Wonderful! - Wonderful! 346: Holographic Goku Poster
Episode Date: October 16, 2024Griffin's favorite disc-flicking game! Rachel's favorite sports-adjacent memorabilia!Music: “Money Won’t Pay” by bo en and Augustus – https://open.spotify.com/album/7n6zRzTrGPIHt0kRvmWoya Nat...ive Women Lead: https://www.nativewomenlead.org/
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["Wonderful"]
Hi, this is Rachel McElroy.
Hi, this is Griffin McElroy.
And this is Wonderful.
Welcome to Wonderful. It's a show where we talk about things we like that's good that we're into going on strong for six or seven years,
maybe.
Something like that.
I've lost touch completely with the duration
of our art in general.
I'm always surprised to learn how long I've been making
all the podcasts
that we make, all the art, sorry.
All the art that we make.
All the art, art doesn't have to just be painting
or David or church ceiling.
It can be lots of stuff.
A lot of people don't know that.
Not video games.
That's not art, obviously.
It can be a recap podcast about a reality dating show.
That was, I would say, low art.
Low.
What we do here is a bit higher, I think.
Okay, all right.
When art historians talk about us in the future,
where all the technology's like crazy.
When you go to a podcast museum,
God, I'm laughing, but that's definitely gonna be a thing.
Yeah, but each room is for a different podcast.
So when you walk into the McElroy exhibit,
it's just like they play little clips.
They play little clips of some of the docents'
favorite jokes that make them bust up.
But the docents are robots,
because this is like far future.
You have to like walk through your open mouth
to get in the room.
I don't actually wanna do that
because I hope that that part of my brand,
I have gone to great lengths to squash
and I pray that in this far-flung future
that I'm describing, it doesn't stick around.
I don't want that in my O-bit, if that makes sense.
Yeah, I get it.
I don't want it either.
No, no.
Do you have any small wonders to talk about today?
I can go first.
Yeah, please do.
I'm gonna give it up to our HVAC guy.
I'm not gonna say the name of the company
because I don't want DC people to overbook his schedule,
but there is nothing better than having a contractor
who you work with a lot and have reached a point
where you can talk to fairly comfortably,
who is like a super reliable and just great.
This dude has helped us fix our fully non-functional
heating and cooling elements a few times at this point.
And it's nice to know if some shit goes down, fully non-functional heating and cooling elements a few times at this point.
And it's nice to know if some shit goes down,
we have a guy.
We never really had, I remember when our house flooded
in Austin, it was like, well, we don't have a guy really
for this, for our house falling apart.
We literally like, we're just, it was the equivalent
of going through the phone book.
Yeah, and we ended up going with a place
that like water remediation or whatever,
and they were, that they charged us a lot of money
because I think that the getting was probably good.
Yeah, probably.
But man, we just got an HVAC guy,
and it used to be very stressful
when like your cold house got colder
or your hot house got hotter,
but now we got this guy.
I like that.
And we're assuming that he is on call for us 24 hours a day.
I know his name.
I don't wanna make it sound like I don't know his name.
I do know his name.
I genuinely don't wanna drop any clues.
You don't even wanna give his name?
It starts with an A.
That is enough.
I've given you all the clues, police.
That's how cutthroat DC is.
It really is.
You gotta get on the daycare lotteries
and you don't ever give out your contractors for first names.
Was that enough time for you?
Yeah, I'm gonna say this phenomenon
that I don't know if this is a thing everywhere,
but it has been a thing at the schools
that we send our children to, which is the parent social.
Yes.
We couldn't stay at one very long last night
because we didn't have extended babysitting hours,
but I think it's kind of a cool idea.
And I've noticed that even though our sons
are at two different schools, both schools did it.
Yeah.
Like, hey, let's get you parents together
and you can talk to each other about your kids.
It's so funny, because I feel like both times
we've gone to one of these, it's been great,
and we've carried on comfortable conversations
with all of these other parents.
And then during one of them, Gus got really sick
and we had to leave after like 10 minutes.
And then the one we went to last night,
we had to leave after like 30 minutes.
Maybe that's the secret.
Yeah, right?
How can they miss you if you're not gone?
Or wait, they probably don't miss you
if they don't know you,
because you left the thing after a few minutes,
but it is what it is, man.
It's a cool idea.
I go first this week.
I'm gonna talk about something that I think I mentioned
to you for the first time last night,
which is a game called Croconol.
Croconol.
I was very lucky to go on a little retreat
with some old pals, I think last month, up in Wisconsin,
and it was really an amazing time getting to catch up
with everyone and-
How do you spell that?
Croconal, C-R-O-K-I-N-O-L-E.
I actually pulled up a picture of the board
if you wanted to see what the game looks like.
Oh, that's what I was doing.
Oh, okay.
It's like two feet in diameter,
so if you can imagine that.
Wow.
One of the highlights of this trip
is somebody brought their Croconol board,
and I knew about Croconol,
just because I operate in a really nerdy space.
I guess so.
I was like, how did you know about this?
And I had always kind of wanted to check it out.
I always wanted to play it,
because Croconol combines a lot of elements
from games that I really, really enjoy.
So it's played usually on a circular board
that is 26 inches in diameter,
upon which you flick these tiny little,
like one inch, one and a half inch wide wooden disks.
And you just flick them with your finger
and you're trying to get it as close
to the center of the board as possible.
The board is like three concentric circles
of like scoring zones and the closer you get to the middle,
the more points you get.
I think it's like five on the outmost layer
and then 10 in the middle.
And then at the very center of the board,
it's like 15 points.
And then right in the center of the board,
there's a little bullseye and it's a tiny little divot
that the disc just perfectly fits in.
And so if you get one in there, it's usually a lot of points that the disc just perfectly fits in.
And so if you get one in there,
it's usually a lot of points.
And then you score it like curling, right?
The more you get closer to the center,
the more points you get.
You cancel out yours and the opponent's points, right?
If you both have one in the 15 spot,
you just swipe those off the board
because they cancel out and then you score it.
And there's also around the middle most sort of layer
where you're shooting to try to get it in the divot.
There's eight pegs sort of arranged in a circle around that
that is sort of like preventing you from just getting
clean shots into the center every single time.
It really is like if curling and sort of shuffleboard
had a little table top size baby.
So you just like go around the circle
and everybody takes a turn?
So you can play it with two people or two teams of two,
which is what we did most of the time.
And you're seated like at opposite ends of the table
from your partner.
And yeah, everybody takes turns flicking their discs in
until you run out of discs and then you score.
Did other people know what this was?
Yeah, so there were a couple of guys who like,
maybe it's a Midwest thing.
I don't know, the regionalism of this game
is kind of mysterious to me.
I mean, not my Midwest.
Yeah, sure.
It was really fun.
It's like the perfect kind of chilling out game
with like a big group of folks.
Because it is like, it does require aim
and sort of manual dexterity.
There's definitely a learning curve
because it does not take much like juice
to get that disc to go.
And so your first few times like flicking it,
you send it fucking flying across the room.
It takes like finesse, but it's not a thing
that sort of like absorbs your whole brain
while you play it.
It's very easy to play.
Like you can have a drink in one hand
and flick the discs with the other hand
and like carry on a conversation while you play.
So it's sort of like, I don't know.
It's, I-
This is like the same thing you said about Kube.
Is that what it's called?
What was it called?
Yeah, Kube is the, but Kube is like,
it requires 50 feet of space.
I know, but you like a game
where you can hold the drink in one hand.
I mean, that is the quintessential outdoor
hangout game thing, but I don't know that there's a ton of,
you can't really do that while you're playing chess, right?
Because that requires, or Scrabble. I remember you and I used to play Sc playing chess, right? Cause that's, it requires like, or Scrabble.
I remember you and I used to play Scrabble a lot
and we kind of stopped because when we played Scrabble,
we didn't like talk that much or anything.
Cause one person inevitably would be like fucking,
like working out the algorithm in their mind.
Oh shit, hit my printer tray, but it's okay.
I didn't break it or anything.
So like all the, there's similar sort of disc flicking games,
but like all of these like move a thing
close to the middle of the thing,
there's a lot of strategy that goes behind every shot, right?
You have to constantly be evaluating
what the board looks like,
and then make decisions of like,
do you shoot straight for the center hole,
or do you try to knock out opponent's discs
from the like center circle?
If your opponent gets it in the little divot,
it's actually possible to flick your disc into theirs
in the divot hard enough that theirs pops out
and goes flying, which feels,
but you have to flick it really hard
so then there's a risk reward thing of,
if you miss, that disc is fucking gone.
It's not going anywhere.
How does the game end?
I just assumed it ended when somebody got
in the little middle section.
No, so every round after you cancel out
the matching scores, you score whoever has
all the discs left on the board,
and then you play to like 200 or something like that.
Okay.
So you could also park one of your discs
right between two pegs where your opponent is shooting
to kind of create a wall so they can't get clean shots
at the center.
There's actually a lot of ways that you can,
a lot of things you can do with this.
Do you think Henry would like this?
It seems like kid friendly.
I think so.
It is also a frustrating game, right?
Because it does involve a lot of finesse.
And once you shoot for the center a lot of times
and just keep bouncing off those pegs,
it does get less fun to play.
And you'd have to destroy him.
And I couldn't not, right?
That's not true, I'm not that dad.
I think I do a pretty good job of pulling my punches.
Just watch me play Smash Bros with that guy.
No way, man.
That's not me bringing my A game.
So there's a lot of these like disc flicking games out there.
Croconole is not the first of them.
It is generally agreed that the game that sort of spun this
and all the other games like it off is called Karam,
which is a game from India, and it's somewhat similar.
It's played on a square board, and it's more like billiards,
because all these little pieces are on the board
when the game starts, and you have to flick your discs
into other discs to knock them into these pockets
in the corners to eliminate them. And then there's one red disc that you have to flick your disks into other disks to knock them into these pockets in the corners to eliminate them.
And then there's one red disk
that you have to try and get last.
So it's basically like a game of nine ball or whatever,
except it's played with these flicking disks.
It is a big game with a lot of history
throughout Southeast Asia.
And historians generally agree,
this is the forefather of all these games that sort of spun off.
So then it's thought that immigrants from Southeast Asia brought the game to North America
in you know, like the mid 19th century.
And people just went wild for it and started to, the Koram started to inspire the creation
of other disc flicking games like Croconol.
There's one called Pitchnut,
which comes from French Canada.
French Canadians went wild for this whole genre of games.
In fact, the whole sort of genre of games
is called Pichnut, which is a French Canadian term
that means basically to flick.
And now that is sort of like the catch-all term
for these sorts of games.
The first known crocanole board was made by a guy
named Eckhart Wetloffer, who was a German immigrant
living in Ontario, and it's believed that he made this board
as a gift for his son's fifth birthday,
which must have been pretty lit to be like,
here's your birthday present, it's a new game.
That's gonna be pretty huge up here in French Canada.
Some people sort of mistakenly believe
that the origin of Croconol is that it comes
from Amish and Mennonite communities
because they're actually really, really big
into the game also, but that is not true.
It's just they really like the game
because typically in those sorts of communities,
games of chance are really frowned upon.
So like dice-based games, card games,
they are not huge fans,
but like just flicking little discs on a big round board
is okay in the Lord's eyes.
Electricity and you know.
Yeah, I mean, it's a chill acoustic board game to play.
I would say the player base of Croconol is quite small,
but like those enthusiasts are really diehard about it.
There is a World Croconol Championships
that have been hosted since 1999 in Tavistock, Ontario,
which is the home of Eckhart Wetlaufer,
the creator of the game.
And last year's event attracted 575 participants,
which is a record number of attendees
for the World Croconole Championships.
And the name of it, for the last thing,
is kind of fun because it comes from the French word
croconole, only spelled like way different,
C-R-O-Q-U-I-G-N-O-L-E,
which historically that word has had a few meanings. way different, C-R-O-Q-U-I-G-N-O-L-E,
which historically that word has had a few meanings.
One of them refers to a hairstyling method
involving wrapping curls towards your scalp
into this circular kind of shape.
It has referred to baked goods, like a donut,
or a biscuit, or a cookie cookie or a bun of some sort.
There is a sandwich that you learn about in French class
when you're in high school called the croque monsieur.
Yeah, that is like, it's like a grilled cheese
in hand sandwich. It's fucking great.
It's really, really, really, don't you think they put
like powdered sugar and like a little jelly dip?
Fuck man.
If I ate one of those, it would kill me.
I would die. I think I ate one in those, it would kill me. I would die.
I think I ate one in my life.
It wouldn't kill you.
We were traveling for that wedding
and we got breakfast with some folks
and I got one of those,
I thought it sounded good
and I was like, that was amazing.
But one other interpretation of the word
that is sort of defunct now
is to strike with a blow or gesture
made by the sudden forcible release
of a finger curled up against the thumb.
This is maybe the best name for a thing ever,
because it's like all that stuff kind of,
all these different definitions of this word kind of apply,
which I found very interesting.
Anyway, that's Croconol.
I don't have a board, I would like to get one,
because I think it would be a fun game
to just kind of play around with.
We should probably wait until our sons are older.
I feel like right now we have like a whole,
almost literal room of games that we don't play.
That's true.
Because we don't have time to play games.
Little Son makes us get those out sometimes
to like play with all the little parts.
Yeah.
And his attention span for one of those
is about five minutes.
I started buying games specifically because of the pieces.
Oh sure, dude.
Because I think like he will like this piece, I'll buy it.
I keep thinking Hero Quest is gonna click
because it's got a bunch of little skeletons
and heroes and monsters and shit.
No way, I don't get it.
Henry used to like playing with them, right?
Yeah, he did like to play with them.
I'm a little intense about it
because I don't want any of the,
that game is expensive as fuck.
I don't want one of the little beautiful treasure chests
to get squished, you know what I mean?
Actually in this new version, I'm pretty sure it's all plastic. Yeah, I was gonna say the new one is like, I don't want one of the little beautiful treasure chests to get squished, you know what I mean?
Actually in this new version,
I'm pretty sure it's all plastic.
Yeah, I was gonna say the new one is like, yeah.
Anyway, can I steal your way?
Yes. Thanks.
["Ego Some John Hodgman"]
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Okay.
My body is ready for your segment.
What about your mind though?
We'll see.
All right.
My wonderful thing this week is the stadium giveaway.
So huge.
I have talked about bobbleheads before.
Yes.
But I have never really talked about the thing
that most people get their bobbleheads from, which is the,
you go to a sporting event.
During a special day.
And it happens to be a day.
The reason I was thinking about this for the past few years,
my dad's birthday is in October.
That has always been true.
That is not just the past few years.
For the past few years,
Rachel's dad has been born in October.
But when we were growing up,
what we would always do is we would go to a hockey game
around his birthday and we would go to a hockey game
in March around my birthday.
And so for the past few years,
I've started like buying them tickets
as a birthday present for my dad.
And the first game, the first home opener,
is at least for the past few years,
always a calendar giveaway.
And then my parents always send me a calendar
that they got.
That's where those come from, okay.
Yeah, so I mean, essentially,
it's a lot to pay for a calendar.
But I will say, it's a nice, I don a calendar, but I will say it's like a nice,
I don't know, I always.
I wish the nude Jordan Kairou that they put in last year's,
that was, we couldn't actually show the month of July
in our home because a nude Jordan Kairou is actually.
I can't believe you would say those words to me
and not expect my mind to wander.
Yeah, sure.
To what that would look like.
I don't actually know, of all the blues players.
He's the one you'd least like to see nude.
I don't know about that.
I think a nude Jordan Bennington would be tough
because I know the face he would make would be incongruous.
Yeah, true.
With the boudoir photo shoot that they.
In my head, at least, I'll say ask this as a question.
In your head, are they all lying on their side
with their head in their hand?
No.
That's what I'm picturing.
You remember those, I think Sports Illustrated
does like body issues every year and it's like athletes,
but they're like tastefully nude to show off like,
this is what their crazy athlete bodies look like.
Have you ever seen any of those?
I don't, no. It's not like nudity with exposed crazy athlete bodies look. Have you ever seen any of those? I don't.
It's not like nudity with exposed genitalia
and what have you, but it's like, you know.
Yeah, like nice lighting to really show off.
Tasteful lighting.
You see like one buttock and it's like,
that's a sculpted buttock.
I can only imagine the other one looks just like that one.
Yeah, but if they showed you both buttocks,
that would be a little too salacious.
You couldn't give that one away.
No way.
Yeah.
Anyway, I love a giveaway.
It's always tricky because you have to be
one of the first X number of people in attendance.
And I feel like the day we went to that
ill-fated baseball game here, it was a giveaway,
but we got there way too late.
I can't remember what it was.
But I always, I don't know, I always like love that.
Like, yeah, and it's always like,
it's the kind of thing that like you can't really find
like in the store, you know?
So you feel like this is a nice little souvenir
of my one day there.
Are you lumping in this segment?
Are you including things like a t-shirt cannon
or when the blimp drops coupons?
No, because I have actually, as you'll recall,
already talked about t-shirt cannons.
That is true.
Have you ever been to one,
they used to do this at Highten Blizzard games,
I don't remember if they did it at other sporting events
where they have like a little blimp and it'll fly around
and then it'll drop a little blimp.
Yeah, that's every game.
Okay. Now I'm talking about like in Yeah, that's every game. Okay.
Now I'm talking about like in advance,
they will put a calendar together.
Sure.
And like, you know, the 19th of October is like,
you know, a hat giveaway night or whatever.
That's what I'm talking about.
I don't know, man, I went to a bunch of Red's games
growing up.
I don't know that I ever went to one
where you got like a cool freebie.
I mean, you have to get there early.
Most of the time they only have so many
and they give it to like the first,
however many hundred fans.
Justin one time got a Cincinnati Reds cap
because he signed up for like a Capital One credit card
and it destroyed his credit for a long, long, long, long time.
That's how they get you.
That is how they get you, yeah.
I can't even think of how much he must've paid
for that hat just to end it.
Oh dude, yeah, no, in terms of interest and penalties,
probably more than his car.
Okay, so the idea of the promotional giveaway
at an event actually started in St. Louis.
It was- Was it at the World's Fair?
At the World's Fair.
We got this new idea, guys.
How would that be a sporting event giveaway
if it was at the World's Fair?
Yeah, it was just like some guy at a booth,
he's like sitting, he's like asking me about my big idea,
and they're like, what's your idea?
He's like, what if at sporting events
they gave away little statues, but the heads are on springs?
It was at Sportsman's Park in St. Louis, June, 1952.
It was a double header between the St. Louis Browns
and the Philadelphia Athletics.
A representative of a bankrupt bat manufacturer
approached Bill Veek, who was the owner, and said,
I would love to sell you all of these bats.
My company is no longer working,
and I have all these bats, and I would love to give them to you.
Full-sized baseball bats?
Or like little tiny, you know,
lominto little sluggish? I think they were full-sized.
That's a fucking crazy party fan.
I know, they don't do that anymore.
Now it's like a little tiny guy.
Yeah.
So the baseball bat guy approached Rudy Schaeffer,
who was like Vique's colleague, and worked out a deal
where they would pay 11 cents for every bat.
And then he'd throw in the unfinished bats for free,
which like, what are you, what
are you doing with an unfinished bat? What does that mean even? Is that just like a piece
of wood?
Well, they ran out of money before they could finish it.
Just like a piece of wood?
Well, I bet they got to do a bunch of stuff to it.
Yeah.
Polish it, sand it down, make sure it's balanced.
So they did that, I mentioned it was a, or if I didn't, it was a Sunday and it was a Father's Day.
Oh wow.
And it was one of the largest fan attended.
It was like 15,000 people for the game that day.
And there were way less people alive back then.
So like 15,000 people then is like 350,000 people now.
This same guy, Vique, has a lot of stories
around his promotional exploits.
So when he left St. Louis in 1959,
he owned the White Sox and they had Coca-Cola bats,
so Coca-Cola agreed to subsidize the cost of the bat.
Full-size bats again?
That's what it says.
Vique has lost his fucking mind, dude.
Oh, well, so I've got to get to the thing
that you may have heard of that was also him.
Okay, so have you heard of the baseball game
where people were invited to bring their disco albums
and they would destroy them?
Yes, yes. That's this guy.
Okay. Yeah.
Hey, that sucks though, V.
I am actually, I have turned on this man a hundred.
I think that's one of the gnarliest, grossest
sort of promotional things in the history of him.
It was a huge problem for them.
So he, they were playing the Detroit Tigers
and they sold 98 cent tickets and told fans to bring all the disco records
that they would like to get rid of.
And then they were going to blow up crates of the records
in between the two games.
The issue is that a lot of rambunctious fans
showed up looking to celebrate the destruction
rather than watch baseball.
Fans poured onto the field,
the records after the records were destroyed,
and they had to forfeit the second game
because it was just pure chaos.
Because you made explosions and you created a, yeah, no.
Also just like the fucking knee jerk pushback
against disco is so mired in like wild racism
and like all kinds of really, really gnarly shit.
And to kind of like, I don't know,
the whole act of mass destroying pieces of media
is like pretty fucking heinous.
No, I only mentioned that to say like this is that guy.
This is who this dude is.
Like don't be surprised that this is the guy
that started promotional giveaways
because he was clearly willing to do anything.
Originally, I was like, who is, this is a madman
giving out hundreds and thousands of bats.
Like that's, that is the behavior of a truly unhinged person.
It is literally.
And now that I know this other facet,
it's like, ah, confirmed.
There are a lot of other fun examples.
Another one that happened in St. Louis,
do you remember the rally squirrel?
No, but in my defense,
you guys have so many fucking rally things.
In 2011, St. Louis was in the World Series,
they were facing elimination,
and there was a squirrel that ran across the plate
while St. Louis was up at bat.
And then after that moment, the Blues came back to,
to win the game.
Sorry, the Cardinals came back to win the game.
I got confused about which sport you're talking about.
So anyway, so for the next Cardinals home game,
they already had towels ready with the Rally Squirrel.
Okay, I love that.
That's powerful.
I love when an animal gets on the baseball field,
except for that one that Randy Johnson
did send to bird heaven with his extremely powerful
and fast fastball pitch.
There was Reggie Jackson, there were Reggie bars,
which is not familiar to me,
but it's probably familiar to people older than us.
And it was just like a chocolate candy and-
Did it have any kind of sports supplement inside of it?
It says it was a circular treat of caramel dipped peanuts
inside a chocolate shell.
Sounds like a Snickers, kinda.
A Reggie Bar sounds like something
that would get you fucked up.
Anyway, Reggie Jackson did hit a home run that game
and a bunch of people hurled the chocolates onto the field.
You gotta keep your fucking,
you gotta keep your wits about you
when you're planning one of these things.
I did wanna say the bobbleheads.
So I mentioned that the bat Giveaway started in 1952.
The first bobbleheads to show up were like 1960.
Okay.
And that was like, you know,
like the first 1960 World Series bobbleheads
were like classic players,
like Willie Mays, Mickey Mantle, Roberto Clemente.
Yeah.
Dad had some of these.
Oh yeah?
In the basement, not like a ton of them,
but there was definitely like a shelf in the basement
where he had like a bunch of bobbleheads.
He also had these terrifying, terrifying busts
of Laurel and Hardy done up in a kind of like bobblehead style
where they had like little bobblehead
and their heads were gigantic.
And every time, I was scared to go in the basement
because of those creepy ass little or hearty statues.
Is that true?
That's 100% fucking true.
You can ask Justin Traviss about that shit.
Those guys were unnerving.
I don't get it.
I don't get bobbleheads and I try to be fun
and like down to clown for whatever,
but I don't really like the whole vibe
or aesthetic of a bobblehead.
Do you know what I mean?
You probably don't.
You probably love a bobblehead.
No, because I brought them as a thing on Wonderful.
Yeah, no, I know.
I love them.
I think they're great.
I guess it's probably those Laurel and Hardy statuettes
like really spoiled me on little representations of human beings
with gigantic heads.
I mean Laurel and Hardy is not,
is not who I would want necessarily as a bobblehead.
I associate them with sports.
I like them in a sports setting.
I'm less interested in like the,
in the like media bobbleheads.
I don't know, it feels like a sports thing to me.
Like the Funko Pops?
Yeah, exactly. The Funko Pops is just like bobbleheads that don't know, it feels like a sports thing to me. Like the Funko Pops? Yeah, exactly.
The Funko Pops is just like bobbleheads that don't bobble.
They're just heads.
Anyway, if you look at Bleacher Report,
they did an article in 2012
where they cited the 15 craziest fan giveaways.
There's just a lot of good ones on there.
Something called Free Compost Night,
Seattle Mariners 2011.
Don't know why my voice changed like that.
Yeah, you really took on a whole other persona there.
Yeah, Free Compost Night is a good one.
Can you just bring a cup, you can bring a bucket,
and they get a big pile in the middle of it.
How do they do that?
You know, I don't know.
I don't know, it just says-
That blimp flies around,
it just dumps compost onto unsuspecting members
of the audience.
It says, the Seattle Mariners emphasize conservation
to their fans by distributing a garden friendly mix.
It was made using food waste and other items
that had been discarded at the field itself.
I mean, that kicks ass.
That kicks ass.
That's great.
I like that a lot, actually.
But then, giveaways by nature,
maybe they don't anymore. A lot of times they happen at the beginning of the game. Yeah, so now ass, that's great. I like that a lot actually. But then giveaways by nature, maybe they don't anymore.
A lot of times they happen at the beginning of the game.
Yeah, so now you just have this compost.
So you're like, see, everybody's just sitting there
with compost in mind.
I like to travel so light when I'm going to like
a sport event of some sort,
because I don't want to have to carry a bunch of shit around
and like monitor it and let it get stepped all over
when people come.
So the idea of nursing a bag of food waste.
I think a lot of them now are at the end of the game,
particularly if it is going to be a disruptive item,
you will on your way out pick up the thing.
That's smart.
That's real smart.
Yeah, handing out compost, that's a dangerous one actually.
If the game starts to go in a way you don't like.
Yeah, that's the thing, right?
Look out.
That's a great segment, baby.
Thank you.
I have some submissions from our friends at home.
Alex says, my small wonder is when I have to get ice
from the ice machine at work
and I close the lid a little too hard
so all the fresh ice falls into the bin.
The crinkle tinkles make my brain happy.
I do love that sound.
I feel like a lot of green rooms
at the venues we perform at
are sometimes attached to staff kitchens or whatever
with big, big, big ice machines in them.
And it is always kind of nice when you're just sitting here
and you hear like, whoosh, whoosh,
there's a bunch of ice in there.
Even the ice maker in the fridge does that sometimes.
It's lovely.
It is lovely.
It's a nice, deep, resonant, rattling.
I also like the sound of a dishwasher. I do when I, it's lovely. It is lovely, it's a nice, deep, resonant. I also like the sound of a dishwasher.
I do when I remember it's running.
I don't when I don't remember it's running
and I hear like, come from the kitchen all of a sudden
and I'm like, oh fuck.
It's just a nice, for me it's just a nice reminder
that a machine is doing something for you
and I feel so grateful.
Pampered.
Leah says, my wonderful thing is the guy
who is showing off his very cool holographic Goku poster on the subway.
My second wonderful thing is that holographic Goku poster
has the same cadence as Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.
As soon as I read this email, I started hitting up with
holographic Goku poster, holographic Goku poster.
You know there's a website or there used to be?
Yeah, that's just that.
Yeah, that like gives you a phrase.
It's really, really good.
I love both sides of this.
I love that someone's like,
hey Train, listen up.
I got this holographic Goku poster.
A holographic Goku poster on its own is great.
Someone showing it off is great.
And the fact that it has this wonderful symmetry
with the TMNT is just fantastic.
Yeah. Across the board, Leah, a wonderful submission.
That's it for the show.
Thank you so much for listening.
Thanks to Bowen and Augustus for the use of our theme song,
Money Won't Pay.
You can find a link to that in the episode description.
Thank you to Maximum Fun for having us on the network.
Go to maximumfun.org, check out all the great shows
that they got over there.
Did you know your episode you did?
Tabletop Hula Baloo.
Yeah, I don't know if that is Boko or if that is just
on the main feed. No, it's on the main feed.
Okay, cool.
Yeah, me and a bunch of other hosts of Max Fun shows
got together to play a one-shot of Dungeons and Dragons.
And I got to be a player, which is always very fun.
And it's up now, it's really fun.
It's called Tabletop Hullabaloo.
We have some merch over at the McElroy Merch Store.
We got the Taz 10th Anniversary coin.
We've got the Trav-O-Fination long sleeve tee.
We've got a bunch of stuff over at McElroyMerch.com.
And we do have a couple more short tours
for the rest of this year for Mbem Mbam and Taz.
We're gonna be in Phoenix and Denver,
actually later this week.
And then next month we are gonna be doing a short tour
in Indianapolis and Milwaukee.
If you go to bit.ly slash McElroy Tours,
you can find out all the information and grab tickets.
Come see us.
It's, we got some really fun plans for these shows.
If you're thinking I was gonna wait, it's no big deal.
Griffin won't wear this toad costume again
after this tour is over.
Yeah, no, I don't intend to.
It is not flattering.
And you've gotta see Griffin in this toad costume.
The pants are so big that it is like a long sleeve diaper.
If that sounds like something you're interested in.
You know what's funny is that our kids keep seeing that little mushroom hat and they want to play with it and we have to be like no no no.
That's daddy's work uniform! Work it all day, money won't pay. Work it all day, money won't pay.
Work it all day, money won't pay.
Work it all day, money won't pay.
Work it all day, money won't pay.
The end.