This is Dispatches from Myrtle Beach with Charles Neal and my son Link from Good Mythical Morning. How you doing, Link? Doing good. Always good to see you. Good to see you too. As of the airing of this episode, we are done with Thanksgiving. Um, and we’re, we’re setting our sights on the end of the year. A little, a little Christmas cheer straight into some, some New Year’s madness. Yes. And I’m sure that our Thanksgiving was awesome, but we’ll have to wait until the next episode to talk about it. Cause we had to. record one more before I came out there. Uh, yeah, that’ll be fine. We’ll, we’ll give them a catch up on. That’s right. How, how all of it went and everything. Link, I got a guy I met at the, a young guy, like 16 or 17 years old. Okay. And he’s a national champion, like teenager in, uh, shag dancing. Really? And, uh, I’m giving a holler at the Tucker. Holler out, chugga. So, and man, he, and this boy can, him and his, I can’t remember what her name was, but, and the girl he dances with, they can get with it. Is she a retired, uh, older lady? No, this girl’s a teenager too. You have to be, uh, in the same age group to be able to dance in that group. All right, good. It’s good that they have those type of rules so things don’t get weird. Yeah. Um, and it’s also nice. That the next generation is getting into shagging. That’s correct. It’s not a dying art. Yeah, we’re trying, you know, I’ve done it on this show and, uh, we’re dispatchers and, and bring it up. And that’s the reason I bring it cause I want to let people know that it’s still alive and well. So what, what, what, how can you make shagging appeal to, um, teenagers? I mean. If you like to dance, and do stuff like that, and like good music like we have, and listen to, it’s just, uh, uh, just like any other genre that they’re growing up with. You know, uh, different kind of music and everything is, uh, something that they can get involved in and it’s a, uh, a good clean thing that they can be involved in and they won’t be getting in any trouble. As opposed to what? Like what, I mean, you’re saying it’s a good clean thing. What’s, like, you thinking that teenagers are getting into dirty things? Well, uh, you know, uh, I was a teenager one time, and I probably done some things I shouldn’t have done, and Shagging could have kept you off the streets, is that what you’re saying? Yeah, yeah, it might could have done that. Of course, uh, I mean, I used to shag dance when I was a teenager, but, uh, I wasn’t doing it exactly correct. I didn’t never take lessons, but. I had a good time with it, trying to do it. So I bet you, well, that’s good shagging shagging continues with the next generation, Tucker, you’re keeping hope alive for my father and all the other beach music enthusiasts. No, that would be correct. Keep it up, son. Yeah. So what, what else has been up with you, son? You got anything to. Are you just trying to do like we’re doing, get ready for the end of the year and go on vacation? I’m trying to think about some gifts to buy people earlier this year. I’m trying to, you know, cause the thing that I do is, I’ll, I just kind of put all that, On Christie’s plate and she, and there’s inevitably, there’s a point and it’s always too late where she says, you know what? I don’t know why am I’m, am I the one that’s in charge of getting all the presents you need to be getting some presents. So this year I’m trying to get ahead of it. I’m trying to, well, you can tell her you, y’all, y’all way ahead. Cause you already got me my present. That’s right. That, that green egg grill. And man, I’ve been burning that thing up. Oh yeah. Have you tried a pizza on it yet? No, I ain’t done that yet. Okay, you gotta try that, but you need a pizza stone, and you need to get that thing up to 600 degrees, you know, 500, 600. What else have you done? I, well, I’ve done chicken wings, I’ve cooked, uh, hamburgers on it, uh, and then Nancy and I had this little party, and I don’t know how I ended up doing, but I, I cooked tortilla chips or them little chips that you do, do with tacos and stuff. I heated them up to put all the stuff on them, on that thing, in a pan. You made the nachos, you heated up the nachos on the grill. Yep. I bet they tasted good, like a little smoky. Oh yeah, they were good. Well you couldn’t put them right on the grill, you had to put them in the pan. They’d get so hot and be done, they’d just fall all to pieces. So I figured, I put them on a pan and heated them up and turned out pretty good. I’m still looking forward, I ain’t done it yet cause, and I did it, you know, I cooked this Thanksgiving, but one of these days I got to get me some, cook me some barbecue chicken on it and just shut the lid and let it roll. Yeah. And see how, how, how low and slow you can go. That’s right. Cause you can do it like that. Like you do on your, uh, your pig cooker. Yeah. That’s what I mean. I, that’s what this stuff leading up with my. Uh, green egg that you and Christie got us that I’m getting kind of used to how to regulate and get the heat down or keep it with the draft and the control on it, how to, how to do that. You open up the one at the bottom, you open up the one at the top. And then you got to, I mean, it sucks in through the bottom, I think. And then it comes out the top. Yeah. Yep. Next time you come out here, you’re going to be teaching me stuff about it. You probably will have used yours more than a year than I did. And then in the eight years I’ve had mine, so I’m all ears. And you know, you sent me that pizza thing that goes on the grill, but are you saying that when I. Use that, I still need to, Nancy’s got one of them stones that you set on top of it to put the pizza on. Well, you put an insert inside of it so that the heat is indirect. Yeah. And then, so it’s more of a convection oven and it’s not direct and then, yeah, but then you want to put, you want to put the pizza stone in there and heat that up and then you want to put the pizza on the hot stone. Okay, all right, well. And you can use, um, parchment paper. If you want to. But yeah. Are you taking notes? Oh, you’re. I’m getting me a lozenge. Okay. A lozenge. Alright. It’s time for another edition of Myrtle Beach Mailbag. Link, we got an email from Emma. It says, everyone talks about your accent and Link’s accent. Especially how it has changed. There’s an interesting dialect quiz that predicts where you are from based on how you say certain words or phrases. I would love to see you and Link take this quiz to see where you are from. It thinks each of you are from. My dad’s results stayed the same, but mine changed between years I moved. Okay. Hmm, this is interesting. So we got this thing pulled up so we can fill it out. I think we can only do it for one person at a time, so. Okay. I’m gonna walk you through this and you give me your answer. 25 questions. We’ll keep it kind of quick. How would you address a group of two people or more? You all, yous, you lot, you guys, youns, yins, you, other, or y’all? Y’all. Y’all. Okay. But you’ve known people who’ve said yuns, right? Known people that said what? Yuns. Absolutely not. You’ve never heard anybody say, Yuns, Yuns need to get your act together. Oh, well I don’t know if, I mean it’d be much like, younguns you need to get your act together. That’s not it. Alright, next question. What do you call a sweetened carbonated beverage? Soda, pop, coke, tonic, soft drink, lemonade, co cola, fizzy drink, dope, or other? Co cola? Soft drink. I’d call it a soft drink. Okay. I thought you would call it a Coca Cola, or Coca Cola, with an R on the end. No, see I don’t, I’m a Diet Mountain Dew man, so Coca Cola, they ain’t got that on there, so that’s the reason I’d call it a soft drink. Well they have Coke, and they have Coca Cola. Yes, they do. All right, he’s going with soft drink. I would be going with Coke. And in my past, I would be going with Coca Cola. I need a Coca Cola. What do you call the area of grass in the middle of some streets? Maybe you can just answer it outright. Grass in the middle of streets. So you got people going one way and then A traffic island. Alright, is it boulevard, midway, traffic island, island, neutral ground, you don’t have a word for this, median. Well, I don’t know if I, uh, this is kind of I’m breaking his brain here. Middle of nowhere. The grass in the middle of a road. What do you call it? The median. Alright, median. That’s what I call it. Alright, what do you call a long sandwich that contains cold cuts, lettuce, and so on? Just go ahead and tell me. Don’t even read the answers. A sub. Sub. Yep. Not a grinder. Not a hoagie, not a hero, not a poor boy, not a bomber, not an Italian sandwich, not a baguette. Definitely not a sarnie. No, I mean, I just, I’m going to get a sub and I just ordered the kind of sub I want. That’s right. Sub. I agree with that. How do you pronounce the second syllable of the word P A J A M A S. How do you say that word? P A J A M A S. Pajamas. Okay. With the vowel in palm. Palm. Jam. Jamas. Yep. Not the vowel in jam. It’s not jamas. It’s jamas. I agree. Pajamas. Yep. That’s right. What do you call the small road parallel to the highway? Don’t read the answers, just tell me. It’s a service road. Service road. I call that a frontage road. So you don’t call it an access road, a feeder road, a gateway. You call it a service road. That’s a service road. I, I don’t know. I’ve always called it the frontage. Alright. What do you call the thing from which you might drink water in a school? A water fountain. A water fountain. Water. Water fountain. Not a bubbler. Not a water bubbler. Not a drinking fountain. Water fountain. That’s what I would call it too. A water fountain. How do you pronounce the word B E E T? In. Ben. With the vowel in sit, see, or set. See. Ben. Ben. Set. With the vowel in set. Ben. Sit. Sit. Ben. It’s sit. I think it’s the vowel in sit. An I. Ih. Ben. Ben. Yeah. Ben. Yeah. That’s very Southern. How do you pronounce the first syllable of L A W Y E R? Say that. Lawyer. Law rhymes with flaw. Mm-Hmm. . It doesn’t rhyme with boy. Lawyer. Lawyer. Lawyer. Yeah. Lawyer. Lawyer. Lawyer. Yeah. Yeah. Lawyer. It’s law. Yeah. What do you call something that is across both streets from you at an intersection? Meaning, it’s diagonally across from you in general. If you’re on one corner, and then the opposite corner of the street is what, to you? So, what would you call something that is across? Is it kitty corner? Kit a corner? Cat a corner? Catty corner? Kitty cross? Kitty wampus? Or I would only use diagonal for this, or I have no term for this. Catty corner. Catty corner. C A T T Y. Catty corner. I think I would say kitty corner. Kitty corner. All right. You said catty corner. All right. I like that. I like a good catty corner. What do you call a big road on which you drive relatively fast? Expressway. Really? Since when, since when do you call that expressway? Is that something they have in Myrtle beach? Well, I don’t know. This. Before I even read it, I mean, that’s, that’s, I mean, Hey, it might have been because of riding with you in Los Angeles and I don’t call it, out here I call it a freeway. But back home I called it a highway. And that changed. Okay. And I never have called it an expressway. I mean, it’s like, that’s, that’s if you live over in Baltimore or Washington D. C. or something. I’m surprised you call it an expressway. Well, I screwed that one up. Do you call it a highway, a freeway, or an expressway? Sometimes I call it the interstate. Is a freeway bigger than a highway to you? Yeah, I reckon. I I think it is, yeah. Highway 55 is mostly two lanes. Yep. But a freeway is going to be more. Is a freeway free? Well, a turnpike ain’t free, but a freeway I think would be free. Yeah, that’s why, maybe that’s why they call it a freeway. Yeah. But they’re saying, some people don’t think a highway is free, but that’s a, what did you call that? A turnpike? A freeway has no limited access, no stop blocks, no intersections. A highway can have stops and intersections, but a freeway can’t, right? Mm. All right, well you chose expressway, but we’re just gonna have to go with that. Where does that put you? So yeah, that one wasn’t as Southern. What do you call an easy high school or college class? Gut, crypt course, crip course, bird, blow off, meet, or other. A crypt course. With a T, crypt. Or no, Crip, like the gang member that yeah, I don’t, I don’t know what I would have called this, but I guess a Crip course. And I don’t know how I would spell it, but that’s how I would say it too. Okay. What do you call the rubber sold shoes worn in gym class for athletic activities? It’s time for your gym class. Put on your sneakers. Would you, would you say sneakers or would you say tennis shoes? Well, I didn’t say, yeah, ten, I didn’t say, yeah, tennis shoes. That’s what I thought. You wouldn’t say jumpers, would you? You wouldn’t say sand shoes or jumpers. No. Maybe sneakers. Maybe running shoes? Nah. No. I’d tell you to put your tennis shoes on. Of course, if I was in school, I’d probably already have them on, so. I think tennis shoes is Or, growing up, I would always call them tenny shoes. T E N N Y. Tenny shoes. Okay. I didn’t realize it was based on a particular sport, known as tennis. Alright, we’re getting there. What is the distinction between dinner and supper? Just tell me, what’s dinner and what’s supper? Well, um. This has always confused me. But, it, that’s the same thing to me. Okay. Meaning it’s at night? It’s at night. Both of them, yeah. You can either have dinner or supper. It’s the last meal of the day. But there are some people that we’ve known that they call lunch dinner, right? Um I don’t know. Lunch is lunch. Dinner and supper is supper. I mean, and I don’t hardly ever call it dinner. I call it supper. We’re having, you either eat lunch or you eat supper. But if you did say dinner, you would still mean at night. And I would be correct. I would not know what you meant. Because I, I mean, if you ask, you know, well, sometimes if I ask somebody to come over and I said, y’all want to come eat dinner with us tonight, I always say tonight. Because you don’t want them to think lunch. And then the other way I might say it would be, you know, if you’re going to come over, you want to have some supper tonight, we’re going to eat supper tonight. And you don’t even need to say tonight, with supper. No, I’d probably say it anyway, because I usually do. All right. There’s no distinction for him. Okay. All right. Bye. And that, that was a weird one. Cause it’s all over the place. Um, how do you pronounce the words? M A R Y, M E R R Y, and M A R R Y. Just say, read all three of them. Mary, Mary, and Mary. Now did that sound different to you? Yes. Say them again then. Mary, Mary, and Mary. And you’re saying those three are different. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, I learned Mary. Mary, Mary, and Mary. And if I want to be Mary, I’m Mary, and then if I’m getting married, I’m Mary. Run that by me one more time. I said, if I know Mary, I know Mary, but if I want to be Mary, Mary would marry I’m Mary, but if I want to marry Mary, I’d marry Mary and that would make you Mary. Dad, you’re saying them all three the same. No I ain’t! But you’re just picturing different things. All three are pronounced the same. You have to, you have to check that one. Alright. What do you call a traffic situation in which several roads meet in a circle? Rotary? Roundabout? Roundabout. Traffic circle? Traffic circus? I have no word for this. Well, roundabout because they started putting these, them things in this part of the country. I might would have, you should have called it, it was just a traffic circle, but now, now it’s a roundabout because they got them everywhere. Okay. And do they say the word roundabout on them? Is that why you’ve changed? I reckon because you get used to driving and you got to get around that, you got to get around that roundabout up there. Okay. Slow down and get around that roundabout. How do you feel about the fact that these are going in everywhere? I, well, they say it’s for safety reasons and it’s probably, At these intersections where they’ve had a lot of wrecks, so. Okay. If they think it’s happened that, then that’s probably a good thing. I think I like them because you don’t stop. The default is not to stop. Only stop if you absolutely have to. Whereas at an intersection, always stop, even when you don’t need to. That’s what I like about it. It’s like a Yeah, but a roundabout, if somebody’s already in there, you got to stop, too. Well, yeah, you do. You’re supposed to stop. Let them move around. You can just slow down and then ease right behind them. But there’s no legality to coming to a complete stop. And if you time it right, you can just slide right in there without ever having to apply a complete breakage. When the brake grabs the brake pad, You’ve lost. I think that is giving in. Like, that’s just the defeat of driving. When you’re, when you’re brake. Grabs the brake pad and it just stopped. The car just stops completely. Ugh. I hate that. I love a good traffic circle, but you call it a roundabout. I do now. Yeah. What do you call the insect that flies around in the summer and glows in the dark? A lightning bug. Yep. Not a firefly. No. You don’t use those terms interchangeably? No. What about a peeny wally? I ain’t never called a lightning bug a firefly. Peeny wally? No. I ain’t never heard of that either. So you seem almost offended that someone would say that you’ve used the term firefly. It’s a lot less syllables, dad. But it’s still a lightning bug because it’s a bug and it lights up. Well, are you saying it’s not a fly fires up? No, it’s a bug that lights up. Okay. All right. All right. Well, he changed his mind around roundabouts. We used to catch them and put them in jars. Yeah, but we turned them loose. Had to poke holes in the top where they could breathe. What do you call the area of grass between the sidewalk and the road? I have a word for this. Berm, parking, tree lawn. Terrace, curb strip, beltway, verge. I have no word for this. I have no word for this. We don’t have a word for this. The grass between the sidewalk and the road is where, I don’t know, is where your dog pees. That’s what I was thinking. There’s no word for this. And that’s not really the verge. Well, maybe it is, I don’t know. That sounds British. Okay. We have no word for that. What do you call a traffic jam caused by drivers slowing down to look at an accident or other diversion on the side of the road? Rubbernecking. See, in the third answer, rubbernecking is the activity, slowing down a gawking that causes the traffic jam, but I have no word for the traffic jam itself. So the traffic jam caused by rubbernecking is called what? Is that a rubberneck? I don’t know, but I’d, People that gawk and drive down the road and try to look and see what’s going on. Cause you, you turn in your head around, it’s rubber necking. Right. But the traffic jam itself, have you ever heard of a gapers block? I don’t think so. Gapers delay? Looky Lou. No, I’ve never heard of a looky. A looky Lou, I think is a person. Curiosity delay. Well, that sounds like if you’re like a scientist keep keeping traffic. Yeah, gawk block. I don’t think we have a word for this. I mean, we just call it a traffic jam due to rubbernecking. But I don’t call it a rubberneck. All right, we’re rounding the last turn here. What do you call the small gray bug that curls up into a ball when it’s touched? I think I know what it is. A doodle bug. Really? So pill bug, doodle bug, potato bug, Roly poly, sow bug, basketball bug, twiddle bug, roll up bug, wood louse, millipede, centipede. I know what this creature is, but I have no word for it. I have no idea what this creature is. So you’re saying doodle bug. Yeah, cause when I was growing up, you’d find them little holes, you’d take a little stick down in there, and rub it around, and the bug would come out, and it would Curl up in a, uh, and just curl up where you think it was dead. Not to mess with it. And that was a doodlebug to you. That was a doodlebug. See, I, I call that a roly poly. I never thought something with so many legs could be cute. What do you call a large motor vehicle used to carry freight? Uh, probably got Semi? Semi truck? Tractor trailer. A tractor trailer. Trailer truck. Transfer truck. Transport. Truck and trailer. Semi trailer. 18 wheeler. Truck. Rig. Big rig. Lorry. I call it a tractor trailer. I mean, that’s what I call it. Sometimes I call it an 18 wheeler. Yeah. Tractor trailer it is. What do you call the small freshwater lobster often found in lakes and streams? Crayfish. Not crawfish? Not crawfish. Not crawdad? Mud, bug, craw, crawfish. Now, I call this a, um, I dunno, I think I call it a, uh, a crawdad, but this is a Louisiana thing. The reason I call it a crayfish is because it’s in fresh water. If you get it, if it’s a crawfish, it’s got, it comes out of kind of salty fresh water. Oh, briny. Yep. All right. He’s saying crayfish. I’m saying crawdad. How do you pronounce C R A Y O N? C R A Y O N. Crayon. Say it. Crayon. Two syllables sounds like cray on. Some people say it as one syllable. Do you know how that would sound? Uh, cray on? Cray on. It’s still two syllables. Crayon? Cray uh, no, I don’t know how that would Rhymes with man. Crayon. Crayon. It’s cray on with me. Yeah. What about I’m gonna give me a crayon to color with. Do you call the sweet spread that is put on cake frosting or icing? Or are they two different things? Both. Both. How do you, how do you decide which one you’re gonna say? I say icing across the board, but I like frosting better. Yeah, I like frosting. Well, Nancy said, I’m gonna frost this cake. I’m gonna put some frosting on this cake over here, and then sometimes he says I’m gonna put icing on it. Oh, yeah, so very equal, both. And finally, what do you call it when rain falls while the sun is shining? Sun shower, the wolf is giving birth, the devil is beating his wife, monkey’s wedding, fox’s wedding, pineapple rain, liquid sun, or I have no term or expression for this, The devil is beating his wife. That’s sad. I didn’t even know he was married. I’m not surprised that he’s abusive. He’s a devil after all. I have said that, uh, several, many times in my lifetime that when the sun’s out and it’s raining, I say, boy, look at that, the devil’s beating his wife. What is the devil’s wife like? Is she just as bad as him? She might be worse. She might like it. Yep Okay, let’s let’s submit. Let’s see the results dad. Where do you where do you think your accent is from? Go out on a limb here. Okay, so it’s a heat map So down south somewhere. It’s it definitely says down south It actually says less. Let’s see. You’re in the northern coastal part of south carolina, which is the darkest red so it got you right but the only other time when it gets that red is in Like Alabama and Mississippi. Well, I have people that have asked me, said they don’t think I’m from North Carolina, South Carolina. They say you must be from Alabama, Mississippi. Yeah. Well, I haven’t had that happen. It gets stronger down there, but nope, you’re not. Distinctive answer for each of these. So Montgomery has a service road. Greensboro, more people say y’all, but also Birmingham, Alabama. Okay. All right. The good news is dad, you are certifiably Southern according to the New York Times. And as if you needed them to tell you that. What are your goals for the upcoming holiday season? 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That’s unlimited access to 25 language courses for the rest of your life. Redeem your holiday offer at rosettastone. com slash dispatches today for yourself. Or as a gift that keeps giving. All right. Now that, now that we’ve established that now you got to, you got to say some words. Oh yeah. Here we go again. I hope so. Who are these from? From Michael. Michael wants to know, can you pronounce these words? Where’s Michael from? I don’t believe he said. He didn’t. Mike, are you calling in to ask me a question next time, you need to let us know where you’re from. That’s right. We’re gonna go ahead and pronounce your words. Can I pronounce these words? Let’s see if I follow, fail. Let’s, uh, oh, these are, uh, these are culinary words, I can see. Alright, what’s this first one? That’s it. And that’s what you do. If you’re gonna be, if somebody’s gonna be sitting on your lap. What do you need to do first? Pay. Pay your thigh. . Your thigh. . That’s right. Hey, he got you with that one. I mean, that’s, that’s the one that started us all, Thai food, just saying that out the way, I mean, I’ll never forget, riding in the back of the car, we were taking y’all somewhere, you just looking out the window, going across L. A., you see a Thai restaurant, and you said, Thai food. That was it. Alright, yeah, so you got, you got that one just as we expected. Alright, what’s the next one? Kimchi. Mm mm. Kamachi. You’re, you’re adding a vowel in the middle that doesn’t need to be there. Yeah. Oh yeah, you made it an i then you made it an a kimchi. You’re still adding, you’re adding a vowel in the middle. There’s no, there’s, it’s only two syllables. And this is good for your gut. Kimm T. There you go. Yeah. You go to a Korean barbecue place, you get you some kimchi. You ever had it? It’s kind of like Korean sauerkraut. It’s like fermented cabbage and all types of stuff. And it’s very, it’s good for your gut biome, dad. How’s your gut biome these days? Uh, it’s pretty good. I’m still having a little trouble once in a while though. All right, let’s go Italian with this next one. Tortellini. You nailed it. You nailed it. You seem surprised though. Have you ever ordered it? Do you know what it is? It’s Italian, isn’t it? Okay. Yeah. Well, I told you that. Oh, you did? It’s like a pocket of pasta that’s folded over on itself. Kind of like a dumpling, but Italian. Okay. All right. Try this next one. Oh, good God. Uh, Be my pa. Be my pa. Well, the last, it doesn’t, it doesn’t end in an A. It ends in a P. So what’s the last three letters? Pap. Bop. Bap. Bop. Bap. That’s it. Bap. Isn’t that it? Is it b ? I don’t know how to say this one either. Does this is when I would be asking, man, be a bap. Be a bap. Bib and Bap. Bib, and B, put the second B with the, with the, with the. I am by Bob and Bap. I think that’s Bob and B, I think that’s, and B, how I would say this is. Bi and bop. I always thought it was bi and bop. Is that, but what I saw a lot was Pee b, bop, bi and bop with like a P, bi and bop. But that was what I said, won’t it? I think you did. Yeah. Kind of. I think, I think you eventually said that one of at times. I just wanna let you know that I don’t necessarily know all of these. Okay. All right. This, let’s give this last one. Mm. Imp Pam, get gracious. Uh, imp . imp. Well, that’s, there’s only one M that’s second. You’re making an M sound, but it’s Ada. There you go. Ada. It’s not pan though. The N goes with the next part. So it’s just mda, the emphasis on the na imp You’re getting close. Sorry. That’s the emphasis on the na. Nada. Mm-Hmm. Yeah. It’s just say NADA. Nada. That’s it. And then put the EMPA in front of that Say NADA. Nada. That’s right. You nailed it. . Now say, don’t change that. When you say the first part. Empanada. , empanada. Empanada. Yes. You said it. Say it again. . Empanada. Yes. Empanada. Yes. Yes. . It’s a Mexican pocket. It’s a Mexican pocket dish. Woo. We did it. I mean you, I mean you could, you can order food in Italy, you can order food in Mexico, you can order food in Korea, and you can order food in Thailand. I hear you. Well, if I go down to order they’re probably gonna look at me and say, What did you say? No, they’ll say I’ve seen you on Tik TOK. That’s going to start happening a lot more. I mean, you get millions of views on Tik TOK. Come on over, listen to the whole show y’all. Yeah, that’s right. Well, Link, it’s been fun having all of y’all here with us today and all you Myrtle beasts, and we’ll be glad. We’ll be back next week for another one. And don’t forget to follow and subscribe wherever you get your YouTube. And while you’re at it, rate and review us on the Apple podcast. If you’ve got a question, comment, or story you’d like to share with me, email me at ratherbeshaggin53ataol. com. And y’all have a great rest of the week. We can’t wait to pad your thighs again next time. . That’s it. . Oh, I love you, dad. Well, it’s been a, it’s been a good, another good week, Lee. Good to see you and I love you. Yep. Alright. Alright. Later.
