Whoops. This is Dispatches from Myrtle Beach with Charles Neal and my son. Link from Good Mythical Morning. How you doing, son? I’m doing good, dad. I’m doing good. You know, I, if I were to, if I were to rate my life on a scale of one to 10, just overall 10 being complete and pure orgasmic bliss. Oh my goodness. And, and zero being, um. Would rather not remain on this plane of existence. I would probably give myself, I think I, I think I would go with a, with an eight. I think I’m gonna go all the way to eight. I got, I got a couple of things that I’m still a little too worried about that I don’t need to be, so I’m not happy about that. And I think that brings. That brings me down a point, and then not knowing how you’re doing brings me down another half a point so you can fix that. So on a scale of one to 10, where are you putting yourself right now? And you can take a minute to think about it. ’cause I know this is a big question. Well, I I, I’m probably about a eight too. At least a eight, if not a nine. At least a eight. Yeah, man, we’re over. We’re both over here at eight and nine. Dad. Yeah. I mean, now you brought me up to a nine just by saying you’re a nine. Yeah. I mean, I almost feel bad saying it because you know, there’s a lot to get down about in the world these days and Oh yeah. But the sad thing about life is that in one way or another. If it ain’t here, it’s coming for you personally or corporately, or whatever the case may be. But, and when things are good, you don’t need to feel guilty for it. You just need to be grateful for it. So how about that? That’s right. Yep. So we’re in a good spot. Things has been, things have been good for me and Nancy and everything we’ve been doing, like we’ve talked about, they been doing a little bit of traveling and everything going on and enjoying each other. And I got, uh. Probably by the time this episode has come out, we’ve eat, uh, cabbage out of the garden and spring onions and, and probably getting pretty close to picking something you don’t care nothing about, but, nope. Some good, wonderful tomatoes. Nope, don’t like okra either. You got any okra? Nope, I ain’t got no ochre planted, got be bell peppers. And look, your anticipated delight from the fruits of your garden is pushing you up to a nine. That in your, I’m telling you, I’m your relationship with Nancy. So that’s, that’s, I love that. That makes me happy. Yeah. You know what, and it’s kind of a good example of like, keep it simple, you know, if you can just have a, have, have a project you’re looking forward to, even if it is tomatoes, ugh. You know, that’ll, that’ll, that’ll be magical. It’s time for another edition of Myrtle Beach Mailbag. So I, I got a email from Phil and it says Phil. Hey Charles, and Link, this is Phil here and I’m kind of curious. You guys always do a segment called Don’t Tell Nana. Mm-hmm. But I feel like Link has gotten all scot free for the past 115 plus episodes. What about don’t tell Christie for a change? Well, uh, that’s a good point. That is a good point, and I think that’s something that I’ve been meaning to discuss. Now’s a bit time to do. What if we do that? Hey. Hey. I, Phil, I don’t tell Nana is a whole different ball game than if we would do a thing called Don’t tell Christie yet. Don’t tell Nancy because, uh. We still married and if we do a start doing, don’t tell stuff about our wives. Oh hell. They might not be a wise anymore. Oh, that’s a good point. Dad. You’re talking about keeping secrets. Yeah. From your partner. And that, that ain’t a good idea. I’m a, I I’m a pretty good example of that, of, of some things, but Okay. That’s fair. I, I, I’m, uh, you know, link, link if he, if Link wants to do a don’t Tell Christie episode and we do a spot about that. He can go right ahead, but we ain’t doing a Don’t tell Nancy episode. I’m telling you that right now. Well just, yeah, just uh, back the bus up and then run right over me with it, dad. That’s what I just did. Alright. I’m on my own with the Don’t tell Christie, but, well, I mean, she is your wife. What do you mean? What do you mean by that? I mean, it’s my decision. You’re the one that’s got, if you don’t want to tell her something and we do an episode about it, uh, somebody’s going to tell her ’cause she’s not like nana, Nana don’t get on and watch and kind of see and yeah. Uh, Christie does peek and look sometimes at some of our podcasts and not stuff on you t Matter of fact, in the last episode, uh, I. Told the story of like how I was kind of in the doghouse the day before Mother’s Day, right? Yes. When I, when I said that I, I took a nap. I didn’t take two naps. I took one nap, but it was segmented. Okay? Just ’cause you wake up in the middle of nap doesn’t mean the naps over. It doesn’t mean now you’ve taken two naps. So I don’t, I feel like. I get the raw end of the deal here. I’m doing it again, talking crap about Chrissy’s perspective, and she’s listening again. Ah, because that’s what I found out. She said that I made her look bad. And who, how do I get off telling my version of things? And I was like, well, it’s just, you know, I told her how I remembered it. She’s like, well, you made me look bad, like just wanting a steak. Oh, that steak’s not good enough. You gotta go and get me another steak from Ralph’s. Oh yeah. And I was like, well, that’s kind of how I remembered it. She’s like, that ain’t how it happened. And I was like, but for the sake of. The podcast and you know, we only have so much time. Stories need to be simplified and, and sometimes you gotta emphasize things for entertainment value. Christie. Yeah. And she is like, well do, you can’t do that at my expense. And I said, okay. Note taking. Don’t take it. Yep. So, so I would just like to so feel he’s already exonerated, he’s already done it. Her that, listen, apparently there were other reasons that she gave me why my story was all wrong, but honestly I really wasn’t taking notes. Yeah. But I can tell you right now that her story’s right and my story was, was wrong and it if it painted her in a negative light. Well that’s, that was my error. So, and I get into the specifics, but uh, you know, you know, if you do, you know what they say about a dead horse? If you beat a dead horse, don’t it stinks. That’s what they don’t say. They say don’t beat a dead horse. But they don’t tell you why. Because it stinks. It stinks. Mm-hmm. And it all, the smells just fart out of it if you beat it. Yep. Why you sitting there beating a dead horse? Anyway? You already killed it. Or maybe that’s the reason that it’s, that you say don’t beat a dead horse is the reason why. Why is that the phrase dad? Don’t beat a dead horse? Because it stinks. Right? I think I, I don’t think the phrase is that you really are beating a dead horse is set when you’ve done something and, uh, like you kind of shed a little. Bad light on Christie. Mm-hmm. Don’t keep bringing up. Leave it along. Let it go. I think that’s what that means. Let it go, let it, let it rot. Don’t bring it up no more. Let it rot in the prairie. Yep. I understand the, the application, but I don’t really understand why I’m now torn on the interpretation, the origin of why, of the phrase don’t beat a dead horse. Can I read it to you? Were people beating dead horses? Yeah, no, I don’t want the right answer. I want dad’s answer. I am sorry for being snappy with you, Logan, but I am on the defensive. People are coming at me all over the place. Logan’s like, well, I can tell you. Well, I, I’m, uh, I, I, I gave you my reason of what, because it stinks. The dead horse meant because it stinks. It, it, no, it, I know the, and then. But you just have to, if you got a problem, why people beating a dead horse and there ain’t no need to keep bringing it up. I know that. Just leave it along. You’re not understanding my question. My question is, I understand your question. Okay, well, well, well then why? Why are people beating dead horses? I. Uh, I, I, I can’t answer that question. I don’t know why anybody beat a dead horse. Is it because they’ve killed it? It’s just a saying. Did they be beat it to kill it and they need to stop because it’s dead or it it, is it because you don’t beat a dead horse? ’cause it’s a stink. Well, but it kind of be like when I tell people that dog won’t hunt, if if it won’t hunt, it won’t hunt. So it’s just a saying. But the origin is people hunt with dogs. Dad. Yeah, but some dogs won’t hunt. I had some of ’em and then, so you might as well not even try is the application. Yeah. It’s a failure from the start. It’s destined to fail. Don’t even do it. But, alright, Logan, get cut him off. Tell him what, what it means. It’s your show. Dead Horse don’t. Don’t beat a dead horse. The origin of the expression comes from the mid 19th century when the practice of beating horses to make them go faster was often viewed as acceptable. To beat a dead horse would be pointless as it wouldn’t be able to go anywhere. It was neither of what I said, and you didn’t help me at all. Dad, here I am talking about stinking horses and killing horses. It’s riding horses. It, it’s almost like d it you, what it could have been was like, get off of the Dead Horse. Well, hey Link. Maybe not. It could be like the UN Kentucky Derby. It could be like the Kentucky Derby, uh, a month or so ago when they find a jockey. 60 some thousand dollars and where he couldn’t ride again for a little while because he, he hit the horse too many times and he won the Kentucky Ry. But because he hit the horse so many times they find him. He beat he. He was beating the horse. He was hitting it with the yeah. Thing to try to make him go faster. And because he did it so many times, they find him 60 some thousand dollars. They’re sitting there counting how many times you’re beating the horse. Yes they are. Yes they did. I think I didn’t never know. That sounds, and where are you on this? Are you agree or disagree? I had a horse wanted to Kentucky Derby, and I thought you were supposed to try to win. And, and I didn’t see him draw no blood anything. He was just making the horse go faster and that’s what he was supposed to be doing. So that’s where I stand. He did his job, dad. You got, Hey, I, I guarantee you the man that owned the horse, the money didn’t come out, the jockeys. Uh, pocket. He, he probably paid it because he won the Kentucky Derby, but I mean, because they didn’t, they didn’t strip him of the title, did they? No, absolutely not. Well, it seems like it’s a little, the punishment’s a little outta whack there, but Dad, you, I, I kind of threw you under the bus because by asking you that question, you gotta just, between you and me, we get, you gotta think a little bit more about. How some things could be perceived on the internet. You’ve seem pro horse beater right now, you seem. No, I, I mean, I, I’m pro that, that jockey wanted to win the Kentucky Derby, so you’re pro winning. If it means beating a horse more than is illegal. That doesn’t sound good. Well, you know, I didn’t know there was a, uh, like you brought up, I didn’t know there was a thing that you, you had so many times you could just, I. Hit that, uh, around the neck. Make him go. So lemme, let me give you another chance. The official stance of dispatches from Myrtle Beach and its creator and host on horse beating is we, what? We don’t want you, we don’t want you to be beating a dead horse. I ain’t even going back to that. I’m talking. Okay. We are, we are. Okay. Yes. Yes. Keep going because I, yes, there’s work to be done here, so there’s always work for me to be done. Yeah. Keep going. Keep going. You’re digging out the hole. You’re in the hole and we’re gonna dig you out. You’re gonna do it yourself. We are anti beating of dead horses and live horses. Within the constraints governed by the people that look after the Kentucky Derby are all that stuff. Right? So, yeah. So I reckon the jockeys are going to have to go to school, how many times they can, uh, how many times can you beat a horse, make it go faster? Yeah. It is a good thing. Listen, this, these limits are a good thing and it’s, and it even across the board, if, if they want to talk, if the people that run the Kentucky Derby want to talk about abusing horses, the mud was about that deep where they were running in and okay, that would be abuse to me instead of him whipping that horse to even letting it go on that day and not running it another day. ’cause I. I’ve never seen one where it was that muddy. It was terrible. So the official stance of dispatches from Myrtle Beach on. Muddy horse racing is you, it, it’s abuse to the horse. You need to wait till it’s a better day. See, to let ’em run where he don’t get hurt and That’s right. That’s right. Mess up their legs or something. And if they’re, and if they horse, if the horses insist on running in those conditions, do we advocate the beating of said horse to keep them from enduring the mud abuse? No, we, we don’t advocate that they need to be beaten or run in the mud. See, I’m not putting any words in his mouth. Myrtle Beast. This is all my dad. And at least, especially the last part, the early stuff was just part of the journey to get to, we are anti-abuse of forces in all capacities. Well, hey, not this horse is. Animals. Dogs and cats. And animals. And dogs, yep. That’s right. Yeah. But if a, but if a dog bites you, I have been bit by a dog. Right. And then what? It’s all bets are off or what? No, I didn’t do nothing to the dog. He. I let him, I just, I asked him if the dog had had his shots. Okay. Alright. Alright, good. Thank you. Funny enough to make written link laugh. Well, they’re going to test that one on The Mythical Society by July the 18th. Submit a video of yourself telling a joke you think will crack them up or send them a written joke and the mythical crew will perform it on your behalf. Either way, the goal is simple. Try to make them laugh, more info and submission details@mythicalsociety.com. You don’t have to be a member to submit. Well, I’ve always wanted to learn French, but I should have done a better job in high school when I was taking it because I didn’t pay any attention and didn’t hardly learn. Learn any words, and that’s why I love Rosetta Stone. It’s designed to help you learn naturally the way you learn your first language instead of drilling words out of context. Rosetta Stone immerses you in a real life scenario. I. Plus with their true accent speech recognition, you can get your pronunciations down right from the start. Whether you want to learn Spanish, French, Korean, or even Dutch, Rosetta Stone makes it easy, effective, and fun. Don’t wait. Unlock your language learning potential. Now dispatches from Myrtle Beach. Listeners can grab Rosetta Stone’s lifetime membership. For 50% off, that’s unlimited access to 25 language courses for life. Visit rosetta stone.com/dispatches to get started and claim your 50% off today. Don’t miss out. Go to rosetta stone.com/dispatches and start learning today. Well link, we got another email from Georgia and this one is, uh. I’m going, going put us in a different limelight because okay. She says, my mom has had terminal cancer for the last 10 years and defied all of the doctor’s odds by still being alive today. Unfortunately, it’s now spread to her neck and I don’t, I don’t know how much longer she’s got on this earth. She’s only 54. I can’t imagine a life without her. She’s been a single mother my whole life. She’s all I have. She’s my best friend. I know you and Link have experienced loss in your life, so I wonder if you have any advice you can give me for dealing with this to support grief and, uh. And ti I can’t. Anticipatory grief. Yeah, she’s, I love the relationship you have with one another and it always brings tear to my eye when you end each episode with Love You. Well, Georgia, um, this is a pretty. I, I, I’m just gonna say boy life, don’t me, and Link talked about this life. Don’t always give us a bed rose and things that, uh, we have and with what’s going on with your mother. And sounds like you are, you are doing a great job trying to help her and be there for her and. That’s the main thing that with whatever goes on, and if this cancer is terminal and she passes on it is, it’s not going to be a easy thing. It is never easy when you, even, when you know something, somebody’s going to pass away, but you also need to know that you are doing something that’s. What a child is supposed to do with somebody that they’ve, that’s raised them and loved them, and you’re trying to be the caregiver and, and take care of them and, and make it as, as easy on them as you can. So I commend you, but just, you know, just keep telling ’em like me and Link tell her and try to do the best you can and, and just. See how it ends up. But just do, like you said, just remember in the end just always tell her that you love her and, and, and I, and she knows that you’re, and I know she knows that you’re trying to take care of her. So I, I commend you for that Georgia and. But I, I can’t make it any easier for you. It, it ain’t never easy. It’s just not easy. Right. Yeah. The anticipation of grief is, is different than being blindsided by it. Um, it’s not better or worse. It, it’s just different. And I think that maybe there is an advantage in being able to prepare. I do think that. The time Georgia that you’ve had with your mom and kind of knowing and they being a little bit more perspec perspective than her just being snatched from, you know, existence. Uh, it can be something that you can use to your advantage, you know, you can, it’s something that maybe you guys can talk about together and get ready for together. You probably already have, but I’ll go a step further and say. Think about how the two of you might dream about your future together. You know, I think Dad is saying some really good stuff about all the care and love that you’re giving in terms of the time and energy you’re spending together and caring for her. But, you know, starting to talk about how it’s gonna be, you know, it’s gonna be hard for you when she’s gone. What are some things that she would hope for your future? Things that, as you talk about it after she is gone, and hopefully that’s another 10 years or more from now, but whenever she’s gone, you can access the dreams that you dreamed for you together and the desires that she has for you can be forward facing for. The rest of your life and is, uh, I think that could be something powerful for you to access food for thought. Just something I was thinking about, but dad’s exactly right. You know, it’s not gonna be easy. And um, you know, there’s, there’s lots of resources for stepping through grief. You know, you’re probably familiar with the stages of grief and, um, so I think making sure that you have. People that you can talk to that can relate to losing a loved one. I think if you can have one per, at least one person like that, that you can talk to, there’s also professionals that you can talk to that help you walk through grief in a way that’s like, ’cause if you don’t walk through it, you, you unwittingly can get stuck at a stage I’m told, and then it can, you know, it can halt your own. Life moving forward in a way that your mom would want for you. So I wish you the best and, um, we’re sending our love. Thank you for sharing this with us. And dad, it does feel good. Well, that something about our show is, is, is a light and an encouragement and, uh, for Georgia and in Georgia this. One other thing I thought of Lincoln and I experienced losing a loved one with papa and his Nanas, uh, on his mama’s side and his other, uh, granddaddy and all that, but they, they were on up in age, right? This, this has got to be. I, I don’t, I mean, I have lost people that are close to me that are young and, and lemme tell you something, uh, 54 is young. Mm-hmm. Yeah. So, uh, it is got to be a tough and trying thing to go through, but, um, sounds like you know. You are doing a great job and we are going to, uh, um, I’m gonna be praying for you, hope that everything goes well, uh, with you in the next years or months or ever. How long it is that, you know, uh, that, uh. You’ll have you, you’ll be able to take care of it and go on with your life and, and remember the good years with your mother. So amen to that. Yeah. So what, that was a different limelight. You, you got, which limelight are we going to next? You got another email? Yeah, I got one for, yeah, we got one now. And this is going, uh, it’s from Kylie. And, and she wants to know, did you know your son said, you sound like Kermit the Frog. We’re not gonna play that video right now, are we? Dad? Do you know, do you know what Kylie is referring to? Well, I know who Kermit the Frog is, but uh. Okay. Uh, well, I think what Logan is about to play for you at Kylie’s request is a clip from Good Mythical Morning when we had, um, a guest on who she is. I, I don’t think it matters, but I’ll just tell you anyway. She’s on Saturday Night Live. So when she came on the show, they never, uh, you know, people were saying, oh, you guys should go and Saturday Night Live. I was like, well, it ain’t that easy just to have somebody from SNL on your show, and then you get to host it. It doesn’t work like that, but it was cool to have her on. Anyway, that’s, that’s the third person with us for this conversation. The only time that my dad actually gave me advice intentionally was when he said, son, to make a marriage work, you both ha you, it’s not 50 50. Was your dad, Kermit, Southern Kermit? Yeah. You know what kind of, Hey, I’ve had four wives and I don’t know how many girlfriends. I rubbed a many a books. I think this is pretty accurate how he talks. So if you think that that’s Kermit, then yes. Mm-hmm. Yes, that would be correct. That would be correct. That’s Ker. That’s giving Kermit you, you gotta give a hundred percent. So that was a TikTok. A clip. Yeah. Dad, uh, from the show. That’s why they like cut in. They, they cut in the parts of, um, of you to kind show how accurate I was, but. She had not heard your voice. Well, I don’t know if you know, uh, sounds like sh she was the, she was more the one bringing up that, uh, about Kermit than you. Exactly. She was kind of throwing you under the bus and, yeah. Uh, Kylie wasn’t it? I mean, and asking you the question ’cause I’m not the one who said it. That’s right. I just, the impression and she interpreted it. Yeah, that you said it, but I, I, the, the girl from Saturday Night Life sounded like she was the one that was outta Kermit the Frog, so That’s right. Yep. Uh, are you upset with her? Because let her have it. Ah, hell. I mean, uh, if she thinks Kermit uh, speaks as good a Southern as I do, it’ll be all right. That’s true. Take it as a compliment. Now, do you think that my impersonation in this was accurate? I. Uh, I thought you, Hey, I, I think you’d do a pretty good job impersonating me with some of the stuff that we do, but, you know, uh, that means you just, even though you’ve been gone a while and out in la you, you can still get back to your southern accent. So, yes, it’s still in there. Yeah. How many views does that thing have? I think 900,000. Oh, I about like a million, man. Yeah. Hopefully they come on over to Dispatches. Yeah. Welcome Myrtle Beast. If you’re here because of that, TikTok, let us know. If you want Dad to respond to other tiktoks, I bet you he’ll tell you his email address. Well, he wasn’t listening to me, but he’ll tell you. No, I he’ll tell you later. Well, yeah. Come on, Myrtle Beast. If No, no, no, it’s too late. Dad. You don’t have to listen to me. It’s your show. Do whatever you want to do. What were you doing? Go do it. Well, it, it looks like people was wanting to see me pronounce some more words. Yes. We’ll move on to that ’cause I’ve been sitting on this one. It is time for another edition of, can I pronounce These words? Let’s see if I Follow Fail. This is from Michelle and I have recent, I have, damn, I recent, I recently had read the new Hunger Games book and I was hoping I could help you learn some new characters from the franchise. And me too, because, I mean, I’ve seen some of the movies, but I don’t know how much I’m gonna be able to help you with these dad. So, uh, well, you better be able to help me ’cause I, I, we’re gonna show ’em to you one at a time. Here’s the first one. Hmm. Good god. Kaus Everdeen. That’s gotta be right? Yep. That’s gotta be right now. That’s, that’s the, that’s the lead. That’s the main person. You want the main person’s name to be easy to pronounce, so you’re not necessarily off the hook. That’s just good writing. What’s this next one? Peta Miller. How many times you want me to pet him? There’s two E’s there. It’s a weird spelling. Okay. Peter Lar, that’s gotta be right. That’s not it. The pronunciation of the second. There’s a different emphasis on the last name. Okay. Say that again, Logan. Emphasize the, the second part of the last name. Okay. Hmm. Pet Mill Ark. You forgot the first part again. It’s the and I, Pete Peter Mill Ark, Peter Millar, malar. Peter Malar, like malarkey. If you add a E on the end, then it becomes something we all know about. We throw it back and forth every week here. Bunch of malarkey. Peter, I mean, what? What do, what do you, Peter Malarkey. What do you, yeah, what do you think about this alternative spelling of. Peter, it’s like it’s, it’s like you’re trying to spell Peter with some sort of a posh accent. Peter, Peter, LAR. Peter, it’s Peter. Come on. Peter’s a nice name. Authors don’t need to be changing it all. Here’s the next one. Hey, Mitch Abernathy. Hey, Mitch. Yeah, that’s what you, when you see Mitch. Hey, Mitch Abernathy later. I don’t know. I don’t know what that means. Was that right? Yep. Well, it’s not Hamish. I think it’s, it was Hamid. That name sucks too. That’s just, that’s stupid. All right. What about this next one? Effy. Trinket? Yep. That’s gotta be it. Mm-hmm. All right. Next one. Oh, I, I’m doing too good. Oh Lord, uh, Cornelius. Snow incorrect. That ain’t Cornelius dad. I mean, the, none of those letters are Cornelius letters. What some of ’em are. Look at the Le COIs, COIs snow. Look at the la, the second half of the first word. Look at those four letters. What are those four letters? LAIs? Nope, that’s five letters. What’s the last four letters of that word? Anus. There you go. Now build, build it up around the anus. Hmm. Co. Co. Illa Anus Snow. Yep, that’s right, isn’t it? Co anus Co anus co. Co anus co. Doc. I’ve been putting this off for way too long. I’ve got the Choal Anus. What can you do for me? Oh Lord. Choal Anus. Okay. Uh, Seneca Crane. Correct. All right. Like the apple juice, Seneca, didn’t they make apple juice? I don’t know. All right. And then one last one for you. Uh, Plutarch. Heavens be plutarch. Nope. No. Pla art Arch Heavens be. I think you got Heaven’s be yes. Yeah, you got, heaven’s be. Yeah. Let’s see. Put arch. Put Arch Heaven’s be, Nope. I think the arch, you’re not saying arch, right? I think it’s going to be it. Just like it has a K in it instead of a ch. Hmm. Put cart, heavens B. Interesting. Replace the CH with a K. Plu Heavens B. Plu. What happened, dad? Was that a Just, are you, did you run outta breath in the middle of plu? Plu? You said that put a K, plu heaven. B, yeah. But you didn’t put the K in the right place and it made you seem very, very, like it was your last breath. The ch is the last two letters in the word. Replace that with a K. So it ends in a K Sound. Plu. I can’t, uh, plu tar. Is that right? Plu. PLU Arch Heavens be no what? I said plu tar. Plu tar. Yeah. Can you believe it? Yeah. No plu tar. Heavens Be plu tar. Heavens be, you know what, we’re not gonna read it. Don’t even worry about it. It, the audio book’s already done. It’s not like you’re trying to get that job. Of course, that couldn’t be a job you could get. They miss me anyway, so. Uh, who, what? They missed me. The hunger Ganges missed me anyway. They just kind of went over my head, so. Oh, they missed you? Yeah, they missed me. Were they aiming for you? I don’t, I don’t think so. I don’t think so either. They missed me, but they weren’t aiming for me. I meant it not. That would be correct. I love it. It’s not. I missed the hungry games. No, he didn’t say that. He missed what he said was they missed me. I listen, if you wanna get Charles, you know where he is, and then you gotta come to him with the movie. He’s not gonna go to you to seek out your movie. You know where to find him. And if you don’t, well you missed him. That’s on you. That’s right. Yeah. So just come on and have something to do with dispatches from Myrtle Beach and we may do some hunger Games. That’s right. We’ll park right up. Yeah. If we get executive producer credit. Yeah, that’s right. Well link. It was fun having you all here with us today, and we’ll be back next week for another one. Yes sir. And don’t forget to follow, un subscribe wherever you get your podcast and on YouTube. And while you’re at it. Hmm. And while you’re at it, rate and review us on the Apple Podcast. And if you’ve got a question, comment, a story you’d like to share with me, email me at ratherbshaggin53@aol.com. Y’all have a great rest of your week, especially you with the put your cart, heavens be again next time. Yeah. Woo. That was fun. Thanks Dad. Thank love you. Love you too. I’ll see you next week. Yes, sir.
