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Sockeytome
The Humor of Generational Anxieties
Ever wondered why every generation seems to think the next is bound for doom? Join us for a laugh-out-loud session with Keebler as we share stories of our grandparents' and parents' worries, comparing them to our own anxieties today. We add a humorous twist to the serious issues of skyrocketing living costs versus stagnant wages and even entertain the absurd idea of vaccinating birds to keep egg prices in check. Tune in as we marvel at the resilience of each generation and poke fun at the struggles of maintaining a single-income household.
Keebler and Detto also wander into the quirky and nostalgic, from the rising costs that might make us consider cemetery "bunk beds" to a nostalgic nod at MTV's endless evolution. We're not afraid to question conventional wisdom, joking about political figures as mere puppets in a grand performance or wondering aloud about the existence of dinosaurs. We discuss the infamous doomsday clock and the perpetual anticipation of global catastrophe, all with a playful skepticism that keeps the mood light even when the topics get heavy.
Technology takes center stage as we reflect on the massive impact of the internet. We share stories of our own reliance on younger, tech-savvy family members to navigate this digital age. From online shopping and virtual doctor visits to the potential of time travel, we explore how rapidly advancing technology shapes our world. We encourage embracing these changes with humor and optimism, learning from those who were practically born with a smartphone in their hands. Join us for a session that promises to be fun, insightful, and sprinkled with humor.
Come back every Tuesday for a new episode each week. You won't be dissappointed, I'll tell you that for free. Subscribe and like us over at sockeytome.com as we begin the best part of our journey into podcasting yet, interacting with all of you. Give us your email as we begin to have more promotions and contests along with my personal favorite, trivia. Thanks everyone and as always, be good.
Hey, everybody, welcome to.
Speaker 2:Saki Toomey.
Speaker 1:Hey everybody, welcome back Saki Toomey, a podcast that connects people to people, sometimes explains why connections are so uncomfortable. Anyway, I'm here with Keeley today.
Speaker 2:Hey, how's it going everybody.
Speaker 1:We're talking about generational change.
Speaker 2:Oh yeah, we are.
Speaker 1:Remember when your grandmother used to say stuff like oh, this plan is never going to be good enough for these kids. I don't even know why we're raising them.
Speaker 2:Oh yeah, my mother used to say the same thing back in the day. It's like I don't know how you guys are going to afford to buy a house. We can't even afford ours. It's like, all right, we'll see what happens. But I mean, I get what they were saying, because I said it to my kids. I don't know how you guys are going to make it. I just hope that everything works out for you.
Speaker 1:I've said the opposite the entire time.
Speaker 2:Really.
Speaker 1:Yeah, it's like yeah, yeah, you don't like, you don't have any. They don't know any different, they don't know, what it was like in 1950.
Speaker 2:Right, so they've kind of plant the seed in your head and then you're like how the hell am I going to make it?
Speaker 1:You know, yeah, how am I going to walk uphill both ways of school in the snow?
Speaker 2:Yeah, barefoot, barefoot, I used to hear there you go.
Speaker 1:That's what it was all about. I mean, there's boomers, there's Gen X, there's millennials, there's Gen Z, there's all kinds of different things going on.
Speaker 2:Right.
Speaker 1:And the difference between all of them. It's huge.
Speaker 2:Exactly. The gap is huge, exactly, and it just amazes me how we all adapt to the current situation in front of us. Either well, we're going to delve into this or dive into it. I should say how, back in the day, only one person worked. Now it's like both spouses work if you're married, and usually you have a part-time job just to make a little extra money.
Speaker 1:You have to, you have to. That's the way it goes.
Speaker 2:Exactly. So yeah, mrs Keebler was nice enough to find this article. What they Said in 1957. Well, let's hear it. And the first thing, one of the things was ah, I'm not sure how we're going to mail a letter with the potions and I'm a postal worker with the potions.
Speaker 1:They cost five cents. That's why I'm laughing.
Speaker 2:Now it's 73 cents. Is it really? It's up to 73 cents for a letter stamp?
Speaker 1:That was like minimum wage in 1950.
Speaker 2:Yeah, holy shnikes. 75 cents was minimum wage, now it's 73 cents to mail a stamp or mail a letter.
Speaker 1:It would take you one hour's worth of work in 1955 to buy a stamp today, today, crazy nikes, that is crazy, that's insane another saying.
Speaker 2:They said uh, not sure how they're gonna afford groceries when it costs 20 a week. Now that was in 57 and I don't know about you, but for me, if I do a full groceries it's 200. You know, if you're doing like the meats and the vegetables and the fruits and then if you have to get paper products or stuff like that, yeah. Freaking crazy.
Speaker 1:Forget about when you need to actually like toothpaste and shampoo.
Speaker 2:Exactly, yeah, but they said, like you know, 20 bucks back then I mean, eggs are 10 bucks a dozen. Exactly, there's half your. You get what? Two eggs a day for your meals. Quick side note yeah.
Speaker 1:What the fuck is the?
Speaker 2:bird flu. I have no idea.
Speaker 1:Birds get the flu. Give a shot, get them out Apparently, get them back out there. How?
Speaker 2:about. We vaccinate the birds Exactly. The humans don't want the vaccinations, that's what I'm saying.
Speaker 1:What the fuck? We got all these flu shots sitting around. Give them to the birds. Let's get eggs down. Let's get eggs down, jesus Christ. Unbelievable. It's like the people at the grocery stores Might as well have a gun and a mask.
Speaker 2:Come on in. Come on in.
Speaker 1:We want your money we want your money, son of a bitch. Well, yeah, that's some crazy stuff, you know, yeah and uh, it's different. And so in this day and age now, we laugh.
Speaker 1:We were laughing at this because we remember what our parents said, what our grandparents said yep and all that and it's like I'm looking at my parents nowadays and I'm like no guys, these kids will be fine, it's just going to be the way they live. Right, just like me, right Like you said, my grandparents were like oh, these kids, we're leaving a world of terrible place for these kids.
Speaker 2:Well, here's the thing, you know. I mean minimum wage is how people adjust, but that's one thing that really hasn't gone up all that much.
Speaker 1:Minimum wage is a crock of shit.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I mean, don't get me wrong you have certain states, most of the so-called red states, and I don't want to label, but the southern states, most of them, are still $7.25 an hour. Back in the day it was what? In 57, 70 cents or 50 cents an hour, somewhere in that area.
Speaker 1:I think it was 75 cents 75 cents an hour.
Speaker 2:But now you got like District of Columbia 17.50. California 16.50 an hour. Connecticut is 16.35.
Speaker 1:we're up to my first job paid me that. My first job that I ever had was for a corporate America conglomerate. Okay, you see them everywhere. They're in every restaurant. Yep, it's a soft drink company. Oh, I know every restaurant.
Speaker 2:Yep, it's a soft drink company. Oh, I know, yep, yep.
Speaker 1:And they paid me that much to work part-time on the weekends, really. So if you're going to sit there and tell me that you can't Back in, what the 80s.
Speaker 2:No 70s, come on 90s. I'm not that old it's 90s. 90s is all I'm thinking about.
Speaker 1:In mid-90s Alright, mid-90s.
Speaker 2:I apologize, Ditto.
Speaker 1:But they were paying me that then.
Speaker 2:Really.
Speaker 1:For part-time.
Speaker 2:That was good money.
Speaker 1:Yeah, if you could sit here and tell me that minimum wage makes a difference, I will just give you the proverbial middle finger, because get out there and get a fucking job. Right, that's it, anybody. There are people looking for work workers all over the place, oh, absolutely. And if you're going to sit there and complain about minimum wage and how it's not enough, then you're not looking for a job. Exactly Sorry, you're just not, you're not.
Speaker 1:Right Because at 15, 16, 17 years old, but it was 16, 17, 18 years old because I had to be able to drive. I found a job that paid well above minimum wage.
Speaker 2:Well, that's part-time money, right. So you're talking. I think I was only making that's when I started the post office, probably right when you got into the workforce in the 90s and I left the hospital where I was a transportation clerk, a transporter for the x-ray department.
Speaker 1:What'd you do? Take the patients from floor to floor.
Speaker 2:I brought them from floor to x-ray.
Speaker 1:Oh, I thought you actually drove them in a truck.
Speaker 2:No, no, no, no, no Big yellow bus. No, I was down to wheelchairs and stretchers. That's all I could handle. Pushing the new moms out the door. But I was making 7.25 an hour then and then when I came to the post office I jumped at it because it was like 11.25. That's what I started at 1993 and I started the conglomerate in 94 94, april in 94, and you made good. That's good money I was.
Speaker 1:It started at 13.25 an hour, right, and I only worked only worked Saturday and Sunday. Okay, I was in school, obviously. Yeah, yeah, because I was still in school at that time and I'd make like $200 or $300 a weekend doing virtually nothing.
Speaker 2:That's pretty good.
Speaker 1:Yeah, yeah. It's like you go out there and you just look. It's not hard to find the money if you want it. The people that are complaining about minimum wage at this point are people that don't want to work. They're looking for the reasons to not do something.
Speaker 2:So let me give you another good one here.
Speaker 1:Here we go. I got off the top. If this is a joke, I'm going to lose it.
Speaker 2:No, no, no, no. Speaking of that, we're at the hospital now, so I'll stay with that. Back then was you're cracking me up, guy? I'm in a good mood today. I see that I am Back at the hospital for a one-night stay was $35. Now $3,500. You're pretty damn close. $2,800 is the average for one night in the hospital. And that's what 70 years later, or just under 65 years?
Speaker 1:That's a lot of cash. That's a huge contributor to the divide of wealth in this country. It's like people that have insurance. Insurance is just paying the stuff out, yeah, and then charging everyone.
Speaker 2:But you couldn't. I mean they were complaining back then. 35 bucks, I mean don't get me wrong, that's a lot of money.
Speaker 1:But Well, back then you could probably buy a house for 35 bucks also.
Speaker 2:Oh, I got those numbers.
Speaker 1:Well, in 1950, I bet you, a house cost probably $12,000.
Speaker 2:$12,200 was the average.
Speaker 1:Holy shnikes I am a prophet.
Speaker 2:You're on fire.
Speaker 1:I know everything. There isn't anything.
Speaker 2:I don't know. So that's funny. You say that because in 12,200, 1974, when my parents bought their first house, when my father, he actually had a heart attack 21 000 29 9 was theirs yep he actually they got a big house stressed out that he couldn't make the payments because my mother was still back.
Speaker 2:Then you had stay-at-home moms, you know, and she didn't. She didn't get to go to work until after we were in high school. That's when my father I'm not going to say allowed her, but thought it was a better idea because we were old enough to take care of ourselves. Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1:Well, the same thing happened with me, just for a point of reference. Yeah, my mother stayed home for 13 years. She was a school teacher. She started out teaching Right, my father worked, obviously, my mother worked as a teacher. Yeah, my mother worked as a teacher, yeah. And then she stopped and raised the kids. Yeah, she raised all three of us. I have a brother and a sister and she raised all of us for 13 years.
Speaker 1:Then she went back, went back to school, got a master's degree in library science, really and went back to school as a librarian and killed it after that, yeah and she took those 13 years off to raise us, which, in this day and age, you can't do that now, you can, you can, you can, but you have to be very disciplined, and I think there should be some way that that is able to happen. Right, because I agree with you there daycare and child care is wildly it just sucks up expensive. It sucks up the other.
Speaker 2:Uh, yeah, they didn't have that back in those days.
Speaker 1:No, because everybody stayed home.
Speaker 2:Everybody stayed home or your grandmother would watch you yeah.
Speaker 1:I'm not sitting here saying that you should be supplemented for staying at home as a mother.
Speaker 2:No, no but there should be tax benefits for the husband.
Speaker 1:That works Right. So if you're a stay-at-home mom taking care of your children instead of paying daycare, you're getting a bigger tax credit on your overall taxes, like $30,000 tax credit. Oh yeah, because that's what it would cost a year per child, exactly. Because there's nothing more important than staying home with your kids.
Speaker 2:So to bring that a little bit further, in 1991, I bought my first house. It was $130,000. A little bit further, in 1991, I bought my first house. It was $130,000. In 2014, when me and Mrs Keebler got married, we bought a house $264,000. That was 2014. So this year my daughter, casey, shout out to Casey hey, bff, oh God, she's going to love that. Her and her husband just bought their first house for $480,000. Now those houses are all about the same size.
Speaker 1:No kidding.
Speaker 2:I swear to God. Yeah, the ones that myself I bought on my own, and then me and Mrs Keebler and then Casey and Anthony's, are all roughly the same, but it's just the astronomical rise in prices.
Speaker 1:That's also due to the rise of people staying at home and working.
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 1:So houses are now more desired. True, that's true. The house we sit in currently where the studio is, I bought it for $110,000.
Speaker 2:Okay.
Speaker 1:It's currently worth I don't know over $300,000.
Speaker 2:I was going to say it has to be well over $300,000.
Speaker 1:I moved out of here when I got married and bought a house for $375,000.
Speaker 2:And then you sold it.
Speaker 1:Had to sell it after the divorce for $575,000. Wow, it's now worth $700,000. And that was in the manner of eight years.
Speaker 2:Yeah, so if you've got any real estate tycoons, if you're thinking about it out there, not a bad gig. No, real estate is good.
Speaker 1:You got to know when.
Speaker 2:Got to know yeah.
Speaker 1:It's all about when Yep Buy low, sell high, absolutely. But you got to have the money to buy low.
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 1:That being said, what the heck is a generation anyway?
Speaker 2:Yeah, I'm not sure how they decipher how many years it is, you know, and then what they name them. I mean, I'm a boomer, I'm right at the back end of the baby boomers.
Speaker 1:Yeah, you're a back-in-the-day guy.
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 1:Back in my day, back in the day.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I tell those stories now. I used to hear that from my father.
Speaker 1:I'm a Gen Xer. Oh yeah, you look like you. Anyway, to this point, to this point yes, Gotcha, and it's a sub-generation. It's not even a whole generation, it's a sub-generation. Yeah, it's the people that were born between 77 and 83.
Speaker 2:Oh, that little block right there. That six-year little period is the greatest generation to this point in time in life, and how do they figure? That Because we can do anything. Is that in your own mind or no? They say you can. We were the first ones.
Speaker 1:We were the first ones to. We were the last ones to use the hose. We were the last ones to ride the bikes. We were the last ones to go outside till the streetlights came on. We were the first one with video games. We were the first one with video games. We were the first ones with telephones, with cell phones. We were the first one with internet. That six-year generational gap there is the greatest generation because we are the bridge to everything.
Speaker 2:My father always told me, if I paid attention, I'd learn something new.
Speaker 1:Well, you haven't paid attention, have you no?
Speaker 2:I've been wandering around aimlessly. I got a good one. I don been wandering around aimlessly, I got to go. I don't understand how a cemetery can raise its funeral prices and blame it on the cost of living.
Speaker 1:Oh God, I knew that was coming.
Speaker 2:Tell me how.
Speaker 1:They ain't moving out. No, they're running out of rooms. I'm an idiot. Pretty soon we're going to need bunk beds. Oh man, imagine that People will be buried three feet deep.
Speaker 2:You've got one at three feet, six feet and nine feet. Oh my God, no way. That's a triple bunk bed, that's a three stooges there.
Speaker 1:By the way, Gen X, MTV oh, we're back on them. I just want to say that because it popped up in the notes. Gen X, MTV oh, we're back on them. I just want to say that because it popped up in the notes Gen X MTV.
Speaker 2:I did like MTV. I still watch MTV.
Speaker 1:Yeah, except they have no M on it anymore. No, it's just TV. It should be CTV.
Speaker 2:That's right. Crap TV Ink Master.
Speaker 1:Yeah.
Speaker 2:We got Big Bang Theory on there. I love the Big Bang, I know.
Speaker 1:You keep. I know you keep saying that and I think it's a stupid, stupid show. But why do generations think the next one is doomed? That's what we started this whole podcast out with. Yeah, our grandparents thought our parents' generation was doomed. Or our parents thought ours was doomed, yeah, and I'm looking at my parents now. I'm like my kid will be fine, he's going to figure it out.
Speaker 2:It's just the way it goes. I it out, you've, and if you can figure it out, if you can figure it out, yeah anybody can figure it out, exactly because I'm stupid just like it. I'm stupid profit.
Speaker 1:I'm stupid, just like everyone else, but why do generations think that like? Why is it? Oh my god, it's gonna be so bad for these kids when they grow up I don't know. I mean, it's like everybody's thinking the worst I feel like saying you're dumb just for saying that yeah, I mean give, give everybody a chance.
Speaker 2:I mean look how it turned out, for you know our parents than us. I mean, do we have our hard times? Yeah, but we figured it out.
Speaker 1:Yeah, you know yeah, like right now, like I'm in a hard time as it is.
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 1:Right, I'm like, well, you just got to figure this out.
Speaker 2:Yeah, you're still here, let me go get the shovel. Yeah, it's getting deep in here. Yeah, got to throw some shit around, but yeah, christ, got to love it, you do. What's this thing called the doomsday clock that we've been hearing about?
Speaker 1:oh well they, that's crazy. That's crazy and it just popped up the other day. We were planning on doing this podcast about this generational gap in this generational change and all of a sudden, the doomsday clock pops up and scientists have lessened it by one second. Where it used to be 90 seconds to midnight. Now it's it's 89 seconds to midnight. We're closer to doomsday, which we are, and I personally believe that we're closer than 89 seconds. We're like 75 seconds.
Speaker 2:I think you're probably right. It's a lot closer than they say. People are getting pissed, oh, absolutely.
Speaker 1:And they're about to just start blowing shit up.
Speaker 2:I hope not Me too. I mean, we got to look around the world at the crazy shit that's going on and it's I don't know how we get these people in office. I mean not only our country, I mean that's a whole nother episode. That's another episode.
Speaker 1:That's a deep state, the deep dark side of, like, what really happens in the world. You really think that Donald Trump has any kind of say in anything? Nope, probably not. He's a mouthpiece for the people that are bigger than him. Right, and that's the way it goes.
Speaker 2:There's never. You're not going to change it unless you revolt. You're talking about this doomsday. I mean it's country versus country, it's the disease, it's all this. You know the weather. I mean, that's all.
Speaker 1:This is. I believe this is just a stupid thing that scientists have come up with to say that the world is going to end. Right, the world is never going to end, not in. The world is never going to end.
Speaker 2:Let me know another 40, 50 generations before that happens. Not even no, no, no.
Speaker 1:The civilization of human beings will probably end.
Speaker 2:Okay, but the world will not Got you.
Speaker 1:The planet will not end it will just keep going.
Speaker 1:The dinosaurs are gone, it'll like uh rejuvenate yes, it'll just start something different, gotcha yep, because it's happened before yes, and well, as far as we know, as far as we and you can question that, all you want. Now we have these things that are fossils, yeah, and we're finding them in dirt, we're digging them up and we're putting them all together like a puzzle and all of a sudden you go to a museum and boom, there's this bony dinosaur, right. So we believe that they really existed. How the fuck do we?
Speaker 2:know they could have planted those things there.
Speaker 1:How the hell do we know? We don't know. That's the crazy part, but anyway, yep, moving on. That's a nice segue right there I don. The internet has changed everything.
Speaker 2:Well, how do you think that article came up on Doomsday? They're probably hearing us, absolutely, you know. Yeah, I mean you and I have been talking about it and all of a sudden, boom, the internet, though.
Speaker 1:It's like a time warp. It's the Wild West without the physical guns. Okay, people just fight. Fill me in here, all right, there is no regulation. No regulation over the internet. Oh, true, right, yep, I can say whatever the fuck I want right now yeah, you could throw f-bombs out there I'm doing it.
Speaker 2:I'm trying to. You know, sammy jay's probably listening sammy jay ham, ham's probably listening. Ham, we don't want to have you know, they're virgin ears you got a potty mouth.
Speaker 1:Congrats ham ham. Congrats on the new job yeah, I'm coming to see you, buddy oh boy, I never told, I'm just kidding. Give me a call, though, but the internet has changed everything the way we do things, every single way of life. You can buy a car on the internet. You can buy a house on the internet.
Speaker 2:Yeah, you can have it delivered right to your house.
Speaker 1:I was on house arrest.
Speaker 2:Because I'd done a lot of shopping.
Speaker 1:Because of my ex-wife, right and here. I was sitting here and I realized at that point you don't have to do anything, right, if you're a stay-at-home person that works, you can do everything from that chair. From your chair.
Speaker 2:Yeah, from that chair.
Speaker 1:It's like if you really have any kind of desire to get out there and do something, then you get up and go Right, but if you're a lazy sack of potatoes, you literally don't have to do anything.
Speaker 2:You can stay right in your pajamas.
Speaker 1:That's it.
Speaker 2:Put your slippers on and sit in your chair.
Speaker 1:You can have a doctor visit.
Speaker 2:I've had them Over the internet. Absolutely my doctor's in California. Get off your lazy fat ass and get out there.
Speaker 1:Get out to California. No, outside, go see some sunshine.
Speaker 2:Oh yeah, yeah, Vitamin D man.
Speaker 1:Listen here, casper, get the hell outside. But yeah, it's. And the crazy part is, at this point in time, I'm telling you this is a hundred percent true. If you want to know what's going to happen, look to your kids.
Speaker 2:Oh, they can tell you.
Speaker 1:Look to your kids. You're not out in front of them, they're out in front of you.
Speaker 2:They're out in front of us, I. They're so far out in front of you. I totally agree.
Speaker 1:I'm I've been trying to corral my son to give me advice to do this and make it better.
Speaker 2:Right, because he knows the ins and outs of social media and oh yeah, and well, it's funny you say that, because I just got a new phone and I got a couple messages popped up on certain apps and I don't know how to get rid of them. I handed my phone to my niece last night. You know she's in her early 30s. Oh gone, she goes. Here you go, uncle keibler, here you go. I was like, thank you, that's it. And I was like, what did you do? She goes, I don't worry about it. I'm like, okay, I mean that that I was gonna learn. I mean maybe I could pick up a thing or two, but and that really, it just comes natural to them it does.
Speaker 1:you know it does because they like it comes more natural to me than it does to you. Oh, absolutely, because of that little generational gap that I'm talking about, because I knew I grew up with it, right.
Speaker 2:I've known it Now.
Speaker 1:What's happening today? I'm far beyond. I'm way behind Right, because I don't do that stuff. I'm out there building houses and banging nails, yeah, but my son is here figuring out how to sell digital fish.
Speaker 2:What the hell is that?
Speaker 1:Yeah, exactly, he's making businesses by selling digital things.
Speaker 2:Holy moly.
Speaker 1:Yep, that's where it's going.
Speaker 2:Imagine if you said that to somebody in 1957.
Speaker 1:They'd be like what the hell is a digital fish?
Speaker 2:Yeah, you want a fish Go down to the pond.
Speaker 1:Exactly.
Speaker 2:Teach a man to fish.
Speaker 1:He'll eat for a year, or he'll eat for a year or he'll eat forever, but yet that's what's happening and they're learning how to do it and they're understanding it and they know how to use the algorithms and all that stuff and they know what to do. So if you need to know anything or you want to get anywhere, just ask.
Speaker 2:Look to your children, yeah, because I mean and so it really takes out what our grandparents said way back when oh, yeah, mean the next 15 to 20 years, I'm going to be hopefully having my grandkids yeah, hopefully somebody's in diapers, you know and I'll be watching them grow up and it's going to be like what are they going to teach us? You know, it's going to be that much, far that more advanced, I should say.
Speaker 1:And that's really the way everybody should look at it. Yeah, instead of this life is going to be awful should look at it instead of this life is going to be awful, Right.
Speaker 2:I shouldn't say I'm worried what my daughter's going to do or what my son's going to do. I should just wish him the best and just go along with the ride for the ride.
Speaker 1:That's exactly it, because this really is where ignorance is bliss. Yeah, if you don't know anything about 1950 and you're in your own life right now, just stay in your own life. You'll be just fine. Yeah, don't, don't. And maybe they should never create time travel. Oh my God, because if you see how simple it was back then as compared to now, you might be like you know, I don't want to go back. No, I want to stay here and wear popped collars and weird shoes.
Speaker 2:Talking about that, I just got a haircut. And there's another thing what do they call those Duck asses? Another thing what do they call those Duck asses, the haircut seats? They get back in the day, oh yeah. Those were 50 cents and I just went yesterday for a haircut. It was $23.50. You don't have any hair to cut. I have none, exactly, I mean I got ripped off. I have slightly more than you. You got a lot more. You got a nice head of hair.
Speaker 2:Hey, you're an all right guy, thanks but I don't know what happened to left side of you. But you're all right. Oh my good god all right keeps. We are at the end. We're done already. Already, we got to go to video here for a minute. All right, sounds good. I'll show you my haircut on video yep, check it out on friday.
Speaker 1:See how I got ripped off well check it out because it's already come out. But uh, thanks for checking in with us. Sake to me like and subscribe at sakatumicom and uh, join the family. Let us know what you think and tell us how bad we are at all this podcast and stuff hey, we appreciate you all we do.
Speaker 1:We appreciate all of you. So, uh, that being said, as always, be good. Hey, everybody, it's Ditto. I want to give a shout out to my buddy, larry over at Legendary Graphics. He designed our logo for us. It came out fantastic. He does wraps, he does all kinds of customized stuff for you. If you get a chance, go to Legendarycom. That's Legendarycom, check it out for anything you need. All right guys, thanks, be good.
Speaker 2:Saki to me.
Speaker 1:Hey guys, Thanks Be good. Saki Dumi. Hey everybody, it's Ditto. Thanks for checking out our show today. Hope you enjoyed it. If you did, subscribe to us, we can hook up. Interact. You can tell us what you like about the show. Talk about what you don't like about the show. Give us information and insight. We'd appreciate it. We only want to make the show better for you guys.
Speaker 2:Also, if you get a chance head over to summit, that's our sponsor and you can really do some business. All right, as always, everybody be good Sake to me.