3 Cocktails In

Lottery Dreams: What Would You Do With $200 Million?

Amy, Kitty & Stacey Season 2 Episode 38

What would you do with $200 million? It's the ultimate daydream – one that reveals surprising truths about our values, relationships, and what we find most burdensome in daily life.

We discovered that fantasizing about lottery winnings can actually be therapeutic. As one host explains, imagining how she'd distribute newfound wealth helps pull her out of bad moods. It's pure fantasy without the disappointment of reality crashing in.

Beyond the expected luxuries (dream homes with pools and personal chefs), the conversation takes thoughtful turns. They debate the wisdom of lump sum versus annuity payments, strategies for gifting money to family without creating dependency or resentment, and how to maintain friendships when sudden wealth creates imbalance. One particularly clever idea: creating a "girlfriend travel fund" ensuring annual trips with friends who might not otherwise be able to afford them.

What's most revealing are their charitable priorities. Libraries with banned books included, funds ensuring no child misses a school field trip due to family finances, and endowments that continue giving perpetually. These choices reflect deeply held values about education, opportunity, and equity.

Curiously absent from their wish lists: fancy cars, designer clothes, and ostentatious displays of wealth. Instead, their desires center around freedom from daily burdens, meaningful experiences, and positive impact. As one host notes, the chances of winning are infinitesimal – "you're more likely to die in a vending machine accident" – but that doesn't diminish the pleasure of the thought experiment.

What would YOUR lottery list reveal about what matters most to you? Share your thoughts and join us for this delightful conversation that's less about money and more about examining what we truly value.

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:

Hello ladies, hello running, get me to the top. I don't need an invitation. I'm about to start a celebration.

Speaker 2:

Hello ladies, hello Hi, hello, how is everyone? Today I'm feeling very relaxed, today Relaxed. Are you?

Speaker 3:

That's good. Yeah, it's been a nice chill day. That is good, that's good.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's good. It's been a nice chill day. That is good, that's good. Yep, well, we are Three Cocktails In where we have addicting conversations between the three friends. Three. That's why we're called Three Cocktails In, kind of we were Three Cocktails In when we made the name and we are Three.

Speaker 3:

Cocktails, and we are three cocktails and we are three.

Speaker 2:

There we go. Yeah, there you go. So guess what? Our topic of the day is this is one of my favorites, I know. The topic today is what would you do with all the money if you won the lottery? Woo-hoo, all right, yeah, it's fun, amy and. I may need Go ahead.

Speaker 3:

It's fun to just dream sometimes, like the chances of it happening are mm.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, tiny. In fact, you're more likely to die in a vending machine accident than you are to win the lottery, because that would happen a lot of vending machine accident.

Speaker 4:

I don't even know what that would be, but I don't even buy lottery tickets, but but I find this activity to be almost the number one thing to do to get me out of a funk. Oh, really.

Speaker 4:

Yep, I find it to be very soothing, therapeutic. Soothing therapeutic I don't know what it is because I was having this conversation with somebody earlier this week talking about what we're going to do for the, the podcast, and they said, well, what would you do? And well, first of all, we're gonna have, we're gonna have to pick a couple parameters, because my list is different. If I win 1010 million versus $200 million, so I'm just saying but the first thing that I always start with is I give X amount of dollars to my brother, I give X amount of dollars to my sister. It's a significant amount of money and how they distribute it to their families is up to them.

Speaker 4:

So, they're good, and then I get to start going through. What am I going to, what am I going to do with it? And you know different charities that I'm interested in, different causes that I'm interested in, and you know goes on and on, so um, so um. It is a. For me it just is such a joyful celebration and imaginary celebration of all this crap, ton money that I don't have, but I like doing it yeah, that's, interesting, yeah, it's good that it.

Speaker 3:

It's good that it makes you happy, rather than going through that whole exercise and getting very detailed about it, because we know you, amy, I'm sure that the thought process is very detailed, but it's good that at the end of the exercise you don't go well, shit, that's never going to happen. So right, you're not doing that, so that's awesome.

Speaker 4:

I think it's because it's never going to happen. I don't have to worry about that part of it. Yeah, it can just be pure fantasy and it also does kind of earmark. Okay, if I, if I did come into a little extra money, or maybe my paycheck is a little bigger, where would I like some of those dollars to go, sort of thing. But mostly it is just one of those daydreaming sort of things. I don don't, it doesn't happen often, but I will find that if I'm in a really crappy mood, it is, it is. Or if I was on the treadmill or something like that, where I just was, you know not happy.

Speaker 2:

She needs something to keep you going. Yeah right, I have a question.

Speaker 4:

I find it funny that you're you'reing money for your brother and sister and you didn't mention your kids oh, that's because my kids are given, they're getting a big chunk right anyway, and and that was something that I wanted to talk, wanted to ask you guys about, so, um, so you know, let's, let's start with the premise we won the two, we won, we're netting out 200 million dollars, so a big chunk probably. We probably won the power ball and that's our takeaway that's our take home.

Speaker 4:

yeah, okay, give me like your top three things that you're excited to spend or attribute money to. What would those be Detailed?

Speaker 3:

Yeah Well, top of my list is my dream house, which I've been thinking about for probably the last 10 years, and it's not a big monster, but it's like Bill and I have a very specific and a very aligned vision of our dream house, so that's top of the list. A lux, lux, luxury vacation I don't know where yet or how long, but it's, uh well, one of the. I think, when we talked about bucket list, one of the things I've always wanted to stay at, like a St Regis or those types of places where you've got a butler and yeah. So yeah, it's, it's the vacation, and so it's the house and the vacation. Those are the big things.

Speaker 3:

And I know that there's going to be gifting. I know there's going to be gifting Same, that's a given, yes, but how you actually figure that out, I think, is a big nut to crack. I did a little research on this and one of the statistics that I found was I was curious about how many people who have won a major lottery Did they stay millionaires, and it's a pretty small number simply because they overspend. They had no financial literacy to begin with, right, they didn't. I mean, it took them from here to you know there and so poor investments, bad advice, pressure from family and friends, so I was kind of taking those things into consideration. How do I make sure I keep it?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, Use it, but put it into a system where it can then not just get yes right, but it can.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I did the same kind of research and, based on you know you're going to pay well first, I think you have a couple of different choices in how to take the money. So you can take a lump sum right away, but you pay a buttload of taxes and you know federal and state taxes and whatever, and you only get this pot, which is okay if you're a good money manager and you're going to invest it and you know, not just blow it right away. Or you can take the annuity route, where you get it paid over years and I think it's even like I don't know 20 or 30 years. So then you get little pieces. You get more in total that way, but you just get a little bit. So that, on the other hand, you know, might be harder to manage.

Speaker 2:

You might not be able to just spend everything you want, you know all the time if you're just getting smaller pieces. So for me, of course, I have to be practical. You know I'm not going to go buy a new car, I'm not going to go buy a new house. I'm going to pay off what I have. You know what I mean. So I'm looking at it more like I'm going to pay bills, then I'm going to travel that would be the first piece you know and probably retire and just live the life, but have a lot of money. You know what I mean.

Speaker 4:

Okay, so you pay off all your bills. You just you just won 200 million. You can't have more than what. I mean, if you were, if you were like a gambling addict, at most you'd have $500,000 in bills. So you have just spent a drop in the bucket. You have a whisper. So I think that's funny. I would well. Yes, you guys know I love to travel. But one thing and I've told you guys this before is I would have the girlfriend travel fund, where I've got money in there that is making money, so that you know there's a good chunk, so that once a year all of us get to go on a trip. Airfare is paid for, whether we're in. You know, lodgings pay for you bring your fun money, but I want to make sure that we get to go as a group somewhere as a group, somewhere.

Speaker 2:

yeah, and I've heard that too that, like people that win giant pots, almost have to just just know that they need to bring their friends along. You know, because they're not gonna your friends, unless you give them a big chunk, aren't going to be able to keep up with you unless you just say, yep, I'm taking everybody to this trip and aren't going to be able to keep up with you unless you just say, yep, I'm taking everybody to this trip and we're going to go, do this and whatever, and I'll and I'll pay, you know. Then I wonder how the friends feel at the same time, you know, do you feel like you're taking advantage of it? Because that's the issue Nobody else is going to be able to keep up with you. You know.

Speaker 4:

Well, you know, and that's I mean. I'm not saying that we're going to go on a, you know, a worldwide cruise every year, but if we wanted to go to dallas and you know, and visit tricia, let's all go sure, you know, I mean, and for people who can't take multiple trips a year, this might be one that they get to take. That's an extra, you know, sort of thing. So that's one of them. You know you were talking about gifting. So this was my idea by giving my brother a chunk of money and my sister a chunk of money, all their kids go to them. Their kids don't then come to me. The kids, they can keep it in the family. They can decide how best to use that money. Ann and Cole can put parameters on what that money is used for. That's their deal. I don't want to get into that. I don't want them coming to me when mom and dad have said no, keep it in their family, you guys do with it what you will have. Said no, keep it in their family, you guys do with it what you will. So that's one of those gifting things that it's passing the buck, literally and figuratively.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, so here's my question oh, what other fun things, I would buy houses. I would own multiple houses, not necessarily grand houses, but they would be, you know, one maybe in Europe, one maybe Caribbean, or it could be a condo or something. But my occasion for that is it needs to be by airport, with the goal being that I want my kids to have an easy time getting there and enjoying it. I'm trying to find pockets of places my kids could go easily. So, again, I don't need something grandiose, but you know, I'll take something in the Caribbean where I can see the water, and it's probably got five bedrooms or something like that, so every family or whatever can have a, have a bedroom. But I think that would be really fun to have.

Speaker 2:

Yes, for sure your vacation. I don't care about cars, no, and that's what people go out and like buy a Maserati or a. I know I agree, no, don't waste it on the car, yeah, no.

Speaker 4:

As long as it's comfortable, I would pay for for the serious XM subscription that I'm really missing.

Speaker 2:

Oh, we can, we can all do that now Woo big thunder.

Speaker 4:

I could pay for $10 a month or whatever it is. Okay, here's my question about your kids, because we all have kids. So do you set it up in a trust where they get a lump sum and you trust them to do with it what they will? Or do you set it up in a trust that they get a significant amount of money at a certain age and then on a yearly basis? Or do you do parts and pieces? And if you have multiple children, are you treating any of them different?

Speaker 2:

Okay, yeah, those are good. Well, when you pass, they're going to get it all divvied up anyway, in theory.

Speaker 3:

But you can. But, but even, even, yeah, even at your passing, you can have it set to yeah, divvy to them how you see fit I think, it depends on the kid, on the kid that it's going to. I would would be making some judgments on, based on what I know of this young adult. What would he or she do with this?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, I kind of like giving them some each year, you know, and starting right away, even not waiting, you know what I mean. So they can, you know, do what they want with it, pay bills, whatever, whatever they're going to do, but then they at least know what they're getting along the way too. So I don't know, that would be my first thought. How about charities? What I hear is that charities come after you when they find out you won the lottery, you know. So how do you decide? Yes, we'll give it to you know which charities, even locally, you know, I've had, I've heard people just win, not the millions, but the you know 100,000 jackpot. People want, people want a piece of it. You know, I don't know. That would be rough, I think, to try to determine who you're going to donate to and who you're not not.

Speaker 3:

I mean, I think it's gotta be. It's. It's gotta be something that, for a very specific reason, is something very meaningful to you. My parents made a list. I want to say they had like four organizations that when they were putting all of their financials together and, um, you know, getting everything documented and everything they have this list. And so the you know getting everything documented and everything they have this list. And so the you know the final wishes were that specific amount of money would go to each of these. So I think it's a smart idea to make a list and then, you know, maybe kind of narrow it down and it might change over time too. So these are, these are good things to be thinking about, just for our own um, having you know, having things in place, should you need to have them in place, but I don't, and for me I don't, and for me I don't know what they would be right now. I don't, I don't know.

Speaker 3:

So it kind of tells me I should probably think about it and make a list or get involved with some or something, because I don't think I have any on my list right now.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, I researched a couple of different things. One was what's the most common number that wins, and the first one said 38, 40, and 44. However, I looked at some others and they had big, long lists of numbers that didn't include 38, 40, and 44. So again I'm back to I think it's random, I don't think there's any that you know, like there's not some you know formula to winning. It also said people of all education and you know current status. Yeah, no, no rhyme or reason to any who wins, or the numbers or anything reason to any who wins, or the numbers or anything?

Speaker 4:

Did you, did your research show whether or not randomly selected numbers win more than people who select them, than chosen numbers? I thought I heard that at some point.

Speaker 2:

Oh, like if you just let it pick your own instead of you like you do all the birthdays and the anniversaries and that kind of thing. I do not. I don't know that.

Speaker 4:

I'm pretty sure I heard that a number of years ago that you're better off letting the system choose your numbers.

Speaker 2:

Pick instead of you picking the same ones all the time Could be yeah, yeah, who knows there was a when the Powerball got really big.

Speaker 3:

I don't know, this was probably a year ago. We will rarely go and buy a lottery ticket and it's usually one of those. You're seeing it over and over on the news, you know, and then the day goes by and nobody won. And then it's on the news again nobody wins. And then Bill and I look at each other. We're like, should we buy a ticket? So one time? So I went, and it was the night of the drawing. I went up to the quick trip up on 212 and there was a line of people at the register.

Speaker 2:

Oh, wow.

Speaker 3:

I mean not a hundred people. There was like maybe 10 people standing in line and we all kind of looked at each other. Everybody's just kind of doing their own thing. But we're pretty sure that everybody was there to buy a lottery ticket. It was, you know, 10 o'clock at night or 9.30 at night or whatever, and so we're all just kind of looking at each other. That one guy turned around and he goes hey, you can't win if you don't play. And we were all like yep, that's better.

Speaker 2:

It's true. Exactly right, it's true. So there was a little bonding with people that you know, and so there, we each buy our lottery ticket and off we go and never saw each other ever again and none of us won and none of you won. Yeah, the largest pot was like over 2 billion, just over $2 billion. Two billion, just over two billion dollars by and a guy in california won it. It's like, wow, that would be huge. Um, there was some math trying to figure out what he really got you know one billion at least.

Speaker 2:

So yeah, huge there's, there's a large based on the other billionaires go ahead. Yeah, based on how big billionaire there's a large unclaimed one. Based on the other billionaires.

Speaker 3:

Go ahead.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, based on the other billionaires, he probably got it all.

Speaker 2:

Oh, sorry.

Speaker 4:

Maybe. How big is the one that's been?

Speaker 2:

unclaimed yeah, unclaimed A little more than a million by someone bought it in Illinois.

Speaker 4:

That was probably my grandma, and she's since passed away.

Speaker 2:

She held on to it and didn't claim it Maybe. Yeah, that's interesting.

Speaker 4:

Do you remember the movie with Nicolas Cage and Bridget Fonda where he's the cop, she's the diner cat waitress and he didn't have any money to? I love that movie. He didn't have any money to tip her, so he said you know, I'll split my, I'll split my winnings with you. And he won and his wife went bananas.

Speaker 3:

That's right. Is that Marissa Tomei? Was she the wife?

Speaker 4:

No, oh, was that Marissa Tomei? I don't remember who his wife was. Yeah, that was a fun. That was a good movie. Yeah, that was. Do you remember what it was called? No, I'm sure the interwebs could tell you, nicolas.

Speaker 2:

Cage Bridget.

Speaker 4:

Fonda.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, who did you think it was Bridget Fonda?

Speaker 3:

Well, she's the waitress.

Speaker 2:

She's the waitress, yeah.

Speaker 4:

That was before Nicolas Cage went off the deep end, or he hid the deep end a lot better. Stacey, you said you'd retire. Kitty, would you retire?

Speaker 3:

I probably would have to, because we'd be traveling and my business isn't very travel friendly. So yeah, yeah, I would I know?

Speaker 4:

I would too. Yeah, of of course, I could have my nights and weekends yes, okay, it's called.

Speaker 2:

It could happen to you a 1994 movie, it could happen to you. There you go, nicholas cage, and yeah, good movie. Um, I don't know what it says. Was it rosie?

Speaker 4:

for a while Was it Rosie Perez. For a while she played. Rosie Perez is the wife. There we go.

Speaker 2:

Yes, yes, interesting. There you go. There's an old one, if you can find it. Was it based on a true story? Is based on a true story. There you go, oh, okay, yeah, and Yonkers, that's on Netflix is based on a true story. There you go. Oh, okay, yeah, and Yonkers, that's on Netflix. Right? Here's a recommendation for everybody. If you want to watch somebody else win in the lottery, yeah, okay, what else do you have? Is there any other weird things that you'd spend money on that you don't today?

Speaker 4:

that you'd spend money on that. You don't today. Part of my charitable giving harkens back to my childhood and how much I loved the libraries when I was in elementary school. I would be setting up funds for schools to have really good libraries, well-stocked libraries and a librarian there, and the precursor to getting the money is banned books are included. You cannot take anything off the shelf. If you want any money, all books, anything off the shelf. If you want all of, if you want any money, all books are on the shelf.

Speaker 4:

Um, just because the more we read, the more we know, and you know and I want every book should be free. I get that people like audible and whatever, but there's something so enjoyable and so tactile about diving into a book. That's something that is very, very important to me. And the other thing that I really would love to make sure happens through schools is that every kid who wants to go on who field trip gets to go, like these trips to DC that kids do in eighth grade. My kids didn't go, it was. It was like $1,200 for three days. I'm not I. How do you come up with that? And? And so some kids got to go and other kids stayed, and that to me is crap. Yeah, either everybody goes or nobody goes.

Speaker 4:

So, you know, to have that field trip fund sort of thing, um, to earmark some some schools and obviously it could be a bunch of schools with with that sort of thing but you know you should never feel bad because your mom and dad don't have money. Yeah, you know, a second grader, a fifth grader, an eighth grader, they can't make money to go. Do that. Not everybody's got mom or dad or grandparents to help foot that bill. So those are the type of things that give me a lot of joy when I sit and think about how I would distribute funds. That makes me really happy to think of those things. Yeah, food shelves, you know some of those things. Yeah, you know food shelves, you know some of those things. And to set up some, you know, even if it's at colleges or something, to set up some endowments.

Speaker 2:

So they just keep going perpetually letting you know some certain students in, oh yeah well I think there's a lot of things locally, especially with the school, you could set up and fund. I think that'd be a good idea.

Speaker 3:

Like Prince, who lived here, donated money to the local elementary school that was near him for their music program.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's a good idea yeah near him for their music program? Yeah, that's a good idea. Yeah, very, very nice and lucky.

Speaker 4:

I would pay somebody to come into my house and take care of my plants so they'd live, because they all have some sort of pest on them right now and it's making me, infuriating me. Where would that come from Exactly? I don't know. You bring a new plant in that you haven't quarantined and haven't taken care of, and suddenly they're all sick.

Speaker 2:

Oh, there you go. Is that a tip? Quarantine your plants for a while, quarantine your plants.

Speaker 4:

Never thought about that. So, Kitty, at one point you put out a a poll that said would you rather have somebody to cook for you every day or clean for you every day? Are you gonna hire somebody to do both? Would you suddenly have like a live-in? Yeah?

Speaker 2:

house man? I would. Yes, I would have a live-in. Would you have staff? I don't know about staff, but yes, I would have a live-in. Would you have staff? I don't know about staff, but yes, I would have someone cook. I would definitely have someone cook for us. Yeah, absolutely yeah. And not that I don't like to cook. I feel like then you could kind of meal plan and they could take care of all the baloney you know what I mean and just have it done when you get home.

Speaker 4:

And you could probably eat something different than the eight things. You are exactly, yes, okay so this is another thing.

Speaker 3:

So this is taking us on a little bit of a tangent, but, um, I did want to share this, so I'm you know, I'm doing this course on AI and because of that, like everything now that shows up in Instagram and Facebook is about AI. So I put a prompt in this week because we are stuck in the same meals. We have eaten the same meals for the last 20 years, and so the prompt that I put into chat GPT was give me seven meals using these, and I think I picked 15 ingredients, seven meals. These are the ingredients. Each meal has to be completely different, and so I picked chicken, ground beef, steak, shrimp, and then the specific vegetables that we like, and I picked rice and sweet potatoes, and spices don't count, but you know, figure in spices, but those don't count as the ingredients, right, and it gave me back seven meals and they're all great and they're all great so how many have you tried?

Speaker 2:

how many have you tried we're?

Speaker 3:

having our first one tomorrow night oh cool, that'll be fun and it kind of we were actually just talking about this this this past week and I said I would love and I love to cook too but I need somebody to think through. What is a well-balanced meal? How can we eat healthier, right? How can I mean? There's no wonder that all of the uber rich people in the world are fit. They've got a personal chef that's creating great meals for them, right? I would love love. I would love that If I had to pick between the two, I'd pick the chef. I can clean my house, but I would pick the chef.

Speaker 2:

Well, you're going to have your new house, that you can just have it all you know. Perfect, yeah, yeah, yeah. So yeah, you can have a chef, yeah.

Speaker 3:

I would too. I like to dream about that.

Speaker 4:

And you'd have a driver.

Speaker 3:

I would have a driver. A driver would be awesome.

Speaker 4:

Driver, that's not Bill Correct, correct. You can have Bill and then faux bill.

Speaker 3:

Yeah nice, what would you pick, amy?

Speaker 4:

uh, definitely somebody cleaned. My house cannot stand cleaning and I would like to have all this stuff behind me dusted more than like I don't know. I can leave notes on that counter in the dust for myself instead of paper. So definitely somebody to clean. Um, I don't, I don't mind doing laundry and I have no problem folding it right as it comes out and putting it away. I, I don't iron, so I would love to have somebody like, do the iron? I would buy different clothes if I had somebody who could iron for me. Otherwise it's all t-shirts. Um, I think, if I'm, I mean, yes, if I have $200 million, yeah, I'm going to have somebody cook for me. Actually, have somebody grocery shop.

Speaker 2:

Meal planning shop and and make it, yeah, yeah, the whole deal. Yeah, yeah, I think so cool what else funny things?

Speaker 4:

so let's talk about this dream. Well, stacy, you're not doing a dream house at this point. Maybe other houses. But, kitty, are you gonna have a pool? I'm, I'm gonna have a pool. More than one of my homes will have a pool and somebody to take okay, yeah, I suppose, since we're talking about I mean this is dreaming large.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, of course, like why wouldn't you? Because of course you had resale value, exactly I mean that's okay, gotta tell you pools not a good resale value.

Speaker 2:

Exactly, I mean that's the only reason.

Speaker 4:

Okay, got to tell you pool's not a good resale value unless you're in, you know, california.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, not here, but somewhere she's going to, you know, build her dream house, who knows where Some really fancy location.

Speaker 3:

Yeah Cool, I would definitely have a uh, a carriage house so when we would have guests come, that they would have their own um they didn't have to be in we are so happy you're here please.

Speaker 2:

Please stay on the other side. Please go to the other building. Oh, my gosh, oh, but it's a nice, it's a beautiful carriage house. Yes, I'm sure, I'm sure.

Speaker 3:

Adjacent to the pool.

Speaker 2:

There you go. Yeah, that makes sense.

Speaker 1:

That makes sense.

Speaker 2:

Oh funny. Well, we live to dream, that's for sure. But yes, we need to like buy a ticket occasionally so we have a chance, yeah, instead of you know, a teeny, weeny, weeny percent chance instead of zero, right.

Speaker 4:

Well, except that for every one you buy, doesn't I mean, aren't your chances just the same Because there's you're not buying? 10 doesn't increase your chances because they put 10 more in to the pot.

Speaker 2:

I mean you just need to buy one. It only you can win with one ticket. Yeah, it's not like pull tabs, no, it's not like that.

Speaker 4:

When there's a finite number of winners in there, you can do the math. No, it's not like that.

Speaker 2:

You just need one.

Speaker 4:

You just there. You can do the math like that. You just need one, just need to buy one. I'm still living off the high of us at girls weekend winning a 400 pull tab on a friday night. Let's just say that paid for the alcohol for the weekend for like eight of us.

Speaker 2:

That was good it did. That was a good one. That's been a while.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, yes it has.

Speaker 2:

So how cool, what does?

Speaker 3:

anyone happen to have a shot for this episode? Well, I think I gave. I think my using ChatGPT to create the to create your menus was mine.

Speaker 2:

That is a good one.

Speaker 4:

We'll all all try that, that's not a bad idea.

Speaker 2:

Stace, do you have a shot? Oh gosh, no, not really I don't. I was gonna say you know, it'd be nice if we'd win the lotto here really quick, because amy and I are off to italy this week so we may need to win when we get back if we spend too much money.

Speaker 4:

Well, I can only spend up to a certain point and then I feel really guilty. Yeah, I would like to win the lottery so that that guilt number goes up. That's true. Yes, that would be good and I could actually go buy what I want to wear because, also, I wouldn't be working and I could go during the day and actually try them on, instead of doing the old mail them to me and send them back.

Speaker 2:

Mail send, mail send. Yeah, yeah, there would be a lot of perks to winning, obviously, yeah, there would. Awesome.

Speaker 4:

I don't have a shot. I've been working my fanny off and haven't watched anything good on TV lately.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you've been busy All to get ready for travel.

Speaker 3:

All to wrap some stuff up. Okay, well, you guys have safe travels, thank you. Thank you, and are you going to do a? Did you do a live last time from there, or did you just do a video, did you?

Speaker 2:

do a live. I don't think we did a live, I think we just did videos and post them. So we'll work on that. We'll do some more and then our next episode we will record about our trip, so you can look forward to that Awesome Sound. Good, okay, we will record about our trip, so you can look forward to that Awesome Sound good, okay, all right, all right, arrivederci, you two. Thank you, bonjour.

Speaker 4:

I can't hear.

Speaker 2:

No, we're not going there, prego. Prego, I don't know what that is either. I don't know. See, this is the things we learn on the plane going there. Prego, I don't know what that is either. I don't know. See, this is the things we learn on the plane ride there. We'll have plenty of time, but we'll go over our please and thank yous and good evening, good night, all these kind of things.

Speaker 3:

Okay.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, We'll kind of we'll be about this repair. Yeah, our preparation will be about that much. But whatever, yeah, our preparation will be about that much, but whatever. Okay, well, thank you, exactly All right. All right, see you next time. Bye, bye-bye, bye-bye, all right.

Speaker 1:

I got that. Wow, who wants some heads right now? We got that. Turn it up. I know you're wondering how 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 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. Turning up the crowd when I hit him.

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