DFMB 50: Link’s Family Health Scare

Hey Link, how you doing? Good, good, you ready? Well, listen, I’m ready to listen. Do you know that this is our 50th episode? Really? Of “Dispatches From Myrtle Beach.” The big five-oh? And I thought… Yeah. And I thought maybe to commemorate this 50th episode, we’ll let Logan cue the music and me and you will stand up and dance for 50 seconds. Okay, yeah, yeah, I like this. I think I got 50 seconds in me. All right, let’s do it. All right. Extended version. I’m trying to do your dance. Halfway. Oh, this is only halfway? Yeah. Oh gosh, daddy, you gonna be able to make it? Oh yeah, I dance all the time. Like this? I dance like this. Whoops, I just, I tried to do a spin move and I lost my… Is it over? You spun me around, dad. Well, we gonna get- And why am I winded? Why am I the one who needs to catch his breath? What’s up with that? I don’t know. You need to come down here to the beach and go dance with me and Nancy more often, but- For real. Hey, so this is “Dispatches From Myrtle Beach” with Charles Neal and my son Link. And for all you Myrtle Beasts, y’all keep watching, ’cause we’re gonna try to get 50 more in in the next year or two, so- Okay, yeah. I mean, if it doesn’t happen in two years to get 50, we’ve really slowed our roll. Well, we’ll just see how it- Well, I guess you’re right. If we’re, doing, well, here I am. Just doing it twice. I’m not good at math, I guess. If we do it every other week, there’s 52 weeks in a year. That’s 25, so that’s about two years, ain’t it? Yeah, yeah, I’m sorry I didn’t trust you with the math. I can add, I can add. But I didn’t get no engineering degree, so I can’t help you. Well, I’m apparently not using mine. How you doing, though? Good to see you. I’m doing good, yes. It got cold here, but- Oh, well, what do you mean by cold in North Myrtle Beach? It was about 35 degrees here this morning when we got up. So for November, that’s pretty unusual, right? Well, I mean, last week it was in the 80s and yesterday it was in the 70s and today the high was 52 and the wind blowing about 35 mile an hour. So, it was cold today. This is not why you moved to Myrtle Beach. Are you upset? Well, no, because the weather said we have about three days of it and next week it’ll be back about 80. So you just learn to live with it and roll with it. That’s all you gotta do. Now, you have changing of leaves down there, right? Oh yeah, yeah. We don’t have any of that out here. That’s the thing that the southern Californians complain about. “Oh, you know, I miss the seasons. Oh, I miss the seasons. Oh, the leaves changing. I wish, oh, I just wish I could see leaves changing.” What’s the big deal about leaves changing? I mean it’s beautiful and all, but like… I don’t know. Dad, you know I like it out here. I’m willing to give up a little leaves changing for- If it’s that bad for ’em, they just need to move. I know, exactly. I can visit leaves changing if I really get the hankering. Oh yeah, you, hey. Of course, going and seeing it in person ain’t the same as watching it on TV or seeing in a picture, but- Yeah. I mean if they crying that much about it, they need to re-figure out if they really like living where they live at and they need to move somewhere else, ’cause I don’t wanna live in the mountains. Yeah. I ain’t living up there. I don’t like cold weather that much. Me neither. So just, to hell with that. It’s nice to shake it up a little bit for a visit. Yes, it’s a place to visit and for me to come back to the beach, I’m telling you, yeah. And I will say that you got a new look. I gotta say that. The mullet is gone. Yes, yep. It’s a thing of the past. And last time I thought it was gone, you were just messing with me. But give me a profile here. Yes. Okay. You’ve got some neck coverage. I got me some curls and stuff. Yeah, it looks good. Nancy liked it where I left it long. I’m backing off of it slowly, as well. You know, it had its moment. Yeah. Yeah. Oh yeah. We’ll never forget it. Yeah. We’ll never forget it. But you can’t never tell. You know, I might start growing it long again, but not just for a mullet, just to have it long. I don’t know, you can’t even tell. I know, sometimes you like to have all your hair long. Well, I got a little story to tell you before we get into something else here, but I went to the bank last week. Yeah. I was gonna get a check cashed and walked into the bank and there was this young guy, there’s a teller and he said, “Can I help you?” And I said, “Yes,” and I handed him a check. And he said, and I told, I got an account here. He said, “Well, I just need to see your ID.” And so I pull my driving license out and showed him my ID and Charles Lincoln Neal Junior on it. And he kinda looked me and I said, “Hold on, I just want to make sure that you understand and know who I am.” And I pull my phone out and popped up the podcast from “Dispatches From Myrtle Beach” and me and you sitting on it. And the boy fell out. He fell out of his stool? Yeah. He wasn’t in it, he was standing up and fell out and like, I thought he was gonna pass out and fell back in his stool. Now, he didn’t, he put us together, but he said, “Oh my God, I’ve been watching Rhett and Link for…” And he was about 23, but ever how many years I think he’d been watching. Right. And then he said- His whole life, probably. Oh yeah. Then he said, “And y’all got that thing you just showed me, ‘Dispatches From Myrtle Beach.’ I’ve watched that some, too, he said. He told all the, and all the other people that were tellers, and they were women. Yeah. And he said, “Well, we got a famous person in the house today.” And they said, “We know who he is. We know who he is. We know he’s famous. We don’t bother him and make fools out of ourselves like you do.” Yeah, be cool, man, be cool. Get his money. Actually, you were trying to get your money. Did you get a little extra, you know? What did you get out of this deal? No I was afraid to, he counted it and I said, ” I don’t want you to get in no trouble. You might count that again, make sure you… I don’t want you to come up short at the end of the day, but-” You made him count it twice ’cause he would, he couldn’t hold it together. And this boy’s name is Joseph Kelly at Anderson Brothers Bank in North Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, so- Holler out, Joseph. I’m giving the holler out to Joseph. Thanks for being a Mythical Beast and a Myrtle Beast. Yep. And for giving dad his money. Yeah, yeah. You know, don’t stand in between him and his money. This episode is brought to you by HelloFresh. The most wonderful time of the year is also the most delicious and is quickly approaching. Planning to host the holidays? HelloFresh Market has just what you need to please a crowd without the hassle. from photo worthy… Oh Lord, what’s that word, Logan? Churichi? That would be charcuterie, but charuchi also works. Charcuterie, okay. Yeah, there it is. From photo worthy charcuterie boards to mouthwatering desserts, you can choose from over 45 weekly recipes and over 100 curated picks from HelloFresh Market. Okay, let me tell y’all, when me and Nancy use HelloFresh, it’s really nice ’cause it makes things quick, but during the holidays, you really do need to be able to use your time well, and HelloFresh will help you make things be quicker and get food ready and to use it, and then they’ve got all these 100 different things that you can pick from to make your Thanksgiving, whether it’s for breakfast or lunch or whatever it is, so you ought to try this HelloFresh ’cause it’ll make things easier and a lot simpler for you for Thanksgiving and the holidays. Go to hellofresh.com/myrtlefree and use code myrtlefree for free breakfast for life, one breakfast item per box while a subscription is active. That’s free breakfast for life at hellofresh.com/myrtlefree with code myrtlefree. HelloFresh, America’s number one meal kit. We made our own cereal. Well, Rhett and Link did. They wanted to create an anytime cereal that brought people back to the cereal heyday of their childhoods. It’s now available in two flavors, sweet mac n’ mello and peanut butter and honey sandwich. Rhett and Link personally taste tested and developed these from the ground up with help from the entire Myrtle… Myrtle. Mythical and Mythical Kitchen teams. Order now at eatmishmash.com. Well, on another note, I was gonna ask you, Christy’s dad Bobby, how’s he doing? Oh, he’s doing good. His arm is, you know, I should tell, I’m gonna tell the whole story ’cause this is quite a story, but just to skip to the end, he’s been at home, he’s been recovering. His arm, he’s still fighting some less intense versions of infection that are much more localized. But, so the story that I’ll tell is a really harrowing story, but at the end he’s doing good, to answer your question to start things off. But yeah, ’cause I mean, I haven’t told you from our perspective everything that happened. I know we talked some about it and you’ve been talking to Christy about it. Yeah. But for the benefit of the Myrtle Beasts listening, too, I’ll just kinda fill in the gaps. So I got home from work. It was a Thursday and I got home at 6:30 and Christy and Lando are around and we’re about to eat dinner and Christy just mentioned offhand, she was like, my dad, he’s had an injury, he cut his arm, and he’s gone in to get it looked at. He’s gone to the emergency room. I was like, okay. And it didn’t sound like that big of a deal at that point, and Christy wasn’t getting a lot of updates from her mom for the next few hours. It was just like, okay, they’re checking him out. And then we turn in about, I probably went to bed at 9:30. I like to turn in early. And we didn’t talk about it anymore. And then at, let’s see. It was two… It was between two and three AM, I think, Christy woke me up and- Y’all’s time. Yeah, our time. And she was like, “Dad’s not doing good.” I was kind of in a haze trying to wake up, and she was like, “He’s not doing good. He’s in the ICU and he has an infection.” And then I believe at that point she used the word sepsis, but she definitely, if not then, that came a little bit later, but she definitely used the words ICU, and that woke me up instantly and I was like, okay. And I’m pretty sure that the word sepsis was thrown around. I barely know what sepsis is, but it’s when the infection that you have from some sorta injury gets in your bloodstream, right? So then it’s like- Yeah. And that’s really bad news. And knowing that you’re in the intensive care unit, it’s like, oh my God this is not good at all. And then, so immediately we’re like, what do we do? It’s always so difficult to figure out when you’re on the other side of the country. You’re trying to figure out, okay, are we, I mean, just keep us updated. Are we, do we need to be ready to come home? And then I just kinda had this, I don’t know if you’d call it a moment of clarity, but I just kinda felt like, I was like, you know what? This is very scary when you’re talking about ICU, when you’re talking about sepsis, this is, these are trigger words for a deadly situation. And I was like, there’s no reason why we just shouldn’t go ahead and mobilize and go back. Just waiting to see if things get worse or if things get better, there’s no… We have the means and we have the ability in terms of our company, my company, and being able to pull strings and move stuff around. It’s like, I don’t need to ask anybody’s permission here, you know? And so it’s just like, okay, this can actually be a pretty simple decision. We just need to get on the next plane home so that we can be there and you can be there for your dad no matter what happens. And- And her mom, yeah? Oh yeah. And so we made that decision by four o’clock. By 4:30 or five we were leaving the house and driving to the airport to get on a plane to come home. And it was really scary because at that point I was like, “Christy, pack your things and you need to be-” Yeah, go ahead. Let me ask you a question, ’cause I know somebody just had what Bobby’s had, and did the doctors or anybody tell y’all before y’all got on this plane and left that this was a 50/50 thing, that he would make it or not make it? Well, we didn’t yet know what the chances were and we didn’t know what the infection was. Oh, okay. What happened to him was he was fishing down in the river and he had his bait bucket, his minnow bucket in the water so that the minnows can swim around but they’re still in the cage that you can reach down into, and he reached down into that to pull out a minnow, and when he pulled it out he cut his forearm on the edge of the bucket. And he cuts himself a lot and… But he always does a good job of cleaning and dressing his wounds, which he did for this. And then it was the next day he was mowing the grass and he comes in from mowing the grass and he’s like, “My arm is not doing good. I need to go by urgent care.” And so he went to the nearest urgent care, and they were so backed up they were like, “Well, come back tonight in four hours or come back first thing in the morning and you can be seen.” And as he was talking to the person at the desk about this, the doctor happened to come out and overhear that he was talking about how he cut his arm in the river, and the doctor said, “I’ll see him now,” and he took him back then instead of waiting four hours or the next day, and in retrospect that little happening, that happenstance moment of getting him seen versus waiting- Probably saved him. Probably saved him because of how quickly this infection was moving. And he took a look at his arm and he said, “You need to go to the emergency room right now.” And then that was when we started to understand something was going on and he was being seen, but it was then through the night that things got worse and he got admitted into the hospital and they were trying to figure out, okay, what is this infection that is ballooning your forearm and potentially moving up your arm? And so yeah, it was really serious. And so we’re packing our our clothes and I’m like, “All right, Christy, you need to pack for, I would just take everything to be there for a while.” And then it was, there was this one moment where it’s like, you know what, I think you probably need to bring a dress for a funeral. It’s one of those tough conversations where it’s like, very sobering moment. It’s like, all right, we have to be ready for the worst, because it’s definitely on the table. In those situations, sometimes you don’t wanna say, okay, this could be it for your dad, you know? And it was very emotional. But we had to make an informed decision, and I think that, so yeah, we found ourselves packing for the worst case scenario, for a funeral. Oh yeah. And then just making plans for Lando. And everything worked out where Lily hadn’t started classes, so she was, were flying out and then Lily was flying home so that she could stay home and so that Lando could stay home and continue to go to school and everything. So everything was being worked out as we were getting on the plane and getting there. And then by the time we got there late that afternoon, eight o’clock that night, we go to the ICU room, and he was awake and alert and communicative at the time, and so that was really encouraging, but his arm was scary. It was swollen up twice the size if not more than his other arm, and they had taken Sharpie and they were marking on his arm the progression of the swelling and the infection, presumably to decide if they were gonna have to amputate the arm, you know? Or that if it was gonna progress in such a way that it was gonna kill him. And they were pumping him full of antibiotics and sending off samples in order to know what they were working with. They didn’t find out until, it might’ve have been another 48 hours. It’s not that fresh in my mind exactly the timeline of it. But they eventually found out that it was vibrio, which, yes, has a 50% survival rate. So all of our instincts and all of their actions were correct to accommodate for that scenario. And yeah, at certain times of year, the river water has it in it. You gotta be really careful about that. And they, at this, down in New Burn in the ICU, they were talking about, well, we see a few cases of this around this time every year, and it’s just, you know, and it can go really south and… But from the moment we got there through the next few days, every, he was, we only saw positive improvement, you know? So it wasn’t a lot of ups and downs for him. It was actually very fortunate that the antibiotics worked and that everything headed in the right direction pretty much all along the way. But it was definitely scary, and- Oh yeah. But yeah, it was… I think he ended up being in the hospital for not quite two weeks. Like I said, I’m kinda fuzzy on the timeline, because once he was stabilized, I flew back home and Christy stayed there. Then there was this whole other thing because then Christy got tested positive for COVID, and so then it was like, well, you can’t see your dad. And I never got it. I never tested positive. I had flown back home and then isolated myself thinking, knowing that I was exposed, but I never got it. But yeah, so then it was like, she was there but she couldn’t see her dad, and then her mom had to stay away and her sister and her husband were able to step up and help and everybody made it work, but I was like, man, this is getting… We thought this is getting better, but then it got scarier, and it was even more complicated, and it was a lot. It was a lot. But yeah, Mr. Bobby pulled through like a champ, and- Yes he did. Yeah, it’s kinda like a new lease on life experience for him, ’cause it was definitely a brush with death. Oh yeah. And it’s just kinda wild to think that it can just happen from a simple cut. Little cut. Yeah. And the bacteria in the water. Yeah. Yeah, yeah. But, I mean, I was glad that we made the right decision to say, you know what? We’re gonna go, we’re gonna be there. Yeah, it’s a five-hour flight. It takes a lotta rigamarole to figure things out. But this is the right thing to do and this is what we wanna do, and I think it’s one of the challenges of living out here is feeling like you’re separated and you can’t be there when people that you love need you. And so I was glad that we were able to get back as quickly as we could and it felt like a drill that it’s… Honestly, it’s just, I think it’s something that we have to be ready for, right? It’s like, I mean, from your perspective, I think about you’ve never had, as far as I can remember, you’ve never had a scare like that, you know? Am I forgetting? I wouldn’t be forgetting anything, right? No. I mean, I know that when you had your, got your leukemia diagnosis, that was, I mean, that hit us like a ton of bricks, and it sounded really scary, but you were never, you know, it was a totally different process and assessment. Yeah, that was a whole different thing, yeah. I mean, the doctors told me they could get me well, and if I was gonna get something, that was the best one to get, so- Right. But it did get me thinking about, I know there were talks with Christy’s family, and it’s like, when something like this happens, it’s like you start to ask questions, okay, are your affairs in order in terms of like your will and all of that type of stuff. Oh yeah. It’s like, having to figure all that out. Is that something, I mean, do you have all that figured out? Well, I didn’t have all that figured out, and then when Dan got killed- Right. And really didn’t have a will about stuff or anything, and it was all of a sudden, it made me see that, boy, I need to get my ducks in a row. So me and Nancy both, we got all our stuff figured out and got a will where everything fixed up where the family don’t have to worry about nothing, so- Okay. Yeah, yeah. I hate to be, yeah, I mean, it’s one of those things where it’s always like, well, yeah, I’ll get to it, you know? But then someday it’s like, all right. Oh yeah, that’s what I mean, listen. I gotta stop and I got to figure this out. It don’t make any difference, either, if you’re in your 40s or you’re in your 70s. It don’t make no difference. Your day might be today. And- That’s true. If it ain’t, if you ain’t got that stuff figured out, it leaves a mess for the spouse or whoever that’s left to take care of stuff, I’m telling, a mess, so- Yeah, we- If we learn one thing out of this for my Mytle Beasts, I think what Link’s trying to get to, if you don’t have a will or whatever you do where you live, you need to get one, and it don’t make no difference how old you are. That’s true. So- Yeah, and I’ve got all that squared away for me, too. Have you picked where you wanna be buried? I haven’t, I don’t even, I haven’t even asked you that. It’s the type of thing that’s like, it’s not the thing that you wanna talk about, I guess, unless you’re telling a story like this on a podcast or… It’s a good question to ask. What are, you know, you don’t have to go through all of your end of life wishes at this point, but I was just curious, do you have a spot you wanna be buried? Yeah, I got a place Nancy had where her first husband passed away and she’s got a spot and then she had another spot right beside of it, so me and Chuck’s going to be right in between her when we get buried. She’s gonna be in between the two of you? Yep, that’s right, yeah. Okay, all right, so that’s another spouse sandwich. This is like a theme of the show. So you’re gonna be permanently buried in a spouse sandwich. You’re gonna be the bread of a spouse sandwich. Yes I am. Well, okay, is there room on the other side for anybody else? No, I know mom’s got a spot next to Louis. Yeah. I’m sorry I even said that But yeah, it’s- She bought it, Nancy bought this spot for Brandy and- Her daughter. And she don’t need that spot, so Nancy’s gonna let me have it. That’s the thing I haven’t nailed down. I mean, there were so once you go into the process of last will and testament and it’s like, I did that through the people that I work through and they know all the questions to ask and all the paperwork to do. But the one thing that I haven’t done is, and I just don’t have a clue where I would be buried, honestly. I just don’t- Well, I mean, I don’t know, there’s a lot- I don’t even know if I wanna be buried. Well, there’s a lotta people now that aren’t getting buried. They’re cremated and put in a little urn if you want to. Ashes spreaded somewhere. Part of ’em, you can do that. And if you don’t, you just set ’em up on the mantle. Yeah, and then it’s like, well, it uses a lotta energy to burn up a human body, so it’s not the most environmentally sound thing, I’ve heard. I need to think about that a little bit more. But hey, it’s a lot cheaper than getting buried at a funeral home. Yeah. I’m also not one of those people that, I’m not a grave visitor, at least I haven’t been up until this point. I hope it doesn’t hurt your feelings, but when you get buried in this spot, I don’t know how often I’mma come visit that spot. Well, just think about me once in a while. I’m gonna think about you a lot. But I’m not, like in the movies where they walk up to the grave. You don’t remember a little something about it. I mean, I don’t, have you been back to the spot where Papa’s buried? No, see, but I think about him all the time. I don’t need to go back there. But, and I’m not denigrating or diminishing anybody who that’s part of, that might be very edifying a practice for some people. I’m just saying for me personally, I just, I don’t have that instinct, so I’m not gonna be putting flowers on your grave, I don’t think, Dad. You can send somebody to do it. I can send somebody, all right, yeah. Is that what you’re saying? Is that what you’re asking for? That’s what Nancy does. She makes all these things for people’s, for cemeteries, and she carries and puts ’em on there for ’em, so… But we’ve already figured out there ain’t nobody gonna do that for us, so I ain’t gonna put that pressure on you, either. I don’t care if you put flowers on my grave or don’t. It don’t make no difference ’cause I ain’t gonna know it. Okay, good. Okay, good. That’s a thing that people do, I think- That’s what I needed to hear. I just needed you to let me off the hook. Help them feel better about the family being buried there. I mean, ’cause the people that’s buried there don’t know you put flowers on there to start with. Mm-hmm. What about funeral stuff? Since we’re talking about it, I’mma dig a little bit deeper. Have you thought any about what you want in terms of a memorial service? Have you written any of that down? No, I hadn’t done that, but, well, I started one a little bit, but, and Nancy’s been to the place in Sanford, the funeral home. She’s got hers all set up. We were up there for a funeral two weekends ago and she said, “We can go on back here in the back. You can pick out your casket like I did and we can get all this stuff took care of.” And I said, “Not today.” Well, you gonna get stuck with a ugly one, then, if you don’t watch out. Oh no, it’s, I mean, she can pick out, family can pick out. You’re not opinionated. You can come in. No. See, I’m more interested in a party. I mean, like a celebration. Well, I mean, I must go- Think about that. I’ll have a burial at the church where we go to church up there and we’ll have a visitation, see if I got any friends and anybody shows up, so… I won’t know it, but see how, well, you seen that with- Yeah. Both of your papas and- I know, but for you, I just think we might need some sorta special shagalicious party. Maybe it’s a after hours thing. Maybe it’s down there in Myrtle Beach. We can do that and have a little memorial thing if you want to and have it down at Fat Harold’s or out there on the beach. That’d be all right with me, yeah. Well, I want- People that do that- Just think more about it. You think more about it. Okay. This is what you want. And then once you’ve thought about it and you’ve laid it all out, then we’re gonna decide to do it before you die. That’s the real key. Oh yeah, well- Fake your own death, you have everybody show up, and then you’re there to see it, man. Well- That’s what I wanna do. If you throw a party down here, there’s people gonna show up whether you, if it’s whether you- Know ’em or not? Not died or did die. Oh. Well, okay, so I didn’t mean to make it morbid, but, I mean, is nothing wrong with talking about all this stuff. It’s actually a really good thing and it’s, especially when it’s like, okay, the good news and the celebration that Christy’s dad pulled through and that he’s doing great and… Like I said, there’s still, I mean, he’s not, he’s outta the woods, but they’re still dealing with the… They’re still keeping an eye on the infection, ’cause it is a long recovery. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. It is a long recovery. but he’s getting there. Thanks for asking. Well, hey, Link, I got a little note from some of your people and said y’all got a new release for something coming out and- Okay. And I don’t know what, they didn’t tell me anything, but you know- Okay, yeah. I’m kinda interested in what- I forgot about this. What’s going on. I got so fixated on death and funerals and stuff that I forgot to tell you. We have made our own cereal, Dad. It’s called MishMash. Oh my God. Isn’t this crazy? MishMash? Yeah, Mythical MishMash. And there’s- What does that say? Sweet- Sweet mac ‘n mello. It’s- Sweet mac n’ mello. See, it’s supposed to look like a box of mac and cheese, but it doesn’t taste like cheese. It tastes like sweet corn cereal with marshmallows. And then check this out. We got two flavors. Oh my goodness. Peanut butter and honey sandwich. Oh man. Yes. This was my idea. I probably won’t be able to get that here, so you’re probably just gonna have to send me a box of that. Well, I’m glad you asked. All you gotta do is go to eatmishmash.com, Dad, and order some. Oh man! But I will send you some. I mean, that’s pretty cool, right? Ah, hey, course, that don’t look like you and Rhett, but, I mean- This is our mascot, the Randler. Yeah. So yeah, he’s kinda like our Tony the Tiger. You know you made it when you can release your own cereal. At least that’s how I feel about it. Yeah, well, there don’t nothing surprise me with you two where ain’t no telling what else’ll come out in the next little bit, so- Are you, do you, are you a cereal lover? I eat cereal at least once instead of fixing me a egg sandwich or something in the morning. Some mornings I fix me a bowl of cereal. So yes, I do eat cereal. And then sometimes- I’mma send you some. Instead of, when I get a… At night when you ain’t supposed to eat a whole lot and get a hankering for something that don’t fill you up, I’ll eat me a bowl of cereal then, too. Yes, that’s what I do, Dad. My favorite time to eat cereal is 11:30 to 2:30 in the morning. That’s the best time to eat cereal. Mine’s more more like 8:30 to 10:30 while I’m watching, might be watching a ball game or something for, and want a little something to eat and fix me up some cereal. It’s so good. All right, I wanna see what you think of our cereal, so I’mma send you some of this. Okay. All right. Shut it down. Well, hey, we’ve talked about a lotta stuff today and- Yeah, we did. A lot of it was fun and then some of it was serious, but it was fun… It was fun… Good God, I can’t talk no more. it was fun having all you Myrtle Beasts here with us today. Hope everyone has a wonderful Thanksgiving, and Link, I’ll see you soon. Mm-hmm, that’s right. Little bit before Thanksgiving. And don’t forget to tune in next week for another mini dispatch and please click those follow and subscribe buttons for us wherever you get your podcast and on YouTube, and don’t forget to rate and review us on Apple Podcasts. And if you got a joke, question, or comment you’d like to share with me, email me at ratherbshaggin53@aol.com so we can’t wait to spin your world around next time and we’ll see what we can get into then and it was good seeing you again, son, and I’ll talk to you later. Yep. Love you. Love you too.

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