[00:00:18] Speaker A: Welcome to Friendly Competition, a podcast to discover the best of all time. I'm Nick Carey, alongside my coast and best friend Cody Lena says various pop culture topics and narrow it down to truly the best of all time.
[00:00:30] Speaker B: Or as we like to call it, the boat. Before I get step foot on the boat, we put them into a sweet 16 style tournament. We argue each round till we decide a winner. Nick, what criteria do we use when we decide who steps foot on the boat?
[00:00:40] Speaker A: Whatever the hell we want. Cody, do you want to tell them what we're talking about this season?
[00:00:43] Speaker B: Absolutely. Everybody's out here giving thanks. It's a time for giving thanks. We did it last week. We'll be doing it coming up. And we're going to give thanks to something special, something modern technology has provided us. What is the greatest little modern wonder that we have?
[00:00:58] Speaker A: That is correct. Shout out to Carl for sending us in this. And then shout out to the motorboaters who helped kind of pad out the list. Here we are in group D. So go listen to group A, B and C to see what their champions are. But here we have the three seed washing machine going up against the 14 seed, the vacuum cleaner. We have the six seed television going up against the eleven seed non cash payments. Cody, where do you want to start?
[00:01:26] Speaker B: Let's start at the top. Washing machine versus vacuum cleaner. Nick, if I didn't have a washing machine, would I wash my clothes is the question.
[00:01:32] Speaker A: That's a fantastic I don't think I would.
[00:01:36] Speaker B: I might just only wear black jeans, white T shirt, and just get those ten packs of T shirts and wear them until the wheels fall off.
[00:01:43] Speaker A: I mean, yeah, at least a white T shirt. You can see it pretty quick when it happens. You're like, oh, that's bad. Now done trash. Because I'm not going to get a.
[00:01:50] Speaker B: Washboard and do it in my sink.
[00:01:53] Speaker A: I wouldn't know how to. And I know that sounds kind of like being a dumb guy, but I'm saying if I got a stain on my white T shirt, I wouldn't know, outside of putting it in the washing machine with some soap, how to get it out.
I get that there's like washing boards, but I'm like I get that's what we used. But did it work?
[00:02:17] Speaker B: Those are things that's bluegrass percussion and that's it.
[00:02:20] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:02:21] Speaker B: That is not meant to clean clothes. It blows my mind still when I get some because I'm a big stupid idiot. And I'll get some of my shirt like sauce, spaghetti sauce or something like, oh, let me get that. She goes off. I don't know. I assume she kills a chicken and then washes my clothes in the blood of the chicken.
[00:02:36] Speaker A: Some kind of sacrifice, I don't know.
[00:02:38] Speaker B: But she always gets a stain off and I don't understand how that works at all. No one taught me this.
[00:02:44] Speaker A: Every time I put dirty clothes into the washing machine and they come out with none of the stains that they because they all were stained filth when I put them in there. And then they come out so nice and clean, I'm like, this Is amazing.
I don't even know another dumb thing.
I get how the washer I mean, this Is the washing machine and the dryer. I get how we used to dry clothes, right? We've all seen the line. We get that.
What happened in the winter were we just drying our clothes in our house and letting them drip?
[00:03:16] Speaker B: If Your shirt freezes and it's hard shirt when it unfreezes, is it dry shirt?
[00:03:22] Speaker A: Yeah, that can't be right.
That math ain't there. That ain't adding up. So it's just like so did during the winter, do we even clean anything? Or do we just be like, man, I can't wait Till it gets hot again. Really would love some clean underwear.
[00:03:36] Speaker B: Is that why the vacuum was invented? Because it was So cold we couldn't do The Wet, so we got the vacuum to suck up the Tri. Oh, maybe the tri dirt. That's what I'm talking about. Here's the thing about vacuum cleaner. I don't like carpet. I don't have a lot of carpet in my house and a vacuum cleaner never invented. I think I'd survive.
[00:03:52] Speaker A: I hear you.
[00:03:53] Speaker B: Hardwood, baby. I'm living a blessed life of leisure.
[00:03:56] Speaker A: I will say as someone who has animals and pets and I have a lot of hardwood and not just talking about what's in My pants.
Got them. As someone, we have the pet vacuum.
It's like a cordless handheld mini.
And I got the little tip nozle, that I put that shit on the corners. Ain't no Pet hair getting past that, dude, that is for me where how much of that I get how sweeping works. I understand that. But sweep don't come at me with sweeping. Gets everything. There's no way. Every time I sweep, I look around, I'm like, I don't think I did shit.
[00:04:38] Speaker B: The Thing I'm saying, though, is even if I didn't have a vacuum, I could get down there and I Could scrub and I Could Do stuff with my hands. But with clothes, the science isn't there. I'm still convinced that no one in the 16 hundreds smelled good because they couldn't clean their clothes. You can't clean them. You can't.
[00:04:53] Speaker A: No, I mean, at the end of the day, I do think I care more about the washing machine. I just wanted to say, like, for the VAC, I think there is benefit, there is value in what a vacuum cleaner is doing. Because straight up, because I'm not bring shit to the table, I am not getting on my Hands and knees and fucking scrap. You ain't going to catch me. You ain't going to catch me doing it. Not a chance. I need a vacuum or get me the wet vac and I'll do it with a wet VAC. I don't care. But I ain't doing it myself anymore.
[00:05:21] Speaker B: No, I think this is the easy one. We got a lot lock in the washing machine. There's just no way way that anything could even happen. I couldn't even pretend to clean my clothes, and I wouldn't. I'd smell so bad.
[00:05:30] Speaker A: Yeah, no, I agree with you here. I think this one's a little bit of a walk off for washing machine, but vacuum cleaner, I mean, shout out to you, vacuum cleaner. Thank you for being a modern miracle. We do appreciate it. You're helping out. You're killing the broom industry. You're trying to at least and I appreciate that.
[00:05:45] Speaker B: I love that. Do you think we went backwards now that we don't have cash? Do you think the lack of our cash society has made us weak and pathetic?
[00:05:52] Speaker A: Those are strong words, but yeah.
[00:05:55] Speaker B: Japan again. I'm going to go back to Japan. We were in Japan. It was a cash society. A lot of places didn't take card at.
[00:06:00] Speaker A: Really? Okay. I didn't know cash.
[00:06:03] Speaker B: Cash is important.
[00:06:04] Speaker A: Really? Yeah. That's for a place that I consider to basically be the future.
So I wonder then, are they like, nah, man, this is still the future.
You should have cash. You should do this with cash.
[00:06:16] Speaker B: You got to have cash on you at all times, dude, just in case. What if the Internet goes down?
[00:06:20] Speaker A: Yeah. I mean, they would know no matter what. Everyone knows this, that there is something to be said about, like, I made this much money and I can physically hold it in my hands. And now I'm going to for your goods and services, give you some of the money I have made. Here you go. Thank you.
[00:06:38] Speaker B: I'm so much better at budgeting. When I see the cash too million times, I look hard. It's like, this is not real.
[00:06:47] Speaker A: It is wild how much that feels like magic in that way. Once again, if we brought people from the past and showed them this, they'd be like, wait, you just tapped that piece of plastic and now they gave you the items you wanted? Yeah.
[00:07:01] Speaker B: I don't think I could spend $600 in cash. If you gave me $600 in cash and said, give all this cash to that man in exchange for his goods and services, I would say, no, this is too much for this man. I will not give it to him. If it's the same exact thing happens and you're like, put it on your card, I won't even think about it, dude. I won't even stop playing angry Birds.
[00:07:22] Speaker A: Yeah. She's like, okay, cool.
Do a quick little apple pay on that. Done.
[00:07:26] Speaker B: All right.
[00:07:27] Speaker A: Get it out of here. I think also because this was part of it, because I know this is one of Carl's when he put it in, he included, like, venmo too, though. How great is Venmo, though?
[00:07:36] Speaker B: Truly blessed. I finally don't feel bad about taking stuff from my friends.
[00:07:40] Speaker A: No. Now it has finally because before, if you and your know, if you covered them for dinner, you're like, all right, man, just get me back when you can. And yet some friends are great about it and will be like, the next time you're at dinner like, hey, man, you got me dinner last time. I got you. Don't even worry about it. But now for those some of those friends, some of those friends, you know, who aren't faithful and trustworthy like that. I hit you with the Venmo right after dinner, dog.
[00:08:00] Speaker B: Yeah, bro, I'll hit you during dinner.
[00:08:02] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:08:03] Speaker B: As soon as that bill comes, I'm hitting you with the yep.
[00:08:06] Speaker A: And I'm going to send you reminders. I'm going to be like, yo. And then I'm going to send you gifts of Rihanna saying, bitch, give me my where's my money?
[00:08:12] Speaker B: Which we wouldn't have those gifts if we didn't have the television.
[00:08:15] Speaker A: Well, that's true, because she wouldn't have had to make a music video.
[00:08:17] Speaker B: Exactly.
The television is a powerful mean. The television has defined generations. We have moments of modern culture that are all centered around the television. Game of Thrones, the landing on the moon, equally important and happened around a TV.
[00:08:34] Speaker A: I agree. Could you imagine a world where we didn't have TV but we still had, like, movie theaters? Right? So, like, to go watch Game of Thrones every week. It still comes out. Still comes out once a week. All right.
Yeah. But you all just actually, physically had to gather. I can't tell if that's a better experience or there's something about a world.
[00:08:56] Speaker B: Where televisions cost like a million dollars, so cities will buy them and you just have to buy tickets to go.
[00:09:03] Speaker A: See.
[00:09:05] Speaker B: It'S like capitalism.
[00:09:06] Speaker A: And I hate do, but I think there's something to be one. It's nice that we all can watch Game of Thrones from the comfort of our house, and then we can all come into work and talk about, man, I can't believe Jon Snow came back to life. Or but like, imagine when I was there. Can't believe I'm going to say talk about endgame again. But specifically, also when Captain America gets Thor's hammer, I don't want to be alone watching that. I don't want to be by myself, be like, no, what the fuck? This is amazing. I wanted to be in a room with people, and we're just going ham over this shit, man. That's amazing, dude.
[00:09:44] Speaker B: It was too busy crying because of how beautiful it is. I don't want people to see that we're different, you and I. It's dark, actually, but what am I going to do without a tell? Nick I put Bosperger's King of the Hill, our futurama on in the background. If I'm not watching TV, one of those shows is on just to give me happy serotonin.
[00:10:01] Speaker A: Sure. Sure.
[00:10:02] Speaker B: And what am I going to do? I can't do that now. You're taking away one of my most important things so I can have a credit card. Doug I love cash society. When I was a server, I loved cash.
[00:10:12] Speaker A: One of the things I wish we were more of a cash society, because I think we'd get back to haggling more.
[00:10:16] Speaker B: Oh, yeah.
[00:10:17] Speaker A: I want to haggle, baby. Because like you said, there is something wild about a great example is especially repairs, right? If a man comes into my house to fix my washing machine and is like, sir, for my services that I just provided you, you will need to give me $600. I'll be like, or we can fight. Not handing over $600 to you just takes it. I would like to give you $400. And he's like, I believe it's maybe 500. And then, look, I save myself $100. Also, I think it would force us as a society to get more jacked. Because then you could really back up your shit, and you could be like, I'm not paying you $600.
[00:10:57] Speaker B: Is that why our society is obesity? Problem is because we're not a cash society anymore. If we were a cash society and you had to be on the street carrying your wad around and you knew at any point a bigger, stronger person could try to take that wad from you, maybe you'd be in better shape. Is that what you're saying?
[00:11:13] Speaker A: Or once again, if you were in a service industry, imagine how big embrolic waiters would be. Because some guy is like, I don't want to pay for this meal. And you're like, you're going to fucking pay, dude.
[00:11:24] Speaker B: You're going to pay, dude. You know I keep that fang on me. Everybody has guns now, even more so than they do currently.
[00:11:31] Speaker A: Yeah. Just like, hey, dog, just hand over the cash. You had the meal. You liked your burger, right? Hand over the cash. Are you about to get that ass whooping?
[00:11:38] Speaker B: Okay, that shows you the difference between society. No one even considered fighting in Japan about things. I just gave them money up.
[00:11:45] Speaker A: They don't even have violence. That's very silly of them.
That's the only place my mind went. It's like, oh, now it's all violence all the time because we're cash only.
[00:11:54] Speaker B: Can I ask you a question?
[00:11:55] Speaker A: Yeah, of course.
[00:11:56] Speaker B: How come being cash only makes it all about violence when you could easily do the same thing with a card? What's stopping you currently?
[00:12:02] Speaker A: Because the card's invisible magic money that I don't know what happens there.
[00:12:05] Speaker B: I don't understand.
[00:12:06] Speaker A: Yeah, I don't get it. The guy says it, and I'm like, Will you take because it is one thing to hand over a man once again the money you made that you physically hold. But when I give the man the magic card and he accepts it, I'm like, you're kind of stupid.
You think this has value? And then somehow it does, though. That's an insane thing when you break it down like that. And you're like, all right, you're going to take the magic card? All right, try it. Oh, it worked. Oh, great. And you're happy and I'm happy. Great. Thank you so much.
[00:12:34] Speaker B: Dude, I played Monopoly once where they had cards that you would put in and swipe to do your transactions with people instead of cash. Bro, first of all, I couldn't just look at my money and be like, this is how much money I have. And plan I'm out here playing in my hotel, buys all that, right? Also, how am I supposed to steal, right?
How can I cheat with this car?
[00:12:55] Speaker A: Well, I guess can you just add a couple more zeros? It's like, oh, I've got $500. Yeah, we're going to say that's about five G's right there. That's five racks.
[00:13:02] Speaker B: Yeah, dog. Welcome to hell. Racks on racks on rack.
[00:13:05] Speaker A: Yeah. And now they don't know actually, it may have been easier to steal because they don't know what's on your card.
[00:13:11] Speaker B: But if there's someone saw, they see what's on your card every time you do an interaction.
[00:13:16] Speaker A: Oh, I hate that. They shouldn't be able to do that. I don't like, see I don't get to see when Bill Gates buys a new boat.
[00:13:23] Speaker B: Yeah, we've been trying to see Trump's tax returns for fucking ever. Yeah. So it's like, why do you get to see my card?
[00:13:28] Speaker A: So why do you get to in Monopoly all of a sudden?
That's bullshit. Monopoly? That ain't even good capitalism. That's the one thing you're here for.
[00:13:36] Speaker B: I'm not getting we might I think we might need to go back to cash.
[00:13:41] Speaker A: Cash is important. I wouldn't hate it. I truly wouldn't. If we altogether like, hey, we're all going to do cash.
[00:13:48] Speaker B: Japan's doing great.
[00:13:49] Speaker A: I love that. I love knowing that that's how it goes down there. But that's just so wild to me that they're like, no, we handle because in America, you know, when a place is like, hey, man, we only do cash, like, oh, so you're a front. I get it. Okay. Hey, I'm not a narc or anything, but I get are you guys are a front. Okay, cool. Keep the money clean. I get it.
[00:14:06] Speaker B: I support it.
[00:14:06] Speaker A: Yeah, I'm here for it. But it's like you're making it pretty obvious is all I'm saying.
[00:14:11] Speaker B: Oh, the oldest front that I'm aware of in Sioux Falls closed down the other day, so that's wild. That Irish gift store downtown. They retired, dude.
[00:14:19] Speaker A: Oh, my God. We have an Irish gift. We have one in St. Paul. And I'm like, just Irish gifts? That's all you have is Irish. And they're not even really it's like, hey, here's socks that are in the that's not when I went to Ireland, that's not what I was bringing back as Irish gifts. Hey, here's a leprechaun hat. Nope, that's not an Irish where's the crack at?
[00:14:43] Speaker B: I know you got crack.
[00:14:44] Speaker A: Where's that crack? That good crack. All right. So we have washing machine going up against television. Dirty clothes versus dirty television.
[00:14:54] Speaker B: Lots of good dirty television. The problem is, if I didn't have a washing machine, I wouldn't leave my house because I'd be stinky and I'd gross and I just wouldn't understand the world around me. But that's okay because I have the television. Yeah, the television keeps without a TV, what am I even going to do?
[00:15:12] Speaker A: I think the big negative I have for television is just I am curious to know what a society would look like if we never invented the television.
This isn't my like, hey, you go to the movie theater and watch game of this. I'm not saying that. I'm saying just truthfully. We did not invent the television. There was no in home way to watch it. Because I will never read a book again. That's the truth. I'm not going to read books. I'm over it. This is me declaring officially I'm tired of lying to people. I'm tired of lying and being like, no, I'm going to read a book. I'm going to read, like, one book this year. No, I'm fucking not. Because do you want to know why? Because television exists. And it's so much better all by leaps and bounds.
[00:15:57] Speaker B: It's like if the book talked and showed you the book.
[00:16:00] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:16:00] Speaker B: Can you imagine that?
[00:16:01] Speaker A: And I didn't do it's called TV anything. I didn't have to do anything mentally.
I was untaxed mentally. By doing this all, I did the worst. Television is still sometimes better than a good book because I didn't have to do shit to earn it. I just got to watch it. You know what I'm saying?
[00:16:19] Speaker B: But spoken like a true American hero.
[00:16:22] Speaker A: And I want to be clear. I don't think that's a good thing. It's just the truth. And so there's just a part of me that's like, maybe it would be better if I had clean clothes and a clean mind and I could just read books because that's all we have. And then we could yes, we're all.
[00:16:39] Speaker B: Smelling of lavender and just reading the finest books.
[00:16:42] Speaker A: Yes, like the utopian society that we would create. Because you have to think like the guy who wrote Breaking Bad, right? He wrote all of it. He wrote it himself, the stories in his mind. He could write a book that would have been compelling if we didn't have television. But he's like, actually, I'd rather do it in this medium, stories would still.
[00:17:00] Speaker B: Be told without television. There's many ways to tell a story. And maybe we'd have more bards.
[00:17:06] Speaker A: Oh, good.
[00:17:07] Speaker B: Travel more Bards. Dude.
[00:17:10] Speaker A: Could you imagine the breaking bad? Bard the breaking bard. Sorry it was so obvious.
Sorry I didn't say it right away. Everyone, you all thought I was going to get there right away, and it took me a beat I'm so sorry. But the breaking bard.
[00:17:22] Speaker B: And then Walter looked down at her instead. Skylar. I am the danger. Oh, my God.
[00:17:29] Speaker A: I can't believe this is what I did not see that would which is the same feeling you had watching it on television.
[00:17:39] Speaker B: Oh, no, it's the same thing. It might even be better if you have a really charismatic storyteller. I've been enthralled by storytellers.
[00:17:46] Speaker A: Right.
Wouldn't that just be great?
[00:17:50] Speaker B: I think more people play Dungeons and Dragons too.
[00:17:53] Speaker A: Easily. Easily. More Dungeons and Dragons happening, for sure. It's just you lose that excuse, right. Because to stay in and watch TV is the easiest thing in the world to do. But if you don't have a TV, you'd probably just call up your budy and be like, hey, do you want to actually go physically watch the football game? Because you can't watch it on television.
[00:18:11] Speaker B: No, you'd actually have to be fans of teams. For real. You have to support your teams. You have to be there in the thick of it.
[00:18:19] Speaker A: Which is great, though.
I know not everyone likes going to a football game, but it is a good experience to physically do stuff. To go out in community is important. And we'd all smelling of lavender, though. Our clothes are so clean.
[00:18:35] Speaker B: But, yeah, now we're forced to go out. At least we smell good.
[00:18:37] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:18:38] Speaker B: I don't know, though. But the TV has given us so many good memories. I was basically raised by a television.
[00:18:43] Speaker A: Me, too, dude. I don't know if that was right.
[00:18:46] Speaker B: I don't know.
[00:18:48] Speaker A: Do we need all of these witty pop culture references?
[00:18:52] Speaker B: Yes.
[00:18:53] Speaker A: Okay. Never. All right, cool. Okay, then I guess TV wins.
[00:18:58] Speaker B: That's been my bread and butter my whole life, dog. Okay. Without television, are we funny?
[00:19:05] Speaker A: Dude, it's hard, right? You want to say that it's something innate about you, but at the same time, you're like, actually what? I learned all my funny stuff from watching stand up on television and then stealing those jokes, doing them for my friends, and then eventually coming up with my own shit.
[00:19:20] Speaker B: That's the learning process. That's how we do it.
[00:19:21] Speaker A: It's the curve. It just is how it goes. And so, yeah, without television, would you have watched as much of something? Right? I mean, that's the beauty, right, is that there is good sides to television. You can learn things. There's documentary, there's all this stuff.
[00:19:35] Speaker B: Nick, if I didn't have television, I might be a doctor, a lawyer.
[00:19:40] Speaker A: Heaven forbid.
[00:19:41] Speaker B: Like, yeah, heaven forbid. An why?
[00:19:47] Speaker A: I just need to see something else.
[00:19:48] Speaker B: I gotta go to the moon. I sell alcohol and weed like the Lord intended.
[00:19:53] Speaker A: Yeah, like a good man. Like a good, respectable member of society. I'm like these doctors and these lawyers, astronauts. But okay. Hand washing your clothes.
[00:20:05] Speaker B: I just wouldn't wash them right now. I'm currently running the numbers. Like, if I can get three pairs of jeans a year if I can make three pairs last a year, right?
[00:20:17] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:20:18] Speaker B: And I can set aside $100 a month for shirts. Go commando. Get those gone.
[00:20:23] Speaker A: Yeah, that's gone. Yeah. Underwear is gone in a world without only flip flops.
[00:20:27] Speaker B: So I'm shoes with no socks. I think I'm going television. I think I can make this happen. I would just have to buy new shirts all the time.
[00:20:34] Speaker A: Can I ask, what is the sacrifice then? Well, I guess if you didn't, what would be the sacrifice then? That $100, like you said. Is that just less in savings or.
[00:20:43] Speaker B: Is it like, hey, man, that's my future.
[00:20:48] Speaker A: I invest heavily in Haynes. Oh, you have stock in Haynes? No, I just buy a lot of it all the time.
[00:20:55] Speaker B: I would just doug funny it every day.
I'd have two shirts that weren't just standard earth tones that I got for $3 at Target.
[00:21:03] Speaker A: Yeah, that's it.
[00:21:05] Speaker B: No, I'm going. I got to go television. Dude. I think actually this could be good for the economy.
[00:21:12] Speaker A: This is your way of stimulating the economy, keeping people in their homes with television.
[00:21:17] Speaker B: Also, Nick, think of the for all the single people out there, think of the ground and how big of a foot up you'd have if you just didn't.
[00:21:24] Speaker A: It's true, dog. I think I worked myself into a shoot. I think I'm going washing machine.
I know I think I'm wrong. This one I feel a little more wrong about, but I think I worked myself into a shoot over it.
[00:21:35] Speaker B: No, it's fine.
[00:21:36] Speaker A: There's just a part of me that wants to believe that maybe it would be better it's not that I want it. I just think we would be better off.
[00:21:45] Speaker B: Well, we'll settle this the only way we know how, then. The American voting cone of 2004 is brought to you by random.org. We got John Kerry facing up. That means Bush baby's on the bottom. Nick, I get to call it because I'm the low seed dog.
[00:21:59] Speaker A: We would never have seen 911.
[00:22:01] Speaker B: We never would have seen 911. Would Bush even have done it if.
[00:22:04] Speaker A: No one could see his masterpiece?
[00:22:06] Speaker B: Exactly. Why would he? I'm saying bush. I got a lock in Bush.
[00:22:10] Speaker A: All right, we'll flip bush, baby.
[00:22:12] Speaker B: Bush. All right, television going the final.
[00:22:15] Speaker A: That's fine. It's okay.
I can live with that. I think it's for the best.
But I had myself all worked up in that tizzy in. I was in the sauce.
[00:22:25] Speaker B: I could see you had the bloodlust in those eyes, bro.
[00:22:28] Speaker A: I was about to go downstairs and just throw out our TV like, we're done with this. TV is over.
[00:22:33] Speaker B: We're not doing it now. Wash our clothes. We must smell of lavender.
[00:22:36] Speaker A: Yeah. All right. Television. The group D champion, and that means only one thing. We got a final four Friday coming up. But thank you all so much for listening to this episode of Friendly Competition. If you want to watch your boys. A few things that you can do, as always. Share with a friend, tell a friend, wherever you're listening to this, make sure you're hitting that like that. Follow that subscribe and giving us those five stars, please.
[00:22:58] Speaker B: Absolutely. Do like Carl. Follow in the footsteps of the world's most handsome, attractive, smart and sensual man. And follow us on Instagram, Twitter, Facebook. Just look up at friendly. Comp. And if you have an idea for a whole tournament you'd like to see us, do, just like that bastion of masculinity, email us to us at
[email protected] or just reach out to Nick on any of the social medias.
[00:23:19] Speaker A: Please do as always, shout out to Charizard for that intro to your music. You want to hear more of their stuff, head over to Bandcamp, type in Charizard and replace the vowels with sixes. That's going to be it for us, folks. Like I said, we got that final Four Friday coming up, but until then, I've been Nick Carey.
[00:23:33] Speaker B: And I'm Cody Lena. See you on the boat.