
R2RO = Right To Remain Offended
The Right To Remain Offended Podcast or R2RO for short is Kraig, Eric, Chuck and Scott (with a special guest or two) getting together to discuss a variety of topics, from music to pop culture, maybe some politics and EVERYTHING in between.
Trigger Warning:
Because we give our raw unscripted opinions & reactions to the topics we discuss, R2RO is NSFW and NSFKids
You have the right to remain offended.
Anything you say can and will be used against you.
You have the right to have a lawyer with you during questioning.
If you cannot afford a lawyer, one will be appointed for you.
If you decide to answer questions now without a lawyer present, R2RO takes no responsibility for your feelings.
R2RO = Right To Remain Offended
R2RO Radio Show: Family Values Tour Flashback, Halloween in NOLA, and Matthew Perry's Legacy
What's the one thing you'll never forget from the iconic Family Values Tour of 1998? Was it Limp Biscuit's meteoric rise to fame, Romstein's flaming arrow finale, or that unforgettable acoustic set by Aaron Lewis and Fred Durst? Join us as we crank up the volume on some of the most monumental moments in rock history. We'll even take you behind the scenes to reveal some little-known anecdotes and trivia that will satisfy your rock cravings.
Have you ever wondered what a post-Halloween November 1st looks like in New Orleans? We're painting a vivid picture of the electrifying atmosphere that embraced Voodoo Fest in the 90s and how the Halloween spirit continues to resonate in the Big Easy even after the calendar turns. You'll get an up-close and personal look at the unique way New Orleans celebrates this spooky holiday.
Finally, we will remember the life and career of Matthew Perry, sharing some of his career highs and personal struggles. We will also revisit the golden era of HBO Sunday nights, from the cultural impact of classics like Friends and the West Wing, to boundary-pushing shows like Workaholics. If you're a fan of these shows, you won't want to miss our deep dive into the living situation comedy of Workaholics, its potential ratings and viewership, and the lessons we can take away from it. Tune in for an episode packed with music, TV, and nostalgia.
Planet radio 106.7. The best rock on the planet, it's the R2 RO radio edit. We got everybody here tonight. Tonight we're gonna talk a little bit about something that happened 25 years ago. I think. Is that right 25 years?
Speaker 2:I'm old.
Speaker 3:What, how wait?
Speaker 5:how long ago was 25 years ago 2298, 1998, one thousand, and those dominate right after the 1920s apparently oh, there would be an end those dominate by the.
Speaker 1:That's technical anyway, what so? 25 years ago family values tour came around, lafayette was that no occasion though Cajun dome, the Cajun dome, it was stupid.
Speaker 3:Oh, you went a big deal. I didn't go, I did, you went to family.
Speaker 5:Yes for the, for the people that I Know.
Speaker 4:I didn't go to one. What is what?
Speaker 5:was, I didn't go there was a tour that that was put together. I mean, this is back when they were doing everybody was doing music festivals as a, as a. You know they were following the Lala Palooza bandwagon, right, but corn put this together okay, there was corn and limp biscuit, because they discovered limp biscuit corn. Fred Ders was a tattoo artist for Jonathan. Now I can't remember his name, but the leasinger for corn, jonathan Davis. That's how they met, because he was a tattoo artist.
Speaker 1:But it was corn found in biscuit, or let's let biscuit fall corn.
Speaker 5:No, the Fred Ders was the tattoo artist, so he was discovered by Jonathan Davis.
Speaker 1:Hey, can you listen to?
Speaker 5:my demo, I seen to have him in a band. He was able to do it because he was giving him a tattoo nice base.
Speaker 2:Player.
Speaker 3:But you can't do. Listen to my demo.
Speaker 2:Uh, fieldy, no, no, no, no, no, not corn limp biscuit. Oh, the dude with the I always had a weird contacts in. Oh, I don't remember his name. I was just wondering if he was in it from the. I know he left for some reason and honestly I'm kind of embarrassed about my knowledge of limp biscuit, but I know he's, he, apparently he's revered as some I don't savant base player, oh, and also probably very wrong. I don't have the internet. Look this.
Speaker 5:I remember I discovered limp biscuit through something we've talked about before. The box, the box.
Speaker 6:It was on the box there.
Speaker 5:That's where I found them, before they hit MTV box went that long, mm-hmm.
Speaker 2:No, dude, I watched the box like when I was in high school and I'm oh.
Speaker 5:I know, but they, I had the box on cable in Baton Rouge, really. Yeah, I had it over there because we didn't have cable. Oh no, I remember those days. But then it made it to cable. That's why I learned a lot of music in 1998 when I was in undergrad.
Speaker 2:I. That's where I discovered ministry I saw a video for Jesus built my hot rod Pastor. I'm a reverend attention Lafayette people, do you need to be married? Call me now.
Speaker 5:So we got corn and we got limp biscuit. We also had Romstein. Yeah, remember them, dude, that was yeah, what was their? Do house.
Speaker 2:Do do us do dude. So all of the dudes in Romstein are One of two things they're either Tremendously huge or they wear kiss boots and I was kind of baked, so I don't remember exactly what I saw, but a Gigantic people and they did some of the strangest things you've ever seen in a concert. At some point in time, some dude puts up quote-unquote hose in his mouth and it's kind of like spewing from the size of his mouth and then it comes out as real.
Speaker 1:It's so weird, you're right strange.
Speaker 2:Yes.
Speaker 3:And then I was sure did.
Speaker 4:You say you went to this so I did not go to the one in life yet. In the same year though, limp biscuit, kid rock. Oh, we're playing in Biloxi and Stain open form before stain.
Speaker 5:Oh wow, remember that I was staying got popular cuz Aaron Lewis did that acoustic set with Fred Durst, yeah, and that ended up circulating around.
Speaker 4:Yeah, yeah, there for that. That was that's what I was saying. I was there for that when that happened, that's when that happened.
Speaker 2:It was during that concert in Bilox you know, fred, I'm sorry, mobile Fred Durst is cross-country motorcycle rider. I.
Speaker 5:Didn't I know that?
Speaker 2:those big GS 1100 BMWs that got all the suitcases and everything.
Speaker 5:Clare cross country and then the one other artist on that tour, ice cube.
Speaker 2:Not the one other. It was what was the other one Orgy orgy.
Speaker 5:Orgy was on there, which, by the way, that was.
Speaker 2:It was kind of like a top or the new.
Speaker 3:That is yeah, exactly, they did the one.
Speaker 2:The one thing that I know they did was a cover of Blue Monday by New Order, and it was. That was their biggest hit.
Speaker 5:Yeah, and it was meh. And if you listen to the rest of the album, none of it sounded like that cover. So I was very upset because back then, yes, you had to buy a whole thing.
Speaker 3:Oh, one cover and then all the rest was original. Yes, and then, their original was not as good as the cover.
Speaker 1:Yeah exactly.
Speaker 2:Wow, dude Romstein, at the end of their set, this gigantic dude grabs this quote, unquote, bow and arrow, which I mean obviously. Now I know it was on a cable. Oh boy, I was trying to figure out.
Speaker 2:And it's on fire and he shoots this gigantic arrow. I had had to have been like a four foot arrow, it was ridiculous. And it goes flying on fire across the top of the crowd and goes to the roof of the Cajun dome. And again, at the time let's just say I wasn't sober and I was like what the hell was that?
Speaker 5:That's pretty awesome. All right, y'all come back for some more R2RO show.
Speaker 1:It's the R2RO radio show radio one on six, point seven the best rock on the planet. Which planet?
Speaker 2:on the planet this way if it's on a planet, then it's up for it. It doesn't say it's not specific.
Speaker 3:Chris was never specific about which planet, is it?
Speaker 2:Well, it's not just that. Is it the best rock on the planet right now, or is it the best rock on the planet from from?
Speaker 3:the blessings Rock on every stuff.
Speaker 5:The bless the bless on planet radio on playing.
Speaker 2:The best rock and roll that they play on planet radio.
Speaker 4:OK, is there? Is there any good rock now?
Speaker 3:That's why we play 90s.
Speaker 5:We just finished talking about the family values tour. It might have been not stop being good.
Speaker 4:I mean it's so. It's the blessed rock on the planet.
Speaker 3:Still, yes, there have been no other rock. There's no other better rock. We have not been blessed with better.
Speaker 2:Gee, really are not wrong. The 90s were pretty dope, the 90s were weird man 90s and 2000s. Yeah, I did some strange things in the 90s because that encompassed part of high school and then after it, and then bartending, and then.
Speaker 5:So you weren't here when we were talking about Halloween last time.
Speaker 2:I'm sure you had some. I went to Halloween in the warlands.
Speaker 1:Like trick-or-treating in the cemetery.
Speaker 2:Is that a? Thing? Yeah, oh, yeah At the churches.
Speaker 3:They set up in the parking lot at the cemetery. They set up in the cemetery.
Speaker 2:Well, I don't think they, I think anybody really sets up. I think it's kind of a Free-for-all type thing. Also, never been in a cemetery in Halloween, so no idea what I'm talking about. Oh yeah, but I was on bourbon in all those places.
Speaker 5:On all those places outside of bourbon.
Speaker 2:That get really weird.
Speaker 5:Well, I mean speaking the other good music festivals that remind them I voodoo fest is always. They haven't done voodoo since before, to that since 2020 right, yeah, they stopped doing it during COVID and never came back.
Speaker 3:I love the time of year Right now right when it's getting cool.
Speaker 5:It's right around Halloween, people would dress up. It was. It was a lot of rock music. Yeah, it was a lot of rock music, even when we went. I went see tool with Eric in the 2000s. Right, they're still playing 90s music from back then. They're bringing those me. I love, I'd never set foot in voodoo.
Speaker 2:I went to the very first voodoo. I think was like 99.
Speaker 4:Yeah, it was fun, I was pretty good.
Speaker 2:I think 2001 maybe it was shortly after family values.
Speaker 3:Then New Orleans bring I just I'm like live music.
Speaker 2:Nah, I'll be, I'm good.
Speaker 3:Did New Orleans bring any of those music festivals back?
Speaker 2:Oh, I mean, it did jazz, that's, they did jazz.
Speaker 3:But they're still doing yeah, just that's yeah.
Speaker 2:I don't know if it's just voodoo. I don't know how many other music festivals they have.
Speaker 5:New Orleans, yeah, I know, yeah voodoo started in 1999, so I went to that one.
Speaker 2:Oh, you went to the first one. I'm into the very first one.
Speaker 5:Mm-hmm, how was that? That was a lot of fun. The first years were a lot of fun because it was it was a mixture of rock and rap. Back then a lot I remember seeing Cypress Hill play when they were getting into more of their rock stage. Oh, and they did rock super slow. When they did rock superstar and rap superstar, right, the best was. I remember there they had a field where they had two stages set up facing each other, oh set up in our camp in the middle.
Speaker 5:People would get real close. But it was like I watched Eminem on one stage and then I watched I think it was the black Rose right behind me, because what they do as soon as that band stopped, the other one was already set up and ready to go. And there was no going there was no downtime between bands.
Speaker 2:That's awesome. Now question is the venue, because this is 99.
Speaker 5:Yeah, it's still caught the world Kind of a they hadn't figured out city park that's talking about. I was in Australia. How is that. I was in a straight-up field. That's what I'm talking about.
Speaker 2:Yeah, it was awesome. Yeah, like almost like Woodstock 99 with the yeah, yeah.
Speaker 5:Yeah, look, when they got going later they got city park. You know, kind of dialed in at least, like you couldn't just wander in from anywhere. Yeah, a better crowd control. It's still a great venue. It was a great festival. Yeah, they got more into a dance music to go with the rock versus the rap, but it was still.
Speaker 5:I remember going there was a big tent and they had like a DJ in there with light show and everything going on, yep, and then all the different stages are remember and they still set it up to where you can kind of hear other stages If you get in the right spot and kind of just listen to different things going on at different times. Hmm.
Speaker 1:So, you were trick-or-treating in New Orleans at voodoo fest. No.
Speaker 2:I mean, I wouldn't exactly trick-or-treating, it was more just like dressed up.
Speaker 5:It was more like just just just drinking just drinking trick Triggered him if you got it.
Speaker 2:Yeah, it was just, it was wild. I mean, it's New Orleans being extra New Orleans, yeah, and just all the wild people are out, everybody's extra wild just because it's Halloween and it's like yeah, and then on November 1st, what's it like?
Speaker 5:because you were there the next day, all these people are still clinging on the.
Speaker 1:Halloween.
Speaker 2:And it's. There's guys where it's like think of a demon. Demon doesn't know what goes on after. I mean nobody ever talks to a demon is like hey, miss Damon, are you saying that, are you?
Speaker 3:cool now. Like what's what the next day? Like do we not care about it? Nobody thinks.
Speaker 2:Does anybody talk about a demon after?
Speaker 5:Halloween. Do you know any demons that we do?
Speaker 3:Do we talk about demons?
Speaker 2:before Halloween, Do? I mean some people do, but I mean think about it. I mean you get attention one day a year, One day.
Speaker 3:We just go one day.
Speaker 2:Here we got to be going. There is a way, you know, that is going to therapist. Like man, I can't keep a friend, nobody cares about me.
Speaker 3:Today it's not for my first Somebody, he only comes around, that's my friend the demon, tell us I mean the Halloween just passed.
Speaker 5:How are you feeling that nobody cares?
Speaker 6:I feel you get, you get attention. All the people will only think about you one day. Man, I'm asked about a thing about it like this, you know, the folks at Spear Halloween, Yep oh to go home and they start thinking about that stuff, like I'm like, yeah, let's go.
Speaker 1:So it's just one day, or is it a whole month? You get a whole month, at least a month.
Speaker 6:I mean some people who like that I feel like you can start showing out at least a couple weeks up.
Speaker 3:So you got at least a couple weeks to show up and then hashtag this you know like instead of me two would be demon to bring all your friends.
Speaker 1:Are you worried about me? What are you thinking about?
Speaker 5:Are you worried about Santa at all, because he's already completely taken over Thanksgiving. He's starting to encroach on your territory.
Speaker 1:There were, there were trees. There's trees that load.
Speaker 3:There were trees at home before you even started about.
Speaker 5:Well, you heard that, Santa, you better cross the street with Matt's friend. Demon comes around. We'll see how it's.
Speaker 6:It's the R2RO radio show.
Speaker 5:Radio one to six, point seven the best rock on the planet. You show about that.
Speaker 4:Yeah, we already discussed this. We've already established that we fit of that planet. Yes.
Speaker 5:Yeah, all right, you got something to complain about.
Speaker 1:Well, this is tell me why we didn't do. Tell me why there's something to complain about.
Speaker 2:Just tell me why this isn't stupid. Tell me why this idea isn't stupid. Got it?
Speaker 5:Oh, oh, oh why?
Speaker 2:can't we find the people? Because you can. You can find anybody. Why can't you find the people who pick up election signs to do other things?
Speaker 5:Oh, they're so efficient so look, you got. Look, they got to go on in a day. Yeah, I have a time frame.
Speaker 3:I don't know, like they have do does is the campaign in charge of picking up their own elections?
Speaker 2:I wouldn't say like you know, those campaign, people are actually out there.
Speaker 3:Like they put a mile I was going to pay somebody to do that.
Speaker 2:My point is is who are they paying, and why can't we hire those cats to do other things around the city that need to get done Well, because they're busy running Chick-fil-A the other six days. You are correct. So, dude, especially not the new one. They got that little door. Kids just comes busting out with your chicken Go.
Speaker 5:Yeah, oh, and Eric pointed out to me that there's a line, that the first, the line closest to the door, is supposed to stop sooner so that they can actually come.
Speaker 3:The left lane is shorter than the right. Yeah, it's kind of like.
Speaker 5:But, nobody does that.
Speaker 6:So they're always having to run around.
Speaker 5:So, lafayette, please, if you go to the Chick-fil-A on Collise Loom, if you're on the inside lane, you got to stop the shorter window.
Speaker 2:Okay, tell me why this isn't stupid. Apply the same attitude from Keynes to Chick-fil-A.
Speaker 1:What the attitude is that with kicking what's kicking you?
Speaker 2:want some chicken. Don't get me wrong, don't get me wrong. Chick-fil-a people are. They are the most polite crew on the face of the planet. I don't know if you get a Xanax when you show up to work.
Speaker 5:Everybody's just cool, they really are. They're all so nice, they are all so nice and you don't get that anywhere.
Speaker 2:You go to Popeyes and it's like, hey man, this is going to be a show. Yeah, you know every time you go to Chick-fil-A. It is the nicest people on the face of the planet To Popeyes the fence.
Speaker 5:they know what they got. I dig it.
Speaker 3:I dig it. No, I'm not saying it's bad. We ain't got to be nice.
Speaker 2:We got them goods Right. No, I totally understand that and I'm happy that they do it. I wouldn't want it any other way. It's kind of like the racetrack back in the day on the throughway whenever you go home at around 2.30 in the morning. Oh yeah, it's always fun. You could buy some CDs, you could buy some shoes, you could Buy some things.
Speaker 1:Yeah, so let me get this right. So what we're saying is that the people who pick up election signs are working at fast food.
Speaker 2:Dude, I don't know they're doing it, but they might as well be working at Chick-fil-A. They're banging it.
Speaker 1:I mean it's super efficient.
Speaker 2:God. So you think?
Speaker 3:Chick-fil-A has coordinated the elections they must have.
Speaker 6:The.
Speaker 3:Chick-fil-A drive through people coordinated the elections.
Speaker 4:That's what it seems like I want to vote. Do you think the losers go pick up their own signs?
Speaker 3:I'm not picking up their signs.
Speaker 6:I'm not paying somebody to pick up their signs. Do you think the losers pick up the sign.
Speaker 2:No the loser has to pick up the winner's sign.
Speaker 4:If I just lost my banks?
Speaker 6:are already empty, so I don't have anyone to pay.
Speaker 4:I know I'm not getting a government contract because I'm not in government anymore. I wouldn't put it in government.
Speaker 3:I didn't make it, so I'm like the winner needs to pick up my stuff. If I had any more signs, I'd just go put them out even more.
Speaker 2:It's in the application whenever you apply for the election. If you lose, you've got to pick up the winner's sign. I like that.
Speaker 5:Everybody who's running now loses.
Speaker 2:Even if you lost before the runoff, you still got to pick up the winner's sign because you put in yeah.
Speaker 3:Yeah, if you put one sign up, you got to pick up all the winners.
Speaker 5:If I knew I was going to win, I'd put so many signs up.
Speaker 3:Oh, absolutely, but the people got to pick them up, I think that whoever ran has to actually get them themselves.
Speaker 2:Uh-uh, after the election, I want to see Doofy out there picking up signs.
Speaker 6:That's what I'm saying Himself yes, not paying other people to pick them up In his suit, Like you're like picking up your own name sign I'm going to set up a barbecue pit right by some signs.
Speaker 2:I'm going to shake a can of slapy mama at him.
Speaker 3:I'm going to be like oh, you can go to Carter-Penture. They got signs up and down both sides of the street. What they had? More signs than anybody ever seen.
Speaker 2:I mean, dude, I honestly like peak election, though Right there at the corner of Veroton, ambassador, oh, those were all gone.
Speaker 5:No, oh yeah, they were all gone.
Speaker 2:But what I'm saying is there was like 97 of them. Yeah, Like at some point you only saw like the corner of somebody's sign because somebody else's sign was in front of theirs. The old gas station was last. No no no, no, no, Old gas station is gone.
Speaker 3:That's like those digital billboards, no the part that there's never been anything.
Speaker 4:Right.
Speaker 2:Long time ago where the gas station was, I drove by. Every once in a while somebody would pop up doing detail work on cars and then one day I see this dude's got a GMC Acadia and the entire interior is on the ground. The whole thing Like he decided he was going to clean the underneath of the carpet. This is full detail and I'm like somebody left this dude their car and said yes, I'm going to clean this, no problem. And you drive up and there's all your cars all over this parking lot.
Speaker 1:Maybe that's the dude that cleaned the both election Extremely.
Speaker 2:Oh yes, I'm cleaning everything. You ain't going to smell a thing when you get back in this truck. It's going to be like brand new, all right.
Speaker 5:Well, somebody go find that dude and bring him to us. We'll be right back.
Speaker 6:It's the R2RO radio show radio.
Speaker 5:One of six points seven the best rock on the planet. Welcome back to the R2RO show with some current events.
Speaker 4:So Matthew Perry died that dude from 90210.
Speaker 3:That was Luke Different dude. He died Well he did too, and you all died there, everybody, all the.
Speaker 5:Paris. That dude from my nose.
Speaker 2:They killed the entire town of Pitt. They killed the entire town of Perry. You watch a lot of 90210.
Speaker 5:Luke Perry is from the fifth element.
Speaker 3:Oh, I thought that was a Matthew Perry on.
Speaker 5:He was for like yes, and so if anybody was in the fifth element, that is, the movie that is always going to be the first one listed.
Speaker 2:I fully understand your logic, matthew Perry. He was not in the very weird part of the fifth.
Speaker 3:He was in that weird beginning.
Speaker 5:It is the part I skip past Different dude, I see light Matthew. Perry, matthew Perry, oh yeah, the lead I guess the lead on his habitual is going to be? He played Chandler on Friends.
Speaker 4:Well, that's what that was. He made a whole lot of movies and, yeah, I'm sure he made a lot of money on the movie too, but he did a movie with Bruce Willis called the whole nine yards where he was a great movie. That was a great movie.
Speaker 5:He was the lead with Bruce Willis.
Speaker 4:I saw that movie in all of the neighborhoods, all right In the prison.
Speaker 5:No, no, no no.
Speaker 3:That's the longest yard, the whole nine yards.
Speaker 5:Bruce Willis was an ex mafia hit man and he moved into this place in Canada and he lived next door to Matthew Perry's.
Speaker 4:Oh, yeah, Okay I remember it, he was a dentist.
Speaker 3:Yeah, a pee, a man to pee, a man to pee, yep, okay.
Speaker 1:But most people knew Matthew Perry from Friends.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I've never watched an episode of.
Speaker 1:Friends in my life? Not one, it's a whole culture around that.
Speaker 6:Why did he?
Speaker 1:die.
Speaker 6:He is so he is so the right.
Speaker 2:Coke, coke.
Speaker 1:Coke, Coke. Are you like hoping? That's what it is?
Speaker 2:No, just that's my guess I'm hammering home my phone.
Speaker 3:Coke, Coke, damn it.
Speaker 4:The news report is that he drowned in his own jacuzzi.
Speaker 3:Okay, from Coke From not all. Obviously drugs are involved.
Speaker 2:I would get, I would get Well, I mean, I don't I'm. Who's so drunk? I can picture the dude's face, but I don't know anything.
Speaker 6:He's really going? What if he slipped?
Speaker 2:My point is is like does he have a history of being a crackhead?
Speaker 5:Well, not a crackhead but yes, he did. Yes history. Addictions, with some struggles with painkillers and stuff. It actually happened during the show. You can. I know you didn't watch it but, there's a part where you see him get a little heavier and then he gets a little healthier.
Speaker 1:looking after some point but I think they had like a documentary about it, like on A&E or whatever.
Speaker 3:Wow, yeah, it's what happened.
Speaker 2:But that was a decade ago. Yeah, but addiction doesn't go away after you, just stop using. It's always there. It doesn't go away, man. I loved him.
Speaker 5:I loved him back there. He was funny, yeah for sure.
Speaker 4:He was one of my favorite shows. He was on the.
Speaker 5:West Wing for a couple episodes, really.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I watched the West Wing, but there's so many episodes. It's one of those things I need to start up again, because I know I've forgotten enough of it by now, to where it's going to be exceptionally interesting.
Speaker 5:I hadn't watched network television so long and I go back and watch some of those old shows or, like the old sopranos, and forget that they used to put like 23 one hour episodes out every year.
Speaker 2:Appointment TV.
Speaker 5:You know, you go look now and, oh look, there's five seasons of that show and it's five, six episodes.
Speaker 1:Differ season.
Speaker 5:That's one season from back in the day.
Speaker 1:Dude, you remember Sundays?
Speaker 5:on Cleveland Street oh my God, it's so great.
Speaker 2:Sundays on Cleveland Street HBO Sundays HBO Sunday dude started at seven, went through eight. Everyone's wild a little bit. Something was good 30 minute one at nine, the one at nine and 30 was always meh, but also everybody was like all right, hbo knew how to keep you on that subscription, though right, Because it was just they put out one show once a week every Sunday and you kept this.
Speaker 5:Well, I know we didn't have one. There was people that paid for that just to watch the show.
Speaker 4:Subscriptions. Some people paid for that.
Speaker 6:Some allegedly some people did not have something.
Speaker 4:And then, as soon as one would end like so Sopranos was over there to start, what a deadwood played on. Hbo, and that was a.
Speaker 2:Well, it's not even just that. They would end like season finale of something on Sunday the following Sunday.
Speaker 1:Here comes another banger right yeah, whether it was a new show or a new season of something like.
Speaker 5:For a while HBO was, they had my trust.
Speaker 3:Oh yes, 100%. They were like. You're showing them my time. They don't need more. No.
Speaker 2:There's some decent stuff on max. Everyone wants to. How they got? No, I'm just saying what's the righteous.
Speaker 4:They don't have my trust.
Speaker 3:Yeah.
Speaker 6:Right, I don't know the righteous Jim, so this is one of the best things.
Speaker 2:I've ever seen on TV. That was pretty good.
Speaker 3:It's one of my favorite ever.
Speaker 5:It's Kenny.
Speaker 3:Powers as a preacher. It is Kenny Powers as a preacher which they found we all wanted to see since we saw Kenny. Absolutely, it's absolutely. Kenny Powers is my spirit, animal, dude, but I really like Adam, the Vien divine, the.
Speaker 5:Vien divine. He's so weird. I'm going to go with divine because he's a religious. I saw him at a wedding in Lafayette in rain in Lafayette. Oh, and my cousin's wedding.
Speaker 6:Really.
Speaker 5:Well, so they filmed. He was a, he was a big part of pitch perfect, and pitch perfect was filmed in Baton Rouge Mostly at LSU's campus.
Speaker 3:Yeah.
Speaker 5:And I think at the time they were filming pitch perfect too. So he was down the road and she got married in Brobridge and had the reception here. So they just drove down the road and came to visit her. She's nice, she lives in LA, but she's from here, so she came home for a wedding. Ally, he seems pretty cool.
Speaker 3:Very cool. They were very nice people ever since. What is?
Speaker 5:workaholics.
Speaker 3:Workaholics.
Speaker 6:Workaholics.
Speaker 3:It was so original and dumb and amazing.
Speaker 2:The grape van is one of the funniest things I've ever seen in my life Ever.
Speaker 3:The fact that they lived in that house. Yes, Just that. That's a whole nother level of what the? Because they did this show in this house, but then they lived in it because they didn't have any money. So the show the house that's in the show. They lived in that house.
Speaker 2:I did not All three of them, I mean think about it If we had cameras on Cleveland Street. That was the first of all. You wouldn't have been able to put that on Comedy Central.
Speaker 4:Yeah, that was their whole break up. We would have been on HBO, yeah.
Speaker 1:Real world, like pay-per-view probably, or it would be rated R or real world like y'all ain't.
Speaker 2:Nobody should watch this.
Speaker 1:It's like kind of like the R2, or like nobody, just nobody.
Speaker 2:Like old school Tivo back in the day when you go to set up the season pass and it asks you really yeah.
Speaker 5:Sure, all they would have done is use that the scare kid straight yeah.
Speaker 2:Don't do this, don't do this. Yeah, because that worked. Payah, that's it. Peace.