3 Cocktails In

Reality Check: A Discussion on TV's Truest Fiction

Amy, Kitty & Stacey Season 2 Episode 21

Welcome to this engaging episode of “3 Cocktails In,” where we delve deep into the captivating world of reality television! Get ready for light-hearted banter as we engage in lively discussions about our favorite—and most dubious—reality TV shows. We share our heartfelt and often humorous recollections of classics like “Survivor” and more modern hits such as “The Bachelor.” As we navigate the crazy world of reality TV, we shine a light on why we keep coming back for more, despite the eye-roll-worthy moments found in every episode.

In the midst of our laughter, we explore the repetitive yet strangely comforting tropes widely used in reality shows. Whether it's a generic home makeover trend or the polished reality romance, we reflect on what keeps viewers hooked. Our conversation takes a creative turn as we brainstorm new ideas for reality TV, such as shows where your friends choose your date for you—imagine the unpredictable turns of events that could stem from that concept!

Join us as we dissect and critique the current state of reality TV, considering its implications on society. Through our playful exchanges, we unearth what these shows reflect back about real life and our relationships. Be part of the ongoing conversation—what do you think makes reality TV delightful or devastating? 

Don't forget to subscribe, share with friends, and join us next week for more insightful and laugh-filled discussions!

Amy, Kitty & Stacey

P.S. Isn't our intro music great?! Yah, we think so too. Thank you, Ivy States for "I Got That Wow".

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Speaker 1:

All right, ooh, look I got that. Wow, who wants some heads up right now? We got that. Turn it up loud. I know you're wondering how.

Speaker 2:

I got that wow, here I go, here I go, coming. I can't ever stop. I'm a tour de force running. Get me to the top, I don't need it.

Speaker 4:

Where is our third wheel? There she is, hello, hello, oh, she disappeared. Maybe she doesn't want to talk tonight, I guess, maybe not. Not, I don't know. This is three cocktails in. Usually there's three of us. Oh, there she is again. We can see you. You never know how many we're gonna have tonight. I'm gonna tell you right now go ahead, go ahead.

Speaker 5:

My connection thing is already flashing on or off and malware bites is yelling at me about something, so this should be good oh, so they're pre-warning.

Speaker 4:

We may lose amy's face, maybe just to see your voice tonight. We don't know. That's the beauty of technology, especially for three cocktails in half the time. We don't know what we're doing hey, we're bootstrapping this thing yes, we are. If we only had a tech, you know a technical crew and, uh, you know, studio, right, but no, we don't. We have writers, yeah, script writers, that'd be good too, too, but no, we don't. We have a basement, we have a laundry room and we have a bedroom.

Speaker 3:

That's what we have. That's our studios.

Speaker 5:

And we have these cute little lights. Oh, yours is little Mine's, like this. It's a ring light. I'd move it, but I'd never get it back in place again.

Speaker 3:

Okay, don't do that.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, right, don't do that. Yeah, good evening or good day or whatever time of day you listen to our podcast, I think sometimes, when we drop at 5 am Thursday mornings, I think there's some listeners that grab onto it really early on Thursday because we get some, you know, early, early listeners on Thursday. I wouldn't do it. But hey, thanks for listening. It's coffee talk at that point in the morning, maybe coffee, that is right. Well, guess what our topic is today? We are going to talk about reality TV. Maybe come up with our own ideas for reality TV. Yes, right, yeah, do you guys have a favorite you like watching?

Speaker 3:

Who wants to start?

Speaker 5:

Well, I watched anything real recently, but I used to be totally in on Bravo and I watched real high-end shows Swipes of New York. I watched real Beverly Hills, I watched Vanderpump Rules, I watched all of that and then I don't know what happened, but I stopped watching. I don't know what happened, but I stopped watching. I think it got to be too much because I was talking to the TV and yelling at the TV just like I do during a baseball game. You know about things and I think I just needed to. You know, self-care, dial it back a little bit. Yep, how about you?

Speaker 3:

guys, what are you watching? So for me, for a long time I got into the competition reality shows. I loved the not. Amazing Race. Amazing Race. No, so not the Voice right now, but what was the first one? American Idol, american.

Speaker 2:

Idol.

Speaker 3:

Loved, loved, loved watching that one, Um, and, but then kind of fell away. I've watched a little bit of the voice, um. I watched the Kardashians, um, and I have really gotten into the Bachelor and the Bachelorette, even though you guys know I cannot stand watching people flirt with each other and watching people like kiss and make out and stuff like that. I'm telling you I'm not a prude, it's not that I just cannot stand watching people do that.

Speaker 5:

So, yeah, I'm so yeah, I am right now the whole um making out on tv on those particular shows. Look so fake.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, I mean yeah, yeah, because I'm sure they have to get the camera right. You know what I mean?

Speaker 5:

Anything goes right. How many takes? Does it take yeah?

Speaker 4:

Yeah, ew, that's what I want. Yeah, it was right. Yeah, I have. You know, I was big into Survivor real early on and stopped watching that.

Speaker 3:

Oh, I forgot about Survivor, yeah.

Speaker 4:

I too liked all the music For a long time. I watched I don't know how many million seasons of American Idol, of course. I don't know how many seasons of the Voice and just don't. Yeah, I just lose interest after probably you know, 10, 12 seasons, I don't know. The one thing we haven't brought up is like all the home makeover ones you know that were popular for a long time, where they would, you know, somebody would go help you make over your house or something. There was a lot of those that we would watch, yeah.

Speaker 4:

So, there's been really interesting ones over the years.

Speaker 5:

When you talk about the home makeover shows, you know if you watch a couple and they're all couple shows you know recently, I mean, how many tan beige houses with shiplap walls can you watch? Yes, you know, they're all the freaking same. And then you watch some that are you're like whoa, you just did what to that house. This looks like some 12 year old and their cousin decided on a Saturday to do something. Some of it is so hideous.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, there was that one where they would the. They would swap houses and the one couple would redo the one and the other would redo the other. And I saw one one time where where one of the couples was so mad because it was so bad, you know, and they have a designer and helpers and whatever to it, so it's not like they could just do whatever bad thing they wanted. You know, the designer could.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, cause I did see some doozies on that show. Yeah, yeah, there were some weird.

Speaker 3:

I mean it's it's all for entertainment, that's what it is so. So, just like you know, just like with the bachelor, it's all for entertainment, that's what it is. So, just like with the Bachelor, when they cast those women and vice versa, when they cast the men for the women, they're picking people that they know will be the drama kings or drama queens so that you get some spiciness happening. So, yeah, they get you know. Sure, they say, oh, you want to do what? Yeah, that'll make good TV Sure.

Speaker 3:

And with the, with the home, all of the home improvement stuff. I I watched a little bit of that but I got tired of it really quickly, Like you said, amy, because it was all the same and it was too contrived, it was too scripted. So I feel like there's a lot of reality tv that doesn't feel scripted. It still may be, but it doesn't feel scripted like like those home improvement shows I feel like they are. They're not even good script readers, it's like you know, it's like you are reading your lines.

Speaker 3:

That turns me off.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 5:

There. I clearly I love home shows, um, so sometimes I watch these things just to see what homes are like in other areas. I think that there's something on the Discovery Channel, one of those weird, not weird but not mainstream TV channels, where it's Maine Cabin Masters and it's this brother and sister and their three knucklehead friends One drives a Bobcat and has like four teeth and another one, you know and they go out into the wilds of Maine and they do some a really kind of I mean, I don't mean architecturally cool, but they do kind of do some cool settings sort of thing. And I am very interested in that, not because of the dialogue but because of the setting, and you can't script, you know the setting, so I find that. And then all the house hunters. I still enjoy a good house hunters international, not the, not the us ones. I like the international again because I look at it as sightseeing. What do houses look like, like in there? Now? Yeah, dude, god well, or somewhere.

Speaker 4:

Yes, so I put those. There's one where they go, I don't know which one it is, but they, it's a couple, couples that are looking to buy houses, and so the realtor shows them three different houses, and then they pick the one they want, and it always seems, like, you know, they have this ginormous budget. You know, like you know well, we can only spend, you know, 1.2 million dollars, it's like what, what, yeah, and and it doesn't look like a $1.2 million house.

Speaker 4:

usually it must be, you know, on the coast, somewhere where they're really expensive.

Speaker 5:

I like the memes of those shows where they say you know that he grows butterflies for TV shows and she runs you know a home pet health care situation and they have a $7 million budget or something.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I know right.

Speaker 4:

I don't know how that flies, but whatever. Yeah, oh gosh, really I have a funny one. I have not seen it, but my nephew, you know my 20 year old nephew and his 20 year old girlfriend, she, um, she texted me. Hey, talk about this on your podcast. This one is called MILF.

Speaker 3:

Manor.

Speaker 4:

There's been two seasons. Yeah, can you imagine? So I, I did say MIL m-i-l-f. If you don't know what that is, you're gonna have to google it. I'm not gonna say um yes the premise is that? Yes, right, gts. So these 40 to 60 year old women go to mexico, to a resort, in hopes of finding connection with 20-year-old men. So they all go. There's a catch? Yes, right, bad enough. However, there's a catch. The catch is they invite their 20-year-old sons. Oh, at the same time.

Speaker 5:

Yes, so you're stuck there watching your 20 year old son, you know try to make a connection with other women His grandma, his mom, grandma friend.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, pretty much yeah. The New York Times said this one has hit rock bottom in reality.

Speaker 3:

Good, I'm glad somebody said it. That's just trash, that's horrible.

Speaker 4:

Some things are so bad.

Speaker 3:

I know, yeah, that's just trash. And I mean I do feel a little trashy watching Bachelor and Bachelorette. I don't think that things like like, if you're the parent of a 12-year-old girl, don't let them watch those shows, or even 16. That's not going to be helpful to anybody.

Speaker 4:

A reality show, but not the least bit real. It's not how things are going to be.

Speaker 3:

I wonder if it would be a good show to get your girls to watch, so they can see how stupid and awful other girls can be and how totally superficial some men are, so that they learn to look for the red flags in friends and in relationships but you gotta sit there and watch it with them yeah, I agree, and ideally, yeah, I agree, and ideally, ideally, yes, but I don't the reality of that actually being, because it was pre-COVID, I was you know, going to a bunch of shows, and I remember Gudrun and I happened on it and that's all we watched for.

Speaker 5:

Like the whole time I think we were in Houston or Austin or Austin probably, and I thought that that was an excellent premise, where you learn about the person before you ever meet them. Yeah, but before you see them. Yeah, before, yes, before you see them. I mean you've talked to them. You talk to a bunch of different people. You talk one assumes you talk about kind of important things, but even that all went off the rails because people say they want one thing until they meet somebody and they're not hot enough or they don't look right On that topic, it's been very interesting because the current season of Love is Blind that is being shown is set in Minneapolis and if you listen to talk, radio up here if you listen to talk radio and stuff up here, people are dogging on some of the men that are on it saying, for a lack of a better term, they're manhose, that everybody has a story about some of them and they've been through the dating circles and, yeah, and it's very white bread evidently.

Speaker 4:

Because people know, because people local people know who they are. Is that the deal?

Speaker 5:

Yeah, and a lot of different circles have stories about a few of them, so they're not necessarily you know. They're on it for the show, they're on it for the thing. So, good idea.

Speaker 3:

I think you could say that for the Bachelor and Bachelorette franchise also, and even probably Senior, senior, bachelor. Those people, a lot of the people, go on there to be discovered and to become the next big social media you know Instagram star, and many of them have, yeah, I mean yeah, many, many of them now have very lucrative careers as influencers or some sort of you know public. Who knows how long it will be, but yeah, yeah, so we started, we started kind of chatting about this topic and we started thinking about what would make, what would make a good reality tv show. Yeah, like a real reality. Have any good ideas? I, I have an idea.

Speaker 3:

Okay, what is it Go ahead as long as it's not me going on. Well, I'm going to give credit to Bill on this one, because this came out of a conversation that he and I were having. But yeah, I mean, I did so. You know, golden Bachelor and Golden Bachelorette they are taking applications right now. Golden bachelor and golden bachelorette they are taking applications right now. So you know, the only single one here is miss Amy. So anyway, but no, no, we won't talk about that. So the idea is so what if it is a dating reality show, but instead of you, the person picking your friends pick for you. So the person who's the bachelor or the person who's the bachelorette, they are on the show and they're part of it, they're part of all the activities. But you've got this group of two or three besties or people that you have said all right, you're going to pick for me, and then you don't have any say in it. You're involved, you're interviewing, you know you're having interactions, they're observing interactions and they pick the person for you.

Speaker 5:

Okay, as the single person with two friends who have opinions, if you could pick people for me, how's that?

Speaker 3:

going to go Okay if you could pick people for me why haven't you done it yet?

Speaker 4:

Because we don't have the pool. Because we don't have the pool, we don't have the pool, so we're going to rely on the show we need some choices.

Speaker 3:

The show is going to recruit everybody, they're going to go through the vetting process and then, of that, then we help make the selection.

Speaker 5:

I do think that that has potential for me. But for somebody else and I do think it would be pretty, damn funny because you, because I'm just thinking about, if you two really were doing that for me, I would be out on a date with somebody and the whole time going I'm gonna kill them. What in God's name did they think? Did they even talk to this person? You know what about me says I would like that you know. So it, it could be a really good psychological sort of uh, experiment, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 5:

A test group groups A and B. Somebody take a note? A test group groups A and B. Somebody take a note? There you go. I think we should pitch the idea I think you already have, and somebody's going to listen to us, I'm sure, and it's going to probably be next season. We'll be out there, all right.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, we need some quick legal language here. All ideas generated here on the Three Cocktails In podcast are solely the property of the owners of Three Cocktails In.

Speaker 4:

Exactly, I know. You know what could we, what could we pitch? You know that has to do with cooking. I've got one I tried to pitch. You know that has to do with I've got one. I tried to do you good. Go, because mine are, mine are just half ideas. They're not full ideas.

Speaker 5:

Go ahead so this one came out of a conversation that I had with my sister, um, and for whatever reason, we were probably bitching about grocery shopping or something and talking about. You know, sharing recipes and stuff as we do are dead because neither one of us have kids in the house anymore, so evidently we don't cook anymore. But I think that there'd be an excellent cooking show where one celebrity chef has to come into your kitchen on any random day. They don't know where they're going. They have like five houses on the block. They get to pick one of the five. They cannot bring their own tools, their own spices or any ingredients. They have to come in and make a dinner for five or for four out of solely using the equipment, the pots and pans, the seasonings and the ingredients found in this home. That is what I want to see. I don't want to have to go out and buy 2 million different spices to make some dish. Come in my house and show me what I can make with what I have here yeah, I like it.

Speaker 4:

I think that's a good one. I like it. I like it. Yeah, mine were. Mine weren't that well thought out? Something to do with, you know, people coming in and like cleaning out my refrigerator and trying to pick out all the stuff that's expired.

Speaker 5:

I have three daughters who would come over and gladly do that, because it seems like they do that to me every time they come over and if it is like a day past the date on it, they throw it out date on it.

Speaker 4:

they throw it out. Do you, do you guys? Well, maybe we, maybe we have a taste test and you have to taste it and decide if it's expired or not. Maybe that's it, Cause I don't think some stuff expires.

Speaker 5:

That's what I was going to ask Doesn't it say best if used by? It doesn't say don't use it after this date or you're going to get food poisoning right. Just says best buy yeah that's not a hard date.

Speaker 4:

Yeah no, especially spices and some condiments and those things.

Speaker 5:

I don't think they really expire I think when you open a thing of spices and you can't smell, it doesn't like knock you off your feet with smell throw that one out, yeah yeah, yeah, cream of tartar, baking soda, baking powder, throw them out.

Speaker 4:

Pretty much everything else, yeah yeah, yeah, I would think you could use it. Oh funny, what else? What other silly ideas do we have Anything good? Speaking of the Kardashians, there would be more interesting people that I could think of to follow around and have a camera in their face all the time, like our favorites. Wouldn't it be hilarious to follow Melissa McCarthy around day after day after day A?

Speaker 3:

day in the life.

Speaker 5:

I would like to see a video of their, like breakfast or dinner every day with she and her husband who is also hysterical and their two kids, like yeah, you know, I don't need really you know, and of course they wouldn't do it, but yes, I totally agree that that would be good, right now, yeah, see what they do all day.

Speaker 4:

Of course they wouldn't do it, but yes, I totally agree that that would be good, I know. Yeah, see what they do all day. What if it would ruin the magic though? Could she do anything? You mean like we'd like her. We'd like her just based on her acting, and that if we saw her normal day, we would say meh.

Speaker 3:

I wonder if she would feel like she had to be funny, or if she could truly, you know, knowing that their camera's there, could she just be herself. Some people can't, some people in that you know, especially comedians um, they, they can't do it um, okay, I've got a.

Speaker 5:

I've got a guilty pleasure that I've got to admit to everybody about these reality situations and I'm going to blame the Reels on Instagram and now, of course, my feed is flooded Karen cam. It's the, these people who record situations where a Karen goes off and and they're weird neighbors and they're seemingly normal people that just lose their shit about stupid stuff and the dash cam or the cop cam when they're chasing down. And I mean, I am a white woman of a certain age and I hate to say it, but there are a lot of stupid white women of a certain age that really are giving all of us a bad name. Oh, but I can't help watching them. There's just something train wreckish about it, without being violent and without being you know, yeah, it's just they're just like screaming at somebody over something stupid.

Speaker 5:

It's like you know, when your kids were little and they were toddlers and they pitched a fit about something and you couldn't help but laugh, or, you know, try not to laugh at them while it was going on, but their reaction is so out of proportion to what is happening that it gets comical. Yeah, that's what I feel about these.

Speaker 3:

There are so many that I question that they're even real, you know. So maybe some are and some aren't, I don't know. But oh my gosh, are people nuts?

Speaker 5:

yeah, yeah, I get it. You know, you know, you guys, I hate awkward, I really hate awkward. I can't watch awkward on TV. Um I anything that is super cringe worthy. I got to leave the room. So I think it's just that these are 30 second clips, that I can watch them and then move on, but they do make me laugh and for that I am thankful and for that I am thankful Bill and I were talking about this when we were on vacation.

Speaker 3:

So I am fascinated with kind of the behind the scenes on things. I've always wanted to just sit in a big restaurant kitchen and just watch how things happen, and so we were at this all inclusive and I'm I just think it's. It's amazing how these, these things, these experiences, run. How do they create that much food, how do they create a process around seven different restaurants and service and entertainers and all of these things. I would love and this is more a documentary than reality tv but you could blend the two. You could. You could find an interesting way to blend the two, but I would love to see how does it happen?

Speaker 5:

it's almost not watch. Bear the bear, no, yeah, the bear that yeah, you find it that needs to go to the top of your list. All right, because that is exactly what you love.

Speaker 4:

Yes, it is how crazy.

Speaker 5:

And yeah, you know trying to source food and one guy gets locked in the freezer. Is it real, though, or is it?

Speaker 3:

fiction no, no, but it knows.

Speaker 5:

So that would be interesting. It's really good and actually I saw a casting that they were actually looking for real people to be part of the cast. It's set in Chicago, so I think it's pretty, pretty accurate, would be my assumption.

Speaker 4:

Okay, I would say yeah, yeah, yep, it's good, you need to watch it. So people may not know this, but kitty likes to watch people fall down. Yes, she does. So the funny is yes, she likes to see people fall down, so she we. That's what we do. We send her reels of people. Did you like you?

Speaker 5:

like the one where the dad laid down on the bed and the kid flipped up and hit the wall. Oh my God, that was the best Slap.

Speaker 4:

I know they are funny. I don't know what we could pitch to just have that. Do you remember? Did you ever see Jackass? Do you know what I'm talking about this?

Speaker 5:

show.

Speaker 4:

You know that I watched about two minutes of it and had to turn it off right, yeah, it's, it's bad, but something along those lines where you know you're yeah, you know watching for people to trip and fall down I don't like watching things like punked, where they set somebody up to do like really that's too much yeah.

Speaker 4:

Mm-hmm. Yeah, if you're doing it to yourself, you know, like Jackass did, that's one thing, but yeah, punk'd where. I mean that's got to be totally embarrassing that you're falling for, yeah, some of the stuff they you know some of the stuff.

Speaker 5:

Here's another one that I thought was an interesting premise, but execution was poor and that was undercover boss.

Speaker 4:

Oh yeah.

Speaker 5:

Oh yeah, why did they have to wear like a dorky mustache? I don't think it was ever believable. No, it was never believable, I don't think it was ever believable?

Speaker 4:

no, it was never believable. I don't think so either. I just think of, I just think of some, you know, not even like my direct boss, but I know what the high up you know, you know owners and ceos and whatever what they look like. I don't think you could disguise them and bring them in where I wouldn't say, yeah, you know what I mean. Yeah, it never seemed very believable Good premise, poor execution. Yeah, yeah, I think so. Yeah.

Speaker 5:

I'd love to know what other reality thoughts other people. What are they watching? What are you watching? Yeah, what should we give a try, knowing that kitty likes to watch people fall? I, like a good cop, cam stacy's looking for somebody to come and eat food that could be rotten yes, it could be rotten, you know, and that was the premise of early survivor.

Speaker 4:

They would have them eat bugs and worms and gross stuff. I don't think they have to do that challenge anymore.

Speaker 5:

Well, we didn't even talk about naked and afraid. Okay, that is one that I want to talk about.

Speaker 3:

Why, why, why does anybody have to be naked?

Speaker 4:

It's like cold.

Speaker 5:

You can't be hoody and afraid wax and afraid it just doesn't have that ring to it no, it doesn't, and it's funny that you know they, you know um, fuzzed out.

Speaker 4:

You know some of the nakedness. I mean, I mean it's naked and they're on there naked, so why do we have to fuzz it out?

Speaker 5:

I always thought that was a funny part it could be swimsuit and afraid, you know, bikini or whatever you get. You get to pick your swimsuit and that's and afraid yeah, sketchchy and afraid.

Speaker 3:

Which, by the way, in a future episode we're going to be talking about the Oscars. Should we talk about Scantily Clad?

Speaker 4:

Oh my.

Speaker 5:

Knowing how much you like. Kanye's girlfriend's outfit the last thing that she was on. I'm very much looking forward to this.

Speaker 4:

Good Lord. Yeah, there were several that you know. Yeah.

Speaker 5:

A little too skimpy. Yeah, I'm excited for that episode because I didn't watch any of it. I haven't seen any of the. I've seen one of the movies, so I'm going to have a nice list of things to pay attention to after we're done with that one.

Speaker 4:

Good yeah there you go. Okay, it's that time. Do we have any shots tonight? I do, I got a shot Perfect.

Speaker 5:

Oh good, I binged the series Running Point with Kate Hudson, who is the youngest sister, and she gets put in charge of a professional basketball team. It's based on a true story but it's good, it's funny, it's fairly short, it's more comedy without being slapsticky or anything. I thought it was really good, I believe.

Speaker 4:

Isn't it on Netflix? I think it's on Netflix, didn't it just come on? Netflix, yep, but I've watched all that in like a day. Haven't started that yet Running point.

Speaker 5:

Give it a try. You don't have to like basketball. It has really very little to do with basketball. Yep, you don't have to like basketball.

Speaker 4:

It has really very little to do with basketball Perfect.

Speaker 3:

Kitty, do you have anything?

Speaker 4:

All right, I'm trying to think of something myself. I don't think I have anything. I don't think.

Speaker 2:

I have anything Okay everybody.

Speaker 4:

I can do my plug for um suntan city. So I'm looking a little glowy because I'm going on vacation next week, so I sprayed tan. So if you have a suntan city around you want to spray tan, they're five dollars. Five dollars spray tan. I. I'm blown away by that yeah I might do a google search. Yeah, yeah, I think you should. It's, it's yeah If you like to look tan before you go on your vacation, or just a little tan, not pasty white, this was a fun game that Bill and I played on vacation.

Speaker 3:

We tried to find people who were whiter than me whiter than me?

Speaker 4:

Did you find any?

Speaker 5:

Did you find any Were they?

Speaker 4:

albino.

Speaker 3:

No, they weren't albino, but they were very fair-skinned, see.

Speaker 4:

You need a spray pad, Kitty, so you're not so white Walking along the beach and you know, looking around, she's whiter than me.

Speaker 3:

Oh, that person over there is whiter than you oh my, oh, true love.

Speaker 5:

If ever that was um love it.

Speaker 4:

You know that that is, that is for sure. Oh funny. Well, I think this concludes this episode of Three Cocktails In Three. See you next week, you guys have a drink. Kitty has her water. Oh, what do you have? Water Water? Really hitting her hard tonight, all right. Oh, what do you have? Diet Coke Water? Oh, really hitting her hard tonight. Woo, all right, all right, see you guys next time. Okay, bye Bye, yes, next time. Bye-bye, bye, all right, woo Look.

Speaker 1:

I got that, wow. Who wants some handsome right now? We got that turn. Who wants some heads up right now? We got that turn it up loud.

Speaker 2:

I know you're wondering how I got that. Wow, here I go. Here I go, coming. I can't ever stop. I'ma tour the forest running, get me to the top. I don't need an invitation. I'm about to start a celebration. Let me in Brought a good time. Put some friends. Turn it up loud past ten.

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