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July 16, 2025 • 25 mins
We continue talking about job perks, board games, and a higher power.
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Just want to let you know the Minnesota Goodbye is
important enough and you are important enough to refurt to
us that we have interrupted our breakfast to record the
Minnesota Goodbye. Yeah, all transparency. This is now just after
ten o'clock. The show is over. This is the time
we normally go into the kitchen, get stuff out of
the fridge, and we bring it back here. I got
a bag of vegetables with some hummus, a couple of

(00:22):
hard boiled eggs, and oranges. That's my breakfast. Yeah, Bailey has.

Speaker 2 (00:26):
I have strawberry yogurt with dark chocolate, cashew butter granola.

Speaker 3 (00:30):
It's so good. And then I have a bag of cherries.

Speaker 1 (00:33):
Okay, and Jenny has.

Speaker 4 (00:34):
I don't have it yet, but I also have some
yogurt and some cattalina crunch to eat with my yogurt.

Speaker 1 (00:41):
I don't get hungry first thing in the morning. I'm
not really hungry until about nine o'clock, and then I'm.

Speaker 3 (00:45):
Like, oh, I'm always hungry. That it needs a snack,
that it needs a.

Speaker 1 (00:48):
Snack, and then we will eat anything, even though most
people would never have ribs or a burger or canes
at nine o'clock in the morning. We sure will.

Speaker 2 (00:58):
I mean it's like, yeah, well, when you're awake already
for the last you know, five hours lunchtime.

Speaker 1 (01:04):
Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 4 (01:05):
When I had to work like a nine to five,
it was so hard to wait, tell about noonish to
have my lunch.

Speaker 3 (01:10):
I agree. I'd be like, oh, it's eleven o'clock. What
is the time for lunch right now? Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:15):
All right, let's get to the emails. Here we go.
We asked yesterday, what is some of the perks where
you work? And let me see if I can get
into some of these quickly. Here about perks where you work?
Here we go. I work for a large law firm downtown.
We have free snacks and coffee and various drinks in
the office, along with lunch meetings where the food is provided.
Pretty standard for most big firms or most firms big

(01:38):
or small that I've worked out of the course of
my career. But the best perk about this firm is
the access to all kinds of college and professional sporting events.
Great seats. If it's tickets the firm has, you just
got to put your name in a drawing to win
the tickets. Attorneys will often offer their personal season tickets
to different events for grabs as well. Same with concerts.

(01:59):
You can be put also put an email out and
ask him, but he has tickets they want to part
with to a specific event you're looking to attend. It's
really cool. I wonder where lawyers get all these tickets,
if they have connections or just the resources to buy
them or what. And I going to guess there's a
lot of businesses that have things like that for clients,
Like if you're a high powered client or a big

(02:20):
money client for this law firm, maybe it's like, Hey,
you know, Joyce, do you want to go to the
Twins game? I got tickets in the blah blah blah,
so that could be too. And I'm also writing in
instead of I break for Caribou, what about I break
for coffee. Then it's the same idea without free advertising
for the boo. I actually really like the one of
seven listeners I would wear that have a great day.

(02:43):
Hell yeah, pimp in from Jenny. Thank you Jenny. We're
still working on the shirts. The one that we put
up the other day. Who sent the one that.

Speaker 2 (02:54):
We have Hayley, Yes, send us a lot. And she's
really talented.

Speaker 1 (02:59):
Really really good next one, hold on, I want to
make sure I get around to it. Here we go, Minnesota.
Goodbye work perk, says Andrea. I had to write in.
I know it's not normal whatsoever, but here's some of
the perks we get. Free breakfast and lunch, free snacks,
free drinks, and on site Barista. Also free Wow free
on site Jim with group classes. I won't go through

(03:22):
the whole list, but I'm grateful every single day for
the perks we get. I know it is not the norm.
I won't give out the company name, but I work
for a social media company. Love listening to you guys
from Afar, so I don't know where you listen, but
apparently they're not here. So they work for social media somewhere.

Speaker 3 (03:38):
Imagine she works for Meta.

Speaker 2 (03:40):
That's okay, Instagram, but I obviously I don't know, but
I'm just going to pretend because I always just picture
them or Google. Like I heard, Google Corporate is wild
and they've got like the coolest place to work.

Speaker 1 (03:52):
Okay, I think I've heard that too, So you just imagine, like,
you know, you get a company that's thriving like Google
or Meta, and they probably go, you know what we
want to keep good people here. Let's give them amazing perks.
And here at the old iHeartRadio ranch, we you know,
we fuss and we you know, we kind of tongue
in cheek bitch about it, but we really don't get much.

(04:13):
We get coffee, and we get and by coffee.

Speaker 3 (04:18):
We get it's like a masuring. It's close to a curate.

Speaker 1 (04:21):
It's a bad version of curing. It's really more like
coffee juice. It's not real coffee at all. But it's free.

Speaker 3 (04:29):
Yeah, we do have a gym in this building.

Speaker 1 (04:32):
In the building. Yeah, and it's free for people who
work here.

Speaker 3 (04:35):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (04:36):
Okay, I've never been in it. Is it a good gym?

Speaker 2 (04:38):
I mean it's tiny, it's small, and there's no windows.
But okay, there's equipment.

Speaker 4 (04:42):
There's a decent amount of equipment you can do, like
a decent amount of things. However, the whole like it's
in a dungeon kind of vibes not motivating whatsoever.

Speaker 1 (04:51):
Okay, gotcha. Next email begins with please don't say my name.
So I work at a community bank and I'm on
our corporate HR team, and I work from home one
hundred percent of the time and the company is assured
on multiple occasions. We will never revert back to being
required required to be in the office. We're even work

(05:12):
shopping flexible scheduling for our frontline staff. But the biggest
perk is a one percent interest rate on a mortgage loan. Wow,
that's huge.

Speaker 3 (05:23):
Oh my gosh, I'd be buying property all the time.

Speaker 1 (05:26):
Only applies for as long as you work there, but
I think it's a huge benefit and I will literally
never leave my job because of these benefits. That is crazy.
It was like eight and a half percent now or
something like that.

Speaker 4 (05:39):
I don't know if it's that high, but it's at
least been in the sevens in the in the last year.
I haven't looked at it in a minute, plus the
daily next one.

Speaker 1 (05:47):
Don't say my name. Here's my perk at work. I'm
a dietician at a local hospital. We get sent a
case of free insure bottles every few months. It's meant
to give to our patience as free samples, but unfortunately
that's again our policy, so it usually ends up going
to the right right to the local foodshelf unless it
looks damaged. Then we might keep a few to drink
for lunch. If we're too busy to take our lunch break.

(06:09):
I can't complain because we also get free lunch every day,
but keep in mind it's hospital cafeteria food, so even
if it's free, sometimes we're better off bringing our own lunch.
And those are the most exciting free things that I
get at work. Keep being awesome. Thank you for writing in.
I wonder if prison food is really that bad, maybe
if you've been in prison, because you know convicts, they're

(06:31):
always complaining, yeah, you know, food is really bad. Convicts
don't like the food. Is prison food really that bad?
And why is it because they don't have a budget
to make good food? And is prison food good or bad?

Speaker 3 (06:46):
If it?

Speaker 2 (06:46):
Like same with that, same like prison food, but then
same with like school food, like is it bad or
do you just want it to be more exciting?

Speaker 3 (06:53):
Like does it taste bad?

Speaker 2 (06:55):
Okay? Because I think if if somebody says the food
is bad, I would assume it tastes bad. But when really,
if they all say the food is bad, it's just
because it's not you know, like koloua pork tacos.

Speaker 3 (07:07):
You know it's not something fancy.

Speaker 1 (07:09):
Right, Well, you're never going to have that at school.
I mean the favorite school lunch was for me, it
was either burgers or pizza. And I think that pizza
was like every Friday or Thursday, and the kids would
be like, Oh, pizza day, pizza.

Speaker 2 (07:22):
Yay.

Speaker 1 (07:24):
Let's see here. What is a This is another one
brand new email from Crystal. What is a family or
friend game that causes problems for you? We have a
friend that can't play sorry with. We can't play sorry
with and saying sorry doesn't help. Okay, I don't really
have a story for that one. We we don't really
play games with family and friends. We do with the

(07:45):
family once in a while. We like playing Settlers of Katan,
but there's no arguments, so don't really have a story there.

Speaker 2 (07:52):
Yeah, we used to play on New Year's Eve every
year Monopoly, and I think it was just because it
took a long time to play it. But we don't
have I mean, we're not like super competitive in my household,
so like, we don't really ever get into or we
never used to get into, you know, arguments over.

Speaker 3 (08:10):
Games or anything.

Speaker 2 (08:12):
My dad would accuse us of cheating sometimes, but also
we were like ten, like who cares?

Speaker 1 (08:17):
Right, Okay, that's funny.

Speaker 3 (08:19):
I think I have a story there.

Speaker 1 (08:21):
Yeah, and it's funny that some people do and some
people don't. I always share this fun fact because I
was wrong about playing Monopoly for years, and every time
I get a chance, I will share this rule about
Monopoly that everybody violates. You say it takes too long.
The reason it takes too long is because people have
made their own rule. Then everybody thinks it's part of
the rule. When you pay luxury tax or you pay

(08:43):
for chance, like you know, give a fifty dollars to
whatever people put it in the middle, and if you
land on free parking, you take that money. No wrong,
no oh, that replenishes the bank roll of people who
should be close to being eliminated from the game. So

(09:03):
that's why Monopoly goes on way too long until you
get bored and go You guys had enough, Yeah, let's.

Speaker 3 (09:08):
Go to That's kind of how it ends.

Speaker 1 (09:09):
Yeah. So when you play Monopoly, and I'll be honest
with you, I've never played it the right way in
my entire life, but that's how you're supposed to play.
Don't land on free parking and take the money.

Speaker 2 (09:20):
I played a new board game on Monday with my
improv friends called the Quacks of Quedlinburg, which sounds as stupid.

Speaker 3 (09:26):
As it is.

Speaker 2 (09:28):
It felt like I was being trolled, like that they
were doing some kind of sketch comedy thing because it
was so intricate and there were so many pieces and
different rules that you had to keep track of.

Speaker 3 (09:40):
But by the end of it it was pretty fun.
And it lasted an hour and a half.

Speaker 2 (09:44):
And it was so ridiculous because there's like rubies potions,
there's cherry bombs, there's just like so many things. You
literally have a bag that you have to like shake
up and pull things out of it.

Speaker 1 (09:56):
Okay, so very elaborate.

Speaker 2 (09:57):
It's super elaborate, and I felt like I was in
Parks and rec where that guy makes the Cones of Dunshire,
which is also a super elaborate game. It just felt
like it was a joke, okay, but it was a
real life game and.

Speaker 1 (10:09):
It was really fun and it was fun. Yeah, there's
a game called Wingspan.

Speaker 3 (10:12):
Yes, I've heard that's good, and I've heard it's a.

Speaker 1 (10:14):
Great game like up there with Settlers of Katon and
a listener of our show, Henry shout out if he listens,
he bought it for me and Carson to play, and
we busted it out at least twice. And the rules
are obviously not so complicated that people don't enjoy it.
But I could not figure out the rules. Yeah, could not,
And I watched tutorials on YouTube.

Speaker 3 (10:36):
Okay, that's what my friend said that they do.

Speaker 1 (10:37):
They watched tutorials, and I still could not figure it out.
So then I bought the Nintendo Switch version thinking I
would figure it out. I could not. I could not.
I could not, And I'm really bummed because I think
it's one of those games where you either really have
to invest a lot of time or you have to
have somebody show you how to play it. Like if
you look at Settlers of Katon, you go, fuck that,

(10:59):
let's COMPLI But if you have somebody show you, it's
really not. It's it's quite simple. Yeah, it's a little
bit more complicated than Monopoly, but really, once you get it,
you're like, oh, okay, I totally get it now. Pe
Nuckle is a game that I thought I would like
to learn how to play because Susan and I like
we we like to play card games. We play one

(11:20):
called three thirteen, which I'm not going to explain it.
But it's a fun card game. But we wanted to
play Pinnuckle, and I watch tutorial videos and I cannot
get how to play pinnuckle. So I would like to
have somebody show me because it's like just we like
to mix it up. We played dominoes. We'll go to
the bar, bring dominoes and sit at the bar and
play dominoes.

Speaker 3 (11:37):
Cute. Do you play bridge? Have you played bridge?

Speaker 1 (11:40):
Don't understand bridge?

Speaker 2 (11:41):
Don't. I just know that they used to have like
little bridge parties when in like the fifties.

Speaker 1 (11:46):
In the fifties and sixties. Yeah, neighbors would get together
and play bridge.

Speaker 3 (11:49):
That sounds fun.

Speaker 1 (11:50):
Next one, let's see what is a piece of advice
same email or Crystal. What is a piece of advice
that's always stuck with you? Dave. I hear your voice
every time I'm doing chores, and I think, don't put
it down, put it away. I heard that a year
or so ago, and I really like that, don't put
it down, put it away. My piece of advice is,

(12:11):
probably I've said it a million times, it's better to
have it and not need it than to need it
and not have it. So if you're going on a
camping trip and you're like, oh, should I take a raincoat? Yeah?
Better to have it and not need it than to
need it and not have it.

Speaker 2 (12:24):
I'm sure I've gotten many pieces of advice throughout my life.
I don't have a great memory, so the only one
I really ever remember is my mom. In middle school
and high school. She would tell me and my sister
that we shouldn't try to be pretty or be popular
or be smart. We should just be so just be
who you are and stick with it.

Speaker 3 (12:42):
Okay, So that's one I like. I like this one.

Speaker 4 (12:44):
A dream without a deadline is just a fairy tale?

Speaker 1 (12:48):
Oh is that one that you kind of lived by
or try to remember?

Speaker 3 (12:52):
Yeah, it definitely is.

Speaker 4 (12:53):
Like I before I started my travel blog, I thought
about it for a very long time, and then I think,
I remember we're hearing that, and I was like, hey,
this is just a fairy tale in my head right now,
I better do it or else. It's just a fairy tale.

Speaker 1 (13:06):
That's similar, Jenny, to one that I've heard. And it's
like everybody who takes a shower has an idea. It's
the people who get out of the shower and do
something about it. That really are successful. Okay, stand in
the shower, like, you know what I should do. I
should open up my own coffee shop. And I had
a day da da da da da. But then you
get out of the shower and you don't do anything

(13:27):
about it. So all right, and her she says, mine
is from my grandma, and it's very nice. If you
can help someone without it hurting you, you do it. Okay.
I like that one. Thank you, Crystal. Yeah, next one,
here we go. I like you guys less oh after
today's Minnesota goodbye. Just kidding, but I did have to

(13:47):
stop the podcast and write this email. Funions are my
favorite chip, to the point that I got to limit
myself on buying them because I would crush a family
sized bag by myself in probably twenty minutes. Jenny said,
we're probably offended somebody right now by all the criticism,
and yes it's me. I'm standing alone in my kitchen
right now chopping onions which I love and audibly responding

(14:08):
you guys by saying, Yep, it's me. I'm the one
that's offended. Lol. I love them. I'm twenty seven. My
mom too, to this day. We will grab me, will
grab me? A bag just because she knows I love fions.
That being said, after obliterating a bag like that, I
feel like garbage, both metally and physically with my onion
breath worth it though it's a very guilty pleasure to

(14:28):
say the least. Anyway, that's all I got. Had to
stand up from a Faive's no legitimate hard feelings. Of course,
love you guys, Alison. That was funny, Allison, because when
I first read that, I was like, oh man, what
did we do?

Speaker 3 (14:40):
What happened?

Speaker 1 (14:42):
I think the beauty of that is that there's different
there's a chip for everyone, and thank God, there's a
chip for everyone, you know, whether it's chili, cheese, Frito's,
whether it is salt and vinegar, salt and pepper, jalapeno.

Speaker 4 (15:00):
Yes, even like the o G flavor delicious.

Speaker 1 (15:05):
And let's see how about this one? It is from Sydney.
She's a regular contributor to the show, and she said,
I know that. I just know that. I'm listening and
responding in my head every day on the topic of God.
I am considered an atheist, but as a mom of

(15:25):
two young boys who love dinosaurs, I'm starting to think
dinosaurs are a proof that God created the world. I
promise I'm not high and hear me out. Dinosaurs once
lived on Earth and suddenly were wiped out from the planet,
as if somebody drew a rough draft and then said, nah,
I don't like it. So they wiped the canvas clean,
kept some of the things they like, like birds and trees,

(15:46):
et cetera, but then decided to create another species to
rule the earth, humans. I don't know. These things are
the things I start thinking about as I learned more
about dinosaurs from my two year old than I ever knew. Okay,
so God created dinosaurs and then said, well, this is boring.
So they wiped out the dinosaurs with a well placed

(16:07):
meteor and because that's how they think, they died, and
then brought humans onto Earth. Now there's another theory that
we are aliens, that we are not the original inhabitors
of the earth. We came from somewhere else. Have you
heard that one?

Speaker 3 (16:21):
That's interesting?

Speaker 1 (16:23):
It's to me, it's there's I'm not the most religious person,
but to me, it's like, what a miracle the earth
and life is. Eyes? For example, somehow somewhere something determined
that we needed eyes, not just us but hamsters and

(16:44):
mice and falcons. Eyes. What a fucking miracle eyes are
when you think about it.

Speaker 2 (16:52):
Just like any organ in your body right to make you, like,
you know, walk around and talk.

Speaker 1 (16:56):
Well, sure, and and faces and God somehow if you
give credit to God or whatever that higher power is
or whatever, Yeah, well God gave us all different faces
so we can look around and tell each other apart. Now,
think about that. Our faces are all essentially the same.
We got a nose, eye's mouth, eyebrows, forehead, cheeks, ears,

(17:19):
but every face is a little bit different. So you
can look around and go, oh, that's Bailey and that's Jenny.
You can't really tell that with sheep. I mean, think
about it. Sheep and cows all look about the same.
They might have different colorings.

Speaker 4 (17:40):
Were you No, I'm a deep thinker. It feels like
a high thought.

Speaker 1 (17:46):
No, And it's like I think that that is like,
what do they call it? Intelligent? No, there's a name
for it. I don't know what you're look intelligent creator
or something like that. Now there's a name and somebody
will remember what it is. But that's what I think.
There's the evidence of God because he gave us look
at we love trees. What do we got trees all

(18:08):
over the place?

Speaker 3 (18:08):
I love trees.

Speaker 1 (18:09):
Waterfalls? We love waterfalls. Waterfalls were probably not necessary.

Speaker 3 (18:13):
Jenny's a huge fan.

Speaker 1 (18:14):
I but did God give us waterfall? Dogs? Dogs are
a wonderful thing because then even the friendless can have
a friend and a dog. Was that God's idea? Or
did it just evolve that way? How did all this
shit happen without oh, what's the word? Anyway? Somebody won?

(18:35):
Not a higher power? Intelligent design? Now? I don't know anyway.
I love the state fair shirt ideas. I would vote
for one of seven listeners. And you're kind of hot.
I think you're kind of hot is the front runner
right now because I think even if you don't listen
to Kato, but you think that's kind of cool.

Speaker 3 (18:54):
Yeah, you could walk by and be like, I'm gonna
buy a that.

Speaker 1 (18:57):
Yeah yeah. And also, as a Caribous Coffee Support crew
meter employer employee, I'm definitely a fan of my break
for Caribou. But it doesn't really work out for you
because but if it doesn't work out, Caribou would appreciate
the free advertisement anyway. Thank you, Staff writer Sydney Listener
for of seven. Love that one, and we might have

(19:19):
time for one more. Let's check the clock and see
how we're doing. Yeah, we get time for at least
one more, and we had an abundance today, So thank you.
Question for the ladies, how many times in your past
relationships have you let somebody swear at you? I understand
the show and the mood you guys create, but there
are a lot of assholes that women and women that
put up with it. For example, I can't picture Dave

(19:41):
going to anyone ever and saying fuck you and letting
it carry out for a long time. If this is
too serious, I get it. I just want to know
if this is something everybody deals with, or am I
once again a complete idiot. Well I hope that nobody
says fuck you. I don't even say it jokingly, you
know what I mean? Like I did say fuck you

(20:01):
to Carson last summer, and I've told you the story.
We were out on the deck and he was home,
and I look for things to talk about because he's
a quiet lad he's a quiet boy, and so I'll
look for things to talk about. And he loves wearing
loud if that's the word. Just crazy pants So he's
got on these checkered crazy pants and he's sitting on

(20:22):
the balcony and I come outside and I go, whoh, Carson,
what's up with those pants? Or something like that, not
in a demeaning way, but maybe something like, tell me
about those pants. He's like their pants as.

Speaker 4 (20:33):
To where he got him from.

Speaker 1 (20:34):
Maybe, but his answer was their pants. And I said,
fuck you, Carson, because I've spent his entire life trying
to get the boy to talk, and he's getting better
at it, but it's been so frustrating. I was on
the phone with him one time as in Colorado, and

(20:55):
it's like he was back here and I hadn't seen
him in three or four days. Hey, buddy, what's going on? Nothing? Okay,
what do you? What are you gonna do later today?
I don't know? Okay, well, what do you? What have
you been doing all morning? I don't know. And I'm like, God,
damn it, Carson. You know what, you can make some conversation.

(21:16):
And I don't know if I hung up or what.
But I would never say fuck you out of anger, too,
But I did say it to the Carson. But I
but I and we we immediately apologize he's like, I'm sorry,
and I'm like, no, I'm sorry for saying fuck you, Bailey.

Speaker 3 (21:32):
Not I don't really tolerate that kind of crap. Uh
if it was from like a romantic partner. I did
have an ex boyfriend once.

Speaker 2 (21:40):
He was pretty mean in general, but he told me
that I lived in a fantasy world, and I don't
know that I'd be, you know, like you're gonna be
fucking sorry, like you live in this fantasy world and
blah blah blah, and I'm like, Okay, he was mean
though all it was just all around. He'd yell at
me all the time. I wasn't like responding to text

(22:01):
messages fast enough or whatever kind of controlling then yeah,
and uh now he's kind of fugly, so worked out
for me, Okay.

Speaker 1 (22:09):
Go ahead, good uh Jenny.

Speaker 3 (22:12):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (22:13):
I mean I wouldn't tolerate someone saying like fuck you
or anything like that. I mean, my parents had a
really bad relationship, so I listened to a lot of
fighting that I am traumatized from. But I mean, I'm
guilty of getting angry in the heat of the moment
and being like okay, right, fuck off. Like I've I've
said like I've sworn in the heat in like arguments before,

(22:34):
so I'm not going to sit and say that I
haven't been guilty myself. And I've also had partners not
swear at me being like fuck you bitch or anything
like that, but like swear as like are you fucking
kidding me?

Speaker 3 (22:45):
Beble you know, like that kind of swearing.

Speaker 1 (22:46):
Okay, now that you bring it up, Susan Delton told
me to fuck off a week or two ago.

Speaker 3 (22:51):
Well what'd you do?

Speaker 1 (22:52):
Well, it's what she did, honestly. She sometimes treats me
like I'm clueless and and and I don't know if
other couples go through this, but it'll be something like
did you put Bernie out? And I'm like, yes, I
put Bernie out. Did you remember to put your dishes
in the sink? Yes? I remembered it, Yes I did.

(23:16):
Did you put the towels in the washing machine? Uh? Yes,
yes I did. And we came home the other day
and I've got Bernie on a leash. We had him
in the car, and she's like, you should probably chain
him out out front and make sure you chain him good.
So blah blah blah, and something like I said, you know,
I don't need you to tell me every little thing.

(23:36):
I'm not stupid, and she said fuck off, and she
went inside, what do you make What do you make
of that?

Speaker 3 (23:44):
I'm making it up as.

Speaker 4 (23:47):
You both have your issues, because it sounds like Susan
feels like she has to be your parents sometimes and
tells you things because you'll forget. So that's what she
was doing in that moment. But then you took it
as like I'm not fucking dumb, and so she shouldn't
have said it to you. So I think you both
just butted heads about things that like already are in
a relationship. I mean, I feel like I've been a

(24:08):
parent in relationships before and have been in similar situations
and then they get mad at me and it's like
I feel like I'm your mom.

Speaker 3 (24:16):
Well why do I have to be like your mom?

Speaker 1 (24:18):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (24:19):
Because you don't. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (24:20):
No, I think that she definitely feels like she needs
to remind me to do this, and sometimes I, you know,
like anybody, Yeah, sure I need to be reminded. But
other times it's like I'm also not stupid. All right,
We're gonna wrap it up with that. What do you think?
Any thoughts on anything? Send me anything you want. We
love getting your random emails or poignant emails. They can

(24:44):
be serious. Somebody said a minute ago that like, is
this too serious? No, serious is good Once in a while,
whatever you have on your mind, send it to us.
We love talking about it on the Minnesota Goodbye and
that is Ryan Show at k d WB dot m
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