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Strayer University is certified to operate in Virginia by Chev and has many campuses including at 2121 15th Street north in Arlington, Virginia the you should Know Podcast hey everybody, welcome back to the you Should Know podcast episode 155. Round of applause please. Nice. Hey everybody, welcome back to the you should know podcast episode 155. If you are new here or if you haven't already and you look below you can see that subscribe button isn't pressed. You're wrong. If you're given more below then you see the comment section. Is it fulfilled with your name? Guess what? Even more wrong. Go ahead and fill that out. I have a call to action right now. If you look below you right now you see a comment section isn't fulfilled you should do that. But more importantly said subscribe button. If you have not pressed that yet, hit that subscribe button and there's a little bell button right there. Hit that little bell button. So that means whenever we post you get notified right on your devices. Also we have a twitter for those that you don't that don't know. We have updates on there every single day. It's @YSK Pod on Twitter. Join that Patreon. Last week on Patreon they y'all got so so so much content and it's only gonna keep coming with the new show we have with a new series we have that is high production. It is like a TV show, let me tell you that. So join that Patreon. Right now we are working on getting the tick tock back. Hopefully by the time that this has come out we have TikTok back. But until then follow us on all our socials, the link are in the description below. Hit that subscribe button. Hit that bell button. Share this podcast with five of your friends and your closest pets. We love you. Now on to the rest of the episode you should Know podcast. This episode is brought to you by friends at Manscape. Spring cleaning isn't just for finally tossing that fedora you swore would make a comeback. It's for hitting reset on your grooming routine. Why do you got a fedora, manscaped beard and balls bundle. As you covered from cheek to cheeks, clearing out that overgrowth winter left behind, it's time to weed, whack, hedge trim and make sure that the lawn is looking manicured for the season. Because nothing says fresh start like a sharp beard and more importantly, a properly landscaped lawn.
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B
Happy Mardi Gras wouldn't do that.
A
Hey, I'm not going to lie.
B
Some kids, if you were on Bourbon street.
A
Oh, during Collect during Mardi Gras, brother.
B
I'd come home with a bead collection, dude.
A
Especially if it was like. Especially if there was a certain demographic out there, they would think you're a thick old white woman.
B
They'd be like, girl. And I'm just like. I'm like Snow allegra in my AirPods. I'm just like going crazy.
A
Dude. Yeah, you on Bourbon street either get a lot of beads or a lot of. A lot of a lot of police activity.
B
Probably. Probably a 50. Both. Honestly, you show you get beat.
A
Yes.
B
Yeah. I go home with a lot of beads. Go home with a suitcase full of beads. Okay, like, what's up, Mr. Bam?
A
I'm not gonna lie. So if you don't know Mardi Gras is a, is a Is a holiday, right?
B
Yeah.
A
And one of the biggest celebratory things of Mardi Gras is in New Orleans on Bourbon street, which is like a street packed with clubs and bars and people. It just. Thousands and thousands of people just standing on this road, partying, having a good time. And it is tradition for the ladies on Mardi Gras, if they lift up their shirt, beads get thrown at them. You get some beads. Now, I remember one time I was. I had a girlfriend, she went to New Orleans for Mardi Gras. This is before I knew the tradition. She came back looking like Trinidad James, brother. I said, go.
B
All of my watch.
A
I said, you had a great time. She gave me some of the beads too. I went down. Sound bad, brother?
B
You go, what's that on your neck? It's like.
A
And. And not only like the little bitty beads. She had like the big ball beads. And I said, like, what did you show? Like, they saw a wink.
B
Yeah. That's not just chess right there. That is. That's something. You know, I've been to Bourbon street too.
A
Really?
B
I went to New. Well, I was in New Orleans building homes for the homeless. And then nobody. Okay, now why did you have to do that, though? I was in Louisiana, specifically New Orleans building homes for the homeless. Who are you in. What is it, Section nine? Not, not.
A
Not Section Ward.
B
Ninth Ward. Here we go. Nothing to do with section in the ninth Ward. No, but I said the wrong word.
A
Okay, it doesn't matter. Let's. Let's relax a little bit here. Let's get some context. When did you become the Messiah? No, I'm not.
B
It was mission trip, probably 2013.
A
As. As a 15 year old.
B
Yep.
A
You weren't building shit.
B
Oh, no, I was.
A
You. Would you get a nail and a hammer? And you were like, here's your head.
B
I was hitting the shit out of two by fours. And I was really doing a lot of landscaping too. They gave me a manual like. Like Weed whacker. Like a scythe. Basically said, go take out that lot.
A
Okay.
B
Four and a half hours straight. Sunburn, soaking wet clothes from sweat. I was cutting grass.
A
What year was Katrina?
B
I think like 07.
A
And so you're like eight years later.
B
Oh.
A
Oh. It was still.
B
It was still impacted. Trust me, it was. There was a lot to do. It was. But I got. I was saying, I brought up that because after the day that we were building homes for the homeless, we went to Bourbon street and I got crazy.
A
Dichotomy of a trip and I got.
B
For the for the. You know, you gotta.
A
You're like, we're building houses in the name of Jesus now. Let's do something.
B
Oh, no.
A
God.
B
But I got. I got robbed at hand point for bags of socks and sandwiches.
A
And boy, straight.
B
Someone said, give me no straight mitts.
A
And you gave it up?
B
Yeah, 100% did. So we. We spent. We spent another collective about three hours making like 400 peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. Got a lot of white Hanes socks and toothbrushes.
A
Yeah.
B
If you see where I'm going. We made these little care packages for the. For the unfortunate that maybe left without a home, the homeless, whatever. We were strictly told, hey, we put a lot of time into this. We really want to spread the gospel and the wealth. One pack per person.
A
Okay, 100%.
B
We get out of the van, I'm like, dude, this Bourbon Street. This is New Orleans. And I hear, hey. I was like, oh. I said, yeah. Yes, sir. Yes, sir. He goes, what you got there? And I was like, oh, I just wanted to say that Jesus loves you and I'd love to give you this pack if you wouldn't mind, good sir. He said, give me all of it now. And I went, well, I can't. I was told by my. My youth group leader to only give one. He said, man, did you not hear what the. I said, give me all of it. And I went, you know, you're right.
A
Here you go.
B
You look hungry. I said, you have all of it.
A
As soon as you got off the bus, that guy was like, that chubby girl is. She is green. That chubby girl is green.
B
He said, hey, Steve O. You see a little chubby white girl with a crew neck on, Hit a lick on her. I'm just, like, running back to the bus, dude.
A
Yeah.
B
Fun time, though.
A
That is insane. I never knew that about you.
B
I saw Chris Paul play in New Orleans when they still were the Hornets.
A
That's insane.
B
Wild.
A
Not as entertaining. Wizards, not as entertaining. He could have kept that.
B
I could have touched the ceiling of that arena. I think I actually did. I went, yeah, you do?
A
When I was a kid, I went to wwe, right?
B
Oh, my God.
A
I went to Night of Champions. Jeff Hardy, John Cena, Ric Flair was there. It was insane.
B
Oh, you did better than me.
A
And I sat behind the screen, like, the entrance screen. I was at the top behind it. Ask me how many wrestlers I saw in person that night. None.
B
Do.
A
That might be the most defeating. Oh, we're going to talk about John Cena's turn. Heel turn in pop culture. At the end of the episode.
B
Oh, my God.
A
But that might be one of the most defeating things. You're so excited about an event. You get there and you're like, I can't see.
B
That easily tops mine. But I also had a defeat experience with the wwe.
A
So not only, oh, you told this.
B
Story, but I didn't tell the other part. I did the throw up. We went to Raw, right?
A
Yeah.
B
I spent probably 30 minutes and maybe six bones on a poster board. The second I get into the arena, they said, can't take that.
A
Yeah.
B
I was like, but I made it with my hands. It's mine. They said, can't take. And I go, why the Is he gonna take his.
A
Like, what did it say on it?
B
I don't remember. I was like. I was like 10.
A
Well, they check signs, and at the door, they always check signs. They still do today.
B
But I'm saying, what could. I wrote down 10 years old. I probably said, cena, I love you some dumb. Actually, I think I. I printed out, like, logos of them.
A
Yeah.
B
Like their logos. Like, John Cena's little ruthless aggression. Like, put it there and just words and sharp.
A
Well, there probably was, like, a logo on there that's, like, not a part of the WWE anymore. And they didn't want to be on camera. But I took a sign to Monday Night Raw one time, too.
B
Did you really?
A
Yes, it was in Austin, Texas. It was. Do y'all remember? We'll get off of wrestling. I know a lot of y'all aren't wrestling fans. Well, until later in the episode. Oh, there was a time on Monday Night Raw where they would have guest host of Monday Night Raw where they'd have celebrities come in and host the Monday Night Raw. And so they came to Austin on a Monday, and the guest host was Ashton Kutcher. And at the time, I was like in my. That 70 show bag. So I was like, dude, this is perfect. Like, I'm gonna. And I was like, I don't know how we did this, but I was like, eight rows from the ring. And so I was on TV this whole time. If y'all find that Raw, you can see me with my long hair on tv. Swear to God. Like, so I remember the night before me, my mom went to, like, Dollar General. We got a neon poster board, right? Went to my family computer. We printed out pictures of Ashton Kutcher and shit. And then I brought it into the. Into the arena, because I was like, when he comes out to the ring to do his, like, promo, I'm Gonna hold it up. He's gonna be like, oh, that's cool, kid.
B
That's cool, little girl. You're like, no, I'm a boy. I promise.
A
He didn't even show up in person. He was on his screen the whole time. I'll say like, you go, dude, bro.
B
That was the worst part. I didn't get this. The worst part of it was the guy took my sign. We're walking in, and I do a double take. Just like, damn, am I really not getting in? I turn around, brother. Folded it and put it in the trash can.
A
Yeah. All your hard work is done. It's just done 100.
B
I was like, wow, dude, that's wicked.
A
And I was. This week, I went out to a bar. Surprise. Going through it. This week, I went out to a bar, right? And I've said this before, right? I've said this before. I think on an early episode. I genuinely do not like pda.
B
Oh, man.
A
I hate when I see a couple and they're doing a lot to each other in public. Yeah, it is. It is, honestly. But. Oh, I do feel like there are limits to pda. What are your PDA rules?
B
Oh, God, my PDA rules. If I would say that the max pda that can happen for me and my personal playbook. Last play, Hail Mary, ditch effort. As soon as tongue gets involved. Oh, as soon as tongue gets involved. You need to pop off, whisper in that ear. Hey, let's wait till a little later. We're still in public.
A
That.
B
That for me, if. Me personally, if it gets the tongue, it's fantastic. But I got. I got a creep watching me in that corner. Friends over here. What am I doing?
A
What's the most you've done, PDA wise? Except for New York, that doesn't count. You're in deeply inebriated, and I wouldn't want to smell your hand. So if we're. If we're being honest about what we saw. Oh, my God.
B
That makes it sound so much worse. Oh, no, no, no, no, no. That makes it sound great. But it is wicked. I got. I threw up so much.
A
What was it? What's the most you've done, PDA wise?
B
I'm not. I'm not big on it. Neither is my partner. Yeah, I don't have, like, traumatic crazy experiences. I would say the most is like just a. Just a good old kiss.
A
Just like a peck or like.
B
No, like a good kiss. So tongue, like, I love you kiss. And then it got to that point, and I was like, hey, we need.
A
To you use tongue when you kiss?
B
Do I use tongue when I kiss? I use my feet. When I kiss. Yeah, I use tongue. Yeah. Oh, I can. I'll. Yeah.
A
What?
B
Yeah, I use every.
A
You're like this.
B
I use all my.
A
Yeah, suck it. I go, no.
B
I grip her and then it's just like. I can't breathe. I'm like, oh, no, I know, I know. I'm like, go to sleep.
A
You can't put your girl in a submission hole.
B
No, I'm kidding. But yes, I use tongue. You don't use.
A
You don't use tongue. I use my tongue more than my lips.
B
Exactly. So why.
A
You just thought I was. I can't see you using tongue.
B
I'm just a grown man. Like this. My lips aren't even big enough to just pleasure someone with pecs. It's like I'm sucking a Tootsie Roll.
A
Wait, show me.
B
I'm kidding. But I'm not going to have to show you. I'm getting hot. I'm getting hot. I'm not showing you.
A
Come on, show me how you use tongue.
B
No. What is.
A
Come on.
B
It's like this. I'll give you this. No. Use your tongue. I'm not using my tongue on an air live. No, come on. No, no, no.
A
I'll show you.
B
Go.
A
You like? No, it's like that.
B
Oh, God.
A
No, I'm like this.
B
I do like a slide. Like a kind. Like a surfboards. Best way to describe it kind of. I ride that wave. I imagine.
A
Oh, you. You're imagining.
B
Her tongues is water and my tongue's like a. Like a Hawaiian. Like just a guy that lives in the ocean. He just grabs that surfboard, he runs straight to it. This is her tongue. This is my tongue. It gets a little friendly slide. You got to test the water first, make sure it's not rough. She goes, then I go. Yeah, no, it's.
A
It's.
B
It's bedroom talk. We're playing tigers.
A
Whenever I use tongue.
B
Oh, my God, I want that.
A
I've had a girl ask if she had pop rocks in her mouth, how fast my tongue works in there. It's like you put a goddamn bop it in your mouth.
B
I feel like your tongue suffocates other people's tongue.
A
You go, you go, come here, baby.
B
They're like she's you. All of a sudden you just hear her breathing because it's all out of her mouth or her nose. She's like. Because it's literally like this. This is her tongue.
A
Yours goes like this.
B
It's Just like, they could use my.
A
Tongue as torture for prisoners of war. Oh, they could just suffocate somebody.
B
Have you ever had. Okay, what's your. Like, what's been your feedback on kissing? Oh, like, have people like, what's it like, 1 to 10? Like, you. Like you're putting out a LinkedIn profile. My kissing scores about a.
A
What Is this number 1 through 10?
B
1 through 10.
A
Based off the reviews.
B
It doesn't have to be whole numbers. It could be points.
A
Based off the reviews I've gotten.
B
Based off firsthand reviews you've received either in moment or after through via text.
A
FaceTime email, I'd say 9.2.
B
Oh, man.
A
Because. Because I like kissing more than I like doing the actual coitus.
B
Oh, my God. Dude.
A
Dude. Thank you. Like, I don't want to be in there.
B
Wow. Scary. You're sitting. There you go. What was that?
A
It was like, I haven't been in the holy clam in a minute.
B
Oh.
A
What do we have to lose, right?
B
Biblical clam. Oh, you haven't buttered a muffin in a minute. No, that's not true.
A
I haven't felt those sacred walls in a while. I was. What?
B
What about us last weekend.
A
Stop it.
B
I've said the house.
A
Stop it.
B
Remember we went to the third floor? Cj See the fact I wasn't trying on shirts?
A
No. Okay.
B
Honestly, so much of the Internet literally leaves the comment, why don't y'all kiss already?
A
Every. I leave that comment too. I have so many burners on the YouTube.
B
So nine.
A
Damn, these guys are kissed. Damn it. Come on, camp. I've left them there.
B
Oh, my.
A
The fact that people watch this with their infant. Dude, I don't know what to say.
B
I'm sorry. Back to the dogs.
A
Can't speak.
B
Back to 9.2.
A
Yeah.
B
Now, if you had to grade your own performance. So it's like a peer review, like a paper.
A
Yeah.
B
Your. Your friend slid you a 92 on the test.
A
Yes. Yes. You did good.
B
I raced one. Bad for you.
A
Yeah.
B
Do you think all those were very logical thought out, honest reviews? You think some were blowing smoke, getting brownie points? What do you think?
A
I think a lot of them are caught up in the bliss. Like, a lot of them are caught up in the, like, Stonewall.
B
But.
A
But one of the things I am self conscious about is my gingivitis. Like, when I kiss, I know you can hear and feel that.
B
Hear it.
A
Oh, there's cracks. You ever put your finger in a. Like some play. D'oh. It's like a little.
B
You've pockets of.
A
Oh, yeah. There's something wrong up there.
B
Holy.
A
I had a scab on my gum the other day and I flicked it and it. My mouth was gushing blood. Did it like. My mouth is not healthy.
B
We need to take a moment of silence for anyone that has sent to review one of those reviews. And you've experienced this. Oh, my God.
A
But I'm not gonna lie. Like, the only downside is my. Is the gingivitis. That's one. The second is I drool a lot. I got really wet mouth. And so there's been times, there's been strings that weren't asked for. There's been a connection that kept us together.
B
Oh, you shut up. Oh, now that would do it for me. Even. Even with my wife.
A
Yeah.
B
If I unlocked my prism rate wave riding tongue and there was a string of slobber spit. It wouldn't do it for me. It wouldn't do it for me.
A
Do you have. Now we're gonna stay on this. We're gonna stay on this little. This little X rated vibe. I kind of like it.
B
Okay. Fluff my feathers.
A
You've been married how long?
B
Correct. I am married how long? Pushing three. Almost three.
A
Pushing three. Sorry.
B
I love Liv. I love Liv.
A
But you've been together for how long?
B
Pushing seven.
A
Seven years. You've been in a relationship. You've been in a relationship for seven years, right?
B
Correct.
A
Question for you.
B
Mm.
A
I have never experienced that length. I'm assuming sometimes in the bedroom we might need to spice things up. Oh. How do you feel about, like role play?
B
Now I'm gonna answer this very, very well thought out and careful. I'm all for it. Okay. I would be all for it.
A
Yeah.
B
And my wife, she's a. She's a beautiful companion. This is awkward because her family's watching this.
A
Oh. How do you think Malachi got here?
B
Yeah, Malachi did get here, but we are, we are, we are. We are synchronized. We are in one.
A
Oh, stop all this bullshit. What do you want to say?
B
I'm down. I'm down for it now. Now the roles in the game which is played. That's where I gotta really be careful.
A
That's where it starts to get a little tricky for me now. I'm okay. You want me to be a cop? Come here.
B
Yeah.
A
You want to be a firefighter? Here's the hoes.
B
Yeah. I'm a doctor. Oh, what do you need?
A
Let me check that.
B
Yeah, let me give you all. That's good.
A
Let me Give you that pap smear. Yeah, all that's fine, right? What?
B
I'm a plumber. Your pipe's broken. Mine's not.
A
Now my. Okay, now, my problem is, I think I would have. The problem with role play is if she was like, okay, today you're Dwayne the Rock Johnson.
B
No, If. No. Oh, no. Like, if she said, I want you to take your football jersey off, Travis Kelsey.
A
I was.
B
There's no way. There's no way that I or he is ready for performance. If she is name dropping a real human being and she's thinking, it's me.
A
Yeah, no, that's where it starts. Like, she's like, come on, Klay Thompson. Like, I'm like, come on, man. I can't shoot that well.
B
I'm going bang bang Clay Thompson for three.
A
Now, that's.
B
No, you can give me a profession. You can even give me some weird, wicked. Like, we gotta escape something. And we're just. We're butt naked.
A
Oh, no, I don't want to leave my bed. Oh, oh, you want to explore the house?
B
Oh, man. I got a nice pantry. I got a. I got. I got counters everywhere. Hell, I got a staircase.
A
You wanna.
B
It could be. Oh, I'm coming for you butt naked. I'm like.
A
That'S a twist.
B
No, no, I'm kidding. Oh, no.
A
Now?
B
No. Yeah, now we're. Now we're. No, that's okay.
A
I've never been asked to do it. I asked. You've asked.
B
I asked to do it.
A
What was her answer?
B
No. She is a lover of our bed. She's a this. Now I am. I am starting to sweat. I am starting to sweat. She's a great wife, a great lover. That's that.
A
Yeah. But I'm just saying, for me, at some point, like, if I'm in a relationship for seven years, right, at some point, you're gonna have to put a collar on me. Oh, wow. No, at some point, make me bark. You know what I mean?
B
You're like, now that hurts.
A
Oh, well, we came in.
B
She got that little. Yes.
A
Okay.
B
Oh, my God.
A
It's all comedy party. It's. It's comedy podcast.
B
It is.
A
It's comedy podcast. I was just wondering, because I do see you. Like, I genuinely cannot. I can imagine in a lot of circumstances, I cannot imagine you intimate. And I've tried very hard to visualize it. Visualize it. Like, I've googled, like, people that would resemble you just to.
B
Like, you have googled other people that resemble me naked to resemble.
A
I'VE seen you naked and that's what makes me not being able to see it.
B
You saw me in a vulnerable light. I was. I was small and in a shower and I was turned away.
A
And that didn't help. I was like that. I can't see the rhythm.
B
I'm very white. That one, that one video. The guy in Best Buy, he's listening to the headphones.
A
He's like.
B
Okay, oh, last question on sex and X rays.
A
I love it.
B
And then we'll get off.
A
I don't care.
B
Is there too much? Is. Is there too much? Can. Can you overdo love making? Do you know what I'm saying? Like. Like that guy, like, in the Best Buy meme, it's obviously, he's fully clothes in a Best Buy. He's putting on headphones and he is like grinding. Like full grinding.
A
Yeah.
B
Is there a point where you're just showing out at this point?
A
Like, are you talking about publicly or what are you talking about?
B
Do you think that there is from male or female side that there's. You're. You could do too much. Like, you're overdoing it. You're overselling.
A
Oh, oh, yeah. I've experienced. It's like, I am not doing that to you. I. I do not have those powers, man. Let's keep it quiet. You should know. Podcast this episode is brought to you by Factor.
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B
You should know Podcast the Other day, I was coming home for. I don't even know where I was at, but I know I was in the car by myself, and I was coming back home. And in my neighborhood, when you enter in my neighborhood, it is like a. It is like a ball of joy and peace. There's always kids out playing at the park, all these things, right? So I came in this back entrance, and it's like, right when day is turning to night, okay? And I go down this street, and there's this. There's this young girl. She's probably Maybe Pierce's age, 18, 19, okay? And so at the street that I came, I hit the end of the street, very abrupt stop, because I remembered wifey said, gotta go by mailbox. Okay? Mailbox is to the right, house to the left, girls right in front of my car. So I hit this mean stop, and she turns around and looks at me, and I swear to God, worst timing ever. It turned night enough to where my lights kicked on. So she turns around and looks at me. My lights kick on. Right on. I swear to God. And she's looking at me, and I'm like. And she. In my car, there's not a ton of tint. So she sees me, and I'm probably tired because that's what new fathers are like. I'm like this, right? I'm sitting there looking at her dead in the face. The lights kick on. It's bright on her. And she started. Now, this is the crazy part. She was walking toward the left. Remember I said houses to the left. She's walking towards the left. She. We all know what she's thinking.
A
Yeah.
B
So she switches her route, starts going to the right. You have to go to the right to go to the mailbox. She starts taking off to the right, kind of like a quicker walk. And I go, hit that slow turn. Hit that slow turn. The lights perfectly, like, follow her walking. And then she looks at me again, and she does, like, a triple take.
A
She's really like this.
B
Like, she's terrified.
A
I felt.
B
I felt awful.
A
Yeah.
B
But the last thing I'm gonna do is roll down my window, go. Hey. She would take off running. So I'm like, I just got to let this play out. She'll be fine. Obviously, I know myself. I'm not doing it.
A
Yeah.
B
So I go to the mailbox and park. She's already far, like, past. I get the mailbox. I turn around, go back to the left. I am not shitting you. The. It's like little streets. They can connect and stuff. So she was gone and far enough, and she turned back left where she was originally walking, right?
A
She.
B
We meet at this intersection. I swear to God, I felt so bad. I meet at the stop sign, and she's at the edge of the street. She looks at my car, sees it, takes off on a full sprint.
A
Oh, shit.
B
And in that predicament, what do I do?
A
Honestly, dry fast after and tell her.
B
Hey, nothing to worry about.
A
That's the last thing you do.
B
Just let her run off and think she's running for her literal life?
A
No, what do I do?
B
Because I got to go that way, too.
A
The first thing. Okay, that's all. That's on you.
B
That is not on me. That is on the ecosystem.
A
It was.
B
It was immense timing. Like, it was. It was wicked timing.
A
The only thing you could have done is. Is nip it in the bud immediately. And this might sound crazy, but as soon as you see that she's concerned that you're gonna take her, you roll your window down, be like, hey, I'm not taking you. That's.
B
That's what people that take people say, hey, I'm not here for you. Just hop in. We can talk about it. And then you put them in handcuffs and you drive off. That's exactly what I didn't want to happen. That is exactly what I couldn't say. So what did I do?
A
What'd you do?
B
I just followed her a little more because I had to get to my house. She took off running to the left. I drove my ass to my house to the left, and she was sweating.
A
Do you ever.
B
She was like. She was, like, full sprinting away from me.
A
Do you have one of those neighborhood apps where everybody in the neighborhood talks to each other?
B
There's a Facebook group, but I'm not in it. I bet she dropped a paragraph.
A
Oh, my God. Yeah.
B
She goes, black sedan. It's a white guy, awfully tired, big beard. He tried to get that the next day. I'm like, this some dad like, tackles.
A
Yeah, it was.
B
It was.
A
That's the worst timing ever.
B
Oh, my. It was unreal.
A
Yeah.
B
I immediately walked inside, started now. It's not funny. But I started cackling with live.
A
Yeah. Just due to the traumatized that girl.
B
This girl's really, like, kind of. She's gonna be up.
A
Oh, yeah, you.
B
She thinks someone was just trying to get her 100%. The lights. I follow her. We meet again.
A
Follow her more. And now she told her parents about it, and now she has less permissions to roam streets now.
B
And it looks. Oh, my God. She's. She's Harry Potter. She's under the staircase. But it also looks worse because she never saw me stop at the mailbox.
A
Oh. So now it's a wonder.
B
She's like, is. Was he waiting on me?
A
Yeah.
B
Because I wouldn't stop. You have to get out. It's like the big community ones, like, all of them are at one spot.
A
Yeah.
B
So I get out, get it. There's hunt, like, hundreds. There's, like, 20 little things I got to grab. And then by the time all that's done, she's made enough ground where we meet again. But in her mind, I went that way. She took off. I stopped, and she's like, bro, she's probably messed up. I think if you ever see this.
A
I don't know.
B
I literally don't know your name. I don't know who you are, but I'm sorry.
A
I think the best thing you could do is just hope that you run into her again and just be like, hey, Yeah, I changed my mind on taking you. I was going to.
B
Funny enough. You look really similar to the target. I'm sorry. I was supposed to get another girl. You look awfully close to her. Have a nice day.
A
That might not be good.
B
No, I mean, that's.
A
To the target.
B
No, no. I mean, hell, she thinks I'm an assassin. Okay, bro, it was. It was. Oh, my God. It was so. It wasn't funny, but I know what I'm saying.
A
I brought up that. Those. Those neighborhoods apps right? Where you, like. I think that's the worst thing ever. Those.
B
Something else.
A
Those community. Neighborhood apps.
B
Right.
A
And my parents are in one.
B
Everyone's parents are.
A
But it's not one of those ones where there's a discourse. I guess there is, but basically, it's just like, pings, alerts, like, hey, somebody saw my Amazon package. Hey, a hyena just killed my poodle. Hey. Too many black people on this park. You know what I mean? It's like, that's what the things are saying.
B
Hey, the five on five games getting really loud.
A
Dude, I'm saying, like, I think at a certain point, I hope I am never at that.
B
I play God. We never, ever touch that level.
A
Oh, Liv is definitely gonna get there.
B
Liz already there. She's already in those groups, I swear.
A
Oh, really?
B
She's in, like, the Moms of Blank. Moms of Blank. Single Stay at Home Moms of Blank. Housewives of Blank. I'm like, what are you doing? Like, live your life and love it, dude.
A
And it's. The funny thing is, so I go back home to Austin, and my parents are in there, and, like, we'll all be in the living room, and we don't talk. So we're all in the living room, like, on our phones, and I'm like. I'm looking at Preston, my mom, my dad. I'm like, what are y'all looking at? And they're like, somebody broke in two houses down. And then they're talking. They're like. And they just talk shit about, like, neighbors and what they say, bro, that's.
B
I mean. And I can see the drama part, but, like, that's what they're in it for. Exactly. The drama is like, dramas thrilling to anybody.
A
I'm not really, like, I don't care.
B
Drama's nice.
A
I. I love. Never been into it.
B
God, love a good draw. Just a cup of tea and spilled right on your lap. I.
A
Boy, I'm not a cheeseme kind of girl. What a cheeseme.
B
What hell's a cheeseme?
A
Cheeseme.
B
Cheeseman. Cheese me.
A
No, no, it cheeseme.
B
What is it? What are you saying?
A
Chisme.
B
Chisme. Now you've changed it.
A
Chisme.
B
Cheese me. Yeah. What is that? Is it a snack? Is it a group? What is a chisme? It sounds like saying, kiss me, and I'm getting close. What does a chisme. I swear to God, I don't know what a chisme is.
A
Stop saying it like that.
B
Chiss me. What is it? Are you gonna chiss me?
A
No, no, no. I'm saying no. Why'd you stand? No, I didn't. No, I didn't. You literally said no, I did not. I genuinely never pointed at you to come to her towards me.
B
Oh, my God. Oh, my gosh. He did.
A
I don't like when you tower me.
B
Yes. No, you went.
A
I literally didn't do that.
B
Okay, I'm getting angry.
A
It's. It's. It's like gossip in Spanish.
B
Oh, yeah. Oh. I thought it was, like, some undercover agency or something. Yeah. Like a chiss.
A
But I never want to get to that. I would never want to get to that age where I'm looking at the group chats of the neighborhood, like, who's doing what and what's doing what at that point, just put me down.
B
Oh, yeah. No, I don't, like, don't just black. Literally spray paint my windows. Like, I don't see anything. I don't get something.
A
Put me down.
B
Right.
A
Okay, so I got a question for you. Say I'M on my deathbed, right?
B
Oh. Oh, no.
A
I'm laying down. I'm on my deathbed. I can talk to you, right? My eyes are straight, little loose. I can't do this or that. I can't look left or right, but I can talk. You come to my deathbed, right? You get granted one wish. Right. But not one wish. You get the power of. You can ask me literally anything you ever wanted to, and I. And I will answer it honestly.
B
Oh, my.
A
What would you ask me on my deathbed? If I have to answer honestly?
B
Does it really hook. I'm just kidding. I'm kidding. I'm kidding.
A
Happen.
B
I'm kidding. He's not. I'm not kidding. I'm kidding. Holy. That is a. That is a wicked prompt. Yeah, that's like. God, this runs answers.
A
Yes to the left. This is built like a nine iron dog. All right.
B
Okay, that. Man, this is such a blank canvas. Okay. I can break it down.
A
Anything. That's last question. And I had to answer it honestly.
B
I could. Okay, well, you're gonna be, like, 50, so it could be. You're not living that long.
A
I just got it.
B
That took you so long, bro. I. I could go multiple ways. I could go something. Because as of now, I don't have one of these questions, but, like, say. Say this big event happened, like, here in a couple years or something, and, like. And you just lied your ass off. And I believed it. But then I slowly started to, like, see the lie. I feel like, did you really do that in Vegas, or did you really crash Michael? Like, some shit like that. But I don't have that yet. As of now, I'd probably say, like. Like, who's getting all your shit? Like, like, how much of your stuff am I getting? Because you got a lot of stuff, dog. And I think it should go to me.
A
That's probably the worst last question ever.
B
I mean, I don't. I don't have, like.
A
You want to know what I'd ask you?
B
Oh, God, not really. Oh, my God. What would you ask?
A
So you're on your deathbed, right? Okay, I get one question. I like that. I get one question to ask him. You're laying there. You can always be straight out of your peripheral. You see me walking up to you, and I got my arm around Liv, and I go, are you sure this is okay?
B
Oh, I literally go. And I just die right there. You sick? No, you would not. No, first off, she wouldn't. If she did, I would haunt her. Like, no one's Business. It wouldn't even be funny.
A
I'd walk living there. Camera. You sure this is okay?
B
Oh, my God. You'd kill me right then and there. That would be. That would be my syringe of whatever. I would just die. That's right there. No shot.
A
That would be a great last question. I just think you in absolute confusion on your way out.
B
Like, you're just like, I have just filled with question marks. Entering eternity. I'm just like, no, no, bro, I don't. I. I don't.
A
You.
B
Your darkest secrets don't excite me. And I don't. Oh, everyone has some dark.
A
I don't.
B
Oh, you got some dark secrets. Yes.
A
What is it?
B
You got some dark secrets.
A
What?
B
Got some dark secrets about your past?
A
What?
B
I was kind of just. I kind of wanted to keep fishing to see if maybe you'd bite.
A
There's nothing that's. Yeah, you're.
B
You're very. You're an open guy. You always talk about honest. You are.
A
I'd say everything on this podcast.
B
I would. I probably genuinely say, like, where. Like, where's the hard drive that contains all your passwords and informations, including bank accounts?
A
Jack's the guy that got the TikTok. I don't know. Better to ask the you should know podcast. This episode of the you should know podcast is brought to you by booking.com booking. Yeah.
B
Every time I use booking.com to find a place to stay in the US I know they're going to have exactly what I'm looking for.
A
They have a huge variety of options, from hotels to vacation rentals. And I know I can find exactly what I'm looking for.
B
I found that booking.com has something for absolutely everybody.
A
I'm going to be completely honest. A lot of people might not like to hear this, especially you as a new father. Whenever I plan a trip to go to the beach, I like beaches with no kids.
B
Oh, I'm right there with.
A
I don't want kids around my beach. I want to lay there with a little margarita, have a good time. And on booking.com with their filter system, they make it easy to find exactly what I am looking for.
B
That's right, Pete. No matter who you are, no matter what you like or don't like.
A
Kids, beaches, no kids.
B
Booking.com helps you find the stay. That is ridiculously right to.
A
For you find exactly what you're booking for on booking.combooking.
B
Yeah.
A
Now on to the rest of the episode. You should know podcast. I saw this viral tweet Right.
B
Oh God.
A
And it was definitely a question that I. If I would have asked it, I would have gotten roasted on the Internet, ridiculed. But since somebody else asked it, it's free game. I'm gonna ask it here.
B
Go for it.
A
How did. I saw this on Twitter, so it's not my thoughts.
B
Okay. I love the preface.
A
Making sure. How did people wake up on time before there were alarm clocks?
B
Jesus. Now that. Now that.
A
That's a goddamn cue.
B
Now that. Cuz the Lord himself knows if I don't set an alarm clock, I'm either waking up at 6am before the birds or you can catch me at 1:30.
A
I missed 100%. It's never his neck on time.
B
Nothing like good time. Yeah, bro, that. I feel like you without an alarm clock would die quicker.
A
What do you mean?
B
In life.
A
What do you mean?
B
You, Your natural alarm clock is disturbingly early.
A
Yeah.
B
Like so early. And I feel like you would just. Those days would just pile up. You're just losing hours on hours, losing hours. Going to bed at 2, waking up at 5, 100, going to bed at 2, waking up at 6.
A
But you know, how did they do it? Like. Like the only thing I could think of is there was a city bell, right? There is like a huge city bell that they had the local ogre go to some asshole in slacks.
B
Like.
A
Everyone'S like, but that was my initial thought. But then I was like, how is that guy waking up at the exact time every day to go ring the bell?
B
Who's ringing his bell? Someone's working the graveyard shift. Someone's like, hey, Phil, you gotta go. He just goes to bed, he's so tired. Phil's like, Phil goes up this 40 pound hammer. He's like just dragging through the city.
A
Dude. It makes no sense.
B
Well, okay, I think, I think a very important thing is what time period are we talking about?
A
Before there were alarm clocks? Okay, there are still times.
B
I know, I know, but I'm talking about. We're talking like United States. Like in the. Maybe 1900. I don't know when an alarm clock was made. The alarm clock. In what year? Yeah, we're talking way back when. We're talking like it doesn't.
A
I don't know, just before when it was sun.
B
Sun's an animal.
A
Yeah, but I'm saying like whenever you had to get somewhere at a certain.
B
Time, there were jobs, infrastructure.
A
Yes. Like the world was still revolving how it is now. You have to go get on the assembly line for Henry Ford.
B
I'm liking the bell theory.
A
But there was no.
B
Exactly.
A
It doesn't make sense.
B
Have to have a fill in your city that rings the bell. Or a great friend that somehow is like addicted to coffee or something. You got to have a budd.
A
How did that work? How did jobs work at that time? They were like, hey, when you wake up, come by. Like, how does that.
B
Hey, just as soon as you feel like it, come give us 11 hours of your day. Yeah.
A
And they're like 7 year olds working at that time.
B
Oh, my God.
A
Dude, how?
B
Okay, genuinely, they had. They had to just been so wired. But like, what happens in a long day? What happens when your boss. It doesn't clock overtime. There's no way you're waking up the same time.
A
It doesn't even matter if you're super wired to have your mind wake up at this exact time every day. That's an anomaly.
B
I don't think so. I think it's more normal to just.
A
Wake up at an. At the same time every day at the same time. If there are circumstances like Cam, that is. You cannot just wake up at any time, the exact time every day. You cannot wake up. You cannot do that.
B
You can get pretty close.
A
You've been late here. 90%.
B
But that's traffic. If I leave a whole other 30 minutes early, that's fine. I'm saying when I was teaching and I would set an alarm.
A
Right.
B
Right. Every day, right before that alarm would go off, I would naturally, like, my eyes would wake up, like probably five minutes, eight minutes before. Like, it's just because you wake up at the same time every day.
A
But you get accustomed to that alarm.
B
In the beginning. In the beginning.
A
Exactly. So I'm saying you had. You had paranoia. Is the best alarm clock.
B
It's got to be dog.
A
I don't know if anybody else experiences this. Whenever you have something big in the morning. Right. Big. The next morning, you go to bed. Oh, my God. And you wake up. You wake up out of your sleep, but you didn't hear the alarm clock. You're like, what the. And you check your phone and there's like 30 minutes left.
B
Oh, my God.
A
And it's like, oh, my God. Okay. But then you start to play with Satan. And then. So you're like, I'm going back.
B
Yeah, you do. You see, you start shaking hands with Lucifer. You go, I can get another 25.
A
Exactly. But you check to see if your alarm clock is still said. So you know. Right.
B
You know that, that shit. Oh, my God. Especially when it's like Something that involves transportation. Like, you gotta. Like your Uber schedule, or you gotta get on a plane.
A
Yeah.
B
Oh, my God. I wake up four times. I'll wake up an hour into the sleep.
A
Every time, it's the same jump scare. It's the same jump scare.
B
Two hours later, I'm like. You start getting mad and your sleep is, dude.
A
And then. And then if you play with Satan for too long and you miss it.
B
And you're like, my God, dude. Oh, when you play with him, when you play with Satan and you think you're hitting snooze and you actually hit stop. Oh.
A
Oh, yeah. I'm the king of that. I'm the king of that. Oh, my God.
B
I just thought of something or her.
A
For before the alarm clocks were around, we didn't rely on human beings. We didn't rely on the guy hitting the bell. It was that goddamn rooster. It was.
B
There was a lot of birds.
A
It was the neighborhood rooster.
B
Just. Oh, my God. Everybody was like, kill that. Like, take his neck. And you're just sitting there, bro. Oh, my God. Some people have incredibly annoying alarm clocks.
A
Yeah.
B
Like the Martian one.
A
That's what I got.
B
And I get it. To wake you up. But imagine a living being.
A
Oh, my God. Every day.
B
That's like your son, he just went, oh, no, seriously. But his is at least semi cute. Then you're just, man, he's like bird with a gobbly little neck going like, screaming, no. Oh, I'd shoot it. I would end that.
A
But then you'd be late to work.
B
Yeah, work would have to.
A
That's exactly how it happens, bro. Oh, dude, waking up might be top five most anxiety things in my life, dude.
B
100, dude.
A
It's when I wake up, my day is ruined. Or, like, just. I am blessed to see another day, but my mind is at the darkest at the first of a wake.
B
I remember when you told me that, like, off pod, we were just on a call, and you're like, bro, waking up scares me, dude.
A
It's like I. It's immediate panic. And I don't know what kind of medicine I need to not panic when I wake up, but it is pure shock.
B
You said. You said you wake up and you take a big breath, dude.
A
Yeah. Like, you go, oh, yeah, I check my phone to see, like, who's dead. Like. Like, I am. I am going through it. Another thing that gives me anxiety that shouldn't.
B
Oh, there's. That's a. That's a lengthy list.
A
Do you know? So I've told this on the podcast before about how I sometimes forget how to do the most normal things. I forget how to eat sometimes. I forgot how to breathe and pee. Right.
B
This week, little brain farts.
A
This week, I was having the hardest time ever with door handles. Like, not a mean, not a little knob. Actual handle that comes out. Because for the life of me, I could not remember, do I pull that up or down?
B
It doesn't matter.
A
It doesn't. But what's the right way?
B
Down, I would assume.
A
But isn't it easier to go up?
B
It is easier, but we're also. You gotta think we're also. Our hands are lower. Our hands are lower.
A
I've been. I've been this way for a long time.
B
No, but I'm saying that's why it might be easier for us.
A
No, but I'm saying I've been like that for a long time. Where I prefer to be up. Like, I've been eye to eye with the bitch.
B
You're just like, yes or no.
A
Is it not easier to lift the door handle up?
B
It is. Well, then go down. Naturally. Pulling is easier than pushing.
A
You're pulling either way. No, if you're putting a door handle down, you are pushing it down.
B
You're literally on top of it, pushing it down.
A
And then when you're doing this, what are you doing?
B
You're pulling.
A
You're pushing it. You're put. You're. You're pushing it up.
B
If I was to grab this and.
A
It'S right here, that's pushing it up.
B
Or a pulling motion. You're pulling something toward.
A
Pulling this. This way.
B
What is this? Pulling it towards you exact. You're doing that with the handle.
A
You're going straight up. This is time for your condolences.
B
I might be sorry. I might be sorry.
A
Yeah.
B
Yeah. I might be. Yeah. I'm just.
A
I've always. I've. It's my. My hardest ever. Like this week, figuring out the door handle. I've been sitting at a door for two minutes this week. It's. Honestly, I don't know.
B
It's some up here to figure it out.
A
I need doctors.
B
No, we need to. I mean, yeah, but we need to get. We need to find out why. I feel like once we find that, why, it'll be like the book of the dead. I just book a treasure that we uncover.
A
I think it's a mix of anxiety, ADHD and a little. You can mute it for YouTube.
B
Little anxiety ADHD, little blankety blank and a vice.
A
Yeah.
B
On the back end.
A
Yeah. It's like oh, my God. Shouldn't spend that much time at a door, you know what I mean?
B
It was the four glasses of Johnny Walk Dog and the 200 insurgents I killed in Team Deathmatch. You wake up, you're like, yeah, bro, that I. Oh, okay. On the, on the, on the thing of waking up real quick. When you wake up, you're different because you immediately, you're in so much fear. You take a huge breath. I feel like that jump starts a system. System. I am like a slow dying patient where when I wake up, it takes me genuinely 20 minutes to like see straight and hear things. I swear to God. Especially now with these late night shifts.
A
Yeah.
B
I wake up and I. I am actually wobbling around my room. I am not drunk. I did not drink the night before. I'm wobbling. I can't see straight.
A
Yeah.
B
And I can't hear.
A
Yeah.
B
Have you ever experienced that?
A
100%. Mine's more of a fear based thing because I've left my contacts in for months, dude, and I gotta, I gotta like.
B
You have dailies.
A
I gotta, gotta rub my eye. I gotta get in there to see something. You know what I mean?
B
I genuinely don't. I swear to God, I don't know what you mean.
A
And once there's a little bit of oil in there, I'm like, once we've warmed that engine up, I'm like, dude, I.
B
But I said that because I have recently been. I have been stubbing the shit out of my feet in my room when I wake up at night.
A
That's top five worst.
B
Oh, oh, my God. And then. But I'm holding this little sack of joy.
A
Oh, my God.
B
I feel handicapped. I feel like I can't do anything to release. And sometimes I just want to bite something. I look down, I'm like, I can't bite him. And I. Oh, my God. It has been like, seriously pissing me off because every night it's on the, on the foot of the bed, on the recliner, on the door, pitch black.
A
Yes.
B
I can't see shit. I'm holding the baby and I'm just like.
A
You know what makes stubbing your toe worse is having somebody in the room with you and laughs.
B
Oh, dude.
A
If you're laughing at my. Dude, I'm okay. I mean, I can take a joke, right? You joke on me on anything. If I kick something, if I stub my toe, if I'm in pain and you're like, you're about to feel this.
B
Pain, you know, that is so, so you.
A
He.
B
This man will laugh and joke at anything. If something is. If it crosses that line to where he's experiencing actual pain. He is. He doesn't even like you anymore.
A
Oh, no.
B
You're like, bro, shut the. And I'm like, oh, oh, okay. Sorry.
A
No. Yeah. I'm ready to send insurgents. Like, I'm. Oh, my God, dude, that's the worst.
B
Oh, my God.
A
And I think that's messed up. At what point is it okay to laugh at somebody's pain and not laugh at some shame?
B
You. You would laugh at any pain that I received. He would laugh at any injury that I received.
A
That's not true.
B
But if we flip the script and you stub your little grossly long toe and I chuckle, I'm gonna have someone outside of my door. And that's how that works. No, I don't think that's true. Hypocrisy.
A
I don't think that's true. Peyton.
B
If I got up and fell face flat first on that concrete.
A
Yeah, you would.
B
You would cackle, then ask if I was okay. That's fact. That is a fact.
A
The reason I left, I was thinking, if you fell over, right now all this equipment's over. All his equipment's on the ground.
B
I go, oh.
A
Yeah. I mean, there's certain things I do laugh at that I shouldn't. Like, like people breaking up. And I'm not gonna lie. It's majority of the tick tock couples. And it's not funny because it is like, that is sad that you're breaking love. That is sad that you're breaking up. But, like, come on. It's like, there's these. Why are we making videos?
B
Oh, my God.
A
Yeah.
B
I'm so sad.
A
And then recording. What is the. What is the appropriate way to break up with somebody, dude?
B
Face to face. Get it all out before they can ask questions. Get the hell out of dodge.
A
You take your girl out to dinner, and you're like, you sit down. The waiter brings a water. Don't ask for appetizers. It's over quick. Yeah, like, hey, let you know, not feeling any more checks on you. Right.
B
That's what I was gonna say, my hungry ass. I'd be like, let's get a whole dinner. And I go, hey, Jessica. Really not working out. You're hella annoying. You need to do better. See you later. She's paying. Fine. And you walk out.
A
What's the worst way to break up with somebody?
B
Okay, I'm not gonna say specifics because.
A
Just give a scenario so we can.
B
I Believe she does. Watch this, but I heard someone that is a friend of a friend of a friend got broken up with by her person that they lived. She lived with this man in the same house and he broke up with her via email. And now that is up. That is the biggest, biggest all caps you I have ever seen. For you to be clocked into a job and you take a two minute break to email someone you live with, shit's not working. That is, that is wicked. And I swear to God, I'm not making that up.
A
That somebody really got broken up with through email by somebody they lived with.
B
Friend of, of a friend of a friend of Liv's that she like was. Liv was told this and now I'm saying it, I'm hiding for secrets.
A
Yeah, okay. But yes, that genuinely happened.
B
Actually happened. They lived together and then it goes on. She said when she got back, his was already packed. And I'm like, this man, this man had some demons. He found something out about this girl because there's, there's no way sends the email. Probably goes, hey boss, I gotta get out of here a little early. Speeds of the house, clears the shit.
A
Okay, that's almost like some serial killer. Like imagine you're living with your girlfriend, right? You go to bed or you go to bed with your girl. Oh, you know that in the back of your mind this is gonna happen tomorrow morning. That, yeah, he's laying down, they're cuddling, he's big spoon in his girl, looking at the back of her head being like, you don't even know what's gonna be in your inbox in the morning, bitch. He goes, good night. Wakes up, right? They're. They're in the house together in the morning cooking eggs and shit.
B
Oh, he's got a new pep in his step today.
A
And he's like, hey, babe.
B
Oh, dude.
A
And then she's like, oh, don't worry honey, I'm gonna clean that lady. He's like, don't even worry about it. She goes to work, she goes, what do you mean?
B
He goes, oh, don't worry about it.
A
She goes to work. She logs onto her work computer. He's at home. Like this sends a goddamn email, dude, to whom this regard?
B
Yeah, to whom. This is my best concern. We're through. I wanna sin.
A
I would pay so much money to see this email.
B
Meet this man.
A
Based off how he ended the email. Like, what did he like, end it like best?
B
Sorry, good luck. Next. And then, oh my God, he had.
A
That U haul prepared to have everything moved Out.
B
Or he has a dually truck. There's no in between. He either doesn't have a. Or he had this plotted, planned, and scheduled. That poor girl, bro.
A
You know that. No, honestly, it does suck for her.
B
Oh, my God.
A
But you have to realize the comedy.
B
Of that genius that this guy has. He kissed the back of her head. He rolled over and smiled and went to sleep.
A
He went. Imagine. Imagine if he cc'd the new girl.
B
If he gave the new broad a carbon copy. Oh, my God. He goes, you better act right. This is how I did the last one. I'd be like this. This man needs to go to jail.
A
That is sick. Breaking up through an email has to be top tier. Top tier.
B
What could. What could top that? Like, genuinely. What could talk. That. Breaking up through parents? What, like breaking up with someone through their parents?
A
How would that work.
B
Ms. Joe? I know, I know. It ain't working, though. I know. Your daughter was great. She was, but it's just. It's not my time.
A
Were you breaking up with my daughter?
B
I'm breaking up with your daughter.
A
Have you. Have you told her?
B
No. That's why I'm here first. Ms. Jo, I just. I wanted to tell you. You've been. You've been great for me, and, you know, me, me. Me and Sydney, we just weren't seeing eye to eye, and I just. It's. I'm gonna have to let her go.
A
Oh, I appreciate that. That you're coming to me. Before you tell her.
B
Yes, ma'am. You got a big old foot. Ms. Joe, wait.
A
What's wrong with this? I said before you tell her.
B
Oh, no, I'm not telling her, Ms. Jo.
A
I'm not.
B
No, my truck's packed. I was telling you. You can. You can relay the message. I'm going to. I'm going to California now.
A
I don't like you anymore. You're gonna break up with my daughter through me? With that. Why are you telling me?
B
You were. You've just been a respectful woman from the start. I've viewed you as a mom. It's just not working. I felt the right to. I owed you an explanation. I don't owe your daughter shit anymore, Mr. Joe, that's. That's just the way it is.
A
Do you think that's actually ever happened?
B
100%.
A
No way, bro.
B
Do I. I am on the side of. There's almost nothing you can name that hasn't happened in the history of mankind. There's so many people, so many different lives, so many options. If you could say do you think a squirrel farted, arse, farted fire and a turtle captured him? I'd be like, I don't know. It might be okay at this point. No, I'm sorry. So passionate. Because the other day, what was. It was a discussion about the same thing. I was like, I think everything's happened almost like everything is a remake. There's a lot, a lot of. Just try me.
A
There's not a mountain. Oh, oh, I heard you swallow.
B
Oh, I heard you swallow it.
A
A mountain hasn't had sex with a tree.
B
Okay. Real things. Oh, real things. That would be. Oh, it'd have to be a California. It'd have to be a California redwood. It would have to be a redwood if it was a damn oak tree in Everest.
A
Okay, okay. A tornado, a volcano and earthquake have not all been at the same place at the same time.
B
A tornado, a volcano and an earthquake never happened. But that. But there has to be validity. We don't even know if that can happen. Okay, that's what I'm saying. Say something with humans.
A
Watch this. No, no, watch this. A tornado, a hurricane and earthquake, a tsunami. What's another natural disaster and a wildfire have it all happen at different parts of the world at the exact same time.
B
I would. I would argue that. I would argue that. Like hell. I guarantee we could find that.
A
You think of the goddamn dream team of natural disasters all went for 30 break. That is not happened. Bro.
B
I'm talking about the original thing we said, like you said. Do you think this has ever happened? Like a guy breaking up with his girlfriend? Yes. Do I think a guy. And now you're getting to the point. I'm thinking damn near about everything. But it doesn't all have to be documented. That's the thing.
A
I don't think a whole family has sneezed at the same time.
B
I've sneezed with my parents at the same time.
A
I'm talking about grandparents, cousins, immediate family.
B
I'd argue that that's happened.
A
One, two, three, Kazoon. Hide, bitch. That's not happening.
B
I'm telling you, there's no.
A
I think you're too optimistic about. That's the only thing you're optimistic about in the world.
B
Yeah, but I'm. It's. It's scary. That's why there's. There's that sense of fear. It's a little bit of fear. Okay. Weirdly enough, you know your gps, right? Strange segue.
A
Yes.
B
Your gps, you enter in somewhere, it tells you your time, right?
A
Yes.
B
The other day, in the car I entered to come here to this building.
A
Yeah, to work.
B
Okay. They gave me three options, right? One was 50 minutes, one was an hour 12. One was an hour and 47 minutes. Now, I said oopsie, on my part, I must have hit don't use tolls, right? Oh, no. All three of those options were including me paying to drive on pavement. Why the would I pick an hour 47? Why would I pick something that is double the time?
A
How did that work?
B
Why is that an option? Apple, Steve Jobs, whoever it is, why Rest in peace. Whoever's in charge of that, don't ever do that again.
A
There's no way that.
B
I'm not kidding.
A
How can there be three different variables of getting to the same place, all using toll roads, and one of them is double that? How does that happen? Do you make a U turn and try again?
B
Did you program a pit stop for me? Am I filling up?
A
They're like, you're gonna be thirsty.
B
You're gonna. Hey, you're gonna want that. Hey, there's a bucky's right there. You're gonna stop.
A
We've seen your doordash bill. You're hungry.
B
Like, like, what on earth?
A
No way. I swear. Swear to you. Did you screenshot this? Because I really want to see.
B
But I laughed at it. I immediately went to my notes and wrote it down.
A
Honestly, I think that's an older person thing.
B
What?
A
Taking the long route.
B
That. Okay.
A
But the only thing that's confusing me is the fact that it was a toll road because I just don't see the possibility of that.
B
Maybe, maybe one of them was just a highway it I don't have avoid tolls on. So first off, when you enter in something, what's the goal?
A
Get there quickest. Yeah.
B
What is the quickest route?
A
Yeah.
B
So it gives me three options that are not even remotely near.
A
Right. Tollway.
B
Tollway and what? Okay, one was a tollway at one part of it, but then it wasn't.
A
Okay. So it said you literally have to get on this because there's no road.
B
I'm paying money regardless.
A
Yes.
B
Get me there in 52 minutes.
A
Maybe it's like, okay, you want to pay $5 in tolls on this trip or like 75 cents using this one little thing. Thing.
B
Now that.
A
That's where it comes in.
B
Probably I'll start taking the long route.
A
If that's my dad does that. My dad has literally like a vendetta against toll roads, bro.
B
That is an old person thing, bro. This wasn't here when we were driving.
A
It's not even that. He's like, I'm not spending money to draft. Like that's his whole thing. And I'm like, dad, like, you drive a Jeep, right? He drives my brother's old Jeep.
B
You're buying a ton of gas.
A
So much gas starting and stopping on these damn back roads and you're driving 35 miles per hour, bro, that, that.
B
Is such a our parents thought process though.
A
It's the worst.
B
I already damn. I damn. Saved up, bought the car, got the insurance. Yeah, I tricked it out a little bit. I filled gas up. Now I gotta pay to use the road. Yeah, bro, that is. Oh my God.
A
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B
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B
All right, I have a. A role playing, maybe a little role play, a little game thing for you, right? Not a, but a more of a role play.
A
Right.
B
I have been watching a shit ton of TV while feeding my son. Great more amount more than I ever have before. And the last three shows that I've watched are all like secret service shows, CIA Buns, Peter Sutherland's, all those and I was watching and there was this scene that struck me right. Immediately made me think about you. And that's how you know I love you. This guy is at the head of operations and he gets shot at. And he drops down below a car and he rallies the troops and he does this little face and he's like, ready now. I said, that can't be Peyton.
A
That would.
B
Would never be Peyton. And Peyton can't do that.
A
What can't be me.
B
So my role play for you is I don't think you would be good or ready in the heat of battle if you were a secret Service agent. I feel like you'd be. I feel like you'd be the shit. Walking the President in, doing like a little task force. You'd look fly in your suit.
A
Yeah.
B
As soon as shots pop off, you're like, oh, that you would take your. And you would literally like just ditch everybody. You would absolutely run out. So I want to. I want to play a role with you. So you are.
A
It's not much of playing. I know exactly what I would do, but go ahead.
B
Yeah. Are you going to do that?
A
I didn't even vote for this. This guy. I got family, bro.
B
But the funny part is you would be qualified for the role if you had it. That's the thing. And I could. I could literally still see you going that. And you take the earpiece out.
A
Yeah.
B
You throw it and you just get out of Dodge.
A
Yeah. 100. I'm out. Why?
B
That's. But that's. Now you're not loyal. You're not loyal to your job. If I get boss in your country.
A
If I get killed right now, it being the Secret Service, guess what they're gonna do. Indeed. Dot com. Secret Service.
B
They go, close his eyes.
A
How do you get hired for this?
B
I think you get recruited. Oh, but you would really do that, Cam?
A
What else are you supposed to do?
B
Like a sad little three legged dog rolling over on its crusty back waiting to get those little nipples scratched.
A
What else are you supposed to do?
B
You're supposed to go out with honor. If I was a secret Service agent, shots fired. I'm thinking, oh, it's fourth of July. Let there be fireworks. Let there be light so I can.
A
Get in the back ad of BET magazine. Like, that's the most publicity I'm getting after getting shot by the President.
B
Oh, my God. The President doesn't shoot you. He goes, I knew he was a traitor.
A
I didn't like his knees.
B
His ankle is too loud for secrecy. Bam.
A
There was always a must falling kid's.
B
Mouth smelt too weird. But you. You really wouldn't. You wouldn't just nut up and just do it and just be that guy in that moment.
A
No. No. Hell no.
B
You are in a role of honor and responsibility. And all that goes out of the window when you hear a little nine mil. If it's enough, it's a big gun. If I'm near like a.50 cal, I might. I might duck a little bit.
A
No, because honestly, are the secret services suits made of armor?
B
You got a vest on?
A
They do.
B
They still go for red dot headshots.
A
But you, no, dude. But that scam, there's. There's rarely anything that. If I'm on the front lines of fire, I'm going out for nothing. Not you, not you, not you, not y'all.
B
No.
A
No. Nothing. Really? I value your mom. Yeah. Your dad. Yes.
B
Preston.
A
Yes.
B
Malcolm in the list. You go. That's it. You. I.
A
What?
B
No, you wouldn't take a bullet from Malcolm. Never mind. You wouldn't take.
A
No, not now. But he's got four weeks young Malcolm.
B
Like four year old Malcolm.
A
Deadly bullet.
B
Yeah.
A
Oh, no.
B
No, bro. See? Oh, my God.
A
A what? No. Well, if. Well, yeah, if I'm not dying, then, yeah, I don't care. I'll take a little bit of pain, but, like.
B
Okay, then there. Okay, then there's no. You just said it, you coward.
A
Cam. I wouldn't even take a pain. You're hired.
B
You're on salary.
A
Cam, I wouldn't even take a paintball for you, bro. Like, I'm not. That's. I don't want that. I don't give a. I like. No.
B
God.
A
What. Who signed up for that?
B
I sign up for it, but shit happens.
A
When I got signed a Social Security number, when I came into this earth, my responsibility is not taking some for you.
B
Exactly. But when I said yes to joining arms with you, I in my mind said, if a gun is ever pointed at him like that, I'm jumping in the middle.
A
Good for you, bro. Thanks. What do you want? I'll put extra candles on your birthday, y'all. I'll drop some flowers off bi weekly at the casket. I don't know what's going on.
B
You're punk. Pass. You would do it the first time, never again. Like, Pierce, go put the flower. Go put the flowers in setup studio. You would. Oh, my God. Oh, my God. What would you.
A
What would you.
B
If you were in. If you were in control. Sorry. Of my tombstone.
A
Yeah.
B
What would you have it read? If we're going to do that. If I could make your tombstone and you can make mine, what would you have my tombstone read?
A
He's not in here. It exceeded the weight limit.
B
I'm not that big. I promise you, I'm not that big.
A
God bless your paw bears.
B
They're like.
A
Put the goddamn gray khali in here. What would you put on my tube, son?
B
Yours would have to read like, as stinky as he came. He left stinkier because you're dead. Probably don't smell the best.
A
Oh my God.
B
When they embalm me, oh, they're gonna be like.
A
There'S gonna be another vaccine that goes around.
B
Your shit would read, this is here simply for all of you. His real self is hanging in Pflugerville. Hanging? You said you wanted to be on the wall. You said you want to be a bust.
A
Okay.
B
Hanging on the wall.
A
No, not.
B
No, no, no. Oh, wow. No, his real self is hanging on the wall.
A
Don't like that word.
B
Hanging.
A
No say like plastered.
B
The real. The real him, actually. No, hell, that the real him is in Cameron Kennedy's closet on wheels. Yeah, that was yours. Oh, my God.
A
That.
B
That's actually kind of sad. You're really not going to be like, I genuinely believe once you get like older and shit, you start writing shit out. Like you're going to have like. Like that happened.
A
I'm have wicked wishes, dude. Oh, my God. First of all, you're cutting downstairs, making it a plaster.
B
What? What?
A
Like it's going to be like a damn trophy on your desk. That little gym jim down there. I want you to put them. I want you to wrap them in gold. Put a little plaque on it. World's best. Put it.
B
Undefeated heavyweight champions. It's your johnson. Just gold. It's like a little fish thing. Oh, my God. We put a battery in it.
A
It goes to High School Musical. We're all in there.
B
It's like.
A
The hole can talk and sing.
B
It's like, oh, my God. But there's such a hook. It just keeps hitting the wall. It's like it starts denting the wall. Oh, my God.
A
Yeah.
B
Oh, my God.
A
Yeah. Dude, your paw bears gonna have a hard time. I keep thinking about that.
B
You're have to wear surgical masks, bastard.
A
Instead of Paul Bears bringing you out for your funeral. It's a forklift cam. Everybody put your hard hat on. Casey falls, sign those waivers, right?
B
Everyone with the waiver, hold your waiver up.
A
Having to get a waiver for your wake is crazy.
B
Oh.
A
Oh, well.
B
Oh, my God.
A
I think it's time for people's God.
B
Your penis is gonna be on my wall.
A
Would you do it?
B
Because there's either two things. Either if you die young and this happens. You wouldn't.
A
In this.
B
In this. If it's a young death, that means your johnson is on my wall. Now. That would be absolutely hilarious.
A
I don't want you to take upper half of dudes, too. So, like, that's what I hate. That's where you put the thumbtacks in.
B
That's the tapestry behind it.
A
You have to go buzz it up.
B
We get a pubic bone. Chia pet. I gotta water that bitch. Give it to the face.
A
You start seeing low fruit flies. Get on that bitch. You're like, get off of him.
B
I go, this isn't your real dad. Just let it go.
A
Oh, that's sick work. Oh, my God.
B
Or the other one is, we're older and my kids already out of the house. It's just me and Liv. And every day when I go to play solitaire and drink my coffee, it's just right there.
A
You're like. You're like playing solitaire. You're like a chicken.
B
I'm deaf enough to leave the room. All right, but, bro, hit the button. Oh. Oh, my God. Oh, my God.
A
That's like a little afterlife. It's like. Like, randomly, like, oh, we got to stop. We got to get a patreon. But before that, let's get into people's favorite segment. You know what that is? Pop culture pay, and they can. Pop culture pay, and they can pow. Anything else? Anything else?
B
Straight to it. I. I am going to have questions.
A
For you, and I got answers for you. Now, my Twitter people, right at yskpot@dpsha. We talk about this often on Twitter. That's where my YSK WWE community really comes in.
B
They're.
A
They're heavy this week. Well, when you watch this, last week.
B
Yes.
A
Was the elimination chamber.
B
Tell us about it.
A
And the heel turn around the world happened. If you don't know what a heel turn is, it is basically when a good guy turns bad. That's what the phrase heel turn means. Now let's break down the elimination chamber. First of all, before we get into the heel turn of. Of the. Of a lifetime, I think that was one of the best ples of all time. That. One of the best. It used to be pay per views of all time. From. From the women's elimination chamber match. Great. From. Not a big fan of the Trish Stratus match. It's okay, Kevin. Kevin Owens and Sami Zayn had one of the best matches of all time. That was such an entertaining match. Nasty bloody match like it was. It wasn't blood, but it was insane. So good. Randy Orton returned. And that's how you know this was so good. Because Randy Orton returned. It's the least talked about thing.
B
That's very true.
A
I didn't even know that he returned.
B
Damn.
A
But every time I tweeted this, every time Randy Orton returns, some goes down because the last time he returned to WWE, CM Punk returned after like 10, 11 years.
B
Oh, so Randy brings that heat.
A
Oh my God, he's so goddamn good. Such a good pay per view. Then the elimination chamber happened. The men's elimination chamber happened. John Cena won. He punched his ticket to to face Cody Rhodes for the undisputed WWE Championship of the world at WrestleMania.
B
So is that if the winner of the elimination chamber automatically gets WWE Championship bout? So do they get the pick?
A
Yeah, I think it's pick because Royal Rumble you get to pick Jay USO won and he picked to do the Heavyweight Championship.
B
Okay. Which is currently held by who?
A
Gunther. Gunther, the big German. And so, and John Cena said, hey, before elimination Chamber after Royal Rumble, he said, hey, I'm going for 17. 17 is going to break the record for amount of championships, right? So I'm going for 17. It's best for business. It's I, I'm going to win this. I'm going to win an elimination chamber. I'm going to go to WrestleMania and win 17. So he won the elimination chamber. Everybody's, he's going, he's going to WrestleMania. Face Cody Rhodes. Cody Rhodes comes out adrenaline Amazon. So Cody Rhodes comes out in his suit, as he always does.
B
Whoa.
A
John Cena helps him into the ring because John Cena is a man to respect man of honor, Hustle, loyalty and respect.
B
Ruthless aggression.
A
A couple weeks ago, the Rock and Cody Rhodes, they've had beef for a little bit. They've had a little issues.
B
I heard of squash a little bit.
A
Yeah. The Rock has been nice to Cody Rhodes saying, you know, whenever WWE came or Monday Night Raw went on to Netflix, the Rock was saying, hey, give it up to Cody Rhodes. He's. He's really leading this company right now. You know, we've had our problems. Let's drink this taramana together. Everything's good. Everybody's a little confused, like why? Yeah, well, that's such a weird. Everybody on, what are you doing? WWE Twitter's like, what the going on? I don't like that. I Was one of those people. I was like, I don't like that. Like, we were just beefing. And now y'all are friends.
B
Yeah, fake.
A
But little did I know it was all set up, because the other week, the Rock said, hey, Cody, good friends now. I want your soul. He said, you give me your soul. If you sell your soul to me, I'm the biggest star in the world. I can get you anything you want. I can open every Hollywood door for you. I can take you past the W. I can do everything. Everything. He actually said those said that? No, that's. Yeah.
B
Oh, God.
A
And so back to elimination chamber. Cody Rhodes, John Cena in the ring, they're shaking hands like, hey, I'll see you at Wrestlemania. Boom. The Rock comes out. The Rock goes up to Cody Rhodes and says, hey, this is where you make your decision. Are you going to sell your soul to me? Cody Rhodes tells the Rock, tough off. Oh, my God. That was a big pop.
B
It was huge pop. The Rock goes yourself the big pop.
A
I was like, I. Me and CJ in the living room. What the. He said, crazy. I was like, oh, my God. John Cena's in the back hype. Yeah, good. He goes up to dad Cody Rhodes up being like, hey, man, way to stay. Hustle, loyalty, respect. Way to stay for this company and all your fans. Little we do. We know John CEN already sold his soul to the Rock to get. Get 17. The rock said, how'd he do it?
B
He said.
A
He. John Cena absolutely turns heel for the first time in his 20 something year career. Now, if you're a part of the WWE, if you've been a fan of WWE. John Cena has always been the face of being good. He's been the good guy. He was never done anything bad in his career.
B
Stuck by the code played, showed up every day.
A
Yes.
B
Worked hard.
A
He's real life Superman. Yes, like that is Superman. But all of us die hard WWE fans were always kind of waiting on that heel turn. But John C. It never was going to happen. But on his retirement tour, his last year of being in the wwe, he finally did it. And when I say the amount of oh shits I had in my mind, I am so goddamn excited to see John Cena as a heel. Like it it. I have never been more happy in my life. Triple H, Paul Levesque, you are a God. You are a content God. The Rock, like it is insane how good they are.
B
Couple questions for you, right? One, this was gonna be a second question, but I can go straight into It. Because you actually just said that in terms of the. The storyline, the scripts and everything is there. Do. Do Superstars have to agree?
A
What do you mean?
B
So say Triple H says, you know, on the elimination chamber, whatever.
A
You said limitation chamber.
B
Say Triple H goes on the elimination chamber night. Cody, you're gonna go out there, talk to John after he kicks you in the nuts. Whoever Jay USO is going to cash in money in the bank, steal your belt like that.
A
Okay.
B
Does Cody have to say yes? Like, are you.
A
He works for him. So, yes.
B
See, now there is a chicken balance. Like, Is, like, not really not. Is he the only Triple H and that other guy?
A
No, there's writers. There's a whole writing team.
B
Is it like a. And you might not know, but they.
A
Talk about this all before. It's like, hey, this is the way we're going with this storyline. This is how. And especially this, like, Triple H is wwe. It's a lot more like. Like, on the side of the wrestlers. Like, hey, you can go take time off or, hey, you can. You. Let's talk about this. What do you want to do? How is this gonna work? And it's like a bit. It's more of a group think type of thing now. I think it's way. It's a way healthier thing now. Back in the old days, it was more of like, dude, Vince will go to the 11th hour. Hey, by the way, you gotta go.
B
Swanton bomb Batista tomorrow night.
A
Yeah, exactly. It's like. And so. Yeah, and I think. Think so.
B
There is. There is ultimately not a say so from. And that's why I said Superstars, because not like your regular guys that are on contract, that are filling out the roster, they're gonna do whatever the hell. But, like, if, say they. Yes, like, if Cena didn't want to turn heel, you know, like, no, he wouldn't have.
A
He wouldn't.
B
But does he have that option?
A
But that's what I'm saying.
B
Yeah. See?
A
Yeah. Now, yes, I would assume so. It's. And. But I think that they all. I know that they all have the best storyline possible. How can we push the company even more? Like, they're like, I'm already.
B
Whoever cemented.
A
And this is kind of the storyline that they're going in now. Is that. That. That corporate and wrestler dynamic. The Rock is the. His character now is the final boss. Yeah, it's like, whatever I'm saying is gonna go. And that's the character.
B
Yeah.
A
And so he's going in Big Dick, and everybody Being like, hey, you want this? You got to do what I say.
B
It's such a dog.
A
So it's mixing, like, the real and the reality and the. In the script. It's like, it's so goddamn good. And I'm telling you, Chat, if you are not involved in wwe, I will stamp this right now. It is the best.
B
Oh, tell them who was at Elimination Chamber.
A
Drake was there. Lil Yachty was there. Travis Scott was there. Who else was there? Who am I missing? Nav was there. WWE has become so mainstream now, which is great. I love it. I can't wait. Now. I'm. I said this before, but I went back on it. I'm never questioning Triple H again. There's been times where I'm like, dude, what is this? Like, you're ruining this great storyline and. But you just gotta wait three months and now it will. It will go back to why you're.
B
It's like the MCU in real life.
A
Well, now they have Marvel people.
B
Oh, my God. You've been telling me that for, like, two years.
A
Yeah, there's some Marvel people working at WWE now. But now I'm done questioning. Like, there's some things I'm so a little confused about now. And I, old me would go on to Twitter and been like, why does this happen? But I'm like, I know this.
B
Trust the process, dude.
A
Dude, WWE is the best it's ever been. I am so excited for WrestleMania. It's going to be crazy. SummerSlam. We have money in the bank coming.
B
I gotta watch it. Last question. I saw on Twitter, somebody say that John Cena is obviously cemented hall of Famer legacy. One of the goats, if not the goat.
A
Yes, but.
B
And it was a thread, maybe like 10 different replies. And I just read it and I wanted to bring it to you. You. They said now that he has turned heel, he has a full body of work, and there's not a single stone, like, uncovered. And now he's fully, like, cemented. There's no question whatsoever. Do you think, like, if someone, like a Mount Rushmore type, maybe even just a top 10 wrestler of all time, do you think someone has to have, like, a heel turn in their resume or at least play a different character to be like, to really show they went through adversity? They did both sides, and they still are one of the greatest. I think, on paper, like, does that add to it?
A
I think on paper, yes, probably. But with a superstar like John Cena, he could have had the career he had done this farewell towards as being like, you know, having pay per view matches, WrestleMania gone off and he still would have been the go. Like, he should have been a legend.
B
The reason I thought that is because I immediately went to when I was like heavy into wrestling and the first three people I thought of all had either a different character or turned heel.
A
Yeah.
B
Like I thought Undertaker. Okay. He started off as American badass on the motorcycle chopper. Now he's undead.
A
Yeah.
B
Randy Orton went absolutely psycho. Started hearing voices and stuff. Boom. And then Batista, he was fantastic. Turned heel and I was like, holy shit.
A
Yeah.
B
I was like, is John Cena really the only, like, goat of Goats, like multiple time champion. That didn't.
A
And that's why it's such a big deal. He's the only one. Hogan had it.
B
Yeah, everybody.
A
Everybody had it, but everybody had it.
B
So does that. Does. Is there any validity to what that person tweeted? Like, you have to have a heel turn or a different.
A
I think from a 99% of wrestlers. Yes. But I think with John Cena, he's such an.
B
He literally is like the.
A
Yeah, I think it's so good because it keeps him in the WWE longer as. Because he's going to retire at the end of the year. Right. And he's never going to wrestle again.
B
I genuinely hope he doesn't.
A
No, he's genuinely. He's never. I genuinely believe he's never. Because he said, I'm done. But I think he's going to come into the wwe as the Rock is doing. He's going to be. He's going to come in. In a suit, actually, he said in a press conference. And I might just be putting two and two together.
B
Talk to us.
A
He told us on one of his first retirement press conferences. He's like, once I'm my final match, I'm hanging up to George. You'll only see me in the WWE in a suit. This is exact words he said, I'll still be a part of the wwe, but you'll only see me in a suit. So this goes to the corporate scene. I just turned heel. I joined the Rock and I'm gonna. Everybody as a corporate guy. God damn, the WWE is great.
B
Quick, quick, side notes. Jorts in 2025 is criminal, dude.
A
Yeah, dude. He needs to. He has to tan. He needs to tan before these matches, bro. I don't know why he stopped doing that. Dude, he has to tan. I know he's not going to cut his hair and I've accepted it, but you have to tan.
B
His hair sucks. You're Starting to get wrinkles. And you're so pale. Like, my God, you are not the John, please.
A
Oh, golly. But anyway, that was pop culture pay. They can pop culture pay and they can't bow.
B
Cam.
A
Get us out of here.
B
Hey. There we go. Absolutely love and appreciate every single one of y'all. Come Back to episode 155 of the you should know podcast. Before we talk about some specifics, confuse the casuals, get your good karma with this week's secret code. Oh, we're really gonna get him. You had to stay to the end of the episode for this one.
A
Okay.
B
Jct. You had to stay. You had to stay to the bare butt end to get this code. Jct.
A
John Cena. Turn.
B
John Cena. Tan.
A
Tan.
B
But either or tan or turned. It works. Jct. And if someone says, where'd they leave the code? Tell them you got to watch the whole episode to find out. Leave it everywhere. Instagram, Facebook, Twitter. I was going to say TikTok.
A
Tick tock. Hopefully by now.
B
Hopefully is back by now, by the time y'all see this. But yes, confused casuals, get your good karma. And as always, the description has everything you need. Our Twitter, our Koala club, who is getting tons of content. Brand new things are coming their way. They're getting sneak peeks to things that y'all cannot see unless you're in there. And they're absolutely eating it up and loving it every single day. The koala club is in the description. Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, everything you need to know is all there. And we absolutely love you and thank you for coming back.
A
And remember, 1 out of 10 qualifiers don't make it home to Christmas, and we will see ya next time.
B
Yes. No, he's. He's really white. Please put some tan to tan.
You Should Know Podcast - Episode 155: OUR WILD ROLE PLAY EXPERIENCE!
Release Date: March 10, 2025
Host/Author: Wood Elf Media (Peyton Hardin & Cameron Kennedy)
Peyton Hardin opens the episode with energetic greetings, welcoming listeners back to Episode 155 of the "You Should Know Podcast." The co-host, Cameron Kennedy, joins in, and they kick off with lighthearted chatter about Mardi Gras, setting a playful tone for the episode.
Notable Quote:
Peyton: "If you have not pressed that yet, hit that subscribe button and there's a little bell button right there."
The hosts dive into their Mardi Gras experiences, sharing humorous and somewhat awkward stories from their time in New Orleans. Peyton recounts his girlfriend's transformation post-Mardi Gras and the influx of oversized beads, while Cameron shares his volunteer work building homes for the homeless in the Ninth Ward. Their tales highlight the contrast between their philanthropic efforts and the chaotic nightlife of Bourbon Street.
Notable Quotes:
Peyton ([05:50]): "It doesn't just say 'don't be a jerk,' it's more like sir madam how is that person treated."
Cameron ([07:54]): "We made these little care packages for the unfortunate that maybe left without a home."
Peyton and Cameron transition into a candid discussion about public displays of affection (PDA). They humorously debate their personal boundaries, with Peyton expressing discomfort and Cameron outlining his own limits. The conversation shifts to their long-term relationships, revealing personal insights and playful teasing about intimacy and emotional connections.
Notable Quotes:
Cameron ([14:09]): "I'm not big on it. Neither is my partner."
Peyton ([17:00]): "My kissing scores about a 9.2."
The hosts share amusing and cringe-worthy anecdotes about interactions with neighbors. Cameron narrates a particularly awkward encounter with a young woman who mistakenly perceived his intentions, leading to a series of miscommunications. Peyton adds to the conversation by discussing the overuse of neighborhood apps and the resulting flood of trivial updates and alerts.
Notable Quotes:
Cameron ([28:15]): "There was this young girl... she takes off running because she thinks I'm trying to kidnap her."
Peyton ([32:21]): "But it's not one of those ones where there's a discourse. I guess there is, but basically, it's just like, pings, alerts..."
Peyton opens up about his struggles with anxiety, particularly related to waking up and daily routines. The conversation delves into their personal challenges, including Peyton’s difficulties with basic tasks and Cameron’s experiences with night-time anxiety and physical frustrations. They discuss coping mechanisms and the impact of mental health on their daily lives.
Notable Quotes:
Peyton ([46:33]): "It's like immediate panic. I don't know what kind of medicine I need to not panic when I wake up."
Cameron ([50:08]): "I feel handicapped. I feel like I can't do anything to release."
The episode takes a creative turn as the hosts engage in a role-playing game, imagining themselves as secret service agents. Peyton critiques Cameron’s hypothetical performance under pressure, leading to a humorous back-and-forth about loyalty, bravery, and the absurdity of their imagined roles. This segment showcases their chemistry and comedic timing.
Notable Quotes:
Cameron ([66:35]): "You throw it and you just get out of Dodge."
Peyton ([69:14]): "If I'm not dying, then, yeah, I don't care. I'll take a little bit of pain."
Shifting gears to pop culture, Peyton and Cameron dissect recent WWE events, particularly focusing on the Elimination Chamber and John Cena's unexpected heel turn. They analyze the storyline, character development, and the implications for Cena’s legacy. The hosts express excitement over Cena’s transformation and its impact on the wrestling world, touching upon other WWE superstars and their character arcs.
Notable Quotes:
Peyton ([80:16]): "He's real life Superman. Yes, like that is Superman."
Cameron ([83:35]): "Do you think someone has to have a heel turn... to really show they went through adversity?"
As the episode nears its end, Peyton introduces a "secret code" game for listeners, encouraging engagement across social media platforms. They recap the episode’s highlights, express gratitude to their audience, and tease upcoming content. The hosts sign off with their signature humor, leaving listeners eagerly anticipating the next episode.
Notable Quote:
Cameron ([88:29]): "Jct. And if someone says, where'd they leave the code? Tell them you got to watch the whole episode to find out."
Authentic Friendship: Peyton and Cameron’s dynamic showcases the depth of their friendship, blending humor with sincere conversations about personal challenges.
Balancing Fun and Serious Topics: The hosts adeptly navigate between lighthearted banter and meaningful discussions, offering listeners both entertainment and relatable content.
Engagement with Pop Culture: Their in-depth analysis of WWE events highlights a passion for wrestling, appealing to fans and adding a unique flavor to the podcast.
Episode 155 of the "You Should Know Podcast" delivers a blend of humor, personal anecdotes, and insightful discussions. Peyton Hardin and Cameron Kennedy offer listeners an engaging experience through their candid storytelling and lively interactions. From Mardi Gras escapades to wrestling critiques, this episode exemplifies the hosts' ability to entertain while connecting on a genuine level.
Enjoyed this summary? Subscribe to the "You Should Know Podcast" by Wood Elf Media to catch all the latest episodes and join the conversation on their social media channels.
Note: Timestamps correspond to the provided transcript and may vary slightly from the actual podcast.