Problem with the INLAWS - podcast episode cover

Problem with the INLAWS

Oct 05, 202039 minEp. 52
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Episode description

Episode 52: Join me as I talk about playing at a drive-in show, to dealing with the in-laws!
New podcast every Monday morning!
Ask me questions! #GrangerSmithPodcast or email me at grangersmithpodcast@gmail.com

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Hi, everybody, Welcome to the show. Thank you for watching, Thank you for listening. Man talk about trouble with the in laws. This is an email I was reading today and I've got to share that with you, guys. I got to tell you the story. I'm right here in the back of my bus Wildflower in Butler, Pennsylvania. I mean, it feels good to be back where this podcast started, right here in the back of this bus talking to you.

I can't wait to show you everything that I've been reading in these emails and talk to you about actually playing a real live movie theater drive in. It's exciting times role the intro did kids in DCL months times and so long line of by four of pomp and down on the back crazy cool yeahation. So I'm here to spread some good news. I'm sitting on the back of my bus Wildflower, which might not seem like that big a deal, especially if you start at the beginning

of all my podcasts. But what's crazy is that I haven't done this. I haven't done the podcast in the back of the bus thing for over seven months because we've been shut down, and it feels good to just be on tour. And I know I've said on this podcast so many times that it's not a matter of if, it's a matter of when we'll get back on tour and things will start getting back to normal. Now they're far from normal, as you guys know, but it feels

good to be doing something. So we're out here in Butler, Pennsylvania. We are at a drive in movie theater, literally a drive in movie theater, just a big field with that's divided up in parking lots, and then they put a stage in front of the big screen, so we'll be actually playing live in concert, not a movie in front of the screen. Two a bunch of cars. This is my first experience like this. Tomorrow we're gonna do it all over again in Cincinnati, So I don't know. I

don't know how it's gonna go. I do know that I am excited to be here and excited to play music, regardless of what the crowd looks like, which is going to be a bunch of cars. Literally, there's gonna be three hundred out here with people in them. I don't know if people are going to be out of the cars or in the cars or sitting on top of the hoods or in the back of a truck bed. I don't know if they're gonna honk when they like something we do or flash their lights. I don't know. Well,

we'll find out. But like I said, I'm just excited to be making music live in person in Pennsylvania. Love Pennsylvania some of my favorite fans. I could say that about many places, but Pennsylvania is one of the many that I have tremendously missed during this crazy twenty twenty year. I've also really liked reading on this program your questions and I have set up an email Granger Smith Podcast

at gmail dot com. So that is the email I have set up specifically for your questions for this podcast, so that at this moment, I could open up that inbox without preparing, without reading them in advance, I could literally roll through off the cuff and answer your questions with no preparation. I think it makes it more fun. If I prepare for these, it's gonna be like some kind of professor lecture. And I don't want to I

don't want to be that. I wanted to be more like me and you are sitting in the cab of a truck having a conversation, so you could ask me anything you want Grangersmith Podcast at gmail dot com, and tell me. Tell me your name, first name, and where you're from so I can include that what I'm reading these and I'll jump in right now. So literally, look, I'm just going through these are this is my inbox. If you're watching on YouTube, I'm gonna scroll through and

randomly stop boom. And this one is from Greg from South Carolina. He says Granger. I wanted to ask a lighthearted question to give you a break from all the heavy stuff. Do you does Tyler and Parker sing too or do they sound more like a heifer dying in the hot Texas heat? Lol? I would really like to know if more people in your family are musically inclined and you had, Greg, Thanks for writing in Buddy, can't wait to come back to South Carolina. Tyler and Parker

do not sing. They don't sing at all. My mother and father do not sing. No one sings in my immediately immediate family. The only person that even remotely sings in the extended family is my grandmother, my mother's mom, and she is the one that I've talked about a lot, who's ninety four years old now. She sings. I mean

she could sing on pitch. She's ninety four years old, so there's not you know, I'm not going to say she's Reba McIntyre or anything, but she does play a little bit of guitar and she does sing a little bit. That's as close as it gets. It's weird that you asked that question too, because, for instance, Tyler is, you know, our voices are so our talking voices are so similar that you would think, because it's we have similar talking voice,

that we could sing, but we don't. So I'm lucky that he doesn't because he's a great manager, and I'm glad that he manages me it because he's smarter than I am. That helps. During this episode, you're gonna hear the stages on Park neck to the stage, so every once in a while you're gonna hear some music coming from the stage. We're gonna sound check a little bit. I might have to take a break and come back to some of these questions scroll in here. The next

one is Thomas calledwell. Thomas says, Okay, here's my question. I believe the most important thing that you could do when you have a business is hire the right people. How have you been able to put together such an outstanding staff from top to bottom, from your band and crew to your production people to Yege apparel. It seems that you have all the right people in place. I

appreciate you, buddy. It's that is such a good point, because your employees for your company are to me, the most valuable asset that you have above all the other resources, above the tour bus or whatever your biggest resource is in your particular business. So yeah, we put and a lot of people have asked a similar question, and we put a lot of attention to the hiring process, and it really starts for me with the recommendations and our

vetting process. So wherever they're coming from, we will talk to their old boss, and it may be even more importantly, talk to their old peers, the people that worked with them. See what kind of recommendation they give, See what kind of person they are, Because if we're going to hire them, we know that they're probably good at their job, or at least pretty decent. So we'll narrow it down. And when we have the one position narrowed down to two or three people, then because of I'm speaking to the

touring side, not ee apparel. But for the touring side, we could bring them on for a weekend two runs and that we will learn everything in one weekend. So say we're bringing on a new crew guy, he has to sleep in the bus, you know, in the bunk. You're sleeping in a bunk with on tight quarters with a bunch of other dudes that you don't know. You find a lot about somebody's personality at that point, and

then we'll see their their job performance. No, we're not expecting perfection, but we're we're looking for someone that through adversity they could pivot. They're not going to pass blame for a problem on some outside situation. They're going to always absorb that blame and take it as a learning experience. That's important for me to see some guy. Everyone's going to make mistakes, so it's important for me to see someone that makes a mistake that goes you know what.

I don't know exactly what happened, but I'm going to find out and I'll do everything I can to research this problem or teck this problem, no matter what it takes, and by the time you see me tomorrow, I will have a good explanation instead of just saying either I don't know what happened, who knows? Or man, this guy over here has been messing things up. I like someone to absorb the blame. So there's a there's a lot of layers in finding the right person. But we'll bring

someone out for two weeks. Really, if we like them for two weeks, we'll extend it to thirty to sixty day trial period, and we'll maybe extend it one more time before you're an official member of our band and crew. It's a good question, Thomas, and I know that a lot of people have asked a similar thing. Let me scroll through here. This question is from Jerry. He says, what books have you read that have made an impact

on your life? Another good question, Buddy, and I wish I wish I could be super specific, but between me and my brothers read a lot of books. We read a lot of books. I have a few lists here on my phone. The Miracle Morning that has been incredible by by hal L. Rod That started a lot of stuff from me, my brothers, Parker and Tyler. We all read The Miracle Morning. How to Win Friends and Influence People is just an outstanding book. Let's see if you've read.

I want to highly recommend anything by John Eldridge, which he has captivating which is if you're raising daughters, and he has wild at Heart if you're raising sons, those are super important. Obstacle is the Way great book. UH. Ten X Rule by Grant Cardone awesome atomic habits James Clear Living with the Monks by Jesse Itzler awesome book. And then then you got to go to Living with the by Jesse Hitler another awesome book. Uh. The Purpose Driven Life that did say, must have, Can't Hurt Me

by David Goggins another must have. I have some learning Spanish books here. I have The One Percent Rule by Tommy Baker. The Reaper by Nicholas Irvin, awesome book. I have so many books, guys, I didn't even realize Deep Work by Cal Newport. Awesome book. The Rise of Teddy Roosevelt. You guys know I love Teddy Roosevelt scrolling on and I like Minimalism. That's a cool, really cool book. I

have a book here called Start Your Farm. It's like a gardening book for beginning breaking ground on rawland and becoming a making it a farm. Stillness is a key. Another Ryan Holiday book, Essential ism, ego is the enemy. Dare to Lead by Brene Brown. That's a that's a great one. Also Daring Greatly by Brene Brown. Anything by Jordan Peterson. So twelve Rules for Life and Maps of Meaning,

specifically twelve Rules for Life. If I could recommend anything other than the Bible itself, which I read every day, I would recommend Twelve Rules for Life, really really good book. Yeah, and I don't want to just keep throwing these titles out, but reading is a very important part of my life, and I'm always reading either some kind of self help some kind of fiction in the Bible every single day, usually all three in pieces. Good question, Jerry, Thank you.

Let me find something else, like a good time scroll scroll scroll. This question is from John. He says, Hey, Granger, my question is this. I have written a few songs, and I think they're worthy enough to share with people. But I don't sing very well and would still like to show my song to someone else to see what they think. How would you go about putting these songs

in front of others. It's a good question, John. I think, first of all, the fact that you don't sing well, or that you claim to not sing well, is kind of irrelevant because the way that you sing is a way that you tell your story through your songs. And so there's a lot of singer songwriters out there that are either phenomenal in their own way, or they have a such a unique flavor to their voice that it's almost hard to digest, like a like a very serious

old whiskey. You know, it's like you could understand the art in it, but it's hard to digest. So I think I think that you should first of all, try to sing your own songs and record them. And I've talked a lot about recording software, but you could just use your phone literally, put your phone on the table, pick up a guitar or your buddy that plays guitar, and hash out some of these songs and record them. It's so important to hear yourself sing, even if you

don't like it. It's important in your growth as a musician and as a songwriter to hear yourself and correct yourself from hearing yourself. It's like when you comb your hair, right, this is a good example. You comb your hair in the morning. You don't comb it without looking in the mirror. I mean you can, but then it's just you're kind of just guessing and thinking that your hair is okay. But you look in the mirror and you comb it

according to what your eyes think look good. So if you're singing and you're trying to sing, you need to record yourself as if that's the mirror, because when you listen back with your ears, which are your eyes, your ears are going to tell you what's good or not, just like your eyes tell you which way to comb your hair. So record, record, record, over and over and over. Boom. Hayden. Hayden from Rock Springs, Wyoming says, Hey, grandeer, I'm twenty three years old, soon to be a dad to my

first son, Hudson on October twenty eighth. What is some of the best advice you can give to this to asson to be dad? Hayden. Congratulations man, First of all, congratulations your first son Hudson on October twenty eighth. You know, I always look at stuff like this, as you know, I'm a believer, and God gives us a timeline for

having children just perfectly for our own understanding. And what I mean, let me explain what I mean is when you find out your girl's pregnant, God then gives you nine months to prepare for that infant, and then when the baby's born, then God gives you a certain amount of months before they you could put them on the ground so everything, everything kind of in your house can stay the same. And then by about you know what,

seven months, they become mobile. So God has given you seven months up in that point to figure out how to childproof your house. And then from that point, God gives you a certain amount of time before they're walking and can reach upward parts of the cabinets, and then that goes That timeline goes on and on and on till you could even say if it's a girl, for instance,

God gives you sixteen years to prepare for dating. So when you first have a baby girl and you think, oh my god, what am I going to do when she starts dating? Well, the cool thing is God it's going to give you sixteen years to educate yourself and prepare yourself for that moment. Or you might think, what am I gonna do when she gets married? Well, you got two decades, buddy, to come up with this. How am I going to afford a wedding? Well you can start saving now, because you got you got two and

a half decades. So the best advice I can give you as a dad I assume to be dad, is soak up every moment. Soak up the moments now. Don't worry about the first deer rifle you're gonna buy them, or or get a four wheeler that you're dying to get him for his twelfth birthday, you know, focus on now, Focus on. Focus on your girl right now. And the the reason I say girl because you didn't say if it was your wife or not. So focus on her. Give her all the attention she deserves. Shower her with attention.

She's about to give you your first son, and it's going to be physically a beat down for her, and it mentally it might be tough on you, but physically it's going to be very tough on her. So shower her with all the attentions she can get and cater

to her every need. That will pay dividends forward for you with her if you if you give her that time now and then, as far as your son's concerned, souk up every moment because it's going to change week to week, every little bit of change that his little body is going to go through these next few months. It's you're never going to get these back. You get one chance, you're never going to get them back. Something that that's important to remember, and I'll close with this

on this question. Something that's important to remember is that a lot of times a little baby doesn't acknowledge the father as well as they acknowledge the mother. And that's kind of a design. You know, you don't have anything that's going to feed this baby besides a bottle, so naturally the baby usually is more inclined to the mother and the father is more of a an accessory toy. And that has nothing to do with love. You're feeling.

The way that you feel the day that he's born does not reflect how you're going to feel anytime in the future, because you might be expecting this huge, overwhelming, crying moment. Oh my god, here's my son, this is this is the You might expect that, and if it doesn't happen, your mind could ask, oh my gosh, I

don't I don't feel completely overwhelmed. And that's because it could be shadowed by a little bit of fear, a little bit of anxiety, a little bit of nonemus because you made you didn't sleep very well the night before, the weeks before. So anyway, the most important thing is just soak up that moment, because the moment will be more important and you look back on it than it is maybe in that time period. So congratulations, buddy, I wish you the very best. I'm going to read this,

reset this camera, and come right back. I hope you guys are enjoying today's podcast. For you to watch it or stream it or listen to it, it's free. But for me, I got expenses. I got people to pay to make this podcast happen. So luckily, I'm blessed to have Today's podcast brought to you by Amazon Music, and as part of Prime Day, Prime members get four months

of Amazon Music Unlimited for just ninety nine cents. That's access to sixty million songs on demand and ad free for less than a buck, so you can play the songs you want, when you want to play them, and if you want to stream for free. Amazon Music still has over a million podcast episodes at no charge, along with thousands of stations in Top playlist. I love Amazon Music because I can sit there and build my own

personal playlist. I like nineties countries so I could build my nineties country with my Mark Chestnut, Tracy BYRD Tracy, Lawrence, George Strait, Alan Jackson. The list goes on and on, Sammy Kershaw, you name it. I love nineties country and I build my personal playlist on Amazon Music. It makes it awesome. I can tie in Alexa and then I could be hands free with Alexa. So you're gonna love Amazon Music Unlimited to I promise get your Prime deal

for a limited time. Prime members can get four months of Amazon Music Unlimited for just ninety nine cents. Go to Amazon dot com slash granger. That's Amazon Amazon excuse me dot com slash granger for your Prime deal on Amazon Music. New subscribers only renews automatically cancel anytime offer ends ten fourteen terms applot. Back to the story GID. This question is from Donnie from Belton, Texas. Donnie says, I think the podcast is great and I love the

new music that came out this Friday. My question for you is, what if London and Lincoln went into the music entertainment business, would you let them and how would you feel about it? I think about this question all the time, and I get asked this quite a bit. Too, And the greatest gift my parents gave me, besides my name and dental work, would be the gift of freedom

to follow our dreams for me, my two brothers. And when I wanted to be a musician so passionately I wanted to be on the stage and sing my songs to the people and riding a tour bus. I wanted that so bad I lived and breathed that I thought about it all the time. I dreamed about it. My parents let me do it. And if they hadn't, if they had discouraged me, or if they told me to get a real job, or that this would never work out, or this was a stupid idea that the odds were

against me. If they had told me any of that stuff, that would have been probably devastating and probably changed everything for me in my life today. So that being said, from this question from Don, you asked two different things. Would you let them and how would you feel about it? So, first of all, yes, I would let them, because that's a gift that I wouldn't need to return that my parents gave to me. Now, how would I feel about it?

I would feel I feel uneasy, I'd feel scared because this business is so tough on the soul, on the heart. It could it could be heartbreaking, devastating to the soul and crushing the dreams and taking an art that you love and a passion that you have and crushing it up into a sausage grinder and spitting it out in

the form of music marketing. I have been very lucky, very blessed to have been able to bypass so much of that by choosing my own path in the music business, by choosing to to not be with a record label for so long, to live in my home state of Texas, to tour on her own terms, to make music on my own terms, recording my own songs in my own house. So I've been able to bypass a lot of that. But it's almost luck or god thing that I was able to do that. And I couldn't say the same

for Lincoln in London. And if one of my kids decided to be in the music business, inevitably they would be Granger Smith's kid trying to make a name. Now, sometimes that's great, look at Thomas Rhett, you know that's been great. But a lot of times it's really tough on the kid to try to live up to something and try to make their own, create their own path, separate from their dad, and draw respect that's separate from

their dad. So that is tough, man. That's I just literally my prayer is that they could follow their passion and follow their dreams, and that it's not music, especially London, like I think about her more than Lincoln. Like London. I don't want her to be judged by her looks, as if females are judged more in music by their looks than guys are. And I don't want her to be judged and criticized and put into categories. And that is not something I would wish on anybody, especially females.

I would not wish that on any woman. I would just like her to be like a veterinarian or of a school teacher or something something like that that she could find just as much joy. And haven't made my point, Donnie, I think I think you know how I feel about that. We find another here. Speaking of record labels, my phone's literally blown up from record label people. Text me right now, it's not the time doing a podcast here, Okay, Caleb, Caleb.

It doesn't say where he's from, but Caleb says, by the time you get this, I will have been married for two days, with my wedding being October third. I'm twenty one years old living in Lake Oreon, Michigan, so there it is, Michigan. I was wondering what your advice may be regarding family conflict, especially as I begin this next journey in marriage and expand my family to include

my in laws. I love them all, but I'm wondering how to strike a balance as my in law struggle to let my soon to be wife go and my family gets jealous of where we spend our time. I've struggled to maintain good relations with my own parents, but recently have realized how difficult it will be to handle when her parents seek to parent both of us. Of Course, I always accept guidance, advice, and help when necessary, but I also have established my own freedom to fail so

that I could grow from that. Thanks in advance. Ye ye, Caleb, dude, what a question, man? Where do I start? First of all, congratulations, I'll start with that you're married, dude, because I'm I'm I'm sure by the time this podcast comes out, you are already married. Because I am reading this on October the first, and you're getting married in two days. So congratulations, man. I love Michigan and I'm happy for you guys. I'm happy that you got a wedding or in this crazy time.

That's something you'll be able to smile about down the road for sure. But it sounds like you got some issues, bro. It sounds like you got some family that thing's going on. You got some in laws that don't know how to let their daughter go, and you got to You said, my family gets jealous of where we spend our time, and you want to maintain good relationships with everybody, but

her parents want to parent you both. I got an idea for you, and this is you know, it's hard, it's hard for you to start a marriage with this. But I'm sure what's happened is you got engaged, and then as you were engaged and you're going through wedding plans. I'm imagining that things intensified with her family and they kind of drew in the reins a little bit tight in the grip once that wedding date got closer and closer. And I don't think that it's that strange or abnormal

that they're doing that. I don't think it's good that they're doing that. Don't get me wrong, But I don't think it's strange because for a lot of people, that's got to be I don't know, I'm not nearly close to there, but for a lot of people, that's got to be a natural inclination to hang on to your baby girl as long as you can, and when she gets married, if you can sink your talents into the husband, then you could just hang on to your little girl forever.

And there's nothing wrong with the thought. The thing that's wrong is actually carrying that out because they will no longer have the right to do that, and that is tough. That is tough to tell a father, Hey dad, I got her. Now you don't have to parent me or her anymore. We appreciate your advice. We're gonna stand by you,

your in your family and your name. And I want to learn from you, and I want to grow with you, and I want you to teach me your trade, and I want you to show me what you've learned in your years that I don't know. But there's got to be certain places that we draw the line, like my job, or where we live, or how we raise our children to be. Those are things that I have to make decisions. I want your advice, but that's all it's going to be is advice, not dictatorship. Caleb. I would put a

lot of this on her too. I would put a lot of this on your wife and in some late night conversations with her. Babe, I need you to talk to your parents. You're their baby girl. I can't imagine what it's like to give up their baby girl to marriage. But it's time to move on from them parenting you as if you're sixteen. You're not sixteen years old anymore. So you guys are still young like y'all are a

young couple. But I think I think a lot of this is going to come down to her shoulders, saying mom, Dad, could we have caught some coffee. I need to talk to you about something separate from Caleb first and see how they react. Maybe they listen to her and they go, you know what, I don't think we even realized we were doing that, And you're right, I'm sorry. We'll work on that. But maybe, I mean, maybe they'll say that that.

Wouldn't it be awesome if they just said wow? I didn't even think about that, but we'll try our best to back off. Or maybe it's the mom, the mom in law or the dad in law. Maybe it's one or the other. And if you can get with the opposite to talk the other one off the ledge a little bit. Regardless, this is not like a deal breaker, Caleb, and it's very normal. It's still not right. I would put this a lot on your wife and see what happens. Have her talk, see what happens, get back to me,

come back to this podcast, and we'll talk again. Me and you sitting here on this bus having a chat. It's a good question, man, and congratulations. Let me do this this scroll here, here's Joel. Joel says, first off, First off, I want to say you pretty much renewed my faith in country music since I first heard you with Dirt Road Driveway. I have done back. I've gone back and listened to some of your older stuff and

like that. Like that stuff just as much. I almost am as one of my favorite songs, So thank you for that. My questions are would you ever consider writing and recording an entire Earl album? And do you think you'll ever feature Donnie Cowboy on an album or a live show. Thank you, Joel, appreciate you, buddy, thank you for listening, and I'm glad I've renewed your faith in country music. I have definitely considered an entire Earl album.

When Country Things Volume two comes out, and the entire collection of Country Things is out sixteen songs, there will be at that point a total of nine Earl Dibbles songs. So that's a lot. So one thought is I could write a couple more and then add those nine together and we got like Earl Dibble's greatest hits. So comment below if that's an idea. One thing I have to tell you is that, and I've always felt strongly about this, is that the reason Earl works so well is that

I feed it to the crowd in limited doses. If I walked out tonight here in Pennsylvania, dressed in overalls and played an entire show as Earl, it would be really fun for about three minutes, and then it would that oversensory craziness would start to wear on you and

you'd get a little numb to it. And I think what makes it work better is when I have the more the well rounded group of songs, the slower ones, the mid temple ones, the faster and more country ones, the faster and more rock ones, and then after all that good mix boom at the end there's Earl devils and you don't see them too much. You see them just enough where you say I wish there was more, But there's not always been my goal, so I've been careful with not giving too much role at one time,

and so far it has worked. I appreciate you liking Donnie Cowboy too, man. I love Donnie, and if he gets a song that's more popular than anything Earle's ever done, I guarantee you there will be a place for Donnie on the live show or on an album. Thank you, Joel. This question is from Amanda. It says, Hey Granger. First off, I'm a huge fan and love watching you and your family. I've been to two of your concerts and both were awesome.

I live in Burlington, New Jersey. I was wondering if you're going to be coming back to Jersey and would definitely want to see you and go to your meet and greet when things get back to normal. Also, I know this isn't a question, but my birthday is Saturday, October third. I'll be turning thirty one. I would love a birthday shout out. It would make my week. So Amanda, officially I want to tell you on this podcast happy birthday. I am happy for you, I'm grateful for you being

a fan and apps. Of course we're going to be back in New Jersey. Of course it's not a question. If anyone asked a question that says, do you think you'll ever make it back to the answer is yes. Snatch question comes from Brett, and Brett says his hometown is Bend, Oregon and his current town is Nashville, Tennessee. He says, how did learning stell guitar come about? And how much do you do you play it currently? So you have to do your homework to find out that

I'm an old steel guitar player. Used to play for a couple different bands, including Trent Willman, who him and I wrote the song Heroes and he co produced it with me on the latest album. So that's a little trivia with Trent and Chris Lee, my tour manager now was a drummer in that band. I learned still guitar. I was living in Nashville and writing songs solely. I

wasn't in a band at all. It was just writing songs, and I had a lot of time when I would get home in the afternoon, and I thought, you know what I've got to I've loved steel guitar. I love that instrument so much, and I wanted to use that extra time in a music city like Nashville and where there's a plethora of players. So I bought a steel guitar at a pawn shop and I went downtown to Broadway where all the bands are, and I found this old guy that played still guitar, and I said, hey, man,

I'd love to learn that instrument. Can you give me some lessons? And he said, yeah, how about Monday three o'clock, So boom it was on. I started doing lessons, then started reading books on it, and played. The most important thing is I played every single day for many hours and played enough to learn how to be in Trn's band,

and then kept playing. Unfortunately, when I moved back to Texas and needed the money to start my own band, I needed the money to sell it, so I stole the steel guitar and so I haven't played it just off and on over the last ten years. I probably played it just a little bit. If I see one some other band has it, I'll sit down and play. So not much, but we have thought about because Country Things has so much deal guitar, we have thought about maybe bringing it back in the live show for that

for Country Things, So that could be cool. So comment below that's something you would like to see maybe, so that might be pretty awesome. So I'll keep thinking about that. And by the way, Brett, you're from Bend, Oregon originally absolutely love that town. Thoughts and prayers go to everyone in Oregon that's in danger in California as well with

these crazy fires. As if you needed anything else in the Northwest to be a problem this year, there's some serious fires out there, and that is if y'all haven't been to Bend, Oregon or any of those great forests in Oregon. It's just so beautiful, unbelievable forest out there, and it's heartbreaking to know that because of some stupid people there, it's burning like crazy. So I'll leave it with that. Guys, remember to email me Grangersmith Podcast at

gmail dot com and I'll get on these questions. Thank you for everyone that emailed in. I'm never going to be able to get to all these I'm going to scroll forever and not be able to get to all of them, but I hope so, and I'll just keep on. I'll just keep on chopping away. I appreciate you guys so much. Thank you for listening. If you haven't subscribed to whatever channel you're watching this podcast on, do that so that you can know every time we put these out.

On Monday morning, I'm going to run in here and do soundtrack on the stage of the movie theater and Butler PA, thank God to horns back ye yee to that

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