Episode Transcript
[00:00:00] Speaker A: At my lunch, you had to have that. You had to have the top three things. You had to have the Capri Sun.
You had to have the chocolate pudding cup, the snack snack pack.
[00:00:08] Speaker B: Which one, though? Just chocolate or chocolate and vanilla?
[00:00:10] Speaker A: Chocolate. Vanilla. If you had chocolate and vanilla. Oh, you was balding.
[00:00:13] Speaker B: That's what I'm saying.
So when you got. That's what I'm saying. When you sell your lunch, there's certain things in how you can sell it. And you could almost separate the jello from the lunch.
[00:00:22] Speaker A: Oh.
[00:00:22] Speaker B: And sell them separately.
[00:00:23] Speaker A: No, no, no. Yeah, yeah. No, no, no.
[00:00:25] Speaker B: You didn't have to sell them as a whole.
[00:00:26] Speaker A: No, no, no, no, no.
[00:00:27] Speaker B: But some of them you got to, though.
[00:00:31] Speaker A: Twinning in the city.
[00:00:32] Speaker B: Aloha.
[00:00:34] Speaker A: Did we get the phone call yet?
[00:00:36] Speaker B: Did you get the call? What call? What call?
[00:00:39] Speaker A: The Midwest call.
That's locked. Can we talk about it, or am I making it awkward?
[00:00:46] Speaker B: No, I haven't heard from him yet. I haven't heard from him yet, but. But, But I think that's gonna be a thing.
[00:00:50] Speaker A: Okay. Yeah.
[00:00:51] Speaker B: So, yeah, we just say it.
[00:00:52] Speaker A: Let's do it. Yeah. Tweety in the city. We probably going to North Dakota in March. Producer Sean. Yeah, you just heard that? Fresh off the press. So THC going to have a gig out there. And we thought, why not go to North Dakota, do a show there? So go ahead, get in the comments right now. If you live South Dakota or North Dakota, but specifically North Dakota, Fargo, we trying to. Fargo. Fargo. Fargo, North Dakota. Let us know, because we trying to pull up. Simple as that.
[00:01:24] Speaker B: And you know what's crazy is, like, I never thought Fargo was the city.
I just, I thought it was a movie. Like, I thought that was just always a movie.
[00:01:30] Speaker A: Yeah, it was definitely.
[00:01:32] Speaker B: No, it's definitely a town. Like, I, I, I, I just. I didn't know that. I mean, I don't know. I always thought whenever I seen Fargo, I always thought it was either that TV show.
[00:01:41] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:01:41] Speaker B: Or that. Or that movie.
[00:01:43] Speaker A: So, yeah, 20, 26. I told y' all we was gonna have plans. Boom.
[00:01:46] Speaker B: March.
March.
[00:01:48] Speaker A: You got a date yet?
[00:01:49] Speaker B: Not yet.
[00:01:50] Speaker A: Okay. We ain't got that far. So March, we gonna be flying first class. Actually, I don't know what we flying.
[00:01:56] Speaker B: Yet, but it probably won't be first class.
First class.
[00:01:59] Speaker A: Speaking of first class. Speaking of money.
$52, bro.
[00:02:05] Speaker B: 52.
[00:02:06] Speaker A: $52. Okay? That is the average allowance a kid is getting a month these days.
[00:02:13] Speaker B: What?
[00:02:14] Speaker A: 50? Yeah, Internet. Internet told me.
[00:02:17] Speaker B: No, no, no.
[00:02:18] Speaker A: Okay, 52amonth. So 52 divided by four, that's like almost 10. That's like 10 and some change for.
[00:02:25] Speaker B: A week every, like, because I mean every two, every two months would be $104.
[00:02:29] Speaker A: Yes.
[00:02:30] Speaker B: So you break that down six. So that's 600.
[00:02:33] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:02:33] Speaker B: Like 650 a year.
[00:02:35] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:02:35] Speaker B: In allowance.
[00:02:36] Speaker A: In allowance. Now I don't know about you growing up. I ain't getting no allowance.
[00:02:41] Speaker B: I mean I did for certain chores.
Like if it was something outside of what I was supposed to do, I would get like, I get like five bucks. Like, okay, like, like if my house was good but my neighbor's house needed help, like I would go over there and I'd cut the yard.
[00:02:56] Speaker A: Oh yeah.
[00:02:57] Speaker B: And then I would get something for that.
[00:02:58] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:02:59] Speaker B: Like at the house. I don't know, I don't. Everything my dad gave me was like supposedly on the list, you know what I'm saying? Like, oh, you can get paid for anything off the list. But everything I was given growing up was like on the list.
[00:03:10] Speaker A: Yeah. Anything that was related to the square feet of the house.
[00:03:15] Speaker B: Oh yeah. And like that means everything.
[00:03:17] Speaker A: Yeah. There was no pain.
[00:03:18] Speaker B: Like, I mean, I was putting on roof shingles when I was 10.
[00:03:20] Speaker A: Yeah. No, I think the first time, I think the first time I got. You want to call it an allowance was from my aunt because I babysit one of my cousins and it was like a last minute thing.
[00:03:33] Speaker B: See my, our allowance as kids, like between my sisters and I. And they agree with me. It was on a, it was on a if I. Do you know what if I is.
[00:03:42] Speaker A: No, I ain't never heard of the if I. I've never heard of the.
[00:03:45] Speaker B: If I, the if I is. We would get allowance from mom or dad if you heard them say if I remember. So it was always if they. If I, if I. It was always an if I. If I, if I remember, if I see it, if it comes like, and it's like, like we would get allowance and we think, okay, we supposed to get one every week. And then they're like, it'd be like three weeks go by.
You know, a month go by and then, and then they come back and they go, oh yeah, here's your allowance. And it was like, wow, now we only making a dollar a month.
[00:04:12] Speaker A: Yup. Yeah. Nah, there was, there was no strict ratio on that. By the way, get in the comments. If you got an allowance or if you got.
[00:04:21] Speaker B: Oh, and I noticed a bunch of people there was. I knew a bunch, I knew I had a bunch of Friends that were. Had an allowance. I was so jealous.
[00:04:27] Speaker A: Yeah. But it's crazy because they could bank on it.
[00:04:29] Speaker B: Like, they could count on it.
[00:04:30] Speaker A: Oh, yeah, That's.
[00:04:31] Speaker B: That's what I didn't like. I didn't like my friends that had allowances because they'd be like, you know, I spend this now and I don't. I'm gonna have to wait till Wednesday till I get my. My.
[00:04:39] Speaker A: Yeah, it was like clockwork.
[00:04:40] Speaker B: It was like. It was like a payday, like. And I was like, what are you getting an allowance for? And it was like, well, you know, I take out the trash, I cut the yard.
I do that. And I'm just like, ain't you supposed to do that?
You got paid for that.
[00:04:52] Speaker A: I would wash the car and cut the grass.
The way I got rewarded for that was to be able to go somewhere.
[00:04:58] Speaker B: Go somewhere. Yeah. That was the reward.
[00:05:01] Speaker A: That was my allowance. It wasn't the money aspect. It was if I cut the grass, I wash mom's car. Oh, I do the laundry. Then I can probably ask her to go somewhere, but to just, like, have a handout. Yeah, I have friends like that too, growing up that just got it on a regular.
[00:05:16] Speaker B: Oh, yeah. And then like, my mom, like, most of the time, she liked to go to the laundromat because she could get more done in a little bit of time. Like, if she washed everything at home, it was going to take like four hours to complete the whole.
[00:05:28] Speaker A: Oh, yeah.
[00:05:29] Speaker B: Between me and my two sisters, Laundromat.
[00:05:31] Speaker A: Though, got them giant ass washers and dryers.
[00:05:33] Speaker B: But. But neither one of my sisters would ever want to wake up that early to go with my mom because my mom wants to get there, like right when they open the doors.
[00:05:41] Speaker A: So.
[00:05:41] Speaker B: And she would always. She would, hey, Sean, you go with me. And I was like, all right, all right, let's go. And I'd go with her every time to do that. And then when I came home, then I had my chores after we got back from the.
[00:05:49] Speaker A: Oh, yeah, yeah. Chores was always a. The list was never short.
Got cut out.
[00:05:54] Speaker B: I feel like I had a full time job since I was like four.
[00:05:58] Speaker A: Oh, we probably did. I didn't get paid. We got.
[00:06:00] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:06:01] Speaker A: What's the.
We had terrible workers comp.
[00:06:04] Speaker B: Oh, horrible.
[00:06:06] Speaker A: Horrible.
[00:06:06] Speaker B: That's what I'm saying. We was on the. If I plan. If I remember.
[00:06:08] Speaker A: If I remember.
[00:06:09] Speaker B: If I remember.
[00:06:10] Speaker A: But yeah, I read this article because I saw 52 was like the average kid nowadays between the age 50. $2 a month, between the ages of 9 to 14, even 9 year old.
[00:06:20] Speaker B: What's a 9 year old doing with $52?
[00:06:22] Speaker A: 9 year old is probably getting less than that. It's like the average between a 9 and a 14 year old. The 14 year old's getting 52, I bet. And like a 9 year old still is probably getting 20, 30.
[00:06:32] Speaker B: See and that's what it is, man. Everybody got them YouTube channels now. So now they can spoil their kids.
[00:06:37] Speaker A: But I don't know, this part I kind of felt I understood, but I also feel like I learned it a different way. Is that they're stating nowadays it's good to give kids that amount of money because then you're teaching them money management and responsibilities.
[00:06:54] Speaker B: Yeah, but are you though? No, I don't think so.
[00:06:57] Speaker A: But that's what I'm saying because I, no, because I'm a pretty good money manager and I was. And I, I think I was a better money manager because I wasn't guaranteed money.
[00:07:05] Speaker B: Yeah, but, but the thing is though is that you're, you're giving, I think you're giving expectations for things that should be done already. Like I like, like, like I tell my kids, my kids like, oh, I'm take out the trash. I should get allowance for taking out the trash. No, you should just be taking out the trash.
[00:07:21] Speaker A: Right?
[00:07:21] Speaker B: Like that's your job. That's what you.
[00:07:23] Speaker A: And that's a everyday thing. When you move out the house, what you gonna do? Pay yourself for taking out the trash?
[00:07:28] Speaker B: Well, that's what I'm saying. And it's like if something break in the house, I don't see none of them fixing it. If something come out of here, I don't see none of them rich in their pocket to go and say hey, I need to go get this replaced. Like I don't see, I don't see none of that. But neither did, neither did my dad when I was growing up. He didn't see none of that coming out of my pocket. Yeah, I wasn't paying for the brand new window that somebody else broke. I wasn't trying to put it in and install it because my dad want to save on labor.
[00:07:51] Speaker A: That probably wouldn't have been a good idea.
[00:07:53] Speaker B: Nah man, I'm telling you, my dad did everything. That's where I get my DIY skills from, is from my father. My father was like, I'll do it myself.
[00:07:59] Speaker A: Yeah, my granddad was.
And that's why going back, my granddad was a DIY also.
But I think growing up at least my parents I Was with them all the time. So I got to see how to manage money. And then also when it came to managing my own money, there was two times a year I was banking on getting money. My birthday and Christmas and that money. And I lucked out because I'm a June baby. So I had six months to let my Christmas money get me through until my birthday. And then from my birthday until Christmas, I had to let that birthday money.
[00:08:34] Speaker B: Bro, let me. Let me ask you. How long did your birthday. How long did your Christmas money last?
Like, by the time you said, you done spent it all already. From every Christmas card, from everything.
[00:08:43] Speaker A: It depends on an average.
[00:08:47] Speaker B: If you got like. Let's say you got 50 bucks for Christmas, how long is that 50 bucks gonna last you at? 50 bucks, is it gonna last you past January?
[00:08:57] Speaker A: Yeah. It's tight, though.
I like how tight.
[00:09:01] Speaker B: How much change you looking at?
[00:09:02] Speaker A: Like five.
[00:09:03] Speaker B: Really? So you gonna hit 40? Like, so if you got 40, it's gone before the end of the month?
[00:09:07] Speaker A: Yeah, probably.
[00:09:08] Speaker B: But 50? You have $5 left?
[00:09:10] Speaker A: Yeah, 50. I have about. I got about five, seven left.
[00:09:13] Speaker B: Damn.
[00:09:13] Speaker A: That's just.
I had to learn the hard way because, you know, first of the year, so wanna go out with all the friends and, you know, gotta rock the new Christmas outfit, so I gotta go to the movies.
[00:09:23] Speaker B: Have you ever got Christmas money and you were given that money specifically because you knew you were gonna have to buy or whoever bought you a present knew you was gonna have to go out and get, like, batteries or get something like that?
[00:09:37] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:09:37] Speaker B: So when they get. So when they give you a card, they put like, the money in it, and you're like, oh, that's five bucks. But it's like, oh, nah, that's so you can buy the batteries for this thing that I got you over here.
[00:09:46] Speaker A: It's like, okay. Because I'd be like, oh, I got the gift and the money. And then I look on the back.
[00:09:50] Speaker B: Be like, man, you know. You know how many toys I had sitting there with no batteries just so I could pocket the money?
Oh, yeah, no, yeah, I put in five bucks for batteries. Cool.
[00:09:58] Speaker A: So you out here making business decisions on. Nah, toy, bro.
[00:10:03] Speaker B: I'm telling you, this is how I did it. Especially if it was double a batteries as a kid. And it was like, yeah, and I left you money so you can go buy some batteries for that that I bought you. I was like, cool. So I had like, you know, four bucks, five bucks. I was like, okay, that's for batteries. But I put it in There and then I go around, because my dad had remote controls everywhere. We have remote controls for everything. Even remote controls he didn't use.
[00:10:23] Speaker A: Oh, you was. You was out there pickpocketing batteries.
[00:10:26] Speaker B: Man, you could open up my toys back in the days, and you'd see an Energizer next to a Duracell next to a Rayovac.
[00:10:35] Speaker A: Wow. Rayovac.
[00:10:36] Speaker B: Rayovac.
[00:10:37] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:10:38] Speaker B: Everything. Like, you would see them all, but they would all be different. It didn't look like they all came from the same pack.
[00:10:43] Speaker A: I remember growing up, the mismatch batteries. When I would see that in the back at my grandma house, I used to always have to ask.
[00:10:52] Speaker B: Yep.
[00:10:52] Speaker A: Because she'd be like, go change. I'd be like, which one am I changing? Because when it's. When it's the same.
[00:10:56] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:10:57] Speaker A: Then you know they're both on the last leg. But when there's a new. When there are two different brands, you knew one of them was on their last leg, and one of these is fresh, and you ain't wasting the fresh.
[00:11:06] Speaker B: And. And, like, more days nowadays, like, more of these. These things. Like, you can control everything with your phone now. Like, you don't even need a remote control no more. So, like, now it's. It's even easier to take batteries from remote controls because ain't nobody using them. Yeah.
[00:11:18] Speaker A: My man said he used to pickpocket the money.
[00:11:20] Speaker B: Yeah, well, because I was like, go get some battery. I was like, why am I getting some battery? You giving me $5.
[00:11:24] Speaker A: I got batteries.
[00:11:25] Speaker B: Yeah, I got batteries around the house. I know my dad has all kind of remote control, and he. But sometimes, like, he get mad. Yeah.
[00:11:33] Speaker A: Battery day.
[00:11:33] Speaker B: Well, because. No, it's not that he's missing one. Like, there's supposed to be two, but there's one.
[00:11:37] Speaker A: No, you wasn't putting them back. See, I. I would. I would at least put it back. So.
[00:11:41] Speaker B: But then what I would do is he'd be like, sean. And I would run, and I would find another remote, and I would take the battery out of that one and then run it back to him. But. Oh, my bad. Here you go. I'm done using it.
[00:11:49] Speaker A: You out here.
[00:11:50] Speaker B: What's that, like Frankenstein?
[00:11:52] Speaker A: Like layover. Like layover minutes. You had layover batteries. You just borrowing from one of the next.
[00:11:57] Speaker B: I was moving it back. That's how I. That's how I learned how to, like, you know, like how you had to take economy. Right. So you had to learn your economics.
[00:12:06] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:12:06] Speaker B: So you had to. That was your that was my economics. My economics class was learning how to do stuff like that.
[00:12:11] Speaker A: Like.
[00:12:12] Speaker B: Like I learned really how to. How to make money when I was a kid by selling candy bars. Like I used to. When I used to go to school, I used to stop. I would grab candy from the store, and then I would sell them at school. Yeah. And that's how I first started economics. I was making some pretty good money off of that.
[00:12:27] Speaker A: I used to hustle my own lunch, especially on. So on Tuesdays. I think it was Tuesdays. Tuesdays. Or when. No, Tuesday was chick fil a day. Wednesday was Pizza Hut day.
[00:12:36] Speaker B: But you see, that's the thing, though, is, like, is that. I think that's where my entrepreneurism kicked in. Because even with lunch and selling lunch, I was still limited.
[00:12:45] Speaker A: How was you limited?
[00:12:46] Speaker B: Because if I got my lunch and I was gonna sell my lunch, whatever I got, right, Boom, then that's all I could sell from that day, and I was done. And I could do it one time. I couldn't do it twice.
[00:12:53] Speaker A: Oh, yeah.
[00:12:54] Speaker B: Yeah. I learned. I learned how to double and triple by selling candy. Because now, you know, instead of just selling one. Snicker. Yeah. I brought four. I bought four or five of them.
[00:13:02] Speaker A: Four or five. So.
[00:13:03] Speaker B: Oh, yeah. And guess who my biggest. My biggest buyers were.
[00:13:06] Speaker A: Teachers.
[00:13:07] Speaker B: All of them.
Those are my hugest buyers. Was teachers. I may have had one or two students that would be like, hey, let me get a pack of nerds. Or, let me get a pack.
That's. That's when Laffy Taffy. Laffy Taffy used to be bars. They weren't just little squares.
[00:13:21] Speaker A: I've always known the bar was at the sketchy gas station.
[00:13:26] Speaker B: Yeah, those were. Those were what we had. We didn't have nothing else, but we had those. And we had Jolly Ranchers. And Jolly Ranchers were long sticks. They weren't small. None of them got cut down. When we was growing up, Laffy Taffy was like that. It was like you bit into it, like. And you pulled it out, like. Yeah.
[00:13:41] Speaker A: No, I don't remember that. I wish I had teachers that bought us. Our teachers used to be mad about. Man.
[00:13:45] Speaker B: I had a teacher, Mr. Henley. Man, I miss him. He was. He was my in. In junior high school. He was my history teacher. He made history so much fun. Like, that's why I had good teachers like that. Like, Mr. Henley was good. But I'll tell you something. Snicker bar and a Look bar. I don't know if you remember what look bars were.
[00:14:01] Speaker A: I don't remember a Look bar?
[00:14:02] Speaker B: There's a Look bar, you gotta look at it. Yeah, look up the.
[00:14:05] Speaker A: Look up a Look Bar.
[00:14:06] Speaker B: Because that's what my mom used to eat too. My mom loved look bars. They're kind of like a Heath bar. They're kind of like. It had the toffee, I believe that was in inside of it.
[00:14:14] Speaker A: L O. Okay.
[00:14:15] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:14:16] Speaker A: Look bar candy.
[00:14:19] Speaker B: Oh yeah, that.
[00:14:21] Speaker A: Remember those?
[00:14:22] Speaker B: That and a snicker. Mr. Henley, Mr. Henley used to corner me. As soon as I come around the corner, he like, hey, Shine, Shine, Shine, get over here.
[00:14:28] Speaker A: Shine, Shine.
Sometimes grab that on accident cuz it's the same color as a dog on KitKat, bro.
[00:14:34] Speaker B: I can get both of those candy bars from the convenience store at like 80 cents for both of them.
[00:14:38] Speaker A: Sell them for like a dollar.
[00:14:39] Speaker B: I sell them for $3 as a pair to Mr. Henley. $3 as a pair and I spent 80 cent. That's how I started learning economics was selling candy. One time my mom thought I was selling drugs cuz she. Cuz she found bunches of ones and fives in my pocket.
[00:14:52] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:14:52] Speaker B: In my pants out here.
[00:14:54] Speaker A: Selling.
[00:14:54] Speaker B: I opened up my backpack, I'm like, I'm selling candy like everybody likes. Nobody didn't like candy. I can sell candy on the bus. I can sell candy walking home. I can sell candy as I'm at lunch on lunchtime was the best time.
[00:15:05] Speaker A: Oh, lunchtime.
[00:15:06] Speaker B: You can walk around the choir with.
[00:15:07] Speaker A: A laptop full of candy. That was the hustle time.
My mom finally caught me one time. Cause I used to always say, can I get an extra something? She thought because it was for football. Nope. I was going to school knowing I needed that because at my lunch you had to have the top three things. You had to have the Capri sun, you had to have the chocolate pudding cup, the snack snack pack.
[00:15:28] Speaker B: Which one though? Just chocolate or chocolate?
[00:15:30] Speaker A: Vanilla. Chocolate. Vanilla. If you had chocolate and vanilla. Oh, you was balling.
[00:15:34] Speaker B: That's what I'm saying.
So when you got. That's what I'm saying. When you sell your lunch, there's certain things in how you can sell it. And you could almost separate the jello from the lunch. Oh, and. And sell them separately.
[00:15:44] Speaker A: No, no, no. Yeah. No, no, no.
[00:15:45] Speaker B: You didn't have to sell them as a whole.
[00:15:48] Speaker A: No, no.
[00:15:48] Speaker B: Some of them you got to though. Like if you got ruffle potato chips in a sandwich bag, you have to sell that together with the sandwich. You can't sell them separate.
[00:15:56] Speaker A: No, I sold the ruffles separate from the.
[00:15:58] Speaker B: Who bought Ruffles separate in a sandwich bag.
[00:16:00] Speaker A: Somebody that got really. That got a good sandwich, but they mom gave them the freaking. What used to be the terrible chips from back then. If you didn't have Ruffles. Nope. Not lay's. No, lay's was good. Some people didn't like Fritos. Oh, yeah, I love Fritos.
[00:16:13] Speaker B: You know why, though? You ever open a bag of Fritos, like, instantly and then just smell the bag?
[00:16:18] Speaker A: Yeah, it's not good.
[00:16:18] Speaker B: It's not good.
[00:16:19] Speaker A: So that's why I like Fritos.
I liked Fritos. And they would think I was losing on that deal, but it's like, yeah, I'll give you the Ruffles, but I need the Fritos. Aye.
[00:16:29] Speaker B: Nah. You know what it was? You know what it was, was he bought the. He bought them from you. Cause his mama sent him with Wheat Thins.
That's what it was. He had. He had a peanut butter and jelly, and then he had a bag of Wheat Thins. And when he looked at the Wheat Thins, he was like, hell, no.
[00:16:42] Speaker A: I can't eat.
[00:16:43] Speaker B: I can't eat now. With peanut butter and jelly. What are you doing?
[00:16:45] Speaker A: You gotta have a Ruffle or.
[00:16:46] Speaker B: Yeah, something. Something. It's got to be a real chip when you sitting there with how. I don't even know how you trade up with somebody with some Wheat Thins.
[00:16:53] Speaker A: Like, yeah, mom ain't gonna make it.
[00:16:56] Speaker B: Now if you came with chicken in the biscuit. No, that was. Now that was. That was different.
You can sell them by the little bags. You can have little bags of little chicken in the biscuit. That and goldfish.
[00:17:06] Speaker A: Goldfish. I don't know what it was about. I never understood goldfish.
[00:17:10] Speaker B: I didn't either.
[00:17:11] Speaker A: I think, because goldfish, it was like, cheez. Its.
[00:17:13] Speaker B: Cheez. Its is the same way.
[00:17:14] Speaker A: I had a buddy that just wanted a little handful. He would give me 25 cents per little handful. Wow. And so I. And I would get the big. Like the big aluminum bag.
[00:17:24] Speaker B: Let me tell you something. If I had an allowance, like how you were saying, kids have $52 a month. You know how much candy I would have had stacked up? I'd have been. I would have triple $52 a month. Three or four times before. Before the end of the year, half.
[00:17:36] Speaker A: Of that 52 would have gone to, oh, easily.
[00:17:39] Speaker B: And then you would have made that back, plus more.
[00:17:41] Speaker A: Exactly.
[00:17:42] Speaker B: And then you would have just kept going, Yo, 52 would have just been like, yeah, you just put that to the side. Every month you got it. You can be like, I don't even need it.
[00:17:48] Speaker A: But yeah, 52amonth. I thought it's. And to do stuff that you're gonna have to do when you're older, like I said, like taking out trash, cutting grass.
I just was. That's expected.
It'd be nice now if I could cut my own grass and pay.
[00:18:03] Speaker B: I used to cut people yards. I did. I used to cut people's yards as a kid. I cut them, I walked around. But you know how much work that is? How much work that is for. For a 12 year old, 13 year. You walking around this whole neighborhood and this old school. So we didn't have no battery operations.
[00:18:17] Speaker A: On the gas can.
[00:18:19] Speaker B: Oh, yeah, you had gas can. You had a rake. You had like. And you hope they had it. Yeah. Because you hope they had a trash can that you could put this stuff in there. But if they didn't, you was bagging stuff all day. One yard took you. And then they come out with $5 talking about, here you go.
[00:18:33] Speaker A: Oh, it was so bad. You do what? Probably. It was probably a good hour.
[00:18:36] Speaker B: That's what I'm saying. And I looked at it like when I started. I stopped cutting yards when I started selling candy.
[00:18:41] Speaker A: Yeah. No, there was.
[00:18:42] Speaker B: When I was selling candy, I was making. I was making way more than $5.
[00:18:45] Speaker A: Oh, yeah, grass was per day. This is labor work.
[00:18:48] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:18:48] Speaker A: Because you also can't do a bad job because then you're gonna get told on by your parents.
[00:18:53] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:18:53] Speaker A: Or from that person to your.
[00:18:55] Speaker B: Oh, and then trying to. And then plus trying to explain to my dad that I'm too tired to cut the yard today because I just got done cutting the neighbor's yard so I can make some money.
[00:19:05] Speaker A: Did your. Would your dad. Because my parents would do this. If I was to cut somebody else's grass, they would tax me because I use their gas.
[00:19:14] Speaker B: Oh, yeah, my dad would.
[00:19:15] Speaker A: Yeah. So I had.
[00:19:16] Speaker B: Well, that's why my dad would tell me he didn't have to pay me was because I used his. I used his lawnmower, his gas, his oil and all that.
And what he told me was he should I. He should have charged me to go out and do that. He was like, you went out there and you cut that person's yard with my gas, my lawnmower, my stuff.
[00:19:33] Speaker A: Nope, I had. Yeah, I had to pay a. We talked about this last episode. Renting or buy or buy or leasing. I was leasing the goddamn lawnmower every time.
[00:19:42] Speaker B: Really? How much did he Take.
[00:19:44] Speaker A: Take half.
[00:19:45] Speaker B: He take half of what you made? I'd be mad with that.
[00:19:47] Speaker A: Oh, that. I had to start upcharging the first time. I got five dollars and I did four yards. So that was 20 bucks.
Half of it was gone.
[00:19:54] Speaker B: I said, now is he doing half? Like, even when you raised it up? He did half of that too.
[00:19:58] Speaker A: Yeah, that's why I raised.
[00:19:59] Speaker B: Just told him it was the same price.
It's 250.
[00:20:03] Speaker A: I can't. You can't lie when it. Show the four neighbors and the block ranger.
[00:20:06] Speaker B: No, you're right. You're right. You right. But still, like, that's it. It didn't seem right on our end.
[00:20:10] Speaker A: Like, I think we got the short end to say stick hard, but it's crazy. I think being lowballed like that taught me how to manage money the most.
[00:20:19] Speaker B: Well, that's because you. You. You're mixing in your hard work, and you're. And you're actually finding your worth. And I think that's. I think that's what's wrong with just giving your kids allowance. Just giving it to them without having a thing. They never learn what their worth is because they was just handed it. You know what I mean?
[00:20:35] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:20:35] Speaker B: So they don't really know what their worth is. Like, if. If. Let's say I give you $5 to do a job, and you done with the job, right? Once you come back in and I give you five bucks, you're gonna sit there and you're gonna start calculating how much shit you just got done doing and how much $5 is trying to match that. When it doesn't, that's when you start realizing your worth. Now, if somebody's just giving you $52 a month, and maybe you take out the trash once or twice a month, maybe you do this, maybe you do that. Now you just getting paid just because you're getting paid, right? You're not getting paid for nothing. So you still don't know your worth. You don't know what you're worth because you don't know what you can do.
[00:21:12] Speaker A: And there's certain chores you don't have to do every day. So that's what I started thinking about when I heard about 52. Yeah, 52amonth on the. What's that, 10 to 12 a week? It's like not every. Not every week right now. Every now. Sorry. Not every day you got to take the trash.
[00:21:29] Speaker B: And how many of these kids are not. How many of these kids are not delegating their duties to other people?
[00:21:34] Speaker A: Right. Or the parent is, I mean you.
[00:21:38] Speaker B: Pay me, you pay me 15, 52 dollars a month.
[00:21:40] Speaker A: Right.
[00:21:41] Speaker B: There's going to be somebody out there for $15 a month that's going to take my trash cans out to the front.
[00:21:46] Speaker A: Oh for sure.
[00:21:47] Speaker B: And I'm, and I'm going lose a little percentage of what I made. But it's still no hard work off of me.
[00:21:52] Speaker A: And you still winning in a profit.
[00:21:54] Speaker B: Correct. And, and, but that, but even if, if somebody, if a kid did that, I would commend him more than just for somebody who just got paid for just because they thought they should.
[00:22:03] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:22:03] Speaker B: Because even with that person that went out and hired somebody else, that means they're really finding their worth. They're finding where their stuff goes in.
[00:22:11] Speaker A: How they mix in, seeing the value. Correct. They're saying that fifth, would you say? Yeah, 52. Yeah, yeah, 52. You take away 15, is that worth me not doing it myself?
[00:22:20] Speaker B: And you know it's going to be, and if it's not, it's going to get done. It's going to be something you never had to watch. So they're going to be weighing the options as they're doing this for sure. So that's what I'm saying. But that's still going to be them finding their worth because they're actually earning it now.
[00:22:32] Speaker A: Yeah. They're doing something to facilitate that. Right.
[00:22:35] Speaker B: They're just not expecting it. That's what I don't like is when you just get it just because, well they're my kids and they should have an allowance. Why? Why?
[00:22:42] Speaker A: No.
[00:22:42] Speaker B: Why?
[00:22:42] Speaker A: They got to do something.
[00:22:43] Speaker B: They got to do something. They got to do something. And, and, and, and, and that doesn't mean chores.
[00:22:48] Speaker A: No. Cuz that's.
[00:22:49] Speaker B: Chores is basic.
[00:22:50] Speaker A: That's basic.
[00:22:51] Speaker B: That's basic.
[00:22:52] Speaker A: Yeah. I don't, I think like I stated.
[00:22:54] Speaker B: You don't pay rent.
[00:22:56] Speaker A: No.
[00:22:56] Speaker B: So you can take out the trash.
[00:22:58] Speaker A: Oh, take out trash.
[00:22:59] Speaker B: You can sweep the floor, clean your g. And not clean everybody room.
Clean your room. Yeah. Where you reside, where you are at. If I open this door, I should be happy to open this door in my house. I should not be mad to be like keep that door closed. If you go down the hallway to the bedroom, don't open up the first one. Don't open the kids door.
[00:23:20] Speaker A: Yeah. The chores that they were saying they're getting paid is cutting the grass, taking out trash, cleaning their room, tidying up the bathroom, laundry.
What was the other one like? Vacuuming, Swiffering.
[00:23:34] Speaker B: What about dishes?
[00:23:36] Speaker A: I Didn't see dishes on the list.
It was only. I don't know, it was a quick. I read it.
[00:23:40] Speaker B: I'm tell you something. When our chore. We had a chore calendar that hung on our. On our refrigerator between me and my two sisters. So we knew whose day it was to do dishes. Dishes was the number one chore in the house. Oh yeah, number one. That kitchen. That kitchen.
[00:23:54] Speaker A: That sink could not have. Not a specific. Did you have to wipe the sink after the water when you were done? Oh.
[00:24:02] Speaker B: If there was one drop in there that was like not finding a vacuum thing on the carpet. It was like my mom didn't see the runways that were made by the vacuum. Then it was like she was like nobody vacuum.
[00:24:13] Speaker A: I I swear the runways was just. So they knew you actually did.
[00:24:19] Speaker B: Yes.
[00:24:19] Speaker A: Because you could just big. Just one big swoosh. No, but it was like. No. If you had. Cuz I'm assuming. Did you have to do the triangle? Triangle, triangle, triangle.
[00:24:28] Speaker B: Come down, come down.
[00:24:29] Speaker A: Triangle, triangle.
[00:24:30] Speaker B: Yes.
[00:24:30] Speaker A: I feel like they only made us do that so they knew we actually vacuumed the whole.
[00:24:34] Speaker B: It was like cutting the yard. You had to go in a circle to where it got smaller or you started in the middle and went out to where it got none.
[00:24:41] Speaker A: Oh my. So my. At my granddad's house, everybody had a.
[00:24:44] Speaker B: Different way to cut the yard.
[00:24:45] Speaker A: My granddad's house for me, cuz I had two grandparents and then my house, one of my granddaddy Bill. So on my dad's side he wanted diagonal. He was a diagonal man. And I used to hate that.
[00:24:57] Speaker B: That's that baseball field looking that outfield baseball field. You know what though? I liked that when it did that as a kid.
[00:25:03] Speaker A: It was so hard because you had. Because he wanted you to start on the edge. I wanted to start in the middle so I could then yeah, yeah, yeah. Uh oh, you just disconnected your mic.
Plug it back in. Are you there?
[00:25:19] Speaker B: Test one.
[00:25:19] Speaker A: Test. There it is there. I don't know how that happened, but yeah, he was diagonal. And then at my own house we were vertical.
[00:25:27] Speaker B: Okay.
[00:25:27] Speaker A: And my other granddad was circles.
I liked just vertical.
But then you had to alternate. So if you went vertical one week, the next week you had gotta go all the way.
[00:25:38] Speaker B: Okay, okay, okay.
[00:25:39] Speaker A: But yeah, no dishes was a dishes was a must.
Dishes, sweeping, trash part of it. And trash by default. That was an everyday thing. Yep, that was by default those three things. If I did anything else.
[00:25:52] Speaker B: And that was because like my mom used to look at me and my mom Would say, did you. Do you want your own place? And I was like, yeah, I want my. Like, I want my own house. I want my own thing. And she said, who's gonna take out your trash? Who's gonna clean your dishes? Who's gonna do that? Because this is your own place, right?
[00:26:06] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:26:06] Speaker B: So you the only one that lived there. So I was like, oh, snap.
So she was like, so get used to it now. Yep. So that you ain't got to try to worry about that later on in life. Like, you ain't got to learn that lesson.
[00:26:17] Speaker A: You already learned it. If you. If you are.
And like I said, if you're listening and you do, are you part of that 52 that spends on your kids?
Are you setting them up to become not clean?
[00:26:29] Speaker B: No, no. What they think they're doing is that they're setting them up to be as successful as they are.
[00:26:34] Speaker A: No, that's what happened, though, isn't if you're paying. If you're.
[00:26:37] Speaker B: No, no.
[00:26:37] Speaker A: Your kid.
[00:26:38] Speaker B: If you paying your kid, that means you don't clean your own house. I'm sorry, I say it right now. I say it right now. If you got money to pay your kids like that, you got somebody to come and clean your house. I'm sorry, I say it to your face right now. And people probably out there going, no, no. But every time you drive around the city, you see a. You see a different type of house cleaning groups that are always driving around, and there's a lot of them in Idaho.
A lot of them. So if you pay your kids allowance, you don't clean yourself. No, you don't. Your husband or your wife, whoever. Whoever's the breadwinner in that house is making enough money to pay. To pay your kids. Let's say you can't. I give my kids 52. Okay, how many kids you got?
Oh, yeah, exactly. That's what I'm saying. Some people will sit and be like, I got three, four kids. Okay, that right there, that's. That's what, 400amonth?
[00:27:28] Speaker A: Yeah. 52 times four.
[00:27:30] Speaker B: Yeah, yeah. No, no. 200. 200amonth.
That's just 200amonth. That's 2400 a year. Just an allowance.
Just an allowance. Not. That ain't never. He ain't never gonna see that. Never gonna come back.
[00:27:43] Speaker A: No. That's crazy, bro.
[00:27:45] Speaker B: So, like, if you got 52, that. You got 2400 to give your kids per year, just a half of them.
[00:27:50] Speaker A: For sure.
[00:27:50] Speaker B: Got you for sure. Got it. You for sure got a landscaper you for sure got somebody who work on your car. You for sure got somebody to clean your house. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. There is nobody out there scraping, working a hard nine to five job, whatever, doing they stuff and going to work, getting up early, doing all that stuff, coming back to the house, Boom. And still giving their kids $52 a month. I'm sorry, no. Whoever out there right now, like, I do that for my kids. Shut up.
[00:28:15] Speaker A: We about to have some.
[00:28:16] Speaker B: Oh yeah, we have some reaction, bro.
[00:28:19] Speaker A: That's going to be the telltale thing.
[00:28:22] Speaker B: Oh, I'm telling you right now, they got you. If you got that much money to give to your kids just for having that thing you, you expecting your kids to earn, to end up like you.
[00:28:31] Speaker A: I mean, that is true.
[00:28:33] Speaker B: I mean, I'm not saying, I'm not saying you're not doing a good thing for your kids because taking care of your kids, spoiling your kids, doing that stuff for your kids, of course every parent wants to do that. But at the same point, you got a life lesson to teach. At the same point, we not here to just be parents. I'm not here to just be a parent. I'm. I'm here to be their, their guidance. I'm here to, to, to set them up for. Not. For. Not failure.
Like. And how do you set somebody up to be successful when you take everything from them? When they have to earn it from the beginning, they learn how to do that.
[00:29:03] Speaker A: That's scary.
[00:29:04] Speaker B: Four, three out of four of my kids served in the United States military.
Three out of four.
All I'm saying is I teach my kids. You work to what you get, you earn to what you get. Nobody is going to hand you something. Don't ever expect that. Ever.
[00:29:20] Speaker A: Yeah. Ever set up.
[00:29:22] Speaker B: And if you could do 2400 a year to your kids, and that means you just telling them that they can be just as successful as you, and then when they don't become successful as you now you're going to be trying to help your kid later on in life because that kid's gonna have the most struggle because he's not gonna understand why everybody else can't just give him what he was given his whole life.
[00:29:42] Speaker A: Yeah. Dang.
[00:29:43] Speaker B: Well, see what happens when you say 52 in the beginning of this?
[00:29:47] Speaker A: Yeah, well, we gonna find out. We got some unsubscribers. If we get some unsubscribers, there's some people that just got.
[00:29:54] Speaker B: They're gonna be mad. Hey, you know what? You know, it had to be said. I'm so sorry. Because this is, this is what we're doing is we're actually getting people that are coming, these young folks that are coming to the workforce and they are expecting so much for doing so little.
[00:30:06] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:30:07] Speaker B: And that's, and that's a problem, that mentality. That's not that you don't, you ain't born with that.
[00:30:12] Speaker A: Yeah, that's taught.
[00:30:13] Speaker B: That, that's taught to you. You're taught to think that way. You were taught to think that just stuff should just be handed to me. I don't know why it's not just given to me. Why, why, why you. Nobody ever asked that question. People said, can you ever say no to your kids? I can do it in 17 different languages.
My kids have heard the word no from me in any shape or form that you can put it.
[00:30:34] Speaker A: I've, I've experienced it non verbally. Just the look of like the look.
[00:30:39] Speaker B: Is, you know, the look.
[00:30:40] Speaker A: I ain't even gonna clap that stage.
[00:30:43] Speaker B: Oh yeah, you not helping. You not helping them. Because when they get older and they have to go out and do it themselves, they're not gonna understand why it's not just handed to them like it was the rest of their life.
[00:30:53] Speaker A: Yeah. Cleaning is a yeah. Parents out there watch yourself spending $52 a month.
[00:30:59] Speaker B: And what's funny is they become those folks that sit there and will criticize people's work because they've never had to work before. Ever, ever. If you mad at me, get mad at me. If you. Instead of unsubscribing comment.
[00:31:13] Speaker A: That is true.
[00:31:14] Speaker B: Let's talk about it before you leave and get mad. Before you leave and start unsubscribing. Before you start pushing buttons and being like, I'm so sick of this dude. I'm so sick of the dude that's missing teeth yelling at me. That's what, that's what they say. But that's okay because come back, don't leave. Don't leave. Speak your mind, please.
[00:31:31] Speaker A: I will respond before you, before you exit or lease on. They have you do a, an exit interview. Yeah, an exit interview.
[00:31:39] Speaker B: Exit interview.
[00:31:40] Speaker A: Before you. Before.
[00:31:41] Speaker B: Yeah, before you unsubscribe, let us have an exit interview first. Let us go back and forth so that you can have your, your word spoken, however you want to say it.
[00:31:48] Speaker A: Let's review that profile.
[00:31:49] Speaker B: Yeah, let's do that. Let's do that. Yep.
[00:31:52] Speaker A: Oh, hey, get in the comments. Did you get paid and if so, what was your dollar amount? Or are you like us, there. There was no payment.
[00:31:59] Speaker B: There was no payment.
[00:32:00] Speaker A: It was more. It was more shocking.
[00:32:02] Speaker B: We was lucky to be living. Yeah, that's what I was told.
[00:32:04] Speaker A: I will say there was.
I could probably count on one hand. There was a few times my mom would be like, you know what? This is for you for your hard work. And I would look. Be like, there's a catch. There's gotta be a catch. Like, there's gotta be a catch. And it's like, no, you earned that. But I'd still be looking around. Like I said something.
[00:32:21] Speaker B: I was always taught that food and shelter was optional.
That's how I was taught.
[00:32:25] Speaker A: I was taught that is my payment.
[00:32:27] Speaker B: Yeah. It was like, you don't have to live here. You don't have to eat my food.
[00:32:31] Speaker A: Were you. Before we ended, was you ever one of those kids that threatened to say you was gonna leave?
[00:32:36] Speaker B: Bruh? Bruh. Let me tell you something. I told my mom. I told my mom I'm running away. Told my mom I ran away. Where did I go? I went to school. Because it was school day, right? So I. I went to school. I was a stupid little kid. I told my mom, left a note on the. On the thing. I'm tired of living here. I'm tired of this. Went to school like a dummy, sitting in class. Here come the. Here come my mom and the officer. Coming up to the class dorm, sitting out there like this, and they're like, sean, you need to come with us to.
Did you tell your mom you was running away? Went home, got whooped. Like, whooped. And it wasn't even by my mom. My mom was so mad at me, she couldn't even talk to me.
[00:33:09] Speaker A: Dang.
[00:33:09] Speaker B: She couldn't even talk to him. My dad. My dad was like, oh, you want to run? Run now. Like, it starts shutting doors. I can't run nowhere.
[00:33:16] Speaker A: Yeah. I told my mom I was done. I was like, I'm getting out of here. She packed my bag, opened the door and sat it on the doorstep and said, go ahead.
[00:33:26] Speaker B: Go ahead, leave. Bye.
[00:33:27] Speaker A: She was like, I'll make this huge.
I.
[00:33:30] Speaker B: You know what's funny, too?
[00:33:31] Speaker A: I ain't never seen my mom so passionate about packing the bag, bruh.
[00:33:35] Speaker B: Did she ever go to where she called a family member that she knew was close enough, going, oh, yeah, yeah. Tweety packing his bag right now. He leaving? Mm, no. So if he come by your house, you know, he don't live here no more.
[00:33:44] Speaker A: She packed my bag, and she stood there and she said, go ahead and she said. She told me where not to go. She said, don't you dare go to such and so house.
[00:33:52] Speaker B: Oh, she knew you was going?
[00:33:53] Speaker A: Yeah. She was like. She was like, if you call, she'll.
[00:33:55] Speaker B: Call ahead of time.
[00:33:57] Speaker A: She was like, bus stop is that way. You gonna need this much money. And she would pat her pockets like, I hope you got money. I'm like, I ain't, bro. I ain't. I immediately took that bag and went back upstairs.
[00:34:08] Speaker B: No, you didn't. You didn't look at her and go, well, let me borrow $5, and then I'm outta here.
[00:34:12] Speaker A: You talked about that look.
She gave me that look like, don't you dare ask.
[00:34:16] Speaker B: That's how you know you didn't have allowance.
That's how we know you didn't have allowance. If you had allowance, you would have had your bus ticket already paid, bro.
[00:34:25] Speaker A: No.
Yeah. My dumb ass was trying to leave, and they had no money. And then my safety valve got taken away. Cause I had a buddy down the street. I was gonna go there. My mom said, don't you dare go to Ms. Johnson house.
[00:34:38] Speaker B: I jumped on my bike like I thought it was mine.
[00:34:41] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:34:42] Speaker B: I jumped on my bike and started going. I'm like, I'm going. I'm outta here, dude. My dad. When I got back, my dad said, where the hell you going with my bike, man? I was like, what are you talking about? That's my bike. I got that for Christmas. From who? From who? Who'd you get it from?
[00:34:55] Speaker A: The times growing up, when I tried to flex, I realized how much I did not own.
It was crazy because your shoes leave your socks. When my mom packed that bag, she said it. She was like, I'm being nice and letting you have this bag. And then when I went back upstairs, I thought about it. I was like, this bag I got for my birthday from her. These shorts I got was from grandma. I was like, man, I don't. I don't.
[00:35:18] Speaker B: You don't own.
[00:35:18] Speaker A: I don't own.
[00:35:19] Speaker B: You don't own nothing. Nope. You just. You just here alone.
[00:35:22] Speaker A: It was crazy that I was really trying to flex like a boss. I'm about to leave, and you see.
[00:35:26] Speaker B: And that's what I'm saying, though. But with that, though, you found that humility. You found that way of growth. Oh, it was because of that. Because you knew. You realized you ain't. That's what you realize at that point. You ain't. And that's what's. That's the problem with most of these kids. Now is they think they the. And you really. They think. They think they really flexing on somebody. When you look at them, you go, yeah. Out. Bye.
That's my phone. Bye.
[00:35:50] Speaker A: It was so.
The fact that my mom packed that back. She said, I'm letting you have this. And I thought I was like, that's my.
No. Nope, she. Yep, she did buy that.
[00:35:59] Speaker B: That's when you started figuring out your worth, how much you was worth, how much you could count on from yourself.
[00:36:05] Speaker A: I was worth zero dollars.
[00:36:06] Speaker B: You was done. No, I get it. I get it.
[00:36:08] Speaker A: I had no stock. I had no value.
[00:36:11] Speaker B: I told myself I was gonna sleep with the playground and be fine. Like, I thought I had no plans. Like, there was. There was no plan. I didn't even have a plan. Where was I going? I don't know.
[00:36:20] Speaker A: I don't know what I was doing. No. That's why most parents got no problem with when you say, you gonna leave, they're like, do it. Because they know ain't nobody thought about it. You just want to say it, and they're like, where you gonna go?
[00:36:32] Speaker B: He said, you ever try to run away? Let me tell you something, man. When I was a kid, man, I had so many stupid things that I used to.
[00:36:37] Speaker A: I only tried to run away one time, and it locked the door. I was. I was gone. I was out of my house for 24 hours. I had actually left one time with no bag. I had told my mom, like, I don't need nothing, bro.
[00:36:47] Speaker B: I had a dull sword that I got from the thrift store, from the flea marketplace was dull as hell, But I thought it was the dopest thing ever. I thought I was a crime fighter. I ain't going to lie to you. One time I done put, like, a mask on my face and crept out of my house, put the sword on the back. Like, I'm gonna go out and fight crime. I got as far as the stop sign of my court, where I stood there when somebody drove by and laughed at me. When they see me, I'm standing at the stop sign with the sword and everything, looking like some stupid ninja turtle. Just standing on the side, looking at him like. They drove by. They was like, ha, ha.
I turned back around and went back. But the worst part is I snuck out, so I got to sneak back in with all this crap. I did a man. I was a stupid kid growing up.
[00:37:33] Speaker A: Zero dollars and zero cents. That's what we were worth when we tried running away. Hit the. Like, hit the. Subscribe, let us know. Did you get paid as an allowance. Some little. None was food and shelter. Your allowance.
[00:37:45] Speaker B: Hey, and like Twitty said before you unsubscribe.
[00:37:47] Speaker A: Oh, yeah, let's have a founder.
[00:37:49] Speaker B: Let's have a talk. Yeah, let's have a. Let's have an exit interview.
[00:37:52] Speaker A: Before that happens, I'm curious, how many X interviews you gonna do? Oh, that'd be.
[00:37:56] Speaker B: Hey, I do it. We'll do a whole thing about X interviews.
[00:37:59] Speaker A: We get at least one, I'll be happy. That's my little. That's my little.
[00:38:02] Speaker B: If you. If you said, I'm unsubscribing, let's talk about it first.
[00:38:04] Speaker A: Yeah, let's have a little.
[00:38:05] Speaker B: Before you walk away, let's talk about it first.
[00:38:07] Speaker A: This is a podcast. We professional about it.
[00:38:09] Speaker B: That's right. That's right.
[00:38:10] Speaker A: Till next time, I'm Twitty. That's thc. Oh, sometime in March, we going to North Dakota.
[00:38:15] Speaker B: North Dakota.
[00:38:15] Speaker A: Get in the comments. If you live in. What's the sound?
[00:38:18] Speaker B: Fargo.
[00:38:18] Speaker A: Fargo.
[00:38:20] Speaker B: Trying to pull up, you know, and if you're following the channel, then you'll see it, because when we. When we. When we fly out that way, we'll be posting it. We'll be going.
[00:38:26] Speaker A: Okay, this is.
[00:38:27] Speaker B: This is where we are now. So if you are out North Dakota next March, 2026, we'll be out that.
[00:38:32] Speaker A: Way and we will let you know a date. We just don't know right now that's how fresh it is. But it is happening. I'm out.