Welcome back to the Official Jets podcast. Eric Allen is there, Ethan Greenberg is here. Calvin Beachum, don't worry, nobody could see that. Calvin, thanks for joining us here in the bet MGM Casino Studio. Thanks for having me. We're powered by Amazon Web Services. You can find us on YouTube or you can listen to us on Apple Podcast. Rate
us review us. We need some ratings, so if you click on the button says review, UM five stars is what UM we here desire, right, So make sure that after you listen to this podcast, go clip the five stars write a raving review. Um. You know, and I talked to the Jets about maybe sending you something that he's just gonna send you feach of you are natural. He's always provide giveaways. He is a man of the people, and now he's gonna give some Jet skires up, sir.
If you don't know what, if you don't know anything about Calvin, he's Mr Community and we're gonna talk about that obviously. But first things first, Happy Thanksgiving? Thanksgiving? What is Calvin Beecham's favorite Thanksgiving food? Favorite Thanksgiving food? I love sweet potato pie. I love sweet potato pie. Love people love yams and sweet potatoes, but I love sweet potato pie. Now do you are you okay with pumpkin pie? Are you never? I've never really been a fit. I've
never really had it. I'm not going to say that I don't like it. It's just i've never really had it. Like my my family we cooked sweepotatoes, So I really didn't know what a pumpkin pie was until I got up here Northeast sweep potatoes. See, I've never really had sweet potato pie. You gotta try it, I know, I know. I just think it's the same family as pompkin same family. So where do you stand between sweet potato and pumpkin pie?
I like them both. Uh. You know. My thing with Thanksgiving is I don't eat much during the day up until the meal. We have the meal around four o'clock for thirty right, So I don't eat breakface, I won't eat launch. I'll have a couple of maybe crackers things like that. But but so my stomach is ready and then yeah, the meal itself. I'm not a huge turkey guy, huge turkey guy, but I do like the dessert some Thanksgiving,
so kelvin stuff. Let let me ask you this as a football player, you guys typically have practice on Thursday? Is thanks what's Thanksgiving like in season for you? Like? Are you able to remove yourself and enjoy Thanksgiving for when you're in the moment or is it almost it just feels like another day and you get something to do,
Like is it weird as a player and Thanksgiving? You know, I've answered this question a couple of times lately, um, And I tell folks I hadn't been able to celebrate Thanksgiving or into the holidays since I live for college, you know, back in oh seven, So I don't know what a traditional Thanksgiving day would be like. You know, it's been so long. I know, I know how it was when I was younger, but you know now it's like, you know, you're practicing on Thursday. You got a game
that possible? You know that that Sunday I've played on Thanksgiving a couple of times as well. Um, So sometimes Thanksgiving has been the day before Thanksgiving, and sometimes it's been the weekend other Thanksgiving. Um, And you know, it's it's kind of hard to say this is is you know, we're so rismatic and we're so we're in a routine all the time, where you know, there is no routine for Thanksgiving. Like it's like you know, well, what we're
gonna have it at this year? Who's who's cooking this year? All right? Well whose house do we want to spend spend thans Giving? That? So it kind of just a very year to year. Did you like playing because and the other thing is on the back end, get that weekend off, You get that weekend off and especially if you win. Uh, it's an amazing feeling. Um. So I've
had had my shut of Thanksgiving games. I enjoy them. Um, you know, it's it's a it's a fun it's a fun so fun feeling because I think is growing up, everybody watches football on Thanksgiving Day, you know, everybody watching it. I mean, I don't know anybody that can say on things Giving because I think is everybody's sitting around, you're eating, you're spending time with family and friends. At some point you're gonna cut the TV on and most likely if
there are men in the room, they're disrespecting women. But they're most likely it's gonna be a football game that's playing, uh, and people are just gonna be gathering around doing what you what you do, but most people are gonna be watching some type of some type of game on Thanksgiving Day. I like the triple header approach the NFL STA because we got the early game with Detroit. You always gotta tell us in the late afternoon and now we have
a game to end the night. And there's college games as well, if you want to take her with that. True And this Thanksgiving or two days before this Thanksgiving Calvin again in the community, another day in the life of Calvin Beacham. Can you tell folks exactly what you're doing and where they started. Yeah, so we'll be going UM to Harlem actually Manhattan UM and owing to the local UM food shelter there. Um. I've been serving during volunteering there for well since I've been here in New York,
and uh, we're doing a turket distribution to the community there. Um. I'm gonna be serving kind of like a Thanksgiving meal as well. So I'm excited that, you know, get to go there and participate with other teammates. So usually when I go there, it's just me volunteering, but it's a couple of my teammates that are coming, and I'm excited to to go and serve, serve the community. Again, what
are you doing overall? Uh, as far as community wise, because Green's has talked about it, it's hard to keep up with you man, it's the clean water um, and you're involved in food pantries not just up here in New York but in your native Texas. And you're still connected to Pittsburgh where you started your career. Yeah, so, uh, where should we start. Let's do let's do Let's do clean water first, because this has been a recent initial You know. The thing is I've done things around clean
water on the global scale. Um. Where I've I've been to hunds, working on a trip to Africa right now, UM, where you know, I've been able to understand what's going on the global front from a clean water standpoint. UM. And that's it's a great thing to do. Is it's it's great to bring awareness too great to bring awareness and actually go do something about what's going on the global front. But right before training camp, I heard about what was going on in New York. Um, I just
came back up from from all season training. UM. My wife was telling me about what was going on in the news, and she told me about New York, and you know, I started doing some research and then started reaching out and found out that what was going on in Flint happened to be now going on in New York. UM contaminated water. UH lead levels were high. UM, there was poor infrastructure. The city is an older city just
in general. UM in different pockets of the community were being affected by this lack of infrastructure from a piping standpoint. So UM got in touch with the United Way. I actually reached out to Jesse here in the building director of community relations here, reached out to him and asked him what would be the proper way to go about it. He reconnected me back to the United Way. That's what I've done some work with up here, and we just
started putting the plan in place. Did UH did a donation which led to UM about a hundred thousand bottles of water being just you know distributed distributed UM early on in the in the summer, right, you know, kind of during some of those off days that we had in training camp UM and then UH had more conversations about what was going on, started talking with PEPSI got
in touch with the NFL. UM. You know, it kind of I guess it kind of pushed some buttons from a government standpoint because they don't want to call it a crisis. But there were some issues that were still going on and they're still um you know, some things that that that that just hadn't taken place and hadn't taken place fast enough in my my opinion. So the NFL and PEPSI and a Cafena we got together and we did a campaign. I think that was two Sundays ago.
The giants came UM and for every bottle that was bought by people at the stadium when bottle was then well, that was matched by PEPs and then donate it to the residents of New Worker. So that's been something that you know again heard about earlier this summer um and just been something that um I wanted to continue to to stay on top of. That's right down the street from us. We're here in from On Park, New York
is about a fifteen to twenty minute drivings. Yeah, we fly out of that airport every time we have a ro game. Now, how do you stay so positive in terms of what you've seen, because I gotta imagine that when you go to Honduras or you're scheduling a trip to Africa and you see how people struggle the day to day, and then you talk about here in America where we we I think sometimes get lost as as as a society, we don't pay attention to people's struggles
and flint or down the street in New York. How are you able to go in there deliver a positive impact but also remain so positive in your approach, because I'm sure you've got to be looking at it from a standpoint too, is that nobody should be living like this? It's correct. Um, I think it's it's the ability to understand what's going on, and it also be able to empathize with the constituents that that are having to go through this. Um. You know, I've been on both sides
of the coin. You know, I've been on on the side of the coin where um, my family struggles when when I was younger, I've been on the side of the coin now where you know, I'm considered affluent. My tax bracket is completely different than than than what I grew up in. So it's like I can understand both sides of the coin. And I've been you know, I was I'm thirty now. So you know, I would say for eighteen years of my life I was on the other side of you know, even in college, I was
on the other side of that coin. So I can actually relate to to what, you know, what's going on there. When I go to developing countries, I can't say that I can relate to that, and that's that's a different level of poverty. But to be able to empathize and at least think about, well, what what would what would my life be like if I were growing up in
this type of environment. And I think when you can really understand, or not even understand, but at least empathize and imagine how different your life would be if you would have come from a situation like that, I think you can then be able to meet people where they
are and be able to have conversations. And the thing at the end of the day, man, if you can smile with somebody, if you can put your arm around somebody, and when you can hug somebody, um, and you don't care what they look like, what they smell like, what they've been through, that's a connection. And at the end of the human connection is its powerful. It's just are you willing to go out of your way and go out of your comfort zone to to to be willing
to work on that human connection. The thing that I like that you do is oftentimes it's matching programs where you say, Okay, I'm gonna put myself out there. What are you guys gonna donate? I'm at that. What the thing is is to bring people along. And sometimes you know, I've I've had teammates beach Man tell the next time you want to do him, I I come and do
it with you. But I'm like, you know, it's it's one thing to get another player to do it, but it's another thing to get you know, a fortune one hundred business to do it. You know, in this case PEPSI, in this case the Jets, because the thing is is, yes, I played for the Jets, but the Jets also have to put put their name on the line to like, you know, we're going out of our way to do this.
We understand the need in our community. We understand that, hey, we're right there on the street from from what's going on here and here in New Work. So when you're when you're able to ask somebody to come alongside you, um, I think it's one takes the pressure off of off of that entity. Hey. It's not just hey, I'm coming to you and say, hey, you need to give money. No, it's like, I'm gonna do this thing with you. I'm gonna walk this journey, and I'm I'm gonna walk this
walk with you. So you know you're not having to walk to journey by yourself. I'm doing in a collaboration. And the thing is, at the end of the day, I'm not trying to reinvent the will. At the end of the day, how can we do this thing together? And I think you know, if you could do it together, it makes uh, it makes more impact. It shows that
you're willing to collaborate. It's what is showing that, um, you're willing to put your hand in the pound and and forget the egos or forget uh, you know, some of the social economic things that are going on and just find a way to get the job done. Something that I really admire about Beach, and we talked a little bit about it last year. How you said earlier you've been on both sides of the coin, and being on the one side of the coin, this side that
you don't want to be in even though you're not. Now, that's something that you've told me you wanted to instill in your kids, so where you're aware of what's going on. And I believe you told me like your kids have to eat all their food because you've been on that side of the coin where food isn't is not a it's not a luxury. I guess this is the way
to put it. So how do you go about, like what do you do now to make sure that you don't get out of perspective from when you were growing up, Because I feel like a lot of people grew up like you, but then just go off the walls and you see stories about that all the time. You know, it's something that me and my wife work on consistently. Um three. When I got here, I think I had I think I had one, so um, but uh, I
have three now and you know we work on that consistently. Um. You know, yesterday, well Wednesday was my daughter's birthday, and um, you know, Report tweeted, you know, tweeted it out and Report I asked me, well, what did you get her? I said nothing? He was like, what do you mean nothing? Like you didn't get her? President I'm like, no, she got a balloon, Like she's five years old? What did she need she has? She's going to a private daycare.
I'm like she she's working on steaming related activities in school, Like what what? What does she need? You know, my son's birthday is today, Well what am I getting him? Nothing like get a hug? Happy birthday? So like you're fine. So it's like the thing is, it's like and I understand where in society and it's about giving and which is great and great and grandy. But I think for me, I have to like almost keep like purposely keep my kids very humble and grounded because what they're seeing in
their life it's not realistic. Like when they come here, they're living in an apartment. When we go to Arizona and spend time in the off season, they're living in our home. Like that's not realistic. People don't get to have two places. People don't get to have a set of toys in New Jersey and a set of toys and and and and in Arizona. That's not realistic. So what can I do to like make sure that they don't see this as well? This is our way of life,
this is how we're always going to have. This is how our life is supposed to be, you know, So it's always working to make sure that you know this is this is not okay, Like this is not how it's gonna be. And it may seem counterintuitive, but I have to, like I make sure that I work on that. And the thing is you're talking about making sure to eat everything. When they played, you know, there is no dessert like if you hadn't eaten everything, and I don't
care if you don't like it. Like when I was younger. You know, this may seem same odd, but my mom would actually get the fork and like shove them food into my mouth and I didn't if I didn't want to eat it. I didn't like ree being green beans and mashed potatoes like, and they would mix it together. That would be a meal. I wouldn't invanted that she would get that fork, open my mouth and put it in my mouth, you know, and I ate it. Say, with my daughter, we had some some some some couscooster
to day and she didn't like couscous. I'm like, you're gonna eat this couscouse? You got two minutes to eat it? If I ate my entire plate. You've got two minutes eat this or you're going to bed. Like simpleness, And I know that may seem hard. And well, there's so much food, because you know how much food is wasted, not only in the United States but in the world. And and uh, you have a good sense of taking something and looking at it and saying, Okay, this is
what we have. And you talked about your childhood, is that you've got great parents, great support system, but you needed assistance to eat at times. Correct, Yeah, no doubt, no doubt. It's it's it's crazy. My sister is up here with us right now, and we talked about how that that used to be and how that was my mom was period a couple of weeks ago. Like we talked about how how that used to be here and it's again, it's it's it's crazy to think about where
I'm at right now. I mean, it's you know, people said, it's come We've been in the league for almost a decade. Like to even think about that, it's a while. But like to even say that I've been living this life almost a decade, that's that's that's that's unreal. And again, this is not realistic, like, yes, I love playing football. I love the game. It's it's a lot of great things to come with it. But um, America, Middle America, like day to day, nine to five America. This is
not this is not realistic. And at one point it goes back to what are you gonna do? And football is over? Like that's how life is going to be when football is over, Like you gotta do something. You know, you can't just wake up and go play with your friends all day. That's when my wife thinks, I do right now, go play with friends all day. But you know that's that's not that's not realistic. That's speaking of toys though, speaking of toys, is it true that you've
had two cars? The Chevy Tahos the Green Machine? Okay, how many miles to eighty two? Eight thousands is my favorite part. There's no radio in the Green Machine. It's not really just Calvin and his thoughts. Are you trying? Are you taking the Green Machine back to Texas? And yes, well what like your season? No? No, no, stay now, I don't I don't put that. I don't put that on the road trip for less. You know, I gotta really go somewhere but it's that is a like my
like my mom says, that is a hometown car. So um that goes here from from here to the stadium will be go and play and and from here to to the facility every day. Well, let me ask you about your pops working on cars his entire life. Did you get from him? Did you pick up some of that? Like if the green machine needs a oil change, are
you taking care of that? Man? I think is this I would love to, I just don't have the time to now they're making let me tell you this now, it's it's times and it's I don't know if I don't know how much time you got, but it was I'll give you a story. Um, a couple a couple of mornings are gonna about two weeks to two or three weeks ago. Um, the thing is my my gas hand doesn't work, so I don't you know. The thing is is I try to try to fill it up,
you know, probably weekly a week and a half. Don't try to go too long because the trip to the stadiument back, you know, that drain draining the gas a little bit. But I thought I had some more time left. So it's uh, it's a Wednesday, I happened to get um, get back home after practice and it's kind of sputtering
a little bit. I'm like, what's going on. I'm like, I know, I got gas in here, so I end up making it home and I'm like, all right, well I go if I need the gas, I go and get gasing in one before I head to the facility. This is five third in the morning. Um, and the car doesn't start, uh five, And then you know, I'm I'm I'm I'm a stickler about time. And I called my wife. This is five thirty five thirty five of the more and I'm like, hey, I need you to
take me to the facility. This is I have the ankle injury during this time too, so I gotta rehab. So I'm like, hey, can you take me to the facility? The car won't start, so I finally get it to start. I get it out the driveway and it's a gas station literally like around like I'm talking about walking distance around the corner, but it's kind of up a hill a little bit, and you know, I get it out and I'm getting ready to turn it to the street
and it dies on me. And I'm like Hey, if I could just get it to the gas station, UM, I'll be all right, but I might need you to come in and guide it up the hill. Like as I push it up the hill right and um, I get up the hill and I end up making it right to the gas station. But here in Jersey, which I don't understand. Oh boy, I know where you have to have an attended to pump the gas. Something is five thirty the more you can just slade you credit
card there. They're not open. So I'm huffing and puff and this is like five and I'm huffing and puffing, and I'm like, all right, this is what we're gonna do. I'm gonna push the car back down to the drug to the parking lot. I leave it there and I'll, you know, I guess up later after you after my wife takes me yet. So we finally I'm pushing this and it's raining in the morning too on this ankle, So I end up pushing it back down the hill and I'm pushing it down to Hire and I'm telling
my wife. I'm like, listen, don't hit the brakes, just let it. I'm gonna push it. I'm pushing enough and it's gonna coast. Just let it coast one in and you and you can you know, you'll be able to go right back into the parking. It's got to touch of the steering with And mind you, this is early in the morning. I've already been hammering my wife about, hey, come on out. It's early in the morning. I'm like, just come on out. She's in the car and she happens to see a fox like cross in front of
the car and she hits the brake. I'm like, what are you doing? Well, I want to hit the fox. I'm like, listen, baby, girl, hit the fox and let's get this thing that gets to the driveway. It's like going to the facility. So this is I'm pushing at five more and my green tyhole and I finally get it back over to the park and let my wife brings me in and I tell her, I'm like, listen, I'm like, this is why I love the Chevy ty Hood, the ninety six Sevy time hold. I'm like and she's
like wow. I'm like it's good for our marriage because you know, the thing is is I still have to do things like that. It sounds my trans my girard shift from my transmission or come off. So I have to get up under the car, put the put the like, get the gird shift from, push it back into park, put the gird shift back on. Uh go get a rip tie like a little tie and tied tied the thing back on there. Because I just say, I've been late. I've been too lazy to take it over to the
dealership to get it done right. So I'm kind of like using some Southern engineering. But but if I could change the oil, I would change the oifer. I can change the transmission fluid. I would change the transmission fluorid. If I you know, could could you know, jack it up, take the take the tires off from rotating on my own, I would do that. I just don't have the time too.
So you know I've worked with or, which is player, you know director player development here and he can be hooked up with one of the mavis Um shops here in the area and then we get things done. All right. So if you see anybody pushing a green time on the morning it's like five thirty, it's Calvin Beacham. So I mean, you're running this thing until I can't go anymore,
right man, this is this ain't going nowhere? I think is I just changed the mode of transmission about two years ago, so it's fine, got the interior completely redone. I just got to get the seabuds. Do you think this is something that like KB three, No doubt, no doubt. So is that gonna be like his first car? Is that gonna be like this is a big deal when it's a face. The thing is is that car was passed down to me. So that used to be the family car, right That car was passed me. I worked
for that car in high school. It was passed that to my brother for a year in college, and I got the next car that was passed that, which was which was a Crown Victoria. My last couple of years in college, my brother wrecked the tahoe which bent the hood, which is still bent right now. I ain't got that fixed. That's what I brought to the league with me, um, so it would just be passed there, just like it
was passed down to me. So the next person in live is my daughter Klena bass down to Klein and once Clean moves on be passed down to K three. Once K three moves on to me, passed down to Janelle and whoever decides to to to keep it going from there. Uh, you know it'll be passed down just like it was passed down to me. I love it.
That's a family tradition. I'm making it away. Um thinking Uh, speaking of Thanksgiving, I should say, in Pittsburgh when you started out, did you seek out homeless on the on the street in terms of giving them meals and stopping by or this is something you were driving by in the Chevy Tahoe and you saw people on the street
and you know, I want to help him. What the thing is in Pittsburgh if you're um, I can't think of a bridge now, But if you're going through Fort pitt Tunnel, Um, there are usually people that are because they know traffic. During traffic time, it's really slow, and you will see people standing up, you know, standing up
on the bridge. And you know, if I'm taking a meal home from the facility and pick up a couple of extra apples or a couple of extra bananas, and I see them and you know I would give them. I will purposely bring stuff from the facility. So yeah, you make that part of your routine. So anytime I saw somebody there and you know they had to ask I would have something already in the car form. But the thing is, I've been doing this stuff. I've been
doing food related things since high school, honestly. So this has been something that has continued to be a part of my life and will continue to be a part of my life after I'm done playing football. So it's not just I waited until I got here to do it. I did this. I did can drives and food drives in college and conjunction with the sm athletics, and did some of these things with the more multi cultural club when I was in high school. So this has been
something that I've been doing for some time. What's your favorite part about it? You know, at the end of the day, it's being and I say this all the time. It's been able to provide a smile to somebody. UM. But I think as I've been doing it more, I've been able to see more instances. UM. I did uh water distribution that ended up with me provided some food along with them a couple of weeks ago, UM in conjunction with United Way, and it was a mother that
had seven kids and they were all adopted. She adopted seven kids and to get three cases of water and two big huge boxes of food just to see how she reacted. Um, for me, that is special to get a hug from a stranger. I talked about human connection earlier. To get a hug from a stranger and uh and all she says and thank you. Um, I didn't see this coming. I had no idea that this was coming. Um, this is gonna help my family tremendously for the next couple of weeks. You just don't know what that that
that does for people. UM. And for me, it's being able to make that small impact and and understand that I helped somebody that that otherwise may not They've gotten it in time, you know. UM. And I really do get a lot of joy out of that. I get energy from that, honestly. That like people you know, trying to figure out what what are you get energy? And how do you keep going? For me, that that that that fires me up when I'm able to help somebody
in that particular fashion. And you're helping the youth too through STEM. What's that an acronym for? And why is that so important to you? Science? Technology, engineering and mathematics? And if you want to say Steam. You add the arts, UM, but you think about where we're going from an economy standpoint. You think about the the market cap for Google, and the market cap for for for Facebook and Microsoft and
all these tech giants. UM, they're powered by software engineers, electrical engineers, developers, you know, product managers, designers like what have you. And they're all coming from Steam based backgrounds UM. And the thing is, I want to make sure that people of of of all colors are races UM, have access to understanding how they can play a role and in this new economy. UM. And the thing is, there's there's money to be had, and I know, you know,
money doesn't solve everything. But again we talked about the middle class, and we talked about the common they American to be able to go and then have a job coming out of college or coming out of high school. You know, because you've been working on being a sophomore engineer and you're starting salaries eighty five thousand, that that's a lot different than than than where most of America is.
And to be able to have a skilled job that you can actually you know, uh continue to to to to go through the ranks and continue to elevate yourself and become you know, possibly a VP, possibly a CEO, to be able to empower our youth in that particular fashion. Something that I see because I see what the economy is at, you know, and I see where um folks can be in this particular space. So just for me is just again being able to provide a word. It's
being able to provide opportunities, being able to about exposure. Um, I wasn't exposed to these types of things. I had no idea what Apple was. You know, everybody just used the iPods, you know, but nobody realized how impactful Apple would be to our our our society right now. And it's being able to make sure that our young folks, um, you know, here in America and across and across the globe have access to it. You got anything else? No man?
Any last Thanksgiving thoughts here? Well? I did. I didn't actually want to ask you a question. This is big news. Your hometown, it says on its website, a great place to live, no matter. How will you pronounce it? Now? Calvin grew up in Texas. How do you pronounce your hometown? What is the proper way this is? I find it's fascinating that they put this on their own website. So the proper way to say it is mahea. That's what
I thought exactly. If if most times people from the north they say Mexico, and if you're from the air, yeah you say my her, you know, yeah, because you know the the Texas slang and how words and and and how um letters are drawn out. Sometimes that's just how they said. So my hair is a way of saying it. Mexia is another way of saying it. And maha um you know is the is the I guess the correct annunciation of it. Did you have a favorite
Thanksgiving growing up? In my head? Favorite Thanksgiving? Man, I had great Thanksgivings. Uh homemade ice cream? Oh boy, well she didn't know him homemade ice cream for for Thanksgiving? Um, so you talk about how you know you want. You didn't eat till four o'clock Thanksgiving meal, Like everything was ready by noon, Like it was like we're ready to roll. We're praying, like that's what time we're getting ready. But
my mother, because she did homemade biscuits for the dress. Um, she would do the homemade biscuits, so we would have that for breakfast. Um. And then you have the homemade biscuits she made. She took some out that would be used for the dressing. We did a hen so we did chicken and dressing instead of turkey. The chicken, the giveing, the gravy, the potato salad, the devil leggs, the collar
green uh, the the the yams, the whole nine. The whole spread was already on the table, the peach cobbler, the banana pudding, the sweet potato pie, the kool aid, the sweet tea like all that was already ready at noon. So growing up, like for me, my favorite holiday was Thanksgiving. Like forget about Christmas. My favorite holiday was Thanksgiving because I knew we were gonna eat galore um uh, mac and cheese, the whole nine, and then we go play
basketball afterwards. Uh played hoops, man, I played. I played basketball before I even got recruited to play football. Now, okay, we're not gonna get into that. Just I knew you play. I knew you played hoops. I just didn't know you would play hoops on Thanksgiving. You you will play after, like if you gotta go run some of that stuff, you know. I feel like after I eat I'm I'm done, Like on Thanksgiving, I wake up, I'll play hoops or
I'll do whatever. And then once I eat, I eat, and I sit back and I just I do like the chicken over the turkey. By the way, that's the turkey guy at all. Not a big time Yeah, me neither. I think turkeys is kind of an overrated bird. Yeah, I'll eat it. I'll eat it. I like it. I just don't think it's you know, I saw something on Twitter the other day it says it takes Americans three hundred sixty four days to remember that turkey is just not that good. Wow. So that's pretty that's pretty rough.
But that sounds like you sounds like you could have tweeted it. Well, I'm just saying, I like, I'm gonna go to the beach and had some chicken and then play some hoops. Yeah, but you won't be able to move out to coming down. I believe that. I believe that too. All right, Calvin, thanks for joining us UM the Official Jets Podcast powered by a wus here in the bet MGM Casino studio. You you want to replug the rate review before me? Yes, remember after listening to
this wonderful podcast. Make sure that you go there's five stars. Don't push the four stars or the three stars, or the two or the one five stars. Remember that five stars and leave a raving review, a ray review, and if you do so, we will possibly think about doing something special for you. That's all. Beach Happy Thanksgiving, Happy Thanksgiving, Happy Thanksgiving,
