Puff and Drinks

Surviving the 90s: Could Today's Generation Handle It? - Ep. 6

Puff and Drinks

Remember when government cheese was a household staple? When kids rode bikes without helmets and dogs drank pot liquor instead of visiting pet urgent care? The Puffin Drink boys take you on a riotous journey through time as they tackle the burning question: Could today's generation survive if transported back to the 1990s?

Rodney Q Love, Byron B, Jimmy Jefferson, and Dennis Cotton serve up straight talk alongside their cigars and spirits, dissecting the vast cultural canyon between then and now. Their conversation weaves through fashion evolution (from baggy JNCO jeans to today's skinny cuts), music transformation (when artists needed actual talent), and economic realities (when a high school graduate could make $100K at an auto plant).

The hosts don't just play the "back in my day" card – they offer genuinely thoughtful perspectives on how each generation adapts to its unique challenges. From their lived experience growing up with limited resources to their observations about today's convenience-oriented youth, their insights are both hilarious and profound. One host even claims to have "invented" sagging pants out of necessity, as his father only bought pants once per school year!

Between nostalgic reflections and good-natured ribbing, the crew shares expert tips on proper cigar lighting (cedar sticks for the win) and introduces Dennis Cotton as their resident wine and coffee connoisseur. They also announce upcoming guests – The Pink Ladies Cigar Society from Ohio – showcasing their commitment to exploring diverse perspectives within the lifestyle community.

Whether you're a Gen X veteran who remembers CDs and payphones or a curious younger listener wondering if you could hack it without Uber and smartphone navigation, this episode delivers authentic conversation that bridges generational divides. Subscribe now, check out our merchandise at puffingdrinks.com, and join us as we sip slow, sip smooth, and sip together.

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Byron B: 0:00

Cue the music.

Rodney Q Love: 0:09

What's up? What's up, what's up? Puffin Drink family. We're back again for yet another mind-tingling episode.

Byron B: 0:17

I am Rodney Q Love throwing it over to Byron B, and what I'm bringing to you today is a Patron cigar and a Stella beer.

Jimmie Jefferson: 0:32

Okay, okay, so he getting ignorant as hell. Today he's trying to be ignorant, that's all, okay, okay. Okay, we're going to get into it, that's that grass cutting type right there, oh shit.

Dennis Cotton: 0:43

Alright.

Jimmie Jefferson: 0:44

Yeah so I'm Byron B, here we go. Alright, I'm Jimmy Jefferson and of course I got the topic of tonight and it's hot. Y'all, y'all gonna love it, trust me, y'all gonna love it, alright.

Dennis Cotton: 0:55

Dennis Cotton, how y'all doing.

Byron B: 0:58

Come on, man, give us more. Come on, man, you got to put some more into that man. Put some more into that man. You're too quiet, I'm sorry. Put some more into that.

Dennis Cotton: 1:04

Dennis Scott, how y'all doing All right.

Byron B: 1:06

Yeah, all right.

Jimmie Jefferson: 1:09

Let's take our toast. Y'all, everyone, hold our glasses. Yes, and, by the way, y'all can find our glasses on our website, puffin Drinks. Get your rock glass and toast with us, all right, all right, all right.

Byron B: 1:28

All right, it was really nice class All right man Cheers.

Jimmie Jefferson: 1:31

All right. Well, I hear you have something for us tonight.

Byron B: 1:33

Yeah, I do what you got, pumpkin Okay. Well, okay, that's some bullshit, Okay.

Jimmie Jefferson: 1:35

No ditty, no ditty, I'm just saying. I'm saying no baby oil either. Okay, get Sasquatch up in here where you at, where's my boy Downs, we gonna pay for that shit. There we are, yeah, okay, okay, alright, alright. This came up again. It was a topic that was hot at work and this is one of those ones where you kind of sort of you know like where they coming with this bullshit, because I know how old I am. All right, right, right. So the topic was could you survive in the 90s with today's climate?

Byron B: 2:18

Hmm, wait, wait, let's keep this. Let me bring it back to you. Define that a little bit.

Jimmie Jefferson: 2:24

Could you survive in today's climate if you had the 90s mentality? We came from the 90s, right, so could people be transported back into the 90s From there to here, yes, no. From here to there, oh, from here back to there. 90s From there to here, yes, no.

Byron B: 2:47

From here to there, oh, from here back to there, yes, Could they?

Jimmie Jefferson: 2:50

survive. Could they survive Now, mind you the 80s and 90s. We know what that was all about.

Byron B: 2:58

You should have said the late 80s, I know they couldn't survive.

Jimmie Jefferson: 3:02

Well, okay, I'll preference it by saying the 80s. Well, I'll preference it by saying the 80s and late 80s, early 90s. Could you actually take and transport somebody from now 2025, back into the 80s and 90s? Fuck, no, okay, there we go.

Dennis Cotton: 3:20

There's the answer right there. It would be difficult.

Jimmie Jefferson: 3:23

Okay, well, y'all saying shit, y'all ain't saying nothing.

Byron B: 3:26

Come on now, let's the answer right there. It would be difficult, okay?

Dennis Cotton: 3:27

well, y'all saying shit, but y'all ain't saying nothing. Come on, dennis, I'll take a stab at this.

Byron B: 3:32

Because I didn't think about this.

Dennis Cotton: 3:33

Back in the 90s and correct me if I'm wrong. I think we were more conservative. We were more Let me put it this way, our young black men or brothers. Today, they're sagging their pants, they're wearing their hair, all crazy type of ways any way they want, and I think, I feel that when it comes time for work, career job, they're going to struggle, Whereas us 90s brothers I think we were more conservative yeah, we had our little crazy side, but I mean our presentation was more in line, man.

Dennis Cotton: 4:20

I hate to say this, but I think it's accurate. I think it was more in line with mainstream America. I'm not saying that we sold out to the white man. I'm not saying that at all.

Jimmie Jefferson: 4:28

We got you. We understand what you're saying.

Dennis Cotton: 4:30

I think just our lives were more conservative, professional, more appealing to the masses.

Byron B: 4:41

Okay, now see I beg to differ. Ooh, now keep in mind. He thinks he's the baby of the. Okay, now see, I beg to differ, keep in mind he thinks he's the baby of the bunch.

Jimmie Jefferson: 4:48

He's mastered you. I am. You know he's Buns B.

Byron B: 4:56

It is.

Jimmie Jefferson: 4:56

Buns B.

Byron B: 4:59

So now let's take these 90 things a little different. Okay, we're going to take the people today with the straight cut jeans, okay tight shirts going back to the 90s, where everything was loose fit okay, okay makes your point, make your point loose fit and sagging. Now, hey, I created the sag, but I created it a different way because my daddy only bought pants one time in the school season. So by the end of the school season I was wearing floods, so I had to pull my pants down.

Jimmie Jefferson: 5:40

So I wasn't flooding. You do understand I was sipping, don't you? That's that bullshit. That's the fresh bullshit right there. I'm just saying so I created't. You do understand I was sipping, don't you?

Byron B: 5:47

That's that bullshit, that's the fresh bullshit right there. I'm just saying so.

Jimmie Jefferson: 5:49

I created this thing, you know.

Byron B: 5:49

I said for a different reason, you know what I'm saying. But we actually are close. Look, I just, man, I'm going to tell you it's crazy. I just threw out, not threw out. I just donated some clothes because they were too baggy. It was clothes from the 90s. You still had clothes from the 90s, I still got clothes from the 90s. Ain't that some shit? There you go, jaboes.

Jimmie Jefferson: 6:14

I couldn't get rid of my Jaboes man, you know what I'm saying.

Byron B: 6:18

I couldn't get rid of my Jaboes.

Jimmie Jefferson: 6:19

Did you have any parachute pants?

Byron B: 6:21

I had parachute pants.

Jimmie Jefferson: 6:26

Hey, I was a Hammer fan.

Byron B: 6:26

I had parachute pants too. I was a dancer. What kind of dancer was you?

Jimmie Jefferson: 6:30

Oh, man, you ain't dancing Watch.

Byron B: 6:34

I'm sorry, taco Tender, I didn't dance and watch like you did. Oh my.

Jimmie Jefferson: 6:40

God, I'm about to piss my pants.

Dennis Cotton: 6:47

So we all have a dark side.

Jimmie Jefferson: 6:49

That's a deep dark side. That's some shit he needs to keep to himself.

Byron B: 6:53

That's just the clothing part of it. We're just talking about technology.

Jimmie Jefferson: 6:57

What about the struggle part of it. So we know that this generation in this new 2025 time frame we've heard it a thousand and one time that they're wussy. You know they're soft. You know, we've heard that a thousand and one times. Right, could you take these soft, you know generational kids and people and put them in the 90s and see, do you think they would survive?

Dennis Cotton: 7:29

no, not at all.

Jimmie Jefferson: 7:32

Let me elaborate imagine if they had to take a bus like we had to, okay, do you mean the freight? A freight okay okay, grand River Hamilton just to go anywhere Grand River where now, okay, they can call Uber A freak Just to go anywhere Grand River, hamilton, right, they can call Uber Mom and daddy Most parents, now black parents six figures. We don't want our kids struggling Like we do.

Byron B: 8:01

At least a six-figure household.

Jimmie Jefferson: 8:03

There we go, there you go. I agree, a six-figure household, there we go. There you go, I agree, six-figure household yeah six-figure household, but shit, it was a mid-five-finger household. Well, shit, you better finish. Don't throw that shit away, boy.

Byron B: 8:16

I know.

Jimmie Jefferson: 8:16

That's right, you know, you knew what you lived in. You knew exactly where you lived in and see when they were talking about it at work and everything else, these were other kids who were like, oh, it couldn't have been that bad in the 90s. You guys act like it wasn't that difficult and everything else. And so I challenged one of them. I said well, when's the last time you rode your bike without a helmet? Yeah right, I mean, you know we grew up where you didn't ride a bike with a helmet hey, we made our own ramps.

Byron B: 8:45

What's the helmet?

Jimmie Jefferson: 8:45

exactly they didn't sell them, they didn't have them, they didn't, there was no helmets, oh no when was the last time you fed your dog dog food? Dog food that day? That's something you know. That boy got, that boy got pot liquor. If his ass wanted something to drink. He got pot liquor. He knew what the fuck this was. You know Shoot you can take your dog to the goddamn doctor now.

Jimmie Jefferson: 9:18

Oh no, the one thing I saw the other day which blew me the hell away they actually have an urgent care for your dog. That's north of 8 mile, right, yeah, thank you. Yeah, oh, my god, you know. But but you know, it was one of those situations, yet again, where again you had to take in and and you had to think to yourself what's going on, because the kids now, or the adults, I mean, you know, I'm not even saying these are not kids, I don't work with kids they they all have in their minds that in back in the 90s that you know, you guys couldn't have been struggling that much. Yeah, we were yeah shit.

Byron B: 9:57

Things was different things were different, everything. But I'm gonna tell you one thing we had better music in the 90s. Okay, okay, what?

Dennis Cotton: 10:07

do you mean by better music?

Byron B: 10:10

I'm going to give you a question, okay, music is a key to the soul.

Jimmie Jefferson: 10:16

Right, it always has been.

Byron B: 10:18

Now what you're saying? What do you mean by better music? This music today, the love songs, are totally different, yep yeah, than they were back then.

Jimmie Jefferson: 10:31

I don't even think they're love songs. They're more like they're all hurt. You know, everybody hurt and you know I just don't understand why he left granted, trees are green and bullshit.

Byron B: 10:42

Granted, the generation before us would say no, our music had better love songs.

Jimmie Jefferson: 10:49

Everyone, exactly Every generation, always does that.

Byron B: 10:52

So and it's kind of this is crazy, because this morning I woke up to watching Jason's lyrics.

Jimmie Jefferson: 11:01

You know what that?

Byron B: 11:01

was not a bad movie. It wasn't a bad movie and everything, and Alan Payne and Jada Pinkett and everything. They did a great job of showing a good healthy love A good healthy love, and they had some good sex scenes and everything but it was more the more poetic part of it and everything. And he fell into it and he liked it and everything. He liked her, everything it wasn't right, like right now it's your booty hole, brown.

Jimmie Jefferson: 11:49

You know what?

Dennis Cotton: 11:49

I'm saying love, okay, now I got one for y'all.

Jimmie Jefferson: 11:50

Now this is part of the whole 90s schism and everything else, has hip-hop died?

Byron B: 11:56

oh no, definitely not. Hip-hop will never die. Well, I don't know, let me put it this way hip-hop will never die. Well, I don't know, let me put it this way Hip hop will never die.

Jimmie Jefferson: 12:03

I don't know about that. I think hip hop along with 90s music. You had to have talent for it. Now you just have sequencing. Now you just have, you know, a hook, but you had to have talent back in the day. You had to, especially if you were a singer. True, had to have talent back in the day you had, especially if you were a singer. True, in most cases, hell, you, you know you had to sing and play an instrument and looked apart.

Byron B: 12:31

Now you can just be any goddamn thing yep, and what it seems to me is they're running out of music, so they refer back to somebody else's music and just change it. Yep.

Jimmie Jefferson: 12:45

Now you can say that again. You can say that about our generation at the time, during the nineties too, because that was one of the big things too, because that came up out of that whole schism too.

Jimmie Jefferson: 12:57

Because you, if you think back on, you know if we're going to be honest with you. You know puff, you know you, we're going to be honest with you. You know, puff, you know you had the puff situation and everything else. Well, you go back a little bit further than that and everything else they were also taking and borrowing from James Brown. Oh yeah, definitely.

Byron B: 13:16

Oh, man, it's happened so much of this stuff and samples all over and that was a big thing, so now what we're getting?

Jimmie Jefferson: 13:23

they're sampling from the 90s. That's even straight crazy. So you're taking a sample from a sample from a sample.

Byron B: 13:32

That was an original. Exactly, that was an original somewhere in that whole mix.

Jimmie Jefferson: 13:37

So I mean, you know again, they were trying to take and tell me because the group of people that were talking to me they were trying to take and tell me because the group of people that were talking to me they were all in their late 20s, like 28, 29.

Byron B: 13:49

I got shoes on Exactly. They were right at 32, 33, that kind of thing.

Jimmie Jefferson: 13:57

They were all giving me all this spill about you guys didn't have the top, blah, blah, blah. I mean, I get it, I understand it, but at the same time you know, here we are, it's 2025 and I agree with you 110%. Our love music doesn't exist anymore.

Dennis Cotton: 14:17

Let's talk about just living, Okay go for it, just living the original question was Can people, in 2025, survive in the 80s? No, you said the 90s. I'm going to take it back to an extra 10 years. I say no. How many of you remember the government cheese? Oh, that's delicious, the government cheese. Now I'm going to put myself out there. I grew up kind of poor. Like the rest of us. Really, that's right, because we lived.

Jimmie Jefferson: 14:52

We lived within a mile.

Dennis Cotton: 14:53

That's right.

Jimmie Jefferson: 14:56

You didn't know that you were P-O-O-R. You were actually P-O. You was P-O. That's the way it wrote.

Dennis Cotton: 15:05

We had to deal with some stuff the government cheese, the fake apple cider, which really wasn't that bad once you got used to it so these kids, these days.

Byron B: 15:19

Oh, no, man, I'll tell you what. Can I say this? Absolutely? Can I say this? I just happen to be I'm going to say blessed growing up. I might talk about. My dad bought the pants one time a year and everything Other than that we're the first ones on the block to drink Capri Suns.

Jimmie Jefferson: 15:43

Hot damn, shut up. Was it 10 or the 12 pack.

Byron B: 15:48

It was the 10 pack. God damn, no shit, no shit. He did, look he did. He was an auto worker. My brother and I had our own rooms with 13 inch color TVs God damn it, here we go, 13 inch color.

Dennis Cotton: 16:10

I slept on the fucking couch.

Byron B: 16:12

Did you have remote.

Dennis Cotton: 16:14

No, it wasn't remote.

Jimmie Jefferson: 16:15

Well, you still had to get your ass up and crank. Okay, but it was colored though.

Byron B: 16:18

Yeah, we had 13 inch color TVs in our rooms, God damn boy. You was doing. All right, I know that. Yeah, so a lot of the struggles. We had to struggle meals, you know, the beans and whinnies over rice you know, and everything you know, stuff like that. A suck a tag A suck a tag.

Dennis Cotton: 16:42

I love it. Look, man look.

Byron B: 16:46

When it was dealing with vegetables, my dad used to feed me and my brother his vegetables.

Jimmie Jefferson: 16:51

Wait what his ass ate. No, he didn't eat it. He didn't like vegetables.

Byron B: 16:57

We ate his vegetables.

Dennis Cotton: 16:58

But let me put it out there, with all due respect Back in the day, you could work. What is it they used to say? You could work, you could work in an auto plant and you might have a high school diploma, if you're lucky, and still make $100,000. Yeah, back in the day with all due respect to those who worked in the plant you were making some nice money.

Byron B: 17:18

But see, not only was my dad working at the auto plant, my mom worked as a mortician, so y'all had dual income.

Jimmie Jefferson: 17:30

Oh, man, y'all shoot.

Byron B: 17:31

Dual income yeah yeah yeah.

Jimmie Jefferson: 17:33

And they have two people working in the house.

Dennis Cotton: 17:36

Yeah, and what city? Did you live in West Bloomfield? You said something, hey look.

Byron B: 17:42

Look right around the block from Burns. My dad still stays there.

Dennis Cotton: 17:46

Shut up.

Byron B: 17:48

He still stays there. I bet you had that first portable basketball rim. No, we had it attached to the garage First rim on the block First rim on the block.

Jimmie Jefferson: 18:00

No, no, no, no, that's the one that you steal from the other block around the block and then you put it up there with the milk crate. Yeah, you know, cause I ain't got no room. You told her, told her rim off, so all you got is a milk crate. Either that or a bicycle rim. Oh God, oh God, help me. Gentlemen, gentlemen, I want to pivot for just a second and everything else. There's a cut. There's a conversation that came out about our cigars, okay, and one of the things that came out about our cigars is we'll talk about our cigars.

Jimmie Jefferson: 18:32

Oh well, I got to I got to All right. One of the things that came out is how do you light your cigar? Ah, you know, everybody always is quick about you know? Okay, light my cigar. Light my cigar and everything else.

Byron B: 18:45

I think we kind of touched on that in the last episode, exactly.

Jimmie Jefferson: 18:47

But here's where it goes a little bit different in how it actually works. Okay, there's a couple of different ways that of course, you can light a cigar. You can actually, you know, depending on the household you come from, you can light it off the eye of the stove. I mean, you know, I mean that's some bullshit in itself, but we'll talk about that at a later show. But of course, there's always the Bic lighter and then, of course, if you ain't got all that going on, then you got the regular stick matches.

Jimmie Jefferson: 19:14

Now, the proper way to actually light your cigar is with a torch. Now, a torch will actually take and give you an even burn. That's what you want to do. You want to actually take and do it, get an even burn on your cigar. Because what happens when you're actually lighting your cigar and when you light it up and you take and use a big lighter? You might catch a side of it. You might even actually split the cigar based upon the actual how the burn is taking place. Now, if you're all that in the fat bag of chips and you really, truly want to light your cigar, get cedar sticks. Yes, now most humidors actually line with c. You know what? You're right. You take the cedar sticks and then you light the cedar sticks and that's how you light your cigar. The actual flavor from the actual cedar goes into the cigar.

Jimmie Jefferson: 20:08

Now you don't want the fuel from the big lighter and even from the torch, because the torch, even though it's minute, but it's still there's some fuel that'll come into the cigar. But if you really want to set your cigar off, get you some cedar strips from your humiditor. You can even go to your local cigar store or whatever you want to do and say can I get some cedar sticks? And they actually have them.

Byron B: 20:33

I'm going to have to check the last box of cigars. Isn't it the last box of matches they gave me? Because you know you go to your high-end places to buy your cigars, they give you a box of matches.

Jimmie Jefferson: 20:44

They always give you a box of matches. But if you want to challenge them, ask them to give you some cedar sticks and then you light your cigar. You actually take your torch light the cedar sticks and then take the cedar sticks and light your cigar.

Byron B: 20:58

Oh, I thought you were going to say light the cedar stick on the stove.

Jimmie Jefferson: 21:02

Well, you could do that too, if you still got a gas stove. If you got a gas, though, you know.

Dennis Cotton: 21:10

Right, alright, I have an announcement to make. I go for it, my friend. Now for those of you who will see this show. You're going to wonder why is Dennis Cotton so quiet? I never thought that. I didn't hear that.

Byron B: 21:25

No kidding.

Dennis Cotton: 21:29

I just feel the need to share this with everybody. I am not a cigar smoker. That's fine, that's fine. I love you guys.

Jimmie Jefferson: 21:41

We don't mind you smoking weed. If that's what that man do, leave that man alone.

Dennis Cotton: 21:45

But, guess what though?

Jimmie Jefferson: 21:49

Mr Cotton is a coffee connoisseur.

Byron B: 21:51

As well as a wine connoisseur.

Jimmie Jefferson: 21:53

He's a wine connoisseur, so to all of you ignorant asses that will need to understand some shit. He will be able to educate you.

Dennis Cotton: 22:05

Edumacate. Edumac, you that is actually in the Urban Dictionary. Are you bullshitting me?

Byron B: 22:11

Yes.

Jimmie Jefferson: 22:12

I am. I'm sorry.

Byron B: 22:14

I got to stop saying it.

Jimmie Jefferson: 22:16

Also, too. What we're going to be doing is we're going to have actual venues at vineyards. I was at Travis City Vineyard for my anniversary a few weeks ago. I tell you what it was a hell of a time. So, you know we will do one and there was a sailboat ride. If we ever want to partake on one where we would do the sailboat vineyard, where they would take us through, we would have lunch and everything on the actual sailboat and expand upon there, Okay, I'm down with that.

Byron B: 22:52

We're going to dedicate our next episode to Dennis Cotton, oh yeah.

Jimmie Jefferson: 22:57

Absolutely.

Byron B: 22:57

And we're going to say either your wine or your coffee, which one you want to talk to.

Dennis Cotton: 23:03

I'm going to get right on it. I'm going to get right on it.

Jimmie Jefferson: 23:06

You got to let me know in advance because I'm going to give you a cigar that goes with whatever you bring to the table, I am down with that, I'm glad that you brought that up and everything, because our next show is going to be really interesting because we have some guests that are going to be remote from Ohio the Pink Ladies, the Pink Ladies Cigar Society. They're a fairly large group of ladies that partake in the cigar world, but they also bring a unique blend because they have a blend of how they actually bring their ladies into the cigar world. We'll get a chance to meet them next week and everything else, and then they're going to take and tell us how they all came about.

Byron B: 23:48

Nice, nice, that'll work, that'll work.

Jimmie Jefferson: 23:51

So keep in mind too. You know, one of the things that we're going to try to work on, too, is that we want you guys to actually take and participate on, you know, is actually take in, look at our merchandise, absolutely. You know, we do have our puff and drink glasses.

Byron B: 24:23

We want you guys to take a, you know we do make our on-site appearances.

Jimmie Jefferson: 24:27

We will have a little promo where, if you go in and say, hey, I want a drink with the Puffin Drink boys, you might win a surprise. Yes, you will. Yes, you will, absolutely. So we're hoping that everybody will take the time and go out to our sites, go out to YouTube and then take a look at our shows, of course, and then, on top of that, please subscribe.

Byron B: 24:51

We can't stress it enough Like subscribe, love us.

Jimmie Jefferson: 24:55

We want you to also comment on our shows. We do reply back to you, we actually talk to you. We will take and engage the conversation even further.

Byron B: 25:05

If there's anything you want to see on the show or any kind of our merch that you want, you can also email us at puffanddrinks at gmailcom.

Jimmie Jefferson: 25:13

There you go.

Byron B: 25:17

Just drop us a line. And I want a t-shirt, I want a hat. Hey, we'll make it happen.

Jimmie Jefferson: 25:23

We will reach back out to you, we'll send you a link to it, the whole nine yards. And we also have, for those who are not into the rock glasses, we do have wine glasses as well, I mean we want you to take an indulgence in the show with us as well, but the key is, you know, please watch our show and then take. Make sure that you take and purchase our merchandise, because that is also how we pay for our show, as well, exactly, it keeps us on the air.

Jimmie Jefferson: 25:48

We know that all our fans love us.

Byron B: 25:50

We know they love us.

Jimmie Jefferson: 25:53

We love y'all too. Definitely we want y'all to take and participate and purchase the merchandise. Keep us on the air. Gang leading out. I'm Rodney Q Love. I want you guys to sip slow, sip smooth and sip with us.

Byron B: 26:10

And I'm Byron B and I'm going to rank up one of our old sayings let's see who's blowing smoke.

Jimmie Jefferson: 26:16

All day long. Well, you know, I'm Jimmy Jefferson, and one of the things that we learned from one of our partners is that he always told us, you know he loves this kind of care and all, there we go, there we go.

Dennis Cotton: 26:28

Dennis Cotton and listen here. Whatever you want us to talk about, look, we have a lot of fun, as you can see, but we do talk about the issues in a serious way. So, whatever you want us to talk about, let us know and we will be more than happy to discuss it. You might not like what we say it's our opinion, dammit but we will give you our honest thoughts. No, ditty Minus the ditty, we will give you our honest thoughts.

Byron B: 26:58

Peace out y'all.

Jimmie Jefferson: 27:02

Take care now.

Dennis Cotton: 27:03

My glasses.

Jimmie Jefferson: 27:05

You drink too fast. We need squash on the show. Where's Yeti, we're down.

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