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This is Attorney Amida Zari from Zari Law.
If you've been injured in an accident and feel like no one is fighting for you, it's time to fight back.
Call Zari Law at 888-828-3rd.
That's what one call you can put a proven legal team on your side.
Zari Law has been serving the DMV for over 15 years, proudly fighting for our locals news.
I was born and raised right here in the DMV and my team is made up of experienced,
reputable local attorneys dedicated to fighting for injury victims just like you.
Follow us on all social platforms at Zari.law.
That's a-z-a-r-i-dot-l-a-w.
Don't wait, don't settle.
Fight back with Zari Law.
With offices in Maryland, D.C. and Virginia,
like Team and I are ready to stand up for you.
Call 888-828-3rd.
That's 888-828-HU-R-T.
And let us fight back for you.
Get more out of every mile when you share the ride to work.
With carpooling, you'll have time to relax, save money, and pick up new friends.
Commuter connections can help you find carpool partners who live and work near you.
Even if you're commuting just a few days a week, it's a free service.
Carpooling, every dollar saved, every friend made.
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I'm Spencer and I work at United Healthcare.
Suspenser, why do you care?
I care because my daughter Adeline has special needs.
I am motivated by Adeline who inspires me every day.
I am driven to help families like mine navigate the healthcare system.
I'm so blessed to lead an amazing team at United Healthcare focusing on
the member experience and making that better.
I'm Spencer and I'm committed to care.
I guess we'll commit a DGS.
It is Thursday, weeks flying by.
Oh yeah.
Of course, it helps when you only have half a show.
Certainly helped the perception of time today.
Just what was it?
Last week, Andrew, were you in there last week when we were talking about the virtues of the half
loaf of bread?
Yeah, because David told us he bought the, I forget the name of the brand,
but it comes in the half-lose.
Lewis.
Lewis, there you go.
We talked about how brilliant that is for people,
though, if you don't have a family of four,
well, your bread is going to be sitting around, not going great.
This is kind of that, right?
For the radio version of that, we got a half loaf of bread today.
So we'll take you up to five o'clock.
Redbird rush hour will pop in at five o'clock.
Dave will be back on Monday.
He had a blast last night.
And I'm not going to even try to recount what we saw in the video.
But I mean, he'll tell you all about the experience down there.
He's had himself a pretty, pretty great trip.
And the game he experienced last night,
the World Baseball Classic with Venezuela and the Dominican.
It's certainly going to be a hell of a story.
But he's back on Monday.
We got Dave Murray in about 20 minutes or so.
And then in about an hour,
we'll bring our legal analyst, Brad Youngin,
and talk a bit about the city county stuff
that Sam Page brought up today.
Be interesting to get his take on it eventually.
We'll go deeper into it.
Because right now it's just kind of being floated as a,
ah, maybe this would be a good idea.
It's, you know, and we'll see if there's any further discussion
that goes along with that.
Ray, why don't we just get things started?
Like, wait, I mean, we're mid show.
It's always a little weird going mid show
because it's not like build up from the beginning.
But let's just dive in.
Let's do throw back Thursday.
All right.
March 12 back in the day.
132 years ago, it was 1894.
And they sold the first bottles of Coca-Cola.
1894.
Was that the version that had cocaine in it?
I would assume so.
Look out.
I'm sipping on a little cocaine right now.
And just to think what that became,
right, this invention from, you know,
the late 19th century is now like a powerhouse, right?
It's a juggernaut.
The Coca-Cola company.
It's pretty crazy.
It was a five cents fixed price of five cents.
Pretty much everywhere you went.
They didn't have dynamic pricing in 1894.
That's a bottle.
And it stayed that way for a while.
It did stay pretty cheap for a long time, right?
When did, I mean, it was less than 50 cents
of bottle when I was a kid.
Really?
Oh, yeah.
Wow.
Yeah, for sure.
If I, I don't remember precisely,
but I'm almost 100% that we could, for like, for $1.50,
you could get a pack of baseball cards,
a bottle of what it was Mountain Dew.
We always got, but Mountain Dew and a candy bar of some kind.
You could get that all for a buck 50.
Nice.
That's pretty sweet.
114 years ago in 1912, they founded the Girl Scouts of America.
They started selling those cookies.
Man, I'm so mixed on the cookies.
Why do you say that?
They're too delicious.
Well, no, they're fine, but too much fun
to support a good cause and get delicious cookies.
Couple of reasons.
Well, I do like supporting the costs.
And we buy them every year because, obviously, it's a good cause.
And we usually get them from our next door neighbor.
The, I'm torn on it, A, because, and this is the same complaint I had
about the Boy Scouts and their popcorn that they were selling back in the day.
It's just too expensive for what it is.
Like, it should be a little bit less.
I think for the, the, how good the cookies are because I do think they're quite good.
They are.
They're not bad.
I'm willing to pay a slightly over premium.
And I think I got like six boxes from that point.
I'm not trying to be as smart.
Like, what is the cause?
Well, I mean, it's a good question.
My understanding is that a portion of the proceeds benefit your local Girl Scout troop.
So the one that you're buying them from.
They use that for activities and things along those lines.
So they get some revenue.
That's the portion though.
Right, right.
You just blew my whole, you just blew my whole mentality.
I don't know.
I don't know how much of that goes to that.
That's probably something we could look into.
Well, because I was just thinking of Pim.
Remember sweet little Pim.
It was like, they told her she couldn't join.
And then another troop took her.
And she set this record selling like 120,000 boxes of cookies.
And on one hand, it's very heartwarming.
It's very sweet.
And on the other hand, it's like, why the heck do they need to sell 120,000 boxes?
There's no way the troop she's in is seeing 120,000 boxes worth of profits.
You know what I mean?
So that's just my question.
Sorry if I'm making anybody mad out there.
But I think I'm allowed to ask the question.
Rachel, you just put all manosphere.
I'm just asking questions.
I am.
I'm just asking questions.
Not only if you're listening, cancel my over.
No, don't do that.
This has messed my whole brain out.
I'm not saying it's bad.
It's just let's dig a little deeper when we say it's for when it's for a good cause.
It's like, well, what's the cause?
I don't know what that is.
You actually say a really interesting thing.
I would advise anybody, even I'm not going to name names,
but some of the very large charities out there.
Make sure you do your due diligence before you ever donate to a charity.
Primarily because a lot of them are not doing the things that they say they're doing with them.
There you go.
By the way, you're not making that allegation about the Girl Scout Cookies.
I am not making that allegation about the Girl Scouts.
No, no, no one's making any sort of allegation.
I'm just saying 100 and 20,000.
I mean, by every year they're not getting all those profits.
They better start answering some questions.
Andrew the inquisitor.
I'm getting, no, I'm talking about a couple of other very large charities that I know
of that are not what people think that they are.
Okay.
If you dig a little deeper.
Let's go back to throwback Thursday now that everyone in the Girl Scouts is mad at me.
Sixty-nine years ago in 1957, Dr. Seuss published The Cat in the Hat.
Man, that book stressed me out as a kid.
It did.
Yeah, because when thing won and the cat in the hat is already ruining those kids' lives.
He's coming in, he's making a mess.
In their house.
In their house.
They didn't ask for that.
They didn't ask for that.
Right.
They didn't and it's like, oh, we're going to be in so much trouble.
And then he's like, I got some friends coming over.
Thing one and thing two, I like, I was melting down inside every time those two showed up
because they only brought chaos with them.
And they look nasty.
They look like a couple of little freaks.
They do look crazy.
They have crazy hair.
So,
this is probably going to be a really ridiculous question,
but I'm going to ask it anyway.
Is the cat in the hat in the hat?
In the white stripes, yeah.
Is it supposed to be real or is that the symbol of the kids making the mess themselves
and blaming it on the cat in the hat?
Kind of like the Calvin and Hobbs thing.
Not to ruin it for everybody,
but Hobbs is his imaginary friend who is also a stuffy.
No, Hobbs is a tire.
Are you ready?
I don't think, I think that the children don't like that the mess is being created.
Right, right.
What I'm just, I'm trying to get through is the point that they were pretending that it wasn't them.
They did it or is it real?
Like, it could just be that it's real.
I haven't read the book in a long time.
So, the question is, is it a real cat or are these children's kids a friend?
Are they saying,
are they sending this up in their head like playing with an imaginary friend and saying,
okay, well, we can tell our parents, we didn't do it
because it was the cat in the hat.
Or is it just straightforward?
This is a cat in a hat who's destroying everything.
Let's dive in.
Do a deep dive.
I've got the lick of video.
Let's see if there's any like a lore like, you know,
like common conspiracy theories surrounding the cat and the cat.
I mean, when you look it up, there's a tab that comes up that said,
is the cat in the hat in the kid's imagination?
Go to the cat's Wikipedia page.
Scroll down to controversy.
But according to this, this is from Wikipedia.
So, take it for whatever.
But it says that this is the first Dr.
Su's book in which the fantasy characters like the cat and his companions
are not products of the children's imagination.
So, they're real.
There we go.
That cat really did.
He solved it.
Screw everything up.
Yeah, so he was kind of a jerk then.
But then didn't he help him?
Did he help him clean it?
So, again, it's been a long time.
I, yeah, it's been a long time for me too.
I feel like
it gets cleaned up before mom gets home.
Right, that's true.
Nobody got in trouble.
Okay, good.
Yeah.
But I don't know if the cat helped.
I really don't.
Yep.
All right, 52 years ago in 1974,
Kathy Lee Crosby became the first wonder woman on TV.
She was replaced by Linda Carter in November of 1975.
So, I didn't know this.
I did not know that because that's,
she became Kathy Lee Gifford, right?
I don't think this is her because the way this is spelled is not like.
Oh, it's different.
Okay.
Yeah.
I know Kathy Lee as in Kathy and Regis
begins with the K.
Okay, different.
Different.
Different.
This is the A, T, H, Y.
Kathy Lee Crosby.
Yeah, we only knew the Linda Carter version.
Or at least all it's all I remembered as a kid.
And I, you got to give it to the 70s.
Like, you could just start a TV show and completely recast the main character.
It's like a year later.
And everybody noticed this.
No one to Carter, we love you.
Yeah, nobody even noticed.
It's like 33 years ago in 1993,
Janet Reno was sworn in as the first female attorney general of the United States.
She served until January 20th of 2001.
She died in 2016 at the age of 78.
What, what year did you say she was put in there?
1993.
Oh, that would have been a year before she was our commencement speaker
at the University of Miami for graduation.
Whoa, was that cool?
Not really.
She was boring.
Yeah, she was, she was really not an exciting public speaker.
Obviously, very accomplished human being, very smart, all that.
But like, new, let's put it this way.
All those college kids were looking around going, okay, you can stop now.
It's hot.
It was like 96 degrees.
It was outside.
We were all just ready for everybody to stop talking.
Joel and the chat confirming everyone helps clean up the situation created by the cat
and the cat and the cat and the thing one and thing to do.
30 years ago in 1996, weird Al released his ninth comedy album.
Oh my goodness, how many albums does this guy have?
This album was called Bad Hair Day and it featured the song's Amish Paradise and Gump.
I don't know those two, but I've any Andrew is.
Oh, yeah, real into those.
Were you into?
Oh, yeah.
Oh, very much when I was a kid in any of my brother, both when he first came out,
it was a really big deal for all of us, you know, when we were young,
but then it kind of like, okay, it's, it's funny for a while.
The movie with Daniel Radcliffe is really spectacular.
Really?
Yeah, it's got one of my favorite gigs in any movie ever.
He seems like a good dude, weird Al.
I thought you meant Daniel Radcliffe.
Hey, he seems like a good dude, too.
He went, I wouldn't call him a dude though.
He's more of a chap.
He's a, he's a, he's a bloke.
17 years ago in 2009, Bernie made off pleaded guilty to scamming $18 billion from Wall Street
and Fetsters.
This is one of the largest cases of financial fraud in US history.
And man, people were really mad because yeah, he took from the rich people.
That's gonna say that's what you really get trouble when you steal from the rich people.
You will pay.
Yeah.
You steal from the rest of us, you'll be fine.
And then 11 years ago in 2015, hot ones premiered on YouTube.
You guys ever watched that?
Yeah, I've seen it.
I've seen it, it really depends on the guests.
Yeah, it's not a regular fix, but like when you see somebody on there that you think they're
funny or they're interesting.
Yeah, it's funny.
It can be.
When you get to, when they get to the last round or two, it's pretty hilarious.
For some of them, they freak out.
They're like, oh my god, what did they do?
That's pretty fun.
So yeah, the misery of other people, a famous people is fun.
This is attorney Amida Zari from Zari Law.
If you've been injured in an accident and feel like no one is fighting for you,
it's time to fight back.
Call Zari Law at 888-828-Turt.
That's what one call you can put a proven legal team on your side.
Zari Law has been serving the DMV for over 15 years,
proudly fighting for our local community.
I was born and raised right here in the DMV, and my team is made up of experience,
reputable local attorneys dedicated to fighting for injury victims just like you.
Follow us on all social platforms at azari.law.
That's a-z-a-r-i-dot-l-a-w.
Don't wait, don't settle.
Fight back with Zari Law.
With offices in Maryland, D.C. and Virginia,
my team and I are ready to stand up for you.
Call 888-828-Turt.
That's 888-828-HU-R-T.
And let us fight back for you.
Get more out of every mile when you share the ride to work.
With carpooling, you'll have time to relax, save money, and pick up new friends.
Commuter connections can help you find carpool partners who live and work near you,
even if you're commuting just a few days a week.
It's a free service.
Carpooling.
Every dollar saved.
Every friend made.
Register for free carpool partner ride matching at commuterconnections.org,
or call 800-745-RIDE.
That's commuterconnections.org.
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To make this going to be a jazzy.
I'll teach you this here on some weird Thursday.
Weird because it's short.
Dave's not here.
But I thought that weird.
It's just weird because everything's jammed together after a ballgame.
So we got Dave Murray coming up in a few minutes
and then after that, we'll see if this roller coaster is going to continue.
Today's not bad.
It's at least when it's sunny out.
It's not as windy as yesterday.
It was worse because it was dark out
for most of the day.
At least felt like it because it was cloudy and it was super windy.
It's a little bit better today.
We'll see what Dave says.
If it stays the same as the roller coaster that he described yesterday,
I'm going to guess that we're probably just going to need to buckle in
and deal with it.
Ride the wave through March.
And then we've got at four o'clock,
Brad Young's going to join us.
We'll talk a bit about the idea of the city and the county coming back together.
And there's a couple of stories out there about it today.
We'll get Brad's analysis on that.
And let's see here, five o'clock, Redbird Rush Hour,
and then of course, the countdown to opening day.
So there are only two more countdown to opening day shows.
That'll be these next couple of weeks.
And then of course, two weeks from today, we have opening day on Camelax.
So is there, for you guys, I know you guys love opening day two.
Is there something that's like that to you on your calendar every year that's like,
a lot of people are like, oh, it's Christmas morning.
It's New Year's Eve.
To me, it's opening day.
Opening day is the best day of the year.
You guys have that outside of like the holiday, the regular traditional holidays.
Like this is this is it.
I'm dying for this every year.
Yeah, it's this opening day.
Just opening day.
Oh, yeah, look at that.
Yeah, I mean, it's pretty fun.
I'm trying to think of something to compare opening day two.
And I wouldn't even compare it to like Christmas or something.
It's different.
It's just a totally different thing.
I compared opening day in St. Louis to what opening day is to St. Louis
to what Marty Graw is to New Orleans.
Oh, yeah, that makes sense.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
Similar like a local holiday that everybody's into.
Yeah, plus
I back it on TGS here on a Thursday.
Mr. Glover still on vacation.
He'll be back on Monday here on the airwaves.
And obviously with great stories to tell about his time down in South Florida.
Rachel, Zimmerman, Andrew Stolls, Kevin Wheeler.
Of course, our buddy Dave Murray joining us here for his daily 330.
How you doing, Dave?
I'm doing great.
I know Dave is listening.
Dave, Dave, don't come back on Monday.
No, he's coming back on Tuesday.
Oh, well, you don't want to.
It's too late.
He's already going to be back tomorrow, I think.
Oh, okay.
That's okay.
Because tomorrow is good.
Yeah, okay.
So just you just start.
Saturday's good.
Okay, but but he's still got to endure Monday and Tuesday with us.
Yes.
You just don't want to be traveling on those days.
Is that what I'm hearing?
No, he doesn't want to be after a week in Florida.
You don't want to.
Oh, I get you.
You want a buffer.
We're doing.
Got you.
Yeah, we got a buffer.
Yeah, he's riding the roller coaster with us.
Yeah, so I've decided to call it Mr. Toads Wild Ride.
That's a throwback to all you youngies out.
Disney it up.
That's a Disney ride.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
It's crazy.
And he's been on Mr. Toads ride, haven't I have not because it looks stupid.
And when you go to one of the things about going to Disney is that even the
stupid rides have like a three hour wait.
And you're like, well, you know, I can well, yeah, I could prioritize
a little better to get the lightning pass.
Come on.
I don't think it exists any more in the Florida one.
I feel like it used to in Disney world.
I'm not sure it doesn't.
Yeah, I'm not sure it exists anywhere.
I think if it was there, I've been on it because I've been at that park with children.
My little sister was born 18 years after me.
So we were there when I was in college and then my book, my daughter.
So if it was there, I was on it.
But I know it well because it was a legendary kind of like kiddie roller coaster kind of thing, right?
Right.
Exactly.
Yeah, I feel like Rachel had something to say.
I was going to ask you a question about Disney, but then I decided it wasn't the time.
Because we're doing the forecast.
We'll do it after the forecast.
Okay, we'll come back to question about Disney.
Okay, okay, this is a strap yourself in and you know, pull up your chair and relax.
I got a lot to tell you, okay?
And it's going to be a lot to process.
Okay, we're quiet tonight.
Partly cloudy skies.
It's okay outside right now.
It's about where we should be.
It's a little breezy overnight, 45.
Handle that Friday.
Fine, partly to mostly sunny.
Windy much of the day, 63.
Friday night, partly cloudy, 38.
Saturday, nice.
Best day of the weekend.
Partly sunny, breezy, 66 degrees.
Saturday night, the clouds come in.
Nice evening, Saturday night, 55 for the overnight low.
Sunday, right out of the gate, rain and some thunderstorms,
gusty winds, 69 degrees.
Now, I do think there'll be some severe weather.
We're way far out here talking about details of severe weather.
Right now it looks like extreme south of us.
I don't not sure at this point it bubbles up into the St. Louis area,
but a very unsettled day on Sunday.
Sunday night, the bottom falls out.
We turn colder and we turn colder very quickly with a mix of rain and wet snow
going over to snow, 22 for the overnight low, which we're sticking with.
We talked about this yesterday.
Could be some thunder.
That shakes everybody up in St. Louis.
And there could be an accumulation of one, maybe two inches of wet snow
that goes to dry snow Sunday night into Monday morning.
Monday, partly sunny, windy, snowflare is blowing around.
Wind gust could be up to 35, 40 miles per hour on Monday.
The high temperature Monday, 29 degrees.
No, wind, wind chills will be in the single numbers.
Monday night, the wind comes down 14 for the overnight low Tuesday, 35 for the high,
and we're in the 60s and 70s come Thursday and Friday.
Holy crap.
Yeah, that's okay.
I've talked to the folks at space mountain, Mr Toad's Wild.
Yeah, I know it.
If you have a bad back, don't get on space.
I don't want to I'm sorry. I didn't mean to interrupt if it was that did I did I step on your
toes. I just want to I talked to the folks at Eckerts Farm today. Uh-huh. And uh, you know,
obviously it's been a very warm start to spring across St. Louis. We had the 86 earlier this week.
Most of the trees right now are in what they call the pink stage. They're just starting to butt
and they're very concerned about 22 degrees Monday morning, 14 degrees Tuesday morning. So, uh,
keep keep records in your in your thoughts and in your prayers because they're hoping they can get
through this, but it's going to be it's going to be a struggle I think. Yeah. It's probably less
practical for them because it's a business that's, you know, doing a lot of things to do. I know
down in Florida when freezes come, they do various things like cover the trees. Yep. Try to keep some
of the heat in. Is that a thing where people can do whether you're at home or whatever. Yeah,
turn the sprinkler on, you know, create a layer of ice on the plant and and the keeps the
temperature right around the freezing point. Oh, really? Oh, instead of wow, I didn't know that.
Teens, uh, you know, covering this is this is going to be such a cold snap that, you know,
fruit trees and stuff, 25, 26, they're okay. Okay. Uh, you know, there's trees and bloom. Those
blooms are going to get smashed. Uh, uh, uh, you know, as far as like certain flowers you may have
up, people have P and E's that are starting to bloom. I cover them up, but it's it's going to be tough.
But don't cover them up. Don't cover them up tonight. Don't cover them up tomorrow. Don't cover
them up Saturday. Cover them up during the day on Sunday. Uh, it's just it's it's going to be,
it is going to be Mr. Toes Wild Ride, no matter what Andrew thinks about the ride.
All right, Rach, back to your Disney question. Okay. So whenever I hear things like it's a three
hour wait for a ride at Disney, are you really just going on like three rides the whole day and
that's it? No, I'm kind of exaggerating there. They're you know, but they can be out of busy.
If you go there the wrong time of year, like if you go Christmas week or you go during spring break
air season, you might, you might only get on a handful of things. Yeah, you might have hit like 90
minute lights on, on, on, they're usually not more than about 90 minutes. No, not with the
passes that Dave was talking about. Yeah, the lightning pass. I had an aunt and uncle who have been
passed away for many years, but they lived around Disney in Orlando. Okay. And they, they went all
the time. Yeah. Anybody who visited, they would go and we would get up like at five in the morning
and get there at six in the morning. And they would have it all mapped out. Here we are. Here's
okay. This is the first ride, second ride, third ride, fourth ride, run, run, go, go, go.
Pretty much got to get it all. And then Rachel, there are ways that you can schedule like a time
slot that you will go and then you'll get an align that's only got, you know, a handful of other
people. So you're waiting maybe 30 minutes instead of 90 minutes. If you go during this a lot of
time slot for you. Yeah. It's like, is everyone in a bad mood sometimes? Well, it can be, it can be,
I've seen it. Like most days, everybody's happy as hell, right? They got their Mickey ears on and
they're super happy the day and spent a while because I learned when I was in college, we learned
when to not go. You know, you go at the start right times a year and you're going to have a great
experience and it's pretty much happy all the time. It's not bad. The problem is that the rides are
absolutely worth waiting like 90 minutes or which ones are the rides. Some of them are almost all of them.
I waited. The ones that you would wait 90 minutes for. I mean, the ones that you would wait 90 minutes for
are absolutely worth it. Maybe the most miserable 90 minutes I've ever spent in line at anything
ever in my life was waiting 90 minutes to get on the Dumbo ride with my little sister when she
was out for it. It was 90. You know, it's a Florida, right? Or in California, right? It's going to be
hot. There's nothing covering the line at Dumbo and you just, and then it's just a carnival ride.
You just sit in the little Dumbo and you go up and while you're spinning around, it's not a big,
but man, the kids love it. The kids, that's what it's all about. My grandson loves Dumbo, right?
And I'll really let you know because we're taking him. They're coming in, not next week,
but the week after. We're going to be a Disney land for two days. Okay. So I'll let you know
and how upset I will be. This time of year, you're probably, it might be busy. It's spring break,
time-ish. Yeah. Yeah. We've got our tickets and you have the reservations and all the stuff you
have to jump through, all those boots you have to jump through. And we went through triple A.
And the guy at triple A, he said, because we bought two-day passes. We're coming home each day,
but two-day passes. And then we have a third day for just Janice and I. Oh, that's nice. Nice.
You've got, he said, you've got several months to use it. But he said, go Sunday afternoon.
The people who've traveled here to go to Disneyland have left. They're leaving, yeah.
And the people who are here, they have school the next day, work the next day, and they leave.
Disney land is really interesting because I've been told it's a place for locals and we went,
when we went last year with my brother, we went out for his wedding. It was night and day,
like in the morning, nobody there. And then once it hits like three, four o'clock in the afternoon,
it is packed, packed. Yeah, because they spend it, they want to spend the evening there. Everybody
goes after work, they go after school. Gotcha. Gotcha. So that would be definitely locals.
Interesting. There you go. Any more Disney questions, right? No, I just, I hear that. It's
good to know that Andrew's exaggerating a little bit. When you get a new ride though,
it can be like difficult. When we went to animal kingdom, handful of years ago,
eight, seven or eight years ago, the new ride was the avatar ride. And if you didn't book a time
reservation, you were going to wait two and a half hours to get on it. We got lucky. We just
found one that popped open as we were walking into the park because we were trying for days to get
a slot. And I'll be honest with you, if I had waited 90 minutes for that, it was worth it.
It was that good. It's a super ride. Oh, wait 90 minutes for anything. I'm going to tell you
something. That one would have been, that one was worth it. It's one of those, you're on,
like a speeder, right? You're supposed to be on one of the animal. What are the flying animals
call I forget birds? No, no, no, whatever. The dudes that you fly on, you're supposed to be on one
of those. So you're kind of like almost horseback, but it's all video screen around you. So it's
moving, but you're experiencing the video and it's pretty cool because it simulates flight. You
feel like you're flying. It's pretty cool. Pretty cool. Flying in the avatar universe was pretty
cool. Highly recommend. Nice. Yeah. Well, Dave, we have fun next week. Yeah, well, we'll try.
Well, that's not next week. It's the week out. And Andrew, Andrew, I want you to
you to Mr. Toad's ride. Pretend you're honest. Yeah, it'll be stupid. Thanks Dave.
All right, TGS on a Thursday. We'll short show today, but haven't fun with it anyway.
Let me get some fun facts in, Rach. Yeah, we some fun facts for you. About 3% of births
results in twins, 3% 3%. I don't know why, but that seems high, even though it makes sense.
It I think it's funny how twins seem to run in families. Like I know a family that has like,
man, I would have to sit here and count. Like all of the siblings have had twins. Really? Yes.
Holy crap. Yeah, it's kind of crazy. And that happens like over and over again.
I feel like if you have one set in your family, like there's a high likelihood of them popping
up again, I could be totally wrong, but just what I've observed. Okay, here's another fun fact.
St. Lucia is the only country in the world named after a real life woman. Really?
Was named after St. Lucia of Syracuse by the French. Syracuse in Greece?
By the French who are the irons for this must it must be. Yeah, we didn't exist back then.
Yeah, I don't think of Syracuse New York. It was just whatever, you know, Native American
group lived there at that time that wouldn't have been the same thing though. Okay, and since we
were just talking about Disney in the last segment, some of the names that Disney considered for
the seven dwarves include Chesty. Tipsy. Tipsy. Jumpy. Jumpy. Dirty. Dirty. Sleezy. And awful.
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