Chewing the Fat with Jeff Fisher - Ep 10 | Who Has The Best Passports? | Guest: Matt Kibbe
Episode Date: January 19, 2019Jeffy goes down the list of the best passport to own and where are people moving to. Also Matt Kibbe joins to discuss his new show on BlazeMedia Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/ad...choices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I just wanted to drop in on Saturday and say hello.
You know, I was looking at the 2018 National Movers Study.
And according to this, Americans are on the move.
This is results from the United Van Lines 42nd Annual National Movers Study.
It tracks customers state to state.
Their migration patterns over the past year.
Now this is a little bit different than some of the other studies that I've seen.
But this again is from the United Van Lines 42nd Annual National Movers study.
According to United Van Lines, the top 10 inbound states of 2018, a little surprising, actually.
Number 10, District of Columbia.
Number nine, South Dakota.
Number eight, North Carolina.
Number seven, Washington.
Number six, South Carolina.
Number five, Arizona.
Number four, Nevada.
Number three, Idaho.
These are all just strange to me.
Number two,
Oregon, and number one, Vermont.
What?
Nobody's moving to Oregon.
I'm sorry, but I doubt that people are moving to Vermont.
But I will say that perhaps these states are the states, when you move to these states,
whether it be Vermont, Oregon, Idaho, Nevada, you use United Van Lines.
Now, the moving out state, the top outbound states,
of 2018 according to United Van Lines.
Alright?
Is it gonna be the whole top 10?
I figured it out.
Before you move, I figured it out.
Do you remember that states were paying people to move in?
Remember that story?
Yes.
Number one.
Vermont.
They paid 100 people up to $10,000 to move to the state.
So people use that money to call United Van Lines
and move their stuff to the state.
Number 10.
The top outbound states of 2018, the states that weren't paying people to live there.
Michigan, Montana.
Those two states right there are beautiful states.
And if you could live in Michigan or Montana and not have to go out in the winter, it would be wonderful.
It's when you have to job and you have to go out and traverse into negative degree weather and snow.
That's when it really sucks.
And plus, if you know anything about Pat Gray, I mean, the mean streets of Helena, you're lucky to get out of that city alive.
And he was.
Number eight, Iowa.
These are the top outbound states.
Number seven, Massachusetts.
I believe that.
Number six, Ohio.
Of course, nobody wants to live in Ohio.
We're state of the union.
Number five, Kansas.
Number four, New York.
I buy that.
Number three, Connecticut.
Absolutely.
New York, Connecticut.
Taxes, baby.
Number two, Illinois and number one, New Jersey.
And what does New York, Connecticut, Illinois, and New Jersey all have in common?
Syntaxes.
Big time taxes.
Yes, absolutely.
New Jersey is getting hurt by that soda tax.
And good.
And they should.
And they should.
Now, if you were thinking about moving out of the country, there's also the top passports that you should have.
So if you're thinking about moving out of the country, you need the best passports.
And according to this, the most powerful passports to have.
All right.
Tide.
Stop it with this thing.
There's two tied at number five.
Spain, Luxembourg.
There's one, two, three, four tied at number five.
Number four, Sweden, Italy, Denmark, Finland.
There's three tied at, no, one, two tied at number three.
Germany, France.
Who's going to Germany?
Well, you just need their passports, though.
You just want their passport.
Oh, goty, got to, got it.
It's not going there, but you want their passport so you can travel.
Number two, it's two at two.
South Korea
Singapore
Oh, South Korea
Number one
Most powerful passport to have
In your possession
Coming in
And number one
There's no tie
It's just all by himself
All alone
Want to take a guess
On the air, Chris Cruz?
U.S.
Uh-uh, you're wrong
And you get the
You can take home
The home game
But you don't get
the money and we're done with you. Congratulations.
Let's flip up the board.
Number one, Japan.
I know.
What's the criteria for this?
Don't ask criteria. What are you talking about?
I'm just telling you these are the best passports to have.
I'm going to tell you the worst ones in a second.
All right.
What makes them the best ones to have?
All right.
The citizens can visit 189 destinations without getting a visa before travel.
Okay.
so you don't need a visa for travel with these passports.
All right.
The highest position that South Korea has reached out the passport index,
which is based on the Dattle from the International Air Transport Association.
And who doesn't believe in that?
All right.
So it's just a matter of where you can visit with that passport without able,
so you don't have to create a visa in those countries.
And Japan, you can do with 190 countries.
I said 189.
That's Singapore and South Korea.
That's with the two-toes.
Coming into number one, the two-toes.
Yeah, the two-toes are 189 destinations without getting a visa.
But the number one is Japan with 190 destinations.
Now, the least powerful passports, the passports you do not want in your possession.
Number five.
Eritrea.
That's Eritrea.
It's right there off to, you go.
Where is that?
You go there and you make a left.
Eritrea.
I'm sure the big listeners, we've got big downloads in Eritrea from chewing the fat,
so I don't want to say anything bad about it.
But I'm sorry, this is not me judging your passport.
E-R-I-T-R-E-A.
My gosh, you're like you never heard of the place before.
I mean, we do have listeners in Digibouti.
And I want to say thank you to all the people in Digibouti.
Now, I know that it's not Digibouti, that it's just Djibouti.
I know that, but I cannot stop saying digibouti because it's got the D in front of it.
And I know the D is silent.
Just I'm not making fun of you.
I just can't stop saying Djibouti when I think about it because that's what it is.
But I know it's Djibouti and I want to thank you for listening to the show in Djibouti.
Now, Aretia, where is Eritia?
Oh, there.
Oh, there.
That's where it is.
Oh, I thought you wanted to, the computer to say the name.
We could do that too, but I want to know where the hell it is.
Okay, hold on.
Because I'm pretty good at, this is how you actually say it.
I'm pretty good at geography.
What is it?
Eertrea.
Eretreya.
Yeah.
Eretreya.
Okay, so I bet you that.
I wonder if that.
I just want to know where it is on the globe.
Eertrea.
If it's by a digibouti, it might be by a digibouti.
East Africa.
That's where a digibouty is.
What, what, up on the.
It's up on.
Oh my gosh.
Jeffie.
It's north of digibouti.
Thank you.
You're right.
Thank you.
If you look at the map, we do have to make a left on Djibouti to go to Eritail.
Isn't that what I said without even knowing I know where it is?
Thank you.
You're our welcome.
Wow.
Number four, but I'm sorry, this is, you're on the bad list though.
When you don't want, you don't want your passport.
Well, you can tell because you're next to Sudan, Ethiopia, Yemen, and Saudi Arabia.
Good times.
You come out of that country and make a right or a left.
You're screwed.
That's what I'm saying.
You're screwed.
You go to the left Sudan.
You want to go down.
You want to go to Djibouti.
That's the only place you want to go if you're from Eritrea.
Where is it?
What is it?
Eretra.
That's what I said.
Number four.
Yevin.
Next door.
You make a right.
Number three.
Pakistan.
Oh.
You go up north?
Pakistan.
Go up and make a right.
It's right there.
Somalia.
I mean, right there.
Right there.
Syria.
Right there.
Next door.
Afghanistan.
Right there.
Iraq.
What is the same building?
These are all in the same building, these countries.
You don't want their passports.
Serious business on Digibouti, though.
Where's Digibouti at on the list?
It doesn't say.
Oh, it doesn't say.
I didn't go to the actual link to have every country listed
because I'm not the UN and I don't care.
I just wanted people to know the top and the bottom.
But I will say, serious business on Digibouti,
we do have people listening to us there.
And I do thank you very much, and I appreciate it.
And all of you.
I know we've got people all over the world.
And I think Texas is our biggest state.
Florida is in the top five.
Pennsylvania, California.
If you're listening, thank you very much.
And please subscribe and rate and review and share.
It's very easy.
Have a great weekend.
Listen, I've got we got the super moon.
Yeah, it's next weekend.
No, it's not tomorrow.
Oh, yeah.
Well, this is going to be released on Saturday.
Sunday.
I'm sorry, my time's all screwed up.
I'm all excited about Digibouti.
All 18 of y'all.
I just checked our records.
18 of y'all.
We don't need exact numbers.
Oh, I do.
Well, not for the air.
Why not?
Because we just were thanking everyone.
We don't need to know that one person in Digibouti listen to you.
Well, it is 18.
The perfect number.
No, it is the perfect number.
That's what I'm saying.
So, like, it was kind of cool.
All right, so I'll shut up.
So we have the Super Bowl.
tomorrow, into Monday, into the day after tomorrow.
So I'm kind of right.
I was half right.
Starting at 10.34 p.m.
All right, you're going to notice a little notch is taken out of the moon.
A little notch at 1034.
Then at 1141, the full eclipse will begin.
Do not call 911.
Ooh, ooh.
Yeah, this could be big time at the ER.
It could be a long wait.
And then the maximum eclipse will occur at 12.12 a.m.
No, his name is Maximus.
The Maximus Eclipse.
And we'll be back on Sunday.
He's going away for the weekend, so maybe, yeah, that's true.
Now, it looks like there's going to be some good viewing, though.
I mean, I know.
I know.
Is the camera going to be ready?
I don't know.
If the house cleaning will be done by Sunday night, then she can take some pictures.
We'll just leave it there.
Have a good weekend.
I should tell you, though, that Matt Kibby is coming up.
And, you know, he and I sat down.
We talked, I bet you for our 10 minutes prior to,
to even starting the actual interview.
And all of a sudden I look up and I'm like,
we got to record this.
We should have recorded the whole thing.
So you're going to hear a little bit of that,
a little pre-talk, because we talked about moving
and he's moved into a new house.
What's that?
We talked about moving.
We talked about stuff that you accumulate
and how you get rid of it
because he's building new studios at his house
and they were cleaning out stuff.
It was fascinating.
I wish all of it would have been recorded.
But we did sneak a little bit of it in just for you.
Matt Gimmie.
Terry and I bought rollerblades when we were in our 20s.
I don't think I ever went rollerblading once.
Yeah.
Lots of VCRs.
Yeah.
VHS tapes.
Oh man.
I'm so loaded full of that crap.
Yeah, yeah.
It's bad.
I talked about the last move.
When we moved from Florida to here,
we were living in Pennsylvania when we were working on in New York,
but I still had a house in Florida so that we moved everything to here.
and I should have burned it then.
Yeah.
And then when I moved to another house here,
I should have burned it then.
I should have just piled it all in the cul-de-sac.
Yeah.
But like 2% of it was precious.
Like it was...
I don't even think it's that.
Maybe.
Maybe 2% of it.
In my case, I found just a couple little things,
you know, from my grandfather and my dad
and early in our marriage.
I know.
I know.
Excuse me.
I know.
the, that's the problem, though.
Right, yeah, yeah.
That's the problem.
I told my wife, if we start cleaning, just throw it away.
I don't want to know.
Don't ask me.
Don't ask me, because I'm going to say, yeah, we're going to need to keep that.
Yeah, yeah.
Because a year from now, somebody will go, you know, don't we have one of those?
Yeah, no, we threw it away.
We'll have to buy another one.
Yeah.
I mean, that's where you're at.
Otherwise, you're there forever.
And you know, yeah, I've got one of those.
I don't know where it is.
Let's buy another one.
So you still have it.
Right.
That's ridiculous.
Yeah.
I know.
All right. So are we ready? Are we ready to go? Chris? All right. Did you record some of that? Good. That was good. I want to hear it back. I want to see if it's worthy. It was good. All right. Matt Kibby joining Chewing the fat today. I know he's wandering around the building and he thought he was going to get out of here without having to talk to me. Wrong. Welcome, Matt. How are you? Good to see you.
This is like the Liberty Death Star now. Yeah. Yeah. There's only one way in. It's only one way in and one way out. That's it, baby. I am fantastic. I think it's great to be back.
So not only are you doing free the people.org, that's your main focus.
That's my nonprofit.
And what are you, the free the people.org, what are you doing with that?
So we set out to do that sort of after I left Freedom Works because I wanted to turn young people onto the ideas of liberty.
Amazing thought.
And I don't feel conservatives or libertarians do a good job talking to young people sometimes.
They don't do a good job talking to anybody sometimes.
And, you know, what we set out to do was to tell cool stories and use the sort of mediums like video that young people, that's how they consume their information.
And instead of hiring a bunch of policy wonks, I hired artists and actors and people that knew how to tell stories.
And sort of as we've evolved three years later, we've essentially become a video production company.
We produced a lot of content, a lot of cool content about beer, which is a mess.
metaphor for everything that's awesome about freedom.
Yeah.
I mean, let's be clear.
Yeah.
Well, there's no beer in Venezuela, by the way.
And there must be some reason why that's true.
There is some reason for that.
Yeah.
So we just, we do a lot of that.
The demographics of the Free the People audience is sort of the opposite of what the Tea Party was.
It's very young.
50% of my eyeballs are under 25.
70% are under 45.
And I just feel like it's an underserved audience.
I call them the Liberty Curious.
but we should listen more
and we should try to use language
that means what they hear
not what we think it means
and we love to use all these
these conservative words
and libertarians are worse by the way
we use all these words
that nobody knows what they mean
but you know if you could just translate it into something
like say don't hurt people and don't take their stuff
everyone's like well yeah that's what I believe
yeah amazing so we're trying to do that
We're trying to very much get out of our bubble.
And, you know, my theory is, is that with technology, for all the flaws in social media,
with technology, you have an ability to reach a very large audience.
And fast.
Yeah.
And not people that pay attention to politics and not people that are self-ascribed members of the conservative tribe or the liberal tribe.
Everybody that's out there just trying to live their lives and raise their kids and pursue their dreams,
that audience is available to us today.
It probably wasn't 10 years ago because it was just too expensive to connect.
Yeah, really expensive.
But now it's not free, but it's a lot cheaper.
So you have that, and now you are, you know, you're the member of the Blaze TV, CRTV family.
Yeah, yeah.
What are you doing for us there?
So I had been with CRTV.
That's what I thought.
I heard you announced today on Glenn's radio show about the new show.
and I thought, wait, I didn't realize that was a new show.
I thought I'd been watching some of that.
Well, it's a totally revamped show.
It's a brand new season.
But I was, I mean, I did over the years, I did several different things with CRTV.
I think the Free the People team actually created the first video they ever published.
And hopefully we were a little bit influential in getting them to move to a more video-focused platform.
But the show, Kibby on Liberty was behind a podcast.
paywall. And I want to talk to young people and young people don't do paywalls. Very well. No, they do
not. They do not. I know. It's a little disappointing because we've structured the, we've structured
things where it should be okay to be behind the paywall. Yeah, it's not. Yeah. Well, it's particularly for my
audience, because they have so many choices for content. They, they, you know, they live in this,
this radically decentralized world where they, they curate everything. I know. And I say that, you know,
I say that that we should be okay with being behind the paywall.
And then I read a story and the newspaper wants me to pay for the article.
And I'm like, I'll find it somewhere else.
Yeah.
So I'm the same way.
So like if you look at the evolution of my content, not just at Free the People, but at CRTV, it was short and sweet because, you know, the mythology was a young people have short attention space.
Right.
Well, as it turns out, as it turns out, Facebook imposes a platform that gives us short attention spans.
and the counter-revolution in social media
and you're seeing it with guys like Jordan Peterson
and Dave Rubin and a bunch of other guys,
they're doing long-form conversational stuff
that's on YouTube.
And YouTube is a different format than Facebook.
Because particularly young people,
they go there and they seek out what they want
as opposed to it being sort of force-fed.
You're going to watch this right now.
It's 8 o'clock.
It's time to watch Bill.
So I think the counter-revolution is going to be a longer format, conversational.
We're going to have guests on my show that aren't a member of one of the pre-approved tribes.
I'm going to talk to progressives.
I'm going to talk to libertarians.
And we're going to try to actually hear each other as opposed to just the shout fest clickbait stuff that sometimes sort of dominates conservative media.
So when you, and by hearing each other, okay, and I love that.
And I'm all for that.
But at some point, there's got to be something at the end.
We're at the end game of, well, listen, we're both listening to each other,
but we're, I mean, we've got to come together and agree on some of these things and put them into practice, right?
Yeah.
I mean, yes.
And I happen to, you know, my super top secret, I'll only tell you and your millions of listeners.
Nice.
Thank you.
Is I think that the common ground is sort of small, L. Libertarian.
And that means that people should be free to.
to pursue their own lives and go to the church of their choosing
and raise their kids the way they want.
You are starting to talk crazy, man.
As long as you don't hurt people who take their stuff.
And I don't think that's radical.
And I think for all of the tribal warfare that goes on now,
freedom is the solution.
So, but in order to get there,
we need to come up with a common vocabulary.
And I've learned this, I've looked at a lot of data
about young people in their romance
with the word socialism.
Right.
And after a while, you realize that when they say the word socialism, they're not saying the same word we are.
No, they are not.
They hear something different, and you can listen to Ocasio-Cortez, and she kind of describes socialism, democratic socialism, as this beautiful, local people working together to solve problems from the bottom-up kind of philosophy.
And you and I know that, no, that's us.
That's like, that's what liberty does.
Yes.
Cooperation comes from freedom.
It doesn't come from compulsion.
So why don't we at least acknowledge that one of us is misusing that word and try to figure out,
okay, if the goal here is to focus on local control and families and neighbors and communities solving problems from the bottom up,
we could have a conversation about that.
Absolutely.
We could find some common ground there.
And really, I mean, it's supposed to start with one, right?
You know, when you start with yourself and then you spread out and you go to another one and then you go to another one.
And pretty soon you're at, you know, a bonus plethora of ones that are all working for the same goal.
And that's not really socialism.
I'm pretty sure you would call it freedom.
So, you know, it's a strange thing.
I don't know that there, we've got quite a ways to go to get there.
Oh, for sure.
Things may be getting worse, not better right now.
It looks that way.
It feels that way.
It does.
And I don't know if it's just, if it just feels that way or it is.
You know, I, some of it's the way that, you know, social media exaggerates certain voices,
the most hysterical voices.
And I think, I think we, we sort of internalize that too much.
But I also think we're in the middle of a paradigm shift.
And, and again, I think, I think Blaze TV is at the right place at the right time because the old world was very top.
down. You had three TV networks and you had, you know, you trusted your government because they said
they were going to do the right thing and you trusted corporations do the right thing. And it was
very top down. And we're all sort of cogs in that world. Well, technology blew up that model.
Big time. And we're now in the middle of trying to figure out what a truly democratized,
decentralized, decentralized world is where everybody has a voice and everybody has an opinion.
And we still have to make it work. Yeah. And we have to make it work. So we're, we're
going to work through this thing, but this gets back to why I think that that Liberty is the answer,
because the only way that all of us, with all of our differences and background and what we want
with our lives, the only way we're going to work together in a peaceful, cooperative way is if
we're free to pursue our personal things and agree to cooperate on these big things that really
matter as a nation, as a society. So how much, well, and I appreciate that, but we still have
a bunch of stuff to go on. So I was thinking I should, I should just flashcard you and play,
you know, chewing the fat flash card with Matt. But, you know, some of the headlines that,
you know, we have blasting us right now is, you know, the shutdown. Yeah. Where are we at with that
in the Mac Heavy World? Shut down. I wish we were fighting about how to get rid of $22 trillion in
debt. I mean, if we're going to shut down the government, I wish we were fighting about something
bigger. Wait, there's only $22 trillion? We are, we're fighting.
about how to spend more money, by the way.
And I would have loved to see, you know,
by the way, the dirty secret here,
I don't think it's the biggest secret,
but Mitch McConnell absolutely could have fully funded the wall
and cut some other spending.
Through the regular budget process,
you only need 50 votes to do that.
There's no reason that we're here,
but right now, I think the Democrats are learning
that the president, the executive branch,
has a lot of power in how a shutdown actually happens.
And the way that Barack Obama would put,
would put chains around the veterans memorials and all that.
Trump's not doing that.
And he's telling some of these guys.
TSA, if you want a job, you've got to come back to work.
So it'd be interesting to see it's a very important symbolic fight for both parties.
Sure is.
Republicans love the fact that Trump's actually doing what he promised to do.
But, you know, I think Nancy Pelosi's charge,
if there was one in the midterm election
was stop Trump by any means necessary.
Well, they certainly believe in that.
So how does this play out?
I think it's going to go on for a while.
I would not be surprised.
I hope it does.
I don't know how to say that.
I mean, I want President Trump to stick to his guns,
you know, and say, no, this is our deal.
You know, and we can sit out
and if you don't have that on your table
of paying for the wall, then we're done.
There's no point in us being here.
I kind of like that.
It makes me feel good.
Well, the way you know who's going to win is it's not about Pelosi or Trump.
I think they're pretty dug in.
It's their rank and file.
And when they start losing their troops, you know who's going to give it.
And are we seeing any of that?
I mean, I haven't seen too much of that.
I haven't seen much.
I see more from the Democrats.
They're getting a little more anxious.
Yeah, well, they realize that if the longer the government stays closed,
the closer we are to realizing we don't really need them as much as we thought.
And we're going to discover some really stupid things that the government does,
like approve new beer labels.
Right.
Like, why?
Right.
Why?
Like, and, you know, I'd love to.
I can tell it's a personal.
Oh, okay.
If the shutdown affects my beer supply, look out.
And has it, or are you still okay?
I'm still okay, but I'm a hoarder.
I have.
I have many gallons of beer stored up for kids and are you brewing your own yet or are you just living off of yours?
As I like to say, I'm a better beer drinker than brewer. Yeah, that's, I'm with you on that.
So in the future we have, in the future talks with Matt Kibby and Liberty with Kitty, Liberty with Liberty.
Kibby on Liberty.
Kibby on Liberty is the Blaze TV, CR TV show.
And I think that's how you say my name. I'm not sure.
Yeah, something like that.
And so that we have AI to look forward to, something that is going to start affecting everyone, right?
I mean, are we going to talk about that at all?
Are we just going to kind of pretend that doesn't exist and hope it goes away?
We're going to talk about it and we're going to talk about, we're going to hold some mega corporations like Amazon to task for colluding with the government on personal information.
But, you know, technology is a double-edged sword.
They've all done that.
Oh, they've all done it.
They've all done that.
They've all done it.
They've all in bed with it.
Yeah.
That's embarrassing.
They've all done it.
And I think we as citizens need to at least be aware of what's actually going on.
And realize that technology is also the great liberator, but it's also an incredibly powerful tool for governments with bad intentions to do bad things.
And you're seeing that play out in China right now.
Yeah, no kidding.
And we're going to see, we'll see what happens.
You know, if you go around the world,
bit. We'll see what happens in the United Kingdom, you know, as they struggle with their exit from
the EU, if that ever happens. But I mean, they're struggling with that now. And I talked to a person on
the ground not long ago who said that if they end up, you know, making us vote again, there'll be,
the streets are not going to be happy. Yeah. It's going to get ugly. Yeah, it's funny. Like the machine,
I call it the machine, but it's like the permanent government.
They love democracy until it doesn't work their way.
And then they're like, whoa, this is, get it right.
This is concerning.
You guys really aren't smart enough to have the right to vote after all.
But this is part of what else, like everybody's sort of pissed off and anxious
because they're realizing for the first time maybe that all of these mythologies
about good government and you can trust our government to do the right thing.
It's never been true.
But now you see, you see it play out in practice.
and, you know, Brexit was one of those quintessential things
where people are like, I just don't trust you guys anymore.
Right.
And now it's even worse.
And it's come to fruition.
Right.
Now it's even worse.
Even after they said we'll leave, they tried to force a deal that only said they would
leave and they really weren't leaving.
I mean, it was ridiculous.
So, Matt, when are we looking forward to the show on Blaze TV,
the new edition, the brand new season of Kimmy on Liberty?
Probably in a couple weeks.
We have to get the studio done.
I did a prototype which my cat sort of photo bombed and broke everything in the studio.
If you like cats, you're going to love my show because my cats are anarcho libertarians
and they will destroy everything in their site.
You know, when we first sat down, we talked about you setting up your studio at the house
and going through the stuff that is so important.
Yeah.
So important.
Now I can't get it out of my head.
I have to get the stuff out of my garage now.
Yeah, yeah.
I have to.
I have to find a way.
Maybe I just need cats.
You know, I don't know why we waited so long,
but, you know, I found,
my wife found some embarrassing zebra striped guest jeans.
Nice.
That she used to wear when she was 22.
They still fit.
Nice.
Even better.
Good Lord.
She's quite proud of that.
Yes.
I found like old concert t-shirts and that kind of stuff.
But mostly I just found junk that we immediately threw away.
Right.
I mean, that's what is it?
I'm probably guessing maybe 5% is worthy.
Maybe.
Maybe.
Maybe.
I mean, and that's got to be, look, if everyone starts at their own house, just cleaning their own house, that is liberating in itself.
Yeah.
How many, how many cassette tape players do you really need?
Oh, my gosh.
I mean, I still have cassette tapes.
You never play them.
Yeah.
Never.
I mean, I barely, think about this now, really.
I have, a lot of times we'll buy a DVD now, say at Walmart,
but as soon as it scans, speaking of technology, as soon as it scans,
it's automatically uploaded to my system.
So I never even open the DVD.
Right.
I just buy it so that I have the movie.
Yeah, yeah.
And, I mean, I have stacks of DVDs on open.
As we Uber-ize everything, just people aren't going to own content anymore.
they're going to rent it.
The one thing I saved that I'm so glad I did,
I would be desperate if I hadn't is I had a huge vinyl record collection.
Oh, I have some too.
And that happily did not.
My wife tried her best to get rid of it, but she never did.
And now vinyl's cool again.
I know.
So I can be cool even by accident.
I was going to say this on the air now.
My wife thought that she talked me into getting rid of them,
but they're in this building in all the stuff.
You're only admitting this with miles of different.
Yes, I'm not saying it out loud, and hopefully she'll never listen to this.
But it's still in this building, I still have the 10 cases of vinyl bond.
I can't get rid of them.
Yeah, you've got to save that.
And now it's like it's valuable and cool.
And some of those first edition records are probably worse than money.
Right.
I hope so.
I don't know that I'll ever sell them, but there were something.
Particularly my captain and Tenil records.
Right.
Oh, my gosh.
Rest in peace.
Yeah.
I mean, to the captain.
The captain is gone by my final was on.
Matt Kimmy, thank you very much for stopping by.
I appreciate it.
You're able to leave the building now.
I appreciate it.
Thanks.
Thank you, Matt.
Thanks, Matt.
It was good to see Matt and talk to him.
He's a fascinating guy.
All week.
This was in Fat Pile for yesterday's show, Fat Pile Friday.
I didn't even get to it on Fat Pile Friday.
And I've been wanting to all week.
I wanted to do this retrospective.
And we're going to have to come up with chewing the fat.
is just going to have to create its own retrospective music and bit and because I love doing them
and I know it was a Glenn Beck thing tough taking it from you Glenn whether you like it or not
but uh this one is special so it's just as a retrospective we're going to start I go we have to
start doing them again this is retrospective an American actress singer dancer and comedian
Known for carrying dried chicken in her purse.
Passed away Tuesday, January 15th, 2019.
Carol Elaine Channing, dead at 97 years of age.
This has been retrospective.
