cover of episode 140: #140 Europe feat. Greg Warren

140: #140 Europe feat. Greg Warren

2023/3/15
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A
Aaron Weber
B
Berk Scarborough
C
Cheyenne Brunhuber
G
Greg Warren
M
Matthew Welch
N
Nate Bargatze
P
Paul Emmy Mueller
R
Ryan Goodrum
Topics
Cheyenne Brunhuber:喜欢Nate Land播客轻松幽默的风格,因为它不像其他播客那样试图教导听众或讨论政治。 Greg Warren:Korn Ferry巡回赛的球员们非常努力地工作,生活条件艰苦,收入微薄,与喜剧演员的经历相似。 Matthew Welch:Nate的新特辑帮助他怀孕的妻子在不到三个小时内分娩。 Ryan Goodrum:主持播客帮助Nate提升了喜剧技巧,但两者仍然是不同的领域。 Nate Bargatze:分享了关于他母亲在电影院用强光手电筒制止青少年喧哗的故事,以及英国麦当劳的三明治比美国的小40%等内容。 Aaron Weber:解释了“hacky”的喜剧演员和仅仅“不好”的喜剧演员之间的区别。 Berk Scarborough:讲述了一位精神不稳定的母亲为了参加儿子的葬礼,让出租车司机从洛杉矶开车到北卡罗来纳州教堂山,事后却拒绝支付车费的故事。 Paul Emmy Mueller:如果Nate要制作一部体育电影,他可能会选择高尔夫球为题材,并邀请职业高尔夫球手John Augustine主演。 J.J. Gitz:讨论了“hacky”的喜剧演员和仅仅“不好”的喜剧演员之间的区别。

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Hello, folks, and hey, Bear. Welcome to the Nate Land Podcast. I'm Nate Bargetti, sitting here with Brian Bates, Aaron Weber, and it'll be Greg Warren in a second, but right now, he's staying here, John Augustine, first guest of the Nate Land Podcast. Wow. Happy to be here. How's it feel? It's good. It's good to be back. Yeah? He's already talked more than he did the first time. Yeah.

Yeah. Now he's too talkative. Now we're like, all right, John, this is not your show. Do you remember the topic? TV. Yeah, television. Yeah. I'll never forget it. Very early on, he's staying here for a couple days. He moved. He's in – because people still – people follow you. He's at the Corn Fairy Tour. It's going great. Just had a big top 10 finish, top seven. Mm-hmm.

It's pretty solid. Yeah. Good start to the year for sure. Yeah. Yeah. Standard athlete answer. Yeah. Yeah. I just want to thank God. Good start for the year. Good start for the year. It's got it rolling. Got to go out there every day and compete. Yeah. We're going to have you when you come back. We'll have you be a guest again. You feel you'd be better now. I do. Yeah. I mean, I think the podcast has changed a lot since I was here. That's true. You were still in college. That's true. Yeah. Yeah. How have we changed? Yeah.

We were still finding our footing, right? I think we found it. I think he derailed it. We did an episode called Television with a Professional Golfer. That was our first guest. We didn't know what we were doing back then. I thought I was going to get invited for the Kentucky episode. Yeah, that's true. But that ship has sailed. Yeah, Nate wasn't even here. We could have invited you. Yeah. Oh, yeah. They could have used you. Yeah.

Yeah, from Holmesboro, Kentucky. Yeah, they did good. Yeah, it was when we first did it. That was a long time ago. Yeah. A couple years. But you listened to the podcast, and now you're in. You would get it. You'd feel comfortable. I think so. I think you're a little funnier than you were then. Yeah. I was also trying to find what I was supposed to say on here. I remember being pretty nervous about it. Yeah. Yeah.

Yeah, I mean, well, yeah, it's going to be nervous. It's the same nervous if you have to go hit a golf ball. Yeah. I mean, I've done a lot of like interviews, like athlete interviews where you just give like little answers. I haven't had a lot of, you know, back and forth like this. You think, have you had back and forth even since then? Still not. Athletes don't really have to do the back and forth. No.

A little bit more. You know, you kind of have some, like, get-to-know-you segments kind of thing on, like, Korn Ferry or PGA Tour. Yeah. So you kind of have some of those questions, but not a lot, no. Yeah. Yeah, I think, like, athletes, like...

You ever think to spice an answer up? Like, do you ever just want to... Yeah, I got asked about the Super Bowl at our last event. And they were like, what's your favorite thing? And I thought I gave a pretty funny answer. They didn't even put it on there. I'm talking about the excitement of gambling on...

What's the coin toss going to be? The Gatorade shower? What are the coaches wearing? And all the prop bets. Yeah. They laughed even at it and nothing. Yeah. And what got put on? Just my pick for the game. Oh, who'd you pick? Chiefs. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.

Yeah. I don't know. They should have. Was any other answer funny from the other golfers or? No. No. They were all just. Maybe it was too much. Like they didn't want it to be that involved. Yeah. Maybe. I don't know. Yeah. Yeah.

I got a message from a professional golfer after seeing my golf swing saying he could really help me out, send him some videos and he can help me out. Jared Wolf. Oh, yeah. Oh, Jared, yeah. He texted me about the podcast not too long ago saying, you know, I think he had either maybe unfortunately seen my episode or something. Yeah, what do you tell people when they go watch it? Always, yeah, to start the episode after the one that we were talking about.

Yeah. It's a great podcast past 12. Yeah. That's nice. I didn't know. I think I know Jared. I know Jared Wolf is. Yeah. I don't think I knew he listened to the podcast. Yeah. Yeah. He lives down in Jacksonville. I don't know if y'all got linked up when you did a show there. Yeah, maybe we did. There's a great chance I've met him. Yeah. And I'm saying this.

But I don't know. Well, he can fix Brian's swing, huh? Where does he play now? He should be on our old friends. Corn Fairy Tour. Yeah. Another guy, Josh Teeter, big listener of the podcast, he gave you that wedge. Oh, yeah. He sent me a video, actually, of Brian's swing the other day in Puerto Rico. He was playing the tour event last week, and he did a remake of your swing, brought the foot up late. Oh, man. Yeah.

Guys are just mocking me all over the world. It could become a trend. It could be, yeah, the Brian Bates. Jason Day calls me left foot. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Lift your foot up, Brian. All right. Well, I just wanted you to – you're staying here, so I wanted you to pop in. Say hello. Where have you been going? Yeah. Because you feel, you know –

When you make the PGA Tour. Yeah. Can't be bringing corn-fitted people on here. He goes, where is this? Amateur Hour? Yeah, what is this? Amateur Hour? Seinfeld? Yeah. Remember that episode? Yeah. TV. What is this? Amateur Hour? Yeah. What was that? That was the Merv Griffin. I know. Why did he say it? Like two animal acts? Yeah. What is this? Amateur Hour? Yeah, two animal acts. He goes, what is this? Amateur Hour? Yeah. We're bringing back for scandals and animals.

We already did a Scandals on Animals episode. We do a second one. Okay. Scandals on Animals part two. Part two. We can do a part two Scandals on Animals. Sure. There's plenty of Scandals on Animals. And school. All right. Good to see you, man. Thanks, guys. See you. Take it easy. We're going to switch them out. We're trading one D1 All-American. Four-time All-American. Yeah. John Augustine Vanderbilt to the original All-American. Damn.

The inaugural. The inaugural. The first All-American. Greg Warren. Everybody's All-American. Greg Warren, he said, All-American wrestler at Missouri. Yeah. How hard was it then?

Because Aaron pointed out there weren't many states past West of the Mississippi at that time. It was easy, Bates. You just sign up. Was there only 48 states when you wrestled? No. This was during Manifest Destiny. You're still figuring things out. I feel like you guys grossly misjudge my age on this podcast. I don't. You're not the same age. You talking above the microphone doesn't help. Is it coming in now? There you go. Yeah.

It's, yeah, four-time All-American. One-time All-American. Hey, that's- One-time. But that's unbelievable, though. Yeah. I mean, I imagine so many people just have no idea that you were an All-American. I try to tell everybody. Yeah. I tell everybody. Yeah. I tell a lot of people because it's like, that's so crazy. Uh-huh. Yeah. Yeah, two D1 athletes right there. And you're an All-American the rest of your life. Once, right? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, it's-

I mean, I was not like him. I mean, I was a not-seated wrestler coming into the tournament my senior year. I just had sort of the tournament of my life, you know? Just had one match I should not have won.

Well, don't downplay it. No, you did good. But it was the difference of age is John, he goes, oh, from Missouri. And then John goes, oh, it's both SEC. And we're like, no, no. No, man. Wasn't SEC. Yeah. It wasn't even Big 12. It was Big 8. It was the Big 8. Yeah.

Oh, that's fun times. That guy sounded pretty good in here, man. Huh? He sounded pretty good in here. Yeah. Yeah, yeah. We had him. He was the first guest. Me and John come very close, and he's the first guest. But he was very nervous, and it was like just we weren't. It wasn't. He listened to every episode now, but it was just like not. I didn't get him the fairest shot.

I'd just like to point out- He didn't do bad, but he was like- Last week's episode, you guys made fun of me for hanging out with teenagers in the 90s. That's true. I mean, come on. That's true. He's like 24. You could be his dad. Yeah, I could be his dad. Yeah, so- But yeah. That's a good point. But I think there's something. Does it not feel different if you're that big of an age gap versus-

You know, where it's a loose freshman, sophomore in college. Ah, so you're trying to spin it like you're a mentor to him more than a friend. Could be a mentor. If John wasn't an All-American golfer, would you want to hang out with him? I would never know John.

He's a professional golfer, man. He's a professional golfer. Yeah. Yeah. It's crazy. That's nuts. Those guys, I mean, you know, the Corn Fairy Tour, I have got to meet a lot of them. And they're, I mean, these guys grind it out, dude. It's like the road, like comics where you're, they do these tours. If they make the cut, they get a little money. Like, you know, if you don't make the cut, you don't get any money. And you have to pay for all your travel and all your everything. And so are the caddies.

The caddies, man, they do not get – they don't get anything. Unless you're like – unless your guy becomes like giant, it's – I mean, they have to pay for their own travel, their own – I mean, they're just – and they're all like in hotels together, which is just insane. Yeah.

Like they're all, they like, I mean, like it'd be like guys in their forties, like sharing hotel rooms. Cause it's like, you know, you really, you just kind of go on and crashing, but it's just like, there's not this big money out there for that. No, it's, it's, I was telling you guys earlier, I read this book called tales from the Q school.

by John Feinstein. It's all about sort of that. There was a Nike tour, I think when he wrote that book or it was the, what was the next, the.com tour or something. Yeah. But, yeah, but he was saying, you know, he just basically followed all these guys that were sort of on the cusp of the PGA. And it reminded me a lot of comics. You know, there's, there's not a, most of the comics I know. Yeah. I feel like I might have that. Yeah.

This is the I Am In Europe right now, which I guess we're going to do. We'll read the comments first. Yeah, let's just go ahead and do that. We can go ahead and start the comment part. Comments come from Twitter, Instagram, YouTube, Apple Podcast Reviews, and nateland at natemargetzi.com.

Cheyenne Brunhuber. Cheyenne? Cheyenne Brunhuber. What would you say? Cheyenne. That's Cheyenne. Cheyenne. Capital of Wyoming. Oh, yeah. Cheyenne. Cheyenne Brunhuber.

Shane, Nate said this podcast is just trying to be fun, and I really appreciate that. It's hard to find a podcast that isn't trying to teach you something or doesn't have politics on it. I just want a podcast that is lighthearted and funny, and that's exactly what I found in Nate Land. Keep it up, gentlemen. There you go. How about it? That's great. That's a line right there. We need to put that out.

She can be your spokesperson. Shane? Shane. Gentlemen is singular, though. I think she's just talking to you. Oh. Oh, yeah. Keep it up, gentlemen. Thank you. Thank you.

I appreciate that. Master Craftster. Have we had him? Feels like we have. Yeah. I am curious what the smallest crowd all of you have performed for. I was at a club in Peoria, Illinois once, and it was me and my wife and one other couple. The comedian still did a full set for four people. His opening joke was, please nobody heckle. I don't want to kick out half the crowd. It's funny. Mine's one person.

That's going to be tough to beat. Yeah. Yeah, I can't beat one. I think I've done two, two people. I've had plenty canceled just because nobody showed up. Right, right. I don't know. It's single digits. I don't think I've ever had that small. I think regularly when I was in New York and doing danger fields during the week. Yeah.

There was two, four. Yeah. I've done about as many four people shows you could do. I mean, they're in New York. You're just at the beginning. You're just in front of four people regularly. Yeah. And you're a lot of times you're just trying to keep it going to get more people in. But I mean, you're, I mean, just, you know, the, the whole, it's so much that it's not even a,

You don't even go, man, there's only four people. You just go, okay, and you go up. There is something about New York, because I'd been doing comedy for a long time before I moved to New York. And then you do it in so many different weird scenarios in front of different crowds that I think I did like a last comic standing audition after I'd been there for a few years. And it was really, you would have thought, uncomfortable. There's no audience. It was like the producers are way in the bass. You just do it. And I was like...

This is amazingly comfortable because I've been doing these kinds of crazy things for the last three years. It's like, oh, this is nice. Yeah, yeah. They're just tiny, man. It's just tiny, tiny rooms. I mean, yeah, I think I remember doing one gig where we had to get paid and like no one was there. So the guy that

booked it. He had it set in the crowd, and then maybe some of the people that worked there set there. So it might have been like six people. But the people that are not supposed to even be in there, they're a part of the show. They're putting on the show. Yeah. They're like, you got to do it. I remember back in Cincinnati when I was early in my career, I was living there, and it was at Go Bananas, the comedy club. And I think we all knew the cutoff that they had. It was like nine or eight. If you don't have more...

eight. There's no show. So there's like four people in there and we're like, I don't want to do a show for eight people or it's going to be nine at the most. So like the comics, as people are walking in comics, man, they canceled the show. Yeah.

Just trying to believe. So those people would turn around. Yeah, man, I can't believe that. No show, you know? Yeah. Yeah. You realize y'all would have got 30 people. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, that's the crazy. 30 is like an awesome show. Yeah. 30. I remember when I was living in LA and that was early on. So, you know, I did probably how you started in New York. You're doing a lot of shows for just comics. Yeah. And I'd come home and, you know, there'd be 30 people at the open mic.

in St. Louis and 30 paying people that were going to want to see comedy. And I was like, this is like doing a theater, man. Yeah. I have no tolerance anymore for like the open mic. It was like, man, there's nobody in there. I'm like, dude, there's 20 people in there. Move to LA or New York. And that'll be the greatest show in three years that you do. You'll love, you'll kill for this audience. Oh, 20. I would travel for it. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. If you went, that was the best is like going sometimes on the road, New York. And then you go do some spots like in a town. Yeah.

And then they're like, oh, it's light. And you're like, it's 20 people. And you're like, this is electric. Yeah, you go, dude, I might light me because I might go home. Matt B. I wonder if Nate knows that Hello World is the first thing that every computer programmer ever learns how to program. Did you know that? No. So this is a good example. This is like the most basic example.

Piece of JavaScript you learn how to write. You just run it. Boom. Hello, world. That's how everybody's taught. Oh, really? I thought maybe your title was an homage to that. Yeah, it is.

Tiger Woods. I'm a Java. So you have to write document.write and you have to do all that stuff? To get it to, yeah, for Hello World to be the output. You think they ever would just have you where you don't have to do that? I don't even know what any of this means. I thought this was from Star Wars. You ever took a computer programming class? No. No, I don't. I think I took basic. When? Yeah.

Yeah, but those were beads where we literally... With a Commodore 64 or whatever. Is that what you did? A typewriter class? No, it was a Commodore 64. When did you take a computer? I did take typing. Greg, when did you... Yeah. Computer was the size of this room. Yeah. Yeah. No, again, man. What are you talking about? I'm not... Greg. I'm not... Greg's lying. He's lying on the podcast. Oh, I took a computer class. What? What?

In the big eight, they had computers. But so you see, you have a screen, right? And this screen makes it say that screen. And so what if they just said, well, we'll just combine them and you don't have to do that whole document, all that kind of stuff.

Yeah. Because you write document dot write parentheses, then Hello World. That's what you do. Or you do the Hello World program, and then it just says Hello World. You're like, couldn't you talk to the computer and go, well, I'm going to just type in Hello World the first time. But that's what that language is doing. Yeah, but why does it- It's telling it what to output. You can also, it's not always going to be write Hello World. There could be variables in there that are going to be dictated by other things. This is just a very-

like simple example of it. But yeah, for this, it would be silly to write JavaScript just so you could have hello world printed on there. Teaching you a technique. Yeah, it's just teaching you. No, why in the top right there's interactive Python course. It feels like something Nate could take and maybe be interested in. What's the node part? Python's a language too. You don't want to take a Python class. Yeah. What's the node part?

Man, I don't know computers at all this way. I don't understand any of this stuff. I guess the answer is no, Nate did not know that. Long story short, why don't they just avoid all that stuff? Yeah.

Matthew Welch. My wife was 39 weeks pregnant and really wanted the baby to come. I put on Nate's new special. And after Billy laughing through the whole thing, she not only went into labor, but had our new baby girl in less than three hours. I guess laughter is the best medicine. Wow. That's awesome. I'll tell you what, that makes me...

Very proud. Very happy. Because you always hear people in the crowd be pregnant, and they're like, maybe I'll... But I feel like it's never happened. And now it happened. That is a thing, though? Yeah, because the laughing is like... It's just... I think it gets you going, I guess. It's like running over speed bumps or gravel roads. I know some women do that. Yeah. Is that not a real thing? Well, in Alabama, probably. But...

Laura. Yeah, that's what we did. Yeah. Yeah, but that makes me very happy because it was, I mean, laughter, they say, you know, because people can go to something and that kind of like gets it going. And so, man. That's great. Three hours. I mean, it was. What did they name the kid? The special was good. Hello World. JavaScript. JavaScript. Slash Welch. Node. Welch.

Ryan Goodrum, do you think you've become a better comedian since the podcast started? I guess. I guess you come talk. I don't know. To me, it still feels very two different things, but it's like you're having to be funny a lot more.

I don't want to cross over into where you're doing the podcast and it sounds like if you come to a live show, it's like, well, we're just watching a one-hour podcast episode. So I'm trying not to do that. I think it's helped for sure, though. You know, Dusty said last week that it helped him on Bob and Tom. He said it was the best he'd ever had because interacting with a bunch of different people helps your timing. It helps the timing with that.

But I mean, I feel like I can go on. I don't think I'm always the best guest on people's podcast. Because I either want to be in control or it's like I just want to sit. I get interviewed a lot, though. Because I'll get like, you know, people get tired of talking comedy or something. And I get like comments. And you're like, dude, I don't know what to tell you. I'm getting asked about my comedy. So like, unless you want me. Trust me, I don't want to. Like, when you go to podcasts, I would not.

Not that I don't mind if it's a, you know, we're like really getting into the depths of comedy or whatever. I enjoy, I mean, I enjoy talking about it, but when an audience is listening, you're like, yeah, I can't imagine they want to hear just super inside comedy talk or whatever. I like it. I mean, I know some people like it, but most you're like, yeah, I'd rather just go talk about whatever and be funny. You know, like that's, that's more fun. I forgot to mention last week's

episode, you were on James Corden with Jamie Lee Curtis. We haven't talked about this. I felt like as a viewer, she was a tough guest to be on with because she was so comfortable with him. And so just, it's almost like we've all been at a party or somewhere where two friends are so close and you're just the third person there. I think you did great with her. I just put myself in your shoes. I think that would be hard.

I don't know how you felt. We haven't talked about it. So, yeah, when I was on James Corden, so I did, I went and did, I had two, I did Adam Crowell and Whitney Cummings podcast before that. So Whitney's went long and we were running late. So when I got there, I've been in that, when I walk out on that stage, I've been there 10 minutes maybe. Wow. And so, which was kind of fun.

Because not that I meant to do it that way. It just, we, you know, with LA traffic and you're in, blah, blah, blah, whatever. And so we got running behind. And then, so, I mean, I walk in and it's like,

I'm 10 minutes. I'm just, I mean, within even less than that would be that I'd done that door thing. That went great. I thought the knocking on the door. Yeah. Yeah. That was funny. Like, uh, Ian Carmel. Yeah. Yeah. Uh, yeah. Cause you don't know what to do. And then, uh,

And then you just kind of go out. Then I was like, oh, I was going to go try to pee real fast. And they're like, yeah, you can go pee. And I'm walking out, but then Jamie Lee Curtis is standing there. And you're like, oh, y'all would be waiting for me. And I was like, why? I just said, oh, I'm fine. Because I was like, I wouldn't be able to pee even knowing that Jamie Lee Curtis and this whole show is waiting on me. Got a CPAP hooked up to you? Yeah.

Oh, it would have been brutal. So, but then they just introduce you, then you're just sitting out there. And then, yeah, Jamie's been on that show a bunch and like him and her have a great relationship and they did a lot of the show. I knew they were going to do something. So I was just trying to like just kind of sit there and just kind of be out of like try to like lean away from like them hugging or, you know, I don't want to take, they have a real moment and stuff. This is my first time on the show.

And so, but, uh, Corden did really good. Like bringing me into it. He kept including you. Yeah. And she had touched me a lot. Yeah, she did. She kept grabbing your knee. But I feel like that was, uh, cause she knew she was talking a lot. Like to, it was actually probably a pretty pro move to be like, I'm still involved in this instead of just straight up like acting. So that was actually pretty nice to like, at least she's trying to like have me be in it. But yeah, I don't, you know,

When you're on there and you're like, I mean, it's Jamie Lee Curtis, and you're like, I'm just a dude. And you really feel like a dude. They're so famous. But yeah, it ended up being fun. And Corden was the most nice afterwards. He said he's been a big fan for a long time. I talked to him a lot after, and that was very cool. He seemed like a really nice guy. That's great. Yeah.

And so, yeah, the whole thing was, you know, that. But, yeah, it's been a lot of press.

Man, I could get – I like doing the press, but I could – man, I could see just getting the point. You're like – you can be like Sandler where you're like, you just don't do it. Let it ride. He does it now. Like, oh, it would be so great because it can be a lot. I don't mind it, but it's a lot. When you jam so much of it, that was like a – we found out about that. Like, that's how crazy, like, where my schedule can get. I was supposed to be home.

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday. And then we went to...

I was in wherever I was at, Shreve Bat Rouge, and we were waking up to do the podcast here that Monday. And then that Thursday, I think, they were like, you got to go do Cordon. And then it was like, all right, do I go do it or not? And it's like, the special is doing really good. And it's like, we're getting asked for all this press. And that's never really happened before. So it's like, you kind of got to go jump on it, go do it. So they were like, all right. And so I was like, all right, I guess I'll go do it. So we drove here, woke up.

Woke up at the house at 10, did a podcast, and then I went straight to the airport and then did Cordon, did all those. That Tuesday was from 9 a.m. to we got done at like 7 p.m. And then I had Harper's career day the next day. And then so I talked about going on a career day. I went and then got there because it was like I just missed everything.

I don't know. I want to talk about this, but like, I've just, not that I've missed so much stuff, but I've missed enough stuff. And this is our last year. Like I've gone to a daddy daughter dance. I think I've only been to one. I've always ended up missing, you know, Harper does very, very good with all that stuff. And, uh, but it was like this career. I was like, I wasn't going to miss that career. I was like, I can't miss this. What's career day. It's what it is. And, uh,

I don't even know how to describe it. I can guess. You mean you go talk about your career? Yeah. Okay. Yeah, yeah. You didn't have career day? You talk about their career? Yeah, yeah. Well, now you put it like that. I go, did you never have career day growing up? I don't think so. You would kill now, though, because you could bring snacks from P&G. Oh, yeah, you would be fun. Jeff and- Yeah, whatever. Y'all didn't have career day back then? They just knew y'all were going to farm or something like that? Yeah.

Y'all already had jobs. I feel like, dude, a lot of kids, when I went to Coopertown, Robinson County, but I mean, it'd be, Lee and Morgan talked about it, like, you'd be tobacco season. You're a kid in school. You're working your farm. Really? Yeah. Like, so kids would, like, especially the high school kids, the older kids, they're

they would miss a lot of school when it was like tobacco because you're like they have to go work their parents are like you gotta come work the farm and remember my dad would get homework and sometimes you could tell the parents that did the homework because it'd be wrong and so the parents would have done the homework just for the kids the mom might have done the homework just because the kid had to go out there with it and work in the farm I had a bit about that on I had a special a while back about farming where I was like

Like what these, have you ever heard a farm kid talk about their chores? You know, like when I was a kid, if I said I was going to do my chores, I was going to roll the garbage cans on the driveway. Yeah. And if I didn't do my chores, I, you know, I got grounded. If a farm kid doesn't do their chores, the bank forecloses on the consequences are a little bit higher. Yeah. A little bit more serious over there. Yeah. That's funny. Yeah. They're like, they, the kids are an integral part of the labor. I don't,

How does that get around labor laws? I don't know. You're trying to ruin mom and pop businesses now. I'm trying to go around. Well, I mean, dot governments listen to this podcast and they go, we never thought about that, all these kids working. I think you're working for your family. Yeah. You're doing a family thing. I guess family restaurants probably are the same thing. Yeah, those kids. But tobacco farming is hard, right? Oh, yeah. Yeah.

Yeah, no, it's tough. Y'all don't have a career day though? You never, like, so we go, so this one, I remember, I think I remember them coming in, uh,

uh just talk about like you maybe if someone goes in front of the class and says i'm a fireman or i'm this this one we we sit at tables and there's a bunch of parents so the the kids line up and they come down and you have like you know we had i had uh on the phone we had this podcast just playing and then i had laura go with me i make her go to everything and then uh

So Laura is a producer on the podcast and just talking and telling kids. And the kids just ask me about school and, you know, like, what schooling do you need? Which I'm doing that as a joke, right? I'm like, not much. But it's a – Do you give away any? Yeah, we actually give away hats. Yeah, so it's like – Was that a big hit? It was a big hit. Harper told me we were the second – the first one was a guy at my table, and he worked for Amazon, and he gave away these little Amazon trucks. Oh.

Oh, that's pretty cool. And so Harper was like, I mean, that guy, because I was like, what's the kid saying about the prizes? And she'll just tell you. She's like, well, yours was second. The trucks were first. I have this jacket. I wear it literally every day. Yeah, I've started running. I'm giving it a go. This is in shape. I don't feel like I'm, I think I'm losing weight. I feel like I'm losing weight. My weight is not going down right now.

I'm having trouble and I don't know if it's my eating is it's good. And then it's like, I'm worried if I go over a little bit, uh,

But I started doing like a half marathon training thing. Oh, yeah? Not to really run. I don't know if I'm going to run one, but. Well, a lot of people congratulate you because you've already mentioned that. Good for you, Nate, running this half marathon. Oh, they did? Yeah, you're in it now. Oh, I am running it? Supposedly you can run. According to the people. Yeah. Three times at what you train at. Oh, yeah. Oh, okay.

So if you're running regularly. Yeah, I got to look up and see where there'd be a half marathon. Zero times three is zero. Nashville has one. Nashville has a half marathon? Yeah. I'll see. I mean, I got to see in the day. I always sometimes think, I don't know if I care about the marathon. Like, I'd like to be able to run a half marathon on my own, but like do my own like thing. But I mean, like, you know, just do pick 13 miles somewhere. Oh, man, get the t-shirt and go out there. It's fun. I don't know if that motivates me then. Yeah.

I think being able to run, I'd like to be able to just be like, I got from here to...

you know, somewhere very far, like from here. 13 miles away. McDonald's. I'd run two at McDonald's. We ran six miles, almost six miles the other day. When you do the training, it's like four-minute run, then two-minute walk, and then it's back and forth. Then eventually it just gets to like four-minute run, one-minute walk. What kind of shoes are you running? I just have Nike right now, but they're good running shoes, I guess. Yeah.

Yeah, yeah. I just, running, man, it, I always thought I would like running the most and I never like did it. And I started doing it now and it's like how hectic everything gets and busy and

uh it's just very it feels like once i run i'm running from everything that's like the chaos yeah it's like you're just running from it and you just feel like you're just in your own world and you're just out there and uh it's it's it's been really great it's it really has been great and i do want to get i want to get in shape i want to get in like you know i want to be real i want to be skinny and like all that stuff i've never done it and so i want to do it and uh

I got to do it now before I get to, you know. Yeah, I know. Other ages. You ever think of a premise running?

uh some i mean some of you're focusing on um the breathing so much that's the thing is like all of it kind of goes away yeah so i mean i can think of like if i have if i have a joke because i was thinking because i have a couple joke ideas that i was going to do uh i'm going to zany's which no one this is coming two weeks out to do the new material night uh i'm going to yeah so it's like they're uh

I like, I'll, I'll just, you know, for me, I just like, if I have a little thing that I just kind of run it in my head and like, kind of just think about how I'm going to get into it. When I was running, I was running pretty hard for a while in my, I don't know, thirties and maybe a little bit in my forties, but I, I would get to a certain point almost towards the end of the run. And I just get one of those, uh,

Pretty regularly get one of those insights like, oh, that's a thing, man. I got to remember that. Because your mind is so preoccupied with something else, with the pain of running or like, I got to get through this. And then you just have that, you're not thinking. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You kind of just get, you're kind of just in your own...

Yeah, and I like the walking, like the running and the walking because it's like then you walk and then you catch your breath and you're out. And then it's like, all right, got to go again. And you just go and it's like how far can you get removed of not thinking about the time and stuff like that. My dad was a coach, man, so there was no walking. Is he in the room? Is that why he wasn't there? Yeah.

Are you afraid that he's listening? He's going to hear me talking about walking. Yeah, yeah. No, but I remember when I was a kid, like, that was just the rule. Like, you don't walk. You don't walk. Yeah. You can't walk. I remember seeing people, like, in these runs or whatever, and they'd be walking. I'd be like, yeah, these people are like. And now you have a joke about going on your walk. I did have, yeah. Yeah. Yeah, I walk a lot now. It's pathetic. It's really, I feel like such a.

Let your dad down. Yeah, let everybody down. Yeah. Yeah. Somebody called him. That's the joke, I think. My neighbor asked me if I was going on my walk. I'm like, my walk? Yeah. Come on, man. That's my walk? Ryan Oglesby. Oglesby. Ryan Oglesby. Oglesby. Oglesby.

I was wondering if you guys would be able to complete the six degrees of Kevin Bacon starting with Nate. I can see Aaron's wheels are turning here. I can do it easily. I can do it too. Way less than six. Go ahead. I got one too. Nate played golf with Mark Wahlberg.

Well, I was going to say something you got to be in. He was in. It was photographed. Okay. I saw it. That's fine. Is that how you do it? It's not about knowing the person? You can do it. It used to be what you were in a picture with. Yeah. I would say play golf with Mark Wahlberg. Mark Wahlberg was in Entourage. Kevin Pollak was in Entourage.

Kevin Pollak was in A Few Good Men with Kevin Bacon. Oh, yeah, man. I don't know if that one... That's a little bit stretching it. Is it like me stretching it? They weren't even in the same episode together, Entourage. That's true. Okay. They got to be on screen together. Let me do it the correct way. Okay. Because I've already done it for all of you guys. Okay. You were on an episode of Marin. Yeah. Marin was in Joker with Robert De Niro. Robert De Niro was in...

Sleepers with Kevin Bacon. Okay. But they have to be on the same screen? Yeah, were they on the same scene? Well, I don't know about the same scene, but they have to at least be on the same movie. Okay. I don't see how that's any different than being in different episodes. What was De Niro in Sleepers? I'm sorry? What was De Niro in Sleepers?

I don't know. One that was asleep. His character's name. One of the main sleepers. I don't know. I mean. Yeah, yeah, yeah. That's okay. It was a CPAP movie. It was a movie about CPAPs. I mean, I think the real way to do Kevin Bacon movies is actor-actor. It's got to even be movies. Okay. Yeah. So you were in a movie, right, with Henry Phillips? Yeah.

Yeah. Yeah. You got to think about it. You've been to so many movies. I think I did one with Henry. It was a long time ago. Yeah, I was in Henry's movie. Was it Punching the Clown? I was in the second one. Punching Henry? Punching Henry. They're both very, very funny. Really funny. J.K. Simmons was in that movie. Yes, man. Wow. Yeah. He was in Whiplash with Miles Teller. Miles Teller was in Top Gun Maverick with Tom Cruise. Tom Cruise was in A Few Good Men with Kevin Bacon. Wow.

That's right, man. That's amazing. I can do all of us. Aaron and I were a little tougher. I did Sprung with Greg Garcia. Greg Garcia was mentioned in an episode of Entourage. Kevin Pollak was on Entourage. Kevin Bacon. Ours are together. We were in Sprung with Garrett Dillahunt. He was in No Country for Old Men with Tommy Lee Jones. Tommy Lee Jones was in The Fugitive with Harrison Ford.

Harrison Ford was in The Devil's Own with Brad Pitt. Brad Pitt was in Sleepers with Kevin Bacon. Wow. That's pretty cool. What is Sleepers? Is it a good movie? It's a great movie, but it's very upsetting. Oh. Yeah, it's very upsetting.

it's very upsetting it's a good cast though amazing I read the book man it was yeah is it like a scary movie or something no it's about it's fun it's not fun I think it was one of them was abused as a kid all of them were abused oh okay they were all abused as a kid they got revenge maybe De Niro was the bad guy was he I was wondering Father Bobby yeah that probably that would fit right that's a lot more than I can't do that it won an Oscar I thought it would be a fun I thought someone would watch a night not a fun watch probably yeah

It's not going to be heavy. It's a good acting. It's like a lot of stuff out now that I don't. That's really. I just watched Spencer Confidential.

Oh, it's like the confidential. He's a PI or whatever? Yeah, Netflix. Movie? Yeah. Well, the girl was in it. Liza Sledge. Liza was in there, yeah. Okay. Nice job. Pretty fun. Wahlberg, too. Yeah. You know, a good movie, if you ever played the game, maybe I've only done this, where name two actors, you've got to guess what movie they were in together. The movie Heat obviously has De Niro and Al Pacino. Damn.

But those are two of the main stars. I thought that was a good one. But there's a lot of Natalie Portman's in that movie. I'm drawing a blank now. Ashley Judd's in the movie. There's a lot of big actors in that movie that were smaller characters. Yeah, I'm looking at it now. Ted Levine.

I don't know, Ted Levine. Dennis Haysbert, the Allstate guy. Oh, yeah, man. And he was in The Unit. Nobody really cares about that TV show. I remember that show, The Unit. Yeah, I always watched it with my parents. Unit's one of my favorite shows. Hank Azaria. Apu. Bubba from Forrest Gump. Yeah. He was? Yeah. Tom Sizemore just died. John Voight. Oh, Val Kilmer. Yeah, Val Kilmer. It's a heck of a cast. You're right, Brian. Good call.

Good call. So, yes, we can do Six Degrees Kevin Bacon with all of us. Pretty fun. If Dusty was here, we couldn't. Well, you could probably pick. I mean, Maren probably interviewed Kevin Bacon. Yeah. Maybe. I was really trying to stick with the thing on screen. Yeah, on screen. Yeah. Yeah.

Yeah. What's sprung, man? Sorry. I don't know that. Greg Garcia. Can you believe this? I'll watch it. If you guys, the hottest show on television. Yeah. Free. Uh, it was on freebie. Our friend, Greg Garcia, who created everybody. Uh, my name is Earl. Yeah. He created sprung and they're in, in, they're in the show. I'm a prison guard. He's a serial killer. Yeah. He was, Aaron was in the trailer.

I'm going to go watch. Is it a movie or a TV show? It's a TV show. All right, I'll check it out, man. Yeah, it's great. He was in the trailer. I mean, I'd be watching SportsCenter, and then they show a commercial, and there's Aaron. I had like two lines, and one of the lines summarized the whole plot of the show. Oh, really? So it was used in the trailer, yeah. That's fantastic, man. Pretty cool. I'm going to go check it out. Yeah. Seth Hoffenberg.

In a previous episode, I remember Aaron mentioning The Sandlot being one of his favorite childhood movies of all time. Would Aaron put The Sandlot on his Mount Rushmore of greatest sports movies of all time? I don't know if it makes the cut for all sports movies. Baseball movies, it probably makes the cut. Yeah. What's your other baseball movies? Moneyball. Moneyball is such a good movie. Yeah. Man, that's a great movie. Yeah, it was like The Natural. West Wing. Yeah, Field of Dreams. The West Wing. What's that? West Wing. Fantastic. I'm with him on Sorkin.

Yeah, yeah, yeah. Big sorkin files. I know you are, but I always thought For Love of the Game is an underrated baseball movie, man. Yeah, it's good. And Kevin Costner? Costner, Travolta's wife,

Kelly. Jamie Curtis. No, Kelly. Kevin Bacon. Beautiful woman. She passed away, right? And you know who was in that movie, man? It has a decent role. Greer Barnes. Oh, really? He has sort of an interesting, he's a really good actor. Yeah. Yeah, comedian Greer Barnes. Yeah. Greer would destroy in New York. Oh, yeah, yeah. Yeah, you don't want to. And low energy too, right? Kind of low energy. Yeah. Murder. Yeah. Yeah. That's fun.

Did we say why my thing was PG-13? Abigail told me. Yeah, we told it. Because I said Merck. We told it a couple episodes ago. Okay. Nate Warhauski. Nate Warhauski. It's a... Chowski. Chowski. Warchowski. In the early 80s, we used to go out and guess this guy was probably older. His early 80s, he's probably older than the early 80s.

I think if you've got to name Nate Warshowski, the last name Warshowski, I think when you're born, you're 40. Yeah. That's a Cold War era name for sure. Yeah. That guy saw me with bull on ice. Very serious child. For sure. In the early 80s, we used to go to the movie theater a lot, and my mom had this giant leather bag with a flashlight in it. It might be close to mine. I'm old too now. When teenagers would talk during the movies –

She would stand up, shine her light on them, and yell, that's about enough. It was so embarrassing for us kids. Side note, the bag was mostly for smuggling in fried chicken and chocolate chip cookies. Also very embarrassing. Oh, man.

You know, what are you, a little fried chicken at the movie? Yeah. That's like, yeah, but I mean, you go to a movie, you're getting a meal. Now, was it legal back then to bring food in? I don't know if it was ever legal. Yeah. But maybe, is it illegal now? No, they don't want you to smuggle food and drinks in for sure. I think that's their idea. Because that's how those theaters make money. Yeah, yeah. I think that's the idea is the concessions.

is you don't do it. Well, it's funny to enforce the rules about talking. I did it with Harper one time. Just...

just to like kind of do something like that for her, you know, and like, it was fun to like, she was like, we're going to get in trouble. I can't get in there. I go, this is, we're not going to get in trouble. Don't worry about it. Like, it's not that I want her to go do stuff, but it's like, it's like my upbringing a little bit, but then I like her being a little nervous. You know, there's part of me that thinks I want her to be a little nervous about live on the edge a little bit, you know, but in that little, you know, in that tiny little way, I remember bringing,

food into the ball game my parents would bring food into the ball game it was for movies talkies yeah my dad will tell you it's hard in a silent film yeah are you talking about like a cardinal's game eating yeah like a cardinal's game we would bring because they're so coolers full of food in there man a cooler oh you just bring a cooler in that yeah i know we did that that's awesome my dad to this day he has this thing where like if you talk about the

If you say anything about the ballgame, he needs to point out to you. You know, now the tickets, that's not even half what you're paying with the ballgame. And then he'll break it down for you. He's got to go through the whole thing. I mean, you know, you got to park. Yeah. And then the food. And then like everybody knows this. Everybody knows that the food is very expensive at the ballgame. Like everybody knows that. We don't have to –

say it anymore it's funny too with food though you want to because everybody always says food you're like well you're gonna have to eat and everybody and everybody goes yeah yeah and you're like you really wouldn't have to you could go eat a meal before the game oh yeah and be completely fine no but and everybody it is because you do that movies you're like well the candy and you're like yeah you don't have to get the candy you're like but you have to but you kind of do yeah

Greg, I thought of a couple of words that you and I generation probably still say that really has gone away. Cell phone.

Oh, yeah. I say cell phone. What do people say? Mobile. Just your phone. Just your phone. Yeah, yes, your phone, yeah. I say cell phone. Okay, well, maybe our generation. Yeah, yeah, yeah. But do you call it a cell phone? Like I've been saying, man. Yeah. Pretty much the same thing. I definitely used to, but now nobody has a landline anymore. I feel like I don't need to make that distinction. Yeah, it's kind of going away because, I mean, my mom still has a landline, but yeah, just phone. And then big screen TV. Yeah.

Yeah. I feel like all TVs now are big screen, so people just call it a TV. You're right. I haven't heard that in a long time. I remember calling TVs that big screen. I mean, I got one a year ago for the Super Bowl, and I called it a big screen TV, but everybody's house I go to has a TV just as big as mine usually. So it's going to be really big now. And they're not that expensive anymore, right? No. No.

Will Matthews, after listening to the episode after episode of Nate Landon in the car, a son signed up to do stand-up comedy for his elementary school's talent show. What advice would you give a fourth grader who has a three-minute set to do in front of his entire school? Got to get out to the clubs and work it out. You got to be – Just keep arriving. You're going to get tired because these shows are late, but you got to hit it hard.

I would say wherever you think the biggest laugh in the joke is, end on that. End the joke. So wherever you think the biggest laugh is, end on that. Yeah. So if you think about it, well, what's the actual real funny part of the, you know, end on that? Yeah, I would almost, for anybody that starts, I think most people think I'm going to get up there and talk and this thing's going to catch fire. We're like, even if it doesn't work, you should at least...

You should have a guess on which word they're going to laugh on. Yeah. For each of your things, like put a little mark and say, this is the word they're going to laugh on. And you'll at least pause a little bit. Yeah. Yeah. And then, yeah, and just have a, yeah, just have, yeah, just have a, know where you're going. Know what the end, the beginning is, and know what the end is of the whole set. So then you have, you won't feel, you know that you know how to end.

like you know how to start it this one will say at the beginning this one will say at the end that's i think that's the most important thing that even for me now is like i don't do well if i don't have an ending like it's like this new hour i'm doing i finally got a closer and i don't know if it'll be the closer forever but it's a closer now and it works as a closer and it might be but it's like until i had that i was very lost i really need to

I really need to close an opener. I can kind of get by because you can say whatever, you know, like, welcome, we're having fun. Or you just, you know, some dumb, you just can say something to get into something. But the end has to be such a thing that like I, if I don't have the end, that's when I feel very lost. Do you have a new hour since Hello World? Yeah. Man, I got to go.

It's garbage what I got right now. Yeah, this is my advice. Will, your kid better have a new three minutes next year. Yeah. I mean, for next year's talent. Yeah, my advice is if it doesn't go well, you need to sit him down and you need to yell at him. Tell him, ask him what he did wrong. Tell him we don't bring up losers in this family. You know, that's just, I'm wrong. And move the mic stand.

Oh, yeah, man. He might not have a mic stand. You're right. That is a... I'd just be talking. Take a towel up there with you. Yeah. I really hope you're not doing that, man. What do you mean? If they laugh, let them laugh. Let the crowd laugh. Yeah. Just sit there. Yeah. Yeah.

You really have not looked at me the same since I told you. I don't want you to be one of these towel guys, man. Oh, man. It's a lot of fun. You're getting in shape. You're looking good. I get everybody involved. No, man. It's a sheep tank. Dude, when I do crowd work, I kind of whip it out. You're going to lean on this thing, man. It's going to affect your writing. Yeah, I go out sometimes. I lay it down, and I stand on it, and that's my set. Woo! Woo! I go, man, these kids are crazy. Woo! Woo! Woo!

These kids. These kids getting out of hand. I think the level of when it has to stay on your body because you're using it that much. Yeah, exactly. When you go over the shoulder with that thing, man. It can never be far away. I wear it like a scarf sometimes. I wrap it around, dude. I remember my buddy Bob Biggerstaff, who Nate knows. Very, very funny guy. Yeah.

And Bob's like slim now, man. He's slimmed down to me. But for a while there, he's getting a little heavy. And he started having a towel on stage. I was like, hey, man, you got to turn it around. You got to reel it in, man. You want to be one of these guys, man, where you got to have the towel? Yeah.

Yeah, he had to walk to my house once. We talked about that on this, right? Uh-uh. Uh-uh. I've never heard of this guy. Bob Biggerstaff. Yeah. I talked about it on something. Very, very funny dude. Real funny. Out of Houston. Yeah.

he was, when I lived in Queens, we had to, this was when he was bigger, and we had to go, when you had to come to my house from the subway, you had to walk, and then you had to go up all these stairs, and over these trail tracks, and then more stairs. And so it was kind of an uphill climb. You're always kind of tired. Then you had to get, once you got off, you had to go straight up a hill. And so, he comes over and Joe lists

And I mean, when he gets to the house, dude, he is furious. And like, he is just wasn't prepared for a mountain climb. And he just sat there quiet for a long time. Just like, just getting it together. Like, yeah, so funny. He got mad at us one time in New York because it was,

We were going somewhere, and I was like, you know, you walk everywhere. I was like, it's just a couple blocks, man. It was a while. He finally just stopped. He just stopped like a child. He's screaming, screaming at us. You guys lied to me. This is not, this is not, it's just a couple blocks. He's lying. And then he went over and got a pretzel at this pretzel stand and sat down and ate the pretzel.

That was his former protest. He also, remember, remember when Joe and, uh, Cantor and those guys lived in that place in Queens and Astoria. Well, I, I, or I think maybe it was Odo or somebody lived below him, but anyways, they had a, it was Paul Odo who lived below him or by him. And he was like, Hey Bob, man, uh, it's the bathroom, man. You're, you're going to come stay with me, but the bathroom, man, it's a, it's a pretty small bathroom, man. It's,

I don't know if you're going to be comfortable, you know? And Bob said he got there and he's like, really? He's like, it's just a bathroom, man. I'm not that big. He's like, I'm not that big, man. It's just a bathroom. He was really angry that they thought he couldn't use the regular bathroom. Again, Bob is very slimmed down. Yeah, yeah.

That's very funny. He texted me his weight today. Oh yeah. Yeah. He texts me his weight now. He's down to 206 in case. Wow. Wow. Maybe he doesn't want it publicly known, but. No, I guarantee he does. I guarantee he wants everybody to know. Yeah. Yeah. That's awesome. Because he was at like over three. 206. Yeah. Yeah. That's crazy. And he's a tall guy. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. That's yeah. He's light. Yeah. Wow. He could go to your place in New York with no problem now. Probably move there. Yeah. Yeah.

J.J. Gitz. My brother's a comic, and I've heard him describe other comics as hacky a couple of times in the past. I think I understand what it means, but I'm wondering how you guys personally distinguish between someone who's a hack and someone who's just not good. Hacky.

Aaron, go ahead. Yeah, you want to take this one? One's me and one's Brian. You decide which. You decide. It's a viewer's choice. Yeah. It's almost that. Hacky is someone that probably does good, but it seems like the material is just... It's, you know, it's like the idea when it's like, you know, the...

fly on an airplane airplane why are they selling small peanuts they still giving small peanuts or something like that like they would and someone's doing but they could actually be doing good in here but the material is just kind of like done material you know it's just kind of like it's been around for the material has been around we've made enough jokes about planes or yeah and they're not giving away peanuts anymore yeah yeah they're not giving away peanuts the allergies yeah yeah

Yeah. So it's like that would be, and someone who's just not good is someone that just doesn't do good on stage. But a hack is like someone that just does, you know. Familiar. Very familiar material. And they really have no point of view either, I think. That almost could be it more than the other one.

And now I'm switching and saying that's what I would think. A hack is someone that's kind of like the material feels familiar, but then you get no sense of the person out. Like you're basically like they're doing jokes that you're like, well, anybody could go. If you have confidence, you could just take their jokes and give them to that person. They would go do good. It's like their material would just work with everybody. They don't have any like – I think this is a good example. On your –

Greatest Average American, I think my favorite joke from that special was about peanut allergies where you defended the kids. Who are all these adults that are just all of a sudden so whatever? I've seen so many comics make fun of kids with peanut allergies. We were tough. There was no such thing. Man, I just remembered in the new special there's a –

Me taking a shot at kids with peanut allergies. What are you saying, Bates? Are you serious? Yeah, but it's in a creative way. I'm talking about peanut butter. It's not hacky. It's just not good. I think that's the distinction. I'm just kidding, dude. Relax. I thought we were swinging a mist. I was playing along. I wasn't angry. I was playing a character. I was a foil. I was playing the straight man. Yeah.

You are a great straight man, by the way. Every interview I see you on, you're so funny because you play a great straight man. Thanks, man. Maybe I'm just straight.

Maybe so. Nate said Brian plays a straight man on stage in his own act. A straight man by himself. I still laugh at it at least once a month. Bates doing crowd work. Did you go to Auburn? No. Okay. Yeah, me neither.

Hey, Bates, a lot of times the guys will actually say something. Let them talk. That was good, man. That was good. I mean, the transition was good, but not as that first commercial you guys did with Viore. Yeah, well. That one, man, we were two minutes in and I was like, is this even a commercial?

It was a testimonial. I mean, it was just right in. I didn't even know where. It was great. Berk Scarborough. While dealing with his father's funeral, my best friend's estranged and unstable mother insisted that she would be with him during this difficult time.

He had no interest in this, but she was determined. She didn't have any money, so she held a cab and promised the driver his son would pay if he drove her from L.A. to Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Like Los Angeles? Yeah. The driver agreed, and when they finally arrived, my furious friend told the driver he had no part in this and wouldn't be paying him a cent. They eventually threw the guy some money for his trouble, but the story made national news.

That's crazy. Cabby says he was stiffed on cross-country fare. Yeah. $8,200 cross-country fare by a female passenger he shuttled from Beverly Hills, California, North Carolina. That's insane. Why didn't she make sure she didn't like fun? I guess she's a mess. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It would... I mean, you feel...

That's like, see, this is a situation where you're like, well, you're the cab driver, you got to call, you know, be like, well, I need to talk to your son. And maybe they could have heard they said that. But then also, I try to be a little more, think about it, because I understand like, you're also, what if the person's just the nicest person ever? And it's like, what's he's been put in such a weird situation and she's maybe crying and kind of a mess and like all this kind of stuff.

That's for me. Do you need one? No, I was just going to relay it to you. Do you need coffee? No, no. I'm good. Sure. I'd love a coffee. Yeah. Yeah. If it's hot. Starbucks ready to drink. Yeah. I'm just kidding. So it's like, I feel bad for like that kind of thing. Cause it's, it's yeah. She probably all guilted him. You know, my ex-husband died. I'm on my way to the funeral. Yeah. But he's paying for the hotel. I think this, the key thing,

piece of information there is Beverly Hills, California. Yeah. Cause he probably, if you picked up somebody and they were like, no, you don't, but Beverly Hills are like, well, this person, these crazy people, they have the kind of money to do this. Oh, that's a good point. Yeah. Yeah. If it were from like St. Louis. Yeah. Yeah. There's no way. First of all, it would only been 4,100. Okay. That's true. Second of all, there's a lot of wealthy people in St. Louis. I don't know if you've ever heard Anheuser-Busch. I have. Family lives there.

I would think you would even, the company would be like involved. From Alabama, man. Sorry. But he comes from money. That's true. Wouldn't the company be involved? Which company? The cab company? The cab company. Like, can he just. You mean as far as trying to seek this money? Yeah. West Coast Yellow Cab. The company has been paid another $2,000. So it's being paid off in installments. But the rest of it's going through small claims courts.

I mean, I think that article's from 2007, so this is a while ago. They agreed to give the woman a 25% discount off the metered rate, but that's still $6,000 or so. Yeah, I mean... I think the cap company would be like, no, you got to have some kind of policy. Yeah. We only go to Utah or something. Or you pay me up front. You can't just... Yeah, you got to be like, half of it's got to be paid up front or like, you know. These...

because they're on radio shows and a lot of times or whatever, they'll run in these stores and you're like, what? And then you're like, I think...

There may be some mental illness in here somewhere. It's riddled throughout this story. Yeah. That's one thing living in New York where you start to realize, okay, there's a lot of people in the world. Because you're on the subway and you're like, oh, no, that guy's going through something. These people are seriously ill. When I see these stories, I laugh a little less now because I'm like, I think there may be something here that.

I felt that way about some video went viral of this guy freaking out at the airport. And I see those all the time of somebody. And it's this guy. And it is very funny when you watch it. And then you watch it again. And you're like, this guy's having the worst day of his life. And everybody's just filming it. And then I feel bad I watched it. And then it's tough. Yeah.

Yeah. Well, hope you're happy. I don't know how you sleep at night, but you contributed to the problem. Yeah, I did in a way. Yeah. Yeah. I watched it. I shared it. Yeah.

Yeah, you didn't have to. You shared it? Yeah, you shared it. I shared it over text. I'm not sharing it publicly. You put it out there. It's a funny video. You put money on it on Facebook. I saw it. It was an ad that came up. I boosted it, yeah. Aaron did do a very funny thing. He made the worst poster for an upcoming Zany show and sent it to some of his friends. I was in on that whole scam. I saw your thing, and I fell for the whole thing.

The only reason I didn't fall for it is because he wanted to ask for my honest opinion. I was like, there's no way Aaron's asking me for my honest opinion about a fly. This is the poster I made for my show at Zadie's. I literally started to type, Hey man. Cause he asked like, how is this? And I, I literally, uh, I literally started to type, uh,

Hey, man, it looks pretty good. The font, I would maybe think about another font. I don't drink coffee. I mean, I didn't realize at the time your ear is... You don't drink coffee? No.

Just tea. Oh, I was like, you had coffee. I thought you had coffee. Tea. Tea. Oh, yeah. Do you need tea? No. Do you want some tea? No, I'm good. No, I'm really good. Yeah, but Brian caught on right away. He goes, is this a joke? Because he just knew it was that bad. No, it was really just because, I mean. Because I was asking you for advice. Yes, and I was like, there's no way Aaron is going to be asking me.

You were so good at that stuff. And that looks like something I would make. And I'm like, I don't know. Man, I fell for this. This was only a couple of days ago. Yeah. Yeah. I fell for the whole thing. Dusty gave me a ton of advice. And I felt so bad by the end of it.

He was like, well, you know, I'd move the flames up a little bit. I might. He's like, I like the idea of it. Like, it's looking nice. Yeah. Then you're a real jerk. Yeah. Your friend Dusty is genuinely devoting time. Took time out of his day. To try and help you out. And you're just, yeah, you feel good about it. This is your whole generation of, what do they call them? Trollers. Trolls. Yeah, yeah, yeah. My wife gave it to me straight, though.

I said, how is it? She said, it's really hideous. She just let me know. That was fun. This shows at 630, that's your first problem. Spoken like a true club runner. Yeah. Yeah. I don't know. I don't know. I'll probably have been like, yeah, it's fine. Yeah, I think Dustin Nickerson said that. That's what Dustin Nickerson said. He was just like, yeah, I like it. It's fine. Whatever. Yeah, it's cool.

We'd be, yeah. You'd almost be like, what are you doing, dude? That would be more of it. Just be like, yeah, dude, what are you, why are you texting me this? That is the one skill that you get. I would be confused on that. Well, that's why he didn't say it to you, but he said to people like us that were like, oh. I said, can I hear your honest thoughts about this flyer? I spent too much time on it. I'm just going crazy. Just want something simple, but artistic.

I was like, yeah, sure. That's perfectly reasonable. And I sent him. It was just good enough that it wasn't an obvious joke, at least to somebody like me. Not to me. I mean, to you it was obvious that was bad? Yeah. Like, that's what I mean. It's close enough that it's like,

I guess. Well, that's the one thing I can do a lot of computer stuff. And I, you know, but that thing where you guys make posters like that, I have no concept. Yeah. The computer school you took Commodore 64. I did. I did take a programming class. Yeah, I did. Yeah. I did. In college. No, I think it was high school.

I think it was high school. There's no way, Greg. There's no way. Yeah, there was like a- A college programming class in the 80s? It was like a basic or something. There was no- Maybe it was like an extra unit or something. I don't know. An extra credit- No, I took it at West Point. I took it at West Point. We had computers, I think, first year.

Yeah, first semester. Okay. Here's why I don't think you did it, because we're even having to rattle our brain to know if computers were invented. They were. They were. I went to college. My freshman year of college was 1986, 87. Freshman year of college? This is like, you're telling me possibly late 70s. You're taking, you're in there taking it. I mean, I don't know if Bill Gates is born yet. No, he's not.

I know. At West Point, we had a computer class. It was a radar. The Pentagon? Nomad? What do they call that? Norad. Norad. And Nomad. And Nomad. We had the terminals with the green. Oh, yeah, yeah. Apple IIs? Apple IIs we had when I went to Missouri in journalism class. We had Apple IIes. Okay. Sort of the IBMs with the green terminals.

Is that what your computer looked like? Yeah, something like that. Yeah, yeah. A floppy disk? A floppy disk. And I remember the computer crashing and me losing a paper at West Point and having to retype the whole thing. We'd have to go to the computer lab. You didn't have a computer. Yeah, yeah. You had to go to the lab to type stuff in. Mm-hmm.

You had to get the dolly and pull the computer out. We just went over it. It's that size, man. What are you doing, Greg? Doing some late night homework? Are you walking through the corridor? I just want to see in his head what my life looks like because it's like 1950s that he's saying right now. I wasn't alive in 1950s. This is what I get every week. I'm so glad you're here. The old guy over here. Well, Bates is younger than I am. Yeah.

Paul Emmy Mueller. Adam Sandler recently made the excellent sports movie Hustle, starring NBA All-Star Anthony Edwards as Kermit Wiltz.

If Nate were to make a sports movie as part of the Nate Land movie-verse, what sport would it be? What pro athlete would Nate try to recruit to star in it? Probably golf. Golf. A golf movie would be John Augustine. Yeah. You know? Yeah. That would be. Maybe a college wrestler has one more year eligibility. He goes back. His dad coaches him. Yeah. Yeah. Could be you, Greg.

That'd be a better story would be you going back. Missouri is riddled with injuries. Yeah. Big tournament. It would have to be serious. They got to come back. It's not a young man's. It's a young man's sport. It's not. I think golf works a little. I can't. I couldn't wrestle. That's what makes it great. Yeah. Exactly. That's why it's so inspiring. Yeah. Yeah. If you walk out, your singler just has been gay on it.

I got them to sponsor it. Icy hot on the back. I would. And that's how we make the money. You think of me as that character in Major League with Harris, the old pitcher that was throwing all the garbage and he had icy hot all over. Yeah. That's exactly what you see. Yeah. And now that I think of it, I'm probably older than that actor was. Oh, yeah. Yeah.

Yeah, I would say if you're going to do that, Vecchione is a little – he's in a little better shape, I think. Well, I think you and Vecchione wrestle to see who goes to the next level. It would be an interesting match. Yeah. You and Vecchione? I would have to get in shape. So my promoter on my tour, Tony Hume, he wrestled too. Oh, yeah? Yeah.

And so, yeah, when him and Vecchione is on, we get a round table. But you and Vecchione wrestling would be- Mike's in real good shape, man. I'm not. But your level of wrestling, Mike is- He was good. He wasn't an All-American. He's not an All-American. No, he was- But he was very good. Yeah, he's very good. Or not that good. Yeah, yeah. But-

Very good. Mike's a maniac. He just decided. Yeah, Mike takes cold showers, which is a bad health. He's got me doing some of it. Oh, of course. He told me to do that stuff. And it's...

I don't do the full cold shower. I'll end on cold. I'll end on a minute cold. Yeah. Minutes? Good. Yeah. 60 seconds. 40 or 50 seconds maybe. It's tough. It's hard. It's hard, man. You act like you did 15 seconds. You do a minute? I only do 50 seconds. You might be doing a minute. I don't know, man. Are you counting? I'm counting. I'm breathing. Yeah.

Yeah, he's a big breather. Vecchione's a big all-out breather. He got me into that breathing stuff for a while. I got dizzy a couple times. He did it. One day we sat in the Chicago theater, I think. And so he's talking about the meditation and all that stuff.

And so you're like, all right, I get it. Like, you know, it's like, cause it can feel so crazy. It's like, that's running as I've, I breathe good when I run. Yeah. Cause it's like, you're running and you feel like I'm doing something. So then they're like, I'll just sit in the room together. So I was like, all right, we'll go do it. So it's like me, Vecchione and Julian McCullough. And so we're all in there and Julian could do it. Julian's like a hippie. That's like, he's on board with every little thing. And so they're all in there. Like, you know, it's like, I don't want to do it in the mic, but it's like,

It's like big, big breathing. Breathing works, right? So like it does work when I run it, but...

we're just in a room and it's loud and i mean we do it for a second then i just go boys i can't i can't do this and like i was too uncomfortable that i was like doing it with other people i go i was like that's a little like that's enough it's a little california yeah it's it's yeah yeah it is but it like he i did do it for a while because mike told me to do it and uh

You do feel like almost like a buzzing in your head after you do it, man. Yeah. You let a lot of stuff go. What you should do to get healthy is hello fresh. Hello fresh. I keep derailing the whole podcast. Derailing? No, that was genius, man. That was impressive. That was on the level of the order. You know what's stressful?

I feel like people should have to give you acknowledgement when you can catch them where they don't know that it happened. Like if it takes them a second to realize that. For the ad? For the ad. Yeah.

I think we should, you know. Okay. That's pretty good. Like, you know, if you're listening and you're like, man, that one, you were in it. I was like, what? Yeah, yeah. I didn't recognize it until the promo code. The Ori thing, I thought we were just talking. I was just talking, man. It was smooth. It was real smooth. I like it. That middle one, I could see where you're going with that.

Well, it's because Nate wears Viore and nobody thinks I actually, you know, I'm athletic or eat greens, but I do eat athletic greens. Yeah. I drink it. Drink it, right? Yeah, yeah, yeah. One scoop? Yep. One scoop. Yeah. We're doing it on the road because some vitamins or some whatever you need. Yeah.

Like my vitamins are low or something. I can guarantee that wasn't what the doctor said. He said your vitamins are low. Your vitamins are low. Yeah, your vitamins are low. I go, golly. Get your vitamins up. I go, shoot it to me straight, doc. Well, I'm looking at your test here and your vitamins are low. Which ones? All of them. All of them. A, B, C, D. Yeah. E.

I owe you. It's not the point. It's just your body. Sometimes why? Because there's no why. I think my vitamin D was, I was like, and I golf, and I was like, I think I get a lot of sun, but I guess just winter. No, that's the thing, man. You got to. But I'm out there. Yesterday, I got, I got, I golfed yesterday. It was super sunny, and I felt like I got so much sun that it was like I felt a little nauseous. Sun poisoning. A little sun poisoning. Yeah, I feel a little, yeah.

But I think it's with winter, I'm sure everybody goes down just because the sun's not out that much. Even during the summer, my doctor has me taking a little vitamin D. Okay, once you go out there. I like the sun. I like feeling the sun. Yeah, me too. Yeah. Yeah, I would. Sun golf. Yeah.

There's an old man conversation right here, dude. Yeah, he goes, hey, another day of the sun. Another day of the sun. See, that sun is a good day. The sun is an old thing. Yeah. Yeah. Well, you're not going to see it much longer. It would be an old thing. Only a couple more trips. Every day I go look at it and go, I can't believe you're there. I'm going to miss you. I'm going to miss you. The sun's a good thing.

This week. We're talking about Europe. Europe. I'm in Europe. Right now, I'm in Europe. I'm amongst it. I was going to ask if you'd been to Europe. I heard you say last week's episode, you did a show in- You heard-

You were a part of it. Well, I overheard you. I didn't ask you about it, but I overheard. Word on the street. Word on the street was. I heard you mention Dublin, I believe you said. I've been to Dublin at a comedy festival, the Vodafone. So this is the first headlining tour. So that's the only shows I've done there. But this is, you know, I did little sets there, nothing long. Yeah. This will be big, big, big stuff. Vocaturated.

We'll start there. Oh, yeah. What's that? So Union Chapel, 7.30 sold out. Very excited. Nice. Wow. Then Dublin, I've already done this. The Car Street, new venue because we moved up because we sold some more tickets than we thought. So you do a lot of that over there when you go. They have like a venue and they're like, let's see how it does and then it'll be like a new venue. Yeah.

And then I'll be at the Folk E-Tirit in Oslo, New Orleans. Come back home. The routing on this is weird. It's really weird. That's a tough one to get back and forth to. It's like a comedy zone run. Yeah.

It's a very funny inside joke. We all been on that road. I'm going, where? You got two nights, an hour apart, then a nine-hour drive. 150, no hotel. Yeah, 150, no hotel. I still get all those. The Comedy Zone ones?

I don't know if I get condoms. I get one of them. I think we get the same one. Do you really? You get them? I always, because I signed up for a long time ago and I like seeing them and I like, it's just, I remember. I'm still taking them. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I like to see where they're at and like, you're just kind of like reminding that it can all go back to just what you're doing.

it's like a pre you appreciate it every time i yeah i appreciate it where i'm at every time like just being like because you i would take these gigs and you see in there just yeah you know 200 no hotel in somewhere in montana and you're like i mean hotels will be 280. yeah like in hotels are just they're 200 now like they're not right right they're they are you're right yeah there's not like they're they're not cheap anymore they're

No, the days in is going to – you're 100 after taxes are probably – Oh, yeah. It's not – you used to be able to get $60 hotels. No change. Now it's – that's why I'm an Airbnb guy now. Yeah, man. I just – I don't know if I can get it with that. Why is that? Don't you have chores and stuff? It depends. It depends. I just had one where literally the checkout instructions were just leave. You don't have to do anything. It said like we're here to –

Make you feel like guests. So just leave. See, then I would stay. Yeah. Because I'm the same way. I'm not a big Airbnb guy either. I've done it. And I want to do it because it makes the most sense. It's going to be the cheapest, especially when I'm on the road and I got a bunch of guys. It's the cheapest for me because I can just put us, we can all stay in this one house or whatever. But it's like, yeah, the chores are the, you know, I'm like, you're paying for like a, I don't know, you're just like,

I want to just go stay at somewhere. I don't want to feel like I have to go clean up. Especially if it's one night, you're like, I mean, that seems like a whole thing. The worst I've had, and I've stayed in dozens now, the worst I've had is just take the trash out to the trash can on your way out. That's the worst I've gotten. That's the worst? I've seen horror stories of mow the lawn and they tell you to do crazy stuff. Milk the cows. The worst I've got is please just take the trash out, which I'm like, that's pretty reasonable to do. You don't do that in a hotel though.

That's true. But you don't have a living room where you can hang out. You don't have a washing machine and a dryer right there in the hotel room. You do it for just one night too? I'll do it for, if I'm alone, I'll get a hotel. But if I have a buddy with me, I want to hang. So we'll get a house. You wash clothes?

I want to throw a shirt in the dryer sometimes, you know, and you never know what's going to happen. A lot of costume changes. You've got to wash my towel in between every show. Yeah. He goes back to the Airbnb in between shows. Yeah. Go with the dryer for a bit. Woo! Yeah, he sounds like he might have to shower in between shows.

He's got to wash the towel. Oh, man. You can't do this this early, man. I know. Young guy. You're right. You're right. Prime of your career. You're right. Oh, man.

I hope not. I hope, yeah. Because this is as good as it's going to get. No, I didn't mean it like that. I did not mean it like that. You're destined for big things. I've said that all along. This is the peak. You're an Adonis. You should be out there swinging. Have you guys ever been to Europe? No. No. My parents were married there. Europe.

Fly to Europe, everybody. That sounds like an ad. Yeah. You're what? My parents got married in Switzerland. Wow. Yeah. So I'm going to Oslo, Norway. Yeah. Which is a different country. Yeah. I thought you were thinking of Sweden. I got a cousin who's in Florida. Yeah, you're thinking of Sweden, Norway? No, Sweden is Scandinavian. Switzerland is...

by Germany, I think. So Norway and Sweden are near each other. Neighbors, I think. But they're separate. But that's two countries. Yeah, and Denmark's up there too. And it's, oh. Have you ever been to Europe? No.

Never been, no. Never crossed the pond. Yeah. Really? World traveler. Yeah. Really? I've been to Italy and I've been to the Netherlands. Yeah, but it wasn't laid out like this when he went. Yeah, there was still a lot of disputes going on. It was more of a mess. Where'd you go? Were you over in Prussia? It was the Holy Lands. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It was the Roman Empire.

Romer it. We use all that. What's the Seinfeld, the place that they changed the name? Isn't it? Oh, Myanmar. Myanmar. Yeah. Burma. Burma. Oh, yeah, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. All right, so let me see where I'm even going. You're starting off in London. No, UK. Yeah. Oh, so. He's not going to make it to these weeks. Uh-huh.

Oh, what'd you say? London's where you start, right? Oh, I thought you said Dublin. Yeah. Yeah. So London is England, but it's also UK. So the United Kingdom is... Scotland is... England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland. That's all. Yeah. And then, but so that's the UK, but then England's its own, they're like, we're our own country though. I don't think so. I think it's the United Kingdom. I think all four of those are considered...

So there's probably a lot of – that's why the Ireland people could be really upset. Ireland and Northern Ireland have had a history of not liking each other. Yeah. So – yeah, because it doesn't look like Northern Ireland needs to be, right? It looks like you'd be like, well, just be all one thing. Yeah, it seems like they should have it. So Rory McRoy had a thing with that. Like when he – because he's maybe from Northern Ireland and maybe did something from the UK or something like that. Like in the –

in something. He's from Northern Ireland. Yeah. But he claimed the UK and it was like not from London. That's at East Tennessee somewhere. Go down. Yeah.

He signed a letter of intent to play golf at East Tennessee State University. That's crazy. That's insane. Yeah. We'll be at their basketball arena April 14th. Oh, I love that. Come check me out. Oh, yeah. You're playing there? Yeah. Me, Nate, and Dusty are opening for him. Yeah. Really? Yeah. Man. We're all doing the show. We haven't worked out who's going to Wetswater, but we're all doing the show together. I mean, I could take a shot on how I think it would be.

For Brian's sake, let's just say show up on time. If you want to be on the show, you better be there when it starts. Is your dad on that show? I don't know. So the United Kingdom is not on, you know, they left the European Union. European Union uses the Euro. That's their currency. Yeah.

But England a few years ago left the EU, so they used the pound. And that was Brexit, right? Brexit. But that includes all of the... It's a great name. Scotland is not using the euro, is what we're saying. I believe that's correct. All the UK is no longer using the euro. Yes. Straight up pound. Yeah, they use the pound. So you're going to have to have a bunch of different currency there, Nate. I think credit card.

Yeah. And they'll figure it out. Yeah. You got to have some. Oh, I will. Courtsy of the people. But yeah, we will. But we have to have. You got to be tipping, man. How many times do we got to. Do they don't tip over there, right? Yeah, but you're American. You should tip wherever you go. That's true. They probably expect Americans to. I did it once in. I remember doing it in Dublin and I waited to give the guy the money and it was like.

it was annoying to the person. That you gave them money? Because I feel like they were busy and it's like, and I'm just, you know, it's not like, it wasn't like, oh man, I appreciate it. It was like uncomfortable because it was just like, what are you trying to do? Like they didn't understand what I was trying to do. That sounds like it's on them. Yeah, they need to get with it. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. But I remember being, yeah, I remember being uncomfortable.

Are you going to do any sightseeing in England? We're going to do, I think we are going to drive around and there's somewhere we have a car that maybe a little tour thing that we're going to just land and basically go just try to hit whatever we can hit. I'm going to have a show that night. We leave the next day. So it's going to be jam packed for England, but we're going to try to see. You'll see Big Ben if you like look up. Yeah. I'll see Big Ben. I'm sure we're, you know, we'll see. Well,

Well, I looked up the McDonald's there. I was trying to think of stuff that you might be interested in. McDonald's is a little different. It's similar in the UK, but they're about 40% smaller, the sandwiches. The Big Mac's about 40% smaller. So just keep that in mind. You might need a side sandwich. That's crazy. I do a side sandwich here. I might need two side sandwiches. That's like when I get junior Whopper, I get two junior Whoppers. Instead of one Whopper, I'll get two juniors.

Because I love the stuff that comes on the Whopper so much. Not the tomatoes and onions, but everything but that. Mustard. And ketchup and mayonnaise. That's like when you go to Sonic and they're like, you want ketchup, mustard, mayonnaise? You go, I want them all. Take them all? I go, I'll take all of them. Down in Texas, they used to have a mustard Whopper when I was living down there, man. Just go up and say, I want a mustard Whopper. And mustard only? Yeah, nothing but mustard on it. Yeah. I mean, they'd have the other stuff, but mustard only. Yeah. A burger, like a meat on it.

Yeah, it's a Whopper, but just mustard only. It's a Whopper, but they don't have ketchup or mayo or anything like that. Because I'm a mustard guy, I don't like the other stuff. You know, you can get it at McDonald's in the UK. Are you sure that these people, you didn't just say mustard only? It's on the menu, Nate. It said mustard Whopper? It was a thing that you could get down there at Burger King. Because they had a bunch of U's down there eating just mustard? I think mustard's bigger in Texas. I want a mustard Whopper. Everything's bigger there. Yeah. Especially not ketchup mayonnaise.

What were you going to say, Aaron? I'm looking at the list of items that are only in the UK, McDonald's. It's pretty wild what they got going on here. They have just a bacon roll. That would be good. I mean, that looks... I did not know. Like here in the US, we have yellow cabs. Yeah. I guess the big thing in London is black cabs. That's what they're called. Oh, yeah? So I was reading about how what it qualifies to become a black cab driver.

And I'm like, I feel like they're missing one. That's a tough Google search. Important ingredient, yeah. Well, I wasn't even Googling it. I was just reading about England. They're like, it's very hard to be a black cab driver in England. I was like, I bet it is. But they have to go through a test. Basically, in London, they have to know every street. Like, they test them. And London is a huge, huge city. Yeah. It's very hard to become a cab driver in London. Really? Yeah. I bet you those guys aren't driving...

$8,800 fair is like... No. They're not taking that. The country's not big enough to have a fair that high. Yeah, it's probably a reasonable fair to go from one end to the other. I want to go to Dublin. I looked up some stuff for you, Nate, to kind of help you get ready for your trip to London. You got to cross the water. You got to cross water. That's going to be double just because. Oh, yeah, man. How long would it take you to drop across England? Yeah, I got it now. Across England? I don't know. I'll figure it out. How many meters is that? I don't know.

Oh, kilometers. That's what we're looking for. I looked up some movies that might help you get into the, you know, London Has Fallen. Yeah, I've already seen it. I'll watch it again. I actually just started watching it again. Yeah. I'd watch it again. Who's in that?

Gerard. Gerard Butler. Gerard Butler. It's a fun one. It's like, you know, it comes off another one. Something else has fallen. Okay. It's a lot of stuff has fallen. Been major attacks. Yeah. Major, major world attacks that everybody's kind of takes in stride. He's out of the Gerards. He's my second favorite. I'd go with Depardieu. Yeah, I almost said that.

Prefer him. So what is it, 13 hours? So if you're driving, let's say, Plymouth, the UK, which is towards the very southern tip of the island, all the way to Thurso, then that's 13 hours and 25 minutes. That's a long trip, man. It's a pretty long trip, but that's like driving from here to New York City. Yeah, I've done it. You know, that's 749 miles. I'll tell you what, not knowing any of this,

I see the appeal of the UK just right now. Because you got London, you got Scotland. That's a pretty vast different... Yeah. You got a lot of different stuff that you can go to. The Loch Ness Monster. Well, the golf over there, Nate, is supposedly... I know. Do London to St. Andrews. The golf course? Yeah. The old course? I wonder, yeah, the old course. Yeah.

It's called the old course. No, that's the old court. Yeah. You had it right. St. Andrew's Golf Course. Yeah, it's not popping up. No. Yeah, just see what that says. About. Three hours. Oh, wow. Is this where it is? I don't know. Foot golf driving. Well, we know it's going to be less than a 13-hour drive. Yeah. It's in Scotland, so no. Oh, okay. The old course is out there. Okay. So, yeah. Yeah. Wales. I mean, yeah, that's, you know.

It's funny, I'm not doing anything really on... I'm going to Amsterdam right there, and I'm going to Brussels, Belgium. Well, the next stop after... Yeah, oh, nine hours. Yeah, eight hours. It's like you're in Milwaukee. Harry Potter was filmed there, right? In the UK? Oh, I didn't know that. Yeah, probably in Ireland, right? Oh, I thought it was in London. Okay. Okay.

Well, it takes place in London, but I don't know where the movies were filmed. Okay. Ireland and the UK drive on the left side of the road, so remember that. Yeah, I don't know if we're driving. I kind of would want to because it'd be fun to see. I don't know if we'll have time to do it, but yeah, we're being a car. So then you go from the UK to Ireland. Dublin's the capital of Ireland. Anybody know what language they speak?

English, but Gaelic is probably maybe the official language. Look at the big brain on it. Yeah. I got it. So a lot of people speak Gaelic? The official language is Irish, which is also Gaelic, but more people speak English. It's more widely used. But the road signs are all bilingual in Irish and English both. You like salmon? Yeah. I'm not sure.

I've heard the salmon in Ireland is unbelievable. My mom and dad went there and they said it was unbelievable. Best thing they've ever had. Oh, wow. In Dublin or Ireland? I know it was in Ireland. I think when they got the salmon, it was a little bit out in the countryside, but the seafood in Ireland is supposedly fantastic, man, and very fresh. Yeah. Yeah.

Some famous people from Dublin? I don't know what. What's so funny about that? I don't know. I don't see what. It's taking a trip, man. I know. It was a nice thing to say, but I know how it feels when you introduce something and then it just gets nothing. I wasn't trying to get anything out of it. I know you weren't. I'm sorry. It was just a funny. What do you think I was doing a bit about Nate? I didn't think you were doing anything. Salmon? I mean, I think it's, I think you'll enjoy it. Yeah. My mom and dad did.

I mean, they still talk about it. They said, is it fresh? I researched every McDonald's in Europe because I'm trying to get in Nate's world. He just said at the beginning of the thing, he's trying to get healthy. That's true. You're shoving British McDonald's down his face. I know. I want to be realistic. I'm getting salmon. And they said, my parents are there. They're like, hey, they went to this restaurant. Is the seafood fresh? And the lady goes, no.

She just pointed to some guy outside catching fish. A little too fresh. No. I don't even know what that means. I mean, they cooked it. That guy gets it? You're like, he doesn't. He'd get the idea. Conor McGregor's from Diablo? Yeah, that's fun. That's fun. Maybe see him. Yeah, maybe see him. Is he the most famous Irish person in the world right now? Rory McIlroy's up there. I can't name him. Yeah. See, he's more famous than McGregor. By now? Yeah.

Bono. Yeah, come on. U2's from Dublin. That's true. Some of those guys in that conflict that we were talking about earlier have some fame for other – Sinn Fein or – I have no idea what you're talking about. The people from the IRA people. Oh, right, right, right, right.

You went to Notre Dame. Yeah. Why would they have fame? In their country, maybe. You talking about Davy Crockett over there? Well. Their Davy Crockett is so famous. Yeah, the key figures in the IRA is a huge thing, man. Daniel Day-Lewis played in a movie. Yeah, because I don't know what. In the name of the father. In the name of the father. Here he thinks this is.

This is not like Davy Crockett. The IRA stuff, there was car bombs going off 10 years ago. I think it was more than 10 years ago. 10 years ago? No. 10 years ago was... 20. I can't believe I'm caving. 10. No, I think it's going to be... I think that stuff was like 90s.

Was like the big IRA car bomb. I think it was wrapping up in the 90s. Yeah. All right, man. Probably still pretty big.

No, it was a giant deal. It was a giant deal. Yeah, but you said Bono U2 was big in the 90s too. I know, but they're still big now, but it's- Most of the hits were in the 90s, Nate. But they're still a big band. Yeah, they're a big band. They were forced on our phone. I mean, that's how big they were. I know, man. That was a big mistake. Guinness Beer, also Dublin. It's a big one there. When the guy created it in 1759, he signed a lease for $50 a year.

for four acres for 9,000 years. He had a 9,000 year lease. They've since tore that up. They didn't honor it? No. And the Guinness Book of World Records, of course, comes from there. Oh, I didn't know that. Yeah, it was a... I don't know if that was an of course. They did it to like a trivia game in pubs, the Guinness people.

Yeah, it was a marketing thing. Yeah, they were like, we're going to put this little pamphlet in pubs so people have something to do in pubs. Wow. Yeah. What do they have to do? What do you mean? Just read the book? Well, no, it's just like, hey, who's got the longest beard or whatever? They thought it'd be fun stuff to talk about. He didn't have phones. No, I know, but I don't know. It's just funny. They're putting in pubs to break records or just to read about the records? Just to read about it. Oh, yeah. Something to do, something to talk about. Yeah. Yeah.

Yeah. I just don't understand what the... What is much to do back then? I understand that. I get that. So they had the book. They already had the records. They were doing... So they go, let's go find a bunch of records. Find a bunch of records. And then we'll put it... And it was about like...

I don't know is this totally, but I think the first thing was they got in and argued about what the fastest bird was at a bar. It was like something about the fastest bird, something to do with a bird. And they all argued about it. And they're like, man, this, these things probably come up all the time. We're going to make a book that, uh, you know, that sort of talks to just settle all the arguments. Yeah. To settle the arguments and have some, you know, you know,

stimulate conversations. Oh, that's fun. I think it was something about a plover. It's a plover. What is a plover? I think it's a type of bird. It's the fastest bird. I don't think it's the fastest bird. Sounds like... Did you have a bit about this? I didn't have a bit. I was doing something for Bob and Tom. I do this segment about anything, and I was...

gonna do guinness but it was too boring so i didn't i didn't do that yeah but i remember it's got something to do with plover well i'm glad you thought to bring it up here uh well i didn't bring it up it came up naturally it came i didn't i didn't just say hey i want to force my you put your trash bag of stuff that can't make bobbin tall no no no no no no no man i mean it's just we were talking about guinness yeah and uh am i right yeah it's the uh the duck hawk

Also known as the Peregrine Falcon. 200 miles an hour. Pretty fast. That's fast. Yeah. That's fast. That's faster than that train that goes from Kansas. It's supposed to go to Kansas City to St. Louis. The Hyperloop. Hyperloop. Ireland has no snakes.

Oh. Yeah, because St. Patrick chased them all out. St. Patrick got them out of there. That's right. And this week, St. Patrick's Day. Oh, yeah. This week? Next week. Oh, I'm there. Oh, I won't be in London. You'll be there the same week. Yeah. Oh, man. I bet there's going to be all kinds of stuff. Lots of leprechauns. I don't think it's as big. We made it into a party holiday. I don't know. It's a religious holiday. Are you taking Nick with you? Are you? No. Nick, I mean, Nick would be worshipped there. I mean, I'm not even trying to be funny. I read this. Man, you can't do that.

No, I'm not trying to be funny. I mean, I'm trying to be funny, but I'm not making this up. No, those guys do work. Come on, dude. That's not cool, man. There's a girl that – there's a Tanya Lee or something that was out in L.A., a little person that was – and I remember we were all out at St. Pat's Day, and she was doing something for St. Pat's Day. And we were like, what are you doing? She's like, man, I'm getting a lot of money. That's drunk idiots. I think there it's more – it's not like just drunk idiots. It's just kind of revered.

Yeah. Okay. Do they have snakes in England and Scotland? I think so. You just can't cross that. The Luck of the Irish. You guys ever heard The Luck of the Irish? It was a great Disney Channel original movie. Really? Luck of the Irish. Yeah, yeah, yeah. What was that about? It's about a high school basketball player who finds out his family's Irish and he turns into a leprechaun. It was a great movie. Yeah, it's a great movie.

Supposedly the term came from here in America when they were digging in the mines, the Irish people were the luckiest at finding gold and silver during the gold rush. Oh, really? Okay. So like these Irish are lucky. Yeah. All right. I doubt they said it with that tone, but they're a little more angry about it. So then you're going to Norway. Yep. Anybody know what currency they use?

I got to use all these different currencies. I know. Is that a euro? No. They're not part of the EU. Flugenhagen. What is it called? The crone. Oh, the crone, like Seinfeld. Yeah. I'll get some crone. Yeah. A 10-kroner. Yeah. It's funny. Nobel Peace Prize is held in Oslo, Norway. Maybe you'll win it. Maybe I should. What do you think you have realistically the best chance of winning?

The Nobel Peace Prize? Yeah. No, not the Peace Prize. Which Nobel Prize? The Nobel Prize in what? In physics? Yeah. Comedy? Yeah. Is there an arts one? Is there an arts one? There's a literature one. That's the one Bob Dylan won. You might have the highest chance of that. Yeah. Versus Peace. Peace is the only other one. I think you got a shot at it. No offense. That I create peace? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.

Chemistry, I just don't see it. No offense. I might come up with something. I don't see it, man. I might come up with something. Economics or something. He did that experiment with Pringles potato chips and we learned some stuff there. Yeah, the thing is like, yeah, I don't think it was an experiment. It was you guys. I knew I was going to come out. It was an ambush is what it was. No, it was you guys. It was basically I knew how it was going to come out. There was an experiment.

There's guys down in Jackson, Tennessee that did those experiments 50 years ago, and they do them every week to make sure that those things go right. That's where Pringles is made? Yeah. I didn't know that. The screen painting, one of the most famous paintings in the world, is at the museum there in Oslo. Oh. So there's like four different versions of the same painting. Two of them have been stolen over time.

The 1994 Winter Olympics was in Norway. And that same time when I think the opening ceremonies were going on, some people broke in and stole one of the screen paintings. Wow. That's quite a diversion. They got it back? They eventually got it back. Yeah. One of them broke in and left a note saying, thanks for the poor security. So they were kind of messing with it. I feel like that's shown off a little bit. Yeah. Why add insult to injury? Yeah. Act like you've been there.

A third of Norway is in the Arctic Circle, meaning that's why it's got the nickname Land of Midnight Sun. Oh, yeah. That's what I call it. Oh, it's going to be sunny the whole time? Not probably. Not in Oslo, I don't think, but I think the northern part. Yeah. Well, I see the northern lights. I think that's Alaska, isn't it? Yeah. I think anywhere near the Arctic. Oh, really? Yeah, it's anywhere near the ocean.

Top part of the world. The North Pole? That'd be good to see, man. Oh, Oslo's there. So I'll see it. I wonder if I'll see it. No. I won't be up high enough. I don't think so. I'll look it up. One more fact about Norway. Women in Norway get 44 weeks of fully paid maternity leave. Wow. Wow. Seems like the whole year. Pretty much. Basically. It's close. 52 weeks a year. Oh, yeah. Even men get six weeks of full paid paternity leave. Wow.

Oh, yeah. Shake the baby's hand. Welcome into the family. Actually, I had a couple more here. World's longest road tunnels in Norway. 15 miles long. Oh, that'll be fun, man. Yeah, that'd be scary, I think. I don't know if I could do that.

do that they put little things on the wall just to keep you from like getting mesmerized and so it didn't all look the same yeah lights painting stuff like that yeah god just to get your sick dude i don't like those things i mean you're getting traffic in the you've been there for two hours getting a rack in the middle of it i sat in the lincoln tunnel for at least an hour before really yeah and that's underwater is that under the hudson under the hudson i thought it was terrifying it's terrifying it's not fun down there man yeah

Everyone in Norway, their annual income, income tax paid, and total wealth is published. It's a public record. Everybody? Yeah. They do it to try to cut down on tax fraud. They're like, if everybody knows what everybody makes and what everybody's claiming, then. Yeah. That's like something like that's, how big is just Norway? Population. It can't be.

You're doing something like that. You can't be big. Population of Norway is 5.4 million. So what is it? Like New York? It's smaller than New York City. Like LA maybe? Yeah. Yeah. Smaller than LA too. Okay. Oh, if you include the whole area. Metro area. Yeah. It's a good looking flag, man. Easy to draw. Yeah. Easier than ours. Magnus Carlsen, you know who that is? I do. Greatest chess player of all time. I thought I was going to.

I thought I was one of those guys on ESPN that pull anchors. Yeah, sounds like it. I feel like there is a Magnus. World's Strongest Man? Yeah, those guys, they pull anchors and stuff. Yeah, I actually think I know a Magnus. Is there one of those guys named Magnus? I don't know him, but yeah, I do think one of them's named Magnus. I feel like a famous one. I think so, too. Like one out of that world. Yeah, I thought, man, I thought I was right on that one. I would go with that more than I would...

The chess thing. Yeah, I should ask you guys first. He is the number one chess player in the world and many think the greatest of all time. Yeah. Still very young. He's just been so dominant for so long. Better than the Russian guy?

Yeah, better than Gorbachev. Kasparov. Kasparov. Yeah, Kasparov. And Bobby Fischer. Bobby Fischer. Yeah. Was Bobby Fischer really great? He was unbelievable. He was just a lunatic. And this guy can hold it together. He's a little weird, but he's a normal person. Way more normal than Bobby Fischer was. So they think he's officially now the best. And he's still so young, and he's still just. Like what's so young? He's younger than me, I think. Yeah. How good did that Josh Waitzkin kid get?

I don't know who that is. I don't know. He was the one in the movie searching for Bobby Fisher. Oh, that's a great movie. He's a year older than me. He's 30, 32. Is he ever lost? Yeah, you lose all the time. The way these work is like you play a bunch of games and it's like best of five or whatever. So he'll lose, but he just dominates people. The reigning five-time world chess champion. He had the highest score, however you calculate that, of all time. Yeah.

A high score of what? Of a game? Like some huge number that they use to, I don't know, understand chess. It's like the FedEx Cup, like a total. Yeah. So then you go to Belgium. Belgium. They're back in the EU, so you can go back to using the euro. All right. How many EUs am I getting to use? I think two. Okay. Or maybe, I guess three. Yeah. You're going to five countries? Yeah.

Crazy week. Crazy week. Yeah. Belgium, my hair is great, man. Yeah. I've heard great things. Salmon's great. That's Ireland. That's right there. That's where they're going to go. And I go, what, Dublin? He goes, yeah, Dublin's right there. Like, we're getting from the same guy. No, I would say, I mean, I don't know anything about Belgium other than waffles, right? Yep. And French fries, I think, are great.

French fries are a big deal there. I was about to say that. The French fry was actually invented in Belgium. Ooh. Yeah. Man, I'm a big fry guy. And they dip it in mayonnaise. No way. Not ketchup. I can do that. Thank you. Do you know what the McDonald's- I bet they got some good, fun mayonnaise.

Yeah, man, I don't like that. Do you know what the McDonald's Quarter Pounder is called in Belgium? A halfie. Man, if he's right. That's a good guess. Anybody? I got it pulled up right here. Is that it? Well, that's the duck. Oh, this is from the movie. In Pulp Fiction, they said Royale with cheese. It's actually Royal Cheese because they don't have, because they're on the metric system. Oh, yeah. Yeah.

The Maestro Generous Jack Jr. These look good too. How generous is it if it's a junior? That seems to be a – Well, they're already small. Yeah. Yeah, they're already smaller. Here's the Maestro Generous Jack. Yeah. I got to see a big bag. 40% is a lot. And I think they're a lot healthier. They take out a lot of the ingredients that we use. Oh, yeah. Probably it's all organic, you know? Yeah.

They just, McDonald's guy points. That's where I'm going to go to this country. I'm going to be like, I go, what is it, Big Mac good? Just points at a man outside. Cutting grass. Just cutting. That guy, that's the Big Mac kid. Personal story for my family. It's a tender moment with, you know, and then just get teed off on for that, man. I hope you don't get salmon, Nate. I hope you don't, man. I hope you don't get it. I hope they don't get any salmon for you. I'm going to get it for the Warrens.

Belgium, 60%. They got married. Switzerland. For some reason, they got married in Switzerland and then moved to Missouri. My dad was in the Air Force. My mom was traveling around. That makes sense. They met there? They met in Europe. Are they both from America? Yeah. Mom's from St. Louis. Dad's from Long Island. I could see that. You've got a mix of that. Yeah. I don't know how I haven't.

Yeah, no, you got to mix it like Southern New York. You got the St. Louis charm or you got the edge of Long Island. You got the edge of, yeah. You're not going to put up with a lot. Yeah. I've been putting up with you making fun of a very important moment in my family for the last 20 minutes. The salmon moment was a big deal.

You have your own screen painting. It's just a guy pointing out to the sea. My dad's told that story 15 times. He said, you know, is it seafood fresh? It's crazy. He's only told it 15 times. In Belgium, 60% speak Dutch, also called Flemish. The other 40% speak French.

So that could be a tough show. So you lose it? Yeah, that could be tough. Yeah. Yeah. You know either one? No. No. I don't know English good. He knows Agua and... Yeah. Yeah. And then you go to the Netherlands. You go to Amsterdam, which I've been to. Also called Holland. And they speak Dutch. So there's the red light district. Yeah. Go check that out. I'll walk through there.

I don't know if we're going to walk through there. No, you got your daughter with you. Yeah. Yeah, you probably shouldn't walk through with Harper, but it's not like some crazy thing. It's like a tourist thing now. It's like Broadway here in Nashville. It's kind of, yeah. Yeah. The Anne Frank House. We're going to that.

Harper's very excited about Anne Frank. Really? Yeah, she's reading a lot of Anne Frank. Oh, really? The diary? Oh, that's cool. And that's in Belgium? Yeah, it's great because we're going and she's like, right, like she's just learned a lot. So, yeah. She knows a lot about her. Well, that'll be fun. And Van Gogh Museum. Vincent Van Gogh's from Amsterdam. Yeah. His ears. Yeah. I got jokes about the Anne Frank house and Van Gogh Museum. Yeah.

Uh, in Frank jokes. Oh yeah. Yeah. It's got 10 minutes on it. And then they're like the tulip capital. So there's a huge, Oh yeah. Yeah. It's a big deal there, man. It is. Yeah. They, they,

Come on, man. I am excited. I think that would be pretty cool to see. You know the flower? Yeah. The festival. We weren't just talking about that? Yeah, the last episode. Yeah. It's the Kuchenhof. It's the Garden of Europe. And we went there as well. And it's very beautiful. Well, there it is. Wow. Look at that, man. That's pretty nice. You got to go to that, Nate. I'm sorry I laughed. You got to go to that. So there's a bunch of like, so we go to Anne Frank House and there's like a lot of stuff to go see like,

I mean, it's beautiful. There's a lot of canals and water running all through the city. Bridges and stuff. Yeah. Yeah. I think Amsterdam is where we're at the longest, maybe three days or something. You got to go see those tulips. Yeah. It's like I'm sitting here like, what am I going to go see at Amsterdam? I'm not trying to say there's nothing to go see for three days, but if you're in London, you're like, oh, yeah. I'd go see a million things. You're like, we're going to Anne Frank House.

And then you see these tulips and then you- Windmills of some kind. You know, Van Gogh. Yeah, windmills are big. The tulips are a little bit out of the city. I feel like it was like an hour or two, you know, ride out of the city. Then I'll go to Van Gogh. Yeah. And then, you know, then it's like, what else am I doing after that? I mean, we did each of those at a separate day and then we'd just walk around the city. You go into little shops and I don't know, the time kind of goes quickly. I would just think-

I've never been to Europe, but I would think just the architecture alone. Yeah. Just old buildings. In Amsterdam, everyone rides bicycles. There's more bicycles there than people. Wow. So. They have a population problem. Some people own more than one bicycle. It's like us with guns. Right. Because it's the same stat. Yeah. We have more guns than people. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.

Yeah. We got a little more control over here. And then he flies. That is very funny. You go, what are y'all going to do? War. They're throwing their bikes at us. We're like, all right. It's annoying. It's like, we got to fight in Amsterdam. You're like, I'll tell you what, it's annoying because the bike does hurt when it hits you. Do you guys know anything about Anne Frank? I've read her book. Yes. Do you remember? I mean, one person lived.

Her father. Her dad lived to like the 80s. Yeah. Oh, really? Yeah, until pretty recently. It's kind of crazy that of all the family members, I mean, he's the only one that made it. Yeah, I mean, so she would have been alive now. Maybe. She'd be very old. Yeah. But I guess it's possible. Yeah, she'd be pretty old, man. Probably over 100. Her dad in 1980. Oh, yeah. When did she die? She died during World War II, 1945. Wow. She was born in 1929. Mm-hmm.

Yeah, so she'd be in her 90s. Yeah. She could still be. She's 94. It's pretty crazy. And she just died from, I mean, she was being held, but they didn't murder her. She just died from dysentery or something. She was born the same year Martin Luther King was. Crazy. It's kind of crazy to think he could still be alive. Yeah, yeah, totally. Wow. Yeah, well, I'm pumped.

We're in it right now. Yeah. It's kind of fun. Yeah, you're there. I'm there. You're looking at tulips. Looking at tulips. Do you want to go see the tulips again? I'd go twice. I'd go. Yeah, no, it's going to be – I'm very excited, and I'm excited for Harper to see –

I'm excited to see her see, I mean, I'll see this stuff for the first time, but I'm excited for her to see. Oh yeah. Like all this kind of crazy stuff, like just another country. How old is she? 10. Yeah. Like. Almost 11. Yeah. Almost 11. I was just about that age, maybe a slight older when we went to DC and I, you know,

Was interested in it. Yeah. I'll never forget that. Yeah. I didn't get to go to – I never went in. We never traveled really anywhere just because it was just harder. We didn't come from money like you. Yeah. My dad with it.

Teacher, coach, empire. We know what's going on over there. You got it built up in the Air Force empire, and then you swing over and get the wrestling money back in the 70s. Dude, you guys were loaded. They were paying high school wrestling coaches crazy money. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Still do. No. No, they're – yeah, we – it was like – you know, I mean, you just didn't travel. Traveling was not –

as big of an option i feel like back then she'll remember this for the rest of her life i gotta think yeah the fries man does she like fries that would that would be a big yeah i can't wait to hear about the fries in belgium yeah yeah they had a back in the east village they had like a belgian fry place over there on like second half or something like that yeah

Yeah, I'm excited for her to see it. Man, they don't look like much. And I'll go see it. Yeah. Those just look like fun. Yeah, we'll be busy. I mean, it'll be just like, pew, pew, pew, pew, pew, and then just come right back and then just go. It'll be nice to be kind of like, too, like just us over there. We'll just do our own little thing, just a little adventure together. I wonder if the local comics will come out.

Oh, yeah. I don't know. I hope so. I mean, I think I got locals on every show. Really? That's cool. I'm not taking anybody. It's just me. Yeah. So you got openers from Oslo? Yeah. Oh, that's really cool, man. Yeah. So, yeah, I'm pumped. In London, I think they do the break. Intermission. Yeah. Yeah. That's just a thing there? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. All right. All right. Raising in. This episode, quiet. Quiet.

It does now, but we were rolling for a while. Yeah, man. It was a lot to process. It teetered off. I mean, I ended on Anne Frank. That's always a good way to end a show. Yeah, man. Yeah. Well, we know where we are. This week, I'll be...

It's Stand Up Live in Huntsville with Angela Johnson. Those shows are sold out, but April 2nd, I'll be headlining Stand Up Live in Huntsville. Oh, nice. So come to those shows or that show. I'm at Zaney's tonight in Nashville, March 15th. Then I'm in St. Louis all weekend, March 17th and 18th. So come on out. Yeah, go see that, man. I'll give you a list of stuff. Yeah, please do. I won't be around. Yeah, give me a list of stuff to go do. Arch? Arch.

Yeah. Salmon? Yeah, salmon. Mississippi River? No. No, man. I hope you don't get salmon. I'm only going to get salmon. I got that special coming out in April. In April? Yeah. We're about a month out. So go to Greg Warren's website, gregwarren.com. Comedy.com. Comedy.com. Gregwarrencomedy.com. Check all that stuff out. I'm over there, 15th. Where am I at right now if I'm on the 15th?

I go the 8th. Maybe I'm in Amsterdam. 15th, you're in Amsterdam. You have a show that night. You have a show tonight. Tonight. In Amsterdam. In Amsterdam. And that's my last show. I'm doing my last show tonight. And then you do the tourist stuff after you're done? Yeah, we're not staying too much longer, but it's like, yeah, we're doing. Yeah, Laura has it all set up. I don't really know. I don't really know what else there is. But Laura has it set up.

But yeah, so we're there. We're there. We're going to get a couple days, a good nine days before a big, big run starts. Melbourne, Florida. Tallahassee, come to that one. PNC Arena in Raleigh. That's actually doing very, that's like pretty, I don't know. It's not sold out, but it's a ton of people. These are all like 5,000, 6,000-some people. Crazy. Pittsburgh, look at that, man. That's where the Penguins play. Yeah, I've been there. That place is cool. Wow. Yeah.

Yeah. Uh, he's where the, uh, hurricanes play. Yeah. Yeah. Hurricanes. Yeah. Charleston, uh, Charleston Coliseum, Covelli center, Youngstown, Ohio. That's where Vecchione's from. He's not, and he's not there. He's somewhere that weekend somewhere else, but yeah, I wish it then freedom hall, civic center, Johnson city, Bridgestone arena. Uh, and then, uh,

It's all on there. It's everywhere. Everywhere. All right. We love you. And as always, we'll see you next week. I think all four will be back. I think Aaron's gone, actually. I'm here next week. Oh, you are? Oh, no, I'm not. All right. Sorry. Okay. All right. Well, we love you and hope you have a great rest of the week. See you next week. Bye. See you.

Nateland is produced by Nateland Productions and by me, Nate Bargetzi, and my wife, Laura, on the Audioboom platform. Recording and editing for the show is done by Genovations Media. Thanks for tuning in. Be sure to catch us next week on the Nateland Podcast.