Tuttle & Kline
Award winning morning radio partners for 25+ years, Tim Tuttle and Kevin Kline share stories and insights through organic conversation and natural humor.
Tuttle & Kline
Ep #38: Neighborhood Talks and Halloween Adventures with a Twist
Have you ever wondered why society is so fascinated with betting on everything, even the length of a podcast episode? Join us as we share personal updates, including Tuttle's adventurous hair journey and Kline's half marathon escapades, while navigating the quirks of our daily lives. We offer a humorous take on Halloween traditions, the peculiarities of neighborhood dynamics, and the unexpected role Tuttle's taken on as the neighborhood's relationship advisor, all with a playful twist.
As we roll through this episode, we touch on the surprising longevity of hurricane season and share our reflections on the legacy of Quincy Jones following his passing. Dive into our candid conversation about a public confrontation involving Jason Kelce. We even venture into a sci-fi-like discussion on dream communication technology that sounds straight out of a real-life Inception, all while pondering the ongoing political divisions shaping our world.
Finally, we tackle topics ranging from data privacy to our own youthful indiscretions with a blend of humor and introspection. Hear tales of moped thefts and bridge climbing as we laugh at our past misadventures. Whether recounting personal stories or engaging in thought-provoking societal discussions, this episode is full of lively banter and insightful reflections, promising both laughs and food for thought.
Welcome to the Tuttle Kline Show.
Speaker 2:Kevin Kline Tuttle. What's going on, Tuttle? Not much. Can you hear me, man? Oh, I can hear you and I can see you.
Speaker 3:Unfortunate for you.
Speaker 2:Hair's getting longer, buddy.
Speaker 3:It's in that awkward stage right now that, like you know, I'm about two months off of being where I want to be Like. It looks good, Thank you. Not bad for an old man, I guess. Yeah, it's a few of the ladies like it.
Speaker 2:I'm sure they do, I'm sure they do.
Speaker 3:Yeah, how are you? How are you man?
Speaker 2:Oh, real good, Real good. Yeah, had a fun weekend and see what else Got to man, just the next five to six weeks are just so busy for us. It's unbelievable.
Speaker 3:Okay, All right. Well, you know. If you got to call off the podcast, I understand.
Speaker 2:No, no, no, I mean, monday is always set. We're all good, bro, okay.
Speaker 3:All right, yeah, usually this is where you know she, she or he lets me down.
Speaker 2:No.
Speaker 3:Says hey, I'm going to go check out other horizons. It's been real yeah.
Speaker 2:No, it's just, this time of year is always busy for Snowdrop and then with the hockey announcing, so it's all good man. No, it's just, this time of year is always busy for snowdrop and then with the hockey announcing, so it's all good man. You know me, I need to keep busy.
Speaker 3:There you go, buddy. Yeah, you sound better. You've been sick. You were sick for weeks, and now you sound a little bit better.
Speaker 2:I do sound a lot better. I ended up running a half marathon yesterday with my brother-in-law and I think that really kind of cleared out the sinuses, if you can believe it nice.
Speaker 3:So you've got a. You've got a, uh, you got a family member that can hang with you in terms of running, huh yeah, he well, uh, he has done a half marathon every week for the last seven years holy shit. Yeah, every week he does a 13 point. What is it? It One.
Speaker 2:Yeah, 13.1 mile, yep, wow, yeah, he thought about, thought about ending the streak earlier this year and he's like nah, you know what I can make time.
Speaker 3:Dude, that's crazy man.
Speaker 2:I know.
Speaker 3:Do they have to be the organized ones where you know the streets get shut down and you piss off traffic, or can he just riff one?
Speaker 2:No, he just. He usually just riffs one. Yeah, he has a 13.1 mile route from the house that he runs at least once a week.
Speaker 3:He's my favorite kind of runner, then he's not imposing his will on the rest of the public like the rest of you fuckering runners can do.
Speaker 2:Oh, you would have loved the Springfield Marathon yesterday. Then, Timmy, because they don't close the streets down.
Speaker 3:They only close.
Speaker 2:Would have loved the springfield uh marathon yesterday, then timmy, because they don't close the streets down they only closed half of the street. I get it, that's how it should be.
Speaker 3:And if you take a runner out, hey, there's plenty more. You know, don't worry, they just regenerate all the time. They're like fucking chinese people yep, oh, we lost a chinese guy. Well, you know what? There's 84 being born every second kev, uh, this is, uh, this is a crazy time to be alive. First off, we get when we're recording this, we're the day before the uh, yep, and I am now? I, I can't even look at social media or anything like that. Just comply, I just can't. It's just, people are just way too emotional, way too over the top. Just relax, okay, everybody. Breathe in through the nose and out through the mouth and relax.
Speaker 2:Here's the thing too. Don't look at the polls, okay, because they don't know jack shit. All right, one poll will tell you Kamala is going to win in a landslide Very next poll. Trump's going to win in a landslide Very next poll. It is so. Even every vote counts. I'm just going to win on the landslide Very next poll.
Speaker 3:It is so. Even every vote counts. Come on, make up your freaking mind If you really want to look. Look at what the gambling sites have, because you know that those are people who put large amounts of money on bets. Those, those, that's the real smart money and that's you know. They don't. They don't have agendas other than making money. They don't. They don't have narratives or anything like that. They have to put a line out that is legit and smart. Money has always been smart. That way they know.
Speaker 2:What does it say about our society that we have to put odds and wager on the election? I don't ever remember that, up until now.
Speaker 3:Of course, Now everything's gambling Cav.
Speaker 2:Right yeah.
Speaker 3:Yeah, there's people who actually have over and unders on how long you and I's podcast is going to be.
Speaker 2:Oh, Do you mean the time of each episode or how long it's going to last?
Speaker 3:Yeah, this is a minute and seven Today's is a minute seven the over and under. And you, yeah, this is a minute and seven today's is a minute seven the over and under. And you know, legit, there's a. There's a couple of degenerate gamblers that live right down the road from me that listen to our podcast every week and they put a twenty dollar bet. You know, one of them will throw out the over and under and people he'll take the action on it wow and there's like five or six of them put a $20 bet down Over and under.
Speaker 3:Today I heard he texted me is an hour and seven minutes. He said if I can sway it slightly towards the over, that would be good. I said no.
Speaker 2:I don't want to hear yeah, that's insider information, you can't do that.
Speaker 3:I can't. No, no, no. This podcast will end on its natural ending. I'm not going to do any of that. I can't be involved in that calf.
Speaker 2:No, no, we can't, yeah. It's funny, though, that somebody would bet on that.
Speaker 3:Wow, oh yeah, there's the calf. There's action on everything Speaking of action and betting and football and all that stuff there is. There was something happening last week. Right outside of my door we have a luxury pool, a big, huge resort-style pool, and it has four huge grills that people come over and do their grilling. And I'm out there and I'm grilling about six huge breast chicken breasts, you know, for my meal prep, uh-huh. And suddenly, you know I'm just minding my own business and suddenly I hear some chatter about NFL quarterbacks going on. You know there's some anger because you know Andy Dalton replacing Bryce Young, which was just for a few weeks, bryce Young is back in the saddle.
Speaker 2:Mm-hmm, he actually won over the weekend.
Speaker 3:Yeah, and Joe Flacco replacing Anthony Richardson, which started this weekend. It's causing tension at the grills why Some of the brothers are like, hey, man, that's racist. You got a white quarterback replacing young, you know, black quarterbacks not giving them the proper chance. And you know, after listening to a little diatribe for a few minutes, I finally had to step in. You know me, Cam, I got to step in.
Speaker 2:Every once in a while you do yeah.
Speaker 3:And I was like, hey look, guys, it's the only color that's being played out here is green. Exactly, it's cash. Nobody gives a shit if the quarterback is black or white or anything like that. It's all about money. And if you look at it, today's modern young quarterback, they've had so much training. I mean they have this year Everything's year round. Now, kev, you know that you watched your niece, audrey Tuttle, go year round and play volleyball at a very young age, at about 10 years old, absolutely so everything's year round. They got the seven on seven. They got the Manning quarterback camps, they've got. You know Trent Dilfer will look at your kid for a fee and work him out. You know so. And they get. You know most of them get huge reps. You know five years and then with the COVID year, some of them six years in college, with all the starts. They know pretty quickly, whereas in the past you had to wait a few years. They know pretty quickly on whether the quarterback has it or not.
Speaker 2:Sure, oh, they're not going to waste a lot of money on somebody who doesn't have it. There's just way too much green on the line. You know, anthony Richardson isn't the quarterback right now because Anthony Richardson quit.
Speaker 3:Yeah, here's the thing, bryce Young, he did. He lost confidence and was starting to have a regression. Anthony Richardson, a regression when you're not getting better as a young quarterback and you're regressing, that costs a lot of money.
Speaker 2:Did you hear what Tom Brady said yesterday in his call of the Packers and Lions game?
Speaker 3:No, what did he say?
Speaker 2:It was kind of a take on Jordan Love. He said the reason that you're not seeing these young quarterbacks excel as fast as young quarterbacks used to is because of the transfer portal. He says they're not used to playing in a system, they're used to being all they are is an athlete that bounces from school to school to school and they're not getting systematic training. And so he said, that's why they're not succeeding at such a rapid pace anymore.
Speaker 3:Exactly, exactly. And you know who knows that? Owners? Well, the Mannings. I mean Arch Manning. He can play anywhere, but his uncles and his dad and his granddad know that he is under the tutelage of Sarkeesian I think that's the Texas coach's name Sarkeesian.
Speaker 2:Yeah, Steve Sarkeesian, yeah.
Speaker 3:He is one of the best offensive minds in all of NCAA football, then they want him there. He's in no hurry to go to the NFL Absolutely not.
Speaker 2:He's making tons of money on NIL right now.
Speaker 3:Kev. He's making like $6 or $7 million a year. Yeah, and he's not getting hit and he making like six or seven million a year yeah, what's the matter? And he's not getting hit and he's not getting hit and he's under an offensive mind and what he's gonna do is he's gonna start beginning next year, probably, do two, maybe even three years as the texas quarterback and then mosey into the nfl with a nice 45 to 50 game started under his belt.
Speaker 2:Did you watch any college football over the weekend? Did you see the new Fansville commercial for Dr Pepper?
Speaker 3:I did not. I love those.
Speaker 2:It's great Quinn Ewers is in this one Holy smoke state one and the fans are going wild. Deputy Ewers, quick call for backup Backup. Yes, Deputy Quinn Ewers, we don't need any backup. I got this Call backup Backup. Yes, Deputy Quinn, yours, we don't need any backup.
Speaker 1:I got this Call backup. I'm sorry. Did you say you wanted a Dr Pepper? I said backup. Look, we don't need any backup, even if he has great hair and famous relatives.
Speaker 3:That's so awesome.
Speaker 2:That was hilarious man. I loved it.
Speaker 3:Isn't it crazy that a current NCAA quarterback is in a big time commercial? Now I know, yeah, it's so crazy, but yeah, I mean, you know and that and they started to like understand they calmed down a little bit.
Speaker 3:You know, yeah, yeah, I and I, and I kind of just sealed it. I was like, hey man, richardson and young, they were regressing. Is it going to be the end of their careers? No, as we've seen, bryce young is already back. Richardson will get another shot. I don't know when he would get another shot. I mean, he, he, is it going to be the end of their careers? No, as we've seen, bryce Young is already back. Richardson will get another shot. I don't know when He'll get another shot. I mean, he shouldn't have done the tap out, I quit. You know, I was tired. That was one of the worst things that any football player can ever say. If that's actually the truth, he should have made some shit up, right? Yeah, you could always say, hey man, I felt a burn on the hammy. Okay, dak, that's all you have to do. It's the same thing. If you look at these owners and then these head coaches who, hey man, they're under the gun.
Speaker 2:Oh, Dennis Allen's out from the Saints.
Speaker 3:He started 2-0 this year, lost the last seven in a row. He's gone. Yeah, I mean, just like that it can happen. So they don't. They don't have time to groom and hold the hands, uh, of a young quarterback. I don't care where you were drafted, I don't care if it was number one overall or it was somewhere in the first round and you were supposed to be the savior. And you know you were a five star and in high school, and you know you were a can't miss by mel kuiper.
Speaker 3:You know it does not matter not at all you know, if you're regressing, you're gone, it's kev, it's like. It's like you get a new girlfriend right okay you're 10 months in with this girlfriend. Things have been getting worse and worse over the past few months. You got to pull the fucking chute, man.
Speaker 2:Take a break or end it.
Speaker 3:Exactly and, and and and. Kevin, they're not ending it with these quarterbacks, they're just taking a little break. Yeah, you know, there's there's this, there's this other older girl who's, you know, got some experience and knows how to handle the relationship. We're going to, we're going to, we're going to let her come in a little bit. I'll go fuck her for a little bit and then, you know, you're, you're hot, you're cute, you know you're a good looking girl. You know you just got to get some shit, you know, tweaked and taken care of, and but once you, once you do, we'll be ready to fuck you.
Speaker 2:You know, that's the way it goes.
Speaker 3:And that's all it is. Man, just everybody. Relax, don't be brainwashed by the axes of evil who want us divided. And you know, don't be brainwashed. You know we're all in this together against those evil fuckers. There you go, know, I know yeah kevin I I how was uh trick-or-treating in missouri well, we live in a cul-de-sac, so we don't usually get a lot of kids.
Speaker 2:But I'll tell you what we got more kids this year than we ever have, uh, in the past I'm gonna say eight years, uh. But here was the weirdest thing, tim. When we were growing up, we walked everywhere. These parents drop the kids off and drive them street to street.
Speaker 3:Yeah, Well, you have to, because they let they let all the crazy psychopaths out now.
Speaker 2:Well, no, the parents can walk with them. You know, like our parents used to do that when we were young, these parents drive their kids. Park the car at the end of the street, walk the street and then get in the car and drive over to the next street. Park the car.
Speaker 3:Now the reason why they're in the car cab first off their vehicles. It looks like a standard minivan, you know, but but it's armored and they have the machine guns ready to go. It just looks like dad has a cute little mask on he's waiting for his kids to do his trick or treat, but below the windshield, I assure you, there's an AR. But yeah, I, you know, I noticed it too, that, like this, this was the all time record trick or treat year in this neighborhood. I've been in this neighborhood now, for I think this is my fifth or sixth Halloween.
Speaker 3:And it was a big one, huh oh it was huge and there was a guy you know that was complaining about it, a guy that lives down the street complaining about it. He's just like I'm trying to watch Thursday night football every 20 seconds it used to be, you know, once every five minutes, you know six, seven minutes, I mean he's like every 20 seconds doorbell rings. I got to get up out of my chair and he was like complaining. He's like I want to opt out of this Halloween thing. Turn your light off, kev this. And he ended up being kidding. But he's like hey, I think I'm going to go register as a sex offender.
Speaker 2:Oh my.
Speaker 3:God no. And I was like dude, you can't do that. You're a constable Bad career move, you know, just really bad. Just shut off your fucking porch light, you'll be fine.
Speaker 2:Yeah, that's a bad life move. Halloween's one night, that's a better. That's the life, buddy.
Speaker 3:That's a life buddy, that's forever. I guess his thought was, since he's not for real, he's not, he can get it taken off there anytime he wants, because he could say a friend was playing a joke on him or whatever. There's no judgment of me being an offender, that's what his thinking was?
Speaker 2:Well, bad thinking.
Speaker 3:I was like you don't want that in your life. Well, bad thinking, I was like you don't want that in your life, man, hell, no, you don't want that in your life. But that's what I do. You know, when I get down to the last few that I want, you know when I get for me calf, when I'm down to three reese's peanut butter cups in my little bowl, a couple twix and a kit kat, I shut the light off because I'm like, hey, man, that's, that's tim tax, right there. Yeah, yeah, I was like, hey, I know it's only 8, 30, but you know it's a school night, kids it's a school night.
Speaker 3:You should be home anyway. You don't want to have too much sugar, yeah, but this guy who's my neighbor? I mean I've got some funny neighbors, cav, it sounds like you do. Yeah, I got one neighbor who's got in a new relationship. Of course, you know, as I've told you, now I'm the neighborhood air.
Speaker 2:Yeah, you're the sounding board now.
Speaker 3:I'm the sound. I don't know how that happened. I've never really been social in my life, I've always been a social idiot. But I guess I'm easy to approach since I have a podcast.
Speaker 2:There you go and you're out grilling all the time.
Speaker 3:Yeah, and I'm grilling chicken. I take down more chicken than a guy named Tyson in Arkansas. But I got a neighbor. He's a little bit bummed out. He's got a new girlfriend and his new girlfriend talks to his ex every single day still.
Speaker 2:Were they previously friends?
Speaker 3:Here's the deal. They're quote're quote, unquote co-parenting a dog together oh, okay so he has to put up with that.
Speaker 3:He's just really bummed. I mean, you know he she, you know he's in the other room listening to her talk to the ex and sometimes he has to. Sometimes he'll like, actually drop her off at her ex's place and he waits out in the car while she goes inside for like 20 to 30 minutes, to quote unquote visit the dog. I'm like, yeah, that's just enough time to visit the dog and take a load from the ex. Wow, you know that's what I said. I said, man, you got to put a stop to that. That's gonna drive you crazy. That's gonna drive you. You know why don't you buy her a dog or something?
Speaker 2:yeah, but it you've bonded with that dog, you've spent time with that dog, so I I understand that, but yeah, that's weird man well, yeah, I was.
Speaker 3:I was just trying to talk him down. He was like hey, man, I'm thinking of killing that dog oh shit. I'm like no, no, no, no, no, no woman is worth taking out. An innocent pet buddy, there's plenty out there, trust me, all right, relax, relax, just breathe, all right yeah, when the truth comes out, that ain't gonna work bro and then he, you know he's telling me about how hooked he is and everything like yeah, he really is into her and stuff like that.
Speaker 3:I'm like that. Then you just a either put up with it and hope and pray you know that she's not slobbing the knob for the 20 minutes of the visiting time and you know, actually visiting dog for 10 minutes. I would check her knees for you know stains damn, I'm no help. No, I'm no help. I would check her knees for you know stains Damn, I'm no help. No, I'm no help.
Speaker 2:I probably put some things in his head that I shouldn't have put in his head, but he's still coming to you for advice, right it's?
Speaker 3:probably totally innocent, kev. She's probably just there and with the dog, and you know, of course that's what she says. She says she can't stand her ex.
Speaker 2:Uh-huh.
Speaker 3:But they had some kind of intricate, sophisticated mechanism for deciding who's going to keep the dog, and he won.
Speaker 2:Give the dog a week at her place, a week at the ex's place. A week at her place, a week at the ex's place Boom.
Speaker 3:You've eliminated the issue. Well, yeah, yeah, she lives in an apartment okay, it's a big dog oh, is it okay.
Speaker 2:All right, that that's the issue.
Speaker 3:That's the issue, okay that's the problem, and you know, there you go yeah so he's just gonna have to ride that one out. I kept to me, I, I, I think he buys her a, a nice birthday present. You know a nice. You know apartment size dog, a fun size, uh-huh, you know a little beagle or what? What are the little uh? What are the little makeup puffs that you like?
Speaker 3:what's called our pomeranian yeah, pomeranian, pomeranian or a shih tzu or something like that. Yeah, I mean, it's always fun telling people, you know, when they ask you know, hey, what kind of dog do you have? I have a Shih Tzu, you know.
Speaker 2:That's right.
Speaker 3:And he said he doesn't want to do that because he doesn't want to be the guy walking around the neighborhood with a Shih Tzu. I'm like hey, hey, hey, hey, you Like, hey, hey, hey, hey, you know who you are. Okay, pal, Of course you know who you are. You don't care. You don't care about what kind of dog it is. All dogs have good souls. They're beautiful animals, all right.
Speaker 3:I mean, I would have thought, that he wouldn't want to do that because when the relationship eventually goes south, she's going to want to come over all the time to pet the dog, exactly, oh no oh, how about that? Yeah, I didn't that that's. That's one that I should. Okay, I'm, I'm gonna note that one, kevin klein yeah, there you go uh, you've been paying attention, I don't pay attention.
Speaker 3:Uh, for those unaware, I'm, uh, not on social media anymore. I don't watch any news, I rarely, I mean, I put my phone down for hours and hours at a time. Now, so, since, since I'm almost completely off the grid now, kevin Klein's going to tell me the things that have happened over the past week since our last podcast, that he thinks that I should know, or I would want to know, what's going on, man, Well, this isn't happening.
Speaker 2:This hasn't happened, but it is going to happen. Hurricane Raphael looks like it's going to form within the next two or three days and if you look at the projections, the models which I have right up here on the screen right now, by next Saturday you guys will know if you're going to get hit or not.
Speaker 3:Shit. Yeah, I mean that's after the election. Why are they wanting to throw some hurricanes in Houston after the election, those weather controllers?
Speaker 2:They say there's going to be three more storms before the end of hurricane season and Rafael looks like it could have the time to build to a big one and also the warm waters to build to a big one. You can see that it's going to skirt the. If the models hold true, it's going to skirt the uh. If the models hold true, it's going to skirt the western edge of florida and then go right over towards uh, the texas gulf, texas coast dude.
Speaker 3:See, I thought hurricane season ended november first. I mean, they're, they're, they're beyond their means. Now what do they do? Somebody needs to go out to the gulf of galilee. Hey, we're already into november. Cut the shit. Now. It's typhoon time. Go hit Asia.
Speaker 2:There you go. That's right. So that's the big thing that you guys need to be paying attention to and looking out for. Let's see Quincy Jones died yesterday. Did you know that?
Speaker 3:What? Oh, I did not know that.
Speaker 2:Yeah, ninety one years old. He was famous for producing Michael Jackson, frank Sinatra, aretha Franklin.
Speaker 3:Yeah, yeah, His his biopic or whatever is documentary on on Netflix or a really good one.
Speaker 2:Is it?
Speaker 3:Yeah, and I've always really liked his daughter, rashida.
Speaker 2:Yeah, she's great.
Speaker 3:She was great in the office and she's she's really like seems like a really cool woman.
Speaker 2:Uh, let's see what else. What else? Jason Kelsey is kind of under fire, but kind of not under fire.
Speaker 3:What did Jason do?
Speaker 2:Well, he was at the Penn State Ohio State game as part of the ESPN pregame and he was walking to the booth and some fan college kid yells out a homophobic slur against Travis Kelsey. Jason took exception, went over to the kid, grabbed his phone, slammed it down to the ground and said now who's the fucking? You know.
Speaker 1:Kelsey, Kelsey, Kelsey.
Speaker 3:Hey, kelsey, kelsey, can I get a fist bump?
Speaker 1:Kelsey, can I get a fist bump? Can I get a fist bump? Kelsey? Can I get a fist bump?
Speaker 3:Oh, that's not good.
Speaker 2:They have it on tape. Well, they're not going to press charges. The authorities have already come't know they're not going to press charges. The authorities have already come forward and said they're not going to press charges.
Speaker 3:But ESPN is not saying if he's going to be suspended or what. Well, if he used the, the homophobic slur, I mean ESPN. They have to get rid of him.
Speaker 2:Yeah, he did use the homophobic slur that they have that on tape. Here's the homophobic slur that they have that on tape.
Speaker 3:Oh yeah, he's not going to last Cause you know they're they're, they're about as woke as they can get over there at Disney ESPN. There's no way he can survive that. If he does, I'd be shocked. I mean, he may, he may be, he may have that Teflon thing that that Barkley and and and South Park has. Yeah, you should not let that bother him. Yeah, just keep walking, because now the entire world knows you can be gotten.
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 3:Words will get you.
Speaker 2:And he's walking to the set and he's carrying a 30-pack of beer.
Speaker 3:There you go. He was, and Kev, you know, he's got a lot of cheese. Uh-huh, he's got a lot of money-huh, he's got a lot of money, yeah. And now that people know that he can be gotten, I mean I, if I take a punch from jason kelsey, yeah, it'll probably sting for a few days and, who knows, I may even have to go to the hospital, but I'm gonna get 27 million well, apparently he's already settled with the kid. Oh, okay, so he already had to write a check.
Speaker 2:Yeah. So I don't know if he just bought him a new phone or if he actually paid him X amount of money, but yeah, apparently he's already settled with the kid. So here's the other thing that is very interesting that came out and don't ask me like all the specifics on it because it's so far over my head, but there is a new startup company in california called rem space. Rem space has nothing to do with the band. It has everything to do with your sleep. They have successfully communicated between two people while they were in rem sleep two people hit.
Speaker 3:Via their dreams, they communicated so the whole dreamscape inception thing is becoming a reality.
Speaker 2:It is a reality. They said that REM space and that's exactly where they got the idea was from inception. They've been working on this for five years. They say this is literally going to change human communication from here on out, and it's going to happen so fast you won't even believe it.
Speaker 3:Hey Kev.
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 3:And I'm just spit balling here.
Speaker 2:Go right ahead.
Speaker 3:This is just me throwing a scenario out. So technically we have the technology now. Where I could go, I don't know go fall asleep Maybe a couple of houses down from Margo Robbie, slide in her dreams and just be like hey, baby, and just you know, you know.
Speaker 2:I, I, yeah, but I don't, I don't, I don't know if it's actually like physical contact. I think it's just, you know, just talking to each other. Really, do you need another conversation? That's all I need. Oh, really Okay.
Speaker 3:I just need a conversation. I see All right. And then she wakes up and randomly sees me, you know, at a Starbucks or something like that, and she's like, oh hey, I'm like I don't know what you're talking about with this dream stuff, but is everything going well? Yeah, all right.
Speaker 2:It only happens when you're in lucid sleep, though, and lucid sleep is you're having a dream within a dream.
Speaker 3:Oh, okay, one of those.
Speaker 2:Yeah, they actually have hotels where you can rent rooms to go into lucid sleep. Really freaky.
Speaker 3:How do they gauge lucid. How do they make that happen specifically?
Speaker 2:I don't know how they make it happen specifically. I mean it's a great if it doesn't work. It's a great racket. I mean do you get your money back?
Speaker 3:Probably not. Probably not Interesting Kevin Kline.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I thought that was really interesting too.
Speaker 3:All right, what else is happening?
Speaker 2:That's about it. I mean the election. You can't escape it. So hopefully it'll all end on Wednesday. It will not, who knows.
Speaker 3:It will not. It will not. If Trump wins, they'll flip the fuck out. If Kamala Harris wins, it was more likely than not completely fraudulent and they'll be a flip out on the other side.
Speaker 2:So do you think it'll last as long as the 2000 election with Bush-Gore?
Speaker 3:No, that was January.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I don't know think it'll last as long as the 2000 election with bush gore, no, that was january.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I don't know if it'll last that long. Supreme court learned then that hey, we got to jump in earlier than we usually do okay so you probably have a supreme court thing happen earlier, man, but yeah, that's uh.
Speaker 3:Oh, let me. Let me talk to the younger people listening or watching right now. There was a time when Kevin and I were young, where it was over and they shook hands and you know, one side would just have spirited uh, debates with the other side over, uh, uh, you know a beer or something like that, and everything was okay.
Speaker 2:Yeah, and concession speeches were actually made on the night of the election.
Speaker 3:Yeah, yeah. Now it's just a holy blood, which leads me to believe Calvin. I never wanted to believe this, or never wanted this to be a reality, but I just think. Sometime in the near future, we just need our to split our country in regards to not geography, but, you know, in terms of ideology, you know Okay.
Speaker 2:So move, move the blue people to the blue, to the west or the east, and move the red people to the opposite side.
Speaker 3:Uh, yeah, yeah to the east and move the red people to the opposite side if you're a constitution person that's into common sense and you know, into reality and is logical and you know, loves freedom, um, and does not want, you know, control freaks in their lives on a constant basis. Hey, you got Texas, florida and that whole corridor and all that stuff. You know what I'm saying?
Speaker 3:Yeah, I'm following you Midwest, and if you are a communist, if you are seriously, if you're a control freak, if you want handouts, you want to be controlled and everything like that. You go to one of the blue strongholds and I'm not being facetious or joking about it, I'm like, hey, man, that's where we're at. I mean, you know, I guess you could have some purple states too, you could, where it's like, hey, we like some commie shit, but we also don't want to be complete slaves. You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 3:I know what you're saying yeah, and then you have like a purple type thing.
Speaker 2:See, but that's why we have a House and a Senate. Sometimes it happens that there's a complete blue takeover and then sometimes there's a complete red takeover. But that's checks and balances. That's basically what that's for.
Speaker 3:That used to be a check and balance and a thing, but now they're all corrupt.
Speaker 2:Okay, I don't disagree with that.
Speaker 3:They're also. Basically what I'm trying to say also is you got to take that whole DC thing out of it. Yeah, that DC thing needs to go bye-bye. It is irretrievable corrupt. At this point and we just got to say, hey, man, you know, no, you're not going to, you're not going to run things from a tiny corrupt city on the East Coast. Everybody's going to do their own thing in their own states. You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 2:I know what you're saying. I have a question, though, because you know, basically, they're saying that eight states is going to decide this whole election, and by the time you hear this, the election's going to have already happened. But they say eight states, my state is not one of them, your state is not one of them. So when you go into the ballot booth, I already have I've already pre-voted, early voted. I just felt like I was wasting time.
Speaker 3:No, no, you still got to place your vote.
Speaker 2:Oh, I did, I did, but I'm like, what does this really matter?
Speaker 3:Nobody. They already know where my state's going to go, see, but if too many people do that, then your state can go the other way, right? So you can't have that mind frame at all.
Speaker 2:Uh-huh.
Speaker 3:It's like that's exactly what happened in the 80s to the Chicago Bulls. The other four players were like this 23 is really fucking good. I don't need to, you know. I can just yeah, I'll just sit here and watch him. He's pretty good man.
Speaker 2:I mean.
Speaker 3:I'm not going to take any popcorn out in the court and watch him. You know I'll still go through the motions. That's the same thing, cap. You still have to make the pass and want to score, and you know.
Speaker 2:Well, while I was voting, the way I rationalized, it was okay. So they think that well, they project that my state is going to stay red, but I think the lower the state um election candidates.
Speaker 3:I thought that was important yes, you got, you've got a well, not only that, but you've got to make sure you know your local politicians. This is where it counts even more is your local politicians you know agree with the way you look at things.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I did five hours of research before I voted.
Speaker 3:Did you Okay?
Speaker 2:good, oh yeah.
Speaker 3:No, that's not what you should do, that's you know. I mean, you should not be a one party person. Nope, you should not be a one party person.
Speaker 2:Nope.
Speaker 3:You know there, there there's a there's good and bad with each individual candidate. So, you got to figure it out. Yeah, I'll tell you this right now. I've this time, and this is probably the first well, maybe the second time in all of my vote. I voted every presidential election since 88, since I could, and this is the first time that that I went one way.
Speaker 2:I kind of have an idea which way that was.
Speaker 3:You think, yeah, I think we're at an important point in history. Kev.
Speaker 2:I read an opinion piece this morning that said that that was the headline we're in an important, we're at an important point in American history. But are we really? And the opinion piece went on to say that it really doesn't matter who wins or loses the election, we're all going to be okay, it's all going to be the same. Democracy will still survive.
Speaker 3:Well, yeah, and a few episodes ago I tried to get that across.
Speaker 2:Well, you said it at the beginning of this episode, just take a breath.
Speaker 3:Look at your day-to-day. I mean, yeah, there's been some effect over the past three years, and maybe there was some effect on you in 2017.
Speaker 3:It's a small effect, but if you look at it, things don't change really that much and if they do, then then you're talking a revolution, then you're talking, uh, civil unrest, and they know that I don't think they would ever. I mean, you know, you can talk about all these doomsday scenarios, but I I I think that they have the data and they know how far they can push, and if they go too far, then they're in danger.
Speaker 2:Oh, my brother works uh, my brother-in-law works in have the data and they know how far they can push and if they go too far then they're in danger. Oh, my brother works, my brother-in-law works in the data field. He's like Jonas, he's a software engineer and he was telling me he goes, kevin, he goes because his wife works in marketing and she just got the Starbucks account, okay, and so what they're trying to develop is a more local approach for the coffee giant. Okay, and he said kevin, he goes. It all comes down to there was a starbucks right across the street from where we got a coffee. Yesterday we got a coffee at a different place. He goes, they, they track. Hey, man, paul hasn't visited here in two years. Wow, look where he's going. He's going over to seven brew almost every day. They know that. What have we done to lose that? If they know that, then yeah, the government knows how much they're pissing people off.
Speaker 3:Well, yeah, they know every keystroke that you type in on your keyboard or on your phone, every keystroke.
Speaker 3:That's amazing and they put all of that together and they know there's anger out there. They know they probably have a good idea. They do have a good idea that there's 50, 60, 70 million armed Americans, many of them veterans, who put themselves on the line for the Constitution and their freedom, that aren't happy about this complete shift towards we don't give a fuck about your rights, we don't give a fuck about your constitution, we don't give a fuck about your vote, we don't give a fuck about what you think we're going to do, what we do. They don't like that and I don't think that they're that stupid. Maybe they are. Maybe they are that evil and that stupid that they would push that to Flashpoint. But I think they know that they can't. And we get the doomsday sayers that say, yeah, they will. We're going to be slaves, man Rehabilitation camps, it's going to be the People's Republic of America, we're dead. But I don't think it would come to that, because they know that they would be hunted.
Speaker 2:I think I could have that wrong.
Speaker 3:Again, everything that I say right there is just piecing together data and knowledge, and I'm pretty good at taking all information and kind of forming it and hey, this happened. I've done that, Kev, you've known me for almost 30 years. I have a pretty good crystal ball when it comes to just common sense. You know, just based on knowledge and what you read and what you know.
Speaker 2:It's basically what you do with trading. It's no different than what you do with trading. You look at trends, you look at data, you make an educated assumption, an educated theory.
Speaker 3:Yeah, you just read things. I mean, that's the poker playing too. You know, I can read you.
Speaker 2:Right.
Speaker 3:So, and I just I you know I'm not 100%, but I got a pretty good idea about this.
Speaker 2:Oh, nobody bats 100.
Speaker 3:Nobody bats 100. Shit Kev. There is some crazy random shit that happens on my grocery store visits. It's basically the only time I really go out retail-wise.
Speaker 2:Okay.
Speaker 3:And I have one last week I have to tell you about. Do you go to the same store? Actually, there's a couple different stores that I go to now.
Speaker 2:Is one crazier than the other.
Speaker 3:Yes.
Speaker 2:Keep going.
Speaker 3:Yeah, it's fun. But you know I'm sitting there, you know, minding my own business, picking up my items and I ran into a guy that I haven't seen since college. Really, you know, I went to Ball State University in Muncie, indiana, in the western suburb of Houston called Richmond, texas. I see this guy decades later, no way. Yeah, you know, and in the fog of college it took me a while to figure out things, but uh, I, I finally had total recall when he told me that you know, I used to sell him weed. Okay, then I was like, oh okay, jack, how you doing man?
Speaker 3:you're a good customer, but he, he started, you know, and I had to like tone him down a little bit because I was like, hey man, hey, you know, you don't have to talk that loud. But he, he told me, he goes, he goes, tuttle dude, you were the best dealer man. I was like, thanks, right. And he was like, hey man, other dealers, you know, we would have to go into their nasty apartments or nasty houses and we have to, like, sit down on the couch and right next to the couch is this three foot graphics bong and we're smelling the bong water. It smells nasty and these guys were just disorganized, you know, getting got to get their baggies over here, the main bag here. Oh shoot, where's my scale? I'll have to weigh it out. You know everything like that.
Speaker 3:And then then they give us like 20 to 30 minutes of a stupid story, of something that they're into right now that you had to listen to because you, you know, you don't want to ruin the relationship, you want to be able to come back. He goes your shit was tight man and it was cab. I mean, I shit was tight man and it was Cav. I mean, I ran a tight operation. I had everything pre-weighed, pre-laid out, pre-all that stuff. I mean I had it de-seated in half and quarter bags and the bags would be like perfectly, absolutely perfectly rolled up and I'd have a little happy face seal on the bag, you know, and they just love that. Yeah, there's like, and no stories.
Speaker 3:I mean the transaction was 30 seconds oh yeah, you don't like talking to people anyway I don't want to talk to people and I want you to get your fucking car out of, uh, the street in front of my house. Yeah, I don't want to draw attention as a matter of fact, if I remember correctly, ke, I would have them park over at the village pantry. That was like a 7-Eleven.
Speaker 2:Uh-huh yeah.
Speaker 3:They park there and just walk over three houses. I didn't even want anybody parking anywhere near my place Of course not.
Speaker 3:You go, walk into the village pantry, you get a pack of smokes and a six-pack of Molson or whatever the fuck you're going to do. You know whatever you need. Then you like, put it in your car, and then you slowly kind of mosey over to my place three doors down. All right, that's how I had the operation, and they and he was just being very complimentary. He said, yeah, we could all tell you were a business major because you knew how to run the business. But yeah, if you're going to get a kick out of this, he said, the best thing, though, was the finishing touch you had after the transaction was over. He was like, as we were walking out, we would. You would say, hey, thanks for coming, and I would give them a butter rum. Lifesaver, dad taught you well.
Speaker 2:That was my exact reaction, man.
Speaker 3:I laughed so hard because we just talked about, you know, my dad and his butter rum lifesavers, and that's where I got it from.
Speaker 2:Wow, isn't that crazy. That is amazing.
Speaker 3:Yeah, yeah. Anyway, I told him that you know he knew he had heard he goes. Hey, everybody knows you became a big-time morning radio guy. We're all proud of you and stuff like that. I said, well, we've got a podcast now he goes. Oh cool, I want to check it out. So he's, I guess, been binge listening to our podcast. He says he loves it really funny stuff and he our podcast. He says he loves it really funny stuff and he'll be listening. He'll be a regular listener and if I ever decide I want to sell weed again, he will be a regular customer too beautiful it's not like I'm out of that business yeah, we entertain it a different way I'm not doing that shit anymore.
Speaker 3:So that's, yeah, it's it's. It's just interesting, you just never know, it's so crazy did he look the same, uh, no yeah they, they my gosh.
Speaker 2:Yeah, he looks all right no, I didn't mean all right. I mean, could you, did you recognize him? No, and on facial features alone I, I no idea.
Speaker 3:I remember the voice. Uh, you know the? I was like a voice, voice, voice. And then as soon as he said, hey, man, you used to have the best red-haired sense amelia ever, I was like, oh, jack, jack, how you doing man? Yeah yeah, um gav, let's do a be honest, shall we?
Speaker 3:be honest, be honest be honest, when you're running and you see someone that didn't clean up after their dog, don't you just want to find out who it is, find out where they live, scoop it up and just rub it all over their doorknobs or their car door handles?
Speaker 2:I want to do worse than that. Ooh yeah, I want to rub it in their face. I hate that.
Speaker 3:Especially Kevin. This is you know, I've seen this a couple times over the past month or so is the dog takes a dump right next to the receptacle with the bags, that is just, and they just keep going and I'm just like, are you fucking kidding me?
Speaker 2:Mm-hmm.
Speaker 3:Are you kidding? I mean, to me that is a huge indicator, along with who rolls the shopping cart back to the shopping cart nest.
Speaker 2:Yes.
Speaker 3:Of who in society is cool and who's a total fucking selfish shitbag.
Speaker 2:Those are good barometers.
Speaker 3:That tells me everything I need to know about you. Doesn't it though that tells me everything I need to know about you, doesn't it, though? See, I used to. I can tell a lot about you by playing a round of golf with you yes or sitting down at a poker table with you and you know, having a two, three, four hour session. But I don't have that fucking kind of time anymore, so I just use these others as an indicator.
Speaker 2:Yeah, they're still great indicators. They're a lot shorter on timeframe yeah, definitely.
Speaker 3:Yeah, so yeah I I. I just I don't understand why you would do that to everybody else.
Speaker 2:Yeah, yeah, it's. It's almost like you know. If you could equate it, I guess if you had a kid and you take that kid in a stroller and that kid has to take a shit and you take their diaper off and let them go right there, you'd clean that up, right? What the hell? Why wouldn't you clean it?
Speaker 3:up. Absolutely, it's the same thing, kevin. Let me tell you this yeah and I know you're going to say hey, I'm not sure You're probably exaggerating a little bit, tim, you know that never happens never does no but I think that the dogs when they see that your dog sees you do that your dog's embarrassed of you definitely the dog's like man yeah, the dog is embarrassed they want to go hide and they don't want to talk to other dogs, you know, when you're around, because they're just like hey man, yeah, I know, this guy, this guy's a fucking douche, tard, but what am I gonna do, you know?
Speaker 2:yeah, he keeps saying it's biodegradable, but what about the person who steps in it?
Speaker 3:exactly, exactly. All right, thank you, kev. You're thinking the way I'm thinking what's?
Speaker 2:your be what's your be honest well, you know you kind of already mentioned it, but be honest, what's the biggest thing you ever did, breaking the law and got away with? I mean selling weed. That was against the law.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I sold a little bit, just a little bit, yeah, weed that's. That was against the law. Yeah, yeah, I sold a little bit, just a little bit, yeah. But you know, um, I'm trying to think what's anything bigger than that. I mean, I've, I was often a law fracturer fracture uh.
Speaker 3:But you know I'm trying to think, uh, anything bigger than that, Stole a kid's moped. Okay, Stole a kid. I, you know I was. Yeah, I, just I, I didn't want to, I missed I. I was a friend of mine and I went to the other side of town to visit a couple ladies.
Speaker 2:Right.
Speaker 3:And this is before I had my license.
Speaker 2:Okay.
Speaker 3:He had the license and he was striking out with his designated lady. I see, and I was not.
Speaker 2:No, that never happens.
Speaker 3:I was doing well, and he was pissed and he wanted to leave, and all this and he was acting like a jackass and he was, you know, like he was going to fuck it up for me too. Can't have that and I just said, dude, go, go, just go, I'll figure it out, okay. So I get done and I start walking and I'm like damn man, that's like six miles. You know, it's starting to get dark, I don't want to walk six miles yeah, that's a couple hours. So this kid leaves a moped? Remember mopeds.
Speaker 2:I do remember them.
Speaker 3:All you had to do is pedal a little bit, hit a button, boom, they start up. That's right. I was on that moped under a bunch of um, um, a bunch of brush in it and I I hid that moped in a shallow grave. Uh, and you know, I saw a day or two later. It was in the newspaper, was it really. Stolen, moped.
Speaker 2:Okay, well, yeah, that's bigger than the dealing and.
Speaker 3:I felt bad about that, of course.
Speaker 2:Didn't want to do it.
Speaker 3:We've all done some stupid shit when we were young, right?
Speaker 2:Yeah, absolutely.
Speaker 3:Did I ever tell you that stolen moped story?
Speaker 2:No, I'd never heard the stolen moped story.
Speaker 3:Yeah, that's about it. Well, you pressed me on it, so there you go. Yeah, now, what kind of illegal shit. It's the water tower thing, isn't it?
Speaker 2:The water tower would be one but the other. You're not going to believe this, tim, but when I was younger I was fearless, absolutely fearless. I did not happen, I know right, I think I can did a complete one day, but anyway, we were having, we had a bridge. That was when I was in elementary school, going into, uh um, junior high. There was a bridge being built over the Mississippi River that connected uh St the, connected our area, Oakville, to uh Illinois, and when they were building it, we would would climb it, yeah, yeah, yeah, we would trespass and climb the structural, you know the metal work, and I probably got about a third of the way up and then, you know, just sat there for a little bit, no intention of doing anything, but just sit there, but I mean it's trespassing. So yeah, that's it.
Speaker 2:Yeah, as a matter of factve, cook and I were talking about this just a little a couple of weeks ago that we both used to go do that dumb.
Speaker 3:Wow, yeah, that is pretty dumb kev, but you know, still not too hardcore no, I I didn't know.
Speaker 2:I mean I got, I got a minor possession, but I got caught, so I didn't get away with that yeah, I mean because, yeah, look at Kev.
Speaker 3:I mean that's a guy that can't go to prison. No, oh no, every prisoner would want him to fuck him with his nose. Yeah, I mean, kevin Kline would spend whatever prison term he had with his nose up other prisoners' asses.
Speaker 2:That's why I walked the straight and narrow.
Speaker 3:He knew that thing was going to be used. I don't know where that came from, man. I'm sorry this is stupid, it's all good man, it's all good.
Speaker 2:That's the biggest thing about us. We don't take ourselves too seriously that we can't laugh at ourselves.
Speaker 3:Exactly, kev. All right, I'm interested. It's been a while for you. I want to know what your top three is, kev.
Speaker 1:Just when you thought they couldn't count any higher. It's Tuttle Klein's top three.
Speaker 2:We just had the time change. Top three things you like or dislike about the time change.
Speaker 3:Well, the fall is much easier to take than the spring.
Speaker 2:Big time you get the extra hour of sleep.
Speaker 3:I like that extra hour of sleep. However, I know I'm going to have to pay for it in the spring, so that's on my mind a little bit. The next day it's like I'm going to pay for this later. Yeah, I hate that it gets dark so early.
Speaker 2:Okay.
Speaker 3:But that's not that big of a deal, right, I usually get everything done that I need to get done before 5.30 pm.
Speaker 2:Uh-huh.
Speaker 3:So it's not that big of a deal. I do like it being a little bit lighter early in the morning so you know I can do the early morning cardio before the markets open. So I do like it being a little bit lighter early in the morning so you know I can do the early morning cardio before the markets open, so I do like that. Yeah, there's a lot that I like about the fall, but you get me around March or April and I'll be like fuck this shit.
Speaker 2:Yeah. You know, oh, I know exactly what you're talking about, because you and I are basically on the same page with two of those.
Speaker 3:Okay, what's yours?
Speaker 2:Mine. I love getting the extra hour of sleep. I don't mind that it gets darker early and lighter earlier, because that is, to me, our normal sleep cycle. You know we woke up early for our career and I always hated spring when it would stay light until 8 39 o'clock at night, because I usually go to bed between six and seven wait, wait, you still go to sleep at six, seven yeah, we still go to bed early, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2:I mean there must be something really really cool on tv for me to stay up. Uh, like tonight. I'll stay up tonight, just because you know the chiefs are on monday night football and my in-laws are huge chief fans fans.
Speaker 3:Okay, let me.
Speaker 2:Assuming we still have power.
Speaker 3:Let me ask you this Cap oh yeah, you got a bad storm system going through, huh.
Speaker 2:We got threats of tornadoes and all that kind of stuff later on this afternoon into Tuesday evening.
Speaker 3:Enjoy that Missouri shit buddy.
Speaker 2:Oh crap right.
Speaker 3:As I sit here with a hurricane on the horizon, maybe, perhaps I'm sorry, I didn't mean to say that. Weather gods, that's right. Yeah, let me ask you this Do you and you can get back to your top three? I rudely interrupted it. No, no worries, but do you? Do you still sometimes? You know cause? For many years, kevin and I, doing a morning radio show, had to wake up at like three in the morning. Do you still sometimes, uh and maybe it's dissipated for you like you'll get up at like five or something like at 5 30, be like, oh shit, I'm late?
Speaker 2:yes, I do, uh-huh, yeah, me too, especially if I've had a good night's sleep, you know, and and then, all of a sudden, I'll wake up and I'll look at my phone to see what time it is gonna be be, oh, my god, I gotta get up. But uh, yeah, no it, uh, it still happens hey, kevin, I.
Speaker 3:I gotta say this like uh, you know it's been over, you know it's been two, almost two and a half years now, almost exactly two and a half years, since I've done morning radio. Uh, the, the, uh, I think it was like six weeks after yeah I got up and it was like 5 15 am.
Speaker 3:I'm like holy fucking shit. I got up and, yeah, I started getting my backpack and everything and I like like running for the uh, for the car, and I'm like in the garage and I'm like, oh fuck, I don't do that shit anymore. It happened.
Speaker 2:That happened one time you know, and this is one of the reasons why tim and I never suffered the excuse from interns or co-workers oh, I overslept. Oh, the alarm clock never went off in 25 years of radio, tim or I, tim and I never were late to a show, never late to a show. We were the fucking Cal Ripken of being on time.
Speaker 3:No, never, never, Fuck Cal Ripken. His was only what? 2,900?. Yeah, mine was 6,500, motherfucker there you go, there you go. Okay, so Cal Ripken times two and a half, all right.
Speaker 2:Yeah, but that's why we never put up with that bullshit excuse oh the alarm didn't go off, or oh, I overslept no, I'm here all the time and I got family man.
Speaker 3:Yeah, no excuse no no, I'll never forget that I was. I was like I was like that's embarrassing, yeah, that's embarrassing, yeah, that's embarrassing, because that messed my day up. I was like my whole day was affected by that. Then I had that jolt. You know that electric jolt when you're late.
Speaker 2:And you can't go back to bed because you're all oh, no, no, I was up.
Speaker 3:No, no, no, I was up, I was up.
Speaker 2:Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, you're all adrenalized. That was it all, right back. Continue with your top three. I just got one more and it it's really kind of strange, but uh, it's the. The. Especially what we just went through last weekend with the time backwards, means what we're we're in fall and winter's right around the corner. I love it. I love winter I, I have.
Speaker 3:I love, see, living in hou. To me, the best time is those first days where you can leave your windows open. Uh-huh, I love having my windows open. Yeah, I just love it. I mean, I got a huge luxury pool out here and it's got a pump and it's got like like the waterfall and I love that noise oh, of course it's very calming it's such a great noise it's it's like one of the reasons why I continue to stay here.
Speaker 3:I'm not kidding, I love that noise, I love it it's. But when I can open, start opening the windows. You know, that's something we take for granted here in houston, because usually we spend most of the years in the oven. Yeah, true, so I. Yeah, this is.
Speaker 3:I've always been a fall guy, and not just because I like stuntman and the theme song and the theme song I I always like fall my birthday's in the fall, football's in the fall, windows open in the fall beautiful time of year thank you, kevin klein you're welcome, buddy. Uh, this has been a fine episode, has it not? It's been a wonderful episode I think we got a lot of our business done we did and, as you can tell from my tone, I'm watching the charts right now.
Speaker 3:I have a setup that's brewing that I'm gonna have to get into because, again, I'm a little bit down on the day and I'm going to have to turn this sucker around.
Speaker 2:Turn that down upside down, Timmy.
Speaker 3:And make it an up. There you go. Stop, hey. Make sure you like and give us a rating and follow us. Go to our Instagram Tuttle Cline and our Facebook Tuttle Cline. Buy some merchandise. Look at how cool our logo looks. Look at that thing right there.
Speaker 2:Just in time for the holidays. You know, if you buy now, we'll guarantee it gets there before Christmas.
Speaker 3:Stocking stuffers Perfect ones, kevin Kline, I love it. Do you have anything going on on your other side Project, the Fuzzy Mike podcast, kevin.
Speaker 2:Lining up interviews as we speak, so I should have a new episode next week cannot wait for that to.
Speaker 3:You know, I I'm. You got me addicted. I'm a junkie, I'm a fuzzy mike junkie, and it's been a couple weeks since you've been under the weather, so can't wait for a new one. So there you go, and if you're listening to my voice right now in the middle of some civil unrest due to, uh, elections, um, just relax and breathe, everything will be all right.
Speaker 1:Um, just relax and breathe, everything will be all right, that's it for this episode of the Tuttle and Klein show. See you this Wednesday for an all new episode, and you can get more Klein on his podcast, the fuzzy Mike, with new episodes on Tuesday. Stay, fuzzy, friends, and thanks for listening to the Tuttle and Klein show. Yo, all right, take the yo out.