From the Fans: The Drinking Episode

Published Dec 6, 2024, 8:00 PM

We’ve once again asked for voice memos from YOU, the listeners, about a “very special episode” of Boy Meets World that was so controversial, it was banned from The Disney Channel. And now it’s time to hear your opinions on “If You Can’t Be with the One You Love!”

Should it have been banned? Or should it have aired to instill fear in children everywhere? Our hosts seem to be on the same page, but the audience has a wide array of unique takes that just might sway them…

Is it a cautionary tale or a college drinking game? Find out when we lift the ban for a new interactive Pod Meets World!

The time has come again where we reached out to our listeners for voice memos. This time we wanted to talk to them about the infamous Drinking episode. We wanted to know if they thought that it should have been banned, if it was too dramatic, that scared them from forever drinking, did it make them an alcoholic? What did it do for them? And we once again received what I could only describe as a butt load of emails.

That's a very specific term.

Is that is well, it's metric.

Ye, So yeah, so I don't understand that.

I don't get it. Yeah. Overall, would you guys say you liked that episode looking back?

If you think I remember that episode.

The one I remember Rider saying he hated watching his performance in that. Yes, but like Benz, liked Benz and also liked the idea that it was like Michael taught you how to play drunk by not actually playing drunk.

I remember that.

Yeah.

My basic takeaway was that the first half of the episode was awesome or it was just that once it got redirected to like Sean becoming an alcoholic. Up until then, I was like, oh, this is actually a pretty important lesson, and well, it's you know, it's very special episodey, but still let's go there. But then it just felt like way too much. And I remember saying it at the time, like I but I'm curious to hear from listeners, particularly those who maybe were dealing with an alcoholic parent or an alcoholic in their family, because I imagine it spoke to them in a way that, you know, maybe it makes the episode worth it, you know, like regardless of how you know, sort of heavy hand.

Every episode is somebody's favorite episode. That's what I just keep in minding myself.

That's true except story night. So I will say too, I didn't pick any clips that say this, but a lot of people do think this should have been a two parter.

Oh.

We we talked about that. That would have been the great two parter where a time lapse could have happened, where everyone could have been shocked by the idea that wait a minute, Sean is still drinking, right, you know.

You get a whole episode of the reveal of that, Yeah really developed.

A multiple strange behaviors and question and all of us kind of questioning what's going on with him, only for that to be the reveal.

Yeah, that could have been great, and then saved the Jack part for the second episode about Yeah our dad.

That was a great reveal.

It's all seen.

Give me a scene Jack and Sean alone having that confrontation.

Great.

Let's get into some of our clips here. This first one is from a listener named Sinatra.

Hi, guys, this is Sinatra. I'm so glad you guys are finally at this episode. This episode of boy Mes World is one of the many nineties that shape the person I turned out to be. I mean, between the episode of Saved by the Bell with Jesse taking the caffeine pills, which had me staying away from drugs including caffeine all the way through college, to the after school specials and TV movies like One with Ben Savage that taught me about domestic violence, this is one of those episodes that just really stuck with me and helped me make my college decisions. I wasn't touching alcohol to save my life even after I turned twenty one. I was scared to death.

Man.

Now that I'm an adult and I actually have experienced in life, Yeah, I've realized that the show went overboard, and I learned that alcohol can be consumer responsibly, but for the longest time, I was scared to even go near it. So if it's a one or two kids' lies, I guess they did what they were supposed to do.

Wow, yep, there to go interesting.

I am still very shocked by the idea that she made it through college without caffeine.

Well, you know, Mormons don't ever touch caffeine.

I am sure.

I haven't held caffeine in like twenty years.

But still I call it seems like the time for caffeine.

Man.

Yeah, that's a caffeine over alcohol. I mean, I didn't even really drink until college, but even I gave in.

Yeah, that's what I mean. But that's what TV can do, especially when you're young, or it does the opposite. And I started smoking because of different So yeah.

Well let's get into Melanie. She has some thoughts on special episodes in general.

Hi, Pop Meets World.

My name is Melanie.

I grew up watching Girl metz World, and I was able to watch Boy Meets World on Disney Plus and I'm a sophomore in college and all throughout high school I was judged for not wanting to partake in Andrea's drinking. And it's become such a normalized thing. And it makes me wonder if Disney Channel shows that I grew up with, like Austin and Ali and live in Maddie, like, if they had topics talked about like this, if Gendi's behavior would have been slightly different today. So yeah, but thank you for having this podcast, and I really enjoy your show. Thank you so much.

Well that I mean, Danielle, this is your world a little bit and righter too with the directing growing's world. But Danielle, with all the work you do at Disney Channel, do they not do very special episodes anymore? Is that not a thing?

Not really?

No, man, that's the perfect.

Place to do them.

See.

I mean, I think this goes back to something that we've talked about before, which is like network television inevitably required, Like it brought about a sense of responsibility because you were airing to try to the widest possible audience, right like you're casting the widest net, so if you account for that net, so when you're not when you're isolating just like oh, you know, Disney Channel, for instance, is like a very specific demographic, right like six to thirteen or whatever, and like those people, you might not feel like you just want to entertain those people that target audience, so you don't have this like level of responsibility to like turn them. You might turn them off with a dramatic episode, right, they'll turn their TV off. They'll be like why, Whereas like if they're kind of compelled to watch it because it's a family audio, a family show that's targeted to the entire family, they're going to watch it, like figure, that's.

Your perfect audience to do that, to do the don't sniff glue, don't take drugs, don't I mean, they.

Do have episodes that are that could be considered like very special, although they're not necessarily as heavy handed as some of our very special episodes, but they're more about I think in trying to let's not add to the laundry list of episodes about drugs and drinking, there may be about more modern.

Day problems tweens and teens.

Face, so that would be social on social media, or things like blended family situations and drama, or racism, micro aggressions in blended families, or you know, like autism. There's there, so they there's like maybe topics that weren't as widely discussed back then. That now they will do an episode about and I think it's probably because they're like, well, do we need to see another let's not do drugs. You know, the nineties was so all about just say no and dare It was so big for our time.

But I don't know, like I could see them doing like don't vape, like like you know, something like that could be super important for a Disney Channel show kind of thing, but I don't know if they'd even want to show that on the channel.

Yeah.

Well, also like the Save by the bellopisode where they go to that Hollywood party and are asked to smoke weed, Now it would be it would be legal.

Wait, there's a Save by the developisode where they go to a Hollywood party and they're asked to smoke.

Why does it have to be Hollywood.

They can't have a party at their own school where somebody has the smoke weed.

They've got to go to big bits at Hollywood smoke pot.

Oh my business, celebrity, Well, we love an international memo. Here is Julia from the Czech Republic and she has thoughts.

It's Julia Ruth coming to you from Prague, Czech Republic, where I have lived for the past six years, meaning the only people I have to discuss this television show with is you. The thing that bumps me the most, besides sit on Corey's lap, which is completely inappropriate, the push in Evangela completely inappropriate, no consequences is the turn that Alan does. He comes at Sean then just immediately has this new level of maturity and apologizes in a scene that actually works, which is a testament to Rusky. It works, but it's always just how can you go from these extremes. Maybe it's a testament to that they made the twenty you know, two minutes work, But come on, Alan, get your shiz together.

Thank huh, thank you, thank you.

You know it's funny is that it didn't really it didn't really bump me that that he made that turn, because I have, certainly, as a parent, made a turn that quickly where I have assumed something happened with one of my kids and have reacted very harshly like like I know what happened, only then to be proven wrong and then to very quickly immediately go into I am very sorry.

I was wrong.

I should not have made that assumption. Thank you for telling me the truth. I hope you can forgive me, like you kind of when you screw up, you should be able to on a dime say I screwed up.

But also doesn't Amy pull him into the other room. She pulls him out of the kitchen.

The first time she does. Second time, I think he comes about.

The second time it comes out, but he's upset. She pulls into the other room. We don't get to see that conversation. Yeah, we only have twenty two minutes and we're trying to wrap this up in eight at this point. And then yeah, the next time that Sean comes over, but I think presumably they had like, you know, more conversations and he had time. I don't know that didn't really Again, like I think we're just dealing with not enough time, Like it should have been a tall episode that whole.

Yeah, but I also love it's also kind of works for Alan. Alan, could you know, you get they've set it up that he was Sean back in the day. Maybe he was a little bit of a hothead. He was a boxer in the navy. So the idea that he like snaps and then takes a minute to like, okay, wait a minute, that wasn't good, and then brings it back. I think kind of works for the character.

Well, I'm happy to say that. I'm happy to say that because Roxanne agrees with you.

Here she is Hi, Danielle Ryder and Will. My name is rox Sayne. I'm calling from Minnesota. I wanted to share my thoughts on this special episode and give you guys a different perspective. I come from a Mexican family. I'm first generation, so my parents are very strict, so strict that I'm thirty five years old, married, a mother of two, and I have a tattoo that they don't know about because I'm.

Too scared to tell them.

Anyway, growing up, these special episodes were always my favorite, specifically because of Alan and his parenting.

When he yells at the boys.

And then can turn around and apologize and make sure that Sean hears him, like, no, you need to understand that I was wrong. Those always stood out to me. There's another episode coming up where Sean is drinking and ask Alan to yell at him the way that he yells at the boys. I just remember feeling.

Like, oh, I just wish my dad was like that.

Anyway, I love you guys so much. I love the pod thank you for all you do.

Wow, was just so nice to hear. Yeah, I mean, I think it's something we noticed, you know, season one watching the show. It's like, isn't the parents are so interesting to dynamic characters and they're like obviously very good parents, like that's the president, but it's nuanced good parenting. It's not just you know, it's not just father knows best, right, it's father father needs to figure out how to know best and in the course of storytelling, becomes a great father. Like I totally couldn't agree more. You know, we've talked at nauseam. I wish I wish Amy got the same you know, amount of space to be as dynamic of a character. But I think in general, Boy Meets World really thrives on the adult characters being you know, great, great role models.

While we're talking about characters, let's go to Kim uh Sean is up some for some notes.

Hey guys, my name is Kim. I'm from Tampa, Florida. I just want to say I love the podcast. I listen to it every week. You three are hilarious and I've been a fan of Boy Me Swirls since I was.

A year old.

I'm thirty three right now. So with this particular episode, I don't believe it should have been banned by Disney Channel because it really teaches the dangers of underage drinking. But however, my main concern is with Sean. First of all, the way he gets heavily influenced by these dangerous is very concerning. First he was getting Corey out of that mob for Christmas, and then he himself started working for the mob. And then also Sean walks into a colt knowing it was a colt, then joins the coke later. I mean, I'm just saying, if Course just starts smoking crack and then Sean tries to get him the cup, is going to start smoking it himself. He's gonna be coming in, busting, coming out.

Like this is the five o'clock free crack giveaway.

So that's my thoughts.

Lovey guys, Thank you.

Also pulling up to join our podcast anytime.

That is true? Yeah, true, I didn't realize the pattern. There's always like Corey like dips his toes in and Sean.

Just jumped.

The bullet. Oh well, let's let's listen to Lauren.

Now, Hey, guys, my name is Lauren.

I am from Napa, California, and I have to tell you this episode is what inspired my sobriety.

No, just kidding, That's not true at all.

Because apparent I appreciate the heaviness of Alan Matthew's disappointment for sure and the lessons, but I thought it was completely overshadowed by the hilarity that is Sean and Corey outside that liquor store talking about our manga.

Are you kidding me?

This is one of my top episodes. Love the show, love the pod.

Wish it could go on forever. Bye.

That's so funny.

Oh my gosh, the oar manga stuff, it's funny.

I have thought about it a couple of times since we did the episode.

That's a really kind of It was.

An underrated moment between the two of them where.

He's like, I don't remember what he says our manga, no my name.

Yeah, it's a pretty It's a pretty underrated joke for I think this was too drunk.

That was post Capoetta spin, wasn't it outside?

That was walking hand talking, just making sure, just walking.

You don't know, I think anything you do like that, I go cabaletta.

I mean Actually, if you think about it, if they had taken off the pressure, you know, Sean needed to become a full blown alcoholic in the course of one episode, that whole sequence of that night could have been two more scenes of funny stuff and trouble, you know, like more trouble, more complications. I mean, because we are we're paying somebody to get us liquor keep getting into more. You know, it could have been funny and yeah, I think, yeah, the consequences could have been just as harsh.

Yeah, while we're on the subject to some Seawan notes, I got more from Michael.

Hey, guys, Michael from Memoryville, California here, And I feel this episode was indicative of the writers doing it as service to Sewan on a more consistent basis for the remainder of the show's run. This may have been a very special episode, but this plants the seed of the idea that Shawn is Corey's very special friend whom he goes on to treat as a project to fix on the grounds that he knows what's best for Shawn better than Shawn does. This feels like such a flanderization of Shawn's character. Following how strong the writing was for him in previous seasons, as more light was shown on his complex nature and his relationships with his parents and mister Turner. On a similar note, I understand that Blake Clark wasn't a series regular, but the fact that we have zero context on whether Chet had any sort of presence off screen after Sean moves in with Jack doesn't do justice to the Hunter family dynamic either. I get that he was trying to be a good dad by bringing his sons together, but are we left to assume that sometime in the six months since they've lived together, Chet has just again left town to do his Chet thing. If so, then that's kind of a jerk move to leaf his sons to deal with the generational trauma of his alcoholism by themselves. Or he is still in town and they don't bring him into the proceedings, which is just as weird.

Wow, it's great, great notes. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm just thinking about like all those those moments that you know where Corey, like in previous season one, right where Corey is dealing with Shawn's Christmas the fact that Sean doesn't have Christmas gifts or whatever it was, like Corey did, like he tried to fix it the wrong way if I remember correctly, you know, like Corey was making mistakes and was wrong in a lot of their dynamics too. He didn't respect that Shawn was his own like individual, and that was part of the episode. And yet he's right. I think as the seasons go on, Shawn is just always needs Corey's you know, constant.

Right, just Sean with go with going into college, where he's like, you're not, you're doing this wrong. I'm going to get you into college whatever I have to. You know, we just saw it, so.

Sewn has kind of like damaged goods from here on out, which is kind of a bummer, like for anybody to, you know, for our show to just fall into that pattern.

He's a drunken cracksmoker. I mean, what do you expect at this point?

My god.

It also does mirror very much what happened in Girl Meets World, where Riley became the sort of let me fix my friend Maya.

My friend Maya is.

A is a lost soul and she needs my guidance in every aspect.

Otherwise who knows where Sheryl She'll end up.

Yes, he used a term that I had to look up at flanderization. He has ever heard that before?

Yes, it's turning you into Ned Flanders from the Simpsons.

Yeah that Ned went from a friendly and good hearted neighbor into a dogmatic, evangelistical Bible thumper.

I was kidding that that's what That's what I.

Was totally fictional characters essential traits are oversimplified to the point that they can't suit the entire personality.

Yep, Wow, it's a great way to put it.

Yeah.

Yeah, Joseph has some other thoughts on this episode. He's turned it into a game.

Yeah.

First time I saw this episode that was probably like eleven, and it was super funny and I really liked it. But then later on in college we used to play drinking games based off of this actual episode. Sean or Corey took a swig. It was a swag for everybody. So it was a very fun episode. But at the end of the day, it was kind of a wrong as you love to say, you.

Think that was what they were going in the should have been category band.

Category, everybody take a shot if you think it should have been banned.

I remember I was told multiple times, like later in life, that that that there were college gatherings of getting stoned and watching Borms, So like that was big.

That was a big thing in the on Friday.

Did I misremember this? Did somebody at one point? And this could be like the prisoners in the audience, which I still think I'm right about, But this could be one of those things. Did somebody once tell us that the Green Bay Packers used to watch our show before a game? So that's why it could be wrong. But I would distinctly remember somebody telling us that, like, oh, dude, the Packers watch your game, like watch your show in the locker room before a game or something like that.

Brett fav if you're listening, Brett Favor, if you're listening, let us go that was real. Danielle is someone who also sent a voice memo. She might have already heard the drinking game story, so let's see what she thinks about banning the show.

Hey, my Boy Meets World Besties. I wanted to give you my opinion as a parent on the Disney Channel's decision to ban the episode. I will say that I have a seven year old and she recently completed Red Ribbon at school, which for us ninies kids is basically dare and she thinks drugs are bad. Alcohol is bad awesome, but she was also very proud to let us know that when she is twenty one, she will be allowed to drink drugs. So the message is kinda close, but close only counts and hand shoes and horse grenades. So yeah, it might not be the best episode for some of the younger audience. Love y'all bye, what kind of drug?

Doesn't drinking or drugs? I hope she doesn't do that? A funny one, you know, man?

Yeah?

Well again, I also, I don't know what the demographic exactly was of our show, but eight thirty Friday nights, you probably wouldn't figure it's for seven year olds. But again, this is why it's different on Disney Channel, that is on ABC. The Disney Channel can aired an three o'clock in the afternoon, and you know, maybe if you are seven, maybe it.

Is Saturday Morning cartoon.

Yeah, but I mean give the Saturday Morning Cartoons is a perfect example because Gi Joe always ended with a message, and it was always the most red Hey, Billy, there's a down power line, let's go jump it. Don't do that, Billy, don't do that, And it was always don't do drugs, don't smoke, So I mean they were doing.

Stuff geared towards little little kids.

But maybe this would have been a little too much.

I don't know. While we're talking about syndication, I do want to say that if anyone works for Freeform, send us an email if you're like involved in the idea that the rewatch is now synchronized with their syndication schedule.

Wait, what's happening.

Yes, so recently we've been getting a lot of emails from people saying, Hey, you know it's weird. Your recap aired the same week that Freeform aired that episode. There is some sort of synchronizing between Freeform and what's been going on in the podcast.

Thank you producer Tara, who just said I have a friend a free Form all ask.

Yeah, we've been getting a lot of emails. Huh uh. While we wait for that, we will hear from Jason. He has a hot take.

Hi, this is Jason from Pittsburgh. I have a hot take for this episode. The writers copped out a bit by going the obvious route and having bad boy Sean be the alcoholic. If they made it Corey instead, this out of character move could have really raised the stakes. Sean could have tried to relate to Corey through exposition about Chet that we didn't know, and Corey and Tapega could have had some genuinely meaningful conversations that she tried to get through to him, giving each relationship and character more layers. I know, the network couldn't make Corey quote unquote bad, but the message that alcohol can be dangerous to anyone is pretty important. And yes, it really is a long walk to Pittsburgh.

At you got a lot of voice memos that said that, a ton of voice memos. Yeah, it's a.

Really good point because actually, Corey, I mean, he is being bad by drinking in the first place. So it's like we've already allowed the character to experiment with alcohol, why not have him people want to have the problem, especially considering he's the one that current, but he also has the current depression or the current you know that he was drinking for a reason. In a lot of ways, the show leans on this idea of you know, inherited alcoholism and like sort of just makes it about that as opposed to you know, yeah, the potential big like maybe a potential more powerful message which is oh yeah, to anybody if you.

Just reversal too of having Sean now trying to quote unquote fix court Corey because of everything he's been through and when his family had been through. And it's right if if Corey would think of the scene of Corey walks in and there's Jack and Sean both standing there and they're like, we talk, Yeah, it also.

Would have been it would have made more sense for Corey than to really be hiding his drinking as opposed to like Sean's beer was just in the fridge, and so how did how did Jack not see that?

How did Eric not see that? Like he just walks in.

And grabs a beer in the middle of the day from the fridge, whereas if Corey had it under his bed and was you know, and Sean joined him for a night, had a great time and was then like whoa, whoa, whoa. I drink with you one night, but I haven't touched it since and you've kept doing it. It's a really good point.

Let's stay on these heavy topics with Alison.

Okay, so I love Boy Meets World. It's my one of my favorite shows. But the moment when Sean pushed Angela, I hated it. I hated it so much. I think they sent this message that he pushed her because he had been drinking, and I think that's very harmful for young girls to see, Oh, my boyfriend only hit me because he got too drunk. But I don't care if you're sober. If you're drunk, it's never okay to put your hands on your partner. When that happened, that relationship should have been done or they should have handled handled it a different way.

Wow wow, Yeah, I mean there is the implication that I'm talking to a counselor at the end of the episode, right yeah. They don't specify. They just say, like, I'm talking to a guy, and you know, but you're right, it would have been so much more. It's like, there's the drinking issue, but then there's also the anger and abuse going on that seems like maybe should be dealt with separately or considered separately. That's a really good point.

Is there ever another point in the series that Sean exhibits kind of outbursts or anything really never happens again?

Right, Well, we did get a lot of voice memos that say he drinks again.

So yeah, I do get drunk again. But you know, I remember the beginning of this episode where I just pushed the guy in the locker.

And that seemed like they were trying to minimize what happens later, like oh, he's just a yeah, he's just a point.

That's to her point, which is that it actually shows that a pattern that sean regardless of drinking, already thrown people around or thinks it's fine to just you know.

Yeah, she's she has a really good point too that, like it really is okay and truthfully a really preferable thing to say. I have some deal breakers and relationships, and one of those deal breakers should be if a partner is willing to get physical with me, if a partner is willing to push me or hit me, And regardless of whether or not there's a quote unquote excuse like alcohol, the fact that you were ever able to do that is a deal breaker for me. And if it happens, I'm just going to walk away. The fact that they didn't even address it, it was just like the next time you saw her, you said, gay, I guess what, I'm never going to drink again, and she was like, cool, right, yeah, that that probably never I did not even think about it in that way of like what kind of message that tells young girls.

It's also could have been completely in keeping with Trina's character too, with Angela to you know, Sean saying Hey, I'm going to talk to somebody, and she's like, that's great, We're good, and then she turns around them and she's like, but if you ever put your hands on the right yea, Like something like that could have been very powerful as well. But yeah, it's interesting.

Let's listen to Ella.

Hi everyone, my name is Ella and I live in New York City, where I work as a canter on Long Island. I really appreciated what Ryders said about this episode being flawed because it's more about ideas than a fully developed story. But that's actually why it resonated with me so deeply.

As a kid.

As Danielle, I love all I'm talking about you guys like I know you anyway. As Danielle has mentioned on the pod, there's nothing tweets want more than to feel like grown ups, and this episode gave us a glimpse into a world that was often off limits. She was like alcoholism and physical abuse that were typically reserved for films and TV shows for grown ups, but in this episode, it felt like we were finally being let in on those conversations. I felt the same way about the iconic Kiss and a Long Walk to Pittsburgh. Finally, a rom com made for me, not for my parents.

That's coo wow, that's a cool way to look at it too. A rom com made for kids. That's an interesting way to look at that episode. I've never really.

World is kind of that a lot.

Yeah, but it's almost but it's almost different genres for kids a lot. We did the horror episode that was more for kids. We did now the drinking episode that's more for kids. Slapstick, yeah they really. We really have kind of hit all the different genres. Yeah.

That interesting. Well, we hit a lot of different voice memos. So this is our final one. This is from Melissa with the last word on the drinking episode.

Hi, my name is Melissa from Rhode Island, Connecticuts often forgot about neighbor. I'm going to try to make this quick because there's a lot to unpack. I'm thirty five years old and I remember watching this episode when it first aired, although I've probably watched it several times in syndication before it got banned. I believe when this show first aired was probably around the same time I was discovering that my own father had a drinking issue. Luckily, it never escalated to the point of violence, and I'm proud to say that he sobered up my sophomore year of high school.

It has been sober ever since.

But when I was just rewatching this episode recently with my husband, during Jack's speech to Sean about how addiction runs in the family and is dangerous, my husband turned to me in shock because that speech is almost exactly verbatim what I have used to defend my sober lifestyle all through high school and college. So could the episode have been done better, probably, But did it get its point across? Absolutely because something I heard on a show I watched as a kid stuck with me apparently my entire life. Love the show, Love the pod.

Keep doing what you're doing. Thank you.

That's great.

That's so great.

It just goes to show you that, like, no matter what kinds of criticisms or critiques or whatever we have, depending on which lens you look at it from and how old you are and what your life experiences are, it can impact people in so many different ways, and like even just knowing that just for her alone, it made such an impact on her life for the better.

It just makes you go worth it, worth it.

Even if even if fifty or sixty percent of the people go this doesn't resonate with me, which I don't think is even actually the case, But even if they don't like the episode and whatever, there are some who it will make a difference for. And it's it's such a great message about the power of television and what we do.

I think what I think the question comes down to, you know, is this, would we rather this episode existed even with all its flaws than not at all? And the answer is yeah, I definitely think that. I think The Boy Meets World is awesome for tackling something like this, you know, and even and it's sort of you know, we have our nitpicks, but I'm you know, I'm proud of like, okay, but we had to show that.

This original question of this episode though, do you do you either of you think this should have been banned from Disney Channel.

No, I don't think so. I mean, you know, I'm a firm believer the kids should be exposed to like a lot like I'm not agree on that. Yeah, I agree.

I think the pros of the episode drastically outweigh the potential cons.

I agree.

Yeah.

Well, as always, we want to thank all of the Pod meets World listeners for sending in their voice memos. Will continue to do these every once in a while as a bonus, but as always, the response is massive and the show obviously affects many many people, not just the Boy Meets World show, but the podcast. So thanks so much.

Yes, thank you for being such thoughtful listeners and your thoughtful messages and also your hilarity.

So many of you are so funny. We really have the best. We really do.

We have the best fans. We've talked about it with Boy Meets World, but now Pod meets World. We really appreciate you all.

So thank you.

Thank you for listening to this episode of Pod Meets World. As always, you can follow us on Instagram pod meets World Show. You can send us your email at podmeets World Show at gmail dot com, and we.

Have merch don't ban our March.

Podmeetsworldshow dot com writer send us out.

We love you all. Pod dismissed. Podmeets World is an iHeart podcast Producer, hosted by Danielle Fischel, Wilfridell and Ryder Strong Executive producers Jensen Karp and Amy Sugarman, Executive in charge of production, Danielle Romo, producer and editor, Tarasubasch producer, Maddie Moore engineer and Boy Meets World Superman Easton Allen. Our theme song is by Kyle Morton of Typhoon. Follow us on Instagram at Podmets World Show or email us at Podmeats Worldshow at gmail dot com

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