Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard - Armchair Anonymous: DIY Disaster
Episode Date: February 28, 2025Dax and Monica talk to Armcherries! In today's episode, Armcherries tell us about DIY projects gone wrong.Follow Armchair Expert on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. Watch ne...w content on YouTube or listen to Armchair Expert early and ad-free by joining Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify. Start your free trial by visiting wondery.com/links/armchair-expert-with-dax-shepard/ now.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Welcome, welcome, welcome to Armchair Anonymous.
Today, our DIY projects gone wrong.
Let's do it yourself.
I always said this wrong.
This is always a high-
It's hard to say. I always wanted to say DIY. Sure. I famously said that in front of somebody and they corrected me and I got humiliated.
Oh, who?
Martha Stewart?
I wish.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I wanna be humiliated by her.
I'd be a sub.
Baby girl.
Yeah, I'd be her baby girl.
I think everyone would.
Yeah.
Okay, let's see.
There's maggots in, I think I gotta warn.
Oh, shit, don't say that.
No, I think I gotta tell people. I think I gotta tell people. I think I gotta tell people. I think I gotta tell people. I think I gotta everyone would. Okay, let's see. There's maggots that I think I gotta warn.
Oh, shit, don't say that.
No, I think I gotta tell people.
What other things are here?
Blood.
Blood, yeah, blood and maggots.
No!
Please enjoy.
Blood and maggots.
Do it yourself.
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you need I would define reclaiming as to take back what was yours.
Something you possess is lost or stolen, and ultimately you triumph in finding it again.
Listen to Reclaiming with Monica Lewinsky are you two? Wonderful. What a bright smile.
Did you just get your teeth zoomed?
I know.
You'll never forget.
I'm so happy.
I'm so happy.
I'm so happy.
I'm so happy.
I'm so happy.
I'm so happy.
I'm so happy.
I'm so happy.
I'm so happy.
I'm so happy.
I'm so happy.
I'm so happy.
I'm so happy.
I'm so happy.
I'm so happy.
I'm so happy. I'm so happy. I'm so happy. I'm so happy. I'm so happy. Hello. Hi, how are you two? Wonderful, what a bright smile.
Did you just get your teeth zoomed?
No, you'll never believe this, but I used Arm and Hammer.
I used the baking soda toothpaste.
Of course you do.
It's the only one that works.
It really is, and your teeth are sparkling white.
Thank you, that's so nice.
I feel so validated.
This has turned into a real commercial for the product.
I mean, you asked.
Okay, so Christina, where are you at?
Right now I'm in Phoenix, but I live in Salt Lake City normally.
Okay, are you there on business?
My boyfriend runs a local grocery store in Salt Lake.
There are a bunch of food shows all over the country,
which if we have time, I have an Aaron Weekly story to tell about a food show.
Oh, did you meet him?
Yes, I met him at the Chicago food show for Ted Seeger and I really embarrassed myself.
Please tell me.
I doubt that.
Let's hear it.
Was he so cute in person?
He was so cute.
We walked up and my boyfriend obviously knows how much I love the podcast.
I was so excited to meet him.
We have the same birthday. J2C. Yeah. So we walk up and my sister is an actress and so
I don't want to ever be starstruck. It's got very strong belief that I have. So I was trying
to play cool and I forgot how to speak English. I turned bright red. And my boyfriend was trying to be really sweet
and was like, oh my gosh,
Christina is a huge fan of armchair experts.
And then I got embarrassed and mad at him.
Like, I'm an armcherry, I am not a fan.
There is a distinguishable difference.
I walked away and was like,
well, I hope I never get the opportunity
to meet Dax and Monica.
Cause based on that, I hope that I can actually speak.
So this is already going better.
I couldn't be happier that Aaron got that kind of reaction.
I love it.
That is a perfect story.
I guarantee he'll remember cause J2C is so rare and coveted.
I didn't even get to tell him.
You didn't?
That would have fast tracked you.
Yeah, but I couldn't even get to tell him. You didn't. That would have fast-tracked you. Yeah, but I couldn't get it out, sadly.
Okay, so you have a DIY story that went poorly.
I do.
This story takes place in the fall of 2013,
kind of around Halloween when I was in college.
I went to a small liberal arts college in Salt Lake.
My roommates and I lived in this super charming 1900s house off campus.
It had these beautiful original hardwood floors. It was just full of vintage charm and we had
no business living there. But I was a sophomore in college and at my school, I think because
there's this big religious influence in Salt Lake, I found that there's a really strong counterculture to that
and my college really leaned into that counterculture.
We embraced every opportunity to run wild.
Ah.
Oh God, I wish I went there.
It was very fun, but at my school,
Halloween wasn't just a fun holiday.
It was the event of the year.
There was an annual campus Halloween party
and it was obviously one of the most important nights of the year. There was an annual campus Halloween party and it was obviously
one of the most important nights of the year.
It had political ramifications.
Yes, it was the night that you would probably hook up with someone that you wouldn't normally
run into. You'd have some kind of life altering conversation that you wouldn't remember, make
some kind of decision that would haunt you. It ended up being such a mess at the school
that they eventually had to shut it down. So it doesn't exist anymore. But when I was there,
it was like the pinnacle of college life. You were there at the right time.
Since we were broke college students, my roommate and I decided that we couldn't justify spending
money on Halloween costumes. We had to DIY it, but we still obviously wanted to look perfect for this night.
At this time, we were also deep in a hippie phase.
We were vegans and we loved patchouli and environmentalism and not showering to save
water, all of that.
Were you into jam bands?
Oh, so into jam bands.
Naturally, we decided to kind of go along with that, that we were going to go as mother
nature to this costume party for our DIY costumes. we decided to kind of go along with that, that we were going to go as mother nature
to this costume party for our DIY costumes. We thought it was sexy and organic and effortless.
So our plan was to just buy a huge piece of brown fabric and hot glue, real leaves straight
from our front yard onto the fabric and then kind of wrap ourselves in it like a toga.
And we thought it was cute and cheap and sustainable. The day of the party in it like a toga. We thought it was cute and
cheap and sustainable. The day of the party, we went into our lawn. We just scooped up
huge armfuls of these kind of damp leaves that had been outside for a while. We sat
cross-legged on the hardwood floor of our living room, just surrounded by piles of leaves.
With a hot glue gun, we ended up gluing onto the fabric one by one, these
leaves. And it took basically the whole day. The hot glue gun strings are floating all
around us. We're burning our fingers. But it was Halloween and it was important. Finally,
we finished right before the party was about to start. So we reached down to pick up the
fabric to kind of wrap ourselves in it. And we realized that the hot glue had bonded the fabric and all of the leaves directly to this original,
beautiful, pristine 1900s hardwood floor.
Oh, it just leaked right through that,
the sustainable fabric.
It wasn't even just stuff, it was like completely fused.
Oh no.
And glue loves wood, all those nooks and crannies.
Whenever we would lift at the corners,
it felt like we were pulling the hardwood floor up
with the fabric.
We couldn't do it.
And obviously this party was about to start
and our costumes moved to the floor.
So in true 19 year old fashion,
fuck it, we'll deal with this tomorrow.
So we wore like flannels and suspenders
and we're lumberjacks or something stupid.
No one knew what we were, but we didn't really care.
I don't think they would have really understood
Mother Nature also, to be fair.
But they would have noticed the effort.
Because a lot of times you're like,
I don't know what the fuck that is,
but boy, did it take them a while.
And I applaud that.
I would love that reaction.
And that was not what we got.
But it ended up being a fun night, I think.
The next day was Sunday and we were very, very hungover.
And when we walked into the living room, we were like, we do not have the
capacity to deal with these piles of leaves and this fused fabric.
The day passed and all of a sudden we were like back in the weekly routine.
Oh, wow.
Okay.
So just really keep kicking it down the road.
I could see this.
So we just leave it for some reason.
And it turns out that the leaves that we collected
that were sitting in our living room,
they weren't just leaves, they were damp and decomposing
and they were filled with lots of tiny,
rapidly reproducing maggots.
Stop, no!
Yeah, I was thinking snails, but maggots,
that's a bit worse.
Oh!
Oh, boy.
God, ew.
You basically made like a habitat
in your living room for maggots.
We kind of started to notice little wriggling things
near the edges of the piles.
Ew!
And of course we're like, huh, that's kind of strange,
and just kind of left it.
Yeah, wow.
It got worse.
Rapidly reproducing is the worst phrase
to hear before maggots, ew.
Yeah, so we had a full blown infestation.
They were in the kitchen, in the couch,
but we had been so in our groove.
Sure.
And we were never really at home in college.
Finally driven by sheer horror, we had to scrape
up the glued fabric and the leaves and all of the insects. And by the time we were done, this
beautiful hardwood floor was just completely scratched beyond recognition.
Yeah. Imagine all that dampness also could have warped everything. I mean, you really did everything bad
you could do to a hardwood floor.
Moisture, glue, dirt, maggots.
Oh.
Was there a fuck you to that floor, really?
It was never the same.
Through the rest of the time I lived there,
we would like put a keg on top of that section.
Like, well, it's already fucked, it can't get any worse.
Was there a penalty at the end of all this?
Did anyone get a bill?
Oh, I'm sure we did.
We lived in this house for four years.
So the number of things that happened in this house.
You're not getting your deposit back.
No, no.
Kiss that Ryke bye.
Oh, I just hate a maggot.
Could you list, Monica, where is that in your top 10?
Snakes out of your bottom, number one.
Snakes up the bottom.
Well, slithering out, no?
They go up there.
That's the worst.
I guess you're right, when they slither out,
you're kind of relieved probably.
Yeah, you didn't know they were in there.
They don't even tickle.
Yeah.
I don't know.
Who knows?
Maggots might even be worse.
Really?
Yes, there's something about them
and you can't get control of them
and they're slimy and ugh.
I think the grossest part,
everyone plug your ears, that's sensitive,
but the grossest part is when you step on them
then there's mayonnaise on the ground.
Ew, why?
Why?
I warned everyone to plug their ears.
What more do you want me to do?
Not me, you made me listen.
Oh, that was so, help.
Help. Help me. Well, Christina that was. Help. Help.
Help me.
Well, Christina, you sound very easygoing,
pretty laid back.
That liberal arts college was the right choice for you.
The liberal arts education.
Yeah, Hellenic studies, baby.
Hellenic studies.
Western SIP.
This was before anxiety and adulthood kicked in,
so I'm much less laid back now,
but at the time it was like anything goes.
You would stress out about it at the time,
but really to reduce your life to just four term papers
every three months, like that's pretty manageable.
And then the rest of your time,
you don't give a flying fuck about anything.
Cags and oh yeah.
Yeah, baggots.
Oh.
Managed.
Oh.
Why?
All right, Christina, nice meeting you. Yes, thank you.
And I just have to say, I am so grateful
that you two exist in this world
and I appreciate everything that you do
and so grateful that I got the opportunity
to talk to you both.
Us too.
Thank you, us too.
I hope I bump into you at a food show, it's possible.
I'm going to one with Erin in March or something.
We'll probably be there.
Okay, come over and lose your shit
and join the J2C club. I got it out of my system though. That'll be cool. We'll probably be there. Okay, come over and lose your shit and join the J2C club.
I got it out of my system though.
Trial run.
Yes.
All right.
Bye. Take care.
Hello.
Hi there, can you hear me?
Oh, wonderful.
Cute Cure shirt.
I agree.
Welcome to my closet, thank you.
Big fan of the Cure, so I had to represent.
Me too.
Robert Smith?
Indeed.
What do we know about him?
He's such an enigma.
And that's kind of his draw.
There was an interesting thing
when they were inducted to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame,
Trent Reznor said,
Robert Smith has curated this Robert Smith world
that we can go and become whenever we want,
whenever we feel a little left out or alone.
And that's exactly what it represents.
Yeah.
Oh, I like that.
Also falling in love.
Oh my God, what good lovesick music.
What's your favorite?
Do do do do do do do do do do do.
Name that tune, Chris.
Pictures of you.
Yeah, pictures of you.
Good job.
Everyone did a great job.
Yeah, what's your favorite?
I'm a really big fan of their new album,
Songs of a Lost World, highly recommend it.
It's their first album in, I think, eight years.
He's getting older and some of his loved ones are pests and, you know, he's
looking at mortality like we all are.
Yeah.
He was able to articulate heartbreak.
So in the early part of your life, that was all romantic love.
And now people are dying.
It just continued on the heartbreak.
Life is hard.
It is.
You can tell a Cure fan miles away.
If not the getup, at least just they have this bonhomie about them.
Bonhomie.
That was a great word.
It's an SAT word for sure.
Where are you at?
I am in Northern Virginia, just outside of DC.
But I have to say, originally from Michigan.
Ann Arbor, the wife is from the thumb, proper farm country.
So we met in Michigan, and that was 20-some odd years ago.
This is why he's so interesting and knowledgeable.
Monica, and I'm not going to leave you out,
I've been to the Atlanta airport.
I think it's that.
I think it might be how cultured the airport is.
Like those holiday and express commercials.
It's very Bonham-y.
It's like, did you go to a Hy-Vee League?
No, but I flew into Atlanta one time.
Exactly.
Okay, you have a DIY story that went awry.
I do.
So, August 2019, I wanted to put up a camera on our front porch to see the comings and
goings of Amazon Delivered Drivers and all that good stuff.
And our house has a really beautiful wraparound front porch with 10-foot ceilings and like
a ceiling fan, and we have a porch swing, and a good place to hang out when it's not
stiflingly hot.
But I needed to get power over to where I was putting in the camera.
And I figured I would just tap right into where the junction box is for the fan.
So I took the fan down.
One thing to note at this point, I'm home alone.
My wife and younger daughter out running errands.
My older daughter is in North Carolina with her friend and their family.
At home it's just me and the dog.
So I get my ladder out, take the fan down,
put it on the ground.
I'm gonna ask a dumb dumb question,
but you obviously already threw the circuit breaker.
Of course.
You're preempting something stupid that I would do,
but that's for another time.
Okay, okay.
Righted the Romex over, put the new plug in,
put a GFI plug in, cause it's outdoors, tested it.
So now I just needed to put the fan actually back up.
So I grabbed the fan and I climbed up the ladder.
Key might say the 10 foot ladder.
So for some reason I didn't think or want to take the four minutes to remove the fan blades
or the undermount light or anything like that.
I have the top of the neck of the fan motor in my right hand.
And you know, the fan blades are all banging around my body and hitting the ladder.
And I just need to get the fan motor clipped into the little holder.
And then I can let go of it.
Then it's kind of in place, but the junction box is a bit more full because
it's got a separate piece of Ro-Max.
It's got some wire nuts, so I can't quite get it into place.
So I figured, Oh, I'm just going to use my left hand to help push it in a little.
However, at the bottom of the fan, there's light bulbs and a nice glass dome.
Again, which I didn't take off.
So I pushed my left hand on that
glass dome, give it a heave, and my left hand smashes through the glass dome with a few light
bulbs, slicing open my wrist. I scream out in pain.
I'm just like you didn't fall off the ladder at this point.
I can only kind of remember climbing down the ladder. Thankfully, my wife and younger daughter had gotten home,
not three minutes beforehand.
They were still putting away groceries in the kitchen.
So I flung open the door and just yelled, tall nine one.
You knew immediately you had cut the artery.
Was that obvious?
There's blood everywhere.
Gonna save five minutes.
Exactly. At 24, I lost my narrative, or rather it was stolen from me.
And the Monica Lewinsky that my friends and family knew was usurped by false narratives,
callous jokes, and politics.
I would define reclaiming as to take back what was yours.
Something you possess is lost or stolen,
and ultimately you triumph in finding it again.
So I think listeners can expect me to be chatting
with folks, both recognizable and unrecognizable names
about the way that people have navigated roads to triumph.
My hope is that people will finish an episode of Reclaiming and feel like they filled their tank up.
They connected with the people that I'm talking to and leave with maybe some nuggets that help them feel a little more hopeful.
Follow Reclaiming with Monica Lewinsky on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen to Reclaiming early and ad free right now by joining Wondery Plus in
the Wondery app or on Apple podcasts.
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And just wait until you hear our conversation.
We talk Twitter drama, bad dates, and then something.
How the hell do you actually get sexy?
Like, what the hell does that mean?
Like, I know how to be funny.
I know how to be like, you know what I'm saying?
Exactly.
Like, I don't really know how to be like,
and take your clothes off.
I'm not robbing fucking Givens.
You know, it's like, how do people do that?
I've been in this situation too many times
and not felt any of those things.
The girl eyes, the quiet.
Like, I've never been quiet a moment in my fucking life.
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So I sit down on the front porch steps and with my right hand, put pressure on the wrist.
My wife comes out with 911 on the phone.
They're telling her to get clean rag or clean shirt or something and just apply
pressure and an ambulance is on its way.
I'm bleeding through these rags like no one's business.
Oh, God.
I'm lightheaded, pale, dizzy.
I actually got the 911 call from the county.
Oh, wow.
My wife hasn't had the heart to listen to it yet.
I wasn't really there.
I was kind of in another space.
So it was kind of fun for me to listen to.
And at one point, the dispatcher asked her
how bad I'm bleeding.
And she said, it's dripping all over the porch.
It's in bad shape.
Do they suggest a tourniquet at any point?
They didn't.
They were just saying direct pressure.
Somehow I didn't pass out, but the paramedics arrived and they quickly see that things aren't
great.
They're able to stem the bleeding a bit more.
They wrap it up with gauze, get me loaded into the ambulance, and off we go to the hospital.
It's probably about a 20-minute drive to the hospital.
The paramedic calls ahead to the ER just to kind of let them know what to expect.
I'm still conscious.
And then about five minutes before we get to the hospital,
both the EMT and I happen to look down
and the gauze is now completely red
and it's dripping onto the floor of the ambulance.
Without missing a beat,
she puts kind of one thumb on my pressure point
on the bend of my elbow with the other hand,
opens up a cabinet, grabs a tourniquet,
rips it open with her teeth,
puts it around my arm,
cinches it tight,
and that somewhat stopped at least the dripping.
We get to the ER, we get into the triage room, and within seconds, 20 medical professionals
are there.
I'm crying.
I'm thinking, yeah, I'm in a lot better shape now because I'm at least at the hospital,
but this is scary stuff.
They strap my arm down to a board, wrist side up, start spraying it with saline.
And then the next thing you know, I'm out.
That was the last thing that I remember.
I woke up hours later in a recovery room, still super groggy.
I woke enough basically to say hi to my wife and then crashed again.
And then the next thing I knew, I woke up at three in the morning in my hospital room
and my hand is just bandaged from fingertip to elbow. But I could see that I had all my
extremities, which was pretty, pretty cool.
I'm thinking out loud that you were lucky that you probably landed in a hospital with
a vascular surgeon.
So one of the benefits of living in Northern Virginia is we have an amazing medical system.
So it's a level one trauma,
which I just learned about on the nurses.
Oh, okay.
Wow.
You do.
We're all learning at the same speed.
We learn so much.
So they did have all the necessary surgeons there
to perform immediate surgery.
I was discharged later that afternoon.
I was in crazy heavy medicine for several weeks.
I had hand physical therapy for months,
then some really nasty scars
and a little loss of motion in my thumb.
So basically what I did is when I pushed up on the globe,
obviously it shattered, but I was pushing pretty hard
and I cut my arteries long way.
Vertical, that's the worst.
Exactly, so I cut my artery, several tendons and nerves. Monica, I actually sent you guys a couple of pictures.
Hopefully Rob has them up.
That's on the table.
Okay, I'm ready for this.
Oh my.
Also you were doing this project in flip flops?
Yeah, why not?
On the ladder.
On the ladder.
Yeah.
God, are we the same person?
You can handle this Monica, but my God,
for the listening audience, it's a good six inches of gash. It's serpentines around into the hand down.
The rest.
Oh, it goes in.
Oh, it's raw.
Yeah. No one can listen to this episode.
A slight bit of humor to the whole situation.
I found out later that after I left in the ambulance and before my wife and daughter
drove to the hospital, my wife took the garden hose and hosed on the front porch because
there was just blood everywhere.
And it's probably best because when she got home from the hospital late that night after
seeing me in recovery, there was an Amazon package on the front porch and I could only
imagine what the poor Amazon delivery driver would have thought if they saw it.
Would they have taken a picture of it or they would have been like customer not
available.
It just went on their way.
If I were the Amazon person, I just arrived at a big pool of blood.
I would open the box to see if someone had ordered bleach.
Oh my God.
Like if this was a murder scene and I was not complicit in the cleanup effort.
That is actually interesting.
Do you think delivery people have an obligation to like report?
Like HIPAA?
First reporters, like school teachers. Yeah. I think delivery people have an obligation to like report. Like HIPAA?
First reporters, like school teachers.
Yeah, we have to call 911 if we see something really bad.
Chris, you're so smart.
What line of work are you in?
I know.
I am a full-time stay at home dad.
Oh, okay.
Well, yeah, you gotta be smart to do that.
I left the workforce about a year and a half ago,
and I love it.
Girl dad, 13 and 15, it's what works for our family so I couldn't be happier.
I have an endless list of projects and things to do.
Oh God, stay away from the projects.
We have some new rules in our house about
the projects I'm allowed to do when no one is home.
If I get up on a ladder,
I need to let someone else be there.
If my wife hadn't arrived home just before it happened, I'm confident in
saying that I wouldn't be here today.
There's no way that I could have grabbed my phone and called 911.
I just wasn't in this state.
And obviously since there was such significant bleeding, I would have
probably passed it pretty quickly.
Oh, okay.
I want to tell you a quick story.
It's not to equate your injury with any kind of property damage, but I think
you'll just get a kick out of it because I bought a car in 2019, the previous
version of it had gone up three times and I was able to get one, I got it
just for an investment.
I got the entire car covered in this thin see-through wrap so that it would
never get any scratches or anything.
And it's just going to sit in my garage.
So I need to get my snowboard bag out of this loft above the car and it's
raining outside. So I don't want to pull the car out into the rain because then that's
its own thing. And then I determined, you know, I can just get on the ladder next to
the car and I can grab that bag. This is not a huge deal. What I didn't really think about
was I had tracked some water in from coming from outside. I set the ladder up. So the
ladder is now on some water, which I didn't really notice. And I'm pulling the snowboard bag out from on top of the car
and all of a sudden the ladder starts slipping. And now I have this decision to make if I fall,
it's coming down on top of this car. So I have to, with all my might, chuck the board from the air so it'll clear the car.
And when I do that, I then fall off of the ladder
and I shoot the ladder into the car
that I'm trying my hardest to protect.
And it hits the mirror perfectly
where the vinyl wrap has come together at a seam
and there's a gap.
My first thought when I lay on the ground,
I was like, oh fuck, I think I broke my rib on my bench.
Okay, oh my arm hurts.
And then I'm like, oh my God,
did the ladder hit the side of the car?
And I'm looking at the side of the car,
no, it's fine, it's fine, it's fine.
And then all of a sudden I see it
and I took a fucking two inch chunk of paint
out of the mirror and I'm like, there we go.
I saved myself wiping the car down
and now I've got to go find a painter qualified to not take the value.
And you're thinking, damn it, I can get my real place, but aftermarket
parts are so hard to find for this car.
What am I going to do?
I destroyed the pristine value of this car.
So yeah, I really deeply relate to just trying to save a few
minutes and really fucking regretting it.
Absolutely.
It was a learning opportunity for sure.
Cause I've cut corners in the past and skated through and this
time I cut a corner and it didn't end nicely at all, but at least I'm still here.
There's a dude that I've been going to AA with for 22 years and his saying,
and I appreciate it every single time is cutting the corners,
the quickest way to the back of the line, something like that.
I've heard it a million times.
Well, it's like cut a few noses,
spite your face type of thing.
Just don't do it.
Yeah, you just always end up in the very back of the line.
Well, Chris, delightful meeting you.
I'm not shocked you're above average
because you're from Michigan.
Thank you very much, Paul.
This is an absolute pleasure.
All right, take care, Chris.
I think it's something like taking a shortcut is-
Fastest way to the back of the line. Yeah, something like that. Shortcut's the fastest way to the back of the line. I think that's something like taking a shortcut is- Fastest way to the back of the line.
Yeah, something like that.
Shortcuts the fastest way to the back of the line.
I think that's what it is.
Yeah, that's it.
Can you hear me?
Beautifully. Yes.
I don't wanna give out your full name, Tanya,
but it's criminal you're not a country western singer.
That's the best country song name I've ever heard.
I know, right?
The 70s is when my name peaked. If you look at the bell curve for popularity of your name,
there's not very many of us.
Who was it, Motive?
Tanya Tucker.
But she wasn't famous in the seventies, was she?
Sure she was.
I'm a 75 baby like you.
Are you about to turn 50?
When?
This summer.
I'm getting scared.
It's gonna be great.
I just got a rebrand for us.
I'm stealing it from Bad Sisters.
I'll acknowledge where I got it. But from now on, I'm scared. It's gonna be great. I just got a rebrand for us. I'm stealing it from Bad Sisters.
I'll acknowledge where I got it.
But from now on, I'm not 50.
You and I are both mid-century.
Boom!
Sounds cooler.
Right?
Sounds architectural.
I'm mid-century.
Fuck, I love it.
Yeah.
Don't you dare, Monica.
I'm gonna make shirts that say mid-century.
You are?
Yes. Okay.
I'll buy one if you do.
Okay, great. Hey, you're three customers. You are? Yes. Okay. I'll buy one if you do. Okay, great.
Three customers.
Three customers, hey.
We have a wide neck.
I'm kidding, this is great.
I'll wear it.
She's really relishing in her age privilege, isn't she?
I have to.
What a bitch with her fresh eggs.
They're not fresh, they're old and stinky.
They're huge.
It happens to all of us.
Where are you, Tanya?
I am in Utah in a oral surgery office
of the man that this story is about.
I'm working for my dad today.
Is he a periodontist?
He is an oral surgeon.
He pulls teeth.
Perio, I think, is about gums.
He still works.
He's 84 years old.
Wow.
And he works on a semi-retired schedule.
He's just finishing up his afternoon nap.
Oh, what a stud.
This is great.
Okay. Hit us with your DIY story that went awry.
Okay. So this is a landscaping DIY disaster.
A few things about my dad that you need to know is that he is a genius,
but this is usually what gets him in trouble.
He knows how to do things.
He knows how to figure them out if he doesn't. He is big on self-sufficiency. His parents
were World War II age vets. Another thing about his brilliance is he skipped out on
the last year of college when he took his entrance exam into dental school because his
scores were so high that they admitted him immediately. My dad has only ever paid for landscaping once in his life, and that was in the last
10 years.
At 85, he still maintains five acres of land, and my mom, who's 80, mows the lawn.
He will spend a dollar to save a penny.
He's that kind of a person.
And the same goes for his time.
He will work an idea 100 times over.
He's very persistent.
He does not give up.
Also, the last thing you need to know about our family
is Saturday, chore day was an all day thing.
If you stayed the night at somebody's house,
you had to be back in time for chores.
If somebody stayed the night at your house,
they either needed to leave or help out.
There are eight kids in our family.
This is all screaming Mormon, the industriousness, the eight kids.
Yes. Okay.
We are Mormon.
Okay.
Okay.
We're in Utah right now.
Yeah. Yeah.
But this story does not take place in Utah. I was raised in the central
valley of California, San Joaquin Valley, outside of Fresno. This is 96, maybe. I'm home from college.
My dad had a job for us to do for the summer. It included my older brother who was in college,
myself and my younger sister who was in college.
So this is probably May.
And we had a newish house.
We had built a pool the summer before
and now my dad is trying to landscape the backyard.
In digging our pool,
we found out that there is about 12 to 18 inches
of what's called hard pan.
It's thick concrete like soil.
You can't penetrate it.
You can use a pickaxe all you want.
You're never gonna get to the bottom of it.
But there is an orange grove in the back of our property.
So how the heck did they get their trees planted?
He finds out that you can get an Ag permit for dynamite.
Oh, perfect. Oh, wow.
Now we're talking.
In the two acres that we have,
he would need to plant 60 trees.
So he figures out the recipe, he researches how to do it.
He knows where to get all the stuff.
It's getting close to blasting day.
We had to wreck an auger.
Sure you got to drill a hole
and dump the dynamite in there?
We had to put like 30 inches down into the ground.
That took three days to do all 60 holes. Wow.
And it's blasting day. My dad took off work. He never takes off work.
The only reason I know he took off work is that my two younger siblings were at school
and my youngest sister was home with the chicken pox. We start in the far,
far back part of our property, two acres. So pretty far.
We put one scoop in.
One scoop was about the size of a paint can,
a small quart.
My brother lights it, we all run,
and there is a kaboom, like a Howitzer Cannon kaboom.
So it was a little bit anticlimactic
and no earth moved at all.
It just shot straight out of it like a cannon.
So, dad being a Mr. Scientist,
he treated it like a science experiment.
We changed one thing, we adjust. So, some of the things we tried was stuffing it with a blanket
to make it push out like a firecracker. We tried chicken wire in a blanket. We tried a big,
huge boulder. Things weren't working. So, now we're increasing the number of scoots.
Oh, boy.
We go to two. We finally get up to three.
Oh, great. This is like when you take too many drugs because the drugs haven scoops. We go to two. We finally get up to three. Oh, great.
This is like when you take too many drugs
because the drugs haven't hit you.
Yes, yes, and you're impatient.
We're up to three scoops in the hole.
My mom calls my brother and my sister and I
that we're home from college.
We had to leave for an eye doctor appointment.
We take off.
At the last second,
she makes my little sister with the chicken pox
come with us.
She didn't wanna leave dad, experimenting with dynamite with a sick little girl inside.
So he's doing it all by himself. We come home country roads everybody has a couple
acres and we're at our neighbor's house and there are dirt clots everywhere.
Oh! And the closer we get to our house, there's more. And my heart starts beating.
We're getting scared.
The closer we get to the driveway to the house,
it's so much that my brother just undoes the van door,
huge Mormon van door, by the way.
And we bolt out of there
and we just head towards the back of the property.
And we're looking for body parts, honestly.
Like where is dad?
Oh, no.
Oh, no.
["The Big Gettys"]
What's up, everybody?
It's Jason Kelsey, and I'm here with my slightly famous
little brother, Travis, AKA Big Yeti Kelsey.
Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls,
we're here to bring you a next level entertainment
experience with our show, New Heights,
where the Lumbaby reigns supreme.
We're covering all the hardest hitting topics
in order of importance, UFO sightings,
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and Trav becoming a big time acting star.
Big time is a big stretch.
We've got can't miss A-list interviews though.
That's right and of course next level access to life inside the NFL and in the booth. Just because
I retired doesn't mean I'm out of the game. Yeah I mean the old dad shoes suggest otherwise but
those are the I'm out the game shoes right there. Listen and watch New Heights wherever you get your
podcasts and if you want to listen to us first
without any interruptions and get bonus content,
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Apple podcasts or Spotify.
Have you ever gotten a message out of the blue?
Maybe you ignore them or maybe you end up in conversation.
Maybe they tell you about an amazing offer.
I can really show you how to make some money.
And maybe that gets you into a lot of trouble.
But this isn't a story about people like you,
the people receiving these messages.
This is a story about the people behind the messages,
on the other end of the line, thousands of them,
working in a micro city built for scammers. From Wondery, the makers of Dr. Death and Kill List,
comes Scam Factory, a new series about survival at the expense of others.
Follow Scam Factory on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen to Scam Factory early and ad free right now by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts.
So the hole back there is massive.
New swimming pool.
Exactly.
New spa.
Dax, you could lay in the bottom of it with your arms outstretched and just be fine.
Wow.
Wow.
A foxhole.
Yeah.
Then we hear some laughter coming from the inside of the house and my other sisters were
in there with my mom and we go inside.
My brother and I run over there.
My dad is laying on the bed of his bedroom.
There's a tarp on the floor.
There's a ladder set up.
There's a bucket of tools and a 12 inch hole in the ceiling.
What?
With a rock.
Oh, that shot up and came down.
Yep.
Now he's repairing the roof.
It came through the house.
It blew up in the air and then came,
God, lucky it didn't come down on him.
It took about two weeks for him to finally tell the story.
He was telling some tall tales all along the way.
He was saying things like,
oh, an alien must've come and tried to get me
and the laser beam shot through the roof,
or I was kicking and screaming
when the aliens were trying to get me and I kicked a hole in the roof. He's a little rascal.
He has a lot of different tall tales he tells and aliens is a favorite of his.
About two weeks later at family dinner, he finally fessed up to the whole story with
the three scoops in the hole, the boulder nearby,
he had remembered there are these things called boosters
or blasting caps that fit over the detonator.
And it gives you maximum explosion
with minimal amount of dynamite.
This is Nobel, the Nobel Peace Prize.
He invented that blasting cap.
So much of the earth was destroyed by his invention.
He felt like he should take the money and give back.
And that's what the Nobel peace prize is from.
He gets those from the safe.
He kept them separate.
He lights it, runs back about a hundred feet.
And this time it was ka-boom.
The sound waves knocked him flat on his back.
And he is being pelted by all of these little dirt clods
all around him and he comes to,
and he sees the rock up in the sky.
And the rock is pretty big, maybe 24 inches,
splits in two, one lands in the orange grove
behind our house, and the other just gets swallowed up
into the house.
Oh wow.
Oh my god.
Talk about saving a little money on a professional
and then now you gotta replace part of the roof.
Yeah, he never had anybody fix it.
He tried to fix it himself that afternoon
before we got home, but it was time for a nap,
just like he loves, and he does his best thinking
in nap time. Sure.
How did the remaining 59 holes get blasted?
So we did finish up, we ended up only needing a third of a scoop through trial and error.
I am shocked that we didn't blow all the windows out of our house from that first one,
because the rattle was so big. My brother heard it about a mile away after school,
and he was just like, what is going on? Our neighbors called the cops on us,
but he had a permit.
He showed that cop exactly what he had.
Carry on, sir.
Mind your own business. It looks like you've got it.
We've got things under control here.
And I think it was kind of exciting too.
She was mad because her horses were losing their mind.
Probably pretty frightening.
We did get a twofer in that whole thing.
Cause that big old pit turned into a fire pit.
All of our friends started calling him Dr. Boom Boom.
Shoo, shoo, shoo, shoo, shoo, shoo.
That's so funny. Well, that's great, Dania.
That's a great story.
Yeah, I'm glad everyone was away from the house.
Let me see if he's around,
if you would like to meet this mad scientist.
Yeah, yeah, let's see if he's awake.
Give me one second.
Dick, you gotta come right now.
Dick, get in here.
Here he is.
Yes.
Hello.
Hi.
You left out that he's very handsome too.
He is.
I want to thank you for blowing up your entire yard and sending a rock into your
roof, because it made for a great story for us.
When I told him we were going to do this, he said, I'll ask him if he
wants to go for round two. Do you have any holes that need to be dug?
Once I get to Nashville, yeah, I might call on your services.
Once a Pacromaniac, always a Pacromaniac.
Great meeting both of you. Tanya, thank you for telling us that story. That was great.
No problem. Glad to share it.
All right. Take care, you bye. Oh, fathers are funny.
We're all kind of the same.
You are all the same,
and you're always trying to play with your trinkets
and put trinkets up. Tools.
You call them tools, but really they're trinkets.
Sure, that whole story is appealing.
I would love to get the permit
and I'd love to have an excuse to use dynamite.
I've always wanted to.
Rob, have you wanted to be able to blast dynamite?
Absolutely.
I mean, I've shot firecrackers a lot.
Yeah.
M-80s and quarter sticks.
You're always looking for a quarter stick in Michigan.
What's a quarter stick?
Quarter stick of dynamite.
Hi.
Are you Chris?
Yes.
Short for Christine or Christina?
Yes.
Because we had another Chris today and I said,
well, double Chris is.
One of my best friend's name is Chris, short for Christina.
In Atlanta?
Uh-huh.
With a K, but you're with the C?
CH, yeah.
So where in Canada are you?
BC, outside of Vancouver.
Okay, so you have a DIY story that went bad.
Technically, my husband was supposed
to be telling the story.
He was the one who experienced it.
I will admit I was the catalyst.
We've been down the road already.
Sure.
I am just the designer and he is the planner, which after you hear the
story, that has now shifted.
I am now both.
which after you hear the story, that is now shifted. I am now both.
Okay.
We moved into our house in 2019
and we're in a town house row.
So we're like the first six
and then the entire complex is behind us.
I'm a cleaner.
I hate baseboards.
The old school ones with the grooves,
I don't wanna get in there.
I wanted a more modern block,
make it nice and simple for me.
So we removed all the old crappy baseboards.
It's a bit of an investment to obviously
put back into your home.
So we started off very small.
I'm like, let's just do the bathrooms
and then we'll eventually get to the rest of it.
So I tasked my husband with the downstairs bathroom
as I'm away at work.
And this bathroom shares a wall with our hot water tank.
Okay.
So my husband starts nailing the baseboard to the bottom.
Prior to this, he does turn off the water
that's by the toilet tanks.
He's making his way around.
And now he gets to the wall
that shared the closet, hot water tank.
Pierces the wall.
He's using a nail gun.
Yeah. Water starts to come out of the wall, like pressurized water.
He's immediately feet up.
It's quite a small space that he could at least put some pressure on it.
He's like, I turned off the water.
I don't get why this is happening.
He calls me while I'm at work and he's like,
you need to come home, something's gone wrong.
And I'm like, you dropped me off at work this morning.
We have one vehicle.
I'm sorry, you're on your own.
Also, we don't have time with water gushing everywhere
for anyone to come home from work.
We've got to turn off the main water here.
Exactly.
So thankfully, our neighbor, he has the key to our six row utility closet, goes to turn
off the water.
And he's like, why isn't the water stopping?
We get a plumber out and they come to turn off the main water to our six houses that we can't get to.
Is water still gushing out?
It stopped at this point.
My guess is it ran for a while after
because he punctured the hot water heater
which holds like a hundred gallons of water.
So it was gonna leak long after
the water supply was turned off.
It wasn't our water tank that he hit.
So the water's just off for the night.
It's 5 p.m. at this point.
Our six houses, nobody has water.
Oh, I'd be so pissed.
I would too, in my neighborhood.
I'm like, hey, you're not qualified to do this now.
None of us have water.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Husband comes to pick me up from work.
I'm like, we need to give them a jug of water
and a little like gift card.
We've literally just met these people.
Yeah, not a great look.
We've got somebody coming these people. Yeah. Not a great look.
We've got somebody coming in the next day.
Plumber comes, fixes it.
They go to turn the main water back on
and it's still pressurized.
He goes, we have to turn off the main water again.
And we're like, okay, great.
He goes to turn it off and he breaks the valve. Oh, wow. Okay.
So now we have to call the city to get them
and turn off the water to all 65 homes behind us.
No, oh my God.
Oh no.
Just keeps growing in the whole town,
doesn't it? Exactly.
Usually 24, 72 hours in advance gives you notice that they're turning off water. It was
immediate. Because Trav is trying to figure this out with the plumber who just broke the valve,
he didn't contact Strata for like three hours after this happened. So they're getting phone
calls, emails, what the heck's happening? Why is our water turned off? What we thought was going
to be, I think maybe 12 hours without water was close to like
20 hours without water.
So then the city comes out the next day, they fix it.
So we're like, whoo, great.
Everybody gets their water back on.
Then we get another plumber to come back in.
He actually tells us that the way our house
was originally built, they did not put that main water line
buried far enough down in the ground. So if he would have punctured our water line,
we would have been able to turn it off, fix it. He would have been able to put it on no problem.
But because it wasn't buried enough in the cement, he hit the whole-
The water main.
Exactly. And so we still do not have baseboard to this day.
We've been in this house for five years because I'm just traumatized.
I don't want to puncture anything.
How fucked up was the ground underneath?
Oh, we had to like jackhammer, pull it out, dry it out.
It was like two days of that plumber coming in and out of our house.
What a disaster just for some baseboards.
I mean, the theme of all these is like,
we're all trying to save a few bucks
and ends up costing way more than having someone else
come in and just do it.
I don't mean to pat myself on the back,
but I don't suffer from this.
Yeah, you really shine.
I am very fast to just ask someone
to please come take care of, in fact, everything.
Pfft.
Ha ha ha.
Bless my husband, I feel like he wants to be handy.
He's techy.
That's his domain.
I'm like, you stay there.
You gotta know your lane in this life.
A man's got to know his limitations.
A woman too.
Clint Eastwood.
Everyone.
Oh, he said that?
Yeah.
Yeah, know your lane.
More men need to really,
like they're taking bigger swings.
Yeah, I guess so. Let me just listen to some of the previous callers. Know your lane. More men need to really, like they're taking bigger swings.
Yeah, I guess so.
Let me just listen to some of the previous callers.
It's true.
I am just so, so excited to hear some of these other ones.
Oh, wow.
Well, Dynamite makes an appearance.
It does.
You should know that.
Someone decided they were qualified to use Dynamite because they were able to get a permit for it.
That is wild.
But yeah, that is our first experience in our home.
So sorry.
I feel like we were laughing about it in the moment because how do you not?
I just couldn't believe that it literally went from a tiny hole to like, now we
have to call the city.
Well, I think the silver lining is that this all took place in Canada.
Cause if you had 60 American neighbors without water, I think someone would have
come to your house to fight.
Well, Chris, lovely meeting you.
We love our Canadian neighbors so much
and our Canadian arm cherries.
I have to give a shout out to my bestie Cora,
who also listens and my sisters, they all love you.
Dax, I do have to give a special, my one sister,
she's just like, please tell him I love him.
What's her name?
Amanda.
Amanda, I love you back.
She will love that.
You guys are such a great example of what a friendship is.
You guys just hold space for each other,
even when you don't agree.
Thank you for demonstrating that.
Oh, thank you.
That's very kind.
Monica, your eye rolls.
Can't help it.
I also have been told that mine are pretty epic,
so I'm always just like, yeah, girl, like you get it.
Thank you so much.
It was great meeting you.
Thank you.
It was great meeting you guys.
All right.
Take care.
I'm going to do these things.
I didn't learn a lesson.
I just want you to know.
I will still be trying to do all my home improvement.
DIY.
That was a good one.
Yeah.
All right.
Love you.
Do you want to sing a tune or something? We know a theme song.
Oh, okay, great.
We don't have a theme song for this new show, so here I go, go, go.
We're gonna ask some random questions, and with the help of Armchairs we'll get some
suggestions.
On the flyer, rhyme-dish.
On the flyer, rhyme-dish.
Enjoy. Armchairing's book is some suggestion On the flyer, I'm dish
On the flyer, I'm dish
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Imagine this, you help your little brother
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Instead, he's trapped in a heavily guarded compound,
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all while armed guards stand by with shoot to kill orders.
Scam Factory, the explosive new true crime podcast
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Told through one family's harrowing account
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Scam Factory reveals a brutal truth.
The only way out is to scam their way out.
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