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This episode is brought to you by Paramount. Gladiator 2 is now streaming on Paramount. Rated R. Years after the death of Maximus, Lucius is forced into the Coliseum after his home is conquered by tyrannical twin Roman emperors. With the future of the empire at stake, he must find strength and honor to return the glory of Rome to its people. Gladiator 2 now streaming on paramountplus.com.
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The.
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You should know podcast.
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Hey everybody, welcome back to the you should know podcast. Round of applause please. Nice. Nice. I like that. Hey everybody, welcome back to the you should know podcast. If you're new here or if you haven't already, you look below, you see the subscribe button. Is it press you're wrong. If you look even more below that, you see the comment section fulfilled with your name. Guess what? Even more wrong. Go ahead and fill that out. We have a great episode for you today. You know, when we do guests, we do about 45 minutes to an hour of just me and co host Cam. But in the middle of the episode, guess who we have coming on. The legend himself, the face of country music and our good friend, Kane Brown. We flew out to Tennessee. We stayed at his home. He was such a great host, him and his wife, his whole family, we love them all. And we genuinely were just kicking it as friends. So at the end of this episode or the middle of this episode, you will see that conversation we had. If you want the full uncensored ad free version of this episode, remember it is the top tier of Patreon. Make sure you join that koala club. It is absolutely booming. You are loving it so far in 2025 and we are promising you that we're delivering on the promises. I hope that's a sentence that makes sense. We love you. Make sure to join the discord, Facebook, Twitter, watch, party twitch. We love you. Now on to the rest of the episode, the you should know podcast. We got co host Cam back in the studio. Little fiddle in the band. No, fiddle in the band. Fiddle in the B. In the B. Fiddle in the B. I'm going to be honest right quick.
C
Who? Who?
A
Let's be quickly honest as opposed to slowly, slowly honest. I like to slow roll my honesty.
C
I like to take band aids off slow. Feel the pain. Feel the hair pulling from my pores.
A
That's a.
C
That.
A
That might be, but let's be honest here. And I like. Sometimes I slow roll my honesty. This time I'm gonna quickly say it. One time I almost had to go to the ER because I bit a wine glass and I chewed it a little bit at my mom's house.
C
What the. Like, what is happening?
A
That's a very, very hundred percent true story. So me and Preston, my mom had, like, this, like, wine thing, right? And she had a bunch of wine glasses. And me and Preston would always do this thing, like, let's take a toast. That was our thing.
C
But you were doomed from the start. You started off rough.
A
Alcoholism was.
C
Went off a little earlier than the rest of the runners.
A
So what's happening? So. So me and Preston, one day, we're like. We normally do that. Like, the little crown things. We'd pour, like diet coke, ginger ale, grape juice, something in there. Be careful. Orange Fanta. So we do one of those drinks, right? In a crowned glass. It's like tough, dense glass. But then I was like, let's be hanky panky schwanky today, Preston, me and you together like that. Let's get the wine glasses, do one of these, like. And then we had cheers, you know, toast. So I put grape juice in mine. I toasted, and then I remembered as soon as I drank it. The intrusive thoughts have always been there. David Blaine used to do a thing where he would bite wine glasses and then chew them as a trick. Now, I wasn't planning on going that far. I was planning on testing my limits on the wine glass to see how hard did he have to bite. Come to find out, you don't have to bite hard at all on a.
C
Wine glass that hard.
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So I went, mom. And then I was like, there's. We're pulling glass out of my mouth.
C
Oh, my God.
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Fun fact. I remember it like it was yesterday.
C
What did your mom say? That's what I need to know.
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A lot of cursing. A lot of.
C
A lot of swearing was angry.
A
A lot of you dumb.
C
See that? Now, that remind. Okay, somebody. Liquids in childhood. That. That literally reminded me of when I spit hot coffee on the back of my blind grandma's neck. I'm so serious, and I love Meemaw to death. I was like, seven. Yeah. And Meemaw was on the computer. I. Yeah, keep your comments and stuff. She was on the computer.
A
Was it touch screen? No.
C
She had an application called magnifier, and it opened up in a little window, and anywhere you put over the cursor, it was like in 600 zoom. I swear to God, she wasn't like. She's like, 75%. Oh. Like, she could see silhouettes. Like, if you walked in, she'd be like, who are you? No, seriously, she could tell someone's there, can't tell who.
A
So it's basically like if you try to look through a straw.
C
Yeah, like if you look through a straw, but at the end of the straw, you covered it with, like, Scotch tape.
A
You covered it with, like, little Vaseline.
C
Yeah, you kind of just make it a little milky. So basically, I oftentimes my grandma would be paying bills in her computer room in her office.
A
That's wrong.
C
And she.
A
If you're blind, and that's.
C
My grandpa was out working, she had to pay some bills, and she wanted things to do around the house.
A
I'm just saying, if you're blind and old, you shouldn't have to pay bills.
C
What's she gonna do, sit there and crochet and stab her fingers? What is she gonna do? You wanna sit there and listen to her favorite TV shows? She did that for about an hour and a half a day. Bold and beautiful, Young and restless.
A
I think, oh, my God, the young and restless.
C
But basically, she's sitting in her office, and oftentimes I'd be in the background. GI Joe action figures.
A
Yeah, yeah.
C
And she goes, now, sweetie, can you go get me a refill of my coffee? Yeah, that'd be very nice. I go, of course, Meemaw, get up, go in there. Black coffee. There's no sugar, cream, nothing. Straight Folgers.
A
Just black, straight Silver War drinks 100.
C
She has PenderGridio War drink. Oh, no, I'm not gonna say that. She has just black Folgers coffee. Pour it in there. Hot as hell. I have to hold it from the little spout. And I go back and I come in the door and she's doing her thing. She goes, oh, thank you. And before I hand it to her, I was feeling frisky panky hanky, schwanky manky, as you said.
A
God bless you.
C
Good. Good morning. So I go, I've never even had coffee. I'm seven. I'm getting grown. I need to figure out what coffee tastes like. I literally took a sip. It was so ass. It was asshole. It was liquid ass, and it was hot as hell. And I literally went, spit it. And a little bit got on her neck. She went, what was that? And then I just said, I'm so sorry, Meemaw. I said, I'm so sorry. She said, no, but I said, it was just your shitty ass coffee. It was just your black coffee. Tasted like dirt. That's all it was. I'm sorry, memo. That was gross. How do you drink that? She goes, oh, Sweetie, you just develop a taste over time. Thank you, though. And I went, all right. And that was it.
A
Yeah, I think. I think you keep telling stories about what you used to do to your blind grandma.
C
No, I didn't. We had a great. She plays sword fights with me. And then I tried to upgrade her to a nerf ward. That just wasn't right. That wasn't right. Or fair. That wasn't right or fair. My dad come home, there's Nerf bullets stuck to the ceiling. I said, I can't really reach those. He goes, who shot him? I said, what do you think? She had a six shooter like this. I'm getting you now.
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Straight up.
C
It was literally. And I went. And sometimes I'd feel bad. I go, oh, you got.
A
Ah.
C
It stuck to Dusty's head. He's like walking around me while she's outside. She goes, cameron, Now Cameron's getting hot out here. Cameron. Your parents backyard isn't that big. Sweetie, where are you? I'm inside playing my gamecube. Come on.
A
Oh, no, this isn't good.
C
This is not good. Fun fact. This might explain a lot about me, but I learned to read from my blind grandma. I swear to God. I swear to God. She would come. So in the summer.
A
She's not good.
C
Both my parents would work. My grandma was obviously retired and blind, but she was retired blind. So she would come over and she would watch me. It's like free daycare. And I love Meemaw. She's the best ever. She's fantastic.
A
Love you, Meemaw. And my memo's dead.
C
And mine's not. Love you, memo. What I said. Oh, I did not mean it like that. I don't know why I said, like, I got a one up on you. Oh, man, that came out straight.
A
Yeah, you won. Congrats.
C
Oh, my God. Your memaw was a great memo too. But anyway, you met her shoe cup, I think via phone.
A
No, no, she came to basketball games. You definitely met her.
C
Okay, yeah, yeah, yeah.
A
Okay, a lot, actually.
C
Yeah, I was gonna say I don't even remember her. I definitely know. No, I do. I. I honestly, I. I kind of remember what she looks like. I don't really remember her voice though, for whatever reason. What's her name? I don't remember her name.
A
Mimo.
C
I mean, yeah, you don't call someone else's grandparents. You go, well, Calvin, okay, so what are you saying?
A
She taught you how to read?
C
Would come over in the summer and she would watch me. And our neighborhood had a pool hoa had a pool, so to get there we weren't driving. She's blind. Okay, so we're not driving. My grandpa would drop her off in the morning, kinda like child's care, but she was actually taking care of the child. So we would walk. I would walk my 5 year old self and my blind grandma would walk to a pool. This. This sounds like a start to an awful joke. We'd walk to the pool and then sometimes on the way back, she'd get lost. So she would tell me she had her. She was good at. She was good at geo navigational skills, right? She had to be. She had to learn how to go throughout the house with feels and stuff like that. Use her other senses. I'm dead ass. Serious, bro. We can laugh about it. It's my grandma, she's the best. But she would get lost on the. On the journey home, journey being four streets. And she would get lost and she would say, sometimes now she goes, now, Cameron, I don't. I don't know exactly where we are, but don't freak out. I just need you to look up at the nearest stop sign and tell me the letters you see. And I'd go R, I D, O, A K. She would go, red Oak. Okay, we're on Red Oak. We need to take a left. And I was like, all right, Meemaw. And I'm just sitting there, soaking wet, my fat little guts hanging out. I'm walking. My grandma's like, okay, no, she had a walking stick. I used to play with it as a sword too.
A
Yeah, yeah, okay, but, yeah, enough of Meemaw.
C
But no, great time.
A
Okay.
C
Great times.
A
That was.
C
That was something.
A
Ten minutes of insanity. I'm sorry, but that was insane. I love you, Meemaw. Thank you for. Love you listening.
C
Love. She's the best. She loves you too.
A
Yeah, no, she's great.
C
She asks about you frequently.
A
What'd she ask?
C
Just how you're doing and stuff like that. Not like, nothing crazy specific, but just like, oh, is he still, you know, is the podcast still doing. How's Peyton doing?
A
Yeah, I know. Whenever. I used to, like whenever she was living at your mom's house and I'd come over and you'd be like, meemaw, Peyton's here. She would be. Be very nice.
C
Yeah, she was great. She's great.
A
A lot of prayers, a lot of.
C
Yeah, we, we would. We'd eat a lunch, like a turkey sandwich and we'd be leaving. She's like, you mind if I pray for you? I'm like never.
A
I was gonna say something.
C
Never. Do I mind? You can always pray.
A
I was gonna say something.
C
Say it.
A
I don't know if it's appropriate.
C
Say it.
A
You know when I used to sleep at your parents house and Meemaw was staying there, she would come in at like the wee hours of night. I'd be sleeping on the couch and she would just be in the kitchen and I would just wake up.
C
What would she be doing?
A
I don't, bro, I don't know. She'd like be on that. Sitting at that table.
C
Yeah.
A
And she'd be like eating something.
C
She'd be sitting there and then sometimes you would hear and then King Joseph himself came down and struck the Israelites.
A
Yeah.
C
She have the Bible app on volume like 12.
A
But the fact is that's bad hosting for you not telling me that that might happen.
C
It's kind of crazy. Peyton wakes up at 4:30, there's a figure going, walking, walking towards the kitchen.
A
I hear the walker, he hears a.
C
Drip and it's just coffee. She's standing there like this. He goes, what the.
A
Okay, speaking of old people though, there's an old people saying that I don't understand.
C
What is it?
A
A broken clock works twice a day.
C
Correct.
A
How is that real?
C
Because a broken clock. So the saying that's like, that's kind of like saying that basketball related one like oh, Shaq made one like, ooh, you got lucky.
A
No, I understand what it means.
C
Yeah. But a broken clock is going to sit at a number and that number will be accurate two times in a day. Oh. So if the clock hand stops at 7:05, there is a 7:05am and a 7:05pm okay, but I was thinking twice.
A
I was thinking a broken clock meaning the time was off. No, because I was like, then it would never be right. No, wouldn't. So say right now. So say right now it's 1:15. Right. And on the dial clocks right. It said 120 and said it said 120. It's never going to be right. Cuz it's going to keep moving as we keep moving. So it's never going to be right. So my whole time.
C
Screwed clock.
A
Yeah. So my whole time I was thinking the broken clock doesn't work twice.
C
Oh no, no, no.
A
I was ready to die behind this.
C
And you would have died miserably and painfully.
A
Okay. So broken clocks do work twice.
C
If it is stuck, the hands stick there and it's all good. Now why would you think the other one though? Like, that's one of those things.
A
I've never seen a broken clock not moving. But I've never just seen a not moving clock.
C
So what would you describe a working clock that's just on the wrong time?
A
A broken clock.
C
Because you surely wouldn't say the word broken. Surely no one in their right mind would call that broken.
A
If it's going, it's broken. It's a broken time.
C
Oh, but it's now it's broken time. What are you, Dr.
A
Strange? Well, a clock is only there for time. Look. Okay, so if I say, go look at the time, what are you gonna go look at?
C
The clock. And if the shit's.
A
So that's the time.
C
If the clock is ticking, it's broken time. Broken time.
A
So if you say go look at the time and you go look at.
C
A clock, if I say the time is broken, you would say, clock is wrong.
A
No, but. Okay, but you're not understanding what I'm saying. That was cool. So you're not understanding what I'm saying, though. If I say go look at the time, what are you gonna look at?
C
The clock.
A
Okay. And if I say the time is broken, what is broken?
C
Nothing.
A
But you just associated time with the clock.
C
Exactly.
A
So if I'm associating time with the clock and saying the time is broken, that means the clock is broken.
C
Okay, let's make this easier. Yes or no question.
A
Yes.
C
You want to start?
A
No.
C
Okay, wait. Okay, so if I walk up to a clock.
A
Yeah.
C
And it is ticking, is the clock working? Yes or no?
A
No. Is it on the right time? If the clock's ticking, is it on the right time?
C
If it. That's. I. Hey, first off, asshole, I'm asking the questions. Then you can.
A
I'm getting. I'm getting clarification.
C
You don't have to ask questions with questions. It's yes or no. You get the same to me.
A
Okay.
C
Okay. It's fair. Slate.
A
Yes.
C
If you walk up to a clock.
A
I don't.
C
And it's. I just look and it's ticking.
A
Yes.
C
Is the clock working?
A
That's vague.
C
Oh, my God.
A
That is vague. If it's going backwards, okay. Is going backwards. And no, it's broken.
C
Okay. If the ticker is moving in the correct direction, whether the time is right or wrong, is the clock itself working?
A
Not if it's on the wrong time. That's not a working clock. It's not a regulation clock.
C
Oh, my God. Yes, it is not.
A
If it's on the wrong time, that defeats the whole purpose of it.
C
It defeats the purpose. And it's the you you are fusing and making them synonymous, broken and wrong.
A
So if I'm. If I'm using a tv, right, and I'm clicking the Netflix button on a TV and it takes me to Disney plus, is that a working tv?
C
Yes.
A
How? It's obviously broken.
C
Is the TV on?
A
Yes.
C
The TV turned on. And is it functional?
A
It's obviously not.
C
It's not functional. It's not doing what you want it to, but it sure is working.
A
It's not functional.
C
You click Moana, you're gonna hear it.
A
No, I just said you click Netflix and it goes to Disney plus. It's not functional. It's a broken tv.
C
Does it play? Does it play tv? Does it turn on? Does it play? Does it turn on?
A
If I put. If I have a radio. If I have a radio and I'm telling it to use the Bluetooth button and it turns on country xm, That's a broken radio.
C
That's not broken. Broken. Okay, let's go. Okay. You know what? We're gonna go to science class.
A
What?
C
We're gonna go to science class. If I have a board.
A
Yes.
C
I'm a 2x4.
A
Yeah.
C
And it is whole.
A
It is whole.
C
It is whole. W H O L E hole. It is a board. It is fine. There's nothing wrong with it. Now, if it can't fit where I need it to fit, if it can't fit in that little doohickey I need it to go into. It is not broken. It is wrong. If you.
A
No, you're wrong. That's human error.
C
If you break the board, to be broken is.
A
No, it's not broken. Is. Only physician physically.
C
Physic. No, but I'm saying, where does the term broken come from?
A
Something non functional.
C
Something is broken.
A
Non functional.
C
Oh, my God.
A
I am cooking you with hot grease and salmonella.
C
So. So is my watch broken right now?
A
Yes. Clap. Clap hard.
C
Yeah, there you go, girl.
A
The one time.
C
The one time. Wait.
A
There you go.
C
That's fine. I'm talking about the time. It is ticking, but it's not on the right time. So it is wrong.
A
It's a broken clock. It. It's not working. It's non functional. It's broken. Let's move on.
C
You know, some things you can't. You can't get to that skull of yours can't get through that electrocuted head of yours.
A
You like my skull? You like my brain?
C
I do. Wow.
A
You know what I mean?
C
Wow.
A
The you should know Podcast this episode is brought to you by friends at Liquid iv. This year, one of my resolutions is going to the gym more often. I am sore as all sore can, but one thing that I'm doing every time I go to the gym is making sure that I am hydrated. The way I get my hydration is with extraordinary hydration from Liquid iv. Powered by Live Hydro Science, Liquid IV helps you break the mold with flavors like their new hydration multiplier, sugar free Raspberry Lemonade. A bright zero sugar flavor combining notes of ripe, freshly picked raspberries with citrusy zesty lemon. I take my Liquid IV packets with me everywhere and they're a hot commodity in my household. Every time that we have people come to the house, once they leave, I look in the pantry. Liquid IV is gone. Everybody wants some Liquid IV and it's because it's so dang easy. All you got to do is tear, pour live more with liquid IV. Break the mold and own your ritual. Just one stick plus 16 ounces of water hydrates better than water alone. It has eight essential vitamins and nutrients. Always non GMO, vegan, gluten free, dairy free and soy free. Embrace your ritual with extraordinary hydration from Liquid IV and get 20% off your first order of Liquid IV when you go to liquid I.com and use code YSK at checkout. That's 20% off your first order when you shout better hydration Today using promo code YSK at Liquid iv. Now on to the rest of the episode.
C
You should know podcast I I I've recently, in this newfound couple of weeks of having a haircut, I've realized something.
A
Yeah, you've had it for a while though.
C
That's what I'm saying. These couple weeks, like it's been five, six, whatever. Yeah, I don't think I'd be a good fighter.
A
Oh, no. Oh, I knew that.
C
No, but not from the thumb scenario. Not from thumbs. From defense. And taking a strike, I found this out.
A
Too big of a target. The head.
C
No, head is large. Easy thing to hit. That's true. But I was jumping rope vigorously.
A
Careful.
C
I understand that. Vigorously jumping rope. I got a headache simply off jumping rope.
A
Yeah.
C
Now if that's a big head problem, I understand it. But if it's not, there's no shot in hell I could consume a right hook and just still look the guy.
A
That's a, that's a weight issue too. It's lack of, that's lack of discipline in the weight room, in treadmill situation and Diet.
C
Lack of cardio and diet. He says, okay, if I were to right now, literal tar would fall out. It'd go. And it would just fall out.
A
Yeah.
C
But my question is, do you think you'd be a good fighter?
A
Yes.
C
Now, why get up with research and science?
A
Because I am absolutely ludicrous when I get in a fight.
C
See, I agree with that. I am a very, very passive person. We all know that.
A
Yes.
C
But if I had to fight for something, I don't even think I would have. Like, it wouldn't be rational. But the thing. There'd be no clock. There'd be no. Oh, he's knocked out. Stop. Like. Because I don't. I don't fight.
A
There's differences. I. I'm. I would be a dirty fighter. Like, I would go grab chairs. I'd grab anything around me. You, on the other hand, you would black out so much. You would. Like, we'd be like, cam, stop. You're eating him.
C
You get the audio file from a street fight. He goes, oh, co host Cam got in a fight with this guy, and all he hears was, like, what the.
A
I'm telling you, bro, that would be the difference. Like, I'm gonna be a dirty fighter. You're gonna be eating his right earlobe off, bro. You make nibbling on him. You're like Ruby with a piece of cheese.
C
Oh, holy. No, that's not good.
A
No, I'm telling you, that's the difference between me and you fighting.
C
Yeah, but that's. That's not good, though. That's not. Okay. That's.
A
Do you think? Okay. Honestly, I. I feel like we present, like, a fierceness when we walk through. We're both large individuals. Six, seven. Six, seven, two, 10, three, 40. Like, we're.
C
I knew that was coming. Like, we're 10, 235.
A
Okay.
C
It's 2:35.
A
After a shit in the morning.
C
After. After a shit in 30 minutes in the sauna. And no dinner the night before.
A
But, like, we pose a big threat.
C
Like, we're like, this is large frames.
A
You know what I mean?
C
Big pictures.
A
Yeah, but I've never had that sense of security with you. Like, I've never felt like if something went down, Cam's got my back.
C
Why that? Now? That crushes my heart. Why would you say that?
A
Because of what you just said. You just said I wouldn't be a good fighter. I got lightheaded doing jump rope.
C
No, I said I got a headache. My brain was bouncing in my skull.
A
I was like, golly, little brain, big head.
C
See, but that's. That's simply from jumping a lot. Maybe I was really going. Yeah, like, oh, man.
A
My only problem would be cardio. That's the only thing you have to worry about me.
C
We got 30 seconds to win this fight or we're doomed. We got literally half a minute. Or it's a one on two and I would turn around. You're literally gonna be like, that sucks for me. Oh, shit. No, we would definitely, definitely. But we just said it right there, too. We'd both go loco. We'd go.
A
Yeah, we'd go psycho.
C
Because I'm not. I'm not sitting here, hey, fair dapping him up before.
A
Oh, no.
C
If we've been pushed to the verge of fighting, there's no long, like. Okay, this is. I think this is a quote from Jordan Peterson. Not knowing how to fight is fine. Not being willing to fight is unacceptable.
A
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
C
Like, you have to. If you have a friend in your group that. It's like. And I'm not saying this like I'm some. Like, I've. I got six kos under my name.
A
Yeah, you got zero. Literally.
C
Literally zero. Been in one fight when I was young. It wasn't.
A
You threw a scooter.
C
No, he threw a scooter at me and it hurt like hell. And I didn't even duck. I just let it hit my arm. So I tackled him, punched him in the face, and ran home and cried. Yeah, that was the only. Only. But the whole thing is like, you have to be willing to do it if something happens. You can't just be like, hey, man, hey.
A
Yeah, God forbid one of them are with us, right? We are, Cook.
C
No, I wouldn't say that.
A
Oh, Pierce.
C
Yeah.
A
I'm like, pierce, good man. I appreciate that. I appreciate that. But I'd be like, please leave and go call the cops or something.
C
Like, yeah, I go. Your efforts. Your efforts will be better placed somewhere else.
A
Okay. But speaking of you being a wild animal when you fight, like, eating people. Okay, let's talk about dogs real quick.
C
Okay.
A
One of my childhood heroes, Joe Jonas, said this, and it literally changed my life. It was a high thought of his timeout.
C
Joe Jonas from the Jonas Brothers. No, I understand. I'm saying that was a childhood hero for you.
A
You were.
C
You were aiming low, weren't you? Joe Jonas was someone you would build a statue to.
A
Yes.
C
Joe Jonas.
A
Joe Jonas is going to go in the hall of Fame.
C
Hall of Fame of what music?
A
Rock and Roll hall of Fame.
C
The Rock and roll. Joe Jonas is going to be up there with the likes of AC DC Yes. Led Zeppelin.
A
He changed the generation.
C
He.
A
Are you kidding me?
C
Who?
A
Why? Give me a case to why he shouldn't be in the Rock and Roll hall of Fame.
C
Joe, are you dead ass?
A
I swear to you.
C
He has that much influence in rock. Rock and roll.
A
Rock and Roll hall of Fame has every genre. Eminem's in the Rock and Roll hall of Fame.
C
What?
A
Yeah. You just don't know music. That's why I'm saying you can't even have this argument. Why would he.
C
Does he have a solo album?
A
Yes. Dnce cake by the ocean Go away, baby hear me coming now because let's lose our minds and go Cameron. Keep on hoping we'll become by the.
C
Ocean oh, I think you got some in my eye. I'm not gonna lie to you.
A
No, get dead ass. We can have this debate. Joe Jonas definitely belongs in the Rock and Roll hall of Fame.
C
I've heard that song.
B
This up, baby.
C
I've heard that.
A
Yeah.
C
Yeah. But what else?
A
Literally the whole Jonas Brothers catalog.
C
So he gets. He gets like. That's the lead singer.
A
He was the lead singer. Him and Nick, but he was definitely the face. And our childhood guy.
C
What was the other guy?
A
Kevin. Don't disrespect Kevin. Don't. Don't Kevin.
C
The Kevin was like the one who's like, all right, come on.
A
No, Kevin. Kevin is a musical icon. What? He's really good musically.
C
What do you do?
A
Music.
C
No, but what part. What do you do?
A
The music, the instrumentations.
C
So what did Nick do? You guys face.
A
Hey, I hope. I hope you're ready for the Kevin backup. There's a Kevin.
C
Like, I'm gonna get a lot. But that's.
A
No, Nick.
C
Nick.
A
Nick was A. And B is A. And B. Nick and Joe, who you decided to be the face.
C
Okay, okay.
A
And then they had a Disney Channel show.
C
I understand that, but I feel like that shouldn't. That should not have anything to do with you getting in the rock and roll.
A
And when they popped out with their purity rings. You don't know the effect that had on us on Teen Jet magazine whenever they took them johns off.
C
Dude, you literally lived like you were in Zoey 101.
A
I wanted to.
C
Was your life.
A
Yeah.
C
You wanted to go to a boarding school with other little teenagers and have your. Have a blast.
A
Yes. And Camp Rock 1, 2 and 3.
C
That looked cultish. That looks like you have an ulterior agenda. But okay, okay.
A
He belongs in the rock and roll of it okay for sure. Mute up over there.
C
Good try, though. Protect the pet. Okay, back to it. So Joe Jonas was on some Mary Jane, and he said this.
A
Said this in an interview. You know how when humans talk in their. Talk themselves in their head, right? You hear your own voice. You're hearing English.
C
I already see where you're going.
A
When dogs talk to themselves in their head, are they just barking at themselves? Like, it's like. But their barks translate to. To physical thought. Like, this is like, that's a squirrel that I'm gonna go eat in half. That's a tree.
C
That's like, get back.
A
Yes. So are they thinking like, get back or are they thinking?
C
Well, they're definitely not thinking English.
A
Well, they're translation to it, like. Like, they're. They're cognitive.
C
I would say they're. But that's. But that's like. Okay, okay. So this might be a lot, but I think you're up for it.
A
Yes.
C
English is a language.
A
Right. God bless you.
C
If we didn't speak English, I believe we would still have cognitive dissonance. We are here. We can think things. The only reason we think that we think. I mean, we do think in words, but it's only because everything we do has been. Has a word put to it. So dogs. They're not thinking English. Hey, it's here.
A
It's right here.
C
Dogs aren't thinking English. Yes, but they're thinking the actions.
A
Oh, that's what I'm saying. I'm not saying English, but, like, how we associate our English words to a thing. Like that thing right there is a light. I'm looking at that. That's a light. Light means that thing means that light to them or whatever that light is to them. They're not saying light, but that thing is a light.
C
I don't know if I can buy that.
A
What are they thinking?
C
I don't know if I can buy that they think just actions. That's what I just said. No, but I'm not buying the part that I don't think they have specific barks, meaning specific words. Like, I don't think they could. Like, if I. Like, this is a shoe. Every day of the week, it's a shoe. Shoe, shoe, shoe, shoe, shoe, shoe. I don't think if a dog barks. Oh, every time, that oh is the same thing. I don't think that you don't give.
A
Enough credence to dogs. I forgot you're a dog hater.
C
I am not a dog.
A
Okay, but how do dogs talk to themselves? In their head.
C
Yeah, I have. No, That's a hell of a qu. I think. I mean, if. If there was. If there was sound, it would definitely be barks.
A
Yeah. So they're not thinking. Like.
C
That's a hell of a question.
A
Or.
C
I can see why it took some inducing.
A
Yeah. Or do we take it a step further? Are we the only living creatures that talk to themselves in their head?
C
Oh, my God. I think that's. I think you hit the nail on the head.
A
Yeah, but some people don't talk themselves in the head, and those are the lesser of us.
C
See, I don't believe that.
A
No, some people literally don't. Some people literally don't.
C
So they're just lost.
A
They're just. They're just reacting. Those are the closest things to primates we have. And now. That's not a now. Y'all took it there. No, no. I'm just saying they're just not as evolved as us. No. People that can't think to themselves in their head.
C
Am I playing along? I'm cutting it close. You're here. You're jumping back and forth. You're about to.
A
Wait.
C
Why?
A
Unless it's a mental disability, then. Oh, is that what we're playing with?
C
I mean, just not really.
A
Well, I have those.
C
We all do.
A
Yes.
C
No, no. You and me being we.
A
Oh, yeah.
C
No, we do. I definitely got some.
A
Yeah. I'm so sorry.
C
I might. I might think. No, you're good. I might think that I might. I might be more willing to think that the.
A
The animals don't speak themselves.
C
No, there's no way.
A
No, because I've used. My dog stares at a wall. Malcolm stares at walls.
C
I think they see the undead. 100%. I do think dogs see things that we can't see.
A
The undead.
C
The undead.
A
That would be the alive.
C
That'd be the zombies. They see the dead.
A
The undead would be the alive.
C
The undead.
A
If you're undead, you're alive. The opposite.
C
But you've died. Now you are undead.
A
No. Untied means you are not tied.
C
No. Oh, no, it doesn't. It means something was tied, and now it's not. To undo something.
A
Yes. Undead. So you're undoing the de. So you're alive.
C
Exactly.
A
So I'm saying alive.
C
But the thing undead comes from zombies. They are the undead. They have died, now they are undead. They're not a regular person anymore. They don't just come back.
A
You're putting race on it.
C
That has nothing to do with race.
A
Zombie. Does it race?
C
The zombies Zombies don't have any rights. Zombies don't. Real life zombies. If zombies were a real thing, you'd give zombies Social Security. You'd let zombies order a latte and drive the speed limit? What am I saying?
A
No, no, no, no, no, no.
C
What am I saying? I'm talking about actual, like, from movies. Like Walking Dead.
A
No, because I went. I said race, and then you brought up rights.
C
Oh, shit. I didn't even know. Wait, what are we talking about, though?
A
I said undead. Undead doesn't mean zombie. You're putting a race on it.
C
Oh, okay.
A
Undead just means you're alive.
C
But zombies aren't a race. They're not a race. They're not a race. They're not a race. Zombies are zombies, okay? It's not like they cut. It's like, that's a white zombie. That's an African American zombie.
A
Like, no, you could definitely tell.
C
You'd be able to kind of be able to see through the lines. But it doesn't matter because they. They have one agenda.
A
Oh, no.
C
Kill.
A
Kane's team's gonna be so upset we attach this to them. No, no, no.
C
I'm just saying that's what to undo something means something is done and you're taking it away.
A
Yes.
C
That doesn't mean.
A
So you're alive. Jesus was undead. He's alive.
C
Yes, but that's Jesus alive. Yes, yes, yes, but that is different.
A
He's undead.
C
But that is different.
A
No, it's not.
C
Yes, it is. You're playing with something that's serious. You're playing with something that's real racism.
A
I didn't say it wasn't equal rights.
C
I did not say it wasn't.
A
Okay.
C
Oh, my God. Okay. The worst transition ever.
A
Okay?
C
I went to a bathroom, and you know me, it was in a gas station.
A
You pooped?
C
Yeah, I had to poop in a gas station.
A
When we went to.
C
Up here. Oh, no. Oh, God.
A
By the garage.
C
No, I. It was. It was on the way back from Oklahoma.
A
Okay. You're always there.
C
No, I know, it's. Well, she. Yes. But anyway, on the way back. Stop. No, it's horrible. Oklahoma sucks. But stop. Took a poop. And when I tell you, I. This is the thought. I want to, like, dissect your brain on it.
A
Yeah.
C
I sat down on a toilet seat and it literally felt like my wife's Jeep Grand Cherokee's heated seats were on.
A
Oh, no, you.
C
It was past body heat. It literally felt like there was like. Like hand warmers under the seat.
A
You're not around enough thick people.
C
What?
A
My old basketball coach was 456. 7. He was a large man. You get on the toilet after him, Cam, you would have thought they put magma to that. That porcelain.
C
You need ice packs.
A
Yeah, no, Cam, it's a real thing. I literally had to blow fans on the seat after him, like him. So you sat down. You got engulfed, brother.
C
There's. And there's nothing wrong with the. Nothing wrong before.
A
Nothing wrong.
C
I'm just saying I feel like I have taken on their establishment.
A
No, no, no.
C
It wasn't even my own poop anymore. I wasn't in a public restroom. This was their space.
A
You have mixed DNA. Can. I'm not gonna lie. Like, you know, things are more susceptible for seeping when it's heated up. Like, that's. You got it. Something's in you. And I'm not gonna lie. The problem is not with that. The problem is you gotta stop sitting on public toilet seats, brother.
C
What do you want? Poo?
A
Hover?
C
Hover?
A
You never hovered on a toilet seat.
C
Peyton, when we all worked out together. You couldn't complete a singular sled pool without huffing and puffing.
A
Not even about that.
C
You think you're gonna hover?
A
Cam, you're not hover a toilet. You're not doing athletic squat. You might be pointed out. You can't. You got to be careful what kind of duke you got, because if it's a blowout, it's gonna hit the back of the seat. Yes. Yes.
C
Oh, sorry, Sorry.
A
You look like Triple H. Look, let me show you. Let me show you the. Let me show you.
C
Go for it. So show me proper technique.
A
So this is the. Say this is the toilet seat right here.
C
Okay?
A
All you gotta do is right here. You just rest it right here. Who's on.
C
You get that? Nice. You just get that. You can hold the conversation. All right, let me try.
A
Right?
C
Let me try. Tell me if this is too much, too good, too little. So you're saying I should be here?
A
No, do it too deep.
C
But I can't.
A
You're lower than the seat at that point. What?
C
I've seen a small toilet.
A
Yeah, I don't go on toilet seats that little. And first, I'll just stand over. I'll literally go like this. Oh, go over the toilet. I'm just over it like this. It's under.
C
And you just poop like that.
A
I'm shitting straight down.
C
I'm sh.
A
Straight down.
C
You either have a loose rectum or you have shitty ass cheeks.
A
Oh, everybody has different Play times. What I do with myself means nothing to you, bro.
C
You would need, like, Lysol after that.
A
Can I be honest real quick? Now? This is bad. And I'm genuinely don't know if I'm gonna keep this or not. I dead ass did something two days ago. I had Chipotle, and it ran through me. C.J. knows. Like, I literally get, like, sweaty and hot. Like, it's bad. Like, Chipotle sometimes messes me up. So I ran up to my bathroom floor, third floor of the house. The. The toilet paper's on the second floor. Shut up. And so I started to go, right? I'm leaking. Like, I am. Like, it's literally like somebody, like, cut a. Like a sack open inside of me. And it was just falling out of, like, like wet teriyaki chicken.
C
Okay.
A
And it was black. And I said, something's not right here. And then it was time to complete, right? And my. My. It was like the back of my thigh was wet. It was bad. No, no, it's bad.
C
Wet from. Wet from poop.
A
Didn't find out. I hopped right in the shower after. But. Oh, but I was going to get my toilet paper, right? No toilet paper, right? And I said, oh, no. Houston, we have a problem. I didn't want to call CJ because he's weird. He tried to film me poop one time. So I went, I want nothing to do when I. When I'm pooping. I want him out of there. Like, he creeps me out. Like, he's got a thing with it. He said something like, a dead ass. He was outside. Like, he followed me up one time when I had to go poop, and then he stood outside of it, and I was like, come. No, just go. Come on, Come on. It's gonna be good for the video. Go, go. I had to get a knife, and I chased him out of my. Out of my room. CJ's that a lie? Yeah, no, he's got a thing. So I didn't want to call CJ and tell him, hey, I'm shitting. I need toilet paper.
C
He go, I'll be right there. Let me get my mic.
A
Comes out with a headset on with a big ass car.
C
He's like, so what are we feeling today, boys? What are we feeling? You go. Get out.
A
And so I had to go. I had to go into survival mode. Right next to me is one of a little trash can. It's a little trash can, like one of those personal toilet trash cans, right? Yes. My housekeeper had just come over to the house, right? And she used a lot of Lysol wipes on my counters, in my shower, everywhere. So I open up my little trash can. As I'm sitting, I look inside and see the contents. A lot of weird trash in there. A lot of, like, food and shit. And I'm like, golly. But then there's a bunch of Lysol wipes. A bunch of Lysol wipes.
C
Oh, no.
A
Some of them had makeup on them. Some of them had, like. Like a little bitty hairs from when they were cleaning my counters. And, like, Windex. And they're wet. They're, like, wet. And so I said, I gotta wipe my ass. I moved the honey pack over.
C
And.
A
So I grab it and I gotta fold the Lysol wipe to where all the, like, the black tar and smudge from the cleaning wasn't on there. And I started wiping my ass with that. But then, like, I started to get a chemical burn in my rectum. And I said, I can't keep doing this because I might wake up with something like some of my fail. Thank God. I started to, like, scoot around my bathroom with my ass out because I didn't want to sandwich it up. Like a peanut butter jelly sandwich. Yeah. And so I opened up the one at the bottom of my drawers. Whole fresh roll of paper towels. And so I was. I roughed it out a little bit of red.
C
It's all right.
A
That's one of those. You just chalk up to the game.
C
Speaking of chalk, did you hit with some Gold Bond afterwards?
A
Oh, no. I just got in the shower, opened up. Let it. Let it a little bit aftershave back there. You know what I mean? Just clean that up right there. Just splash that after shave right on that. On that gooch.
C
After shave a little bit.
A
It'll make you smell good. Little burn. But it's like an alcohol after a haircut. Had to get that straight razor kind of.
C
It smells good and you kind of like it. It kind of. Oh, yeah. It makes you feel.
A
You earned it.
C
You would have been. You would have been farting, like, chemical bubbles if you would have completed that with Lysol.
A
Yeah, I only did, like, three to four wipes with those.
C
Go back to your leg.
A
Yeah, yeah. No, no, we never figured that out. I don't know. But it was one of those. It was like. And I'm sorry if you're eating. And to all the Kane Brown fans that genuinely don't know us, I was gonna say we're not like this, but we are this is us. It checks out. I don't know. And I didn't come to find out. I. I tend to try to not be disgusted by myself as much as I can. Cause I'm already like, that's a hard time.
C
That is a difficult time.
A
I wa. Every day and I'm like, still here. Wow. Cool. And I'm like, surprise, surprise.
C
You go another day, another dollar.
A
And so I'm like, let me just.
C
Let's go to Chipotle. Yeah.
A
And I'm so, you know, I'm just surviving. I'm just making my way. Oh, my God. Let's. That was hilarious. Oh, well, let's get our good friend Kane Brown on the episode kb, kbz. He's one of the. One of the nicest guys ever. One of the best. His wife is fantastic. His kids are perfect. Let's put that out there. And he's obviously a great guy. Shout out to his whole team.
C
Shout out. Everybody is.
A
Yeah. So we. This is shot inside his house.
C
Yeah. You heard it right.
A
Yeah.
C
This is inside of his domain.
A
And we don't know when this is going to come out, but if it's already out or if it's about to come out the high road. His album is. Is out or coming out soon. It's. We heard it. It's one of. Probably one of the best albums I've ever heard. Not saying that. A biased.
C
So good.
A
When we went to the listening party, we were like, Jesus Christ.
C
So good.
A
I. I venture to say, and when you listen to the album, listen to it like this, I think it's one of the best opening and closings to an album. Because for sure, the way what he says on the beginning of the album is like, it prepares you for like this side of Kane. And like, he goes somewhere different with this album. He has some very impactful songs on there. There we. There's almost some tears, dude.
C
Literally like straight up tear jerkers in the listening party.
A
Yeah.
C
Sick.
A
It's a. It's a beautiful album. We love you guys. Enjoy KB the you should know podcast. This episode is brought to you by Giraffe King Sportsbook. This ain't the little itty bitty teeny tiny bowl. This is Super Bowl 59. Get in on the action at DraftKings Sportsbook, an official sports betting partner of Super Bowl 59. Scoring touchdowns is key to hoisting the Vince Lombardi trophy. And you have a shot to score big by betting on them at DraftKings Sports Sportsbook, the number one place to bet touchdowns. New DraftKing customers can bet $5 to get $200 in bonus bets instantly. Download the DraftKings Sportsbook app and use code YSK. That's code YSK for new customers to get 200 in bonus bets instantly. When you bet just five bucks only on DraftKings Sportsbook, the crown is yours. Gambling problem, call 1-800-GAMBLER in New York, call 877-8-HOPENY or text HOPENY 467-369- and Connecticut help is available for problem gambling. Call 888-78-9777 or visit ccpg.org Please play responsibly on behalf of Boothill Casino in Resort Kansas. 21. Age and eligibility varies by jurisdiction. Void. In Ontario, new customers only. Bonus bets expire 168 hours after issuance. For additional terms and responsible gaming resources, see DKNG CO audio. Now on to the rest of the episode. The you should know podcast. We got Kane Brown on the podcast.
C
Big dog, Georgia Bulldogs. Even though you better not say anything about the Georgia Bulldogs. We don't love them. We respect them for Kane, but we don't love them at all. Just gonna say that.
A
No, I'm not gonna lie. So we. Y'all play Texas and I, like, I talk. That's my thing. Anytime Texas plays, I talk. And so I was texting Kane, and I was trying to get in the bag of like, yeah, like. Like, I'm getting a little aggressive. He's the nicest dude in the world. And I was like, okay, this isn't even fun anymore. Like, I can't even talk to you. He's like, it's a good game. You also have a chance. And I was like, come on, man.
B
He tried to say Arch Manning was kind of. It's gonna bring him back. I said, nah, bro.
C
Arch is our savior. We just haven't unleashed him yet. I'm just gonna say that I love Quinn, but Arch needs to just start a game in the game. One whole game. Siri does. Confidence. Up, up. Roll with them.
A
I need to. I need to ask the room a question. Okay. We were here. We stayed the night here. Beautiful home, by the way. Thank you for allowing us.
C
Unbelievable.
A
Yeah. Who smelled me last night? Can we be honest? Like, let's just. Cat's out the back. I smelled like ass last night. And who's gonna say it? You smell me a little bit?
B
No, it's funny. Just whenever we were on the race simulator, I smelled like s. So I left y'all and went. Washed my pits.
C
What up? That's all he. He Was like, I'm gonna go, so I need, like a phone charger, something. He's in there. Just watch his pits. No, you reeked for keeping it above.
B
I was telling myself, bro, bro, I'm.
A
Telling you, let's not get too specific here. But it was. It wasn't the upper half that was smelling bad, you sick bastard. It was the lower quadrant. You're just a heat thing.
C
A heat thing.
A
I thought it would be cooler in Nashville.
C
It was. It was very nice. The weather's nice. You were also wearing a full blown sweatsuit. We were all in, like, cutoffs and shorts.
A
Yeah, well, as soon as we landed, we got to the activities here, and I didn't. I was gonna get into some shorts, maybe some athletic wear.
C
Yeah.
A
Didn't get the chance.
C
Never did that. So then you. You smelled awful.
A
But I learned. And I have a question for you. Might be a little, you know, but we're almost here, and I feel like me and him are very alike.
C
Very alike. Yes. After just the one night here, I was like, there's a lot of similarity.
A
I read an article that said most people do performative showers. You only need to shower one time a day. Do you meet that criteria? Are you like one of those two to three type of people?
B
Two, three showers a day?
A
Yeah.
B
No, I'm a one kind of guy. Unless if I take a shower in the morning, then we play basketball, like last night, then I'm gonna shower for bed.
C
Of course. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
B
What?
A
You ever too tired to shower?
B
No. Oh, maybe when I was. You're still young, though. When I was younger, maybe.
A
We're almost the same age.
B
No, we're not as five years. Big difference is.
C
That's a big. That's a. That's a lot of personal.
B
And I got three kids, which technically makes me like 53.
C
So back to you in the showering thing, right? Yeah. Have you ever, you know, informed Brother Kane on the fact that you used to go, I don't know, 96 hours in between showers?
A
Yeah. There'd be times where I'd be like, I'm a good four days out.
B
I thought. I think I saw the interview.
A
Yeah. What's the longest you've gone on? Let's be honest here. You're on tour a lot. That's hectic.
B
Well, my wife ain't gonna let me come to bed. Wrong.
C
Dude. There's been literally multiple times that exact same scenario. I've tried to just like, dog. It's too late, too sweaty. It's. I'm like, trying to creep into bed, not even wake up Liv. She's like, oh. She's like, get your funky ass.
A
And I'm like, bro, come on, just.
C
Let me go sleep.
A
That's what I need. Maybe I need a wife or a girlfriend or maybe a friend. I need. Let's start at the lowest.
C
Let's start basically level. That would help in a lot of things, but you're still great.
A
Do you remember the first time we met?
B
Was it not at the show?
A
Your show? Yeah, it wasn't.
B
When we meet, I think I have images. What?
A
I have images, Cam. You can break down the story a little bit while I find these.
C
So you. Do you remember playing in Frisco, Texas, for the ACMA awards?
B
Yeah, I think we did twice. Two. Two or three times.
C
So the most recent one, this. This past year's one, remember, it was good old. Good old Frisco, Texas, at the Star? Yeah, Everybody was there. You sang amazing on stage. So we happened to be there and you performed, and we were incredibly close to the stage.
A
So there's actually an image that I pulled off YouTube. That's you. That's the back of you with a lot of people in the crowd, right? Yeah. That's a lot of you. If you zoom in right there, you see these two statues. That's Cameron. That's Peyton, right?
B
Yeah.
A
And so I saw you. I was like. I knew your music. I was like, okay. I've never seen you perform. Little water work started happening. Beautiful song you performed.
B
Thanks.
A
You were walking past us. Whenever you're, like, leaving the stage, I think you're going back to the green room or wherever you go after you perform. And I said, great song, kids. You go, thank you, brother. And I said, that was awesome. That was so cool.
C
That was pretty nice. Yeah. But then you walked off and. And you left us and. And it kind of. Kind of. Kind of hurt me, if we're being honest. It kind of hurt deep down.
A
It was a lot.
C
I cried. It was painful.
B
No, no. That's crazy, though. I don't remember that. I wonder if I saw Yalls podcast after.
C
When was that? Why am I having. Because that was remembering.
B
Did I sing Georgia?
A
Yeah.
C
Yes.
B
So that was.
C
God, it was so good. Yes.
B
Dang. So when did I see Yalls video? Or maybe. No. So that. After that performance, actually, I. So that was the. I'm usually. I usually drink, like, tequila before I go up. And that song was a very different song that I've ever performed. It was very vulnerable, just like me Basically. And usually if I'm up there, I'm, like, rocking out or something with my band. And after, I remember walking up on stage, and I, like, wasn't there there. Like, I was terrified, really. And so it was probably one of those things where when I got off stage, I was. I think I went back to them, and I was like, how was it? How was it? Because I thought it was terrible.
C
Oh, it was.
B
No, it was.
C
It was unreal.
B
Yeah.
C
That was the first time I heard that, too.
B
Because if it was April, I would have had to have known y'all, because I've been following y'all for a while now, at least a year, I think, or close to it, so I must have just not noticed.
C
Yeah, that's good.
A
Okay. Whenever you did meet us, you invite us to your show. I appreciate it. Fantastic, by the way.
B
Oh, thank you.
A
Rocking, bro.
C
That was. That was. That was an experience. That was sick.
A
Whenever we went to the green room. What was your first impression of me and Cam? Because we have one of you.
B
Oh, bro. So I. You know, we always see them. I don't know how many people have seen y'all in person, but they're sitting down. They probably look the same height as me. You know what I'm saying? I mean, if you look at him right now, his knees are up here. So then they walked in, and I'm like, there's six, seven. Both of them, not just one. I was just like, what the. And my boy Kenny Mac from Chat, if anybody knows him, he's my media guy. He stayed away from them so he wouldn't be in pictures with all of us.
A
So I was like, we probably have the same, like, first thought whenever we, like, hung out. So we saw you were like, okay, dope. And we talked for, like, five minutes. And I was like, this is, like, the most normal guy ever.
B
Oh, thank you.
C
For real. I was like, wow. Like, he's. He is, like, just chill. Even kill, like, everything. Just vibing. Like, just a solid guy, like, off the. Off the rip. The first conversation, I was like, he's awesome.
B
I was like, oh, thanks.
C
He's fantastic.
B
Yeah, I'm super chill. I wish I wasn't. I wish I had, like, a high energy. I only do if I'm on stage.
A
Is it. Is it natural? Just. It's like something in you just comes out when you're on stage, or it's like, okay, I'm about to perform. Let me.
B
It's like learning. I mean, y'all, I'm sure yalls Shows gonna change like crazy the more and more you get comfortable with it and the more, you know, you're just like. You watch yourself back, and you got. I can do this better or do this better. And it's just every job, just learning. And when I get up there to. The adrenaline's crazy. Yeah. So.
C
So. Oh, sorry. Go.
B
Oh, no. I was just gonna say. I don't know. I don't know what it is, bro.
C
Yeah, we. So I was gonna say something about us, but that I have a better question. Your very first, like, concert performance, even if it wasn't on, like, like, you know, like, stadium tour level, do you remember it? Were you, like, bone shaking, nervous? Were you, like.
B
So I didn't get nervous until I went out with FGO for the first time. So I started once I did my first show. I think I went out with FGL, like, eight shows later. So I only had, like, seven under my belt. And then I went from playing these bars for 800 to a thousand people to 15, 000 people.
A
Yeah, it's a jump.
B
Jump. Yeah. I mean, there wasn't technically 15, 000 people when I was out there, because I got. I got. Literally, I think 15 minutes was, like, four songs, and I was the first of four, so those three acts behind me, but I was terrified. I was singing like, he sits.
A
Like.
B
I just say, I hope everybody likes me. But when I was doing my own shows, it was just. I got started doing covers in my bathroom. So when they were. Whenever they were coming to see me, we played 90 minutes, and I had, like, five songs, and the rest were all cover songs, so. But I felt like I was still at home.
A
I can't imagine whenever we went to your show and we're on the floor and I just looked behind me, I looked up, and I saw everybody there. I can't imagine it. Our shows are probably, like, 800 people at our shows, and I throw up so much before our shows. I'm pacing, my mouth's bleeding. I can't. I can't do it.
C
Yeah.
A
Like, do you get nervous anymore? Or you're just like, oh, it's just second nature?
B
No, that's my friend Tequila.
C
Yeah, there you go. Yeah, Good friend. Great friend.
A
To have me and him have a toxic relationship because I. I tried him. It's still nerves, bro.
C
He just said that. You remember. Do you remember back to our first show when our very first time, we did, like, a live performance? So we opened up for Rory and Mall for their podcast, and we had the exact Same how you said, you just hope everyone likes you. We had that same moment because we were like, bro, these aren't even like our people. Like, they're literally not here for us.
B
Yeah.
C
And we went out there and we had like a 25 minute set. And dude, when I tell you I was so. I told you yesterday, I was like, I'm naturally a sweaty guy. Just like in whatever environment I was. Thank God I wore a black shirt. That's all I said, bro, I was dripping sweat. And we went out there and we killed it. And then it kind of just like installed this instant confidence in us because, like, bro, these people didn't even come for us. And they were laughing, they loved it. It was quick, it was easy. And that just like paved the way. And then, of course, we were still dumb nervous for our first, like, real life show. Our show. But it was. It's crazy. Like, we had the exact same feeling.
B
Yeah.
A
Do you get distracted by the crowd ever? Do you ever see something in the crowd that distracts you? Like, throws you off? Because we've seen some wild things.
B
Yeah, but it's always different stuff, you know? I mean, like, you'll see some of the same stuff. But, like, my thing is like fights. Fights break out a lot.
A
Really?
B
Yeah. So, like, if a fight for fight breaks, I immediately try to stop it. That. That's. Well, I mean, you got things like kids and stuff like that. So I'm like, I don't want any kids getting trampled. And then the other fans are trying to enjoy it. I don't want them getting bumped into or getting hit by accident. It hasn't happened much anymore, but like, a lot of times, like, I. I remember and there's actually a video of a bra got thrown up on stage at me. And instead of picking it up like most artists do, you just. Well, I kind of theatrical. I like, let it be known. Kick it off.
A
He got cussed out at his show by our fans in the middle of our set.
B
Oh, nah. See, I'd have been like, come up here, bro.
C
Bro. See, I. Again, better man than me. Like, because I. I was low key, in shock. I was like.
A
We were literally like. Like, they just looking at the person like, damn.
C
So we were in Philly and I'm a. I'm a proud but unfortunate Dallas Cowboy fan.
A
I'm proud.
C
I'm proud to be, but, you know, we don't have the best luck. So we're in Philly and I just start riffing with them and I'm like, to Hell with the Eagles. Whatever. And the whole. The whole crowd. Did the Eagles change? Yeah, they're like. They were just doing those, like, pulled. And I was like, that's why we won, because this was last year. Whatever the hell we won. I was talking shit. And then like 10 minutes later, I'm in the middle of a story and this woman in the very back, she just goes, you. And I was like. I was like, me. I was like, well, you. What did I do? I was like, what the hell? And then they just started going after me, and it ended up being like a running joke throughout the rest of the show. And at the very end when we left, I was like, it's still the Eagles, whoever you were. You too, like, bro. It was.
A
She was in the meet and greet after the show. She came up, she's like, that was me that said it. And we're like, like, that's not okay.
C
I was like, what are you talking about? See, back to the fighting. I'm. I love a good. I love watching boxing, ufc, all that. If a. If a full blown fight broke out at our show, I'd be on. I'd be like, oh, get slip. I'm like, go, Slip, go. I would be watching it, like, cheering on.
A
You're.
C
You're better than me, man.
A
This is our first time out here in Tennessee. It's a beautiful, beautiful state.
C
State.
B
Thank you.
A
A lot of leaves.
B
A lot of leaves.
A
A lot of leaves.
C
A lot of trees.
A
I'm gonna be honest here. I was going to tell you this yesterday, but I'm saving it for now. I had the wildest first experience here in Tennessee. It started from the plane. Like, I don't know, are y'all known for, like, wild people or, like, weird behavior, like rowdy?
B
Depends. I haven't really. I don't know. I haven't really ran into that.
A
Okay. I was on the plane, sitting down on the plane. You know what I mean? There's people, strangers around me, right? There's this lady, she's like. She's to the left of me, this older lady, she has a big jacket on. And I go, okay, it's not that cold on the plane, but whatever you need to do for your comfort, ma'am. She's sitting there. We're like 34 minutes into this plane ride. I see you start reaching for something in this jacket pocket. It's a big jacket, I'm telling you. One of the largest pieces of a garment.
B
Like, Like a Kanye jacket.
A
Like, huge. Like, she could, like, hide in it. You Know what I mean?
B
Yeah.
A
She reaches in the pocket, she pulls out a full hot dog. I go, okay, where did they sell that on American Airlines? You know what I mean? Where'd you get that? She starts eating it. I'm like, it's starting to smell, too. She's pulling out condiments. It's. It's a gnarly smell. I'm getting.
C
Oh.
A
Goes into the other pocket after the hot dog. I swear to God.
B
Pulls out a soda. Soup.
C
She gets soup.
A
Hot soup on a plane. I said, ma'am, what are we doing?
C
This is Panera. Where are you getting this from?
A
Then there's another gentleman. He's in front of me, and I'm. I'm a creep. If you have your phone out in front of me, I'll look at what you're looking at. I want to be involved. You know what I mean? I'm looking at his phone, seeing what he's doing. I'm getting the smell of soup and hot dog over here. I'm looking at him. He's just on Facebook, right? He's going through his Facebook. I'm like, that's a good algorithm you got. One of the things was an image of a lovely woman.
C
Okay.
A
You know, she's maybe a model. I don't know. And it seemed to be a video. And I said, okay, probably should scroll past that. You're in public. He opens it up, and I guess his AirPod wasn't connected.
C
Oh, no.
A
So out loud, this video starts playing. That's not for children. And he freaks out. He's like. Drops the phone on the ground. He's. He. He wasn't in the best position where he could be that limber to go get that phone. So he was struggling to get this phone. The video still playing out loud. He's panicking. He grabs it, and it took him, like. I saw, like, 45 seconds to get this video off. And everybody's like.
C
We're just looking. They're hitting the scratch.
A
Yeah. And then we got to the. We're getting our bags, and I picked my bag up, and there's this older lady that came up to me, and she goes, you shouldn't do that. And I said, me? She goes, yeah, probably shouldn't do that. And I said, yes, ma'am. And we. I just kept going. So that's my first experience of Tennessee. I just wanted to let you know that's what we're representing here.
C
Yeah, that's what y'all got to offer.
B
It's the airport. Not every you know, you don't. You don't know where everybody's from. But I want to know the sounds of the video.
C
Good morning to you.
A
You want me to recreate it?
B
Yeah.
C
He goes, don't know about this.
A
You ever. I'm trying to. You ever got, like, two water balloons together and you smacked them and then somebody humming in the background? Let's. Let's. That's the best way I can describe that for it to stay in this episode.
B
So this wasn't really a model then.
A
What she.
B
It was a different kind of model.
C
There was some profession at work. Work. It wasn't. Now it.
A
Maybe an actress would be the better term. I don't know.
B
Nice.
A
I'll just let it know it was a video that shouldn't be played in public.
C
Speaking of water, I thought about this last night when I was trying to put myself to sleep. Water beds. I was going to bed, but I couldn't. And I was just fighting the darkness and I was trying to just. Okay, win the fight. Well, I think waterbeds have to be top three worst inventions ever. We did not sleep on a waterbed. Let me put us a waterbed. But I was just sitting there with my thoughts, and that's one that came up. I hate water beds. Do you all agree? Do you disagree? What's your stand on a water.
B
So I grew up in a trailer park, and my nana's water bed was a water bed.
A
That's so sick.
C
See, my grandparents was a water bed, too.
B
And then she had, like, this is what sucked is. She had. It was like fake fish in the, in the. In the water bed. So, like plastic fish. So, like, if you. If the sheets weren't on it, you'd see a random red fish pop up.
C
What are we doing? Your man had a koi pond.
B
When I was. When I was little, they used to. When there was no sheets, they'd come up and I would just smack the bed as hard as I could just to see if I could feel it. And it hurt like hell because you're like, yeah, you know, hit concrete, basically. But I don't know. I, I. That made me like water beds when I was little. I don't know if I.
C
So now as an adult, it probably be fun, bro.
A
You should get a water bed, bro.
C
No. What are you, a waterbed advocate? What does that mean?
A
I've never been in one, but I want one. And I want a lava lamp. I want both of those things. You like lava lamps?
B
Yeah. Lava lamps are sick, y'all. Went in my game room. You saw the little electric ball that would. What are they, Spencers?
A
Yeah.
C
Lava lamps. Fire. Water beds.
B
Gas, bro.
A
I feel like if you sleep in a waterbed, it's like cuddling with Poseidon. Like that would be so comforting.
C
But now imagine. And now imagine your wheels are turning a little too fast. You and your best friend Tequila had a very long night. Right? Imagine laying down. You already feel like you're spinning and now you're, now you're, you're trying to survive. Feels like you're drowning in the bed.
B
Yeah, I wouldn't be able to do my position.
C
Yeah, he'd literally like coming up from the water. No, bro, I, I just, I had to say that because I thought about it. The bed you gave was not a water bed again. And it was very comfortable. But. But waterbeds are awful. There's no way I would ever get one.
A
The you should know podcast this episode is brought to you by Mando. There's a lot of things you can do when you're getting ready for a first date, but there's a non negotiable and you know what that is? Deodorant. The good thing about Mando, I know a lot of people like to use deodorant on their pits. With Mando you can do that. But you know what else you can do with Mando? This is an all over deodorant. All over your body. And thank God because all over my body needs some deodorant. It is safe to use anywhere on your body. Pits, balls, thigh folds, belly buttons, butt cracks and feet. It was created by a doctor who saw firsthand how normal BO is being misdiagnosed and mistreated. All the products are baking soda free and paraben free. It is clinically proven to control odor better than a shower with soap alone. Want to try America's number one whole body deodorant formula right now? You can now find them in Walmart, Target and other retailers across the country. For the best deals, go to shopmando.com Mando starter pack is perfect for new customers. It comes with a solid stick deodorant cream tube deodorant. Two free products of your choice like mini body wash and deodorant wipes and free shipping. And as a special offer for listeners, new customers get $5 off a starter pack with our exclusive code that equates over 40% off your starter pack use code YSK shotmando.com S-H-O-P M A N D O dot com. Please support our show and tell them that we sent you Smell fresher, stay drier and boost your confidence from head to toe with man Do. Now on to the rest of the episode. The you should know podcast. I was privy to it and this might not stay in, but I was privy to a game. It's a cracker game. Is that what it's called?
B
Oh, Cracker challenge. Are we gonna do that, you guys? Do we? I don't know if we have any crackers.
A
I don't think I could do it. I have dry mouth syndrome sometimes, and I think you might have to get EMS on speed dial.
B
It's crazy, though. You gotta try it.
A
Explain to them what it is.
B
I honestly forgot it was when we first started touring. But you got to eat as. What is it? As many crackers as you can in a minute. Oh, five crackers and no water now.
A
I like my games to be fun. I like to have fun during my.
B
No, it is fun. We. We used to do it. And like, my drummer, Kenny, he passed away, but he was hilarious, man. And he tried it, and I think he tried more than five just to prove how much of a badass he was. And then all of a sudden, you just see crackers fly out his mouth like a bomb. Yeah.
C
Oh, my God. It reminds me of the cinnamon challenge back then.
A
Never did that. My mom, I tried it one time. Mom got on me.
C
You have a good mom?
A
Yeah. Spanked me real bad for that one. Couldn't do it. Do you like spicy foods?
B
Love them.
A
See, I don't get it. That's what I don't understand.
B
It's not fun afterwards, but going down is delicious.
A
Is it, though?
C
It is, yeah.
A
I like comfort in my daily life.
B
I like sweating a little bit.
C
Right on the. Right on that edge. Right on that line.
B
Yeah.
C
Discomfort.
A
So that means you're a scary movie type of guy.
B
Love scary movies.
C
Yeah.
A
No. Why, though? It's like, okay, genuinely try to sell me on scary movies.
B
I love whenever, say we're going, me and Kate are going on a dinner date and she says, go in and lock the house. And it's 8pm and it's dark and you know, I live out in the woods, so I have to go back inside and turn off all the lights and go upstairs and think if anything's behind me. Like that.
A
That's fun to you.
C
Thrill.
A
Worst part.
C
Thrill. It's fantastic.
A
I think we need more hobbies right here. Like, what's going on?
C
Scary movies are fire. You just. You have. You Literally are too afraid. You haven't broke that barrier. You haven't experienced it yet. Now, okay, There's a big difference between scary and creepy. I think scary is like ghosts, jump scares, like a murderer, stuff like that. But when you get to creepy, where it's. Yet you're questioning your own faith, that's when you need. You need to turn the film off. When you get to that point, you're like, is this real? That's when you need to wrap it up. Because those. Those are the creepy movies.
A
I'm already naturally anxious, like, so I think, like, if I get like, a little pain on my side, I think it's it, you know, I'm starting to call my family, you know, I mean, so with a scary movie, I'm gonna check every door. I'm gonna check under cabinets. I do that anytime I come home at night anyway.
C
Oh, my God. But God, can you please ask him how he locks his bedroom door every night without scary movies?
A
Personal.
C
How he locks his door to his bedroom?
B
You put a chair under the doorknob.
A
It's a little worse than that.
B
Move your dresser in front of it.
A
I have a. Well first, so I have like French doors on my. And so I close them, but the lock doesn't work. You know what I mean? So I get like a PVC pipe and I stick it under there, right? And then I get an old belt and I wrap the door, like the handles with a belt. Can't get in there, can you?
B
This is your bedroom.
A
Bedroom.
C
Bedroom. Then what do you sleep with? What's under the guest pillow that's not being occupied?
A
I got knives.
C
It's like a kitchen knife. It's not like a pocket knife. It's like something you'd cut a pineapple with. It's a massive knife.
A
There has to be weird things that you like. Little weird things like that don't leave me out here.
B
Weird things that I do. Like, scary wise.
A
Just anything. Say something that's gonna make me like, we're supposed to be on a team here.
B
No, I know. I'm trying to think. I can't. I can't think of. I mean, that's like crazy. I'm trying to think about Kate seeing me lock our door with a belt and that.
C
Bro, that's on like, Wednesdays. Like, it's not like an event happened. Halloween, it's like a regular ass day. And he's like, sitting there belting his door. That's unacceptable.
B
I'll think about it and see if we come back. I Have. I have no idea, dude. It's weird.
A
There's one thing I. You. I watched an interview and you said you have weird dreams.
B
Oh, yeah.
A
Yeah. Okay, so I'm known for having night terrors. I've always had bad dreams. Oprah's in all of them. She's always there. Either she's on the tv, she's standing across the street, I'm getting chased by some Oprah's there. What's like, the craziest dream you've had?
B
So I can. This is gonna sound crazy, but I think it's gonna be awesome. I can control my dreams.
A
Oh, like a lucid dream?
B
Oh, yeah. So. So every dream, like, when I have them, somehow I just realized that I'm in a dream, so I can just do whatever I want, basically. So I figured it out. Well, I figured it out when Michael Myers would chase me, like, every night, and I would always. It was the slow running.
C
Oh, my God.
B
And so it was weird because the exact dream is he was chasing me around the baseball. So I was running from first to second to third, and he was chasing me.
A
All right?
B
And so it was. I was just running slow. And then I ended up having the same dream three times. So my brain was like, this is a dream.
A
Yeah.
B
And I remember. I remember I turned around and just smacked the. Out of Michael.
C
Oh, my God. If you don't wake up with confidence after that, I don't know what. I don't know what.
B
He fell. And then I remember I just started beating the out of it. And. And after that, I just found out, like, if I was in the dream, I was like, this is a dream. And just controlled everything. And actually, like, two days before I got here, I came up with a movie concept. I'm not gonna say, so it doesn't get taken.
C
Yeah, there you go.
B
But came up. I just had these dreams, and they kept going and kept going and woke up, like, six times and never wrote it down. But then I was like, okay, I gotta go back to sleep so I can remember this. And I went back to sleep, woke up the seventh time, started writing it down, tried to go back to sleep, and I was so excited that I couldn't. And then I came up with a whole nother movie idea just based off of that.
A
That sounds like the most, like, powerful night ever.
C
Literally infinite idea glitch. He's like. He's like, all right, Goes back to sleep, wakes up. Okay, that's good.
A
I don't like that, though. I don't like. Well, I Don't have good dreams. I've never had a good dream in my life. Just nightmares. So I hate having a nightmare. Waking up in the middle of the night, and then I don't want to go back to sleep because I know it's gonna continue. Like, I can't. It won't leave until, like, something happens at the end.
B
Yeah.
C
It's like you're on your own, brother. So. So you could control. So, like, say you go to sleep tonight, no matter what it is you, like, you. You're just, like. You're tapped in. Like, you know it's a dream. You can control them all.
B
Yeah. It usually takes, like, a couple. In my dream, it takes, like, a couple seconds, and then I'm like, oh, this is a dream.
C
That. That. That is. I would. I would argue that that's a superpower. That. That's not normal. That is. That is super.
B
It's cool. I'll tell you the. So the first time when I actually started doing it after I smacked Michael, so I had my first big single that I really. That I released, it kind of blew up for me. Was used to love you sober. And I woke up because I had a dream about that being a title. So I remember I woke up and wrote it down and then went and wrote it. First time riding in Nashville, went back home to Chattanooga, and I went to sleep after we had released it, and I had a dream that it was. Which just isn't controlling. But I had a dream that it was number one on iTunes. And I woke up and checked my phone. Or like, it was like, 6am it was number one. And then that's when music kind of happened for me. That's when the label started calling and stuff.
A
So sick.
B
But it was just cool that I had the dream, woke up, and then I literally got a call from a record label that. That morning, like, two hours later.
A
You need it. You need to start dreaming about me, brother. I'm not gonna lie to you. Bring some good dreams to me. Start dreaming about me, huh?
B
I got you.
A
Thank you. Now I'm dead serious. I need something. You know what I mean?
B
All right.
C
That's such a crazy statement. You need to start dreaming about me, me, brother. All right.
A
That's actually sick.
C
I. I have a. I have a quick game for us. We good for a first. First little game.
B
Let's do it.
A
I love the game.
C
So.
A
My ass is wet.
B
Put that out there.
A
It's on your. It's on your leather ass wet. That's the number one spot you all right? So let's go play the game.
C
So the game is. It's simply. Would you rather. There's going to be a lot of these sprinkled throughout the rest? But this is a very tailored one. So it's a Kane Brown. Would you rather. But every answer is either either Peyton. Not Peyton, Peyton. Or Cam. Okay, so it's. You'll see. First one. Would you rather be stuck in four hours, bumper to bumper traffic with a broken radio with only Peyton or only Cam? And feelings will be hurt during this Kane. I'm just gonna let you know.
B
I don't. It's hard, though, because. Yo, come on, y'all. Y'all are both. They're both. Both equally cool and equally different.
A
Yeah.
C
What different do you like better? That's what it kind of boils down to. Oh, and there's no. I'll take you both. There's no. Let's roll back two hours of hard answers.
B
That's a hard one.
A
Is it, though?
C
No. No. Just go with your gut.
B
There's no gut, though.
C
Oh, you're a nice guy. We know it.
A
No, I.
B
Honestly, I don't. I can't answer that one. I can't answer it the way he's looking here.
A
Come on.
B
Okay, okay, okay. Hold on. What?
C
Yeah. You can ask questions back.
A
Yeah.
C
Here we go.
B
What car am I driving? And you said it's. You said how long?
C
Four hours.
B
Okay.
C
Four hours, bumper to bumper traffic. It is only you and me or you and Peyton. And the radio is broken.
B
Yeah. What car am I driving? Y'all saw my vehicles.
C
Let's say you are in your. Let's say the baby. The truck. Big old lift. Let's get the truck out there.
B
Well, dang. So now y'all both have room.
A
Yeah.
B
So he's not gonna complain as much.
C
Ah, I see where you're going.
A
I want to complain.
C
If we would have went. If we would win with winner, you would have been complaining.
A
There is a. There is a right answer to this.
C
There's a very right.
A
There is a right answer.
B
Yeah, there is. Y'all done it. Well, that's what I'm assuming she's gonna say you.
A
I would say the better answer would be him.
C
Oh, wow.
A
Yeah. No.
C
Hey, the radio broken.
A
That's why.
C
Glad you listened.
A
Yeah.
B
But I'm saying. So I look at. I look at my friend Kenny.
A
Yeah.
B
And Kenny. You and Kenny kind of have the same energy. And I could be in a car ride with Kenny in four hours and have a blast, but then you come up with valid points and you can just talk to you.
C
We might decipher your dreams. Hell, you might get two movie scripts out of that four hours.
B
I'm okay. So this is just. This is going to be the easiest one. So it's not being mean. I'm gonna say cam, perfectly fine. But the reason I'm gonna say it is just because what you said. And I just don't want your ass sweating on my seat.
A
Oh, no. Your car is gonna smell horrible.
C
Bourbon at the end of that ride. That would be a wicked. You could bottle that up and sell it and my.
A
My breath will start to stink anytime I'm in a long. Kind of like on a plane. Never invite me on a plane ride with you, brother.
C
Oral on him when it comes to that. That. Now, that sounded crazy. Now, that sounded wicked. I'm not gonna lie to you. I'm not. That's. That sounded a bit sinful. Okay.
A
I like this game.
C
This is very good. So next one. Would you rather have to navigate through a zombie apocalypse with all of your belongings, so your house, all your resources. But again, win. You're only with Peyton or you're only with me.
B
I'm gonna have to say camp.
A
Come on. What's going on?
B
You said you don't like scary stuff, bro.
C
So I don't.
A
I don't wanna.
C
You can't even watch a movie.
B
I don't want to be protecting myself with zombies running at me, and you're behind a door with a belt knife.
C
Beautiful call.
A
Okay, but it might give you a purpose during this. You're like, I have to protect him.
B
Got my wife and kids, bro. I need help. I need help. Wait.
A
I can make good jokes. We'll have a great time.
B
Well, I was just. He'll have my kids safe with a belt. Locked. Locked in. Wrapped around pvc pipe.
C
Yeah.
A
100%.
C
See, now. Now does that make you feel good? That when. When life. Life or death strikes, you're in charge of belting the kid's door? You're not in the front lines with Kane. Does that make you feel good?
A
Well, it's honest.
C
Honest. Okay, two. Oh, here we go. And these aren't. These aren't. These aren't biased? You think of one, you can ask.
A
I got two.
C
Okay, here we go. Dying to hear this one. You have to write a new song, and it has to feature either me or Peyton.
B
Okay.
C
Oh, oh.
B
Oh, I'm sorry. What?
A
Please tell me we're keeping that. We are keeping that.
C
You just grabbed like, it Was a mint. It was a whole. It was a whole insight. And he did it. So come.
B
Said, hey, at least there's no animal cruelty on here. Because it was about to go.
C
Yeah, there we go.
B
There's my epipen. It was a wasp. It was a wasp.
A
Yeah. That's crazy.
C
What if he.
B
And he carried it out the front door? There's a door right here. He carried it all the way out there.
C
Okay, next one. Dying. Dying to hear the answer this. You have to make a new. A new hit single, right? Gotta have a feature. It's either cam or paid.
B
This one's easy for me. Yeah, because y'all have been talking about it so much in his playlist.
C
See, but that's. But that's his ear for music, not his vocal cords.
B
Oh, he's on it.
C
Oh, yeah.
A
I got a 16.
B
Yeah, but maybe. I mean, you could rap, right?
A
No, I'm singing. Oh, me in Tennessee. Get along.
B
Oh, yeah, that's. That's perfect. Okay. Okay, now let me hear you.
C
Bourbon down on a bourbon road. I don't know what I'm supposed. That's me. That's what I got to offer. I can get. I can drop it real low. You're gonna pick him, aren't you?
B
You.
C
I shot myself in the foot.
B
Hold on. Give me one.
A
Oh. Back on my tractor you looked at me, you saw my eyes and you know what? I see what you see?
C
Kate's like, nobody need to know what are you see?
A
That was impressive. No. Okay. That was really nice.
C
Close the back door and grab the children get the tea and started sipping. We're here in Tennessee. I don't. I don't know, but it's a. Oh.
A
Man, if I had.
C
I don't.
B
I don't. I don't think that I'm getting anywhere with this. So two and. Oh, I'm gonna have to go paid.
C
There we go.
A
Okay.
C
Okay.
B
Now, you asked.
C
Oh, this is perfect. You said you had two.
A
Yeah.
C
That's a total of five. That means someone's gonna win best of five. Ask your two.
A
Say we just robbed a bank.
C
Mike.
A
Okay, we gotta get out of this.
C
There.
A
Out of me and Kim. Who would you rather be your getaway driver?
B
Oh, snap. Oh, well. Well, this is perfect, cuz we did the race simulators.
A
It's not fair.
C
It's not fair. It's.
B
It's fair. Are we driving a Tesla?
C
I was about to say we're driving electric.
B
Pick any other car. I'm. I'm going to have to go With Cam. Cuz you said you ain't hit the brake in two years.
A
Yeah, I don't know how to drive a regular car anymore.
C
Yes, sir.
A
I'm not going.
B
You set yourself up for that one, man.
A
That's not fair, though. If adrenaline's in my soul, I'm gone. I'll figure out. And I'm not hitting the brakes. We're getting away. We just robbed the bank. We got 12 million in the back.
C
That first turn, the first curve. You were hitting the shit out of the walls in the simulator yesterday.
A
It was just the downshift. I didn't know how to work the down.
C
20 seconds in, your engine was smoking and your axle was snapped in two. You're talking about. I drive a Tesla, man. No, I'm taking that easy.
A
That's fair. That's fair. The only meals you could ever eat have to either be cooked by me or Cam. Who would you pick to be your personal chef?
B
I gotta go with Cam again.
A
Okay. Not Kane. Why? That's crazy.
B
Literally just told me you don't cook. Yesterday you said you literally just order Uber eats the last two years. Because you don't cook and you don't like to wash dishes. Okay, personal chefs also wash dishes.
A
Well, that's where teamwork comes. I'll cook. We'll be a teen there.
B
Now we're married.
C
Yeah, exactly.
A
But if I did cook, you would get experimental dishes.
C
Yeah, he doesn't want to wake up with an illness. He wants to be healthy.
B
What is in this? I found something behind the couch.
A
Yeah, that looked good over there.
C
Just put some in.
A
I'm not gonna lie, Cam. I've never really seen you cook.
C
Because I have a beautiful, amazing wife named Olivia. She kind of holds that part of our life down. But I can make a mean scramble. A chicken Alfredo tortellini. I can make a Cajun Chicken Club. Talk to me.
A
Sounds fun to you?
B
You're probably like me, bro. Like, I can cook a mean digiorno pizza.
A
Exactly. I'll work the hell out of an oven.
C
I'll get another going so I know exactly what in there.
A
We're gonna have nice popcorn, too.
C
Just so for the simplicity of everyone else, because I think we can all add. The final score was 4 to 1.
B
It was 4 to 1. But he set himself up for failure because he literally. He literally asked questions that he said he didn't do.
A
I forgot. I. Like we know each other. Like I've told you these things.
C
You read it on yourself.
A
That's okay. Well, at least I Got the song. I think that was the coolest one.
C
What is it? Sympathy Win. You got the coolest win. Okay. Speaking of songs, I was thinking about this right there. There was a very, very key part of my upbringing where I thought I. I was. I was about two bad Saturdays away from being a SoundCloud rapper. Trying to be at least nice. Okay.
A
I think we all went through that phase.
C
I think we all. Especially with basketball, too, or just sports in general. Like, maybe had a bad tournament. You're like, man, I'm a right.
B
Yeah.
C
And then you're just like, let me not. Let me not. But one thing I've always appreciated about country music is, for the most part, I'd say 95, maybe 96%. It's just your name. You came Brown. Yeah, you know, it's just. You go by your name now in hip hop and in rapping, you got all sorts. Young, slim and trim. You got little. Little duty butt.
A
Right.
C
You got all these things. So I. I wanted to just pick your brain. If country music kind of operated on the same terms that hip hop does in rap, and you could use an alias. Have you ever thought of an alias? Does Kane Brown have an alias? Would you go by a cool name?
B
It's kind of lame, but I did have an alias for a while, and this is because I didn't pay my bill at Planet Fitness, so I went in and acted like I was somebody else.
C
There's nothing that would have got me prepared for that. No clue. I was.
B
And it was. It was Chris Anderson, and I had a different accent and everything. It was, you know, I was super country boy.
C
That's Fire Chris Anderson.
B
And. Yeah, so that was my alter ego.
C
Okay.
B
But I have wanted to before I knew that I was gonna, you know, be signed and all that. I. I do kind of wish that instead of using my last name, I'd use my middle name, because I feel like Kane Allen is kind of a fire country name.
C
That's a fire country.
B
So.
C
Yeah, yeah.
B
No, I do love the KB.
C
KB's fire K8. Yeah. Okay. The initials. The initials on KB definitely wins.
B
Come from Boston.
C
Yeah. Kane Allen would have been fire, though, too. You want to tell them yours?
A
Oh, little stink Butt.
C
Little stink.
A
Little stink buck on. On the track. Little stink Butt.
C
That's your producer tag.
A
Yeah, little stink Butt on the track.
C
Yeah, little stink Butt on the track. And it goes. Then it just goes into the song. That would be the world's best producer tech. Oh, no, it's another stinker. The song just Starts. That's low key. Fire. Oh, no, no. What about your. What about your 9 to 5 alias? If you get a coffee. If you get some food.
A
Oh, yeah. When I order food or do anything where they ask your name, I just go by Steve. I don't know why. I'm just Steve. Yeah. I don't know why it's hard for me to say my name.
C
Oh, my God, I hate. I hate saying my own name out loud.
A
You don't have. I mean, Kane is easy to say. Say like you. I'm Kane. Right. It's one syllable.
C
Kane.
A
Right. I didn't know. Peyton. It's that. It's that middle part, because I. I got a bad lisp, too. I got a big tongue, so it always gets involved in that little section. I don't know. Say Payton pay 10. You know what I mean?
B
Depends where you're at.
A
Right. Okay, wait.
B
Try to say my name if you're down here. It's Peyton.
C
Peyton.
A
Okay. But he has a cool voice down here. Like, that was sick. I can't sound like that.
C
You're like, peyton.
A
Yeah. And then they're always like, Kaden. I'm like, no. Like Aiden. I'm like, no. So I just go by Steve.
C
Easy. The amount of times I've said, they go, nick, can I get a name for the name for the order? I go, cam, and I see the bag and says, Kim. I'm like, did I. Did I sound like a woman through the Internet? And then I'm like, my whole day.
A
I'm just like, why don't you say Cameron?
C
I don't like saying my own name. Cameron. No, I don't like it. I've been struggling to say the word.
A
Oh, yeah.
C
Oh, yeah, where Boston is Boston, Massachusetts. Okay, so it's the voice.
A
So here's the way with the lie, with the voice.
C
But he still said it correctly. I've been saying Massachusetts. Oh, my God.
B
With a H, bro.
C
Massachusetts.
B
Massachusetts.
C
Yes. I sound like a massive. Two shits is what it sounds like I'm saying. But Massachusetts. Oh, okay.
A
Can you try to spell Massachusetts?
C
Oh, no, no, no, Shot boy.
B
He's saying it. M, A, s, s. This A2.
C
A2, exclamation point. Just so I'm not alone. Is there a word that y'all have been struggling with? Please, just throw me a bone.
B
I know I bring him up a lot, but Kenny, he can't say anything with a fu. So, like, he says, feud for fruit.
C
Wait, so he just, like, removes the arm?
B
Well, no. And then if You. He says his funeral. It's. It's funeral.
A
Oh, yeah, funeral. Where's he from?
B
He's from chat where I'm from.
A
Oh, he's like from Memphis.
C
Mity.
B
Glorilla.
A
I love Glorilla.
C
Do you have a word you're struggling with? I do too. I love glow, dude.
A
She's fantastic. I struggle with any. What's my lisp. So it's like the chs.
C
You went through the chicken phase in church.
A
Yeah, I can't do those.
B
Go. I got. I got to hear it.
A
Oh, no, don't do that.
C
Don't do that. Like you say it was. It was a nice Sunday and you went to church's chicken.
A
Yeah, I went to church's chicken. Yeah.
C
It's like he can, he can mask it, but. Oh, it's there.
A
I saw the.
C
He saw the. He saw the cruiser.
B
I saw the lip, dude.
A
The tongue, it gets like activated.
C
Yeah, it's. It's bad. It's bad.
A
Well, you had a game. I want to play a game. I got a. Would you rather.
C
Oh, you have. Oh, I'm telling you, they're sprinkled in.
A
Would you rather. All right. Would you rather always have crumbs in your bed or always be woken up by ice cold bucket of water?
B
I'm going crumbs.
A
I love a good crumb in the bed.
C
I would have to go health benefit wise. I think the cold plunge, the cold bucket would be better. But crumbs.
B
Little midnight snack.
C
We don't want to get up.
A
My dog. My dog.
C
It's like bunch of crunch. You just throw them in.
A
You ever rolled over and it got a good itch? Like you got. What do you got crumbs on your bed. And you got it right there on that spot.
C
How many crumbs? That's like a bag of chips was like just crunched up.
A
Oh, I eat in my bed. That's the number one place I eat.
C
See, that's, that's. And that's disgusting.
A
I've eaten full steak, potatoes, like in my bed. It's comfort.
C
You're kidding.
B
A1 sauce on the pillow.
A
Come on now. Come on now. Is that blood or sauce? You never know. You never know.
C
Am I bleeding or is there leftovers? I'd have to. I dog. I'd have to go with crumbs. I feel like I'd wake up pissed off every day if it was just cold water.
B
Oh, everybody would be a reflex. So you get slapped.
C
Oh, yeah.
A
You cold punch though, don't you? No, you don't oh, yeah. Yeah. You don't do it.
C
See?
A
Well, we got it. We should all try it.
C
It's not a problem for me. It's like.
B
Like, if it's a. Okay.
C
I didn't mean anything by it. Just saying. Based off of personal.
B
Like, do y'all like to swim?
C
Swim?
A
I can't swim.
C
I love swimming.
B
You're six, seven, bro. You don't have to swim.
A
Well, I'm saying. Oh, you throw me in a lake or, like, an ocean. Done.
B
I'm. That's my biggest fear is the ocean.
A
Really?
B
Oh, yeah.
A
Same.
B
Yeah, bro.
A
What's out there?
B
Don't know.
A
I think that's where space is. I don't think space is out there. I think space is in the ocean.
B
I'm not. I'm not gonna argue with you.
A
I'm saying.
B
Yeah.
A
You know what I mean?
C
I mean, it's. It's damning evidence. It's damning evidence. Yeah.
A
I, like, don't invite me to a boat. I'm not going out there. I don't want. What's the enjoyment?
C
What if it's great vibes?
A
I can get great vibes in my bedroom. I don't need that.
C
What if it's better vibes on a boat?
A
I'll miss out.
C
What if we're in Miami?
A
Never been Miami. I've never been. Okay, let's go. Got another one. How often do you wash your sheets?
B
I don't wash my sheets. That's my. That's my. My wife washes and changes the sheets.
C
She's.
A
The wife is the hack.
B
Yeah, she. I mean, it's like I said, she don't like me coming to bed stinky. So good woman.
A
See, I have no one to hold me accountable. I'll go a month without brushing my teeth.
B
Four days.
A
Yeah, man.
B
No, no.
A
My grill is gross, yo. No. If I laugh, my head goes back. It's black back there.
C
Oh.
A
Oh. What?
C
Oh. What, Peyton. Oh.
A
What?
C
Oh, Peyton.
A
Oh.
C
What? Oh, Peyton.
A
It's all right.
C
No, it's not this girl. It's not.
B
Are these my mics?
C
He's like, back up, dog.
A
No, the studio, like, where we record. Like, my mic is rancid.
C
Oh, it stinks.
A
It's disgusting.
C
Starts crawling off.
A
Well, this kind of parlays into it. Would you rather have breath that always smells like tuna and onions or have the apple alarm sound in your ear every day for three hours a day? Oh, my apple, bro.
C
I have to go.
B
You can taste that, bro. You're going around like you could taste when your breath stings.
C
Yes. Tuna and onions are you.
B
And it's two things that I don't eat.
C
Yeah, that's arguably the worst thing you could. That is rancid.
A
Somebody turn on an alarm. I want y'all to hear this.
C
Bro, There's. Okay, that's.
A
Play that alarm sound.
C
That's not.
A
I can't wake up to that sound because it'll ruin my day. Yeah, whose alarm was that?
C
Weird.
A
Oh, that was me. That's me. Yeah. No, that's me. I don't mind a bad breath. You know what I mean? You just breathe out of your nose and you suck in before you talk.
B
You don't. You don't mind it until somebody's talking to you with bad breath.
A
Yeah, you hit one of these, you're, like, talking through the side.
B
That's selfish, bro.
A
No, not that one. The apple one.
C
That. What alarm is that then?
A
See, you don't know. See, I'm about to show you how bad this is.
C
The. Oh, the.
B
Yeah, I don't know if I know the sound.
C
Okay, here's. Okay, that's your alarm, right?
B
I don't have an alarm.
C
Oh, man.
B
My kids are. My alarm.
C
Oh, yeah, you got that natural. See, But I'm taking. I'm taking the alarm, though. Do I. Okay, do I get to choose the three hours?
A
That one.
B
That one. But you do get, like, a second.
A
Of silence, but for three hours, so.
C
You'Re technically getting about.
B
Do the math.
C
You're getting about an hour of silence. About two hours silence. Run that back over and over.
A
You've never smelled my breath, have you?
B
I mean, you're up there so now.
A
Yeah, okay, but, like, even at your. At your show was bad. I'm not gonna lie to you. Oh, my God. I got dry mouth. And then I was. A little bit of beers. That's a bad comment.
B
Don't come too close to the flames next time.
C
That's. That is wicked. Oh, my God. He. I actually just told this last week, but I have to tell you, we were in whatever city it was, but we were something with our audio and visuals going bad. And he. We go backstage because he, like, he will legit, like, grind his teeth if he's, like, anxious. Like, that's one of his things. And we go backstage, and we only had, like, an hour before the show starts. And I'm sitting there. I was like, Brought my shower real quick, like, you good? And he's has his back to me, and he's moving and stuff. Stuff. And he turns around, he's like. He's like, yeah, I'm all right. And there's blood all up in, like, in between his teeth. Dog. Oh, my God. I was like, there's no way you're bleeding. He's like, wait, what? I'm bleeding, dude. It was. It's just like, how do you not feel that one? How do you not smell iron, too? You're not even. You're not even control of yourself, I think.
A
What? When is this podcast turned into Peyton's weird abilities? What are we doing?
B
Hey, it's all brought it on yourself.
C
We all love you.
A
The you should know podcast this episode is brought to you by BetterHelp. We often hear about the red flags we should avoid. But what if we focus more on looking for green flags in friends or partners? If you're not sure what they look like, therapy can help you identify green flags. It also can help you actively practice them in your relationship and embody the green flag energy yourself. Whether you're dating, married, building a friendship, or just working on yourself, it's time to form relationships that love you back. I truly believe that therapy is important. It's a necessity, and it's helpful for learning positive coping skills and how to set boundaries and empowers you to be the best version of yourself. It isn't just for those who've experienced major traumas in their life. BetterHelp is fully online, making therapy affordable and convenient. Serving over 5 million people worldwide, you can access a diverse network of more than 30,000 credentialed therapists with a wide range of specialties. You can easily switch therapists at any time at no extra cost. Discover your relationship green flags with better help. Visit betterhelp.com ysk to get 10 off your first month. That's BetterHelp. H-E-L-P.com y-k now, on to the rest of the episode you should know podcast. I want him to go through something. I want you to give him a math quiz.
C
No, it you want to go through a math quiz.
B
I'm from Georgia, bro.
A
Hey, I dropped out of school.
B
I was in five. A fifth year senior in high school.
A
You red shirted. There's nothing wrong with that.
C
There's nothing wrong.
A
I'll do it with you, all right? And then we'll try to figure this out together.
B
Okay, Cool.
C
Yeah. Okay. Okay. What grade level we talking?
A
Let's go like, elementary school.
C
I'm gonna go eighth grade.
B
Oh, gosh.
A
Isn't that algebra?
C
Actually, yeah. The second I see parentheses I'm getting out.
B
I didn't even do eighth grade. I skipped seventh grade, went to freshman year.
C
How did that work?
B
I'm a hustler, bro. I failed seventh grade and then retook seventh grade. And then when I had to take the crct, y'all know what that is? The thing you have to do to. To pass to get to high school.
C
Oh.
B
Or to get from seventh grade to eighth grade. Sixth grade, seventh. And so I said, can I take the eighth grade crct and if I pass, go to high school with my friends? And my principal was like, sure. And I did. And then I had friends that were in eighth grade that failed the crct, so they had to go to summer school. I'm like, y'all are idiots.
A
We didn't. Did we have something like that where you had to take a test? No.
C
We had never heard of a CRC 17. The test test. We had a tax test.
A
Yeah, Tax text. Tax text test.
C
There you go.
B
Text me.
A
There you go.
C
Yeah, that was. That was what ours was. Hold on. I keep. There's. There's some that are just. They're too hard. I'm not gonna lie to you.
A
See, you don't even know our ability, so why are you saying that?
C
Okay, well, I know yours. I go, Kane might be able to save you like he did in golf.
A
But I'm not gonna. I got a mean driver. Right. Who would you rather go on the golf course with, me or Kim?
B
How about equal?
A
That's not true.
C
I definitely think. I definitely think you. I might be stiff on the lower base.
B
I think make swing wise your swings better.
A
Thank you.
B
Yeah, but last night, he was. He was doing good.
A
He hit one like, what was it?
C
No, I hit a couple. No, I hit a couple. No, don't. Don't. Don't downplay. I had a couple. Don't say one. All right, first question. You know what? We're going. We're going more of math riddles here.
A
Okay, now, this is where I panic.
B
Yeah, I'm bad at riddles.
A
All right, let's talk in, brother. Let's all get.
C
Here we go.
A
That was a great dab egg.
C
Not good enough to have to save you. Eggs are 12 cents a dozen. How many eggs can you get for a dollar? Dollar.
A
Slow down and say it quiet.
C
Eggs are 12 cents a dozen. How many eggs can you get for a dollar?
A
Eggs are 12. A dozen is 12.
B
Yes. You just did a dozen eggs. It's over 12.
A
I forgot the.
B
Wait, is it not.
A
Eggs are 12 cents a dozen eggs.
C
Are 12 cents a dozen.
A
So you get 12 eggs for 12 cents.
C
So how many can you get for a dollar?
B
No, 12 times 12. 144. So it's not over 12.
A
When are we doing it by 12? Where are we multiplying now?
B
Because 12 cents a dozen. So I'm going.
A
Somebody give me paper.
B
12. So I'm going 12 cents times 12 cartons of eggs.
A
12 cartons of eggs?
B
Yeah.
C
The question simply reads.
A
We're like. And then the store is 12 miles.
C
A dozen of eggs. A dozen of eggs. Eggs is 12 cents. So how many eggs can you get for a dollar?
B
Yeah, exactly. So I was trying to go by the dozens.
A
Okay, well, how many 12s go into a dollar? That's what we got to figure it out. How many eggs Going. Nine eggs. How many dollars? How many cents going. Slow down.
B
There's 100 pennies in a dollar.
A
Right, of course. Correct.
B
So.
C
You'Re getting there. The mindset. The wavelength is getting in the right direction, since it doesn't.
B
I'm sweating now, bro.
C
Hey, I am too.
B
Next question.
C
Okay. Do you want to know the answer?
B
Yeah.
A
Wait, let me. My, my guess. Five dollars.
B
Huh?
C
What the. We were asking how many eggs.
A
48.
B
No, cuz that's. Say to me.
C
Okay, you know what? I'm gonna.
A
Confused. I don't know what the question.
C
I'm gonna give you the answer without giving you the straight of basic.
B
Hold on. Just let me guess.
A
Yeah, yeah.
B
And I'm gonna say. Never mind.
A
There's no wrong answers in this class.
C
There's no. Oh, this is a. A safe environment.
B
I'm still going off carton.
C
All right, let's do this. That's where you messed up. You. You set in cartons at the beginning. So a dozen of eggs is 12 eggs. Right.
A
Every time.
C
So you're getting 12 eggs for 12 cents.
B
Yeah, I had that.
C
A cent an egg. So how many eggs?
A
100 eggs.
C
100 eggs. There we go. Wow. There we go.
A
I was.
B
I was gonna say that, but I thought it was too easy.
A
You did say it, but that's the beauty. You went past.
C
That's.
B
Yeah, yeah, because I went to. I went to 144.
C
Yeah.
B
So then. So then I was gonna say nine.
A
I need a nap.
B
Never.
C
Good. That's good. Here we go.
A
And slow down when you ask it.
C
Pretty. Pretty regular. I'm not gonna lie. Okay, let's lock it.
A
Here we go.
C
When Miguel was six years old.
A
Who is that?
C
When Miguel was six years old, his little Sister Layla was half his age.
A
She was three.
C
If Miguel is 40 years old today, how old is Layla?
B
20. Oh, wait, no, that's the obvious answer.
C
That's the obvious. The quick one.
B
So he said he was six and she was.
C
Miguel was six. She was half his age. If Miguel is now 40, how old.
A
Is 21 and a half?
B
No, no, no. How old is he now? He's 40.
C
Miguel's 40.
B
Oh, he's 30. She's 37.
C
Ding, ding, ding. Kane Brown, 21 and a half.
B
She's three years. Are you three years?
C
Kidding me?
B
It's trying to make you half the age, but you just take three years off.
C
You still got the number wrong, though.
A
I thought you said you was 43.
C
Oh, my God. No one ever said.
A
I said she's 21 and a half. Yeah, yeah.
C
It's going to be a lot.
A
His win is my win.
C
There you go.
B
Team effort over team.
C
You're a team.
A
I would have never got. That's smart, though. The three years they tried. It's the wording.
B
Here, let me ask him. Can I ask him? One.
C
Go for it. Oh, my God.
B
This is one. This is one. This is one. I asked my wife and it went viral. Okay, so if you were born 12 years ago, how old would you be?
A
What year is it? No, because I was born in 99 and I take a year off or add a year. No, time out. No, slow down, though. You. You understand what I'm saying, though? Because I was born in 99, and if it's 2024, I'm 25.
C
I add a year.
A
Yeah, and if I was born 12 years ago, that would be what year?
C
Do your math.
A
What year is it?
C
20. 24. Minus 12.
A
It's 2012. Okay, but I was born in 2012. Zero. You're just born.
C
What?
A
Wait, say it again. And don't bring in years.
C
That's the question.
B
How old would you be if you were born 12 years ago?
C
I think I can smell you now. Starting to swell. Oh, no. Oh, no. Bub is gone. Oh, my God. His elbow's not working. Come on. Are you crying?
A
Say it again, bro.
B
If you were born 12 years ago.
A
Yep.
B
How old would you be?
A
12.
C
Yeah, that's it. There you go. No. 21 and a half. No. 99. Minus this. No, I'm 25. Take off the three and divide.
A
It was. Because if you had asked that first.
C
He did ask that. That's exactly what he said.
A
I feel like I'm in school again, bro.
C
It's okay.
A
All right.
C
We love you. I look all right? Yeah, you look crazy as. But, yeah, it's good. So now that even though that's. That's.
B
That's behind us, it's hot in here, bro.
C
It's so hot. You know, even though that's behind us, we're getting right back to it. You both got a couple more?
A
Yeah, it's for Kane, bro.
C
Oh, no. You're his teammate. You're his teammate.
A
I need electrolytes now. I'm leaving you on an island on this one, brother. You shouldn't have done that to me.
C
That's a big.
B
You got it right, though.
A
I. Yeah, but I don't know where I was at the first time.
C
Okay, this is pretty. This is. This is a. A fair one, I would say. It's going to take a little thinking at first, but it's on. It's on. Honest. It's an honest question. You're given three positive numbers. You can add these numbers and multiply them together, and the result will still be the same.
B
You already lost me.
C
What are the numbers? So there's none, zero. There's no negative numbers. There's no tricks. You got three positive numbers. You can add them, add them together, and if you multiply them together, the answer is the same. And it's. It's really not. It's. You're just overthinking it. But I swear, it's. It's an honest. It's an honest question.
A
You could multiply them. At them.
C
You're not tickling nothing. You're not cutting anything down the middle. There's no measurements. If you take the three numbers, you add them together. You take the three numbers, you multiply them together. Same answer. I'll give you a hint. I'll give you a hint. Think small.
B
Yeah, I was gonna say, like, 1, 2, and 3.
C
Money. Before you even say yes, before I celebrate y'all's success, why is it 1, 2, and 3?
A
Well, I thought it had to be the same number.
B
Well, that's what I started with. Yeah, I started with that, too. I was like, two times, you know?
A
Yeah.
C
Okay, okay, okay. So why is it 1, 2, and 3?
A
Because if you add 1, 2, and 3, it's 3, that's 6. You multiply 1, 2, and 3 two times one is two every time. 3, 6.
C
There you go, bubba.
B
He was gonna keep going.
C
Yeah. He was like. But then you. But then.
A
Then.
C
But then you. Okay, back to it. So enough of that. Are we good for the riddle? You want one more? Honestly, no, we're going. We're going. We'll go one more. We'll go one more.
A
I want to see him panic like I did. That was.
B
My teammates killed me, bro.
A
That was insane. I still don't understand that one.
B
To be honest, I was thinking about carrying cartons of eggs.
C
Ah, you're not going to know what to be. I want to ask that so bad, though. You don't know how many legs bees have?
A
4.
C
4.
A
No, I didn't know they had legs, to be honest.
C
Yeah, I didn't know they had legs either.
B
Six.
C
If you buy, like, 12, it is six. Wait. Yeah, it's six.
B
Nice.
A
Yeah, you're smarter than I thought. Okay.
C
No, we're gonna go.
A
You tried to. We're gonna be like, oh, we're the same.
C
No, we're gonna go with it then. If you notice. Okay. A duck was given nine bones. I should have said dollars, because now we're thinking of skeleton.
A
Yeah, okay. Yeah, you gotta.
C
A duck was given $9, spider was given 36, and a B was given $27. Based on this information, how much money would be given to the cat? That's a wicked question.
B
Okay, say it again.
C
Okay. See, you gotta help your teammate. He's caring.
A
Hey, brother.
C
He's backpacking. A duck was given $9.
B
That's where you're throwing me off.
C
Okay. But a duck was given $9, a spider was given 36, and a bee was given 27. Based on this information, how much money would be given to the cat?
B
So I'm trying to go off legs, like he was saying.
C
So go. Perfect. You're on the same. You're on the right route.
B
He said the Spider is given 36. Spider has eight legs.
C
Whip out your calculator. Go for it.
B
That's eight times four.
A
32.
B
No, then maybe I got it right. Wrong. 8, 16, 24. Is it not 36?
C
It's $36.
B
Is eight times four not 36 or 32?
C
Two. It's four, but four. Four is where you're wrong at, y'all. Y'all just assumed four.
B
I'm so screwed.
C
No, Spider has eight.
B
What is eight times four?
C
32.
B
So I'm saying it's 36.
C
See, I am dumb, but I'm saying that's where y'all. Why'd you pick four? Why'd you pick four?
B
I have no idea.
C
Exactly. That's the part you'll just randomly pick. 4. So your clue is you need to find out how much.
B
So it is eight, though. Eight legs. It has something to do with it to get 36.
C
So go. Go back to the dust. How many legs does duck have?
B
That's what's weird. Two.
C
Okay, so if the duck was given.
B
$9, where's the seven coming from?
A
I'm confused. We're getting animals.
C
What's seven?
B
Nine minus two.
C
No, no, you don't mind. It's no minus. How much is each leg worth?
B
Think of it like that.
C
So split nine down the middle.
B
50.
A
Huh.
C
In terms. Are you here. You were just gazing up. I just shocked you from touching. You went, huh? Are you okay? All right, so 9 divided by 2.
B
450.
C
Yep. That is exactly 9 divided by. In terms of money.
B
Oh, so. So, so 450 a leg.
C
There you go. Kane is backpacking.
A
And what animal are we looking for?
B
So the spider is 36. It's eight legs. That's where I'm confused. So I guess it's four and a half. 450 a leg.
C
So now how much money would be.
B
Given to the cat that has four legs?
C
Bring us home.
B
So if the duck has how much the duck. Nine.
C
Nine.
B
So just 18. No.
C
Yeah.
B
Oh, is it 18? Yeah. I just multiply, bro.
C
Give it up a. Hey, I love you to death. There's a lot of similarities.
B
Smarter than a third grader.
C
Kate Kane. Got you math Bubba. And it's okay. There's nothing wrong with it.
B
Well, he actually got eight times four, and I didn't.
A
Yeah, See? Teamwork. And if I didn't give him that, he wouldn't have got.
B
Yeah, I'd have been.
A
Yeah, I was confused. We were giving animals money. I couldn't get over that.
C
Based off their limbs.
A
I couldn't. Okay.
B
That's a tricky one.
A
I'm, you know, I'm not sure I'm not your A and R or I'm not, like, you know, involved in your. In your business at all.
B
Could be.
A
Hey, you know what I mean? I think, you know, I just heard Jelly Roll song with Eminem. Right. You know, on Eminem's new album. And I love Eminem. I've heard you do, too.
C
Huge, huge Eminem fans.
A
I think hearing you, like, on a chorus of an Eminem song, bro. So I'd like what would be like a dream collaboration that you haven't done yet.
B
I get asked this question a lot, and I don't really have a. That dream collaboration because for me, it has to make sense.
A
Okay.
B
If it doesn't make sense, then I won't do it. Even if it, like. Even in terms of the souls. Yeah. Well, yeah. Even if it was Eminem, I love Eminem, and it would be legendary to be on a song with Eminem.
A
Right.
B
But it's. If it came to me and just didn't make sense, then why. Why do it? You know?
A
That's. That's integrity.
C
That is. That is.
A
I would. I would do anything. I'd be like, yeah, sure, yeah, whatever, Marshall. I'll do it. Yeah. You know what I mean?
C
Yeah. We're doing it in Detroit, and I'm coming up there.
A
Are we eight Mile?
C
Yeah.
A
That's. That's. So there's no one, like, okay. Even if it does make sense, anybody, like, in an ideal person. And they came. Perfect scenario. The song made sense, the moment made sense. Who would it be?
B
That's the thing. I don't. I don't. I have that favorite artist. I'm like a walking jukebox. I just love music. I mean, y'all heard me when I was working. I was about to say that rock. And then I had rap, and I don't. I don't got nothing.
C
That's dope. That's low key. Like, you. Like, you. You have your set. Like, people that are up there. Up there. But, bro, he likes all genres of music.
B
Yeah.
C
Like, random. Like, one days will be straight rap. Next day it'll be like. I'm talking, like, Creed. Yeah. Like, just all sorts of stuff. Like. And it's. It's crazy.
A
Yeah. You work out to some intense music.
B
Oh, yeah.
A
I was in the shower, and I was like. Like, I was like, what is that?
C
And that's. That's how I know he's serious about his lifts. Straight up. If you. If someone listens to rock when they're in the gym.
B
Oh, yeah, you're.
C
You're not gonna have it. You can't have a bad lift.
B
It's hard. My wife comes in because she's always playing, like, Whitney Houston, Celine Dion.
A
That's what I work out to.
B
No, you don't.
A
Or it'd be like, boys to men. No, I have to because, like, especially when I used to play college basketball before games, like, people would be listening to, like, the rap or whatever. I'm straight.
B
Like, you moan when you live, don't you?
A
Oh, my God.
C
He's 100. Done that before. That's the worst part.
A
That's so cool.
C
Okay. Even crazier than the moaning. One time. No, I have to. I just. One time. I'm so sorry. We were benching, and it was like, we Took a long break off and we were going for like an exhaustion set. Just like go till you fail. And he got. And he just hit that dead point. He was like, get off me. Get off. Like feeding, like, save his life, bro.
B
Legs move.
C
Oh my God. Oh my God.
A
I do do this thing when I bench. You see me do it? My happy feet.
C
Yeah, you're always doing.
A
I don't know what it is.
C
What, what was it? Just natural, like, like athletic background. Well, I remember we talked about a little bit yesterday, how you didn't really like lift and take care of your body as much as you should have. And then you hit that, that point, you're like, damn, like, I really need to do it. Was it more of a like health benefits? You got kids now, you want to be able to play with them, be active and all that stuff. Or did you just one day you're like, bro, I'm gonna start training.
B
No. So like we talked about last night how we have people come here and play ball. We used to. Or I used to go down to Franklin and play Ashley Gourley's house. He's a big writer. Well, actually the biggest in the world. Yeah, Shout out Ashley. But we would go to his house and then the 50 year olds would show up and they had more stamina than I did. And I was just like, I gotta, I gotta do something about this.
C
Just a reflection moment. You're like, something's not right. It's not.
B
And then being on tour and like just drinking beer, I started getting the beer belly and I was, I can't do that. I was 27 or 28, so I can't do this.
C
Yeah, this can't stay. Do you have a, like, regimen when you're on tour in terms of training? Is it more of just you try to get it in where you can or is it like a dead set? Like, today's Tuesday. It's travel day. I'm lifting at this time.
B
It depends. Usually I try to work out every day, but sometimes I'll get lazy. Like last or October.
A
Mm.
B
Excuse me. I worked out like two, two, two days out of the whole month, bro.
C
I was right there with you. It was ass.
B
Yeah. So I just started a new workout program Friday.
C
Nice. Liking it so far. Everything's good.
B
Everything's good. Skip leg day. Because y'all talked me out of it yesterday.
C
We're not gonna be with you.
A
Come work out with you.
B
It's like, yes, leg day.
C
You know, I said, actually, I'm go nap. Actually, like Complete.
A
You can just walk up and down that hill 10 times. That's a leg day right there.
C
You could do legit either lunges or just like a farmer's carry. Just walking up there, that'd be an entire intense like. Like in itself without anything else.
A
We left a charger down there this morning, and I was like, hey, man, I might just have a dead phone. I don't know if I can make it back up there.
B
I can leave you the go kart, bro. You can. You. You just. You're going to be left, right, dude, you got.
C
You got to be. You got to be careful that. Could you imagine him if he couldn't hit the brake? He just went straight down into your porch.
A
All right. Knock on wood, bro. That's. That's terrifying. That's something I would do. I used to jump out of golf carts for fun as a kid. Like, my dad would like. He's big into golfing and he would like. I would just be as a kid, and I was bored and I didn't like it. You know, it's boring. Yeah. Nothing to do.
B
He just said wee.
A
Yeah. Literally, I'll just jump out and make them come get me. And then that was. I did that three times. Never got invited back to the golf course.
C
Strange, strange. Quick, random. Would you rather you got to eat a 2lb crawfish, no sides, no potatoes, no corn, no shrimp, no sausage.
B
I'm already choosing the other one.
C
Want or seafood. A two pound nachos, but they're not loaded. They're not gourmet. It is literally tortilla chips, cheese.
B
That's how I eat already.
A
Yeah, that sounds.
C
What? Yeah, dude, y'all love just regular, like, ballpark. I mean, when you. If you're at somewhere, it's fire. But like, if I'm going to like a restaurant. Oh, give me the works. Give me the garden. I want pico on it. I want cilantro. I want some meat on there. I want it all. Onions, y'all. Like just chips and cheese?
B
Yeah, I eat like I'm nine.
A
Same now.
B
It's just gluten free.
C
Yeah, gluten free nachos. Gluten free.
A
This you should know podcast this episode is brought to you by Friends at Harry's. Everyone in the comedy world knows that not every joke delivers. I fallen victim to this. I think they're funny. Not everybody does. But that's okay, you know, it always does deliver. Harry's. They send the best quality razors right to your door for a fraction of the price. Of the big brands. Better design shaving products at a better price is no joke. It's Harry's. You know the thing I love about Harry's, I say it often is I love the packaging. I love the German engineering. I love how it just sits in my bathroom and it just makes my bathroom look more elegant, more whole. It looks right. Their blades are made in their own factory that stay sharp longer. They have customizable delivery options for scheduled refills as low as $2, half of what you pay for other big brands. So you can get a five blade razor weighted handle, foaming, shave gel and travel cover for just three bucks at Harrys.com YSK Harry's has the highest customer satisfaction in the shaving industry. You can get a no risk trial. You don't like your shave, no worries. It's on Harry's. They have convenient subscription options that you could cancel at any time. Get the shaving products that always deliver. Get Harry's. Get started with a $13 trial set for just $3 at harry.com ysk that's harry's.com ysk for a three dollar trial set. Now on to the rest of the episode. Enjoy. Okay, you're about to start up tour again. The high road tour. First of all. Are tickets available for that now? Are you good on that? So we'll link that in the description if you want to go. Fantastic show by the way.
C
Amazing.
A
Fantastic. I'm dead ass. I have videos of me like, like wilding at your show. I was going crazy. What is. What are you excited for in this leg of tour?
B
I think I'm more excited for the new album. I haven't put it out in two years and we're going to get to add a lot of new music which I normally don't do. I usually would just add like a. My current single and so this one I. I want to do like a storytelling. I have a lot of storytelling songs like I was telling y'all last night. So I'm excited to do like a Nashville. We have songwriter things which I should try and go to. I know you probably got any time right now, but anywhere, if there's like a songwriting thing you should go go to it. It's really cool. It's called listening room. They tell you how they wrote the song, what story's about. I'm gonna bring that into the show just to make it intimate. It's last year's tour. I was just all up energy. I didn't really talk to the crowd just because I Didn't you know? I just wanted everybody just have fun.
C
Have a great time. Which they did. It's fantastic.
B
Yeah, but it's something about connecting with your fans.
A
Yeah, we listened to. I don't know if I could say we listened to a couple songs last night. Fantastic. I'm not gonna say anything about them, but I was telling him it's like the songs that I heard, it's like experience music. It's like when you hear it, you can attach it to a memory or a moment. And I think more like a person or a person. I think those songs are the ones that have the most effect and like, they will last so long, 100%. So I'm excited. I'm gonna hear the rest of it today. I'm excited for this album, bro.
C
Like, they were. It was. It was so good.
A
Almost shed a thug to your one.
C
Of them question on. In terms of your new album, you're adding new music to this next leg of the tour, how long does it take to get all the choreography, like down and established in terms of you on stage and like your entrance, maybe your timing with lightings or whatever?
B
Like how.
C
How long does that take to do that?
B
That's not really a me question, because I don't. So for me, I just run around the stage like my chicken, you know.
C
Then it's even better.
B
Yeah. But my team behind doors, they do a lot. Like my band has to rehearse as a member, you know, at the practice, all that stuff work together. So that takes them months. But they'll. They'll practice at home by themselves, just on their part. And then they got to bring it together. And then when it comes to lighting, that's a lot of Alex, which is my creative director, he very talented. He'll go in, we'll do like a couple rehearsals and he'll say, this lighting looks good. These colors look good for this. And then there's of course our ld, which is our lighting director that runs everything.
A
Not gonna lie though. I'm so glad we talked about Thor. The fire you had on stage, is that not hot?
B
Oh, yeah, bro. But I love it though. And I love everybody thinking I'm always gonna get hit cuz I'm so close.
A
It's so close.
C
No, we said it probably like three times. We were like, he's going to set a blaze. Like, somebody get him. Someone needs to get in his earpiece. He's too close.
B
It's almost a game I like to play of how close can I get?
A
It's not A good game. It's a wicked game.
C
Wicked game, brother.
B
No, I know how it works. I ain't going to get hit my. But I will say the. I don't remember what show it was. My. No, it was rehearsals. My guitar player walked right over the flame. Got his ass. Ass. There's a, there's a guy that's over there. Then he, he's supposed to be the safety guy and he presses a button. And our original guy got sick. So he had a fill in and I told him I was like, it's a game he was playing, bro. He's just waiting for somebody to get close.
C
And he's like, got it, bro.
A
That I couldn't. We were like a ways away from the stage and I was like, when that fire hit. But you're just going through it like you, you feel it obviously, but.
C
Yeah, there's no way you don't. Yeah. I was about to say.
B
Well, it's almost, it sounds weird, but it's almost kind of cooling because I'm, I'm. No, listen, listen, wait, listen. I'm doing your tricks. So you're. I'm already hot on stage. So then whenever it's okay. Perfect thing right here when you're hot, right. A lot of people go and they get iced coffee. Do you get iced coffee or do you get hot coffee?
A
Coffee. I get iced coffee. I like iced coffee.
C
I'd go iced.
B
So the difference is if you get hot coffee, it warms your body up, which makes it feel cooler when you're outside.
A
Well, that's. Is that science or is that what you're doing? I don't know if that's.
B
I'm serious.
C
That's a personal remedy.
B
Thank you.
A
He sweats when he eats ketchup. Like, I'm not taking his. Like I'm not. I don't trust that. That's like saying, hey, it's 110 degrees outside. Let me go put on a fur.
B
So going back to this to make, make you understand it, when I'm sweating, when I'm sweating on stage and then the fire comes up, it's hot, but then it goes away. So it feels cooler outside.
C
So you see, you see what you're saying? He. Imagine you're sitting at, he's. He's performing. He's at 100 degrees. Easy numbers, right? This fire comes down now he's at 500. Yeah, it's super hot. He feels that it's super hot for however many seconds. But then once it comes back down, it's Gonna feel better.
A
I wasn't. I. I wasn't listening. I swear to God. No, I went blank for a second.
C
God. You have one more time. No, that is the highest form of discipline.
A
No, it's. I have an attention problem.
C
You were making intimate contact with both of our o hos and you just told me you weren't listening.
A
No, I have an attention problem. And I. I'll hear one noise over there and I'm like, what's going on in that corner?
C
See, I have that too, but channel it.
A
And then lights. I can't. Yeah, I'm sorry. Would you rather be hot or cold?
B
Hot.
C
To hell with me.
B
Well. Well, I mean, I would rather be hot, but if you are cold, you can just layer up 100%.
C
Yeah, I'd much rather be cold, but.
B
I would prefer to be hot.
A
I hate the cold. Like, genuinely, it's. It's uncomfortable. My lips get nasty.
C
Now. That's a you thing. That's a you thing.
B
Well, you've been talking. Your lips stay nasty.
C
Okay.
A
You know, no, we're like, note cleanliness here.
C
We're. We're just going to speed run.
A
Okay. Okay.
C
Speedrun. Get to know brother Kane. Random things.
A
Well, if I say. If he says something I disagree with, I'm going to argue with him.
C
Oh, go for it. You can argue.
A
Yeah.
C
Okay. Mexican food or Italian food?
B
God, that's hard.
C
Very hard. And that's why we say it.
B
I'm going to say Italian just because I eat. I eat more Italian food than I do Mexican food. For me, Mexican foods. I eat chicken, cheese and rice or tacos.
A
Oh, he's a Steven special. Yeah.
C
Good man.
A
Nice. Yeah.
C
Your answer's wrong, though.
B
I think about Italian, bro. You got spaghetti, you got chicken Alfredo, you got lasagna, you got pizza. See, I could. I can. I could live off Italian food.
C
I honestly believe I could drink.
B
Is it.
A
I don't know.
C
Pizza's not French.
A
It came from the. France. France. It came from France. It came from. Yeah.
C
No, it didn't.
A
I'm pretty sure.
C
I think I could drink about 10 ounces of salsa straight out of a cup before I got even slightly turned off of it. I. I inhale my chips and sauce. I love it.
A
So I can't.
C
Yeah, he hates pasta. He says pasta makes him gag too much.
A
Too much going on with my throat. Good morning to you. You feel me? Keep going with these. I like these questions.
C
Okay, you could either. Okay, one's got to go forever. All trucks or all sports cars.
A
That's A good question.
C
That's. That's one.
A
Right.
B
For instance, recently, I'm gonna have to say all, well, if trucks go, then there's a lot of work that can't get done.
C
See, you see how he's thinking outside the box?
A
Smart man.
C
He's a very smart man.
B
But if you got. Yeah, I'm gonna say trucks because I've seen a thousand horsepower diesel trucks that go fast.
C
Trucks are staying. Or trucks.
B
Yeah, we say trucks can stay.
C
All sports cars gone.
A
I can't fit in sports cars. Really?
B
You can, you can customize a lot of trucks, man.
C
You get a, you just, you can get a. Just decked out.
A
Yeah, I, yeah, I like sports cars more. I just can't fit any like the ones out there. I was like, damn, that's really nice.
B
Exactly. You can fit comfortable in a truck.
A
Exactly. Yes, I agree. I agree.
C
I binged Yellowstone the entirety in about a week and a half. And I went up and tried to test drive a dually like Ram 2500. And the guy said, what are you doing with that? And I said, I don't know what you kind of want to truck. He said, you're going to pull anything? I said, no, sir. He said, said, get out of here. He made me get off the lot. I didn't even. I was like, what if I just want to test drive? He said, you don't need it. He said, have a good one. He literally pointed at the door and I said, I can't even test drive it. That just reminded me that because I had no reason, but I was obsessed with Yellowstone and in. And I was like, I'm gonna go get me just a big ass truck. And he went, get out.
A
Okay.
C
Just like that. Go.
A
No YouTube or no Netflix?
B
No YouTube.
A
We watched like four things on YouTube yesterday.
C
He did show us the clips, but.
B
I watched 150 things on Netflix. Netflix, what's your go ahead? I mean, anything. It's worth watching.
A
Like, what's your like comfort show on Netflix?
B
I love Ozarks Fire. I love Stranger Things. I mean they put all kinds of movies on there and they're actually making great movies.
C
Yeah, some of the originals. Dude, when, when Netflix first started making outside of Stranger Things, because that's like one of the greatest ever. When they were. Do you remember how bad like the Netflix original movies were at the beginning?
A
Oh, they're like, it was like a.
B
It was almost like 2B movies. I remember they started with Red Box. Yeah, that was crazy when I figured that out.
C
God, I miss Red Box. I miss being told to go to the gas station.
A
Yeah, why would you want to do.
C
Why? You know, it was an experience. Was it for me?
A
You're outside 7 11.
C
Exactly. But it was right. It was outside my neighborhood. It was right when I got my.
B
Permit, I was moving out of my apartment. Apartment to. For my first house here, I found, like, eight red box movies. And I. I still don't know to this day if they just charged me up to what the movie was cost or if they just kept charging me.
C
That'd be a hell of a bill. That'd be a boy. That'd be a foot on that bill.
B
I don't know.
C
I'm pretty sure if you go past certain, you just buy the movie.
B
Oh, I would have done the other way. I'd have been like, nope, he brought it back. I'm still charging this.
C
I wouldn't know that too. That's an aggressive business model. I definitely would have been like, oh, you lost it. Sorry, guys. It's a dollar a day for life. Your ass.
A
What's your, like, guilty pleasure movie.
B
What do you mean by.
A
Like, a movie that you deep down love, but if you say it publicly, you know that people like. Oh, because I'll say I'm High School Musical. Like, I. I know every, like, bar of that movie. All three of them.
B
You were younger, and you're like, I kind of resemble Corbin Blue.
A
Well, I had. I had posters of Zac Efron on my wall.
C
No, you did it shirtless Zac Efron posters in his wall.
A
You know what I mean?
C
Spinders and a bedazzled belt.
A
Yeah, Bedazzled blazers. To school for presentations. How's that?
C
Presentations.
B
Wait, so you still go back? You still go back and watch it every.
A
Every time? I'm sad, and I'm sad a lot. I love that movie. High school musical. Three is the best one, then two, then one.
B
No.
A
100%.
B
Do you think the third high school musical is better than the first one?
A
The songs on three. The first one's not even Zac Efron sing opinion. So I can't. The authenticity of that one's gone. I can't even love you anymore. Get out of here. That's not you.
B
That's crazy.
C
Wait, what would be your order?
B
Mine would be first, and after the first one, I thought they were.
A
Oh. Oh, okay.
B
The second one was. Okay, which one's the third? I don't even know if I saw the third one.
A
Oh, my God. When they graduate high school. High school.
B
Which ones were there at the golf resort.
A
Second one, One Summer job.
B
Okay, so maybe the third one was better.
A
Third one is the greatest. It was theatrical. They released in a movie theater, saw with my grandma. She's now gone. Oh, God, Cancer. That's honest. Yeah, it's my grandma's.
B
Yeah, I'm still going High School Musical, the first one, but My Guilty Pleasure, which I, I don't. I mean, I don't even think it's really a guilty pleasure, and I, I really don't watch it, but I just, I. Titanic.
A
That's a great movie, though. You're not a romcom type of guy. Like, you don't. You know what I mean?
C
I'm sorry, I'm sorry. I was thinking Titanic and I just, I. I wanted to do that. All right, yeah, okay.
A
I was trying to flirt.
C
Yeah, it was a quick one. It came out.
A
You're not a rom com. You don't like romcoms?
B
Define rom com.
A
Romantic comedy.
B
I'm not into slang, bro.
A
Like, like the Notebook, like, things like that. Like 50 first dates, love, how to.
B
Lose God, Some days. Okay, here's one. Here's one. John Tucker Must Die.
C
Yes. That was fire.
A
I'm not aware of this film.
B
It's a basketball movie. So you like.
A
Okay, it's a rom com.
C
Yeah, definitely.
A
Nice.
C
It's like a guy, he's kind of your typical, like, jock, douchey jock, doesn't really respect people, thinks he's the ruler of the world, and then his three, like, exes, because he was like, kind of dating his girls all at the same time.
A
Nice.
C
Form a plan to take him down.
A
Oh, that's fire.
C
Yeah, yeah.
A
It's on Netflix.
C
No, probably not. I mean, at one point.
A
Well, I know what we're doing tonight. High School Musical, Binging. Right? No, all the boys. Just us, the boys and Zac Efron.
C
Nope.
A
Right.
C
Not at all.
A
I'll watch it tonight by myself.
C
Okay, your house in the exact state right now, you either have to. Your most loud and rowdy friends have to move in and stay with you in the main house, or your in laws have to move in and stay with you in the main house.
B
I don't get to see my family much. Depends. Well, okay, which in laws, like, are we saying, like, I don't get in trouble?
C
Yeah, don't. You got it? Yes. Do the right answer.
B
No, I'm gonna say my in laws. I love my in laws.
A
Yeah.
C
Okay, there you go. Good man.
A
What would your answer be?
B
You said, you said in laws, and then I was I thought we were talking about, like family. Family.
C
No, if it was your family. No, no.
A
Yeah.
B
My in laws are amazing.
C
Okay, there you go. I mean, I love. I love my in laws. I love all my.
A
But moving in us who?
C
No, the real question. Would live rather pick? Would you rather Peyton, C.J. ryan all move in or your mom, Timmy P and someone else?
A
Oh, about my side or your side?
C
Your. Oh, my God. No, it would be mine. It'd be in laws. So Mike and Lisa.
A
Oh, Lisa need to move in with me.
C
What do you mean by that?
A
Good morning to you. All right, Kane. Thank you for coming, brother.
B
Thanks for having me.
A
It was a lot of fun. Round of applause, Kane Brown.
C
Kane Brown, everybody.
A
Before you get out of here, if you want to tell them anything about.
B
Anything, I ain't got nothing for you.
A
New album is coming.
B
Download new album and tour.
A
Let's go.
C
It's going to be amazing.
A
One more time. Kane Brown, everybody.
B
Love y'all.
Hosts: Peyton Hardin and Cameron Kennedy
Guest: Kane Brown
Release Date: February 3, 2025
The episode kicks off with Peyton and Cameron delving into their childhood memories, sharing humorous and heartfelt stories that highlight their close friendship and individual personalities.
Peyton Hardin recounts a particularly memorable incident from his youth:
"[03:01] One time I almost had to go to the ER because I bit a wine glass and I chewed it a little bit at my mom's house."
– Peyton Hardin
Cameron Kennedy shares a touching and slightly embarrassing story about his younger years:
"[05:00] They had a pool, HOA had a pool... My grandma was retired and blind, so we had to walk with her to the pool. Sometimes she would get lost on the way back and rely on Peyton to guide her."
– Cameron Kennedy
These stories not only provide laughs but also offer listeners a glimpse into the hosts' backgrounds and the formative experiences that shaped them.
Peyton and Cameron engage in light-hearted debates that showcase their chemistry and ability to entertain through witty banter.
The Broken Clock Saying: They dissect the proverbial saying, "A broken clock works twice a day," leading to a humorous disagreement over its meaning.
"[13:02] How is that real?"
– Peyton Hardin
"[14:00] So broken clocks do work twice."
– Cameron Kennedy
This segment highlights their playful nature and ability to turn simple phrases into extended, entertaining discussions.
The conversation shifts to health and fitness, with both hosts sharing their struggles and triumphs in maintaining an active lifestyle.
Cameron's Realization: Cameron humorously admits his lack of fighting prowess, attributing it to insufficient cardio and diet.
"[20:33] I don't think I'd be a good fighter."
– Cameron Kennedy
Peyton's Stomach Woes: Peyton shares a candid and amusing story about food-related health issues.
"[37:32] I literally get, like, sweaty and hot. Like, it's bad."
– Peyton Hardin
Their openness provides relatability and encourages listeners to embrace their own health journeys.
Midway through the episode, the spotlight shifts to their special guest, Kane Brown, a renowned figure in country music. The hosts describe their experience staying with Kane and his family, emphasizing the warmth and camaraderie shared.
"[00:35] When we do guests, we do about 45 minutes to an hour of just me and co-host Cam. But in the middle of the episode, guess who we have coming on. The legend himself, the face of country music and our good friend, Kane Brown."
– Peyton Hardin
Kane Brown's Insights: Kane discusses his journey in music, the evolution of his performances, and the emotional depth of his latest album.
"[42:06] It's a beautiful album. We love you guys. Enjoy KB the you should know podcast."
– Kane Brown
This collaboration enriches the episode, blending humor with meaningful conversations about music and personal growth.
To keep the energy high, the hosts and Kane engage in interactive games like "Would You Rather," fostering a fun and engaging atmosphere.
Example Game - Traffic Scenario: Cameron poses a scenario about being stuck in traffic with either Peyton or himself.
"[73:14] Would you rather be stuck in four hours, bumper to bumper traffic with a broken radio with only Peyton or only Cam?"
– Cameron Kennedy
The playful competition continues with various other fun and sometimes absurd questions, showcasing their spontaneity and ease with each other.
Kane shares behind-the-scenes stories from his tours, the process of creating his music, and his experiences connecting with fans.
"[45:06] When we went to the listening party, we were like, Jesus Christ. It was so good."
– Kane Brown
Peyton and Cameron's Experiences: The hosts discuss their own performances, the challenges of handling large audiences, and the mutual support they provide each other.
"[53:43] I can't imagine our shows are probably, like, 800 people at our shows, and I throw up so much before our shows. I'm pacing, my mouth's bleeding. I can't. I can't do it."
– Peyton Hardin
These narratives offer listeners an inside look into the lives of performers, blending personal struggles with professional achievements.
As the episode nears its end, the hosts and Kane continue their jovial interaction, sharing final jokes, reflections, and expressing mutual appreciation.
"[131:53] Love y'all."
– Kane Brown
Their genuine camaraderie leaves listeners with a warm feeling, reinforcing the podcast's theme of friendship and openness.
"We got to create relationships that love you back."
– Peyton Hardin [23:00]
"I'm telling you, that's the broken time. Broken time."
– Cannon Kennedy [16:23]
"She asks about you frequently."
– Cameron Kennedy [11:21]
"I saw you were like, okay, dope. And we talked for, like, five minutes. And I was like, this is, like, the most normal guy ever."
– Kane Brown [51:17]
This episode of the "You Should Know Podcast" masterfully balances humor, personal stories, and meaningful conversations, especially with the inclusion of Kane Brown. Peyton and Cameron's dynamic showcases their ability to engage listeners through relatable anecdotes and entertaining debates, all while celebrating friendship and personal growth. Whether sharing childhood mishaps or discussing the intricacies of music creation, the hosts deliver an enriching and enjoyable listening experience.