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Travel Regrets, Bad Teachers, & Growing Up Before Google image

Travel Regrets, Bad Teachers, & Growing Up Before Google

E189 · Unsolicited Perspectives
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In this episode, we take you on a hilarious and relatable journey through travel regrets, bad teachers, and the chaos of growing up before Google. Bruce Anthony and J. Aundrea share laugh-out-loud moments about buying plane tickets on a phone (big mistake!), Dave & Buster’s arcade adventures, and a Texas teacher who took bathroom punishment WAY too far. Packed with 90s nostalgia, sibling banter, and reflections on generational differences, we dive into what life was like before smartphones, when dial-up internet ruled the world, and catalogs were our version of online shopping.

If you’re a Millennial or Gen Xer who remembers floppy disks, smoking on planes, or losing your Sears wish list, this episode will hit you with all the feels! Parents, podcast fans, and anyone looking for lighthearted comedy will love the mix of real talk, cultural commentary, and sibling dynamics. Join the conversation! #podcast #80s #90s #teacher #unsolicitedperspectives 

🔔 Hit that subscribe and notification button for weekly content that bridges the past to the future with passion and perspective. Thumbs up if we’re hitting the right notes! Let’s get the conversation rolling—drop a comment and let’s chat about today’s topics.

For the real deal, uncensored and all, swing by our Patreon at patreon.com/unsolicitedperspectives for exclusive episodes and more. 

Thank you for tuning into Unsolicited Perspectives with Bruce Anthony. Let's continue the conversation in the comments and remember, stay engaged, stay informed, and always keep an open mind. See you in the next episode!

Chapters:

00:00 Welcome to Unsolicited Perspectives 🎙️🔥💥

00:35 Sibling Happy Hour Begins 🍹🌶️

01:06 Plane Tickets & Poor Decisions ✈️📱🤦🏾‍♂️

06:03 Group Projects & Grad School Drama 🎓📊😅

11:31 Dave & Buster’s: Adults vs. Kids 🕹️🍻👦🏼

16:56 Bathroom Breaks Banned? A Teacher’s Big Mistake 🚫🚻😡

32:26 The Price of Power: When Teachers Abuse Their Authority ⚖️🚫🚨

33:03 Second Chances? Should This Teacher Ever Teach Again? 🤔🔄📚

38:17 When the Internet Was Loud: Generational Tech Tales 📡💻📞

43:00 When Smoking Was Everywhere & Sears Ruled the World 🚬🛒📖

51:48 Airport Security & Life Before Google Maps 🛄🗺️📵

58:43 Generational Battle Royale: Who Suffered More? 🥊👶 vs. 👴👵

01:02:02 Final Thoughts & YouTube Exclusive Bonus Content 🎤✨🎥

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Transcript

Introduction and Podcast Overview

00:00:10
Speaker
Welcome. First of all, welcome. This is us, The Listening Perspectives. I'm your host, Bruce Anthony, here to lead the conversation and important events and topics in The Shaping Today Society. Join the conversation and follow us wherever you get your audio podcasts. Subscribe to our YouTube channel for our video podcasts and YouTube exclusive content. Rate, review, like, comment, share. Share with your friends, share with your family. Hell, even share with your enemies.
00:00:35
Speaker
On today's episode, it's the sibling happy hour. I'm here with my sis, Jay Andrea. We're going to be Dilly Dan a little bit. Then we're going to be talking about a teacher going too far. And then we're going to be talking about things done changed. Things from back in the day that's completely different now. But that's enough of the intro. Let's get to the show.

Travel Mishaps and Life Lessons

00:01:01
Speaker
What up, sis? What up, Breta? I can't call it. I can't call it. You know, I made some purchases this past weekend. You know, Christmas is coming. As one would do, sure. Right, right, right. ah I bought my plane tickets to come down to see you in Atlanta. Nice. I'm excited. I'm excited too, but I made it, oops, as I was purchasing the tickets. OK.
00:01:26
Speaker
All right, so the reason why I say, you know, you shouldn't make big purchases on your cell phone. You should just go ahead and log in to your computer and make big purchases because I've made some mistakes. Okay. My first flight, I was gonna come in on a Sunday. I said, oh my God, this is an incredible price. I'm gonna go ahead and book this right now. And didn't realize it wasn't a nonstop that somehow I was flying from DC to St. Louis to get to Atlanta.
00:01:58
Speaker
Yeah. OK. Yeah, that's stupid. I mean, not terrible. ah It's terrible for me. It's a straight shot. It's less than a two-hour flight from here to Atlanta. Yeah, yeah. OK, so and and um I don't feel like changing planes. i'm i ah You might not have had to. No, maybe maybe not. But just in case, it was going to be a 40-minute window. And I'm a big guy, so to get out of the seat, get my stuff out of the seat, you know, it's wintertime. It's going to be a ah jacket that I'm carrying, my backpack, my laptop, case, and all that stuff. Didn't want to do it.
00:02:32
Speaker
So I had to cancel that, still hasn't taken it off my credit card yet, but it will. It will, it will. Give us some time. Hopefully. Then book my, then rebook my flight down there and flight up. But I was like, I need to get on the computer. Some stuff that you purchase, yeah you just can't do through your cell phone. No. I got to see it on a so a larger screen. I got to be able to screen my what I'm purchasing, especially if

Home Decisions and Friendly Advice

00:03:00
Speaker
it's a big purchase. Like if I'm just getting something on, ah you know, real quick, not a big deal. I just need an HDMI cord as we all sometimes tend to do it. You will always need an HDMI cord. You always need a damn HDMI cord. But if it's something like that, okay, i I'll get on my phone real quick. But if I'm making a big purchase, I need to sit down in a chair. Yes. I can't just, I can't just put my phone and make a big purchase. Absolutely not.
00:03:27
Speaker
Also, like I was going to buy a couch. I was going to buy a new couch. I decided not to do it because my bestie was like, I don't think you need a new couch. and I don't think you do either. i She also was like, I don't like the couch. I said, you pick it. I said her a couple and i was like she was like, I don't like those. ah Your couch is just five. I've had the couch for about six years. Commitments are hard for me. It's time for something new. Yeah. yeah is Okay. I need to see these couches because What are you picking where you're getting them vetoed this way?
00:04:01
Speaker
yeah You know me, I'm going to go for something that's not too costly. Oh, boy. OK. And the couch probably isn't one of those type of things. No, it's definitely not, because when I stay with you, I sleep on that couch. So please don't get something cheap. You ain't having to stay with me in a really long time.
00:04:23
Speaker
I don't know if it's really long, but typically I come up and I got the dogs with me and it's a lot. Well, the last time you stayed with me, Roscoe was a little, little puppy. Yeah, he was a little guy, so it was fine, but no, no, no, I got to sleep on that couch now.
00:04:40
Speaker
well I want to make it smaller. So I have a ah chase. I have a a sectional, yeah as you know, that the audience doesn't. I have a sectional, but it's a full couch and giant chase. yeah So it's like four seats across, but it's four giant seats. And it just takes up a lot of space. And it's just me here.
00:05:02
Speaker
Except when I come by, then it's not, and I like the giant shades. Right, right. I can still get a giant chase, but but having more of a love seat chase than a full couch chase. You know, just lop off that extra seat so I have more space over by my bar, right? OK, all right. So I was sitting there to her, and she was like, no. But I was going to make a purchase on my cell phone. And I was like, what am I doing?
00:05:27
Speaker
and I need to go on my computer so that I can open up multiple windows to find the best price. I can't, it's not easy to go through different windows on your iPhone. No, it's absolutely not at all. It's absolutely not that easy at all. And so, yeah, no, I need my tabs open. Yes. I need to open up my little calculator app. I'm like, what's the price per unit? Okay, this is actually a better deal. You know, like I, no, no, I feel you on that.
00:05:57
Speaker
Well, speaking of their tendencies, which is what that is.

Academic Success and Technology

00:06:01
Speaker
Yes. You just you just finished your first semester of grad school. I did. And I've been sleeping.
00:06:10
Speaker
Boy, I've been sleeping. ah No. Yeah, I just finished it. Got an A in one class, still waiting for the grade in the other class, even though I put my grades so far in chat GPT. And I was like, what do I need on this final project to get an A in the class? Chat was like, ooh, girl, that's not possible.
00:06:30
Speaker
Because you would need 105% on this final project. So you ain't going to be getting that A girl, but you know you might get a B plus. And I was like, wow, you, okay. I wasn't. So before a better answer than that, but that's all right.
00:06:47
Speaker
The GPA is still do good, so I'm just happy that I'm done, that I finished it. And now I'm in a groove a little bit, so like I'm ready for spring semester because you know I've been out of school over a decade. Right. you know So i I'm just getting back into the swing of like studying and doing homework and taking tests and doing projects and stuff. but Yeah, the semester went really well, so I'm hoping that this the continues on into next semester. How did your program managing project go? It would it wit it went really well. ah As a team, we did a great job, and that's what I'm going to say. it was ah It was a group effort.
00:07:38
Speaker
And look, I saw a meme the other day, and it was this person saying, I want all the people so that I worked on group projects with to be at my funeral and to also lower the casket so he can let me down one more time.
00:07:55
Speaker
does absolutely so That was not the case, but it will it was, um did I take a project manager role? Yes, I did, because that's just who I am. But when we got together and sat down, they just said, you know we're not struggling in programming. I was like,
00:08:11
Speaker
Okay. Okay. Cool. Me neither. But we're going to figure this out, you know? And we were using like Google Cloud Platform and I'd never used that before. So it was a lot of things in that project that I'd never done before. But you know, Google, Google is your friend.
00:08:27
Speaker
Google is really your friend. It really, really is. So between that and YouTube videos, I figured it out. Uh-huh. I'm still waiting for the grade back on that. But when not the paper, it was 38 pages. Jesus. That I wrote for that. Now, was it full of graphs and footnotes? You damn skippy. Yeah. You damn skippy. It was a lot of pictures in it. But it's still, but a some original thought was in there. I would say,
00:08:57
Speaker
60% of it is original thought. All right, stop talking too much. for No, no, no. 60% of it was words. Oh, OK. Like original thought. And then the rest of it was graphs and and charts. Charts. When you told me about that, I told somebody else that also went to college or has a degree and that you'd done a 38 to 40 page paper.
00:09:23
Speaker
And they were like, when did he do that? I said, college. yeah And the person was like, I didn't have to write those type of papers. I was like, bruh, I had to write. multiple, third well, also because of my degree, you know, yeah history and education. I had to write multiple 30-page papers for multiple, and matter of fact, my senior year, you're taking 12 credit hours, so it's four classes. The final project for all four classes for both semesters was a 30-page paper. I wrote 240 pages yes in a year. Okay, I love the book.
00:10:01
Speaker
Was he a math major? What major is it that you don't have to write papers? I think he did something in programming. No, he said computer illustration or something like that. Oh, yeah, he ain't got to write no papers for that. He just turned in projects. Right, and obviously, when you're an English or history major or philosophy or psychology, you're going to have a lot of papers to write. You're going to have a lot of papers to write.
00:10:27
Speaker
240 pages worth. of That's not an exact duration, ladies and gentlemen. No. That was just my senior a year. My junior year, it was probably 180. Okay. like I wrote a lot. It's somewhere, somewhere out there in the world. All those papers on a
00:10:45
Speaker
Talking good about things that change on a disk, not a floppy disk. A hard disk. It's a hard disk, y'all. Now we're not going back to floppy. It's a hard disk, but it is the disk. Yes. so And I don't mean compact disk. I don't know how else to explain it. It's a hard disk. If you don't know what a hard disk is, I don't...
00:11:12
Speaker
You're not 80s, baby. Like, I don't know how students play. Hardness, but it's the thing before CDs. Right.

Nostalgia: Video Games and Childhood Dreams

00:11:22
Speaker
The thing way before step time. dry Right, right. Speaking of being old, and like I said, we're going to get into things that changed in the last but segment. Mm hmm.
00:11:33
Speaker
Our brother and I went to Dave and Busters yesterday. Now you know how much I love. You love it. Video games and arcade. Video games are freaking. Two of the three favorite things in the entire world, okay? Yes. The third thing is sex. But anyway, show me.
00:11:51
Speaker
and So we go to Dave and Busters yesterday afternoon. We get there, I don't know, maybe like 4, 4.30. Okay. And I was thinking, all right, by that time, it would have been aired out of the kids. I don't know why I said air out, but the kids, the kids won't be there when the kids. No, air out, because kids are germy.
00:12:10
Speaker
Right. No, that was not the case. They was there. They was all up in there. And me and our brother, two men... It was a Saturday? Two men, right, in the Middle Ages. Not only is it a Saturday, it's a Saturday during the shopping holiday season. Right, of course. And it's in a mall, so the mall is packed. Yeah.
00:12:28
Speaker
And I was, I said to my brother, you know, all these kids get out, don't they get out the way? I'm trying to play these games. I had to wait in live for the air hockey. And the little kids just went. And I was like, I'm so glad the air hockey games is timed and not by points, because, oh, them kids was not going to park off their hockey tables.
00:12:48
Speaker
And it's also frustrating because kids aren't good at games. You know, I used to be like, why don't y'all get out the way? I know y'all having fun, but this is serious. That's another thing. This is serious. Me and our brother was playing this shooting game, and it's a rifle, and it was like a...
00:13:06
Speaker
It's like an automatic rifle that you use it. It's terminated salvation, right? So that's an automatic rifle with a grenade launcher. And yeah I'm putting it on my shoulder. Job-like, job-like, ladies and gentlemen, is a slang term in the DC area that was used in the 90s. I don't think that it's used anymore. I don't think of all either.
00:13:25
Speaker
I'm acting like I'm a real soldier. The butt of the gut is resting on my shoulder like it's supposed to when you're shooting. When I'm not shooting, I got it on my chest with the nozzle pointing down. This is real life. And little kids is like, you're good in the game. And hey, little man, I know I am, but I got a focus right now. Don't take my concentration.
00:13:49
Speaker
I wanted to play Mario Kart and little kids wiping their nose with boogers and stuff like that and putting their hand on the steering wheel. I had no wet wipes. I didn't have no hand sanitizer. I was like, from now on, when I go to the Dave and Busters, I'm going to go late. On top of that, two middle-aged men at the Dave and Busters just playing games. Little creepy.
00:14:12
Speaker
Look, and at that time of day. At that time of day. It's like, OK, what why are y'all here? Why are we here? And it's really just the dr to drink and play video games. But Ed, I wanted to talk about how much of a kid I am. I wanted to get in, play video games, get out, because I wanted to be back home by 8 o'clock to watch Ruslin. I don't want to grow up.
00:14:38
Speaker
But yeah, I mean, look, they say that we create the life in adulthood, which we had as a child. And so there you go. But it's the same. You want to play video games and watch wrestling. And that's what you wanted to do as a kid? That's all I wanted to do as a kid. And I did that as a kid. This isn't something that I miss out on. This is a continuation of my childhood. Yeah.
00:15:05
Speaker
But now, it's your money, so you can do whatever you want. I can do whatever you want. You'll ever run out of tokens. On a little car, you can recharge your car. You don't have to go to Mom or Dad. What do you recharge that car? And they be like, I spent your card already. Nope.
00:15:24
Speaker
Do it yourself. First of all, them games was taking some of the tokens, and it was really pissing me off. I was like, hey, man, now was I a little intoxicated? Yes, I was. But also, the games was taking my money. Yeah. And it was pissing me off. Which would be, so they were taking tokens and not letting you play? Yes, exactly. Or it was too expensive. Oh, OK. Well, look, are the machines going to work 100% of the time? No.
00:15:54
Speaker
Is it a grift? Is the whole arcade bar culture a grift? Yes. ah Unless the arcade games are free, then I'm just paying for the drinks. Yeah, well. But typically, they are not free. They're taking them tokens. And a lot of games, they used to be only one token. It's like, oh, it's four tokens for this. Four tokens for Ms. Pac-Man? Now, wait a damn minute.
00:16:23
Speaker
It used to be one token. Oh, but i had we had a good time. but Well, that's good. But speaking of kids.

Controversial Teacher Incident

00:16:32
Speaker
Yeah. We're going to get into a teacher harming kids. Yeah. We'll go get into that next.
00:16:45
Speaker
All right, Jay. A j ah teacher went too far with these kids. Yeah, what the hell is this? So there was an incident that occurred on December 4th of this year. A first grade teacher named Ashley Barrera lost her job after she would after she had banned her students from using the bathroom. This resulted in several of the students urinating on themselves.
00:17:09
Speaker
yeah Ashley Barrera is a first grade teacher or was at Bartlett Elementary School in Conroe, Texas. She revoked the entire class right to use the restroom as a form of punishment. As a result, multiple children ended up peeing themselves because they were not allowed to use the bathroom. Parents, of course, were outraged, describing the situation as traumatic and humiliating for the children. This incident led to Barrera being fired from her teaching position. Now,
00:17:40
Speaker
The day this happened, she sent out a message to the parents. And I'm not going to read the message for Braden because it's going to incite a riot. But I believe there was synopsis of it. But just this initial story, what's going on, not even understanding what she's punishing them for. I'll get into that admit in a minute. What do you think about this? These are six-year-old children. First graders are five, six years old.
00:18:10
Speaker
Maybe some are seven. Maybe some are seven. But these are six- Well, I know there were eight. These are six-year-olds. Right. They can't hold it. Not for an entire school day. Not after they had milk with their breakfast and a little Capri Sun with their lunch maybe, or like, you know, they can't... There are ways to punish six-year-olds. This is not one of those ways.
00:18:40
Speaker
Absolutely not. I wouldn't even have thought to use this method to correct to correct the... but I don't know what she was punishing before, I'm sure you're gonna get to that, but like to correct the behavior of a six-year-old, I tell them they can't... that What's next? They can't eat?
00:18:59
Speaker
Like, this is these are basic necessities. These are not privileges that you can take away. Going to the bathroom is not a privilege. And I always hated teachers who acted like going to the bathroom, especially being a teenage girl, is a privilege. It's not a privilege. Baby, you better give me that bathroom key.
00:19:21
Speaker
yeah No, Play-Doh guys, you better give me that pass. Give me that bathroom pass because this is not this is not a game. but Going to the restroom just like eating is not a privilege. so In high school, I can understand teachers kind of holding back the bathroom pass because you had students like me.
00:19:45
Speaker
who would get the bathroom pass and not go to the bathroom, just be playing in the hallway. Yes. There are always going to be students who abuse the bathroom pass, but again, it is not a privilege. It is a right. yeah I am going to the bathroom. like i don't like i I'm not asking you for permission. I'm letting you know I'm going to the bathroom.
00:20:08
Speaker
I remember one time in high school, this guy asked for the bathroom pass, and he went to the bathroom. He was golfing basically like the whole class, right? You know, 45 minutes to an hour, that's how long the class was. He was golfing basically the whole class. He came like right before the class, and the teacher was furious. yeah They were like, where were you? Why were you golfing so long? And he was like, yo, I had to take a massive dookie.
00:20:35
Speaker
And i guess what? We are how old? How long did they take? 30, 45 minutes? No. Hold on. Back in the day. Now it does because we're on our phones. But back in the day, it did not take that long. Yes, it did. No, it did not.
00:20:49
Speaker
yeah it yeah i but Of course, I broke out laughing. Yes, naturally. But once again, these are high school students yeah right that we're talking about in this scenario. Right. In this instance with the teacher with Ms. Barrera, these are six-year-old students. Yes, yes. So I know the audience has to be wondering, like, so what did they do that was so bad that they needed to be on punishment to the point where she wouldn't allow them to go to the bathroom?
00:21:18
Speaker
When she revoked the bathroom privileges for them from the kids, it was because one of the students had lost the bathroom pass. A six-year-old lost something.
00:21:33
Speaker
but right so Surprise, surprise. First of all, your bathroom pass for a six-year-old class should not be something that can be lost. It should be a giant laminated thing that says bathroom pass with maybe something hanging from it like a key chain or something like that, something hanging from it. It should be this giant thing or, or should be a little sign they wear around their neck. So when they walk through the hallway, you can see they got bathroom pass on it. It should not be something a six year old could even lose. So the fact she was, already she already messed up.
00:22:10
Speaker
Well, fact of the matter is there shouldn't be bathroom passes for anybody that's from an elementary and middle school because you know they ain't cleaning that thing and they barely know how to wash their hands properly. So I don't want to exchange. I don't want to take that bathroom pass from them. But when you're that age.
00:22:28
Speaker
you you're not thinking about, it might be Dookie on this pass, you're not thinking about that. Which it would be, which it absolutely would be, right? Little kids don't know how to clean themselves properly. Well, it's tough to her to, you know, spray it with some Lysol every day. Lysol ain't gonna work, but that was the reason why she revoked the children to be able to go to the restroom on this day, but it gets worse. It gets worse because she sent a message to the parents that day. In the message, Barrera said she had a talk with the students about how important it is to use our thing appropriately. Our thing being the bathroom and the bathroom passes. yeah And asked parents to also have a talk with the children about responsibility.
00:23:15
Speaker
Six year olds. Six year olds. Losing the bathroom pass. Yes. This is what we're talking about here. This is absolutely ridiculous. First of all, why do you only have one?
00:23:28
Speaker
Well, maybe there were several. Maybe there were several that had lost. I don't know the exact details. To me, it did not matter. If they keep losing the bathroom pass, you need to change the bathroom pass so that they can't lose it. That's that's true. But it was the message. So she sent the message. And in the message, she was like, hey, some kids had some accidents. They peed on themselves.
00:23:51
Speaker
They peed on themselves because I wasn't allowing them to go to the bathroom. And oh, by the way, the reason why I didn't allow them to go to the bathroom is because they need to learn responsibility about making sure they don't lose things. Also, teach your kids this at home, so I'll have to do it all the time.
00:24:08
Speaker
She was fired. I hope she don't have kids because if if that's the way she disciplines other people's kids, can you imagine? Right. So she got fired because the parents were absolutely upset. Some of their kids came home.
00:24:23
Speaker
smelling the urine because some people had peed on themselves, but it got worse because I watched the news broadcast. I didn't send that that to you because as you were feeling joyous today and I didn't want to bring down your spirits. We were exchanging memes earlier before we jumped on the show. You were feeling good. Yes. I finally went through and answered all my DMs. It was great. Jesus, you responded to like 27 DMs. I was like, I don't even remember this joke I sent you. Anyway.
00:24:50
Speaker
yeah So in the news report, they interviewed a few of the kids, you know, blocked them out and stuff like that. Yeah, of course. One little girl described her friend saying, sitting at her desk, she told the teacher she had to use the bathroom. The teacher said, no, you can't go. And she peed sitting at her desk. There was a puddle of urine underneath the desk, and all the kids were laughing at her. Another kid, a kid peed on herself. But here's the thing, nobody cleaned up the urine. She was sitting there.
00:25:21
Speaker
for the rest of the class with a puddle of urine underneath her. So, of course, when the school board found out about that, they immediately did an investigation and they terminated her. And the message that was sent to the parents, it was the investigation. They confirmed, yes, she said that. Yeah. so i and And literally thought that that was justified. Right. Not that level of humiliation. I mean,
00:25:52
Speaker
that's That's a cool, that's if that's a Dylan origin story, if ever I heard one. hit takes Because the way I would be if you let me see my six-year-old self in my own pee, first of all, my six-year-old self.
00:26:10
Speaker
I'll be like, you need to call my mom and daddy right now. If you're acting on yourself? No. Before that even happened, if I got up to ask to go to the bathroom and she said no, um I would be like, you need to call my dad right now. And you need to tell him that you're not letting me go to the bathroom. And I'm going to stand here, and I'm going to pee on your desk. Wait a minute. What? Give me up.
00:26:38
Speaker
but
00:26:41
Speaker
No, my six-year-old son, that's just me. But a lot of other kids, you know, not as vocal. You know, at that age, do kids really know to advocate for themselves and things like that, that they had rights in that specific instance? No, they're sex. They're sex.
00:26:59
Speaker
ah You know what? Also, you know what? i'm I'm trying to think because I know how you would respond and that sounds about right. How I would respond, I think would be different because, oh first of all, I'm the oldest. So that means that I follow the rules. Yeah.
00:27:13
Speaker
because the parents were more disciplined with with me. So the reason I follow the rules, I might have been one of the little kids that peed on themselves. Yeah. Because you just respect authority. Plus, I came from a generation that just is like, oh, you're older than me, so I got to listen to what you say. Yeah, I was not like that as a c child. No, you were not. I was not like that as a child at all. If I had if i have asked to use the bathroom, and that lady said no,
00:27:43
Speaker
all hell would have broke loose in that classroom. I was a mouthy six-year-old, so all hell would have broke loose in that classroom. Absolutely unacceptable. Now, now you're looking at it from the perspective of being a six-year-old. Yeah. Now look at it from the perspective of being the parent.
00:28:06
Speaker
of that six-year-old. This lady would have to leave town. Yeah. Because I'm going to beat your ass. Like, that's. If I'm one of the parents of the kids that urinated themselves, if I'm one of the parents that just heard this. Yeah.
00:28:21
Speaker
I'm furious and I'm calling for her job immediately. Because as somebody who went to school to be an educator, granted, the kids I was going to be teaching were going to be older. But if I was with the little kids, I mean, I saw a bunch of them at Dave and Buster's yesterday. Little kids, cute, innocent, and they just try to live their life and have fun, yeah right? They don't want to go to the bathroom on themselves. I mean, they don't want to do that. And and the conversation,
00:28:48
Speaker
should that she had with them should have been, yeah, it's about responsibility because they're learning responsibility. They're just learning that now. like That's not something that they're going to 100% grasp at the age of six. They can't spell responsibility. um I can't spell that right now myself. I mean, gun to my head.
00:29:11
Speaker
I got to say my prayers. Okay. Response, re response. R E. There's a C in there somewhere. There's not anywhere in there. looks for There is no C. here
00:29:32
Speaker
I'm going with response. There's a C in response. No, there is not. At the end, C-E response. Oh, response. Yes. I said response. I kept saying response. Ladies and gentlemen, I know how to spell response. R-E-S-O. There's C in response.
00:29:52
Speaker
It's R-E. And that's P-O-N-C-E. There's no C in responsibility. Not responsibility in response. I know the word I'm trying to spell. I just spelled it. But you didn't hear what I messed up. I said R-E. That's what I'm waiting for. Wait a minute. R-E. P-E. P-E. P-E. P-E. P-E. P-E. That's correct, anyone. As y'all can see, we did it with your fast first grade.
00:30:20
Speaker
But yeah, I mean, first of all, s yes and it's on her as an educator to make the bathroom pass something that a six-year-old can't lose, or if they do lose, that it's easy to be found. i might be It might be a directive from the principal that this is the bathroom passes, they have to be uniformed so that people that are patrolling the hallway know that the students ah have have passes and are supposed to be in the hallway going to the bathroom or what have you. Listen, these are six-year-old kids that can't be held to the same standard as eight, nine, 10-year-old children. Yeah, there is a major there is a major age difference between a five and a 10-year-old. A lot. There's a lot. There's a lot of learning that happens in there. A 10-year-old, if you want to have a conversation, if they keep losing the bathroom pass and you want to have a conversation with your class about responsibility,
00:31:15
Speaker
That's a conversation. You still can't revoke bathroom privileges. Doesn't matter the child's age. You cannot revoke bathroom privileges. I feel like I got into it with a teacher. not like The more we talk about it, I feel like I got into it with a teacher in high school once. That sounds about right. and I think I had to make the point of looking at him and being like, I am a teenage girl. I'm not asking you to go to the bathroom. I'm telling you I'm going to the bathroom.
00:31:42
Speaker
like right And then when it dawned on him, oh, go ahead, go ahead, go. i like then I feel like I've had that experience once, but like,
00:31:57
Speaker
beat No, this whole thing is just wholly unacceptable. I'm glad that she, it wasn't like, oh, she's on administrative leave. and She was on administrative leave at first, but she's no longer, the the school board said. Yeah, no, you got to go. Here's the problem though, here's the problem.
00:32:15
Speaker
She's not barred from ever teaching again. She could just move to another area and teach them where else. Just like police officers that are fired from a job, they can move to a different precinct. Yeah. Right? Skitty, town. Well, hopefully people are talking, and she finds it very difficult to find another job teaching small children ah because she don't got no business. She clearly doesn't understand the mind of a child or the development. It's like she didn't even watch it Inside Out.
00:32:45
Speaker
She clearly didn't watch Inside Out. Clearly. Clearly. But it's like, you clearly you don't understand where six-year-olds are developmentally. Yeah, I would say, I mean, that of course I agree that she should be fired. But to never be able to teach again, maybe there can be some, you know how they teach like sensitivity training courses like in corporate America. You know, there could be something that can be done.
00:33:10
Speaker
so that she could teach again. I would say that she needs to do something to prove yeah that she belongs in the classroom again. You can't just throw her back into the classroom, but I mean, she could chicken in she can get back up in there. Maybe after some time, but ah the way I think about it is you went through all of that schooling. Yeah, there's a lot too. you you you had to You had to work in a classroom to get your teacher's certificate. You did all of that.
00:33:41
Speaker
and so And you had to learn the psychology of children. like You had to learn about child development, I'm i'm sure. I mean, I don't know 100% what you need to study to get your teaching license. You would know better than me. But like those things, I feel like, should be a part of it. And so you went through all that, and you thought you could revoke the... And then to leave them... The part about her leaving them sitting in it. Mm-hmm.
00:34:10
Speaker
Not even calling in maintenance to clean it up, not getting. A lot of the kids are laughing at this child. Right. And you think, yes, they're six years old. I'm doing a very good job teaching right now. Like for you to look at this situation that's happening in your classroom that you are in control of and think, yes, this is this was the way to handle this.
00:34:35
Speaker
is insane to me. And a person who thinks like that don't have no business being around children. Mm-hmm. None. Not the babies. Not the babies. No. But you're right. She need to be teaching older kids that can advocate for themselves. She probably need to get tuned up by one of the parents of the moms. That part, because don't let me don't let me catch you in coals or out of it.
00:35:02
Speaker
yeah know It is, it is, what, Conroe, Texas? So they probably wonder what we got of Coles. You know they got of Coles. They got of Marshalls. They probably still got a K-Mart. I actually know that for a fact, because I had to stay at Conroe, Texas for a little while. Yes, I was there. You wanted to cross paths with Ashley Bullard? Might as.
00:35:21
Speaker
Might have, and if I had known that in the future, she was going to do something this stupid at the time. At the time, I was in Colorado, Texas. She was probably still in college. But if I had known she was going to do something this stupid, I'd have just knocked it out myself and just turned and looked at everybody and was like, you're welcome. and You don't know it right now, but you're welcome. Who are you telling me? Glad that could sound. This is Minority Report. I know what's.
00:35:50
Speaker
The future is. We're dating ourselves, because Minority Report probably came out 27 years ago. And I know we all. That ain't no secret. We talk about it every day on the show. We talk about our aches and pains, and then we make noise when we get up and sit there. Yeah, we do. Do you have any last shots at Ashley Barrera? Not at Ashley, but like educators in general. Not even just educators, like people in industries where you're supposed to have compassion and empathy. no I don't care if it's teaching, nursing, whatever it is, where you're in a and ah position where you're supposed to have compassion and empathy for whoever you're working for. If you find that you're sorely lacking in that, you need to find a new line of work.
00:36:43
Speaker
Because if if you need compassion and empathy to do your job well, and you don't have those things, you are just terrorizing people at this point. Find you a new job, find you something else to do. Yeah, I agree with that completely. Talking about us being old,
00:37:09
Speaker
Let's get into the next segment that I like to call Things Done Changed. We'll get into that next.
00:37:24
Speaker
Hey, Jay.

Generational Differences and Cultural Norms

00:37:26
Speaker
You know what? Yeah. Things done changed. All right, this is all coming from an article from Buzzfeed titled, My adult children didn't believe me. 26 normal practices and routines from the past that have Gen Zers confused. Now, we're not going through all 26. Matter of fact, we'll go through a few. But if you want to hear more, you can check out the YouTube exclusive, one of the YouTube exclusives where we'll expand upon that. So subscribe to our YouTube page to find content not here on the podcast.
00:37:59
Speaker
what What we are going to talk about is one of the first ones. A parent says to one of their Gen C children, when the internet first came out, you couldn't talk on the phone and be online at the same time. First of all, when the internet first came out, the fact that we say that phrase It's something that gymsies don't understand. What do you mean when the internet came out? Because when their whole lives, the internet has been a thing that exists and has been deeply ingrained in our society and is just a part of daily life. You have to understand, it did not exist when I was a child. Like, even, even
00:38:50
Speaker
It existed, but not to the general population. No. Yes. I remember... and oh I was in maybe late elementary school, middle school, when we first got dial-up internet. And we only had one account that the whole family had to share. like And it will we were all shocked. We were chatting with people in California. And it was why it was like a shocking thing. So just starting from that point, yes, we remember life.
00:39:22
Speaker
before the internet existed. I mean, no Google, you couldn't chat with no, there's literally nothing. It did not exist. Your phone was just a phone. I'm gonna get into that later. As in, if then you add on to that, you couldn't be on the phone and online at the same time. Cause you gotta understand also, this is the era of the landline. Okay.
00:39:53
Speaker
Internet was dial up, it had to use the landline. So if if you picked up that receiver, you were... Hold on. There are some Gen Z people out here that don't know what a receiver is. It's the actual telephone that's connected to a wall. If you had some money, it was cordless. Yeah. If you had some money, it was cordless, but the actual thing you talk into and hear out of. Right. yeah this is This is how you know the difference. If people use this simple,
00:40:25
Speaker
Just say, call me. That's somebody you're millennial or older. If people use this to say, call me. That's a Jim Zier or a younger. And ladies and gentlemen, it was a certain hand movement that my sister was using for the art the people that are listening. Check us out on YouTube. Check us out on YouTube. Yes. i'll So I remember Dad coming home with a computer, yeah Windows 95. Ladies and gentlemen, it was 1995. And we signed on an instant messenger. Yep.
00:40:58
Speaker
All right. AOL. For my Gen Zers out there, just think of a soft, just think of who? What? Texting? Yeah. Just think, oh, I want to say it's text. It is. They know what IMing is, because I'm sure they've had to use Teams or Slack or, you know. They know what Instagram is. But that was the only way that we could. But that was the only way we could. There were no apps.
00:41:27
Speaker
And you would go into these chat rooms, and there was just a bunch of people just chit-chatting. Mostly creeps and perverts. Well, ah we don't know that for sure, but... A lot of them was creeps and perverts. Yeah, that's... that's Anyone could be in this chat room. Like, literally anybody could be in this room chatting. Yes. But it was the first time that you could speak to somebody in California that you didn't even know through typing and texting and messaging them. Yes. And we were like, this is really cool. And it was cool. Yes. Until somebody picked up the phone, because as soon as you pick up the phone, that connection dropped, and you ain't on the internet no more. Right.
00:42:07
Speaker
And sometimes you might be having a good conversation, you know, wrap it to some woman, you know what I'm saying? That you've never, that you don't have any pictures of. It's called conversation is on point. And she's from Arizona and you're kicking mad game. Like you can come out there and visit her one day and your mom pick up the phone. You are 12 years old.
00:42:24
Speaker
and your mom pick up the phone and say, hey, get off the end Internet. I need to make a call. That's what you got to get off the Internet. Get off the Internet. That's the end of Internet for you for the night. like It's that like, OK, let me go get on my cell phone. It wasn't. No, no, baby. One thing was not a thing. wasn't that a fact All right, here's another one that a parent sent to a Gen Z or child of theirs. I'm just old enough to remember smoking on planes. It still blows my mind that that was a thing. Yeah. I'll go you even one better that, um hold on. Smoking was allowed everywhere. Yeah. In your restaurant. Yeah. In a bathroom. Doesn't matter. On a train. Yep. A plane.
00:43:15
Speaker
everywhere, hotel rooms. We did not care. I remember when we started caring about secondhand smoke. Like, we started getting those commercials, those public service announcement with commercials about second hand smoke. Because we we had just discovered that that also could cause cancer. Like, you don't have to actually be smoking a cigarette. Just being around the smoke can cause cancer. So we there was a time we did not know that. There was a time when women were smoking while pregnant, and it was a thing. It was a thing. There is a picture.
00:43:51
Speaker
of our mother on her the day she graduated from nursing school. She's holding our brother, he's an infant, and sitting next to her is our grandmother smoking a cigarette. yeah And I'm like, there's so much wrong with this picture. You just graduated from nursing school, so you should nubble. She ain't got no business smoking a cigarette around your newborn. Just don't make no sense.
00:44:19
Speaker
There's so many things wrong with the sponge. That's the 80s. That was the 80s. That was the 80s. That was absolutely the 80s. So yes, ladies and gentlemen, you could actually smoke on the airplane. Now, you mad if somebody turned on the little air thing and was blowing too much air on you, and you sit next to them, you're like, hey, man, turn off that air. It's cold. No. Now, imagine somebody just smoking an old-school. Chainsmoking cigarettes. And an old-school cigarette. The cigarette's just got This is an oxymoron healthier than what they were back in the day. Right. I'm talking about somebody chain smoking a pack of Kools, and you can't do anything about it because it's 100% allowed. There's nothing you could do about it but smell that smoke. And guess what?
00:45:07
Speaker
It could be a pack of cools in the air. It could be a pack of new ports, some wall bro lights, some regular wall bones, some Big Red. I don't even think Big Red is a cigarette, but it sounds like... Camo. Big Red is not. it It's definitely gum, but it's... But it sounds like it could have been it could a cigarette... Or at least like the cigarette mascot was a cowboy named Big Red or something like that. Yeah, yeah something real racist. Yes, yes, yes. Something real vicious. Yeah. All right. Okay, here's another one.
00:45:37
Speaker
We used to make our Christmas or birthday wish lists from looking in store catalogs like Sears. You could actually order and pay for things via snail man and it snail mail and it was safe to do. Now, what is snail mail? Some of these kids out here don't even know what snail mail is. That's the that's the mail that you get when you go to the mailbox. Yes.
00:46:02
Speaker
and and Because even nowadays, like it's not really snail mail because when you order things, like say you order you know something from Amazon, i mean it could arrive that same day. so it's like It's not even a snail. It used to take three to five business days.
00:46:21
Speaker
to get something through the mail and used to take three to five business days for them to rec receive it yes so so first of all kids are like we made a catalog it was a book a top yeah with hair a big thickass book of like four hundred something pages fake
00:46:42
Speaker
flyers that they had when you walk in. No, but the JCPenney catalog, the Sears catalog. It was full catalog because you would go into the stores and they wouldn't have everything, but you can go into this little catalog and it'd be these chains that you want and you would say, I want gene
00:47:02
Speaker
twenty twenty eight The way I would get that catalog and be circle-less, I'm like, I'm going to get this, and I'm going to get this for Christmas. All of these things. It had to be 500, 600 pages. I know I'm saying the numbers getting bigger, but the more I think about it, it had to be 500, 600 pages.
00:47:25
Speaker
it was now no stick No, the JCPenney catalog, the seasons one, where it it would be like spring-summer catalog and then the fall-winter catalog. That was a thick, because it had everything, everything JCPenney sells. Even beyond, you were like, okay,
00:47:45
Speaker
Well even the stuff they sell online, there was no online. The catalog was the online. yeah The catalog was the online. You waited until they sent out that catalog twice a year.
00:47:57
Speaker
and that's when you knew what stuff was available. and Yes, we use this in checks. Some people don't even know what checks are. checks are this It's a little piece of paper. Write down who you want to pay. That's on a little piece of paper. How much you want to pay them and you got to sign them. It's got your banking account, routing, and your account number. yeah You know what it is because if you use Zelle, you have to set up Zelle. It's essentially Zelle. It's electronic now, but it used to be a paper that you used to have to write. Yes, and you would hand that person this paper. Right. And they would put it in there. Now, there was a time where they got these electronic things, and they would scan your check, and it could be declined if you didn't have the money in your account. That came a lot later. That was a lot later. Before yeah that, ah you add to money they So you could just write a check and be like, hey,
00:48:56
Speaker
it I would take these items, see if you can get that money from me.
00:49:03
Speaker
People actually went to jail for bouncing checks. It was a crime. It was a crime, but like gro the point is you get you some groceries that day. yeah Oh, yes. you Or you could do chike ah chii check kiting, yeah where you can write checks to get certain things knowing that it was going to take seven to 10 business days before that check clear. Now, if anybody sends you a check, right you take a little picture of it and you're in your banking app and that money immediately. Yes. It's in your account and it's not a- Take it out of their account. So, there might be some overdraft, but yes. Also, when things got later in these catalogs, we used to buy CDs. Now, CDs,
00:49:51
Speaker
compact discs compact discs what we used to use music listen to music on yeah, I but Even the Gen Zers know about CDs and records cuz records have come back. Yes records have come back I don't know how much they know about CDs, but no, I think they know about CDs But there used to be this company that advertised you can get 12 CDs for a penny now
00:50:16
Speaker
The problem was is that you were signing up for a membership, and you didn't really read the five print. No. So you darn sure did get them 12, you pick out them 12 CDs. Yes. And send in your penny. Now, it wasn't a realistic penny. You had to have a credit card, and on this form that we mailed out, we put the credit card information. Yeah. Anybody could have just taken You used to write your credit card information down on a piece of paper and then put it in an envelope and mail it out. It wasn't like you could go online and just pay it online through your PayPal and make sure, you know, to make sure it was legit because, you know, PayPal, you can cancel it and everything and get your money. No, it wasn't. You were literally just taking up to God and
00:51:10
Speaker
pray that nobody gets in your mail, that it arrives at his destination. And also, you didn't know if it arrived or not until that money came out your account. Yep. All right. This is the one that hit me in my chest when I really started to think about it. and
00:51:30
Speaker
because this technically wasn't that long ago, but it was long enough for an adult not to even be aware of something like this. yeah And it wasn't really that long ago. ah The person says, this wasn't that long ago, but there used to be no security screenings at airport. You could literally walk the person to the boarding area and watch them board the plane. This all changed after September 11. That was only 24 years ago.
00:51:59
Speaker
yeah So there's somebody out there drinking at the bar like you used to be able to do that. Yes. yes yes You could actually see the person off at their date. while they were smoking a cigarette. While they were smoking a cigarette, walking through the terminal. Yes, you could. And nowadays, you can't even be in somebody's hospital room with them. Like literally. Like a bit of what? No, because of COVID, they're like, we only allow one person back at a time or something. Like those rules are still, it used to be, your hospital room was full of people.
00:52:33
Speaker
Yes. Okay. Everybody call for no stuff, touch a slap. What's this do? Flippin' switches. but Okay. Your firm used to be full of books. Now you can't even... No, you could literally take somebody to the air back when you used to give people rides to the airport. We don't even do that anymore. We'll send you an Uber or a Lyft. But they' like back when you actually took people to the airport, you would park You would get out. Y'all would walk through. There was security. They did check your bag, but it wasn't the way that it is now. Nowhere close. Nowhere near. And you can walk them all the way to their gate, sit with them, chat, see them off, and get back in your car and go home. Like that, yes, you used to be able to do that. Now you give a hug ah while people are honking at you.
00:53:27
Speaker
and outside, like in the in the elements. And that's it. That's all you get. That's all you get. All right. Last one, and this is a long one, and actually it's two of them going to combine into one because they both touch upon each other. Okay. Whenever you wanted to download something online, you had to basically threaten everyone in the house with their lives if they picked up the phone during the amount of downloaded time that it took. Because if you pick up the phone, download stop. Yeah.
00:53:52
Speaker
It took hours to download a game or an image or someone used the phone and download would start over from the beginning. Plus in the mid 90s, you would have to pay per hour. Yep. Also, it was normal for the entire household to share a single phone number. Yes.
00:54:09
Speaker
We had a land line. That was it. You had one phone for the whole house, and that's it. And if somebody got on that phone while I was trying, trying to download something by Lil Mo, probably, or Brandi. Lil Mo Superwoman. Lil Mo Superwoman, know, because I played that out. Yeah, do I still don't have a good copy of that.
00:54:36
Speaker
Okay. I'm trying to download Brandy's new album. That boy is mine. That boy is mine. I got the new Usher and I'm trying to download. You make me want to do what I'm trying to do it. And one of y'all pick up this phone and it start over after I've been sitting here all day waiting for this to download. I'm going for somebody neck.
00:54:59
Speaker
yes's Because of it starts over. Yes, well from the beginning. It starts over. I started it last night, went to bed, woke up. It was 63% done. And then one of y'all picked up the phone. I was almost there. When I came home from college.
00:55:16
Speaker
I used to wait to download stuff at night. I used to say, OK, everybody's asleep. I've got six hours to download whatever I want. And I would pick multiple files. Yes. And just be like, and just hope and pray. And I was like, should nobody pick up the phone in the morning anyway? Because who you calling in the morning? In the morning.
00:55:36
Speaker
Let me check the temperature. That's my mom, ladies and gentlemen. That's her voice. Let me check the temperature to find out what it's going to be. All you got to do is check the morning news. Good morning, America. Now you the local. Nope. She's going to call the weather line. Yes. Because back then you had to call the weather. Again, there were no apps.
00:55:54
Speaker
No, you had to call the weather line or movie. I cannot stress this enough. You had to call a movie phone. You had to book your movie tickets. You had to call the weather line to know what the weather was going to be like. I can't stress this enough. Everything was very analog. I can't. You had to go through so many steps to do the simplest thing. And it's crazy being in our generation where we're in the middle of both of those like eras of analog, but we remember that crossover and transition into a digital era. and like I was just thinking about it the other day. I was like, man, it was hard just to watch TV back in the day.
00:56:42
Speaker
i I can go further, because I wanted to bring this up when we were first talking about the very first thing as far as the internet. I remember people telling me when I was a kid what it was like when a TV changed from black and white to color, or when the TV first came out. And I was like, wait a minute, what? The TV first came out? The TV's always been around. No words. People used to listen to the radio. And here we go. remember And he's off to the races. What? The kids out there. And Jack Johnson has knocked out.
00:57:24
Speaker
ah you
00:57:27
Speaker
He's just all sitting by the radio, listening. The whole family, listen to the radio. Yeah, listen to somebody read a book dramatically. That's your entertainment. That, and cards, play some jacks. Jen Romney. That was it. That was your entertainment. That's all you had. No, I don't remember when TV used to go off.
00:57:51
Speaker
Yes, TV actually used to go off, and then you used to play the Star Spangled Banner. Yep. Yeah, the Star Spangled Banner. It was the Star Spangled Banner, and it was the American flag, and then that's it. TV was off. Like, there was nothing else on. You knew it was about to go off, because Mash was always the last show. Yeah. That was all before it went off.
00:58:11
Speaker
And then I would say, you had to go to bed, because there was nothing else to do. It was nothing else to do. And so you got VCRs, and then you can watch you with tape. Right. But we ain't going to get into that, because that's going to blow the kids wide when you talk about VCR and the tape. So watch what?
00:58:25
Speaker
Movies, TV shows that you taped, whatever. Yes. Oh, that was fun. I like things done changed. Every now and then we're going to bring that up because we're getting older and I don't mind admitting that I'm older because I think I grew up in the greatest generation. yes late Now, millennials, we've been through it. Well, I'm tur i'm technically a zillennial.
00:58:48
Speaker
Well, yeah, but like I'm just saying our generation, we went through it. The eighties is rough. The nineties was rough. The 2000s rough. The 2020s rough. Like so or life rough. us but We'd have been through several wars, a pandemic ah attack on US soil. Like if it was rough.
00:59:11
Speaker
them boomers would be like, we went through the Great Depression, and we had World War II. Yeah, y'all had one war. Right. The child was there for about four years. Right. It was a war. It was the war. It was the war. The whole world was at war. You know, I was thinking about that the other day. Like, that's crazy. The whole world went to war. Well, not the whole world. I mean, but you did it. A lot of it. Yeah. And then did it again.
00:59:35
Speaker
yeah that That's crazy to think about. There was some real stuff going on. There was some real stuff going on. But them boomers talk about, yeah, we were the greatest generation because we went through a lot. Y'all was poor for a little while and then went through one war for four years. But it also had the Korean War. But that, you know, we don't know if I ever talk about the Korean War. Nobody really remembers that. No, we was literally in one war for over 20 years. Just the one of several. It was just that one.
01:00:05
Speaker
Yeah, for 20 years. And they said, we also had a great depression when it was poor. Yeah, no. We've lived through two depressions. Right? And fris like a and like several recessions. Yeah, people around us lost their jobs. A housing crisis. Yes, it's not the same thing. Several government shutdowns. A pandemic that shut down the world. like it's Please. Please. Bag back. OK. You don't want no parts of this. You don't want this smoke. But some millennial smoke, you don't want it. We've been through it. Yes, we have anxiety. Yes, we're depressed. Yes, we're getting diagnosed late stage ADHD and autism. Because didn't nobody get what, damn. That's a good shocker.
01:00:52
Speaker
but And yes, we're still trying to live out our childhoods and adulthood because we had to grow up so damn fast. so know l me Don't nothing. Don't even bring up crack and AIDS. Don't even bring up crack and AIDS. AIDS. What y'all talking about? And then meth. Y'all don't have nothing on the Swedish language. Y'all don't know nothing about fentanyl. Well, in might they might have a family member that didn't pass because of fentanyl.
01:01:21
Speaker
But I mean, as an epidemic in your time, like, yeah, a please, please. I don't want to hear it. Who's gone through it? the This is not the oppression Olympics or you know and things like that, but may it please. if If it was, we win. We win, period. We won. I would say, Jay, what do you want to leave the people with like I normally do, but it seems like you left with a lot just then. That was it.
01:01:51
Speaker
He got nothing else. all right ladies and gentlemen on that note once again and i want to let y'a know that we're gonna be filming right after this youtube exclusive content we're gonna continue all with the things done change and we're going to add on another video and we're going to talk about some of the rudest things that people can do in someone else's house to watch freedom Those, because that's the only way you can do, is watch them. You can't listen to them, because it's on our YouTube page. So remember to go and subscribe to our YouTube page for YouTube exclusive content. Told you all that we were going to do that. It's going to be a new thing. But on that note, thank you for listening. Thank you for watching. And until next time, as always, a holla.
01:02:37
Speaker
That was a hell of a show. Thank you for rocking with us here on Unsolicited Perspectives with Bruce Anthony. Now before you go, don't forget to follow, subscribe, like, comment, and share our podcast wherever you're listening or watching it to it. Pass it along to your friends. If you enjoy it, that means the people that you rock will will enjoy it also. So share the wealth, share the knowledge, share the noise. And for all those people that say, well, I don't have a YouTube. If you have a Gmail account and you have a YouTube, Subscribe to our YouTube channel where you can actually watch our video podcast But the real party is on our patreon page after hours uncensored and talk a straight ish after hours uncensored Is another show with my sister and once again the key word there is uncensored Those are exclusively on our patreon page jump onto our website at unsolicited perspective
01:03:30
Speaker
our blogs and even by our merch and if you really feel ingenous and want to help us out you can donate on our donations page donations go strictly to improving our software and hardware so we can keep giving you guys good content that you can clearly listen to and that you can clearly see. So any donation would be appreciative. Most importantly, I wanna say thank you, thank you, thank you for listening and watching and supporting us. And I'll catch you next time. Audi