R2RO = Right To Remain Offended

R2RO Radio Show: Veterans Day Real Talk, Wild Rides from Cleveland to Colorado, and Unveiling the Legendary Chocolate Biscuits Recipe

Chris Logan Media Season 1 Episode 24

From the awkwardness of Veterans Day gratitude to the thrill of pulling off donuts in a Toyota TRD locker, we're covering plenty of ground on this episode. Remember when you'd get that blank stare when someone said "thank you for your service", and you're left wondering how to respond? Well, we're turning the tables by exploring a revolutionary concept - getting paid for our service through cash apps like Venmo. No, we're not talking a full-blown OnlyFans gig, but the idea of placing our Venmo usernames on car windows? That's a conversation starter! 

We'll also take you on a high-octane joy ride, reminiscing about our head-spinning adventures from the bustling streets of Cleveland to the Alpine Coasts of Colorado. We're sharing our wild tales of car romps that involve off-roading, doing donuts, and bobsledding in Jamaica. Yes, you heard right, bobsledding in Jamaica - because why not? 

Finally, we'll give you a virtual tour of the breathtaking West Village in Sugar Mopon, complete with a unique 35-hour speed limit and an impressive fitness center, Legends Z1. But hold on to your hats, we're not stopping there! We're concluding this ride with a deliciously heartwarming tale about Eric's dad and his legendary chocolate biscuits. And yes, we're sharing the secret recipe too - so get your notepads ready. Buckle up folks, because it's going to be an unforgettable journey!

Speaker 1:

Planet radio 106.7 the best rock on the planet. Welcome back to the R2RO.

Speaker 2:

Radio show. That's just a reminder. Thank you for who? For me, I don't care. If you all need a reminder, I need the reminder. So I'm just gonna think it out loud, or, like some people say, almost say it out loud.

Speaker 1:

Well, speaking of reminders, we just had veterans day to remind us to thank our veterans for their service. Yeah, we have two of them here, you don't have to thank me.

Speaker 2:

I did not, I don't. I didn't always know how to respond to that. I still.

Speaker 5:

I don't know. I still don't know how to respond. Most of the time I used to just kind of smile. Yeah, but it's so awkward.

Speaker 3:

It is kind of awkward for me anyway, because I can't know, I don't know, but I kind of I get where the tad.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, well, I was 20 when I joined the military. Like, the reasons I join have nothing to do really with what the military was. I was just joining the military.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, I didn't want to go to school anymore.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, like it wasn't it wasn't cuz I wanted to go and do this and do that and do all these things.

Speaker 4:

So now.

Speaker 5:

I am a combat veteran, I have done all those things, and so people say it and I'm like oh, thank you for your service.

Speaker 3:

and I'm like you wasn't trying to be all you could be no, I wasn't.

Speaker 5:

And not only that, like I definitely didn't.

Speaker 1:

What do you want?

Speaker 5:

like one tip toe into this but I definitely didn't do it for all these people.

Speaker 3:

Right, I was about to say what.

Speaker 5:

I'm not trying to be rude about it, but I did.

Speaker 3:

It's like hey lady I I get what you're saying.

Speaker 5:

I was thinking about you when I signed up, but on there in I assume I understand it on there and they probably don't even know what to say. And that is the thing to say. Just for Christmas, you say Merry Christmas for that. That's what you say, thank you for your service and I smile and that's well, a couple years ago.

Speaker 2:

So I struggled with it for a long time been out since oh six, even when I was in I struggled with it. But I've read some or some somewhere's. Or I was in a group chat with a bunch of vets and somebody made a recommendation to say Just respond with thank you for your support.

Speaker 5:

Oh, oh, that's really easy.

Speaker 2:

And so that's. I've been leaning on that but, today I got paraded around in the halls of a school because they did the Whatever veterans they service, my necessary event at school and they paraded us down the halls, which I'm really not about, but I did it cuz my daughter wanted me there and I got thank you for your service Like a million times. And I wasn't about to say thank you for your support I to 500 elementary school kids, so I just kind of smiled. When we have to walk them.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, yeah, this is. It's such a weird, I don't know.

Speaker 1:

They should make an app for all the veterans. A what An app? Oh, absolutely, they should make an app.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, like tip me here yeah exactly.

Speaker 1:

It should be like a go fund me kind of app, where they can just put out their phone every time somebody just thank you for the service, so give me a dollar. Choose your tipping level.

Speaker 5:

Thank you for your service. How much was it worth?

Speaker 3:

to you In 16 minutes. Somebody's also gonna make a clone of that app and then they're gonna be using it at the corner of college saloon and pin hook whenever they're trying to get their trip paid for.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, true that I'm in? Yeah, I mean, all you have to do is put the what's the cash app or your username, the cash app or Venmo, in the back of your car.

Speaker 5:

Oh, I'm the back of your car. Yeah, I've seen that, the Venmo. I'm going on a trip. Please give me money. Yeah, You've seen what.

Speaker 3:

Some of those money requests look like, cause you can send a message with that. And then, all of a sudden, now these people have your cash app and they just send you requests for some of the most horrible things you could possibly imagine.

Speaker 5:

Oh, yeah, you can ask for money too. Exactly Right. Oh yeah, that's true, you can request. I wonder how much money some of these people get.

Speaker 4:

I don't want to have to pay you some.

Speaker 5:

We was driving down to I-TIS the other day and I pulled up to one and it had.

Speaker 3:

Who were you making tariff in the truck with this time?

Speaker 5:

Well, it was me and Ally. We were going to Barbra's to hear her mom sing. There was this little terrible car in the left lane and I'm rolling up to it and I'm looking at this little car. It's got all kind of stuff on it. It was her only fans written across the back of glass of this maybe 1990 Toyota Corolla.

Speaker 2:

Well, maybe she's trying to buy something better, maybe, so hey look.

Speaker 5:

But I had never seen nobody's only fans on the back of their car.

Speaker 3:

That's new one on me. Get your money. Yeah, get paid.

Speaker 2:

Okay, so, veterans, put your Cash.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, why not? Put your only fan and your only fans, I mean just because at Brittany 335 is her birthday and she puts out hey, it's my birthday, Send me a dollar. I mean, hey, they can do it too.

Speaker 5:

I'm down, I'm in Next veteran's day.

Speaker 3:

I'm putting it up there, you want those old school scrolling signs from the 80s that you stick on the back. They used to put them in your back window.

Speaker 4:

And again.

Speaker 3:

we used to write terrible things, so you're just like yo, it's my cash app. Yo, that's my Venmo.

Speaker 2:

Everybody already knows that you're a vet by your license plate, so mine too I'll just be like, hey, you sent it here.

Speaker 3:

That's why I got one license plate. I got one of those license plates on my wall. I ain't no veteran.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but I mean, mine's actually on my car legally.

Speaker 4:

It's mine, I know what you're saying. I know what you're saying. It's mine.

Speaker 2:

I know what you're saying.

Speaker 5:

Anyways, thank all the veterans for their so on that note yeah, I do appreciate people actually saying thank you. It's just not something we most of us know what to respond or how to respond. I like what Craig said.

Speaker 1:

That's pretty. Thank you for your support.

Speaker 5:

Thank you for your support. I heard somebody say thank you for being someone that deserves what. Thank you for being someone that deserves.

Speaker 3:

A Klondike bar. What no? Somebody that deserves a Klondike bar.

Speaker 5:

Not quite. That's exactly what they said. Okay, no, thank you. It was something like thank you for being someone who deserves being served, something like that, but it seemed like such a long way to go around Definitely.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 5:

Right, so I like that one.

Speaker 2:

I definitely appreciate people who served and I served with some really cool people and I also appreciate the people who tell us thank you. I do too.

Speaker 3:

Now everybody says that I served with some great people. Not everybody was great, right? Well, I mean. Well, hey you never hear those people brought up oh yeah, they left out.

Speaker 1:

That's also when you watch on the news and somebody is something. He was such a nice, quiet guy, yeah Right.

Speaker 5:

And you know, half of the military is because they were forced by a court to join. Good boy. You could go to jail or you could join this military, and they're like I'm gonna go to the military.

Speaker 3:

And those are the fun soldiers, those are the fun soldiers.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 5:

Those are a lot of fun.

Speaker 2:

Still some cool people to serve with, by the way, absolutely.

Speaker 5:

Absolutely.

Speaker 1:

I want you to thank all of them for their service.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, thank you for your support.

Speaker 4:

It's the R2RO radio show.

Speaker 1:

Planet Radio 106.7, the best rock on the planet. On that last segment, matt was telling us I was gonna go fly around the clover leaf and had to turn buttons off and everything. Huh, that reminded me that time. Craig's brother over here at Craig's bar, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

That's why you don't let people borrow your stuff man, and you still haven't learned that.

Speaker 1:

You were still active duty right at the time, yeah yeah, I was still active duty.

Speaker 2:

I was borrowing his car to go visit people that was far away from me, so he had better gas mileage in his car and he decided he was coming to Lafayette in it. And then I got and what were you driving at the time? Mustang GT. It was nice dude.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, it was it was a very nice it was. It does a great donut whenever you put somebody in it that knows how to drive.

Speaker 2:

Yeah and you turn off the traction control. Yeah, it's beautiful. So I got a phone call and I get like I did this like on a Sunday night. Yeah, so I was at work, I was already back and at work and I get this phone call. Everybody's okay, we just did donuts On a Cleveland Street or something like that.

Speaker 3:

Bruh, bring me my car back, but he's a poet because he had to go do it in an intersection. I did it in my truck, yeah.

Speaker 1:

In front of the house. Yeah, that was a whole different night. Come home yeah, I decided to do donuts right in front of the house. House telephone pole.

Speaker 3:

House telephone pole.

Speaker 1:

That's all I saw.

Speaker 2:

Just beautiful. At least I didn't have any dents on mine. I'm sure I didn't even have any dents I survived.

Speaker 3:

I. That's one of the very few vehicles that left me the same exact way. I got it, oh wow.

Speaker 4:

What's wrong with that? My Toyota oh.

Speaker 3:

That's the reason I could do that donut. It had that positive lock and, dude, it's just donut machine Anywhere, probably stuck in traffic, and whip a donut and just keep going. It was stupid Actually. I bought one and I'm not gonna say where I was buying another one like that whenever I had Quiznos and I told them I want the one with the locker and they're like, all right, well, hey, we found one, Cool, doesn't have the locker. I said, well, can you put it in it? Toyota locker, toyota TRD locker. Yeah, we could do that. Okay, get it. About a week later, let me go. I drive and I'm turning. I just hear I'm like that sounds like the lockers on Hold on. I mean tanker with a tanker with it, bolts and fuses, play-play around Still.

Speaker 1:

I'm like it was staying locked.

Speaker 3:

No, they put a differential lock. I want it like one that you can't turn off. So I had positive area in all the time. That's terrible. Yes, it was. It's great for donuts, right, it's great if you're going off road. Terrible if you're actually trying to drive somewhere.

Speaker 2:

It was hilarious, you didn't have to do that the most thing. No you just dumped it? Yeah, I was. I would hope so. It was fun. I need to get another one. You should, you should. You should get two so we could race. Well, I mean, that's your when everything and isn't it the best answer?

Speaker 3:

It usually is like if I got one of those things I sent the other day the little jet pack army dudes that just fly and they just cruise. We are you ever bombed about your job. I wouldn't want one. No, what Two?

Speaker 1:

Absolutely Everything we've done. We've raised, yeah, and we went one time to Colorado and they have what they call an Alpine coast and all it is is it's a little chair that's like locked on a rail and the only device it has is it uses gravity, because you're up in the mountain and I break and there's a break, so you get to decide how, I guess how slow you go. And then maybe Matt decided we're going to like, well, we're going to do this thing with no break. Yeah, oh yeah, I'm going to let the world decide how fast.

Speaker 3:

I go.

Speaker 1:

We have to put his wife behind us because we can't run into the back of it.

Speaker 3:

Sorry, babe.

Speaker 2:

Lil would not let me hit the break on it. We did the same. Well, I don't know if it was the same one.

Speaker 5:

Is that on a rail Like it's a different one? We did Glenn was like a, like a roller coaster on a rail. Yeah, that's what we did. I did one like that, but it was. There was no rail, it was just concrete. Oh.

Speaker 2:

I've heard about like on a yes, a concrete so yes, and you can fly out.

Speaker 3:

So I definitely flew off. It was, I would hope so. Right, yeah, if you didn't, you weren't having enough fun.

Speaker 5:

Oh yeah, no, don't break and fly off.

Speaker 2:

Can you do it?

Speaker 3:

like down the bobsled thing? I think so, but I don't know, like what manner you have to go down. I don't know if you're, if there's wheels or how they do it, because I know, like when they don't have ski slopes in the summer you can do it, but it's these weird little tracks. Yeah, oh, yeah, yeah. And then that even changed after they invented some sort of turf? Cool when you can do it, and then you just do it in regular skis Cool runnings.

Speaker 1:

after Jamaica got a bobsled thing.

Speaker 3:

Exactly.

Speaker 5:

And feel the rhythm. Feel the rhythm.

Speaker 3:

Come on, yo it's pop, let's do it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, we're Lil would. Let me hit the break on the, which call it. She's full go all the time. Oh, dude like she can do it by herself, so she's sitting in between my legs with no sea build in that thing. I was on the, which dropped in and I was like, okay, I'm a whole gym with my legs. I got the break. You tell me if you want to slow down, otherwise we rolling.

Speaker 3:

Right, I mean, I hope you already knew what the answer to that was going to be.

Speaker 2:

I was pretty certain she wasn't going to hit. Tell me hit the break, but you never know. I mean at the time she's nine now and I was back when she was like seven or whatever, six or seven or eight. So I was like she might say slow down, right, she might get scared, coming around some of them corners and telling me to slow down. She never, not one time you know what she told me to stop doing, stop squeezing me so hard with your hands Because they scream.

Speaker 5:

And stop screaming. Dad, you're embarrassing me.

Speaker 2:

That's what I'm going to do next time I go down with her. It's your definition. No, I was squeezing her with my legs to keep her in the cart and she said stop squeezing me so hard. I'm like I don't want you to fly out. You won't, you won't, let me hit the break.

Speaker 1:

That was the one thing I think that was making me want to press the break was that those turns were so violent. I felt like I was going to rip my rib cage apart. Yeah.

Speaker 5:

So the thing can't fall off the rail.

Speaker 3:

No it's a little coaster, so don't say that.

Speaker 2:

So what would?

Speaker 5:

be, the reason to hit the brakes.

Speaker 4:

Because if you're a, punk.

Speaker 5:

If you're a punk, OK what are the other reasons?

Speaker 1:

So that's the breaks. Well, if you're a punk, that's the only reason you're just strapped in on your waist. I mean, dude, this is I mean you are on nothing Really. I mean this thing.

Speaker 3:

I think that cart probably weighs what 10 pounds.

Speaker 1:

Remember the old plastic the turtles? Well, the old desks we had in school with those hard plastic shells for a chair. Yeah, take one of those and just strap it to a set of wheels on a rail On a roller coaster, and then give you just a little handbrake and a lap belt. So when you took turns like 90 degree turns, almost it went and you followed Right. So if your core is not in impeccable shape, it's going to hurt.

Speaker 3:

Also, there's a little bit of slack in each one.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

So like when you hit to whenever it hooks to the right. You end up with that just kick like that and those wheels just lock in and do it. Just it's going.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it's going to go that way and you want to keep going.

Speaker 5:

Maybe they're going to put one in West Village Mellow.

Speaker 3:

I'd be great. What they call those are roller coasters, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Can't have a off-pine coaster with no mountain.

Speaker 1:

Oh man, it's good time.

Speaker 4:

It's the R2RO Radio Show.

Speaker 1:

Radio 106.7, the best rock on the planet. Welcome back to the R2RO show.

Speaker 2:

So radio show radio edit Got it. I had to program myself to be able to make sure.

Speaker 3:

I don't want to radio show you edit yourself, don't?

Speaker 2:

we have a button for that? We have a button for that and we have to use it for Eric every single time we record the radio show.

Speaker 3:

And you all thought it was going to be me.

Speaker 2:

I thought it was going to be me. Let's be real here, so. But I have to tell myself now we're on the radio. Ok, now let's go.

Speaker 1:

I know it wasn't. I think coming back from my last training with a old Chris over there in church print, coming back I noticed what's it called West Village, the Dignite building. Oh yeah, on Apollo, yeah yeah that's nice.

Speaker 5:

I think it's. I don't really know, but I think it's the same people as River Ranch and Sugar Mopon.

Speaker 1:

So, but it's the same idea.

Speaker 5:

It's the same idea, yeah. So it's not really a village. It's not a village, I mean it might I don't know, I would refer to a village. It might be. What's a village? A village is like Maurice. Huh, yeah, is that a village? Maurice is still considered a village. A thousand, is it a thousand people, some of our people? Popularity, it's got to be more than that. Oh well, these are going to be the fancy village people.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it was the Hold on a minute.

Speaker 3:

What kind of? I mean the cops going to be on one side, the Indians going to be on another side? The biker dude is on another side, that village.

Speaker 2:

It's the Scots version of the Youngsville Sugar Mopon, one of the River Ranch. Yes Settlements.

Speaker 5:

Yes, Houses, businesses, all these things all in one.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, they did, and thirty five hour speed limits.

Speaker 2:

Even on that little loop they got on. They just built right there. You got a 35. I don't know. Well, now I know what you're talking about. I don't know. But it's going to be like they got a new road that goes that's a post to go from over there by K and high around about over there by that village.

Speaker 3:

You know listening to him oh that's Apollo. Yes, oh, did they finish it yet, because last time I came down at it.

Speaker 5:

you got to. Well, the last time I went you got to make a little detour, so it doesn't touch, but you can see where they're going to connect the two. What is that?

Speaker 1:

Delos. Yeah, is that Delos.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, roundabout. Yeah, it doesn't touch that yet, but the road's there. Ok, it touches it.

Speaker 3:

You can't drive down, yeah, yeah, but say, you can drive down and she'd not have pumped.

Speaker 1:

Do they have some businesses already in West Village or planning to go? They do Some. What Businesses? Businesses I mean? I know, like you know, that was part of the Sugar Mill Pond. Yeah, you know they've had a lot go through there. Yeah, they get it and not make it.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, they got.

Speaker 1:

I saw a few banks you always got the Lafayette, something that puts out their second place in Sugar.

Speaker 5:

Mill Pond. Now they're gonna have some West Village. This is gonna be maybe more.

Speaker 3:

They're gonna try and do West Village next. What side is Legends gonna be on?

Speaker 4:

There's already a Legends there it's down just right across the tracks.

Speaker 2:

They beat you to it, man.

Speaker 3:

I mean, look, he had downtown, he bought the one right behind it, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, he already got. He's there already. He's right down the street. Love you, Jared West Village.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, they got a bunch of stuff I keep seeing popping up, but one of the things I see is they have a really nice fitness center that they built Inside that joint yes, inside the West Village Fitness Center.

Speaker 3:

What are they fitness in?

Speaker 2:

Oh, that's like Sugar Mill Pond. They got a fitness center in there too. They just put a pool in. That is correct.

Speaker 5:

It's like Sugar Mill Ponds. I did both of them, I looked at both of them, so it is pretty similar. The whole thing seems like it's really close, but you know how, when you maybe build a house and then you build another one, but you get a little bit better. Yeah, and then you build another one and you start figuring things out. All right, so this is gonna be West Village. They then. I think they figured some things out. I would hope so.

Speaker 5:

And then this Apollo Road touches the roundabout at I don't know I-10,. What is that? Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

By churches and all that. Yeah, exactly A roundabout on I-10. No, it is the exit.

Speaker 3:

Oh, it'd be so much fun. A giant roundabout on an estate.

Speaker 2:

On an estate. Yeah, but that's a giant roundabout right on the exit of an estate, so you could just pfft, it's a pretty, it's.

Speaker 5:

What is that? Is that Billy's Buddha? I don't know, I don't know what it is.

Speaker 3:

Billy's Buddha is right there.

Speaker 2:

There's a church's chicken. There's a Popeye's.

Speaker 3:

Legend's Z1. Legend's Z1 on an estate.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, the little cloverleaf we have by I-49 is the closest thing we got.

Speaker 3:

Oh yeah, yeah, it'd be fun to drift?

Speaker 5:

Yeah, it would be, just hang it out, smoke it up. It's there it is. I mean we can go.

Speaker 3:

Just go, ladies and gentlemen, we gotta shut this show down.

Speaker 2:

We got something to do, we have things to do On a wet road, let's go you know how to drift, I'll just go watch.

Speaker 3:

Well, I mean, you gotta turn off a couple things on that truck first before you can do any of that.

Speaker 5:

And it's raining. So yeah, if there was ever a time we could do it, that's right.

Speaker 3:

And if I go off the road, we're four-wheel driving. I got a heavy right foot, so let's go.

Speaker 1:

Very well Now. I'll tell that story when we come back right after this.

Speaker 4:

It's the R2RO radio show.

Speaker 1:

Planet Radio 106.7, the best rock on the planet. Welcome back to the R2RO show.

Speaker 3:

Did somebody say rocks?

Speaker 1:

That's Matt Matt's back again. Man, I was looking at this article the other day I think I sent it to y'all but it was like all this stuff from do you remember these things from your grandma's house, and it just had me remembering some of the old stuff Candy dishes With, like those weirdly like the wrapper on it that made it look like it was a strawberry but it wasn't strawberry flavored for some reason, the only time you ate that was when everything else had been eaten.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I like them things.

Speaker 5:

Them little strawberry looking weird. Things with the green topping, you open them up.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I thought it was a watermelon. Well, don't they have like a it might be. First of all, how you know what color it is.

Speaker 5:

I said a color. Yeah, I don't know what I said, right, oh, green. I can see red and green. I'm red green colorblind. That doesn't probably mean what you think it does.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, I mean can't see that, but I can yeah.

Speaker 2:

I'm red, green colorblind, but that's the colors I can see. Okay, Go ahead, hey soy put the candy, because we're about to go down a rabbit hole.

Speaker 5:

Wait, but that candy had a little wrapper on the inside too, right?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah, like a little white clear one. Yeah, some way yeah.

Speaker 5:

It was terrible, it was dope. Yeah, I saw me pick a different word. Yeah, no dump button, chris. No dump button here. Oh, I like them things. But you were talking about the candy dish that, you're talking about the bowl of candy. That was all hard candy stuck together, all touching each other with no wrappers.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, because it's South Louisiana. I've seen those. Those weren't at my grandmother's house, but I've seen those.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, they were like cough drops kind of yeah.

Speaker 2:

But you can't have that in South.

Speaker 5:

Louisiana. No, it's too hot. You got to pry them apart First of all, everybody done touched them all up, I think at those chalky mints.

Speaker 3:

That would be almost like Valentine's Day oh yeah, but those are like people that make Valentine's Day. They would have them all unwrapped too. Yeah, just reach out out of the bowl.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that was terrible. Yeah, the one that I saw on there too was the alarm clock, the ones with the big old red numbers on them Mm, the what yeah?

Speaker 3:

Alarm clock. The big like brown ones with the bells on top. It was made out of wood. Yeah, oh, wait what?

Speaker 2:

I had more, I see, my quotes, those things, those are like that.

Speaker 5:

You can't do air quotes on the radio, yeah, I mean he can.

Speaker 3:

I just did I remember those things.

Speaker 1:

That was like the old Nokia phone, like I had that thing forever.

Speaker 3:

And I didn't hate it.

Speaker 1:

It never broke.

Speaker 3:

I didn't hate it because I would put it across the room from my bed and when I rolled over to middle night like, and I didn't have to slap my phone and blind myself, Right.

Speaker 1:

But that I can still hear that alarm coming out of that thing. Oh, my poor roommate in college. I'm sorry, Kevin, but he had to hear a lot more than I did because I slept through it.

Speaker 3:

He was walking and smashed that thing with a bat.

Speaker 1:

And then I saw in there too and I remember, but I remember the TVs that were like its own piece of furniture.

Speaker 5:

Oh yeah, yeah, we had one forever. Oh yeah, big giant.

Speaker 1:

We didn't have cable.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, and we didn't have nothing. It just like a three to three channels.

Speaker 3:

People use them to take all the guts out and they put aquariums in them. Now, now.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, oh, ok, that's cool.

Speaker 1:

Oh, so it's probably probably worth like all kind of money now, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3:

I mean, come on, it doesn't take a whole lot of skill to do that. I wouldn't think it's. Just because it's rare Don't mean it's expensive. It's a very good point, tell some people that that are selling things to.

Speaker 2:

They have a like a bar stool chair that's also doubles as a step stool.

Speaker 3:

Like I actually like folds out.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I actually have one.

Speaker 1:

There was like a high chair too.

Speaker 2:

You have one, now, I have one.

Speaker 3:

I have one, wait, like you have like one made now or you got one from your grandmother.

Speaker 2:

I have one from someone's grandmother but it wasn't mine. But yeah, I have it. It said, it said the shop. It said the LDP. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And the one in this picture is in way better shape. Maybe I should just paint it.

Speaker 3:

I mean, my grandmother had multiple sewing machines. Oh, so yeah. She had the old school womb that you would work with your foot. Yeah, spend that. She had one of those and one that did some certain kind of stuff and one that did some certain other kind of stuff, but I don't know what the Hold the phone.

Speaker 5:

They have these little wicker things that go under the plates, oh yeah. Under the paper plates under the paper plates. So I used to do that whenever I spent.

Speaker 1:

a lot of plates were so flusy.

Speaker 5:

You had spent a lot of time in Holly Beach, so every time we would cook, they would all use paper plates and we'd have these things that you put underneath it. That was exactly that.

Speaker 1:

I remember those two. You could buy the cheap paper plates in his wicker frame.

Speaker 2:

Yes, oh yes.

Speaker 1:

And then we'd exactly have but the kids would get them dirty anyway. You just have to clean that they didn't just use a dish. They didn't have to chime it yet.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 5:

And you could throw it away after them. Chocolate biscuits. The paper plate.

Speaker 3:

And we had to talk about chocolate Because I was talking about Holly Beach and the little plates.

Speaker 5:

I dig it. That's where the chocolate fried biscuits used to go.

Speaker 3:

Danny Seymour, please come to town.

Speaker 5:

We need to make me chocolate biscuits.

Speaker 3:

This is an emergency.

Speaker 2:

Did you know that? The first time I had them, so I'm getting my first one. I'm like, oh, how you do this. So he's like, well, you could put it pour it on it, or you could. Take the biscuit throw it in the pot and kind of just like roll around and then get it off. So I got all right cool.

Speaker 1:

Well, so far listeners that Eric's dad will cook breakfast and takes biscuit dough, stretches it out a little bit and then fries it yeah, and then he's concocted this chocolate sauce so that was the instructions he was giving you right.

Speaker 2:

Well, I was asking on how to.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, how do you eat this fried biscuit with this chocolate sauce?

Speaker 2:

So I'm like asking him what's the right way to do this. So he's like there's really no wrong way to do it.

Speaker 3:

You kind of managed like really big projects and you needed some instructions.

Speaker 2:

Well, man, I don't want to. He was asking like the custom like what's the custom?

Speaker 5:

Yeah, I don't want to disrespect the cook Like if you would put this on my plate, what would you do?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you want to know what I did.

Speaker 2:

Two options he's and then said there's, there's no wrong way. And I chose one that was I thought was cleaner, and scooped it out with a spoon over the biscuit and he said, well, that was the wrong way.

Speaker 3:

Hey, let me. Let me fill you in on something. No matter what way you would have done, he told me that he was going to be the wrong way.

Speaker 1:

Brother, so he told me he told me my way was the wrong way to, and you dumped it in the pot yeah he told me I was awesome.

Speaker 5:

I mean, I saw chocolate, I had a biscuit in my hand on straight for the pot yeah it was good, that's what we've always done and just dropped it in there, flip it and then Then take it. Yeah, just don't. I did my second one again.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it was much better. I don't know why it's much better.

Speaker 5:

You can put that chocolate on some white bread too. Just regular white, straight up white bread. It works out. It's super soggy and it falls apart, but it works out. No, let's do it.

Speaker 2:

Can we get the recipe?

Speaker 5:

Oh, yeah, we can I have it? I know how to make.

Speaker 1:

Oh well, I pray.

Speaker 5:

I mean, he taught me some things in life.

Speaker 1:

We're going to try this for Thanksgiving and report back to the audience.

Speaker 5:

Oh, we could definitely All right yeah.

Speaker 1:

True, All right when we come back.