The Opener: March 15, 2024 - podcast episode cover

The Opener: March 15, 2024

Mar 15, 202427 min
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Episode description

Here's the opening segment for Friday March 15th, 2024, featuring a recap of the big weather events from the night, and the upcoming St. Paddy's day weekend

Transcript

You an with the eyes of munch Happy Friday World. Let's go, come on, come on, get it to us one time, Come on weekends here, good stuff today. On the downbeat, I'm Kevin. That's Danny, It's Mike, it's j J. Let's roll, Mike. We're gonna do the the way new listeners can associate our names with the voices. Absolutely, that's me. I'm Mike, Danny ding Dong to TJ Miller, I'm Kevo yep, JJ O jorjer. Introduce yourself to people. Know which one

because JJ could be a dude. Dude. Yeah, A lot of bigger things they do, yeah, oh no, no, no, I get a yes, sir a lot when I'm like telling them the information about on the fucking Sometimes really, if they don't, yeah, they're like new, well, ridiculous. You have a very feminine voice, I think you do. You know. Yeah, I've always thought my voice was a little I want to say deep, but no, you know, a little on the

lines of I don't know, you know. I'm just gonna say it's traumatic when you're like fourteen years old and you call someone on the phone and they say, yes, ma'am, it's a bad day, you go oh, or you get the opposite. Like my son's mom is almost forty. Gosh. When she was in her twenties, people would call, like a sales call, and she'd answered the phone, is your mommy, your daddy home? She's like, I'm thirty, your mommy or daddy? Oh yeah,

pick your poison on that one right. This She always bugged me. I think I had a high pitch voice late a late bloomer, I was. I think, yeah, I probably I was. It was hard to tell because I to this day am virtually hairless, like a seal pup in Alaska, a man of the water. So I have like no hair on my legs. People have asked me you shave your legs every a couple of years. I'm like, no, but you don't start sprouting hair, you know. And when you're sixteen, what about your chest? You have a little

bit of chest. Do you have bigfoot butt? What? Bigfoot? But that means hair? Yeah, I don't have one hair on my butt, I said, seal pup, Well, it's got a hair somewhere other than I mean, other than your beard. You got armpit hair right, look that arm You can't see one hair. I mean, yeah, there's a little, but they're blonde and thin like I just don't. I don't have much hair. So when you're spread, when you're going through that at fifteen

six, whatever did your parents? They still loved you even with this malady. When I was born, I remember they lifted they all the whole room, lifted me up and said, behold, God's mistake. That's the first thing I heard. So it was the opposite of what happened with Simba exactly. They lifted me and they don't let pirates into your house. And then they rotated me over a trash receptacle and dropped me. Oh, God's mistake. No, So anyway, not hairy. So it's just a great gray

area when you're I mean, because it is. You know, you see people their leg hair when you're now those years. That's one of the easiest indicators. Not like you have a clock on your friends when they're hitting puberty, but you notice when someone is you know, pitched voice and not a hair on them. And honestly, by the time you're into junior high, you know you're playing football, you're playing sports, you're showering in school.

That shouldn't be allowed by the way. I agree, it's too intimidating for the kids that are that's traumatic what you're to do. And then you got dufus over there tucking it for fun and I'm like, hey, you have all that hair? Man crazy just because he's like eight months ahead of you. Yeah, it's all it is, like, dude, I'll get there fun. The dudes that have excuse me that that have the hair and all the other stuff, they'd make fun of you. Yeah, not my fault.

I don't know. Yeah, I'm two years younger. Look, fifth graders should not be showering with eighth graders in middle school after football practice, and we shouldn't also shouldn't be treated as tackling dummies. Okay, that's how it was for you. Fifth grade does seem very early, dude, it

was seventh for middle school. Was you started football in the fifth grade and you it was five and six and then seventh and eighth grade, and all the practices happened concurrently, and when you were done, you hit the showers and you're in there as afing eleven year old with a fourteen year old that does not need that. Okay, Yeah, granted this was you know, nineteen eighty. I don't think that does happen now, fifth grade and eighth grade. Yeah, and I could be wrong. You put all y'all on

one school. It was middle school where I went FI through through eight. Yeah, fifth, sixth, seventh, and eighth for me. Yeah, it's as it should be. Yeah, that's interesting. It was called middle school to school go tell something in a small town like Danny and I went to. They could go say something to one of the girls, one of the more developed fellas at the time. Yeah, he goes say something to one of the girls that the girl just never forget. Therefore, you never

had a chance. Your baby, you were a junior, your baby, d Kevin the whole life. And it's like, well, hold on, honey, the clock finally what'd you say? The what the world's clock? The world clock finally started, Dick. And now I'm back. Notice I'm taller than that guy. Now weird, he's the rump to the litter. Now he says he was a stud boy. It is funny. There was a couple of dudes in my high school that were considered, you know,

super handsome guys and athletic and all that. In my high school, and boy, the way they ended up turning out as adults because I was the skinny kid with eft up and effed up grill and glasses and stupid hair. Thankfully, I had a little bit of humor to me and had pretty cool friends. Was actually friends with a couple of the good looking dudes, so I was in a good group, so I didn't get the snot beat out

of me too much. Yeah, but boy, to see where those things ended up for them, Yeah, whoo went the other way now, guy and Danny's on ninety seven won the freak hell yeah, two ticks to the right, baby's right, top twenty five in the top five market. Get some, get some, get all of it. Were you not a cool guy in high school? Like good looking dude? Okay, I mean senior

year, that's senior year. I finally got my mom to break down and realized that contact lenses weren't that expensive, so I could stop wearing the whatever state issued military horn rim frames state issued you know. So yeah, I got rid of the glasses and that was a big help. And the fact that I had a job and could start buying my own clothes because we're super poor, I mean, I'm not and I'm not trying to play that up. We were very, very poor crows. Yeah, it's super gross.

So you would have to wear pants that were a size or two too small. So especially over the summer when you grow up, you don't have enough money to get school clothes and you show up where, you know, the first thing they see, they say when they see you, is like, what do you expect in a flood? You know, because your pants are like six inches above your shoes and it just looks ridiculous. I know.

Yeah, being poor is awesome, but getting my own job, it could afford my own clothes, and you know, it could kind of upgrade the style a little bit. And so year was not bad. Yeah, you rallied, rallied a little bit. Were there was there rich kids? Oh yeah absolutely. My best friend was probably the came from the wealthiest family and uh really in the town. Yeah, one of the and you would have

never known pretty much. Yeah yeah back then, Yeah for sure. But he owned his own, uh oil field supply company, and I actually worked for him for a summer or two. And but yeah, you would have never known it from my buddy Tracy, who was just salt of the earth and never flaunted it or anything like that. But he always, you know, brand new GMC truck junior year walking to school. He wouldn't pick you up, Tracy wouldn't pick you up. I lived a block away. Dude

wouldn't go to school in the Googler. Oh yeah you have. Yeah. I think the virtual tour of Knox City oh so boring. I'm just pulling my phone out, looking at it on my lap all day, and he was over my shoulder and here was another fence. Mike you He's looking at the map and just kind of going down the streets and he goes, this just looks sad. I was not mean, aboud. I'm sorry I said that. It didn't take you among to run through that tour. You had

to be creative with your entertainment to figure stuff out. I hope we are. I wonder how those towns are today, with the Internet now and phones and all that stuff. I'm I'm sure it's not near as bad as it felt for us at the time. All those There are things that I've out there I remember that are awesome and seem really great now. But I think that's probably everyone when they get older, looking back at when you know, when they were a kid. But I do think the technology wave because actually

I don't think I'm knowing. Not everyone thinks I'm young, but I'm thirty six. Still didn't have phones growing up there, so like a video games, but the technology, the internet was crap and slow and yeah, barely useful. You barely had access to knowledge of what was cool. I mean, you had TV and that's all you really had. But for Danny,

what you're gora to high school at eighty six? Eighty six? Man, Yeah, so you almost just the people in your town dictate what is I don't even know cool looks or clothes or trends if you could even care, right, Yeah, And the only influence that you got on any type of trends or style or music was from TV or magazines. That was it. Maybe movies, you know, if you were able to drive to Abilene not

stuff to go see a movie at the mall of Abilene. What about when you were in junior high were you looking up to the high school kids in non city, Oh, my god, yes, heroes, right, heroes, Yeah, and they looked like thirty seven year old men in retrospect, you know, they just were otherworldly. You just could not imagine what their lives must have been like a sixth grader, he was so cool in the football players so elementary. For me. It was one through five, first

through fifth grade. Well, when the football players would come in and they would read. Once a week, they wo'd bring a football player in to read a little book to you is oh I got the quarterback, Oh I got the running back. It's Jeremy Johnson. And they all read Curious George to you, and you feel like he's signing autographs. It's crazy. You may have been like this for you because you yes audious and I go back to read to the kids. No one asked for autograph, No one cares

because I didn't get to play much. You State champion, Danny. I don't know. It might be Kevin. It might have been like this for you because your town was just a little bit bigger than NOx City. But I remember looking back at the time thinking these guys are huge. But then in retrospect you look down the roster and I'm telling you, I think in my entire football career in middle school and high school, Knox City may have

had two players in that eight years that were over two hundred pounds. Yeah, that's insane, right, you thought they were big and oh my god huge. I was the tallest kid in school at the time at probably six ' one. I'm about six three now. May have shrunk, I don't know, but yeah, I was the tallest kid in school at the time by quite a lot. Did they have any plays like, I know you didn't play much, but did they like in practice, whether it was your tight end right? Mm hm? I mean, did they have a pass

to the tall guy? I played left left weak side for us. We always ran to the right. My goal was solely to chip a tackle, a defensive tackle, and then run across field and try to cut a safety or what they called they called them half backs at the time. To had cornerbacks and half backs on defense, and it was it was your job because we just ran power sweeps were so fast, and it's my job is to get downfield and be a lead blocker and just take out basically their last line

of defense. It was pretty fun. I mean, you're getting to mow down these one hundred and thirty pound safeties blindside block the crap out of them. They never see it coming when that was illegal. But I have a lot of passes designed for me. My hands weren't great. I wouldn't particularly fast. Just the body, tall body. Put this guy into the uniform. Did y'all have plays? We had plays, Kevin, No, I

school plays. There was a theater department. Yeah, my sister was very involved, but no, I never did because you alway have been made fun of. Huh. Oh, that's the thing. I always wanted to do the theater stuff, and I got scared, really because I know that I would have been teased for that, There's no question. Meanwhile, them I wanted to do like an improv group and maybe act a little bit, find

myself the bright lights of the stage. It's so amazing how underdeveloped our brains are when we're in incredible and how much how much outside influence has over our ways of thinking and our choice making. Because if I had the brain that I have now, would have never played football. Wouldn't have given a rats ass how much shame I got from the coaches or other players, and I probably would have gotten into theater. Yeah, and I probably would have taken

band a little more serious things that I'm actually applied to. What turned out to the person that I ended up evolving into in spite of the fact I didn't know that at the time. I was peer pressure because I didn't want to play football. It scared me. I didn't want to get hurt. But boy, if you didn't play, if you were able bodied and not in special classes, you damn sure tried out for football. And if you tried out and you could walk, you've got a uniform that was okay.

But yeah, oh dude, yeah, I played both ways and special teams, all of it, all of it. But if you didn't play, dude, you were shamed by everybody because that's all that matters out there, dude, in West Texas is effing football. Football. I always kind of regretted getting out of band because I was pretty good at trumpet. It's football for a reason, and I was pretty good, but I quit when it was time to transition into marching. I had no interest in marching messer.

I just didn't want to do that. I would I loved playing the music. I loved it, but I did not have it. I mean that part was gonna I would, so I would have quit it the way with the but you're on the theater stuff always seemed fun. Those kids always semp they're having a blast. Never went to their plays, and I was like, I feel like I could have really found something there. I felt I could have unlocked something. I did a little theater. That's cool. Yeah,

and you didn't get you didn't get uh, you know. He was in a name call too. Yeah, it was this big school. Maybe that was the big difference we had. I don't even know five six hundred people in our graduating class. It was big. So yeah, no, I don't recall any beef for that. And my brother was in theater. He got screwed because when we moved from Miami to Sarasota, i'man a whole

different city. It was his sophomore year high school, you know. So that's a hard one to get thrown into a new city, new school. And I was in seventh grade, so I got to at least have a couple of years before we got to Reverview, the big old high school. So yeah, it was hard for him. But yeah, he got in a theater and then I did year or two, did a bunch of plays and it's fun. I remember it being fun, and it's probably good for

you. It's definitely good for that if you have any if you're reserved at all, which I don't think I really was, but it's still good for any coming out of shelves. Plus there's girls in it. Yeah, it's like the loosest class as far as interaction and messing out. You're supposed to hookers, you're supposed to mess with each other, and you know, interact more than most classes were just sitting there. So it's just good for your social game. I think this good for your social game. It's good for

your public speaking skills confidence. Yeah. Yeah, So get this word got around that they were playing charades in theaters. So my senior year, I'd pretty much died like two classes. I'd take my senior year. But they're like, we can't just let you go home all day, so here office hours, office hours, office hours. I was like, Okay, well, screw that, I'll just go sit in with the theater class. Some went sitting there my senior year and had a blast. It was so fun.

You you either did nothing or you played games all day. And then they started to string together because at the time, whose line is it anyway, it was still very popular and they started from well if we did an improv night, like every Wednesday night up at the auditorium and people would come. It was so fun. It was so fun. We also had something where, oh yeah, students could get out of something else if they came to our place. Yeah, so they know it'd be packed. Yeah,

it's like a class. The auditorium is well, yeah, because they don't have to do whatever. And you see, I mean now, if you do a play at night, yeah, it's gonna be sparsely attended or only parents. But yeah, when you did the one during the school day, yeah, it's were you holding the skeleton? I don't even be not last poriotic. I remember grade school, I did the Shaky Tale of Doctor Jakie and I got the lead role of doctor Jakie. And I was traveling,

uh like medicine salesman in the olden times, you know. And I had the cart, you know, and I was doctor Jakie selling my potions and my tonics. And that's how you became a drug dealer. Yeah, that's gonna do that, transitioned into soroy industries. Probably these people in the play, they're buying this crap. This is amazing potion, this no wonder.

He believes in magic so much so but extra extracurricular activities were a wonderful escape and reason for to get out of a lot of stuff, a lot of it just being at home all the time, which I really rarely ever was. But you know, did you guys participate? I mean, Kevin, I know you had UIL literary events and stuff like that. Did you Were you part of that group at all? Yeah? I did a few things I did. I mean as a kid, I growing up, I was

very good at spelling in math. But as I got into high school and open and quit trying to do things like that, I got into like creative writing. Yeah. Same. Oral reading was one too. I think I believe that was what it was called, where you kind of take a story or a book and then you kind of replay it in your own Yeah. Almost like honestly, it's almost like five minutes of stand up. It's if you're kind of prepared and you're going off a script and regurgitating a book in

your way and what you took from it. And they had like weird they had like a fiction and a nonfiction, and that was that was fun to do. I did that, but it was also but it was great because you got to go. You'd get out of school to go to the competitions. I mean I was out of school so much. Being they called it GT back in the day, Gifted and Talented. Did you have to there's like a handful. It was like maybe five or six or seven of the

upper classmen in high school that were part of GT. And we would go to all these literary events and spelling was one. Creative writing. We did this thing called headlines where you could read the body of a story and you had to come up with the headline for the newspaper. But not only did you have to come up with the headline, it had to be creative and

interesting, but you had to format it to the template. Yeah, it had to you knew what the value of each fun each upper case and lower case letter was and it had to fit under a certain amount of spaces and these parameters that they gave you. That was really fun, but they had

all kinds I mean de bait. Yeah. Like I wasn't part of a debate team, but my senior year I did l D which is Lincoln Douglas Debate where you debate one other person and you have to I'm sure regular debates like this as well, where you're presented both sides of a of a of an argument and you have to regardless of how you feel about that particular topic, you had to. You were assigned one or the other, the pro

or for and against, and you had to. You had a certain amount of time to research that topic and then prepare and go in and debate it against an opponent. And that was really fun. Man. That's good. Yeah, but that was kind of like, I guess that was adjacent to the theater experience for me. Yeah. Yeah, those are real life things that you could use to you feel you're going up against competition too with other schools. Oh dude, the other school that's where you met the girl?

How you met you weren't peeing in your own pool? Loved you I Elevents, Yeah, you pe and your pool? And gory why Munday Haskell, Haskel, Stanford, Stanford, Stanford, Hamlin, what's some Which one of those was like HALLI the hub for hotties for you guys, Like which was

that distance school? There was the one twelve miles away. There was the one school that it was called Winert and it was near Monday and they had a crop of basketball players these girls that played basketball there was like they're starting five were five's and above out in the country, which is like the Globetrotters coming to town. Yeah, come come to your gymnasium. I mean,

our our basketball team would go to these girls games with Winer. It was in town just to sit there and watch watch them play back terrible creeps, boobs and ass hot hot hot Henrietta from Rita right next to it. And the problem with Henrietta as all their guys were huge got I hated playing them in footballs. They'd just talk us and beat the crap out of you. We're just three uncle ricos sitting around the table this morning. How much you

want to bet we going football over that? And tell us fitness bill. Okay, so today, what a lot of stuff, Mike coming up into about ten minutes. Something happened yesterday and it shook everyone's day up a little bit. Let's just say today's most important thing in the world. It was easy. Yeah, it was very easy. It was sure problems. Sure wasn't hard. Sounds the alarms, we got problems. It definitely wasn't hard. Luckily, I had an old sports illustrated magazine with Kathy Ireland. You

know what that probably made you want to do? Are letting creek a little rod? Get the are letting creak a little the at seventh Sports at seven you guys were singing that when I walked in. It's the hit of the day. It is, guys at seven thirty, get this, Get this, I got another shocking gator attack. Are new airplanes? Well, okay, plush, please, no, there's not. At eight o'clock we'll have the news of the light. The flashing light stopped working on a plane.

Were gonna talk about it for an hour. Okay. Someone someone's comfortable letting Boeing control their life. Not me. We got to call these people out. Man. My grandfather, Winford Boeing, did not build his company from scratch to have YouTube this small town Winford or Winfrid. I don't know. The News of the week recap at eight plus. The crowd loved it. Last week. The audience was like, oh my god, so funny.

More church fails. Okay. My one pastor friend did text me and he said that and they have like a pastor because they have conventions and stuff. Sure, he's like my pastor friends and I have all shared all these with each other. There's a text train of of pastor sharing just pastor fails, dear heavenly farter, the classic ones. I guess that's like industry industry comedy

for those guys, of course. And at nine o'clock to Saint Patrick's Day eruption, we'll get you ready for Sunday with everything you need to know about Saint Patty's Day good, including if you missed it, some of the singing pots of gold why why the hell not? But coming up next that a whole kN Paxton. I know, I know who's not gonna get re elected Ken Paxton after what he did yesterday. Next on ninety seven won the freak

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