Today on “Bachelor Happy Hour,” we have part one of our “Happy Hour” crossover with Kathy and Susan from “Golden Hour”! The ladies join Joe and Serena to dive into some listener write-ins. We get some dating advice from the entire “Happy Hour” family today, and you won’t want to miss it.
Be sure to check back tomorrow for part two and follow so you never miss an episode of “Bachelor Happy Hour” or “Golden Hour.”
Hey, everyone, welcome back to bet You're Happy Hour. I'm Joe and I'm Serena, and today we are diving into part one of our Happy Hour crossover with our Golden Hour ladies, Kathy and Susan. Welcome. How are you?
Yes, hey, how are you? Thanks for having.
Us happy we were here.
So last time we had you guys on was for Joey's season. We did an episode recap and that was I think right before Golden Hour became a thing.
So how's it been.
Yes, it's fabulous. We're having a ball.
It's so much fun. I think the most fun for me is hearing readers questions and people asking us for our advice. It's just so fun to hear what people think all over the country.
Part for me is arguing with Kathy we have different point of views.
Well, that's kind of what we're going to get into today. So for today's episode, we're mixing it up a little and getting into the true cross over spirit. For those of you who haven't listened to Kathy and Susie's Golden Ewer yet, you're missing out for So today we're gonna be answering some listener writings together A four for one deal or a four for two deal, I should say. And we have some good wins here, so we're so excited. This is fun for us because I feel like.
It's so different.
It's so different. We've never done anything like this on here before.
Wait wait, I had Before we start, Susan, I have to ask how how is Bradley Cooper? Oh my god, yes day.
Okay, you didn't see it, No, I missed it.
Tell me.
We get for lunch and he's making cheese steaks, which happens to be one of my favorite, and he is from my same town, and we see each other.
We point and he goes, I'm a huge fan.
Then he brings me on the back of the of the truck I mean of the food truck, and he goes, Susan, I have to take selfies with my camera.
I have a million questions for you.
I never missed a show.
You're my favorite.
Was like, oh my god, that's crazy. I actually I saw him doing the cheese truck thing.
I didn't realize that.
That you guys met. That's so funny out of nowhere.
It was a blast. Yeah, and you know what, he's a really nice guy.
Susan, I don't know if you guys know this. He emailed me and asked me if I would do a duet shallow with him.
Little Yeah. He was great.
It was great.
Kathy, where are you again? You're in Texas right, I'm in Austin, Texas. Austin, okay, Serena's never been really wants to go?
Do you want to come on?
Come on, I've got plenty of bedrooms.
It was my first time there. I went out to marry to perform the ceremony for Kathy's son's wedding.
Because I keep saying.
To marry her son.
Everybody's like, yeah, what.
I lived in Texas, right outside of Dallas for nine years. I did not think I was in Texas. Being in Austin, they have rolling, rolling hill roads and trees everywhere.
Just like here.
Austin is very different from the rest of Texas.
I am originally from Massachusetts, which is where my accent comes from. But Austin is a great city with a lot to do, and anyone who wants to come, Serena, come on, I'll show you a good time. While Wiley f One's going on, come here, We'll have fun.
I should, honestly well it's two PM and you're prepping for Italy with a glass of wine right now, So I don't doubt it.
Kathy.
I love I feel like I always see you with with Katie Vigor too.
You guys always look like you're having so much fun.
Can I just tell you?
I was at her house last weekend for she had a bunch of women over. We had so much fun. I was the oldest one there by about thirty years. But they are. She is the best friends. She is the kindest person. She is beautiful, she's smart, she's talented. That girl Zach hit the jackpot with her and she with him too.
Yeah.
And I was there with Kathy and we did a tick out together. We had as I saw just quick on her feet.
Yeah.
I hope she's listening to this.
If I had another son, Zach, I love you, but you'd be history.
Wow. I want to be your mother in law.
I like that. I like that. All right, let's uh, let's get into this. So questions. I'm going to read the first one. Question one. It's from Priscilla from Tampa Bay. She's asking when do conflicting timelines become a deal breaker.
She's twenty seven.
Did I not say that.
No nice.
She's also twenty seven. She has said. I've been dating my boyfriend for a little over three years and things have been going well overall. However, lately we have been having discussions about our future together, and it seems like we are not on the same page when it comes to timelines. For contexts, he's twenty nine. I'm ready to take the next step and move in together, but my boy if it, really wants to keep saving money by living with his roommates. He does at least tell me that he's open to the idea. Eventually, when it comes to marriage, it gets worse. Anytime I bring up the idea of one day getting married, my boyfriend always just refers to the fact that he's not ready yet. He reassures me that he loves me and sees a future with me, but he wants to take things slower. I understand that everyone moves at their own pace, but I can't help feeling anxious about our conflicting timelines. How big of a problem is this in a relationship and how can we work through it? I feel like I can't even figure out how I feel and what pace I want to move at because his pace is so slow exclamation.
Point one question did I miss? Did they say how long they've been together?
Yeah?
Over three years. That's so that's a decent amount of time to be with.
You should something, Yeah, there was again, there was something you said, Joe when you read it that told me everything I need to know. This isn't a this is a her problem. He's perfectly happy with the way things are going. She's the one that's not happy, and she can't force him to do It's not a good idea to give ultimatums. You know, She's either got to sit and be patient and wait or move along, because you can't force someone to do what they're not ready to do.
What do you think ever ready?
Though?
Is this just buying time for him that you know it's comfortable? Yeah, because if you're with her, she's going to split the rent anyhow.
Well, that's the thing. It's like, I want to save money by living with my roommates. It's like, well, you could find an apartment where we're splitting the rent that still falls your budget.
And it's like how many, Like who are these roommates? Is it three guys that he's been friends with for a long time and they're still going out partying.
Now it's three girls. I got the same question sent to me. I'm kidding my thing is.
I mean, look, you're together for three and a half years, no sign of living together, no sign of marriage.
It does sound not great.
But I think when it comes to timeline, there's no right or wrong timeline for a relationship. But you have to be on the same page with your partner about that timeline. So if she is like, I'm kind of ready to take the next step and he's not, it's like, well, why are you not ready?
And when do you think you might be ready?
Like three and a three years and a bit is like, okay, you need to give me Like is it one year?
Is it three years? I don't know.
I think that he's not doing it.
Serena tells me he's not ready, and that's why I said, it's it's her problem.
Yeah, he's not ready. He's not ready with her.
That's my point. If if she it's it's you know, cast cast your lot. Either wait around and see if he's ready, and if you're ready and he's not, you can't say will you be ready in a year?
He doesn't know, so you know if you're ready and you don't want to wait a year. Move along, girl friend.
How about the question how not ready are you? Like, exactly are you saying?
You know, I think actions speak louder than words.
Yeah, and it's it goes to what you said, Kathy. It's like, it's not like he's gonna be like I will be ready exactly in twelve months, Like he doesn't know.
Yeah, it's not like he's saying like I just need another year or like this is you know, I'm twenty nine. I envision myself getting married around.
Thirty three more expectable. It's like just a general well I don't know which is.
And the question is does he not know because he's not sure she's it. He's not feeling it, you know, he wants to save ten thousand, or does he want twelve thousand, five hundred?
You know, And her talk is ticking in her world. She's talking about marriage.
You know, she's.
Looking, but she's also probably thinking, I've been with this guy for three and a half years.
I don't want to waste my time if it's not going to fully you know what I mean.
I don't know what her name is, but I would say a feeling strongly, don't waste your pretty and skinny on some guy that may or may not ever get to the finish line.
Okay, so serious conversations with him.
I think his actions speak loudly. I think it's it's you. I don't know what her name is, but either be patient and Pricella plays Priscilla. That was my mother's name, Priscilla. Either be patient and wait and see how it plays out. But if you can't wait, there's your answer. Move along, and you're in the driver's seat, not him. You're in the driver's seat. You either wait around to see if he's ready, or you move along.
As well as how good is your relationship? Do you feel great when you're with him with the time you do spend together? Is he the one for real?
I also think waiting around is hard because it sounds like her patience is already wearing thin, and if she continues to wait, she's likely going to build some resentment and it's gonna send.
Yeah here two, three, yeah, yeah, exactly.
Okay, what do you think?
Good luck, sweetie?
Yeah?
I stay too long?
Yeah, I feel I just think it's one of those things where you know if it's something you really want and you're not going to give and take both of you a little bit, then you have to move on because and it doesn't seem like he's willing From what she wrote, it doesn't seem like he's willing to budge. So her only choice is to wait around, and she doesn't want to do that, So all that's going to cause is resentment in the relationship.
She could also give him an ultimatum. They never work, but she can either wait around, walk or give him an ultimatum.
They work sometimes some people realize that that's the love of their life.
They're just not ready yet.
But then then you buy, Okay, give me six months or give me one year, and we'll go here.
Yeah, it's like I feel like they have to make a game plan together of like I'm ready, you're not. We have to meet halfway here, so like maybe next year we put that deadline on it.
But if I feel like he's not really giving her much.
You gotta start looking around. Girlfriend.
That's what I smell. I smell a rat here.
There's there's just something here. She's they're not even living together, and she wants to get married.
He doesn't. It just doesn't not just yeah, he's not there.
And I would be interested in knowing who the roommates are and do they go out party and every other weekend?
Yeah?
Yeah, Like what's the lifestyle like living with the roommates that hits so great that he doesn't want to give it up?
Because I can't imagine if it's all men that place being clean, that's a far here.
What comes to my Joe and Serena, Susan Spence Just just so you and Bachelor Nation know, Susan spends a lot of time cleaning, and this is rule number one for Susan.
Clean clean, everything's clean.
I feel like you've had that on the podcast before, Susan when we've been like, what's a deal breaker, like they.
Have to be clean?
Well right now we we just we've been gone for like seven days and we have something that is stuck in our dream, our dream.
We don't know what it is.
When you came home, not bad, but when you're over top of the sink, something is funky.
So we don't have a garbage, so it's like.
Something is sitting at the bottom and we don't something's like fallen down.
We did vinegar and baking soda.
I got to get in there.
You should not get there.
Feel I'd take a wooden spoon and scrape or something.
Yeah, you know what I do? One eight hundred clean out my sink.
Yeah, we're gonna call somebody because honestly, I can't hurt to have that thing professionally cleaned out. It's been a while, but Priscilla, I think our collective answer is you need to figure out if he's ever going to move in with you, if he's ever going to marry you have some horror conversations, and if you can't get the answers you're looking for, or any answer at all, might be time to move on.
Yep, agreed for a way.
Yeah, I agree, But good luck, Priscilla, Oh, good luck.
Absolutely, we hope it works out all right. Question should we do? Question number two?
Question two?
Okay, this is from Talia. That's my sister's name, twenty seven from San Diego, so definitely not her. Funny though that would be crazy friend group clashes. Is this a deal breaker? I've been dating my boyfriend for about eight months and things have been going great for the most part. However, I feel like we've been struggling when it comes to our friends. My friends really like him, and as far as I know, his friends like me too. But anytime we have a big gathering with people from both groups, it's painfully awkward. I threw a big party for my birthday and told my boyfriend to invite whoever he'd like. Thankfully, party was big enough so it wasn't noticeably awkward, but I could totally tell there was even an argument that broke out at one point.
The biggest issue is politics.
My boyfriend and I feel the same politically as do my friends, but his friends not so much. Some of them are more moderate, while others strongly affiliate on the opposing side of the spectrum. I know these occasions don't happen often, but my boyfriend and I both love to host and love having big gatherings and celebrations with our friends, so I know there's plenty more in store.
What should I do? Is this a deal breaker for us?
I can't see a world in which either of us stop inviting our friends to things. Each of our friend groups are years long. Oof, that's hard.
I have the answers, no conversation on politics, no religion. Politics, They well, I was going to say, talk about religion to be funny, but you know what they do put a sign on their door that says you're entering a politically and religiously free zone.
Do not discuss.
That's what. Don't you just tell them?
I mean, yeah, I mean I think I think people could be on opposite ends and still get along. Yeah, And just I just think it's well, it seems like this situation is going to be difficult because just the way she wrote this, and it seems like they will always bring it up and always argue, and it seems like there's some people in the friend groups that like to argue, so that's going to be an issue. But I think in a relationship like it's really about you and your partner. And then like as far as the friends, I mean, you could work on that. And I know it's not ideal, but maybe just don't invite, yeah, or just hang out with them separately, because you could deal with them and other people.
They were my friends. I'd say, listen, if you can't keep that at a lout or non discussion, it all can't come. I don't think you should.
Come, Susan.
I'm telling you, you just read my mind again. I was gonna say Susan and I would both say to that person, hey, you're making it. Because we're older, we would call it out. We would say you're making it uncomfortable for us and our friends, and we love you all and we want to all get together, but you got to stop, and if you can't stop, make other plans because we love you.
And I would do that.
Because of our age. Now, think about they're in their twenties. It's I know they don't feel so comfortable.
Right.
Thirty yeah, twenty seven seven seven.
So yeah, they're they're my age, so I don't know. I would you do it?
Yeah, come on talk to us.
Yeah.
I mean, like, I don't think if you're in a relationship, your separate friend groups have to get along for the relationship to work. That's obviously amazing if it does. But I don't think yes, like, for I have to get along with Joe's friends and he has to get along with my friends.
But are so but friends. It's not crucial for them to get along from them.
God, yeah, no, for our relationship to words, I don't think it's a deal breaker by any means. I do think it also takes time for people to warm up to each other, like, you might have to give it a few tries for these people to get to know each other, to get along. This might take like five or six interactions versus like one or two. I think that if I was in her shoes, I would just yeah, I would say, like, we're not talking about this. You guys are don't agree, and it creates you can't have like a respectful discussion about it without it getting heated. And for the maybe the few people that keep causing issues, those people don't get invited then to the big group gatherings.
Maybe they just stay.
You know, if it's one of Joe's friends that just like can't simmer down in a group setting, it's like, okay, we'll hang out with him with your friends, but he's not invited when it's a mixed bag of friends.
I agree, I agree, that's easy.
Yeah, And then it's on them.
It's like, if you want to play nice and have fun, then great, and if you don't, then you can't come.
That's it, bye bye.
Yeah.
I do think sometimes younger people like the political conversation. They thrive on it and they enjoy it. But I think when it becomes uncomfortable time to time, to draw a line.
I remember living in the city in the high horizon.
Everybody was one way and they talked about it a lot, and I was zip it, and finally, I love, don't you ever say anything? I said, no, I don't want you to know my opinion. I think's private and the only thing I keep private.
But we just talked about this on one of our podcasts recently, like, you're not going to change anyone's mind. I don't care if you're twenty seven or seventy seven. People typically have their political and religious views set, and you know, I think I hope that we get to a place where sides are more respectful of each other's opinions. But if you already know you're walking into, you know, into this, then it's best to just say please, don't do it, and hopefully hopefully but I'm with you, surreen, it shouldn't be a deal break.
The fifth, I feel like people also just love to argue and love to and love to hear themselves argue. And when when you get a group of those people around, it's almost it's probably going to be impossible to stop that, because even if they don't start that way, something will be said and something they're watching or out to dinner or what where.
Yeah, but maybe the first two three times it will be that way. But like that fight is going to get old, you know what I mean. They're not going to be able to sustain that every single time.
Do you think, well, what's crazy is that this happened on the first hangout? Like I would think I would think the first hangout would be pretty mild. I would say, like I could see this coming up, like, oh, we were we were all kind of getting along, and then like the fifth hangout, politics got brought up and people have opposing views, and now people are starting hate each other. But if this is starting from day one, it seems like, yeah, separate parties.
Yeah, yeah, separate parties. You can still host, just maybe not altogether, not all it.
Was, but I love it.
So it's probably in the end, after the fifth one, whoever, the guy was on his side his friends and the girl and hers probably end up together.
You think, I mean, hey, that's only good for that's only good for the dynamic.
Eff that's right.
They started, Remember though, I remember being young and look back in the dark ye when it was black and white TV.
I remember it all well.
But I remember loving that energy of having religious discussions and political discussions, and that's sort of how we all formulate our opinions. We read, we talk about things, and they're just in that stage of their life.
But there's a time and a place for that.
Yeah, I was just gonna say it, like wait till, wait till, wait till one of them sleeps with someone and then they and then they and they ghost that person, and then they all gonna be problem.
That's a lot worse than political argumented.
It's also like I do wonder with this girl, like is she overthinking it? Like she's like, you know, nothing was happening, but I felt I felt the awkwardness. And it's like maybe like her own anxiety about the situation is making it feel like a bigger deal than it is. Like I think she I think she should go ask her friends like hey, because they might be like, oh, no, it was awful.
They might be like, no, it really wasn't that bad.
Like fine, Like she's probably putting a lot of pressure on herself, you know, herself.
Let them, babe, they want to argue, Let them argue. Stop worrying.
I've got the solution before the next party, Priscilla.
Is that.
Talia?
Oh?
Sorry Natalia, they're both twenty seven. Sorry, I Tellia before the next party. Hell, I encourage you to deeply I do.
You still have your name wrong?
Because we're can spend thirty minutes on this tell ya, which, by the way, Joe brings me to my question, what the hell is your last name? And how do you pronounce it? But we'll get to that. Uh, I would say deeply inhale or poor glass of something before your next party.
Roblem solved?
Yeah, before everyone shows up?
Kathy, are you asking me my last name?
Yes?
Because it looks like a moble, which in Spanish means you know, friendly.
Uh, you know.
I don't know exactly what it means, but a mobla is like a cheerful, nice person.
But how do you pronounce your last name?
Well, it's Italian and in Italy it means love.
But it's a mobilibley. Wait wait, I'm going to Italy say it again.
My full name, So, like my first name is Joseph Anthony Amobley a mabuli or a mob at a Mabeli Mobley, I'm going to walk.
Around the streets of Italy.
They pronounced it pronunciated so well in Italy, like when we like, even when we were checking into the hotels.
Like mister and ever, we like obviously travel a lot. Whenever we check into hotels in the States, they're like, hi, mister ammobile, and I speak phonetically like that's how it is. But when we went to Italy on our honeymoon, oh my gosh, they pronounced it so beautifully.
Do you battalion either one of you a little bit?
No, he doesn't. He always says this, he always does.
We went to Italy and the codrivers like do you speak and he was like a little bit.
And then I'm like, you don't speak any Italian? This guy is going to start talking to you.
It was.
It was a woman, and she did start talking to me, and we had a conversation.
Yeah, but different conversations.
I didn't know what she was.
She had no idea. The woman was having a great conversation. Joe had no idea what was going on? Okay, Joe, how do you say an Italian? I would like a glass of red wine?
Please, red wine.
Red wine please?
Zero Italian like not a word, Well, wine's veno.
Yeah, I can do it. In Spanish and something. Vino tinto is in Spanish, but I don't know. I would yeah Italian, I would say veno, uh.
Roja sa veno, and it's usually red.
Yeah, it's true.
Or just put my hand up to my mouth and they'll bring me something to drink.
You get it free on the train, like they give you wine. It's amazing.
Yeah, it's jealous.
All right, let's let's we got the question three. Last question? All right, Charlie. He's thirty from New York City. Am I wrong for feeling uncomfortable about my girlfriend's close friendship with her ex?
Right?
Here we go. I've been dating my girlfriend for about a year now, and things have generally been great. However, lately I've been feeling uneasy about her friendship with her ex boyfriend. They dated for several years before breaking up, and now they are still very close. They talk almost every day, have the same friend groups so they see each other often, have one on one hangouts like a few times a year, and even have inside jokes that I don't understand. Oh, this is an issue me Now. I've expressed my concerns to my girlfriend and she reassures me that they are just friends. Now and that I have nothing to worry about. She's always emphasizing that they've dated when she was eighteen and that the relationship was juvenile means nothing now.
Eighteen is not like fifteen, you.
Know, But every time they spend time together, I can't shake how uncomfortable it makes me. Am I overreacting or is it reasonable for me to feel uncomfortable about this situation. She's adamant about keeping the friendship because he was there for her during some really unfortunate family times and is have integrated into her friend group from college. I trust her, and I've never seen any kind of flirtation from either of them. Honestly, if I didn't know their history, I probably wouldn't think much of it. But knowing they have a romantic past changes things for me.
And they dated for several years.
This wasn't I ever spend time with the two of them.
I wonder that's a good It sounds like yes, because he says that seeing them integrate together and that he's part of her friend group, so I would assume that, like when he hangs up with the friend group, the ex boyfriend is present.
At times.
I feel like he has a little bit of jealousy, but rightfully so to a point.
If you don't trust.
Then you're going to have these issues. But I'm friends with all my.
Exes, really are you everyone, Susan?
But you're not. You don't go on one on ones with them?
And can you talk to them George and.
I a year?
Do you like talk to them every She's he says, they're talking every day.
That's that's a lot. That's yeah.
You know, if she cares enough and she knows how he feels, then she's got to pull back a little bit with.
That or an Italian a rivederci?
Do you do no Italian?
Yeah?
And also I don't like the inside joke thing like and if you don't get the inside joke, you ask her later what was the inside joke about? And she's like, don't worry about it's between him and I. Then you're like a then you break like yeah.
I mean, don't you think though that there's it's it's okay, I'm friends with you know, the one x in my life. I'm friends, but that this is beyond talking every day and inside jokes like that smells like a dog, looks like a dog, you know, and.
He's uncomfortable with it.
So if she, as you said, Susan, if she loves him or really cares about him, I would think she would be saying, you know what, I'm not going to see him as much. We're not going to talk every day. If she's if she's insisting on that, there's more to this story.
So just say, for instance, you have an ex from eighteen and you're really good friends and there's nothing really going on.
How would you handle that? What would you mean?
Yes, me an X from when I was eighteen years old. I can't remember what.
I'm saying ere about you?
Well, if so, if I was this girl that he was dating, and I had an ex that I was talking to every day, see, I mean I'm not. I don't have a relationship with any of my exes. So this is like so mind buggling to me. But I think you have to be willing to redefine that relationship when someone new comes into the picture. It's like she needs to prioritize her current boyfriend and the fact that it's like she's going out spending one on one time with her ex knowing that it's making her partner uncomfortable and she's totally fine with that.
Oh, we don't know, we don't know, we don't know if he if it is making he may no, he.
Says, Like I tell her, she tells me like it's nothing.
Yeah, that's the whole point.
You You are hitting the nail on the head. He is uncomfortable. If she loves this guy, then she's just.
Like, no more one on ones. Okay, if you're out, yeah, that's fine.
But I would be like redefine the relationship of like you're in the same friend group, you can't you shouldn't have to avoid your friends to avoid this person, but like.
No more one on one hangouts.
Like maybe you know, if you want to do it, you can catch up in a group setting you see him all the time, and no more talking every day.
I don't want to be jokes yeah.
Or like let's just you know xnay them.
But the problem is when you when you have to tell your partner they can't do something it is very hard. It's not even about it being very hard. Then they're just going to want to do it more. The truth is she needs.
She does want to do more. That's the problem.
Well, that's what I'm saying.
She told me I don't want you to do this. I would be like, yeah, no problem, she wouldn't want you to feel bad.
What I'm saying is, I think she needs to realize that it has now become a little inappropriate. It's making him uncomfortable. She needs to be able to see that for herself and gradually stop. But if he's like, you can't do this anymore, that's different. Yeah, it's it's just that never works.
Or put yourself in his shoes, stop and think about it. How would I feel if he were doing.
This one hundred percent?
Yeah, right, it's only fair and that maybe would modify the way you.
Yeah, it's it's thinking about the other person's feelings. You know, how is it going to affect our relationship? All those things? And if you're not having that communication and talking, then there's a bigger chasm in your relationship.
Then you realize that's what I would do. But I'm a child. I would instantly be like, Okay, fine, then I'm I'm just gonna become best friends with a few of my exes and go hang out with that and then well then we'll we'll play that game, and.
You know what I'm going to do. I want to meet Susan's xes.
Yeah, EXA's Susan's sexes could become my currents.
They could y.
Yeah, But I do think it's one thing to be like, hey, my ex is in town. We ended on great terms. I'd love to like go grab a coffee with them or go grab lunch with them, Like yeah, like you trust your person you're with, that's totally fine. Like this relationship is so extensive it does borderline inappropriate. I feel that the conversation needs to be like, hey, this makes me uncomfortable. These are the parts that make me uncomfortable. Are you willing to make adjustments? And if she's like no, I don't care that you're uncomfortable, I'm not going to do that every You might need to reevaluate the relationship.
Everyday conversations on the phone.
Give me a break. Are you not over him? Maybe you wouldn't keep.
That makes you look it makes you think it looks like something. It probably is something.
And you know, yeah, where there's smoke, there's fire usually.
Okay, So intuition okay, So overall, what's what's the advice we're given? We're given Charlie from.
New York lay some graund rules.
Okay, Kathy, I would say I have the conversation and don't give ultimatums. If if if she insists on the relationship and isn't willing to compromise, that does not bode well for a future relationship.
Okay, damn all.
Right, what is this guy going to be like in Abrise med at their wedding?
I mean, at this rate, it's going to be like that movie with uh gonna end up?
What's happening?
Do you want to be the other guy competing against Patrick Dempsey? Is the question? Okay? That is that's going to wrap the questions. Thank you guys for writing in your questions. We really appreciate it. And Kathy and Susan, thank you so much for joining us today. It was so much fun having you guys on Happy Hour.
Thanks for coming on.
And it's great to see you.
And I'm so glad to know because so many people don't know how to pronounce your last name.
Joe A.
Mobley, Say it one more time, Joe Joseph Anthony?
Was it Joseph Anthony A Mobley? Byeful?
Okay, this is so much fun. Thank you guys again, and to all our listeners. We'll be doing a Part two where Kathy and Susan take the wheel and we'll be the guest on their podcast, so be sure to keep an eye out for that episode dropping later this week.
YEP, be sure to give part to a listen and make sure to subscribe. We have new episodes of Happy Hour dropping every single week.
Bye bye bye, see you very soon.
Thanks for having us, Yye