Andy Frasco's World Saving Podcast - EP 120.5: Saxsquatch
Episode Date: April 15, 2021On a very special "mini-sode" of the WSP, we welcome the walking/talking, cryptozoological musical legend itself: Saxsquatch! Andy delves deep into the mind of this hulking mythological force of natur...e. Andy and Kyle update us on the road while sharing some exciting news. Keep your eyes and your ears open next time you're out in the woods. Who's to say what beasts await you there... Follow us on Instagram @worldsavingpodcast For more information on Andy Frasco, the band and/or the blog, go to: AndyFrasco.com Check out Andy's new album, "Keep On Keepin' On" on iTunes Spotify Let the healing begin: saxsquatch.com Produced by Andy Frasco Joe Angelhow Chris Lorentz Audio mix by Chris Lorentz Featuring: Kyle Ayers
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Dan B. Mike Evans. I am Sasquatch's publicist.
A couple things I'm going to do with him. First off, he's super excited. Can't wait to do it.
There are a couple of items that are off-limits, so I just wanted to walk you through those.
Number one, nothing about his foot size. He's very self-conscious, so if you could avoid anything about that.
No questions about the missing hiker in Portland.
We're in the middle of a lawsuit, and legally he can't discuss that, so if you could avoid that, that'd be great.
And last, nothing about his sex life.
He's a super personal guy and doesn't want to talk about it.
Everything else, totally fair game.
Keep it loose.
It's going to be great.
Well, he's super excited to do it again.
He does get a little cranky when his blood sugar gets low,
so if you could have some snacks available,
I think it would make for a better interview.
So super excited.
Talk soon.
Can't wait to hear it.
Bye. And we're back.
Andy Frasca's World Saving Podcast, live from the van today.
We are driving in the van with a very special show.
It's actually a half a show because we weren't going to do a podcast.
But like us, like we always do, we are going to do one this year.
How are we doing?
I got Kyle Ayers here.
Hello.
Hello.
Yeah, it's always, yeah, I'm not going to do that.
And then the next day you're like, yeah, I'll just do the thing.
I might as well just keep doing stuff until I die.
Oh, man.
How's the tour been for you, Kyle?
It's been nice.
Here we are, you know, on our way to Springfield Mo.
Springfield Mo.
You're from Missouri.
I'm from Missouri. I one time went to Springfield Mo. Springfield Mo. You're from Missouri. I'm from Missouri.
I one time went to Springfield to try and build the world's largest slip and slide.
And we failed.
And we just made a bunch of trash.
Like 50 kids put a bunch of work in.
Shut up.
And we didn't contact Guinness.
It was just in a yard.
It probably wasn't even close to the biggest.
It was like three tarps.
I love having a comedian open for us.
It's been nice.
Is it intimidating at first?
At first, yeah.
Like even the first show back was also like my second show back.
Yeah.
You know, I hadn't done comedy in a year.
Yeah.
And so it's nice.
People are generally supportive of it and excited for something to happen.
And once they see other people paying attention, they pay attention.
The best is when we did in Charleston.
It's the second show and they get a little more buzzed up.
You're like, you guys give more attention to the fish album.
What did you say?
They quit paying attention in like the middle of a joke.
And I was like, y'all can sit through a 45 minute fish jam, but you don't give me 30 seconds. Yeah. After the
joke. Yeah. You guys will, you guys will noodle for an hour and a half at an I'm freezing McGee
concert, but you won't listen to me for eight seconds in between jokes. It's funny. Yeah. I
mean, the tennis band's crazy like that, But, like, you know. It is.
It's not like a song.
Like, they don't know when your joke is done.
Right.
You can kind of passively take in a song.
And even in between songs, people start talking a little bit.
Yeah.
They're just so hyped to talk.
I know.
People love to have stuff to say.
And here we are on a podcast.
Man, people be talking too much.
Record. Yeah, the tour's been fun i mean we did real fun swanee with
um freeze you didn't get to play that one but yeah you got that was all right it's fun i'd never seen
um freeze magore before magore before yeah that was good and then we played it where else we
played charleston birmingham charleston uh myrtle. That was really fun. Yeah. And now heading to Springfield and Little Rock or Fayetteville.
Oh, man, I'm excited.
We got two more shows announced Red Rocks today.
Yeah.
We just announced that.
So I have never been to Red Rocks.
I've only seen it.
You're doing comedy at Red Rocks.
Comedy at Red Rocks.
It's funny to be like, I'm doing stand up at Red Rocks.
Then you look and they're like, Bill Burr this November.
And I'm like, ah,
the two famous comedians.
He's like, eighth show added.
Yeah, yeah, he's got like eight shows.
We're hoping we sell 2,500 tickets.
We're like, come on, first show added.
But that's going to be a fun one.
We got Keller Williams.
We have John Craigie.
And we got Kyle Ayers hosting.
I got a lot of John Craigie heads in my DMs who are like, that dude is too talented for his own good, is what a couple people said.
He's my favorite artist.
I stroke his dick all the time on this podcast.
There's always like these young, unassuming looking kids.
I mean, not a kid, but like you look at him, you're like, there's a substitute teacher.
kids. Yeah. I mean, not a kid, but like you look at him, you're like, there's a substitute teacher.
I could see why a lot of comedian fans like Craigie because he really focuses his live show on the stories and the comedy. Yeah. Not, you know, as well as the songs. Like it's just as
important to get the timing. I think a lot of comedian comedy fans really like live shows where
they see
something that you wouldn't just get on an album.
Like people want to see a thing that they had to be at that show that night.
Like you did two shows in Charleston and everyone who came to both felt it was
worth it because they saw two totally different shows.
Yeah, yeah, you're right.
And so I'm pretty excited for that.
And we have Sack Squatch on the show.
Have you heard of Sackatch no this guy i'm
excited about i saw the artwork it is and i'm excited about that dude it we don't know who it
is we honestly don't really no no he's just showed up in the jam scene and got super huge and uh he
plays saxophone every just random places.
Then he started doing a live stream and he blew up.
So his publicist said,
sax squads would like to talk to you now.
Wow.
I love that stuff.
I love that.
That's cool.
I like someone who's super committed to that sort of thing.
Yeah, me too.
It's me.
Oh, fuck.
Hey, Kyle.
So when did you learn saxophone? There's no way I would have a publicist
Well, I'm excited for it
Yeah, I've been secretly learning saxophone
In between shows
Just to try and be sax
That's a great name
That's a great persona
I love that stuff
I've been fascinated with
I talked to you about this
Like
The way that people survived
Pandemic, like, mentally
Was a lot of that sort of stuff.
There's like you doing these regular things that people can sort of like, whether it's like the shit show where they can tune in and see a little music and a little talk.
Or it's like the dance party where they can just sort of like exhale physically.
Yeah.
And then there's like Saksquatch who's like doing this new thing.
And it's not a lot of new artists during a pandemic.
I mean, you know know he's probably around before
but like really exploding because of it
people can like pull that in small chunks
or watch these longer things and like Ribbleay
who we talk about sometimes people can watch a short video
and that sort of stuff
people just need to find ways to not lose their mind
yeah it's true and
you know you didn't lose your mind either
you helped us write the shit show
yeah that was really fun
Kyle wrote a lot of the sketches, a lot of the dreams.
It's been fun to see him.
The production value was beyond what I think either of us thought it was going to end up being.
What going in.
You know what I mean?
We're like, oh, we're working with no low budget.
Yeah.
And we kind of got these people we're not super familiar with, but they're very ambitious.
And then you see the sketches and it's like, this looks like an SNL short.
Oh, man.
We worked very hard on them and we, you know, we couldn't have done it without you helping us write the script. SNL short. Oh, man. We worked very hard on them, and we, you know,
we couldn't have done it without you helping us write the script.
It was wonderful.
It was fun, and I got to go to Malibu for a day, which is always nice.
What was your favorite sketch to write?
I do really like the personal, the porn categories for you,
I think is really funny, and everyone kind of gets what it's about.
Love Actually, Frasco was really good.
I like it.
Am I a good actor?
Yeah, you are.
If you write for you, it works pretty well.
Like, you know, I don't know if you're going to be out here playing Capote anytime soon, which would be pretty fun.
It's like you're trying to pick up the Philip Seymour Hoffman mantle.
But, you know, it's.
I appreciate you writing for me. I know you're
busy and I know you're working. So what's your next project? Like, what are you working on right
now? Um, right now I'm trying to figure out how to get it back into a standup standup show
and writing a TV show and trying to make another TV show based on my podcast. It's just kind of
like a lot of people don't really, you know, when someone's like, oh, this new person's blowing up and you're like, well, they tried really hard for 14 years.
Like it's very rare that someone just blows up.
Yeah.
Just getting it.
So it's really trying to grow.
I'm trying to find a comedy job, even amongst the three or four things I'm trying to do.
Been pitching a special around a comedy special places about me opening up for music.
Got some bites on places. The places people would
assume, that's where it's at, about where
that are interested in it.
And so hopefully cutting up like a few
minutes of jokes from this tour.
Well, if there's any producers out there, go
hire Kyle. Yeah, anyone who can make cartoons
hit me up. I need you for something else as well.
Hey, Scooper Steve, yeah.
He listens to the podcast. Go hire
yeah, go hit up Kyle. Yeah. Well, thanks, Kyle, for being on the show. Yeah, thanks. He listens to the podcast. Go hit up Kyle.
Yeah.
Well, thanks, Kyle, for being on the show.
Yeah, thanks.
So do you want to give these kids a motivational speech right now?
Sure.
I'll try and be a little earnest even.
Okay, here we go.
Hold on one sec.
Let me hear.
Chris, play the music now.
Did the music end?
Oh, I guess he can edit it.
He can just pause it. I'm just sitting here
quietly. Uh, I'm like, you know, I forgot kind of where my direction was. I felt good the other
night and I was kind of really feeling, uh, like motivated. And, um, I guess one thing I want to
tell people is this, like, there's, you don't got to feel pressure to get back into how things were
before and just kind of, uh, navigate things in a way that is comfortable for you. There's a lot
of different ways to, it sounds crazy to say reenter, but there's also a lot of pressure to
just be behaving like you were February of 2020 or something like that. And I hope everyone
earnestly just sort of takes time to kind of figure out their way back into whatever they
want to do. And you don't spread yourself too thin. Don't be doing a bunch of shit you don't want to do.
And just kind of try and find whatever happiness and little moments you can.
Uh, every day I try and lay on the floor with my dog and do nothing for like one minute. And I
think about how funny it is that we both are alive because he's so funny and he has a cone
and that's funny. And I'm just like,
no matter what's going on, that moment exists. I'm all that he knows. So that's got to be good
enough for a little bit of something. And, and, and then maybe that's meditation for me. I don't
know, but I'm trying to be like, you can be grounded, be these things. It's, it's easy to
get caught up in, um, like social media death spirals.
Yeah.
And so it's nice to turn that stuff.
You know, everyone's doing better than you at everything all the time.
If you check online and it's tough to remember that that's a small curated lie about everyone's lives.
So just try and like sit with what's in your immediate and, you know, take your time with it.
Thank you, Kyle.
All right.
Let's finish this podcast before we throw up.
Yeah.
Enjoy Sack Squatch and I'll catch you on the tail end.
See you guys at the school.
See you at school.
That's a bad catchphrase.
Have you ever seen this Sack Squatch guy just roaming around?
He just started showing up a couple years ago.
I don't know.
He's just an amazing sax player.
And he just showed up.
And we got a call that he wanted to be on the World Saving Podcast.
So, ladies and gentlemen, I don't even know where he's from,
but please give it up for Sack Squatch.
Hey, Sack Squatch.
Hey, Andy.
Hey.
How you doing, bro?
I'm doing great.
It's a pleasure to be on the show.
Actually from Saskatchewan, Canada.
Tell me, how'd you learn sax?
Where did you come from?
Where were you born?
Just give me the story, man, because you just started showing up and it's freaking a lot
of people out, but you're keeping it funky, so that's pretty
nice. What's been going on?
My whole family is very musical.
My granddad,
he was a guitar player.
His name was Gigfoot.
Gigfoot?
Her name is
Gigfoot.
We're all kind of musical.
I bought my saxophone at a pawn shop. No one believes
the owner, but I go there all the time and buy a musical gear and just play out in the
woods. And we used to take power from people's houses through extension cords and play with
our radio and have little jam sessions. But I have my own Wi-Fi now, so that's cool.
Go back to this pawn shop owner.
He didn't rat you out?
How did you decide?
What city were you in when you decided,
you know what, I want to be a sax player?
I want to be the first in the bigfoot family to be a saxophone player
i was actually right outside of asheville and hendersonville when i got my first sax but
what inspired me to play the saxophone was you know that song urgent by foreigner and that wailing sax comes on. It's like, and I heard that sound
and I knew that's what I wanted to do.
So Foreigner is a big influence to you,
saxquatch?
Jigga Walker is the name of the sax player.
He's like a real soul Motown cat.
Really good.
So when did you start,
because now it looks like
you're like a worldwide phenomenon.
I mean, your streams are
always getting top five in the
country. Looks
like I saw some tour dates too.
I mean, you're busy right now.
How are you dealing with the success?
Well,
it is kind of a thing because my whole life, people didn't really believe in me.
And I've always been kind of insecure.
Really?
But now that people are kind of really loving what I'm doing and starting to believe,
it feels good.
I have a new sense of security
and I really want other people to feel that way.
So when I toured and stuff,
I just wanted to be a community full of love
and belief in each other.
Man, we need more people like you
in this world, Saksquatch.
I wanna talk about your insecurities growing up as a kid. Why did you feel like you needed this idea or this release, aka saxophone?
Who hurt you? Were you insecure or were you competing with your other Bigfoot cousins?
Tell me about your insecurities a little bit.
Well, at first, I just wanted to get laid, you know?
It's hard.
Yeah.
When did you lose your virginity?
I was about 57.
50, damn.
57 years.
Did you beat off or anything?
Yeah, but I mean.
It's not the same.
It kind of led to a sort of depression.
There were dark times, but things are working out now.
What about, so your love life, is it hard?
Can you have sex with humans?
Or do you need to just have like big only big foots
like how hard is that to like find
people because I've really only
there's only really been a handful
of sightings of these of your creature
you know or your species
so like is it hard
to find love out there
yeah I want to be really clear that
I definitely only
have sex with other bigfoot.
Mm-hmm.
She's just not, that's just not something I'm into.
Mm-hmm.
My girlfriend, actually, she's also a saxophone player, but her name is super controversial,
so I'm not allowed to talk about it.
Why? Why? What's controversial about her first name?
Well, I can't talk about it.
Okay.
So how'd you meet her?
Tell me the story.
I mean, there's not a lot of you out there.
What was going on?
You playing sax?
She was playing sax.
Did you meet her at a bar?
What happened?
We both really love dance music and so
the sound of the sax was kind of like a meeting call for us you know i heard her playing some
daft punk and i was like i need to find out this sound and when i saw her, that was it. She's really tall.
She's really hairy.
Tell me about that first time you met her.
What were you feeling when you first saw her,
laid eyes on her?
I was just like, wow.
Like, oh, them titties.
You know?
Yeah, man.
That's beautiful.
I mean, how long did it take until you lost your virginity with her
I mean being 57
like I could see like the tension
probably had huge balls
and like I just see the tension
and from there like you
finally find the one
you knew it right away how long did it
take until you guys fornicated
I mean it's not a surprisingly You knew it right away. How long did it take until you guys fornicated?
I mean, it took a surprisingly long amount of time.
I was still really shy.
And she was a little bit hard to get. I had to take her out on some dates.
Eventually, when we did do it,
it was the most magical thing ever for about 14, 15 seconds.
Yeah, I bet, dude.
Especially if you're not masturbating, you're insecure to masturbate, and you can't really be public.
God, your life must be pretty lonely, man.
Yeah, I guess it's more to growing up, you know.
I really get to have freedom as an adult squatch now
and have responsibilities
and really take my own life into my hands
and have some freedom.
I want to talk about, you know,
there's a lot of poachers who want to
kill rare animals
and rare
species
are you scared of those type of people
hunting you down because there's a lot of shows
like Finding Bigfoot
and like
I'd be nervous to even
do these shows publicly
just in case.
Yeah.
I've almost made peace with the fact that if that's how I go out,
so be it.
I'm doing what I love.
It is a thing.
I mean, we're very sought after.
You can tell, though.
Finding Bigfoot, I I mean my whole family watches
that show. We think it's really funny.
But there are
some people out there in Oklahoma
Alabama
a little
bit out west but generally
people are pretty friendly towards us
but there are those that
you know gotta be careful.
Yeah.
I mean, I'm serious.
I mean, you know, growing up in Asheville, I mean, you do it in Boone, right?
Did you perform, like, young?
Like, what inspired you young?
Like, tell me about your mom.
Tell me about your dad.
Like, were they hard on you?
Were they perfectionist?
Like, what did your dad do for a living? Was your mom there me about your dad like were they hard on you were they perfectionist like what your dad do for a living did you was your mom there for you or did you basically raise yourself
the thing is is that
my mom we were playing hide and seek we love to play that game and
playing hide and seek we love to play that game and i didn't see her for a long time she was playing hide and seek for a really long time so it was me and my dad for a while and um
you know he's the best dad ever really my mom is amazing you know but
sometimes you got to be careful what games you play in the family.
Hold on, say that again?
You got to be careful what games you play in the family.
Why, why?
Because we played hide and seek and I never didn't see my mom for 20 years.
Oh man, I'm sorry to laugh at that, but but, like, it feels like you have commitment issues.
It feels like your mom just, you have abandonment issues.
This is why it took you 57 years to lose your virginity.
You were looking for that perfect love.
I mean, God, that's fucking beautiful, actually.
Did you ever go to therapy?
Was there, like, can you do that as a Bigfoot?
No, but I try to look up and meditate and pray.
What do you think about when you meditate? Nothing at all. I try to think about literally nothing. And that's usually the only time I feel peace.
Is that hard to not think about anything?
Yeah, it is.
What's on your mind most?
Just striving for something that isn't going to matter anyway.
What? Like what?
You feel like your existence doesn't matter?
No, it does.
But a lot of the time I'm caught up in this new social media thing
and I'm caught up in trying to put out new stuff
and all this really great stuff. But in the end,
you know,
I really just want to help people and I got to accept that I don't always know
how to do,
how to do that,
you know?
Yeah.
Or you got to just let everything go,
trust the process and find my peace.
And that's the best way I can, you know, make music.
Yeah, I mean, it seems like you like gained 100,000 followers
or even 150,000 followers from this quarantine.
There's got to be pressure, you know.
There's got to be, like, you're putting the pressure on yourself
because now you're a commodity, you know,
and you didn't understand social media. You're a fucking, you're putting the pressure on yourself because now you're a commodity you know and you didn't
understand social media you're a fucking you're bigfoot you didn't have it did you have a cell
phone when you were a kid no no so like this is social media new to you yeah that must be
fucking overwhelming man because when you all you know is the family that you have and then all
of a sudden you wake up one day and you get a fucking viral video
that you're at some festival
and all of a sudden, bam, you have 150,000 followers.
That's got to be pressure.
You know that you don't have
to work this hard, right?
I wish I did.
Are you a workaholic?
Yeah, I think so.
You just love...
Do you get paid?
Can you go out and use the money
that you make being sacksquatch
and people don't
make fun of you?
I donate a lot to charity.
You donated all to charity. So what do you eat?
What's that?
What do you eat? How do you survive?
Do you need money to be a Bigfoot?
I'm pretty good at fending for myself.
I eat a lot of blueberries.
Are you vegetarian?
No, I just love fruit.
Oh, you love fruit.
Yeah.
Damn.
I want to go back to this social media idea
do you feel like
you have to do
do you feel like
now that you have a fan base
now people are relying
on you to make them feel good
do you give enough time
back to your wife or is she cool with it
or is this all very fun to you right now
because it seems like you're very burnt out.
I'm actually having a lot of fun
and I do get to spend time with my family.
It's all in all, I'm quite blessed
and I really have nothing to complain about.
All the problems that I have today
are problems that I have today are problems that
I've asked for.
Yeah, God.
So philosophical
for being a Bigfoot.
Do you guys,
you know this species better
than I do. Are you all this
intelligent and looking
inward and looking for humanity?
Why do we put such a bad name on
Bigfoot? Why are we trying to hunt
you guys? You guys are the peacemakers.
We don't want
any trouble.
I feel that.
Oh, man.
You've been seeing how the human
race is running
stuff in the world and stuff.
Do you have any advice for us moving forward?
I'm not that smart.
I wish I knew.
All I can say is just keep believing.
Don't give up.
Don't quit right before the miracle happens.
You know, keep pushing.
Are you religious?
Do you believe in any of that stuff?
I would say I'm spiritual, not exactly religious.
Yeah?
Like what?
Like what do you believe in spiritually?
I believe in spiritual principles like honesty and patience and open-mindedness, you know?
And to me, practicing those things is being spiritual.
And of course, I'm not perfect, but...
Have you done anything wrong in your
life you'd like to talk
publicly about to get off your chest?
Anything wrong in my life?
Yeah, anything you regret?
I regret
playing hide and seek with my mom.
What? Say that again?
I regret playing hide and seek with my mom. What? Say that again? I regret playing hide and seek with my mom.
You miss your mom, huh?
Yeah.
Have you ever tried to find her? Is this like your mission? Oh, is this a call out?
Like you're playing saxophone, you're trying to get, you know, your name out there, so maybe your mom recognizes
Over half my life what?
Why do you think she abandoned you sex watch I?
Have no idea
But I know that wherever she is that she loves me cares about me. I think maybe
she Something I can't I can't tell you. I just want
to find my mom.
Gambling debts or what?
You never know. You never know.
Does she give you clues that she's watching you?
She's watching you?
Yeah, actually.
I find rocks sometimes that have a certain color.
And I'm kind of like, Mom, is that you?
And I think it is.
You know what?
This is our chance.
Ladies and gentlemen of the World Sand Podcast,
Sasquatch is looking for his mother.
How old is she, Sasquatch?
I think about 260.
200?
Damn, you guys live for this long?
Yeah.
Man.
That'd be really hard to live that long in hiding.
Yeah, that's why there's no...
We don't leave trays.
We don't leave bones.
Where do you stay? Do you stay, like, where do you stay?
Like, where do you, do you stay in the trees?
I mean, do you build holes, like dig a hole?
Or what do you do?
We have campsites, yeah.
Cool.
What about at festivals?
What about what?
At festivals, do you take the, like, the humans' drugs and stuff sometimes?
Well, I try to stay away from humans because they always get real handsy with me.
They're always touching me.
And so I kind of just like to keep to myself.
Yeah.
God, what a lonely life.
That is...
I feel for you, man.
I mean, being a musician,
being a tour musician is lonely.
Hence why we talk about depression every episode.
But you take it to a different level.
I mean, you only have three people in your life you could go to,
and you're looking for your fucking mom, dude.
Let's close this podcast
or this half of episode
because we have another guest on the show too,
but I want to...
Let's find Sack Squatch's mom.
Do you want to do an open letter?
No.
All right, hold on.
What's up?
Here we go.
I'm going to play some music. I want you to give a cry out to
your mom and maybe the fans of this podcast will try to help find it
ladies gentlemen sacks watch
Where are you, Mom?
Come home, please.
Our game of hide and seek has lasted too long.
And wherever you are,
come bring it home to me.
Thank you so much, SackSquatch.
Ladies and gentlemen, enjoy the next interview.
And I'll catch you on the tail end.
Before we continue on the podcast,
I wanted to talk about this project I was involved in called Isolation Concerts for No One,
brought to you by DistroKid.
Basically, me and my friends,
Sean Eccles, my guitar player,
Kitchen Dwellers at Mahali,
all hop in a car, and we do these
concerts, um, for nobody, we did it in the Navajo, we've done it in Lake Powell, we did it, I mean,
we've done it in all these isolated areas, and it It is April 6th, 13th, and 20th on Fans.Live.
DistroKid presented it.
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All right,
we'll see you at fans.live
for isolation
concerts for nobody.
Wow,
and there you have it.
Fucking sax watch.
Coming on the show,
thanks for being vulnerable.
Thanks for wanting to do
that exclusive interview
with the World's Hitting Podcast.
We're getting big guests, people.
Let's go, let's go.
Let's get this shit.
This is just a half episode. I got really excited when we got... This is no joke.
Sack Squatch has a publicist, and we got the message that Sack Squatch wants to be on the
show. No one knows who this person is, so it's pretty fucking funny. And, um, so it was nice that he, we got to get a
little, a little more information about the Bigfoot culture. Um, but that's it guys. Hope you had a
good one. Um, I'm on tour with my band. It's fucking crazy out here. Um, it feels good to
get the kinks out. Um, but we're sounding great. But we're pretty excited because we are announcing Red Rocks.
We are playing.
We are headlining Red Rocks on May.
They announced today.
So I think, let me see what day.
May 27th.
It's going to be badass.
And we got Keller Williams opening for us, who's also co-headlining.
So he's going to play.
And we have John Craigie opening.
And then we have comedian Kyle Ayers hosting the show.
So go grab your tickets.
This is the biggest show I've ever done headlining.
They're doing 2,500 cap.
So get those tickets.
I know it's – hopefully we could sell it out.
I think we will.
Just get tickets quick
because I think everybody
is getting the itch
to wanting to go see a Red Rocks show.
So it's going to be exciting.
I'm pumped up.
Let's go.
First Red,
the headline,
200 cap.
Now we're going to 2,500
and hopefully we could do,
you know,
in a couple of years,
sell that baby out at 9,000. But thanks for all your 2,500. And hopefully we can do, you know, in a couple years, sell that baby out at 9,000.
But thanks for all your help, support if you can.
Thanks to everyone who's been coming out to the shows.
It's been fucking fun, you know.
Got to hang out with Umphreys and stuff.
I got a dance party on the 17th too.
Yeah, we have a Rolex dance party.
It's been fun.
And last but not least, Zesty Bever have a Rolex dance party. It's been fun. Um, and last but not least, um, zesty beverages, y'all still partnering with the podcast.
Awesome kombucha.
They got hard kombucha.
They got light kombucha, no alcohol.
If you want to just get that gut, right.
Um, like I say, it's great.
Um, you know, I, I was having the summer of seltzers, so I was fucking sick of seltzers.
I was skeptical at first,
and then I drank it, and it's fucking fire.
Go get yourself some hard kombucha.
I think that's what this summer is.
This summer is going to be the summer of kombucha.
Might as well get a little buzz
while you're taking care of your gut.
Go check them out.
If you're in Colorado,
they're at Whole Foods and,
um, awesome dudes. Can't wait to go hang. I tried to hang out with them last week, but it
just didn't work out. But hopefully next time they're in Denver, I will be able to kick with
them. So go check it out. Zesty beverages for some hard kombucha and some regular kombucha.
But that's it guys. I think I am going on vacation. Uh, I'll be in
Charleston for two weeks. Um, starting Monday. Um, so it's going to be fun. I can't wait to
get out there and, um, hang out with all my Charleston crew for a couple of weeks.
Then we start recording the record. It's going down. We are, I am on a mission. I'm going to be
recording songs with, I'm not going to tell you who, but it's fucking awesome. We are, I am on a mission. I'm going to be recording songs with,
I'm not going to tell you who, but it's fucking awesome. We do a week in Denver, week in Nashville, week in LA. It's happening. It is going fucking down. So, um, then we,
then we do Red Rocks. God, Mays, God, I can't believe half the year's already done. That's
fucking nuts. Or a quarter. It's April. Time flies,
y'all. Just remember this shit. Time flies. Do what you want to do. Do what you love.
Do everything because you're going to wake up one day and you're going to be old as fuck.
And you're like, damn, why did time fly by so fast? So go get out there. Go in those
dreams. Go skull fuck those dreams. We got a huge lineup coming up in the month of May.
And I won't tell you all about it because I want to keep you surprised.
But we got some bangers.
All right, guys.
Be safe out there.
I love you.
And I hope you enjoyed Sack Squatch.
I fucking did.
We had to put that in there.
All right.
Love you.