Hey Riddle Riddle - Patreon Preview #271: Name That Tune 90s Edition
Episode Date: May 17, 2024Listen to the rest with a 7 day free trial at our Patreon!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info. ...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
We've all been there.
Rummaging through pipes, dodging man-eating Venus fly traps, grabbing coins,
fighting hammer-slinging turtles and stumbling upon polka-dotted mushrooms,
eating them, turning into giants, and going on full-blown rampages.
Relatable.
Huh? Wait, wait, what? Huh? Huh?
You know, Super Mario! He eats the mushroom, he gets big and strong.
He eats the mushroom, he gets big and strong. Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes.
Schedule 35 is kind of like the Super Mario mushroom,
but for your mind.
Okay.
Schedule 35 will send you precisely measured micro doses
of psilocybin that you can take daily to enhance your day
without seeing, well, man-eating venous fly traps.
Oh, okay.
There is an emerging movement around psilocybin,
and it's proven to help with mental health, PTSD,
anxiety, and depression. And studies have shown that psilocybin works by creating new
neural networks in the brain, which help boost focus, creativity, mood enhancement,
and help fight addiction. I've had friends with PTSD who have used psilocybin and said it
completely changed their life. Pretty cool. And Schedule 35 ships all across Canada and the US,
and is the most notable brand currently operating in the space.
All products come with guides that make micro dosing easy to understand.
All customers will need to be age verified.
19 plus in Canada and 21 plus in the US.
They will receive an invite code.
Oh, so I probably have to prove my age.
Let me get out my...
Adel, you're 60.
...driver's license.
Okay, fair enough.
For all of our products and to get an invite code, visit www.schedule35.co.
Our goal is to de-stigmatize and re-educate on the science and real-world benefits of
psilocybin, as well as making it accessible for everyone.
Cause mentally, sometimes I'm like, you know, the princess is in another castle.
And I can't deal with that. I need something.
Amen, Mario. Erin, how do you say it?
Is it Mario or Mario?
Marry me.
Oh, Erin, no.
Something's on the right.
So get 15% off with code RIDDLE at schedule35.co.
That's 15% off at schedule35.co and use code RIDDLE.
And when you use schedule35, you're a gonna win, right?
Yeah, that's right for that thing.
You're gonna win.
Yeah.
OK, so when I was looking for 90s,
sometimes I was finding things that technically came out
in like 89, but they charted on 90s.
I had banded that pretty quickly because I was like, no, no, no.
I want the real 90s. But this first one is something that came out in like 89 but they charted on 90s. I banded that pretty quickly because I was like, no, no, no, I want the real 90s.
But this first one is something that came out in 89.
So if you don't know how this game is work,
it's kind of like named that tune except I'm not
going to give you a tune, I'm just going to give you lyrics
and you have to tell me what the name of the song is
and who the singer or band who sings that song is.
I'm all about honesty here. I am not gonna know any of these things,
so I'm mentally checking out.
No errands.
No errands.
She's taking a punch car out of her brain somehow.
She's putting it in the old timey factory
punch out machine.
I know you lie about your age a lot on the podcast, but.
No I don't.
What?
I bet you're age a lot on the podcast, but are you told? No, I don't.
What?
I am 26, sir.
Ooh, and Erin's team has swooped in
to do her hair and makeup very quickly here.
It seems like there's a scramble to cover this up.
They're trying to make me look less ghostly.
Ghostly, it's a timeless look.
The ghost is a timeless look.
It's true.
But Erin, you were born in the 90s.
Are you saying that you're not going to be equipped
to know these songs because you don't know any 90s songs?
I would say the two decades I know music from the least
is 80s and 90s.
60s and 70s I could do okay.
2000s on I could maybe participate in this.
Interesting.
Complete two decades of blind spots for me music-wise.
What was going on with you in the 90s?
I mean- I was a child.
Well, sure, but children could listen to music.
I was listening to, if it wasn't on a Now CD
and it wasn't something my parents liked or a musical,
I had no interest in it.
I was like, let's play the Annie soundtrack one more time
from the top, please.
Oh, boy.
What about older siblings?
Did you get some of the boy. What about older siblings?
Did you get some of the runoff from the older siblings?
I started getting runoff from them in the early 2000s.
So I started getting like Death Cab for Cutie,
Postal Service stuff.
That's when it felt like they were imprinting on me.
But in the 90s, I didn't.
I'm like Alanis Morissette, end of list.
Weezer, I guess.
I'm not going to know any of these. OK. Hey, maybe Alanis Morissette, end of list. Weezer, I guess. I'm not gonna know any of these.
Okay, hey, maybe Alanis Morissette and Weezer are features.
Addle, I gotta ask, so in the 1990s,
you were what, 39 years old?
You were living in- I was 39 years old.
I just had my third kid.
I was a mercenary in Guatemala.
Addle, you're very patient with these old jokes,
considering you're like four years older than
JPCA.
It's five.
It's five years older and maybe even more.
We can't know.
We'd have to cut me in half and count the rings.
But what's your relationship with 90s music?
This is when I was listening to a lot of top 40 radio.
So in the car with my mom, at home with my sister,
radio's always on and it's always to like 98.9,
I think is the station.
So a lot of top 40.
So I'm gonna know, hopefully I'll remember a lot of the hits
and I've gone back since I've become older
and listened to more of the indie scene stuff
that I missed when I was 12, know, 12, 13 or whatever.
So hopefully I have a well-rounded base there.
I would say for me, I was born in 88.
So when you get to about 96,
I was familiar with like the radio stuff.
So like the Backstreet Boys, you know, Spice Girls time
when that is hitting in like the late 90s, mid to late 90s.
I was like on board at that point. But when you start getting into stuff from like 92, 93,
that was stuff that I went back to and listened to like much later on. It was like the Pearl Jam,
Nirvana, Soundgarden, the grunge wave. The grunge wave, no, didn't touch me at all because
apparently as Aaron likes to say, I was a little child. And like, when you're four years old, you're not like more Nirvana, please.
Maybe you were.
I wasn't.
I was listening to like a lot of like Raffi in the car, like Raffi tapes and
like, um, peanut butter sandwich made with jam, one for me and one for David.
And then peanut butter sandwich made with jam.
That's my favorite Raffi song.
Yum.
Yum.
Yum.
It's crazy that we have Raffi when we were growing up
and I thought like, oh man,
the peanut butter sandwich song,
that's wild, that's what kids were listening to.
But now kids have YouTube and they're listening
to like discount Captain America saying
like a Mumblecore song about Minecraft.
And I'm like, this is awful.
Like what is going on here?
At least Raffi was a communist, you know?
I got a shield, I got a shield.
I'm gonna put it on another red skull.
And I'm gonna put a red skull on another shield.
I'm gonna come to the American fair.
I have a friend.
Dig in Minecraft, dig in Minecraft.
I have a friend who has kids
and one of them is six and one of them is eight
and he sent me a YouTube video
that they're obsessed with playing
and I was like, oh God, like the computer needs to be, children should not be having access to the computer.
What part of YouTube will your child have access to JPC? What are you going to let them?
My child is going to be raised in a world, I'll tell them that it's like post the big
accident where all technology has been erased.
Daddy has to go down into his secret bunker
to send out coded messages to the resistance,
but the TV that we have upstairs, that don't work.
I don't know, it's dead technology.
We need to up our contact with JPCs by about 40%.
It's up to us to make them normal.
I don't use the term swoop in lightly,
but we'll have to swoop in. Yeah, we gotta swoop, term swoop in lightly, but we will have to swoop in.
See, words matter, swoop in.
We need to swoop in.
We gotta swoop.
It is terrifying knowing what social media
has done to adult brains that I know.
It's just like, even my brain, it's completely,
I had to get off of all social media
because it was completely destroying my ability
to function in the world.
And then to give that to like,
and Adil's trying to swipe up on me.
He's just trying to get rid of the next.
Swipe left.
Swipe left.
Oh, I don't want to match with you.
Aaron's trying to date me.
No, I swipe right is match, right?
Well, you know.
I know I wouldn't.
Swipe left.
I get this guy off my page.
GBC, I know we got to get to the game or whatever,
but I want to have a specific, I want to be
a very specific grown up in your kid's life.
And when your kid turns like six, I'm gonna start taking them to see theater once a year.
I'll take them out to dinner.
We can dress up, we'll make a whole thing of it.
They can pick wherever they want to eat and then I'll go take them to see a show.
And that's what we'll make a whole thing of it. They can pick wherever they wanna eat, and then I'll go take them to see a show.
And that's what we'll do once a year. I do think that that is very fun,
and I absolutely endorse that,
because I think that kids should be exposed
to stuff like that, and not just living on their phones.
I recently went to Disney, when I went to Disney,
I was seeing a lot of young children, and a lot of them.
More than I was comfortable with,
and I'm probably just because I've been totally absent
from this part of the discussion, but more than I was comfortable with were interacting
with smartphones at a very young age.
I was like, gosh, this seems bad.
Yeah.
Okay.
All that aside, we're going back to the 90s, a time before smartphones, might I add,
maybe a simpler time, a more pure time.
We had car phones.
Yeah, there were car phones.
And when you saw those in a movie, you were like, whoa.
I thought that was the height of wealth.
This guy must be a billionaire.
When you watch Die Hard, he's got a phone in the limo,
you're like, okay, Mr. Millionaire.
Okay, here we go.
Die Hard was 88.
This is 89.
I can hardly believe it.
When I heard the news today,
I had to come and get it straight from you.
They said you were leaving.
Someone swept your heart away.
Time.
Is this Sinead O'Connor, Nothing Compares to You?
It is.
Couldn't be further from Sinead O'Connor, Nothing Compares to You, but that is such
an interesting guess.
Guess what the toad went to the doctor.
No, okay.
Yeah.
Now you're singing different lyrics that I haven't mentioned.
So maybe you don't know this one.
This one was the first of the songs that charted on the Hot 100 in the 90s.
Okay.
So tell me about it.
Tell me about the plans you're making.
Oh, then tell me one more thing before I go.
Tell me, how am I supposed to live without you?
Now that I've been loving you so long, how am I supposed to live without you? Now that I've been loving you so long,
how am I supposed to live without you?
I want to know.
No, that's a different, that's.
I don't know why ever, ever.
No, that's a different song, that's a different song.
Did we get a point?
Uh, do we get a point because we quote unquote harmonized?
You do get a point because you harmonized
to a different song.
I would say a better song,
but I don't know when that song came out.
And that was a song that was recorded
by like three different artists.
Let's get the hell out of here and go get some lunch.
What are we doing?
Let's get some lunch.
Let's write a song.
I'd love to catch up with you, man.
I miss you. I'd love to pick your brain.
I'd love to pick your brain.
Pick your brain.
I'd love to pick your brain.
I'm gonna start saying that to close, beloved friends. I'd love to pick your brain. I'm gonna start saying that to close, beloved friends.
I'd love to pick your brain.
Also, not about a specific topic, just in general,
I'd love to pick your brain.
Like, let's grab some coffee, I'd love to pick your brain.
And be like, we hang out all the time.
And then just go to a coffee shop and be like,
so what's Erin?
What is Erin?
If a friend of mine was starting a podcast,
and he'd be like, hey, I'm starting a podcast.
I'd love to pick your brain.
I'd be like, oh, yeah, of course.
But if someone just reached out and be like, hey, man,
what are you doing on Wednesday?
I'd love to pick your brain.
I'd be like, you can pick somebody else's fucking brain,
you psycho bad like.
Lose this number.
Lose this number immediately.
1, 2, 3, 4, hate Riddle Riddle's Clue Crew.
Listen to the rest of the episode now by starting your free 7 day trial at patreon.com slash
hey riddle riddle.