The A&G Replay Tuesday Hour Three

Published Jul 30, 2024, 4:22 PM

Hour 3 of the Tuesday July 30, 2024 edition of The Armstrong & Getty Replay features our other podcast, Armstrong & Getty One More Thing!  

  • Just Diane & Mainstreaming Cannibalism...
  • Next Door Advice...
  • Playground Bullies Prosper...
  • The Greatest Laugh! 

Broadcasting live from the Abraham Lincoln Radio Studio and the George Washington Broadcast Center, Jack Armstrong, Joe.

Getty arm Strong, and Gatty Enough, Pee.

Armstrong and Getty Strong, and hey we're I'm Strong and Getty. We're featuring our podcast One more Thing. Find it wherever you find all your podcasts.

I was fascinated by that python farm story the other day. I actually dug into that, did a little reading, you know, because pythons are big and giant and meaty and and they're like super efficient with the way they turn calories into muscle mass, and they taste like chicken.

I got a question about that, But when I get to the cannibalisma, I'll I'll hit you with it, all right, all right, fair enough.

So after the show, before we started recording this, Hanson replayed a clip of me saying something rather dry about Jack, and Jack commented, that's a very I'm just Iyane thing to say. And I was reminded of a longtime listener to the show and hilarious tweeter I'm just Diane, and I went digging into our Twitter feed. She doesn't tweet as much as she used to, I think, which is a shame for humanity.

But she's had grown up with a job now and it's not easy. You should follow her, Katie, if you've never checked out, I'm just Diana. I am on her now. She is a listener we became aware of a long time ago. And she's very funny. Okay, Yeah.

Her pinned tweet is I'd rather go home than go big, which I agree with. How perfect is that? And then somebody tweeted the the Nancy Pelosi this is not an attempt to pan TikTok, It's an attempt to make TikTok better, tic tac toe a winner, a winner. Her comment has simply nailed it. Oh boy, man, I love understatement.

That's hilarious.

Oh looking forward to the day my new phone stops autocorrecting vaping to raping.

Oh boy. Her best stuff is how much she hates her job and her coworkers. But that's a different topic. So New Scientists is a real science outfit, and they're trying to take another look at cannibalism, and they mention these bones that were found in a cave in southwest England which beared all the marks of cannibalism. It is pretty clear that cannibalism was going on their teeth, marks on the bones and the way. I won't get into details. It's pretty gross. But and this was fourteen, seven hundred years ago, that they were practicing cannibalism there in England. To Rotein's protein baby, that's what I say today, they write in New Scientists. Today, cannibalism is a taboo subject in many societies. We see it as aberrant as a clear in film such as the Texas Chainsaw massacre. We associate it with zombies, psychopaths, and serial killers like hannibal Lecter. Positive stories about cannibals are few and far between. I would agree with you there, I haven't heard one of those. Wait, what a child's book about cannibalism? Or Jimmy is a good guy like to golf, he treated his family well, and he was a cannibal. He'll be missed. Yeah, but perhaps it's time for a rethink because despite our preconceptions, evidence is accumulating that cannibalism was a common human behavior. Our ancestors have been eating each other for a million years or more. In fact, so was torture for years in the years, for centuries. But that doesn't mean we should reconsider it. What a bizarre story this is. In fact, it seems that down the ages, around a fifth of societies have practiced cannibalism. While some of these people, while some of this people eating may have been simply to survive. In many cases, the reasons look more complex. In places like this cave in southern England, for example, consuming bodies of the dead seems to have part of a funerary ritual, something they did when people died. Far from a monstrous affront to nature, cannibalism may have been a way of showing respect and love for the dead, say archaeologist. No, uh yeah, no, no.

Whoever wrote this needs to be investigated. He's like trying to sell this.

I don't like it, right. He's trying to soften a revelation that may occur someday about the barrels in his exactly exactly. He's trying to set the table cannibalism. We need to reconsider it.

I just watched a horrible horror movie about cannibalism where these guys invite a bunch of people over to their house for a dinner party, and they're serving them the victims, but they don't know it.

Would Jim ember watch episodes of Hannibal, the prequel to Silence of the Lambs. Yes, Oh, my god, when he would when he would sit down at the table in his suit, with his fine wine and his beautiful home and start slicing off pieces of liver that he cooked up. God, that was gross dinner table. Do you think because like you, you're so you're talking the other day about the snakes and how that might become a meat of the future, And I said, you because the idea of eating a snake disgusts me. There's something about eating a reptile that I find.

And I've had snake, I've had alligator, there are multiple I've had it, but I don't want to it's gross.

Alligator was great. It's just fried meat. Say that's all right, but could could you eat human? No? No, that's repugnant, repulsive.

Wi.

I don't know.

It's an instinctive horror. I think now the concept of it being a funerary ritual. Does anybody have anything else they'd like to say about Jim? Okay, well, then we're passing out knives and forks. If we could all make our way to the casket.

Yeah, I got one more thing to say about Jimmy looks delicious. Now that's some marbling. I mean, I know, I know he didn't exercise much, but that is some delicious looking marbling. Nice rub for it, Sid.

If you heard me, I think did I tell this on the air? I can't remember my favorite joke now, which also takes place at a funeral.

If you've heard this before, forgive me, but it's short. Uh.

It's a funeral and uh, and people are talking about the dearly departed, and the widow stands up and says, is there anybody else who'd like to say a word? The guy stands up, he said I would, and he says plethora. Then he sits down, and the widow says, thank you, jim That means a lot to me.

Yes, that is a good one I have.

Actually, you've told that before, and I wrote it down to tell it to somebody else, and then I never did, so thank you for reminding me.

I'll pass it on. Yes.

The beauty of that joke is you think the punch your line is that he just says one word.

Yeah, there's a twist and a twist.

My love.

It caught the twist done. Oh go good twist. That's funny. So back to cannibalism. I'm guessing that we're designed to be disgusted by it only because most of human history people have been starving. And if you weren't disgusted by it, I mean, if you if you thought of eating another human the same way you thought of eating a cow, we would have all eaten each other. I mean, just the strongest would have survived and eaten each other, and the societies that didn't find it up hurt and died out pretty quickly because of that. That'd be my evolutionary guess.

Yeah, and we're just like an epidemiological reason why it's a bad idea because obviously humans can catch human diseases, but I don't.

I suppose that's possible, but you know, we've mostly been starving throughout history. If you weren't disgusted by it, and like, the only the only way you could possibly do it is if you're you know, the Donner Party, and you're all starving to death. And many of them didn't participate, they went ahead and starved before they did it. If it was okay with you, yeah, people would have turned to that right away. Yeah, I know, Jim. We all hate Jim. Let's eat him.

I tell you what though, It's it's all about the method of preparation, because like, I'm not gonna have human sushi or anything like that.

That's too much. I'm a medium rare guy, but I'm going well done on Jim.

Yeah, and I'm like, maybe he smoked all day, like a.

Long maybe jerky even I want it really clicked. Could it be like a company.

Could it be like a sandwich, or maybe like a rap or something.

So it's not just that, yeah, you know what I mean. I don't want it like tender and falling off the femur. I just say, oh, like a turkey leg you know, you see it the fair because I'm diabetic. That's right, You're at the fair and you're eating a human legs.

Got that footstill, see that's disgusting point.

So we'll see if this catches on and if New Scientific is successful in their effort to I don't know, mainstream cannibalism.

I guess you know what the world we're in right now, it wouldn't shock me, right right you.

Jack Armstrong and Joe the Armstrong and Getty Show.

This is the Armstrong and Getty Show featuring our podcast One More Thing, Get it wherever you like to get podcasts.

I've been familiar with next door for a long time, but I'd never had the notifications on where I would get where i'd get the regular everything everybody posts? Good God? Is that a smorgus board of unimportant? It is? Question? It is the forum of first world problems? What it is? It's it's a combination of like first world problems that you really don't need to mention out loud to anyone, and uh, and like big problems.

That there are much better venues for finding.

The answer, like my you know, my dad has got this disease. My dad's got Parkinson. He happened to be president. Does anybody recommend a good doctor You're going on next door for that? Is that your best place to try to figure out these things? It just seems odd to me.

Yeah, I guess nobody ever responds, So I don't know why everybody's fishing in this pond. I could see asking for a recommendation of like a service provider or something like that. I wouldn't ask what medicine do you think he ought to take? Or anything like that.

Or you know, a football is in my backyards, they may know it belonged to That was one this morning.

Oh boy, I saw one the other day that somebody took a picture off of a ring camera of a kid that doorbell ditched him, and they posted the video on next door, going, who is kid?

Is this right? Right? Lots of those, lots of those, lots of did anybody just hear that noise? Well, that happens like ten times a day? And then various responses. I did too. I thought it sounded like a gun. It didn't. That's not like a gun. It sounded like more okay, whatever. But here's my favorite one from today that got me on this very topic. Here's another one. Somebody asking about shingles. Find a medical professional or weib MD or something not next door that you're.

Talking about roof depiltating, a nerve pain or exactly.

I'm talking about the disease. Here's my favorite one. Uh, does anybody know what I should do with this crow? It has a hurt wing. It lands between our houses. I'm trying. I'm trying to I'm trying to nurse it back to health. It keeps hopping around and I don't know what to do with it.

You got to put the whip to it. It's not trying hard enough. What should I do with it?

Call it a sissy and tell it to try harder.

Right, exactly, tell it? Good Lord helps crows that help themselves? Just like, is it like the new Google for your neighbors? I don't understand why people are utilizing that.

Well, all right, that's what I'm saying. And you don't have Google or any of the other search engines for figuring stuff out, or even TikTok or whatever you do. You go to the next door with the other eighty year old. Nothing else to do is to answer your question.

Yeah, yeah, it's just I just shocked by And I've always wondered this about when I didn't live in a neighborhood for like twenty years.

But now I'm in a neighborhood. Every neighborhood I've ever lived in, pretty much, there are quite a few houses where you know who lives there, even if you don't know know them, you see them on a regular basis, getting in their car, kid, coming home on a bike, whatever. But there's always several houses where you just never see anybody. Yeah ever, ever, you never see anybody ever. Somebody lives there. Lights get turned on at night off in the morning, and that must be the crowd that's on next door asking about crows or medical questions or whatever. It must be that crowd.

You gotta go on next door and say, hey, has anybody ever seen anybody come out of the blue house?

Just start asking really weird questions on there. Jack, that'd be perfect.

Hey, speaking of asking advice, I thought this was so interesting and it makes sense in my head. See if it does to you. It's new research out about getting advice, asking for advice, that sort of thing, and this, Elizabeth Bernstein writes, we tend to believe the best person for support during a tough time will always be someone who's been there before.

Turns out that's wrong.

New research shows we make get better help from people who've been through a significant challenge that's different from our own. Because social scientists say this is because those who have been through an unrelated challenge can empathize with our emotional pain, but they won't assume they know what our experience is like or bring their own emotional baggage to the conversation.

Oh, hu's great, that is interesting. I think that one over.

Meanwhile, somebody who's quote unquote been there before some times talks more than they listen. They may also give advice solely based on their experience and forget that ours is going to be different. And because they got already got over the problem, they think we should too, and tend to minimize how painful the situation is.

My main advice with big things that I've been through is usually having been through this, don't listen to anybody's advice. That's about my only advice on a number of big things.

Wow wow, interesting a cynical man or an experienced man. Sometimes you don't know. Sometimes someone you don't know well may have different life experiences that you can draw upon.

You never know what people know until you ask. Well, like, that's the advice I give on my cancer experience, because I've had a number of people ask me who get cancer, and I say, don't take anybody's advice, because everybody's situation is so incredibly different. I heard so many things it turned out not to be true. I'd have been better off if I never asked. Everybody's situation is miles apart and changes on a daily basis, So don't worry about it and child rearing, while not the same as that, because there are some truths to child wearing, definitely, but man, there's a lot of I don't know, what are you telling me this for when it comes to child wearing.

Also, yeah, a lot of people are trying to express their own how to put this, work out their own issues, or exhibit their own egos or something, because kids are.

So different and then the parents interaction with the kid is so different. It's just, yeah, it's hard to normalize a lot of it.

Yeah, maybe the worst advice giver is somebody who's raised a kid, because to the beginning of this article, they're completely convinced that their experience is universal. I'm not talking about all of you that have had one child. Obviously some of you have wisdom, but yeah.

You'd exactly be what she was describing. Yep, I because I've got that situation. It ends up if I just if I'd only had one of them, I would think I was the world's greatest parent and be willing to lay out all kinds of advice and maybe write a book. If I don't lay at the other one, I would think I'm a disaster.

Yeah, I heard that So final note on this, which I found interesting was the power of weak ties. Conversations with people that you have weak ties with can be surprisingly helpful. They don't know us well, they don't know our false They're less likely to judge us or make assumptions about our situation or something like that.

I've had many experiences like this. Are much more likely to be a fellow, like a brainstormer, than a bestower of alleged wisdom. They're much more likely to listen and toss out ideas with you than try to lay the law down. This is the guy sitting next to you at the bar or the bus stop or whatever.

Yeah.

I've had this experience many times in my life, and it works both directions. They don't have any particular agenda because they don't know you and you don't you don't They can say things that if somebody who did know you said them, you'd get furiously angry. But because you don't know them at all and have nothing invested, you can just hear what they have to say. Yeah, the power of weak ties thought provoking. Yeah, ask a stranger.

See Armstrong and Getty, Showy Orgia Orgoe podcasts and Our Hot links.

It's The Armstrong in Getty Show, featuring our podcast One more Thing. We do a new one every day. Find it wherever you find your podcast is now, Katie.

You don't know this, probably, but Jack and I have had a long running and bitter dispute.

I really like.

Appetizers if I'm out to eat or whatever he's got, like he's a member of ISIS, He's got this militant anti appetizer belief.

It's stupid. Just have the meal. Have the meal. You don't need to have appetizers. And anyway, I.

Won't go any further because again we're not bad mouthing him, okay, and is insane and unsupportable, some would say idiotic beliefs. But Jack is anti appetizer. I, on the other hand, love appetizers, and in fact, Judy and I went to a breast cancer fundraiser just last night and I bought at probably excessive cost, but it wasn't a purchase, it's a donation. I bought an appetizer of the month club membership in which some of the gifted chefs associated with this community slash.

It was a golf club.

They deliver to your home like a gourmet appetizer once a month.

Oh, I know, that's awesome. I know.

So like I'll say, yeah, can we do it this coming Friday, And they'll say absolutely, And they'll show up with like this brilliantly crafted stuffed mushrooms or something like that. It's a great excuse to have like friends over for a glass of wine and stuff and we get the credit.

Oh that is so cool. No, I know it.

Okay, So what kind of things do they offer?

So stuff mush rooms obviously, are there other Yeah?

I realized that this the very term has a negative connotation, but I don't know why they did, like a super delicious cheeseball, one of those big cheeseballs you dig in with the knife and put it on crackers.

But it was like home crafted. Oh cheeseball, Those are big cheeseballs. Yeah, that sounds awesome to me.

Yeah, and a friend, a friend of ours, actually bought this last year. And I can't remember what else there like a shrimp thing and various cannapis whatever that is, but just super yummy like gourmet appetizers.

Yeah. See this sounds like I'm me Yeah.

Well, I mean and particularly I mean it was several hundred dollars.

Again, it's a donation out a purchase.

But when you look at what you spend, like go out for a nice dinner now, especially if you have a bottle of wine or something that crap.

So anyway, I'm happy to contribute.

Judy actually she quilted a thing, a golf cart seat cover that fits like custom fits around the little what do you call it, the hip rest things to keep you from sliding off the end of it. Anyway, so we made a nice donation to It's a nice nice fundraiser anyway. The game across this article playground bullies do prosper and go on to earn more in middle age. This is a five decade study that's thorough.

Brits.

Children who displayed aggressive behavior at school, such as bullying or temper outbursts, are likely to earn more money in middle age, according to a five decade study that upends the maxim that bullies do not prosper. Any reaction to that, Katie, off the top of your head.

I can kind of see where they're going with this, because the people that are more outspoken maybe going further in business rather than the meek that get picked on.

I can see that.

Yeah, this is one of the reasons I'm so militant about in schools not making little boys act like little girls, nor should you make little girls act like little boys. Let them be themselves, but the idea that you're just sit still and be quiet and just like the girls are doing. Because as a youth coach, mostly in soccer, I coach baseball and softball a little bit too, but observing the difference between boys and girls. And then I coached gosh, I coached eight year old boys, ten year old boys, twelve year old boys, that sort of range, and then fourteen year old girls was the oldest I ever coached. But I would watch ten year old boys and there are like fifteen guys on the team, right, So it's a nice selection of different sorts of human beings. And you could see, Okay, that kid is going to be a dynamic leader, but at age ten, he's obnoxious because he has the tool, but he doesn't know how.

To wield it properly. That's a great point. Yeah, just and I wish.

I'd thought about this more, but I could give you more examples of just they're all diamonds in the rough. I mean, some of them are probably going to end up in jail or beating their spouse or something like that. I mean, not everybody's a diamond, but they're they're too much of everything. But that's how you end up, I think with a good man. It's very rare that a meek Well, no, I don't want to I don't want to.

Overstate this because some people are just introverts.

But we need to get back to boys will be boys, and that that's saying has been perverted to mean allegedly so they can do anything they want. But no, that's not what that saying means at all. It means you have to put up with the excesses of boyhood to end up with good men. Now I'm a poor bullying but go ahead.

No, I like what you said too about they have the tool, they just don't know how to use it yet.

Because you do.

You might see a leader in this ten year old, but that not yet because right now they don't know.

Yeah, they're they're loud and obnoxious, yeah, or they bully for instance. Now, some bullies remain bullies in their a holes and I hate them and I hope they go to prison. But some people, you know, this is if I haven't told this story in ages. I remember the first time I told this story. Now, Gladys, do you play the harp when I'm thinking about I'm looking back at telling a story.

About looking back? Yeah, she's there for do you play the harp twice? Or how did that work? Doesn't he just go ahead and start talking?

So I was, uh, I was having this argument with a frenemy. Okay, he I was like the pitcher on the baseball team, high school baseball team, and he was the catcher, and he was a really good catcher, really good ballplayer. But he and I had this like two alpha dogs thing going on, and so there was respect and all.

But we clashed.

We clashed a fair amount, and we got We got into it one time verbally and he said to me, and I wish I had I wish I had written the quote down.

He said.

Something like, I'm not even going to get into it with you because you'll cut me to bits. And I thought he sees my verbal ability as a tool of meanness and cruelty. And I thought, I don't want to be that guy ever again. I don't want to. I mean, unless somebody's got a coming. I decided, Okay, I have the ability to hurt people with words, I am never going to do that to an innocent victim. And maybe I've lapsed at times of loss of temper or what have you in the intervening years, but I've never thought of myself. Part of it is I never thought of myself as a bully, because I would never hurt anybody physical, right. But I realized at that moment he used me as some sort of verbal bully, and I thought, I'm not going to be that and so, and I hate that. This is painful for me to admit that I might have kind of been that quote unquote bully who then grew up to not be a bully as an adult.

That's interesting because when you said what when you quoted what he said, I heard it as like you were you have more of a verbal ability than him, Not that you're cruel with your words, but that you you could verbally take him if you guys were to get into an argument.

Right, right, I guess I guess The subtlety of it is I always saw it as like winning an argument as opposed to leaving a victim. Okay, well, it's you know, like the typical adolescent. It was self centered. I looked at it from my point of view. I win, and I spanked him and sent him running. Yeah, but I hadn't developed the compassion to really see it from the other person's perspective. And like I say, if it's somebody trying to, for instance, you know, like push experimental sex change procedures on children, I'll rip them apart. If I can, I will turn every skill I have full blast for the kid's sake. But like I said, no, no, nobody who doesn't have it coming, I just won't do that.

Yeah, And recognizing that about yourself too is a big thing because I have a very similar I like to call it a sharp.

Tongue, especially when I hear that at all.

Yeah.

No, I don't have that one bit.

But that's something that I've been working on my whole life.

Is realized.

Yo, Okay, cool it because I know that once it takes off, bad news bears.

Right, right, You don't punch everybody who deserves it. Yeah, And you don't, you know, strip them naked with your verbiage if they don't deserve it either, even though you.

Can, and when they do, they'll always it fun.

So Now the temper outburst thing is interesting. They found an increase in teachers observations of conduct problems such as temper outbursts or bullying or teasing other children, was associated with an increase in earnings of nearly four percent of any given rise in conduct problems for boys or girls. That compares to a six percent rise for higher cognition skills and so as a measure of who's going to do well, at least financially an old boy, Now that I think about it, that's an interesting way to measure this anyway, But being like hot tempered is almost as good an indicator of being successful in life is being smart.

Yeah, based off how they put it.

Yeah, yeah, Wow, it's forty percent of six Well, I guess you could say fifty percent more likely, but you see my point. Further, an analysis showed that by age sixteen, those with conduct problems were more sociable as teenagers and were more likely to smoke and be arrested at some point in their lives.

Oh there's that. Wow. So is it just being more dynamic in general? I do not know. Yeah.

They point out, many people, many successful people, have had various problems in school, like Winston Churchill, various folks expelled, suspended, who ended up being famous or successful or what have you.

Well like in today's news.

I mean, look at Trump, He's considered a bully.

He's probably didn't like that his whole life. Yeah, I think he's still a bully. It's one of the things I don't particularly like about him.

But I was thinking about Steve Jobs, genius, but I've heard he was a complete bully.

Oh yeah, that's right at when. Yeah, I was picturing his youth, but yeah, running apple he was absolutely was.

Yeah.

You know, maybe this boils down to and this is an old, old message. Don't make kids sit still and be quiet and all act the same, because they're not the same. There's a cynical view of education that modern education exists purely to turn people into rule following drones. And you know, I certainly hope that's I know a lot of gifted teachers and that's not what they're trying to do. But just to what, to whatever extent, that's what's happening. Resist that, Yeah, a big yick. Yeah, we need more kids who end up smoking and getting arrested, because the other ones will be Winston tr I think that's our takeaway here? What something like that nail?

That's the Armstrong and Getty Show featuring our podcast One more Thing. Download it, subscribe to it wherever you like to get podcasts.

Your sweatshirt either says I p A or E p A. I assume it says I p A like the beer, and not E p A like the you're not wearing a sweatshirt that you wouldn't catch me dead in an EPA swatcher Environmental Protection Agency swag.

I was just gonna say how many how many agency government agencies have swag?

I know the CIA and FBI do do they like for public purchase?

Oh?

Yeah, absolutely cool. I might have to get some of that. I wear my FBI swag all the time and arrest people. Oh, I'm gonna get the CIA stuff. I need you to open your trunk. I bring them to justice. Open the trunk. Please, you make lights on your car too, so you can rely. Who are you? All questions? He opened the trunk? Can I see your badge? Can I see your hands behind your back? And then I tough them? Uh so this I hope, I hope this works. What I'm about to do here? I came across this last night, and I laughed out loud several times. So it's a guy with a kind of funny laugh and this is pretty long. He speaking a different language. I don't even know what language it is, but I don't speak it. But it was still funny, and I could pick up on the universal cadence of telling a story. And then he starts laughing about the story and then filling in more details and continues to laugh, and the other guy's laughing, and it just and then like you know, and then you won't believe this, and then they I guess that's what he's saying. I don't know. I don't speak the language. But if this is funny to you the way it was to me, I think it says something about humor or because I've often thought people that are really really funny, they don't they don't even need words. Their timing is so good. The joke doesn't even have to don't even have to be a joke. The timing is so perfect. It's funny just with the timing. Yeah, I suppose anyway, we'll see if this is funny or not. You're not supposed to understand what this person is saying. He's telling the story ran loud, Michael Chank, Philip, Now we're gonna maybe chan intermoth the inter up on the bottle you got come up to me? He goes, Yeah, they drop into.

My let me.

There, I got that. Yeah, I said, tell you.

Dude is amused. I think, first of all, I would like to have somebody translate that story to me, because I just feel like at some point it was like and then, no, you won't believe this that she walks in with a canary on her head. Yet her husband turns around and he says, but then the dog comes into the room and hold on, I'm not done.

I just hope the translation of that story isn't they were complaining about how loud my party was, so I went to their home and murdered them all.

Or it's incredibly yeah, it's incredibly graphic sexually or something. I mean just like racist or something. Yeah, oh my god, the record, We got no idea what Bro was saying. And maybe you should have run this by somebody who speaks whatever language that is before snapping this out. Now, yeah, yeah, exactly. Jesus could be the most racist, sexist, overtly horrifying joke you've ever heard in your life, and.

Then the nazis, Oh, don't even say it.

Boy, dude's laugh was just insane. It's not that was it. No, that's not the end of it. Sounds like it must have about a heck of a joke.

I think his laugh might have been what was making you laugh, because it just just his laugh itself was was funny?

Well, yeah, I was. Clearly the infectious laugh had something to do with it. I would like to have the slightest idea what this story was about, because it's got many tags, and just when you think it's over, it's not.

Oh yeah, exactly, yeah that her husband, Her husband says, no, seriously, this is what he said, right. Uh yeah, I wonder can we run that through Google trains figure out what sort of horror we've unleashed over.

The closet and his mom is standing there and it just keeps going and going.

The Armstrong and Getty Show show podcasts, and our hot links

Armstrong & Getty On Demand

The official podcast...of the broadcast...of The Armstrong & Getty Show!  Learn more at ArmstrongAn 
Social links
Follow podcast
Recent clips
Browse 7,846 clip(s)