0:00
to say good morning huh we are doing our
0:02
oxygeniverse live and we are celebrating
0:03
what are we celebrating you will have to
0:05
stay tuned after the video to find out
0:27
good good morning guys uh were you gonna
0:31
you caught me off good so we're
0:33
celebrating it is my mom's birthday so
0:35
happy birthday to her everybody say
0:38
uh so we're gonna do something that's
0:41
kind of fun and we'll we'll see how this
0:42
goes because this will be interesting uh
0:44
but I do like going back in time and
0:46
seeing what is going on so we're going
0:48
to talk about some events that happen uh
0:51
during the year she was born
0:54
oh okay so we're allowed to say okay
0:57
1956. I'm just giving you the okay so
1:00
there's an alternative uh you know it's
1:02
very you know it's better to say how old
1:04
you are rather than not be here at all
1:08
sure whatever you say
1:11
um all right so first off um there's
1:15
always the major news events that
1:16
happened and this one's actually
1:18
interesting your year was the first time
1:20
the internet or the federal aid Highway
1:23
Act was signed into uh usage in June
1:27
29th and this meant that we got the
1:30
excuse me a 41 000 miles of interstate
1:33
highway now this is interesting because
1:36
I've watched plenty of shows about how
1:38
you know what it took to get from one
1:40
side the other when we got highways guys
1:43
this is kind of what the economy needed
1:46
to get stuff done now I don't know if
1:49
you know this uh but for our side of the
1:51
country Hoover Dam is actually kind of
1:54
main point where things started because
1:56
that was one of the biggest buildings
1:58
that was ever made and from that they're
2:01
like okay we can connect here to here
2:03
through that I believe Hoover Dam
2:05
creates uh electricity too right I think
2:07
it creates power so because of that
2:09
power and because of that ability I
2:12
believe it's Eisenhower who was
2:13
reelected this year signed into law the
2:15
ability to make that many that's a lot
2:17
of miles guys 41 000 like I don't know
2:19
what it is from California to New York
2:21
but this is probably a nice chunk of
2:26
through here now one of your favorite
2:28
things being a musician as you were
2:30
Elvis Presley pretty much topped the
2:32
charts with his first hit Heartbreak
2:34
Hotel and we'll talk about him later but
2:36
he really made a big deal about what
2:38
music was for the time and you'll see
2:40
some of the other people that were big
2:41
and probably played off of Presley's
2:44
Fame to make themselves bigger as well
2:47
Across the Nation Egypt was having its
2:49
own little problem with the Suez Crisis
2:51
when Egypt nationalization got control
2:53
of the Suez Canal what's funny about
2:56
reading this stuff is I remember this
2:58
from high school and middle school all
3:00
right Rob that's really like connected
3:03
and then you're like oh wait I've heard
3:05
about this before so if you guys
3:06
remember the series Canal it was a big
3:08
deal Egypt got control of the Suez Canal
3:11
and I don't know I think there's still
3:13
kind of issue even to this day about
3:14
that because I think it's one of those
3:15
areas where people some countries say
3:18
it's theirs others say it's theirs
3:20
people don't like that Egypt has control
3:21
what are you gonna do that's the world
3:23
we live in everybody's like I want this
3:25
I want right well it's weird Bob is that
3:27
weird for you to know that you know your
3:29
mom was born when something was actually
3:31
you'd studied in history in high school
3:33
I mean that makes me feel very old right
3:36
now no comment from the peanut gallery
3:40
um all right this is kind of cool and
3:41
this actually plays into our uh um
3:43
religious background here the biggest
3:46
film premiere of the year was The Ten
3:48
Commandments right which if you guys
3:51
know it was oh I'm blanking on his name
3:53
what the hell was his name Charlton
3:54
Heston thank you one of the biggest and
3:58
still even though he passed still one of
3:59
the biggest actors of all time right
4:01
played uh the main character of Moses I
4:04
believe and this is actually you know
4:06
he's a movie where you know you gotta
4:10
have the time to watch it because it's
4:11
long but if you want to watch a very
4:14
well made movie from the past this is a
4:17
very well made movie and I think it
4:19
still holds up well even today comparing
4:21
it to people like James Cameron and all
4:23
those guys who are making epic movies as
4:25
well this is kind of Epic before it was
4:28
epic now I don't know if this is the
4:30
same person as the movie that Sylvester
4:33
Stallone was in but Rocky Marciano who I
4:36
believe he played Rocky in the movie
4:38
retired this year as the only undefeated
4:41
heavyweight champion of the world so I
4:44
don't know if there's if the movie was
4:45
based off of this boxer he was just a
4:49
separate guy says if it's the same name
4:52
I think it actually as as a boss I just
4:55
learned something new
4:56
Liberties but yeah of course yes they do
4:59
but that's kind of cool and again you
5:01
know I'm not a big in sports but knowing
5:04
the movie and how important that movie
5:05
was for a lot of people and knowing how
5:07
many sequels came of it obviously this
5:10
historical character made a big deal and
5:12
the fact that they're writing down that
5:13
he retired as the only one defeated you
5:16
know think about how many boxers have
5:17
come since then it's kind of hard to
5:20
surpass somebody that's undefeated who's
5:22
right you know right the first hard disk
5:28
you mean those little
5:30
flap Floppy things I think that's where
5:33
the floppy disk is I believe so
5:36
okay you know again I'm not gonna say
5:38
much unless you want me to but you know
5:40
uh the same year the Alabama bus
5:43
segregation law was finally declared
5:45
illegal by the Supreme Court that's a
5:49
big deal that is a big big deal this was
5:51
obviously still at a time when obviously
5:53
segregation was was a problem yeah and a
5:56
lot of the fact that the bus law was
5:58
changed now it says Alabama do you think
6:04
right I was born in Tennessee I was
6:07
actually born there not in Alabama but
6:09
in Tennessee and but also
6:12
my father was in the Navy there's no
6:15
water in Tennessee I'm not quite sure
6:17
why he was there but we were there and
6:20
they tell me stories about segregation
6:22
and they tell me stories about
6:24
um how bad it really was in terms of you
6:27
know the uh black people can only go
6:29
here they couldn't go here there was all
6:31
these things going on that when you
6:33
think about that that's what I grew up
6:35
this is how I grew up actually back then
6:37
but thank goodness it's some of that has
6:41
changed thank goodness and my guess is
6:42
this probably also stood in the
6:45
footsteps to more and more and then of
6:46
course you have people like MLK who
6:48
really made the biggest difference and
6:50
kind of just you know and I believe on
6:52
an offshoot there uh his daughter uh
6:55
Loretta king or one of their
6:57
great-granddaughter I think still runs a
6:59
uh Martin Luther King uh they continue
7:02
the family has continued some of the
7:04
things yeah so they continue on so that
7:06
just shows you how important obviously
7:07
this was it sucks that it had to happen
7:09
but I'm glad to be in a time now that
7:12
that it's a little bit it's a little
7:15
better it's a little better right right
7:17
now this is actually funny and actually
7:19
I actually accidentally learned about
7:21
this somewhere else but As the World
7:22
Turns it became the first soap opera but
7:25
I found out a few months ago when I was
7:28
looking through some stuff I think this
7:29
is the longest running uh soap and
7:32
because I was looking up uh oh I know I
7:34
was looking up Jennifer Aniston's family
7:36
because I guess her father was one of
7:38
the actors and it turned out that this
7:40
was the longest running soap and
7:43
everybody who's been on it who is still
7:46
a lot of a lot of them and it started on
7:48
radio I actually I my my mother watched
7:52
this soap opera from the time that I was
7:54
born and and in fact I because she
7:57
watched it we tend to watch what our
7:59
parents do and so I continued to watch
8:02
As the World Turns uh up until it went
8:04
off the air I think in 2009 I want to
8:07
say 2010 it was on for a very very long
8:10
time and you are right rob a lot of the
8:12
actors and actresses that started in
8:15
um soap opera ended up going on to
8:17
humongous things I mean huge things and
8:20
of course don't realize some of the ones
8:22
who were like the kids in that show or
8:24
actually on channels like Disney and
8:26
they're on channels like
8:29
hearing some of the time the hot cereals
8:32
right now uh Jennifer Landon I just saw
8:34
her name bantered about and she was in
8:36
As the World Turns and she's in one of
8:38
um shows that are on TV right now so a
8:44
um uh okay yeah I knew there were
8:51
when you think about all the actors and
8:53
actresses that have passed through those
8:55
stories but it's interesting soap operas
8:57
were huge back then that was television
9:01
you know watched back then right oh I
9:04
know um and then I always laugh I think
9:05
it was Allison Sweeney who did like
9:07
Biggest Loser as a host for a while and
9:09
did some other stuff now she's on
9:11
Hallmark and does all these movies like
9:13
she was on the Soaps and now she's more
9:15
prolific on TV because she's on all
9:17
these movies and made for TV stuff
9:19
um all right so rock and roll became the
9:21
craze that swept the nation and again
9:23
we'll go back to some of the guys later
9:24
but I think obviously due to Mr Presley
9:27
that probably made a big deal and a big
9:29
difference as to what it was and even
9:31
still to this day because obviously last
9:33
year there was the movie about his life
9:34
uh that was just put out
9:36
um and obviously not just him but I
9:38
think Whitney Houston movie is coming
9:40
out this year there was an Elton John
9:42
movie that came out a couple years ago
9:43
so obviously people still care about all
9:45
of this right all the music that may not
9:48
be as big but it still is Big because
9:51
we're still talking about it that's big
9:54
if not bigger I I think as we all get
9:56
older we tend to think that you know
9:58
what's happened to music today because
9:59
our music was great but then you go back
10:01
into the time when our parents said what
10:04
what are you listening to they thought
10:06
Elvis Presley was just like God forbid
10:08
he should move his hips when he danced
10:09
well that was funny in the movie one of
10:11
the guys makes a line of saying like if
10:13
you literally move your hand we're
10:15
cutting you off the whatever and of
10:16
course he was trying to like defeat the
10:18
norm and do it anyway and it ended up
10:20
ended up breaking the entire exactly
10:22
internet basically as they said exactly
10:25
and number 10 the biggest thing there
10:26
Grace Kelly married Monaco Prince
10:28
Rainier and this is one of those things
10:30
where I know the names I know I've heard
10:32
it but what was the big deal about this
10:34
other than was it American to somebody
10:36
European or what was it no mattress she
10:39
was an actress a very popular actress at
10:42
the time who gave up acting to Marry The
10:44
Prince and died terribly in a car
10:47
accident after she married so that's
10:50
there's you know it's kind of that
10:51
fantasy thing the fan you know a woman
10:54
marries her prince you know the literal
10:57
Prince apparently literally marries her
10:59
prince and sadly passed away in a car
11:03
well that is unfortunate now if you want
11:05
to feel even more bad you might want to
11:07
turn off the show now because we're
11:08
going to tell you how cheap things were
11:09
and it's probably going to piss you off
11:13
now first off we'll go with the
11:14
inflation rate the inflation rate
11:16
apparently was still going on at this
11:18
point and it was at 1.52 now I know what
11:22
inflation is can you do you do you know
11:24
a better definition of what that means
11:26
for General money or what was inflation
11:28
generally was it was it that was it the
11:33
what do you call I know I saw that was
11:35
it the was it why things got so
11:38
expensive is that what it like I I I
11:41
think it's kind of it's going to be hard
11:43
to compare inflation rates other than we
11:45
can talk about first of all because uh
11:48
that will have to do with what's going
11:49
on in the world at the time and and the
11:52
value of money and the value of the
11:53
dollar which I think more importantly is
11:56
what did people get paid to per hour to
11:59
work then I mean we hear all the stories
12:01
and we want to have our you know the
12:03
minimum wage is is whatever it is twelve
12:07
dollars ten dollars and they want to
12:08
raise it to 15 because we need a cost of
12:11
living you'd be able to need to make
12:12
enough money but back in those days when
12:14
I was born Rob how much did people make
12:17
so this minimum hourly rate was a buck a
12:20
whole dollar you could buy a pack of gum
12:22
right but you could probably buy your
12:24
house because the house was only 11 700
12:27
for a brand new home now you say 11 000
12:30
only but keep in mind what a home is
12:32
today and I'm not talking like a mansion
12:34
just a regular home right the first
12:36
numbers are at least three digits these
12:39
numbers were only two so eleven thousand
12:44
and exactly and and even even when uh
12:48
fast forward a couple of years maybe to
12:52
um 60s when we ended we were back in
12:55
California and we built a house in
12:57
Brentwood uh which is a a relatively uh
13:00
High economic area and the entire house
13:03
and the land everything was bought for
13:06
under a hundred thousand dollars and the
13:09
mortgage was only four hundred dollars
13:10
four hundred dollars a month
13:16
it's you know times have changed right
13:19
and con and to compare how a yearly
13:22
average wage is from the hourly you're
13:24
only looking at about 4 400 a year which
13:27
really is kind of what most people are
13:29
making in a month now right not in a
13:32
year so and that's kind of approximating
13:33
the numbers a little bit different but
13:35
we're kind of averaging out to about 44.
13:37
rent however and again this is big at
13:40
least for me because when I was having
13:42
to rent obviously it was already a big
13:44
difference it was only about 90 bucks a
13:48
some instances today depending on where
13:51
you live you can get a under a rate if
13:54
you're on some certain situation but
13:56
even at 100 bucks an hour or 100 bucks a
14:00
you know you'd have to what we're what
14:02
was it those those tiny like three by
14:04
three Square apartment units where
14:06
people are paying you know 75 bucks a
14:07
month you'd have to be living in a in a
14:10
shoe box right to get this kind of thing
14:11
now again I'm assuming inflation has to
14:14
do with that as well but I'm also
14:16
similar to where you are because
14:17
watching HGTV versus you know living
14:21
here versus the people in the South you
14:23
have homes that you can redo and
14:25
renovate for super cheap in Alabama or
14:29
Mississippi versus if you buy a house in
14:32
California there is still a big
14:33
difference so I know it's still a lot of
14:35
money but keep in mind that there you're
14:37
looking at these numbers you can still
14:39
go to places and get a a nice four or
14:42
five bedroom home right
14:44
it's all relative so back in the day of
14:48
1956 you could buy a home that was this
14:50
amount of money that would have been
14:51
considered expensive let's just throw
14:53
out a number ten thousand dollars or you
14:57
could be live in a different area where
14:58
you could buy or rent something for like
15:00
9 nothing almost nothing where you live
15:03
right and that has not changed that what
15:06
has changed is the minimum dollar amount
15:08
that's what's changed where you could
15:11
rent an apartment or a home or or have a
15:13
for a dollar or whatever never you
15:16
couldn't rent anything for a dollar but
15:17
ninety dollars that same apartment well
15:20
we know we know what people are renting
15:22
places for you you can't even get a one
15:24
bedroom apartment for under
15:27
a thousand dollars two thousand dollars
15:29
so that's that's you know times have
15:31
changed but I don't know if it's I don't
15:33
think it's necessarily
15:35
um inflation I don't know if that's the
15:37
right way to explain I mean I think yeah
15:39
I actually I'm going to retract what I
15:40
said because I think looking at what I
15:42
see on TV and looking at what people can
15:43
renovate for even in like like a place
15:45
like Las Vegas uh you know because I
15:47
watch the Property Brothers you can get
15:50
a good sized house not in Vegas proper
15:53
but off into the City and you can get a
15:56
good sized house for very inexpensive
15:58
probably because of how the the the the
16:01
state itself is working right we happen
16:03
to be in a place where everything is
16:05
extraordinarily high as is New York as
16:08
is Texas probably it is also Texas it's
16:11
also the way right now speaking of all
16:14
that too the average cost of a car
16:18
if anybody out there want to guess
16:22
it is a little over 2 000 for a car now
16:25
what we know what that makes you think
16:27
that's like the monthly payment you make
16:29
on the car that you buy now because you
16:31
know you buy the car for you know five
16:33
hundred thousand dollars and you make a
16:35
payment of two or three thousand dollars
16:36
a month to pay it off right it's crazy
16:39
can you think you know now on top of
16:41
that and this is going to hurt a lot of
16:43
people so please don't anger get angry
16:45
at us a gallon of gas I don't even want
16:48
to say it out loud I've heard we're
16:49
going to get like hate mail 22 cents a
16:54
yep and I'm assuming that's just regular
16:57
gas right not like diesel not like I
16:58
don't I don't think that we had
17:00
different grades of gas back then
17:02
okay we're talking about the Dinosaur
17:06
just had gas ground coffee per pound now
17:08
again I could care less personally but I
17:09
know you drink some coffee you can get a
17:11
pound of coffee for a little under 90
17:18
okay because I was I was reading up
17:21
about store brand versus others you know
17:22
life hacks to save you money would you
17:25
say that sometimes if you go to the
17:27
store you order a store brand couldn't
17:29
you theoretically get something that
17:31
kind of averages out to what this was
17:33
now if you're not looking for a fancy if
17:36
you get instant coffee maybe if you buy
17:38
a can of instant coffee right so I mean
17:40
theoretically is this that word compared
17:41
to what it is now generally speaking
17:44
yeah everything is so is okay okay I
17:47
thought it was different but yeah I
17:49
thought it wasn't different but you know
17:50
yeah no huge now I'm not sure what the
17:52
Mansfield Ohio modern house is do you
17:55
know what that is okay well that cost
17:56
you only 6 700 I think it was probably a
17:59
specialty made architectural house
18:02
um now just to give you a clarification
18:06
um how okay so I said the average house
18:07
price here was 11 000 in the UK it was
18:11
2200 to get a house over in the United
18:13
Kingdom so think about the difference of
18:15
there now I know they also have a big
18:18
problem going on now with their switch
18:19
of of people and they're having the same
18:22
problem we owe with their inflation
18:23
stuff too so I don't know what the deal
18:25
is now but I think in in areas of higher
18:28
amounts of people and more you know
18:29
whatever you're going to end up with
18:31
higher priced stuff well we're also
18:33
coming off of a pandemic and we're
18:35
coming off of a worldwide you know
18:37
situation with war going on and and
18:39
supply chain and everything's gone up so
18:42
I as part of it is that just naturally
18:45
things go up but the other thing is we
18:47
got a lot of stuff that's going on a lot
18:49
of things right now all right so now
18:51
I've found a couple things that you can
18:53
still buy today that were popular at the
18:55
time uh and I can't find the website
18:58
that it's from but for nine bucks off of
18:59
this one website you can get yourself
19:01
your very own Velveteen skirt which
19:04
literally is a skirt made out of velvet
19:06
with nylon Ruffles all that stuff it
19:10
makes me think of Greece personally but
19:13
so that's that one now another popular
19:15
thing there was a toy a remote control
19:17
power steering car uh this comes from a
19:21
company called Product miniature and you
19:22
can get it today for six bucks and it
19:24
resembles a 1956 Chevy hardtop so this
19:28
really looks like a grease car to me
19:32
um okay so some more popular culture so
19:34
obviously we mentioned Rocky Marciano
19:35
retiring Albus hit the charts with the
19:39
um the first of 170 of what is going to
19:41
be hit single so he had 170 singles
19:43
right and he also killed on the uh
19:45
Sullivan Show he had his first movie
19:47
Love Me Tender here you go dad'll like
19:50
this one diamonds are forever was
19:52
published in book form so we know Ian
19:55
Fleming the creator of the James Bond
19:56
character wrote all of his books before
19:58
they became movies my favorite lady
20:00
opened on Broadway with the famous I
20:03
guess we can call her Dame Julie Andrews
20:05
now because she was knighted
20:07
um as Eliza Doolittle and Rex Harrison
20:09
as Professor Higgins
20:13
some popular films that year Guys and
20:16
Dolls The King and I
20:18
trapeze High Society Around the World in
20:21
80 Days I actually remember that one and
20:24
the Ten Commandments I actually only
20:25
know that one because of all the remakes
20:27
they made afterwards because they
20:28
assumed it was a book that people wanted
20:30
to watch no offense to the book I I
20:33
don't like it I thought it was a really
20:34
weird movie yeah but you know any of
20:38
those movies ring a bell though too
20:40
yes some of them do all right popular TV
20:43
we had the Adventures of Superman with
20:45
the late great uh Christopher Reeves
20:47
R.I.P to him Cheyenne which actually
20:51
I've heard of because we have an entire
20:52
Western channel on one of our shooting
20:54
apps I Love Lucy Father Knows Best
20:57
Alfred Hitchcock Presents which I think
21:00
kind of grew him into being who he was
21:02
Gunsmoke and other very popular even to
21:05
this day Western and then for some
21:07
apparent reason the 64 000 question
21:10
which I think is refers her to something
21:13
else that we have now but well that was
21:15
actually I if I recall that was a huge
21:18
Scandal because the guy that that won I
21:21
think he cheated or something and he
21:23
said he had the question the answer
21:25
somebody had the answers in advance so I
21:27
think that's why that's actually kind of
21:29
one of those things they stick into that
21:30
time capsule that happened back then
21:33
something bad all right so some of the
21:37
um uh popular musicians we had so
21:39
obviously we're not going to go over you
21:40
know who because too many times we had
21:43
Bill Haley in the comments we had Chuck
21:46
Berry yeah Jerry Lee Lewis Johnny Cash
21:49
somebody I never thought I'd enjoy but
21:51
actually I love that guy's music we had
21:53
Ella Fitzgerald and of course Dean
21:55
Martin who kind of resided where we are
21:58
now so we're in the land of you know the
22:00
Rat Pack I guess yes
22:05
you'll look this way I think this will
22:07
be funny for 150 bucks we could order a
22:10
1958 a couple years after you
22:13
semi-automatic washer this literally is
22:16
one of the first washing machines that
22:18
you partially had to do by hand but
22:20
partially did it by itself as well and
22:23
this thing was only about maybe a high
22:25
it was not very large this was at the
22:26
time and again I learned this from the
22:28
TV the guy who ended up doing G or um
22:31
yeah I think General no not General
22:33
Motors you know electric GE General
22:36
Electric thank you though because his
22:39
what her his wife ended up having to do
22:40
it but she ended up she found one of her
22:43
friends who was a mechanic basically and
22:46
they just started going at it and thanks
22:48
to her thanks to her we have washing
22:51
machines and dishwashers and whatever
22:53
but can you imagine I mean it's 150
22:56
bucks now it probably only cost you
22:58
maybe 50 60 bucks but how funny would
23:01
this be to have in your home well hey if
23:04
you collect if you're a collector for
23:06
things that you know from in as I said
23:08
the dinosaur days that might be one of
23:10
those things you might want to have
23:13
we're going to see how many of these
23:15
celebrities that you know
23:17
first off September 16th of well
23:19
actually it's the year before but it's
23:21
the same difference we had Mr David
23:23
Copperfield so he's your age he was born
23:29
um I don't know who this next guy is
23:30
Gary Cole was born on September 20th in
23:33
Illinois Gary Cole is an is in NCIS
23:36
right now he is he took over for
23:39
um to do with the beard he's the dude
23:42
with the beard oh okay I do know who
23:44
that is all right we also have Martina
23:46
navrolito he's the tennis player okay so
23:50
she was born on October in Prague we
23:53
have Bo Derek who I remember from movies
23:55
born in Long Beach actually so she's a
23:57
California Native on Note in November
24:00
November 20th so five days before you
24:03
Tom Hanks also from California in
24:06
Concord uh Mel Gibson January 3rd in New
24:10
York Joe Montana the uh I guess he's not
24:13
really playing football anymore but now
24:15
he's doing commercials for shoes
24:17
good for him Pennsylvania
24:19
Randy Jackson is that who I think it is
24:23
yes hi Buck thank you is he that wait
24:27
Randy Jackson the the I think he was a
24:29
football player or something okay I
24:31
think the American Dad will do never
24:32
mind I'm thinking the judge for American
24:34
Idol that's a different guy uh he was
24:36
born in Baton Rouge and then Jamie demon
24:38
I don't know who that is but born in New
24:40
York let me look up this last one and
24:43
because I'm kind of curious he oh okay
24:46
the Chief Executive Officer of Chase
24:49
Bank well there you go JP Morgan there
24:52
you go no there's a lot of people you
24:54
know actors you had Sports people you
24:55
had musicians you had Chase Bank
25:00
It Was a Very Good Year
25:04
because why not right
25:07
right it's always fun to fun to
25:09
with family and friends so we got the
25:11
family here and we got the friends out
25:13
there wishing me a happy birthday I
25:15
really really appreciate it
25:17
um you know when I love birthdays
25:19
personally I love birthdays um I always
25:22
have loved birthdays I don't know why I
25:24
don't worry about the age the number I
25:26
just love the fact that I'm still here
25:28
and so I think that's why I love
25:30
birthdays I guess but I want to thank
25:33
you guys all for celebrating with us
25:34
today Rob any last thoughts on how old I
25:39
are you just gonna leave that
25:41
I I'm Gonna Leave the Room now I'm I'm
25:44
Rob has left the building well thank you
25:47
everyone Happy Thanksgiving to everyone
25:49
I hope that you guys had great turkey
25:51
days yesterday if you're in the states
25:52
and if you're not in the states whatever
25:54
you ate last night I hope it was great
25:58
you would go out and give somebody an
25:59
awesome day we're going to see you next
26:01
week we have a bunch of great shows
26:03
coming up next week say goodbye everyone