. Do you remember doing that? You were there. Do you remember doing this? Were you there with us? So just to be assholes, though. No. It was pouring down rain. We decide. Do you remember? We're gonna go carol. And it's like, you, me. It's definitely this motherfucker. Because he was the sing song. You went over here and. I don't remember that. Did we afterwards? Yeah, we went to Sykesville Apartments where Keith was living. My mom was living with him over there. And we. You. You knew where he was. Was. So we went onto the property and we just stood outside his. You don't remember this? Outside his place. And we didn't know the whole song or anything. We'd just be like. Just hear those sleigh bells jingling. Ding, ding, ding. And then we like. And then people started to come out. Do you remember? And we did not know any of the whole songs at all. And we did it. And then. And my mother one day goes that. Y' all out there, Carolyn? We're like, we ain't going, Carolyn. We're just out there with that guy. Yeah. People kept just. You didn't have to have the words coming up off of. And we're out there singing Jingle Bells, the Top Gun. Somebody's getting ready to hit the afterburner. Yeah, somebody was. All right, what should we go out on? Guys? Just tell. I mean, this is special. That we're all together. It is like, I mean, when was the last time we were all together? Probably, you know, all of us, Right? I haven't seen you in at least 25 years. Yeah, right. So you came back from that Jimmy's. But still that was like when was after the crowd. Oh, when I did that stand up show, it was 22, 2022 Night Pants Nation tour. Yeah. And you haven't seen Derek once before? You've seen one twice then in 25 years. Wow, that's nice. Okay, I'm glad we could do this. I probably haven't seen Sheila since high school, right? I mean, I don't know where I ran into you. This is great, guys. I listen this, I'm very grateful that you all could make this. I know you all have families, obligations. I know you're driving long distances. I, I can't thank you enough. This has been awesome. Thank you all not just for doing this show, but for lifelong friendship, family, brothers, cousins. I'm gonna go again. I'm gonna go for my left this time. This is Chris Lamb right here. This is Shannon Patterson, owner and proprietor of Auto Recycling of Baltimore llc. This is my cousin Tim Demo, AKA Timmy's always gonna be Tim me. This is my brother Todd right here. Fresh off triple bypass open to heart surgery. This is my brother Derek Sickler right here. My twin brother, fraternal twin, identical twin beds. And this is Chris Sheila right here. I am Ryan Sickler. Thank you so much. You guys are the best fans in comedy. I really appreciate all of your support. I love this show and I love that you guys allow me to do it. Thank you for your support. Talk to y' all next week. That's it guys. That is the final episode of the Baltim More Junkyard series. Thank you for your support and thank you for being kind to these men who are not anywhere in entertainment or anything. All the love, all the support, all the comments. You guys are no doubt the best fans in comedy. We're definitely going to do more. I can't wait. And if you are subscribed to the Patreon on the premium tier, we've got about, I don't know, four or so now exclusive Baltimore junkyard series clips that you can go check out as well as getting the way back a day early ad free, sensor free, all that good stuff. You get everything on the eight dollar tier that you also get on the five dollar tier. So it's definitely worth it. Thank you guys again. Can't wait to bring you more of it. Thank my brothers, my cousin, my friends, my family, Derek, Todd, Shannon, Timmy, Chris. We had two Chris's, we had Sheila and we had lamb so Justin Schlegel was also one of the episodes in there. Thank you all and stay tuned for more. This episode is brought to you by Athletic Brewing Co. No matter how you do game day, on the couch, in the crowd or manning the snack table, Athletic Brewing fits right in with a full lineup of non alcoholic beer styles you can enjoy bold flavors all game long. 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Podcast Summary: The Wayback with Ryan Sickler
Episode 117: Baltimore Junkyard Series Finale — Part 2
Date: March 26, 2026
In this vibrant and hilarious finale of the Baltimore Junkyard series, host Ryan Sickler brings together his brothers (Derek, Todd), cousin (Tim "Timmy" Demo), longtime friends (Chris Sheeler, Chris Lamb), and the junkyard owner (Shannon Patterson) for one last rowdy roundtable. Set amid the greasy nostalgia of Auto Recycling of Baltimore LLC, the crew reminisces about wild childhood tales, family absurdities, and Baltimore legends. The tone is warm, deeply personal, uproarious, and unfiltered—a joyful celebration of family, friendship, and the chaos of growing up Sickler-style in Maryland.
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Timestamp: 54:30
Timestamp: 57:30
| Time | Segment | Description | |-------|---------|-------------| | 06:30 | Introductions | Guests, junkyard setup, series context | | 09:55 | Art class scams | Mrs. Geist, forged art and prankery | | 12:00 | Family trauma | Todd walks in on mom and Keith | | 15:10 | Soundtrack memories | Phil Collins, Top Gun, and cover-up music | | 17:45 | Teenage “Spice” days | Clandestine porn and toilet-paper “smoke screens” | | 21:40 | “What’s up, Troy?” | Derek’s instant flip from rage to calm | | 25:00 | School shenanigans | Fake drug pledges and gym aid abuse | | 28:10 | Driving disasters | Junkyard lessons trumping school simulators | | 31:00-51:00 | The Preakness fight | Legendary bus riot, mayhem, and loyalty | | 54:30 | Sickler caroling | Dysfunctional holiday traditions | | 57:30 | Reunion & gratitude | Rare coming-together, heartfelt thanks |
This episode is a tour de force of wild Baltimore memories—equal parts raucous and heartfelt. Ryan Sickler, with his signature humor and authenticity, orchestrates a roundtable that moves seamlessly from shocking family tales to larger-than-life street anecdotes. The chemistry is palpable, the love between them is real, and the stories will make you laugh, wince, and maybe even tear up.
Fans of family chaos, Baltimore lore, and true-life comedy—this series finale is a must.
End of Summary