F'nAround

F'nAround Ep 04

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Upgraded Sound equipment at episode 5.

Episode Four: nuEra Cannabis Exposed, Unfiltered Reactions, and a Surprise Guest

This week’s episode of F’nAround takes a bold step forward as we tackle the ongoing controversy surrounding nuEra Cannabis from Joe’s personal experiences and the deeper implications of their actions. We break down the critical issues—uncovering the layers of racism embedded in their practices and how it impacts the broader industry.

In an unexpected twist, James, CEO and cofounder of 312all, set up Stunt Taylor as a surprise guest on the show. Stunt brings his perspective as he stated an educated Black man, community advocate, and rap artist, taking a direct stand while giving his opinions against nuEra’s racism and their attempts to exploit the cannabis community. His no-holds-barred commentary makes this episode a must-listen, as he calls out not just the company, but the systemic issues they represent.

The conversation goes beyond just reporting facts—it’s about taking a stance. We also share listener feedback, personal updates, and the viral spread of the podcast, showing how the truth continues to resonate far and wide.

Don’t miss this episode of F’nAround, where surprises are plenty, the truth is sharp, and the fight against corporate injustice keeps growing stronger.

Listen now to hear the unfiltered truth from the frontlines.

Craft Cares, Corporate Doesn't
Produced by Timeless Wolf Productions, a 312ALL Company
312ALL.com

Speaker 1:

welcome to the second episode of fn around all right, hey guys welcome back oh yeah happy to be back.

Speaker 3:

It was great, huh, we weren't canceled already guys, we did really amazing from last week.

Speaker 1:

Actually, that was, that was incredible. We actually, very amazingly, hit over 25. We're in the top 25 of podcasts. We've hit three different continents and 56 different cities in the us alone and we're hitting more with every day that goes by. Well, shout out to us huh, fuck yeah so, as a recap, what do you guys think about like last week's podcast? What do you guys think about what we talked?

Speaker 2:

about. Honestly, I think our first three episodes I guess as we called it went great Seamless. It seemed like we clicked well. There wasn't a lot of dead air between us, we didn't have a hard time coming up with things to talk about. I think we're way ahead of where I even thought we would be at this point.

Speaker 3:

That's honestly the feedback I've been getting from everyone. They said they couldn't believe the production value and how well it went for the first episode. Shout out to you, Mo.

Speaker 4:

That production was okay.

Speaker 2:

And our production team, which wanted to remain nameless.

Speaker 1:

So we'll just call them, the production team. I would like to shout out Odyssey odyssey studios, who helped us out with all right, odyssey studios they did want to get a shout out.

Speaker 3:

I guess they did. He did a great job. I don't know if anyone knows this, but he did have some filming stuff. We'll do that, yes, maybe in the future we'll clip but post it up soon enough.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I'll be working on those over some time.

Speaker 3:

No rush, nobody wants to see my face anyway, that's why you? Keep duct taping me.

Speaker 1:

Alright, so I did want to say that we do have a very big interview next week on Saturday. I would hope you guys stay tuned in there. It's a very special guest that we're going to be doing on set, so that's going to be the first for us to do.

Speaker 3:

We're going on a field trip.

Speaker 1:

We're going to go on a field trip. It's going to be a fun field trip to go to. It's going to be interesting.

Speaker 3:

Won't be dropping Saturday probably, but we will be recording it Saturday, right?

Speaker 1:

I'll try to drop it off on Saturday, hopefully.

Speaker 2:

If not Saturday, I'll have it done within the next day or so. Um, now are we allowed to say where we're going?

Speaker 3:

no, let's, let's keep the surprise for them let's keep the surprise for the people for now, right? Mystery surprise right everyone likes a little bit of mystery, have you? Guys got feedback from other people, by the way um, I've, I've heard that it was.

Speaker 1:

It was really good. I haven't really had any specifics, unfortunately. I wish I kind of got a little bit more feedback from the people that have listened to it, but other than, it was really interesting. That was basically mostly what I got from it.

Speaker 2:

I got some positive feedback. I didn't really tell a whole lot of people about it, I guess.

Speaker 3:

Well, the rest of the world did.

Speaker 2:

Right. The world did a fine job. Thank you to the interwebs for spreading it around. I just didn't know how it was going to go, so I wasn't sure I wanted to plug my family to listen to it. I didn't plug my family, I put it on every social media there was and I to listen to it.

Speaker 3:

I plug my family, I put it on every social media there was and I'm still pushing it. I mean, I spent two hours on FaceTime with Peru the other night with somebody over there talking to me about it and the regulations and what's going on, and couldn't believe how messed up our whole system was.

Speaker 2:

The country of Peru.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, the country of Peru.

Speaker 2:

Because you're in Peru Illinois.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I wasn't talking about that, buddy.

Speaker 2:

We Because you're in Peru, Illinois yeah, I wasn't talking about that, buddy. We got a lot of weird cities in this Peru's and London's Cairo's. Lebanon's, and all of that, the Wakanda, the Wakanda, havana, those are all in.

Speaker 3:

Illinois. I know We'd be blessed to see you.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, episodes, and that's because originally it was supposed to be 30 minute episodes that we're going to do, but we had so much to talk about, so much information to give out and, uh, when I was going through it myself, I didn't really want to cut off the conversations that we were having. It was, it was a good flow with everything that was going through, so I decided to keep it all as in in one episode. I I wanted, I wanted to have especially like the bigger stories out there, at least starting off with it, so we can show everybody what it is that we've been going through Absolutely.

Speaker 2:

And I mean I got the notes. I got were it's long right and I understood it. But you know, look, it's a work in progress. We're learning as we go. You know, we don't really know what we're doing, so it's great to like push it, you know kind of figure it out Right.

Speaker 3:

As we go along. We also got a lot more stories than that. I was just straight to the surface, Right. I mean we got so much to talk about.

Speaker 2:

You know, joe and I started a list. Just you know and I know Mo is on it, he hasn't contributed to it yet we started a list and I mean, just in the first two days we must've had a hundred lines in this notepad put together. And I mean, you know, you, and it just kind of mashes together A lot of these things. You don't even know which one, who it's coming from.

Speaker 3:

You can't tell.

Speaker 1:

Literally. I don't know who it's coming from. I was reading through it.

Speaker 3:

That would be a fun episode of how we started when we get to the list. Mo goes to the list and he goes. This sounds interesting. Oh yeah, you know, that's actually kind of what.

Speaker 1:

I was thinking about doing. I swear to God, I was thinking about the same exact thing. I'm just reading through the list and I'm like dude, this sounds like you, mike. What the fuck is this?

Speaker 2:

I'm like nope, it wasn't me, Because some of them we do say you know, Mike or Joe or Jalot did this, Jalot does this, Joe does this. So there were some of those stories, but really that was just a reference for the person to remember the storyline or the subject line that we had written down. But yeah, I am so excited to get into just some of the stuff that we have planned for this podcast.

Speaker 3:

But at the same time, we're still going to stick to the truth, the facts, the justice and try and push the advocacy, because I mean we have a chance to make a difference. And I mean, you guys know, we have politicians, elected officials, we have corporate entities reaching out and other people not only trying to stop us and silence us but at the same time trying to say they they appreciate what we're doing and that we're actually bringing forth things that are hidden behind.

Speaker 1:

You know, boardrooms, speaking of which I've uh.

Speaker 3:

I've recently heard about uh labs testing for uh some mold on uh, cannabis, oh yeah I've been going all over, linkedin with that, going crazy. I've been saying that months ago I was yelling at a james. Now you know the ceo threw into it. We're going back and forth on it because of the fact that these labs, they have that wiggle room. If you pay enough, you pay a little, they'll wiggle that stuff 15%, 10%, 15% and percent. So they'll change it around. You never really know what's going to come or what you're going to get or how close to it it is. I mean, look at their shutting down labs and Look at their shutting down labs. And the problem is, the biggest issue is if a lab shuts down enough places or if a lab gives too low results, they're going to take their business somewhere else.

Speaker 3:

And they're going to find a lab that gives them the results they want, like there was that lab in?

Speaker 2:

was it Long Island? I don't know if it was last year or two years ago. Dude got busted for cooking meth in his lab and what the lab his business was actually for? Was testing thc for for grow operations? And he was and after hours he was cooking meth. Yeah, I forget where it was. It was somewhere in new york, I know that for sure.

Speaker 2:

I want to say it was long island, but I don't remember the exact city. Um, and I want to say it was one of those. Like you know, I happen to listen to Q101 a lot in the mornings and I think it was like they were doing like a hey, we're going to talk about this. We got two different news articles. We can talk about this one or that one, and obviously everybody wants to know about the meth lab that got busted.

Speaker 3:

Remember that movie where the guy you guys, it's James.

Speaker 2:

You know 312 CEO. Should I CEO?

Speaker 3:

I say his name three times already.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, should I answer it? Yeah, we might as well. Yeah, put it on, fuck it.

Speaker 4:

Hey, James, what are you doing, buddy? What's good, my boy. I'm just talking with what's going on. James, Let me get him in on the call, hey.

Speaker 2:

James, hold up real quick before you say anything.

Speaker 3:

We're recording, right now yeah, we're doing the podcast. Buddy, You're going to be live on this.

Speaker 4:

Wait what happened? What'd you say? I was merging in.

Speaker 2:

I was letting you know that you are currently being recorded on the F because you called in while we were doing the podcast.

Speaker 3:

And I did not feel like turning my phone on silent in case there was an emergency.

Speaker 1:

Oh.

Speaker 4:

I know Son's getting ready to head over to Tommy's show when we were just talking about the podcast actually.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, tommy Banz, one of the featured artists for 312. We love him.

Speaker 3:

Shout out to Tommy what up, son, how you doing buddy.

Speaker 5:

I'm good.

Speaker 3:

How you guys?

Speaker 2:

doing Good. Mr Taylor, Nice to hear from you.

Speaker 3:

Just kind of debriefing on last week's episode and kind of going through how we thought about it. You know the reach and how big of an interest piece this was and how much publicity it's gotten. I mean the media hasn't talked about it, but I mean, what were the stats?

Speaker 1:

again. It was top 25% within a week. Their first podcast, too. Crazy numbers. Three continents, 50-some cities, three continents and 56 cities.

Speaker 2:

US cities.

Speaker 1:

US cities. It was crazy.

Speaker 3:

Well, I'm glad you think it's crazy. Did you enjoy it or do you have any insights on it?

Speaker 5:

I loved it, man, but your thing that I speak on with the Laughing Around podcast laughing around podcasts, from my point of view, is what I think about it. I think it was awesome, but it's a lot of things that you got to do Well not that you didn't do but it's a lot of things that people in the world they don't know. So one of the main things is about how they treated that one guy. What's his name?

Speaker 3:

Juan Juan.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, Juan.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 5:

Like they did them dirty, like unnecessarily dirty, and just the whole aura behind what they got going on, especially with, like, the underground railroad and the black community. I don't think a lot of people understand what they're doing and what's going on well, that's, that's why.

Speaker 1:

That's why we're doing this right now. We want to help people, or at least show people that the hidden things that are happening behind everything you know, the stuff that people normally don't see, the stuff that's behind closed doors you know, so to speak.

Speaker 2:

You know, there's two countries here there's the country for the people with the money and the power, and here there's the country for the people with the money and the power.

Speaker 3:

and then there's the country. For the rest of us.

Speaker 5:

Everyone's just trying to survive, and badly that one country doesn't care about the other one right, no question the the underground railroad statement on how they thought that they could lead people to a certain place. Yeah, do people really understand what the actual Underground Railroad was?

Speaker 3:

I don't think they do.

Speaker 5:

It's probably one of the worst things ever, next to Hitler, how they have survived and escaped, and I don't think people know that and just to make I don't like from my point of view, I don't know if I'm saying this right. But to think, if I read this right, if I heard right from my point of view, they really thought that they can put a destination and they thought all black people would just like convert there and go Like, am I saying that right? Is that what they thought?

Speaker 3:

So it was a brand they were going to make. It wasn't a dispensary. What they're going to make is a product called the Second Station, with the North Star on it and a railroad, because you know, in their mind from what I remember when I was sitting there and how I viewed it when they were talking to me was, if you put the North Star and the Underground Railroad on it, all black people will follow that star to their bottom lines and profits. And it wouldn't have been in their slogan that went out. It was just their inside, behind closed doors process of what they were thinking of, how this should be marketed and done and why it would be beneficial to them. So they spent weeks working on this. Yeah, that was their marketing, marketing campaign.

Speaker 3:

That was going to be their marketing campaign, until they stole that interstate 420 brand from me, because myself and jerry um valentino uh were working, created this and put this together this, this idea and this brand and we basically convinced them that, yeah, you can't do interstate, you can't do second station, you could never do this. In what world do you think of a? A Colombian girl and a white boy from Harvard could put this concept out there and make this be a good brand. This is a white Irish-owned company with not one minority on the board of color that has significance to this atrocity. So Interstate 420 was our concept and luckily we were able to convince them to go the other way. But, as I said, they spent weeks building out this brand and marketing idea that, you know, this would actually get all the black people behind them and they can get all the minorities to support this brand and buy it wherever they sold.

Speaker 5:

So basically because what they see on the outside looking in as black or minority on the streets and how black people like we, so basically they don't understand the role of race in captivity underground in a railroad to create strategies to be free citizens where they travel at night, so white abolitionists could not see them. But to me why would they think that's a good idea? First off, as they say again, my opinion base how do they know black people can follow the North Star, besides the person who led them to freedom?

Speaker 1:

How would they? Know, that Go ahead. No, I'm sorry. To me it seemed, or like the way it looked like to me is. It looked like they kind of knew what they were doing and they just they did not really care, pulling people in to basically sway their look on them while realizing how much of a you know honestly fucked up, you know.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, you know what you got. You know, like you know, stunner actually talks about this stuff all the time. You know what you have is you have a bunch of powerful people with money that think that they can cater to the minority class or use the minority class to their advantage to increase their bottom line, and that's just per the usual, and joey probably attested this a little bit more. That goes on a lot, and goes on a lot more in business than you think, and it's actually pretty sad so here's a good example of it.

Speaker 2:

You know, and we all, something we all know Aunt Jemima, okay, exactly, aunt Jemima. Right, how long did it take, you know, for that? Now it's what pearl milling company, or something you know. Or Land O'Lakes butter, you know they took the Native American off. What else you?

Speaker 1:

know they use them as a face.

Speaker 2:

Right.

Speaker 1:

They train as much people as they can to follow their company, their slogan or whatever, and then, after they become big enough, then they just completely remove them. They completely erase their history or whatever work that they had.

Speaker 2:

It's gone right away Right. Another good example amos, you know the cookies, right, he's a real guy, you know, and he sold part of his company and he got pushed out of his own company and then it turned into the global giant that it is. He died recently, I want to say this summer, um, in hawaii, back where he was living, and he had restarted a cookie company, but it was just like a bakery, right, but he couldn't use his fucking name from his company that he started because some, you know and I'm not gonna, you know, point fingers or anything, but somebody fucked him over right at some point, some way, shape, shape or form, some point in time. I don't remember who it was or what color they were, but I know that Famous Amos was a black man. He was really good at what he did. He started a business to do what he did. That business took off. Ray Kroc found him. Maybe, I don't know. Again, I don't know who did it. No, no, I know who Ray Kroc is. What I'm saying is I don't know, maybe.

Speaker 3:

I don't remember. You mean depending on his personality, right, but the same, you know, Antrimite.

Speaker 5:

His name is Wally Amos.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, like I said, shameless, yeah, yeah, yeah, he was like I said he was a real guy.

Speaker 5:

He was a real guy. He was in 1975. Here we go, stunt knows, he helped a lot of people, uh, converted by his brand, his cookie brand. So, um, the first cookie store, if I'm not mistaken, was in Los Angeles, the chocolate chip cookie. So a lot of people don't know that they pushed him out because of who he was.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 5:

And they didn't want his face on the brand because in 1975, they didn't believe that his face being on the brand would sell, especially sell on TV. Sell on TV. The majority of people as they maybe, I think, maybe as they thought that black people or any other minority did not have TVs nor cable.

Speaker 2:

Right, but it was also okay. You know, it was okay with society back then, you know, like it was still the it was definitely okay. You know, the Anton Lime stuff was everywhere still.

Speaker 3:

But I guess five years away from 1969, so it was definitely okay, but I guess some people think it's still okay today.

Speaker 2:

Right, well, I mean we're seeing it, it's just they've just got a little more hidden with it right and.

Speaker 5:

I don't know why I still think yeah Right, raw-ass podcast right here, where all the information is being dropped about crazy people. They don't want people to hear this and come together and go against them.

Speaker 1:

Right.

Speaker 5:

This is something that they don't want.

Speaker 2:

Right, they do not want the masses organized.

Speaker 5:

Yes, and I don't know if people know this, but black people are not the minority anymore, so that's the crazy part about it. I don't know if you guys know that. Uh, if I'm not mistaken, they take over the population about 16 more percent than caucasian people and the spanish culture is taking over as well as we see what's going on now I can't dispute it um I'll say

Speaker 3:

that I know it's growing I don't know the facts and stats on that either, but I do remember being in school with mike when we were kids and saying that that trend was going to happen in the future. I just don't remember what date that was supposed to occur.

Speaker 2:

They told us in high school that the majority of the united states was going to be black at some point and that the majority religion of the States was going to be black at some point and that the majority religion of the world was gonna be Muslim. Which I blew my mind, that part. But you know, I don't mind, but you know there are a lot of Muslim people in the world.

Speaker 5:

Whatever you want to believe, those are called core principles of socialism yeah they think that people are going to just follow anything that they say, as you see now, right, you see a lot of people converting to being Muslim Again. I love everybody. I'm not Muslim per se, but I do know a lot of Muslim brothers and I have read the Koran or not read it because it's in Arabic, but my Koran friends have explained it to me.

Speaker 3:

Yes, yes, by the way, shout out to Ignatius for teaching Mike and I a little bit about society, not being racist and being good people.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, shout out St Ignatius College Prep, chicago, illinois, and I love what you're getting into Scott and we always want you on this stuff.

Speaker 3:

but you know, as long as I got you on the phone and you get a chance to plug it, what are you working on? You got any projects you want to plug. I mean, we can get back to like the nitty-gritty stuff, but you're here, plug what you got to plug, buddy.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, man. First off, let me just say this man After the Rock it's like is going to be crazy when we're sitting in front of ESPN and we're sitting in front of all of these big outlets and we talking our shit and they can't mute us. The next thing they're going to do is try to DD us.

Speaker 1:

Whoa whoa whoa. Nobody brought some baby oil in this room.

Speaker 4:

Nobody brought some baby oil in this room. Nobody brought some baby oil in this room. Nobody brought some baby oil in this room.

Speaker 2:

Nothing but consent is huge.

Speaker 3:

Come on. Aren't you the one that made men consent to campaign again? Come on.

Speaker 1:

Hey, no means no, right no?

Speaker 2:

absolutely means no, and a yes can also turn into a no.

Speaker 3:

Mike knows that very well.

Speaker 2:

If you want to turn on some crazy shit that yes can turn into a no real fast. And you got to say okay.

Speaker 5:

That was a little humor, man. But yeah, man, I got some first-time shots of Tommy man. He's opening up for a big artist tonight.

Speaker 2:

Who's he opening?

Speaker 5:

for Waka. Wow, all right, wow, that's actually pretty good.

Speaker 4:

Tommy is in first place right now. I believe in the next hour he will take first place for ticket sales for his show at the town in Aurora and he will be opening up for Waka Plaka in two weeks. It looks like now All right.

Speaker 3:

Shout-out to Tommy. Shout-out to Waka.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

Waka if you listen to our show and you like us, we'd love to show up.

Speaker 5:

There's three ones Shout-out to my manager. He hates when I say his first name, but shout-out to JJ man. Shout-out to Joey. Shout-out to when I say his first name, but shout out to JJ man. Shout out to Joey. Shout out to Tink, and you know we got some. And shout out to Freddie man for putting all the pieces in order. Man, we got some. Good, I don't know how this like folded the way it did. It's really unorthodox but it's crazy. But I'm with it though, you know, like whatever. But yeah, we're working on this starting October 2 project with my team.

Speaker 4:

And I got some politics songs.

Speaker 5:

I'm going to be putting out man and I know I'm probably not supposed to say this, but you know we might have a F'n Around theme song coming soon. So, oh man, you know what?

Speaker 3:

you guys. That's it. You got an extra surprise for us. Huh JJ, you got own game song coming soon, so you're gonna come on, you're gonna come out here live and play it for us, right, you're gonna? You're gonna start the show with it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it's gonna be live yeah, we'll premiere it here yo be sure you guys, bro, I seriously like the podcast.

Speaker 5:

You know I just I'm manifesting it. I see it. It's something's crazy about it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, we feel it Stunt, we do man.

Speaker 1:

We feel it too.

Speaker 3:

And it's not just the Taco Bell flat eight.

Speaker 2:

I've actually never been to a Taco Bell.

Speaker 3:

Really Never.

Speaker 5:

I'm just waiting on my invite to come down to the studio.

Speaker 3:

No, you got an invite when you want it. I mean, we're doing some uh, we can't tell you where or what, but we're doing a film in next weekend. If you got Saturday morning available, we're gonna do with some, actually community leaders and we're gonna talk with them and hear their story. Alright, perfect, we'll take that offline because we don't want to spoil the surprise to the public. But tomorrow morning, saturday morning, I mean next Saturday.

Speaker 2:

Saturday or whatever.

Speaker 1:

Not tomorrow.

Speaker 5:

This has been awesome, this very short segment that we touched on and I hope everybody's listening Like. I'm not a politic. I'm just an educated black man who went to college and knew that I needed to learn something in history, so I just thought that I would always pay attention and keep my nose in the books. So, yeah, I'm not a politician. Don't quote me on things that I say. Everything is for my pain, what I think, and I got a voice, and if my voice is heard it's gonna be crazy because I got a lot of shit.

Speaker 3:

So we're all about making noises. Yes, loud voices shout out to stunt for calling in with jj. Jj. Thanks for interrupting the call, yeah that was unexpected. My call in the future. My phone is silencing. In the future. Thanks to this, I learned my lesson yeah. Jj set me up.

Speaker 5:

Man, we're going to call Joey right quick and talk about the EP or the mixtape and I'm like all right.

Speaker 2:

Oh, so he knew. James knew what he was doing. James knew what he was doing, he knew when we were recording, he knew when we were recording.

Speaker 1:

He had to find out.

Speaker 3:

He planned this out, he set us up. I'm like hold on.

Speaker 5:

You're filming right now.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 5:

Why don't you call them yeah?

Speaker 4:

Just so you know. I'm like, oh my.

Speaker 2:

God, yeah, no. And then we spent so much time on this now that you know we're going to have to cut you out the rest of the show.

Speaker 1:

But that's okay.

Speaker 2:

That's okay, we've got plenty to talk about.

Speaker 3:

Gentlemen, let's be honest. I think the audience and the people would rather hear the debrief from your mouth and your opinion Stunt than us. I mean, I loved it, it worked out great, and I don't think anyone wants to hear my voice anymore.

Speaker 2:

Well, hey, I've got a question what else from the podcast did you like Stunt, you know what else did you? Yeah, what else from the podcast?

Speaker 4:

Why are?

Speaker 3:

you a fan of, not my ego.

Speaker 2:

It's, it's our egos, First off you have a wonderful presentation voice.

Speaker 5:

You sound very fucking important even though you aren't Like.

Speaker 5:

You stand out, bro, so that's one thing I like about you three your voices are very objective and very powerful and you guys sound, because I know that you know what you're talking about you guys sound so confident in what you say and I want people to understand that, man, the more confident you are, the more of an interest that people take to you guys and I think this is awesome what you three are doing. So like I really took that from the podcast and you guys, I don't know y'all shit Like it's dope.

Speaker 2:

All right, thanks, man.

Speaker 4:

There's a lot I'll say before you. You're the best person on the podcast.

Speaker 2:

Jay, I wasn't. I wasn't looking for a pat on the back or a boost to the ego, I was just. You know I own voice. So I only listened to 15 minutes of the podcast. It was a Tinder story. Did I tell a Tinder story? Yeah, Okay, Listen, I'm going to go back with Stunt.

Speaker 4:

We got a few things to talk about before he slides over to Tommy's.

Speaker 3:

A lot more. It looks like we're looking forward to it. Shout out to you, jj. Shout out to you Stunt. Thank you for calling in. I mean, appreciate the phone call, appreciate the phone call and we'll take this offline to schedule everything for next week, because we'd love to have you with us.

Speaker 1:

Oh, yeah, alright cool, appreciate it alright, take it easy, brother.

Speaker 2:

Bye guys okay, so that yeah, that was, that was cool and that was unexpected, and now that's what we're going to talk about now, because we kind of have to, so let's do it.

Speaker 1:

Talia I mean honestly, I think we went over pretty good the briefing of everything. There isn't really too much else to put into it. There is, there is, Is there?

Speaker 3:

We have plenty. How many people bamboozled you this week on?

Speaker 2:

Tinder. Okay, so I haven't really been swiping this week, I don't know why.

Speaker 3:

Really yeah, I haven't, you haven't been swiping or they haven't been swiping back.

Speaker 2:

Well, you know, it does take two to tango. I wish you guys could see his face. I really wish.

Speaker 3:

You can see his face.

Speaker 2:

We should have had you caught on it today.

Speaker 3:

You did, you got caught.

Speaker 2:

I see his fucking mouth. If you don't get on the dance floor, you don't got to worry about having a partner. You know what I'm saying, you know so?

Speaker 4:

yeah.

Speaker 2:

Okay, I've been swiping, but I don't have any stories. I'm sorry, I got nothing.

Speaker 1:

We'll wait until next week. It's all been very vanilla, very nothing, nothing, nothing in that, in that room.

Speaker 2:

How many catfishes out there? They're all catfish. It's like 90, I swear to god by the way, I was serious walk.

Speaker 3:

I do want to like backstage. We'd love it. We'll shoot backstage, we'll do the podcast, we'll interview. I know you're not going to listen and give it to us, but you know, if you do listen, you do like our show and you do like what we're trying to do now. You know, we'd love that hookup. Yeah tell your friends about us. We'll make sure Stunt shows up, so it's not just us.

Speaker 1:

This is the time where you say like share, subscribe, right.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, like share subscribe.

Speaker 2:

Like share, subscribe.

Speaker 3:

Like share. Subscribe Comment.

Speaker 2:

Give us you know. If you got ideas, Let us know your opinions.

Speaker 3:

Is there something you wanted to talk about?

Speaker 2:

You hate the sound of my voice too. Let me know.

Speaker 1:

You want to hear some more Tinder stories? Let us know.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I guess we're going to have to become a segment now, huh.

Speaker 1:

Mike's Tinder stories.

Speaker 2:

I'm not the only single man in this room. Okay, I know Joe is. I don't know about Mo. You know he might be waiting for his 72 virgins or something.

Speaker 1:

They're out there waiting for me, you know, wow, I'll never be single again right, I'll never be single at all.

Speaker 2:

Never be single again, I guess.

Speaker 1:

Never be single out here Come on.

Speaker 3:

But I'm glad someone's going to come next week. That'll be fun.

Speaker 1:

That's going to be good, that's going to be good.

Speaker 2:

Did you cut it? No, no, I'm going to go, let's go live.

Speaker 3:

Why don't we cut it? Because there was a lot of jet air. I just see you as young. This is why it's funny though.

Speaker 2:

We're laughing right now. Okay, so can I follow up questions? Yeah, follow up, go on. All right. So say you have your 72 virgins, right? How do you like Decide? Yeah, like, I mean which one you, you know, do you like hang?

Speaker 4:

out of them, my first five wives.

Speaker 3:

Rodney Dangerfield movie my Five Wives.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, he only had five and he lost his mind. Remember Right 72. Right, that's a lot.

Speaker 3:

I don't even think you got there fair enough. It's one for every day.

Speaker 1:

That's how you got to do it.

Speaker 2:

And then here's the other thing they're virgins, right Right. That's no experience. Now you gotta be a fucking sex ed teacher.

Speaker 1:

What you do is you teach one and you get that one to start teaching another one.

Speaker 2:

That's how you build a stable, I would assume, a harem. A harem, yeah, we gotta use the right terminology.

Speaker 1:

Well, I think this is a good cut-off right here for the show.

Speaker 3:

So we're setting the precedent that we're going to try and do like 30 minutes, half hour shows a week. Unless we do like the interview right.

Speaker 1:

Exactly when we need to extend it. We'll extend it, but we're just going to try to do 30 minutes or so episodes. Again, stay tuned for next week. It's going to be a very interesting episode with very interesting people to talk to. And what? And welcome to the clover club guys and have a great night all right.

Speaker 3:

Thanks for having around with us. I'm Joe. I'm.

Speaker 1:

Mike and I'm Moe, all right, see you later.