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3 Cocktails In
Addicting conversations between friends who have been there, done that and still want more.
We are 3 friends who got this crazy idea to start a podcast based on our friendships, family lives, professional lives and experiences! This idea kept coming up in our conversations, especially after a cocktail or two or maybe three, and we finally decided to ACT on it!
We don't claim to be experts on too many things, but friendship? Well, we've got that down. We're making our way through major life changes, searching for work that excites us, busting myths associated with 'old' people, and keeping a sense of humor about it all.
Self employed, boss - CHECK
Mom, wife, single - CHECK
Rural, suburban, urban life - CHECK
Vodka, gin, wine - CHECK
Make sure to subscribe to our channel ~ FOMO is real and it sucks.
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".
3 Cocktails In
The Friendship Challenge: Finding Connection in a Digital World
The friendship drought is real. As we navigate our busy adult lives, making genuine connections becomes increasingly challenging, especially when established friends move away. In this heartfelt episode of Three Cocktails In, Stacey, Kitty, and Amy continue their year-long "Project 2025: Make a New Friend" journey with practical strategies for connection in the digital age.
Surprisingly, Facebook groups emerge as friendship goldmines when centered around shared interests. Amy shares how her crafting community has blossomed into meaningful relationships despite members living states apart. The hosts exchange laughs about their collective failure to join new in-person groups last month while acknowledging the very real time constraints that make digital connections so valuable for busy adults.
Summer offers unique opportunities for connection, and the conversation sparkles with creative ideas: community education classes that group people by skill level, neighborhood "porch crawls," farmers' markets, local baseball games, and art festivals. The key insight? Consistency matters more than the specific activity—showing up regularly to the same places increases your chances of forming relationships with fellow regulars.
The conversation takes a poignant turn as Kitty opens up about the anger she felt when close friends moved away without warning. This resonates deeply as the hosts acknowledge we're entering life stages where retirements and relocations will increasingly challenge our friendship circles.
With equal parts humor, vulnerability, and practical advice, this episode validates the struggle while offering a roadmap for connection. Whether you're an introvert seeking digital communities or ready to organize that neighborhood gathering, you'll find strategies that respect your comfort level while gently expanding your social horizons.
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".
All right, I got that. Wow, who wants some heads up right now? We got that. Turn it up loud. I know you're wondering how 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 a.
Speaker 2:Hello, my darling friends.
Speaker 3:Hello ladies.
Speaker 2:Welcome. Welcome to yet another episode of Three Cocktails In With Stacey, the delegate from Iowa, kitty, the delegate from the southwest suburbs, and me from the heart of the city. Amy, how are you guys doing? Doing great.
Speaker 4:The week is off to a good start.
Speaker 2:Yes, it is Thursday night for me. Rocking hard Only because it's not really Thursday night, but my weird schedule. Super, super excited about our discussion that we're going to have tonight. We're doing a friendship check in. Yes, yep, now we've been kind of embarked on this whole year project 2025. Make a new friend. So we have identified what kind of friends we're looking for. We have gotten ourselves out into the world and done things with our lights on little sign, saying hey, I'm here, how are you? Last week or last month, we talked about joining some different groups. Maybe that's a little harder. How has that gone? What have you?
Speaker 4:guys, been your, what's been your experience Joining groups. So I have not joined any specific groups, me neither.
Speaker 3:I haven't either. I think this goes to how hard it can be, you know, for people to find people. You know, find new people. You know, this last month just flew by and really didn't have. You know, I don't want to say didn't have time. You always have time to do something you want to do, but maybe less opportunity you know, there wasn't going on that, um, you know, if that makes sense, just not not something going on that I could join in on. Let's say yeah.
Speaker 4:Well, I agree with that. Joining groups can mean, okay, so you might be picking up a new hobby or the group might. Then that might mean once a month you go and meet, yeah. So, depending on what it is, it can mean a time commitment and, like Stacey said, you know, yeah, if it's something that you really want to do, then you make time for it. And I know we're going to talk about this, but one of the things to crack the nut on meeting new people digitally one of the things that they say that's not a good analogy but one of the things that they say is join groups online because then in in that entity, you're going to find people with commonalities, yeah. And so I think that's probably a more accessible solution for us, because obviously the three of us didn't go to the community center or wherever, and find a group to join.
Speaker 2:So that was the recommendation for this month to leverage apps, digital apps and social media. And my first thought when I was preparing for this month was, as you all know, I've had enough of digital apps that are trying to set me up with somebody Matchcom, trying to set me up with somebody matchcom. So my first thought was well, yeah, there's, I know Bumble has. Part of their business model is to find friends. You know, you're new to a city. You just want to meet some people to be friends with. There are different groups that you can go do. That seems really intimidating, but as we were talking about this, you know, prepping for tonight, kitty says well, like she just talked about her, her Facebook group and I worked for a company that had a large Facebook group and I think a lot of us don't automatically assume that's a source of friends. We look at it as they're just trying to sell me something, when the reality is you are in a place with people who like the same things. You do, whatever.
Speaker 2:That is, quilting, jewelryting, jewelry kitty, I've watched yours, stacy, I know you're on there too. We've all watched um. I worked for ge designs and gudrun's got a group on there. Um, really good people. Leaders do a great job of encouraging conversations. I've noticed you not only are you making friends with people, kitty, but people in your group are making friends with each other. Yeah, and they really do. They come on with regularity, they see each other. I've seen people post well, where's Susan? And somebody else will pipe up and say susan's got this going on.
Speaker 2:Yeah, one would assume your next door neighbors. No, these people don't even live in the same city right it's a great source of you know, maybe a daily connection, maybe a weekly connection yeah, it was.
Speaker 4:It's something that was very surprising to me. And then and then I was like well, why? Why am I surprised about this? So it's, yeah it, and I, every time I get a message from someone, I am realizing that this is more than just their customer of mine. We have become friends and my life is better because I know them and because we now have a friendship.
Speaker 2:And this is a really easy one. This is a very easy opportunity to put yourself out there. If you're not in the practice of it, yeah. Or if you're in a rural area or transportation is an issue or your time is short, you can do this from the comfort of your couch, yeah, yeah, and you don't have to buy right no, does anyone ever ask where everybody's from kitty in your show?
Speaker 3:that might be something you could do one of these times, like who's from who's local in minneapolis or who you know, and match people up.
Speaker 4:That would be interesting yeah so, and every once in a while I do it. Uh, if I'm trying to, if I'm trying to generate a lot of comments, I'll, I'll do it, but every once in a while, somebody somebody else will do it one of you know, one of the other viewers will do it, and and then I just sit back and watch.
Speaker 4:And when somebody says I'm from Roanoke, virginia, or I'm from, I'm from Virginia, and then somebody says oh where? And then now in the comments they're sitting there talking. And then I realized later that they've become friends and you know communication on their own. But yes, that is, and you know, and we have communication on their own. But yes, that is people love to like. If I'm from Minnesota, I'm from Minnesota. Like you know, it's a freaking state. We have one thing in common, that's all it takes yeah, so you were talking.
Speaker 2:You brought up um, I belong to a group of knitters and crocheters and it's an online community called Ravelrycom. I haven't been on it for a long time because, you know, my hobbies jump around too, but work and everything. But I have made friends and I still. I follow them on Facebook. We comment on each other's things. They are a great source for hey, I'm gonna be in Boston, I'm gonna be in Roanoke, virginia, where do I need to go? And people meet each other and like three or four people will say, well, I'm close, I'm only 45 minutes away, and somebody else will go.
Speaker 2:I'm a half an hour away. Let's all meet at this, this coffee shop, at this time and we'll get a table and we'll all bring our knitting. So we know who each other.
Speaker 3:I mean, you've probably seen pictures by then, but what a great, easy thing to do yeah it just takes one person to start it and make the comment and see who wants to see who wants to eat and get together yeah, and speaking of, that's a great segue.
Speaker 2:So I was thinking of how do we meet people in the summer? For those of us in the Midwest, the upper Midwest, this is the time meet people in the summer. For those of us in the Midwest, the upper Midwest, this is the time we are in the prime outdoor, everybody's happy, everybody's walking, dogs, kids, grandkids walking around the neighborhood. So I brainstormed a list of different ways that we can be out and about with similar people. So you guys, let me know what you think. Good idea, bad idea? I've done it. I want to do this. So my first thought was look at that community education book that comes out in the mail, because now is the prime time for lessons. Signing up for lessons, golf lessons, pickleball lessons, um. Golf, um. Tennis, um.
Speaker 2:The cool thing about these, these opportunities are people are often grouped by skill. So maybe you've never played pickleball before and all your neighbors want you to go play, but they all play all the time. For me, that's a problem. I don't want to go out there and be playing against three people who know what they're doing and I suck. That's my own issue. I'm working on that just as an aside. But if you sign up for lessons, you're going to be put with people of like skill. That's a great bonding experience. Everybody's struggling with the same challenges. Yeah, they're multi-age, which is also great. There's no expectation of having to be friends, but you're probably going to see them six times over, maybe six weeks.
Speaker 4:Yep, yeah, that's a good idea. A lot of times too, those community education program things are very reasonably priced, yes, and they're not big chunks of time, right it's usually an hour, yeah, but like it's like a six week course or something like that. So it's, you know, once a week for six weeks and then, and then you're done.
Speaker 2:And yeah, hopefully by then you've met one or two people and and, yeah, I think it's a great idea. But to go with somebody else or your group field trip, whatever you want to do, what a great opportunity to learn something new, to meet somebody new, to go to a new place that's the trifecta right there. Yep, yep, okay. So the other flip side of the community education is there are often leagues bocce ball, corn hole, again, golf but they do things like gardening groups or they might have a Saturday morning garden tour. That's all people that like to do the same stuff you do. If you're into gardening, and maybe they start in one neighborhood and they have three different local gardeners that have beautiful yards. What a perfect thing to do. Everybody you're going with likes the same stuff you do. It's a very short amount of time. You get to meet somebody new.
Speaker 3:You learn something amount of time you get to meet somebody new, you learn something. Excellent idea.
Speaker 2:Okay, Now, when one of you said something about organizing, didn't you say something about organizing? It's hard to plan. I don't know. My mind works and you've got a bestie. You know that lives next door, but you don't know a lot of the other people in your neighborhood or you don't see them as much. Minnesota, everybody is out on their porch after dinner, After work, everybody's sitting out. How about you organize for lack of a better term a porch crawl in your, on your block, from five to seven or six to eight? Um, everybody be out at your porch and you know whether it's a cocktail or a lemonade or iced coffee or something, just you know. Talk to your neighbors, make it an effort to just again. You're not having to clean your house. You don't have to put on fancy clothes. You can do your thing. I think that would be really fun.
Speaker 4:A lot of neighborhoods still do the neighborhood night out.
Speaker 2:That's on my list as well, yes. Yeah, but I just thought you know you can do it smaller.
Speaker 4:Yep.
Speaker 2:It shouldn't be just Halloween when you get to knock on neighbors' doors. Yeah, trick or drink, you know we can do it in the summer. Yeah, that's a good idea. Then think about other outdoor places where you can go, and if you go consistently, like Kitty at the Coffee Shops, you can start to meet people. Farmer's Market happens every Saturday morning or every Wednesday afternoon, you know, in smaller towns it's usually in kind of the city center area. What a fun thing to do, you don't? I mean you can buy one thing or not. Go get some carrots, go get something for dinner. Meet some of the people that live in your community. Ask them what do you do with this vegetable? What a great conversation piece. Everybody loves to share what they know. Yeah.
Speaker 3:Yeah, that's a good idea, Yep.
Speaker 2:Of course, being the baseball fan, go cheer on one of your town teams. Minnesota has great town ball baseball. It is the last place where it's really a good small town feel. You sit in the grandstand, you buy popcorn, you get a hot dog, you watch your town team play, you see neighbors, there are kids running up and down the stairs. It's just a really lovely, inexpensive night outside. Yeah, kitty, you met a lot of friends when you started doing that.
Speaker 4:Right many yep, yep, absolutely, and it was truly you'd see, you'd see your neighbors and um your mechanic and the person that works at the coffee shop, and yep, that said, then, that also makes me think about and I was just thinking about this the other day when I drove by the high school so, with our kids not being in high school anymore, we went to a lot of the high school football games for a while, and and I was here, on the marching band Right.
Speaker 4:That was first and and I was here on the marching band. Right, that was first, and so when I was driving by the school the other day, I thought maybe this fall we'll go to a football game, and I actually would. We, would we really do that? So we don't know anybody. None of our friends have kids in high school right now. Would we do that we could? Why not?
Speaker 2:Yeah, chances are, you're going to see somebody you know Doing different things.
Speaker 2:Yeah, yeah, and here's a goofy one. You know, for those of you who belong to gyms and clubs, do you go? Like? Lifetime Fitness here in Chanhassen has a beautiful outdoor pool. Okay, so go to the pool. But I've got a tip for you Don't just sit on the lounge chair under your umbrella reading, reading your book, because that doesn't really say hey, I want to meet somebody or talk to somebody. Go sit on the edge of the pool, put your legs in the water, maybe have your book to the side, but you're saying to people I'm here and I'm in this.
Speaker 4:Yeah.
Speaker 2:You know, anytime you can take that extra little step and it's a great. There's some, there's other, a mom that's there chasing a kiddo down, or you know, those are intergenerational things, where you're at an environment where everybody there likes the same thing. Let's not make this more complicated than it has to be Right.
Speaker 4:Yeah, bo has been a member of Lifetime for years and every once in a while if he's out with us at dinner and he'll run into somebody and you know the guy will be like Bo and you know they'll do the dude handshake or you know the dude. You know like that, um, and we're like who, who is that? Oh, it's so-and-so. At the gym we work out together. Oh, cool, yeah, so he's got these. You know specific people that, because they are consistent with the time that they go to the gym, because they are consistent with the time that they go to the gym, yeah, and so you know they. Hey, would you spot me? That's an opening to yeah, what? Hey?
Speaker 2:what? What's your name you?
Speaker 4:know, yeah, so.
Speaker 2:I'm going to put you guys on the spot and you guys love it when I do this. Yes, when Amy goes rogue, yep, and you guys love it when I do this, love it when Amy goes rogue, stacey and Kitty. Can you think of some place in your community, locally, that does something like this that you could go to? Where in your community would you go if you wanted to just put yourself out there now that it's summer, if you wanted to just put yourself out there?
Speaker 3:now that it's summer, listening to all the ideas, I came up with something, but I I don't want to tell you what it is on this episode, not because, not for that. I'm going to do it this week and I'm going to report back in a month. I don't want to say what it is. And it's kind of going to have to combine a couple of things. I'm going to start with social media and end up at a thing.
Speaker 3:Okay, but I'm not I'm not going to say, not going to say what it is, it does. It covers all the bases you know. Put putting yourself out there using social media, meeting with people, and I think I think it might work, I think I might be able to report some success and I am very intrigued, you sneaky person yo I'm not going to tell you what it is right away. Stacy with the secrets. Yeah, let's see how it goes. Yep, kitty, what do?
Speaker 2:you think?
Speaker 4:Well, um you know, we have the beautiful Arboretum right out here, Love the Arboretum. And I always. It's always one of those things when the summer rolls around that I think we should really have a membership there so that we go walk or go, you know, cause they do all sorts of things out there. I think that would be good.
Speaker 2:Yes, now that Mr Blingboss is retired, how much fun. I love the Arboretum.
Speaker 4:Yeah, so then do they have different activities.
Speaker 3:I'm assuming is that what you're saying. They like have planned nights of this, or something like that.
Speaker 4:Yeah, they do. Yeah, so thank you for asking that question, amy. I'm going to put that on our list for this week to pop onto the website and see what they have coming up.
Speaker 2:Very cool idea. Minneapolis, it's art season. It was Art World this weekend. Of course, I couldn't go because I was working, but Stone Arch Festival is coming.
Speaker 2:There is nothing I love more than strolling around and seeing what people do and you guys, I'm sure you know by now I talk to everybody. You know, oh, where'd you get that? What booth was that in? You know what? What are you eating what? What food truck did you get that from?
Speaker 2:I just love those occasions to get out, do something different, see something that I like doing. It doesn't cost me a dime unless I buy something, which usually happens but there's no entry fee. I love stuff like that. It's like a state fair for artists. Yeah, so I'm gonna, I'm gonna hit, I'm gonna get my fanny up out of bed and go before I have to go to work. Awesome, good idea. So things outside to go do. Stacy's got a plan cooking. We're making new friends. We're making new friends. We did have part of our conversation this past week about friends that fall off the face of the earth. Yeah, or you know, I think that we've tapped into or we've talked about reconnecting with old friends. We think that that certainly tapped into, or we've talked about reconnecting with old friends. We think that that certainly is a very viable option.
Speaker 1:People you already know.
Speaker 2:What happens when you reach out and you get nothing in return. That's sad. Or the people that you rely on in your neighborhood that you would plan the porch crawl with what if they up and move? If I could quote somebody Uh-huh, they just upped and moved. I'm not bitter.
Speaker 3:Tell us a story.
Speaker 4:Katie. So we've been in this neighborhood since 1999. And there's been a fair amount of turnover. We've been here the whole time. People over here have been here the whole time, but everybody else has come and gone and we had a family right across the street from us and Bo and the youngest over there were the same age and we became fast friends Doing the outdoor things, you know, in the summer, and then in the depths of winter we would get together and have coffee and eat toaster strudels in front of the fireplace, I mean we had a good toaster strudel Really really, really, really good times together and all of a sudden they said we're moving.
Speaker 2:And I'm going to be real honest I was pissed, not sad. Was pissed, not sad, pissed I shouldn't laugh about it, but bless your heart for sharing this.
Speaker 4:Because, it's true, you didn't talk to us, yeah.
Speaker 2:You didn't talk to us about that.
Speaker 4:Well, so the good news is now they're moving back. They're moving back here, they've moved back to Eden Prairie. And you know, of course we stayed in touch, but we didn't stay in regular touch, we didn't talk every week like we did when they lived here. And I kind of asked myself the question well, why? Why not? Because there's no reason for us to not still have the communication and the closeness that we had before. I think I was mad.
Speaker 2:Yeah, yeah, mad because somebody you relied on and loved hanging out with changed the whole pattern.
Speaker 4:yeah, and it's out of your control yeah, we, we.
Speaker 4:then there was another family too, that was kitty corner and amy. You might, you might remember them and yeah, so they were, um, husband and wife and they had one child. And he was so what was he? Maybe five years older than bo. He was enough, he was old enough that when we needed like a nanny, he became our Manny and um, he was just such a good role model, role model for Bo. And it was also during the years that we were having a lot of problems with Bo it w. We had some rough, rough, rough years, and whenever we did, I would reach out to the mom, kitty Corner, because she and Bo had a very, very special bond. She could, if he was wound up, she could bring him down, and it was like if everything was imploding here, she could come in and I would leave she would take away.
Speaker 4:De-escalate, thank you, that's the word. And then, same thing, we're moving.
Speaker 2:Are you taking Bo with you?
Speaker 4:And that one hurt just as bad. Like well, what the what are we gonna do now? You know, of course I was being very selfish about it, but, um, and we have kept in touch and we've seen them a few times. Um, yeah, and you know, the communication is is great. I'm grateful for all of the technology that we have. Same thing Like if we didn't have Facebook, we never would have connected with all of our high school friends or our middle school friends.
Speaker 2:Oh yes, yep, I was thinking about when Tricia left, when Tricia moved, I was not happy about that, yeah, she and I, because of proximity, and we both stayed at home with our kids and through the seven years I think that she lived here in Minnesota. One of the two of us was pregnant the entire time and it was just she was that other mom that totally knew what I was going through and she was that other set of hands. It was like, okay, you take both babies while I go do this, and then I'll be back and take both babies and you go do that. And it was this tag team effort Plus. She is hilarious and a lot of fun and she just, you know it was hard when she moved, as she would say, bless her heart. She is really one of those people that we can talk to occasionally. We share stuff on Facebook and then most of the time she comes up here to visit all of us and it's like she never left and that's a really good friend.
Speaker 2:But, that was a hard one when they leave. Yeah, it is, and you're right, we are at that. You talked about being in your neighborhood for such a long time. I think many of us are in that stage of life where people might be retiring. They may now be choosing to move where their children are. I think that we're at the start of seeing a lot more people move.
Speaker 3:Yeah, yeah, at least spend the winter, you know, somewhere else.
Speaker 2:Yeah maybe retire, you know, have a winter snowbird escape. So we are going to have to double down on our efforts to stay in touch, whether it's technology, whether it's the old-fashioned calling calling somebody and actually talking to them using the phone for its original purpose.
Speaker 3:I know we don't do that very often, but we need to yeah, so all right.
Speaker 2:So do we have the makings of a plan? Stacy's got one already cooked up, letting us in on nope I, I have a plan.
Speaker 3:I think it's a good plan. I hope it works. We'll see.
Speaker 2:All right, so Kitty's going to check out the Arboretum. Yep, I'm going to start to get out and walk to Walkmore. You know, get out and even if it's walking to dinner. But down here that's also a great socialized place. I have a. You know it sounds bad that I have a local bar, but it's actually a bar restaurant that I have been going to since the day I moved in, where Kitty and I went and had dinner and I've taken some dates there, just because it's super casual and I kind of know where I'm going and I walk and I sit down and the bartenders are like, oh hey, so nice to see you. People are looking at me like, oh, you must come here all the time. But it is one of the advantages of having a spot, having your spot.
Speaker 2:You develop, you know connections and you can talk about certain things, and it's a. It's a nice feel and it's the opening to meeting somebody else. That's right, all right. So we're gonna try it. We're all gonna take a shot at trying something new this month, which is always our shot. Um, do we have other shots? I don't have one I do okay, tell us okay so one of our recent episodes was um the oscars watching oscar movies, and I was a very poor participant at that time, having not watched very many, but I watched a Nora last night and I want everybody to give it a shot.
Speaker 2:It was. I somehow anticipated that it was going to be this horrible graphic, really ultra sad, and I found it to be a little bit lighter than that, yeah, I mean the story. I mean it's not a good situation for her, but a lot of it was really kind of funny and they were having fun. I think people should give it a shot. Of course, I will abide by the caveat, in the privacy of your own home.
Speaker 3:Yeah.
Speaker 2:With, you know, because there's a lot of boobage that you see. But the story you know, and I really did like the ending, the very, very ending. You know, I thought that was kind of good. So I would say I would say I still don't know that it's Oscar worthy, right, so worth watching Worth watching.
Speaker 3:I think we all agree it shouldn't have won the Oscar.
Speaker 2:Yeah, but it didn't win for best film. Did it, it did, I thought it was just her.
Speaker 3:No, no, it won best film and she won for best actress, and that's the thing that's like.
Speaker 2:I have seen her in some different stuff and every time I see her she does. She is a really good actress. What else? I think her filmography to use your term is quite extensive in a lot of different things. She's been acting for a long time. She's not this ingenue upstart. She's got a. She was in Well well, I think I used it as a shot months ago. Was that, um, that series better things?
Speaker 2:better things yeah she's the oldest daughter in that, okay, um totally different personality than in this one Mikey Mikey Madsen, I think, is her name.
Speaker 3:Right.
Speaker 2:And I really didn't recognize anybody else in that cast? No.
Speaker 4:I didn't either.
Speaker 3:Yeah, so that's my shot. Give it a shot people. Give it a shot. There you go Give it a shot. Yeah, all right, all right, shot. Give it a shot, people give it a shot.
Speaker 2:There you go give it a shot. Yeah, all right, all right.
Speaker 3:Well, on that note, I say let the friendship games continue right, yes, and we will report back in a month our progress back.
Speaker 2:We have been doing yes oh hey, speaking of friendship, we were good, we were gonna talk about this in an upcoming episode. We are going to re-watch um and talk about um. A re-watch show that. So you know, see if it still holds up. And so the one that we kind of decided the three of us were going to do is watching the four seasons. Four seasons, four seasons. It's out right now as a series, but it is based off a movie from the seventies, so 81, 1981.
Speaker 3:Yeah, Wow.
Speaker 2:Okay, 81. That's close to the seventies, 1981.
Speaker 3:If if I didn't know, because of the streaming service that told me it was 1981, I'd have guessed it was a lot earlier than that too. It is 1981. Yep, and the remake now is more of a series, I think six or eight parts or whatever.
Speaker 2:I think it's an eight-part series.
Speaker 3:Yeah, tina Fey, and I don't know who else I can't remember now. Oh, yep, steve Carell.
Speaker 2:Steve Carell, tina Fey yeah, steve.
Speaker 3:Carell, steve Carell, tina Fey Will Fort the old version 1981 version is Alan Alda Rena. Moreno, sandy Dennis, is that on Netflix or Amazon? It's on Netflix right now. You can catch the old one.
Speaker 2:Everybody do a little homework from the comfort of your own, your own home again watch four seasons, the series that's live, you know that's streaming and watch the four seasons original movie, yeah, and then let's discuss, yes, all about friendship, again, all about friendship. Awesome, it's good. All right, people, we better get on it. We've got a lot to do in the next. Yes, all right, we do love you guys Good night.
Speaker 4:See you next week.
Speaker 1:Bye-bye 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 for some friends. Turn it up loud past 10.