
(rooster crow) (animal roar) (bang) – We just lost one of ’em. – Hopefully we don’t land on that one. – Welcome to Good Mythical More. – Didn’t see that comin’. That’s my dog. – It’s our dogs. Hey dog. – Barbara, you’re such a good dancer, yeah. My tiny dancer. – She’s looking at that wheel, huh. – Whoa. – Remember the first time we put these dogs up here, how small they were? – You wanna eat my hat? Wanna eat daddy’s hat? – Jade, you don’t have to be a great dancer to be the love of my life. Well, the canine love of my life. – Yeah, let’s clarify that, okay. Barbara, do as you will. – Alright, so we’ve got the doggy version of Mad Libs and then we’re gonna see if we can get some some nouns, verbs and adjectives from our dogs, that’s not a flattering angle, Barbara. – I dunno, she just had it trimmed. She just had her butthole trimmed. – Okay, okay, gosh. – It was getting too hairy, it was catching a lot of things. They also expressed the anal gland. – Great Rhett, really great. – This one is called, dog, yeah, you can take Barbara ’cause she does not want to sit there. – She’s not happy. – She’s not a cat, she’s an actual dog. – What do you want? – I’ll do this one, you give me the words and then we can do the reverse a-verse. – Oh really, okay, well, I’m gonna get Jade to give me the words. – Adjective. – Growlish. – Uh oh, now you do know that these are already all dog themed, so if you make them dog themed too it’s going to be a little too on the nose. – Tell that to Jade. – Cuz this is dog themed. – Okay. – So give me another adjective, Jade. – Well she thinks like a dog, man, I got it from her. – She thinks like a cat, actually. – Alright, an adjective, slick. – Okay, there we go, slick, that’s great. – Slick is great? – Part of the body, plural. – Part of the body toenails. (laughter) – That is a part of the body, not really inventive, but okay. Adverb, does she know what an adverb is? – She does, but I don’t. (laughter) I know it ends in an L-Y. – Yup. – Strikingly. – Strikingly. – Strikingly. – Wow, these are really inventive. Adjective. – Why are you saying these are really inventive? I don’t understand what that means. – I’m trying to compliment – Are you judging? – I’m complimenting your dog. – I mean if you wanna suggest something better. – Just take it at face value. – You’re judging my – I’m being very generous, very. – Okay, well what was it? – Adjective. – Adjective, stinkies. – Stinkies? – Stinky. – Oh gosh, exclamation. – Wham! – Wham. Verb ending in I-N-G. – Uh… Spelunking. – Spelunking, there we go. Noun! – Breads. – Bread. – Breads! – It’s not plural. – Oh. – Part of the body, plural. – Intestines. – Okay, alright, got a laugh on that one. Exclamation. – What? – Exclamation. – Scram! – Scram, noun. – Fetcher. – Fetcher? – Yeah, I’m still thinking in dog land. – Same noun. – Same noun, fetcher. What do you mean same noun? Oh the same thing again? – Plural noun. – Plural noun, little bitties. – Little bitties, that’s good. Verb. – Pummel. – Pummel. Part of the body, plural. Recurring theme. – Kidneys. – Kidneys, plural noun. – Walruses. – Person in room. – Stevie. – Stevie. – Any room or this room? – Part of the body. – Stevie’s, nope, not gonna do that. Part of Stevie’s body would be weird. – Yup, part of the body. – I can’t think of any more. – There’s a lot to choose from. We’re almost done. – Lung piece. – Lung- – Not the whole lung, just a piece of it. – Lung piece, and adjective. – Slim. – Slim? – Read it back to me, Rhett! – You know what it looks like when you’re sleeping dog is having a slick dream? Their tail swishes, their toenails twitch, and they bark strikingly. (laughter) – Little boring. – But what do dogs dream about? Here’s one dog’s stinky dream. (laughter) Wham! – It’s the Mad Libs that are lame. – What’s that little flash of white fur spelunking in my backyard? It’s a bunny bread! I have to chase it, I run, run, run as fast as my intestines will carry me. Oh scram! The bunny has hidden in a fetcher. I sniff the fetcher. And sure enough, it’s in there, with a den of baby little bitties. I wanna play with them so bad I could pummel! I bark at the top of my kidneys. Come out and play, you fluffy little walruses. But before I can, Stevie scratches my lung piece and wakes me up. It was all just a slim dream. – Do you wanna do another one? – Yeah! – Alright. – I do man. I do. – Sometimes Jade does have a dream and she’s like (grumble noises). – Oh, doggy dreams are the best. – Adjective. – You should film that. Striking, no (scoffs). – Adjective. – Porous. – Verb. – Shove. – Adjective. Come on man, an adjective. – I want it to be good. – Use it to describe something. – Fatty? – Fatty, huh? Adjective. – So many adjectives. – So little time. – Regretful. – Part of the body, plural. – Anal glands. – Adjective. – Stiff. – Adjective. – Limp. – Plural noun. – Plural noun? – Plural noun. Adjective. Plural noun, noun, noun, that’s where we’re going. – Campers. – Give me another plural noun. He’s trying so hard and it’s still gonna turn out the way it’s gonna turn out. – Shaving, shavings. – Noun and then another noun. – Horse. – Horse. And a what? – Low cut socks. – And give me an adjective. – Testy. – Testes, that’s a noun. – Testy, with a Y. – Oh. More porous dog breeds for you to love and shove. What? – Okay. – This is called, What’s That Dog Part Two. – Why did we start with part two? – You gave it to me. – I just gave you the thing and it was just open, it was the next one. – No, no no, part one is not on the page, it’s the next page. – Alright, we can only imagine what part one was like. – Maybe that’s the joke. More porous dog breeds for you to love and shove. – Got it. – Poodle, the curly haired poodle, best known for it’s fatty haircut, is exceptionally smart and regretful. Dachshund, hey that’s what she is. – Yeah. – At least half of her. Known for it’s long body and short anal glands the dat-sun or dash-shund, has a friendly personality and a stiff sense of smell. That true Jade? Yeah. Beagle, this hunting dog is happy-go-limp, (laughter) friendly and loves the company of humans and other campers. – Oh, that’s stupid. – Great Dane. The gentle great dane, famous for it’s testy size. – It’s true. – Would have been better, famous for his testes. – Teste size. – Testes. – His teste size. (laughing) – Big. – Big. – He’s also known as the king of shavings. Chihuahua, this sassy little horse, often called a purse dog, – Ironic. – Is a big dog in a little low cut socks. Boy that was fun. (laughter) – Yeah, – What a fail. – I’m gonna blame it on the book, because they both sucked. – I mean, look at the expression the dog is making, the dog’s not even proud to be on the cover of this thing. – The dog knows that this was a bad idea Mad Libs.
