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Scott Reed & Alanna B Season 2 Episode 9

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We celebrate our one-year podcast anniversary by reflecting on the cryptid-hunting adventures that have shaped our journey from Squonkapalooza to exploring the mysterious Chestnut Ridge of Pennsylvania.

• Exploring cryptid conventions and paranormal hotspots across Pennsylvania
• Discovering local legends like Becky's Grave and tracking down the history behind the myths
• Finding hidden gems in small towns like Saltsburg where rivers meet
• Searching for Bigfoot at Hinckston Run and investigating the abandoned town of Livermore
• Experiencing the worst drive-in theater ever with no buttered popcorn and flooded bathrooms
• Meeting experts like Ron Murphy who connect folklore with local history
• Launching "expLORE Nation" to document paranormal locations and local legends
• Finding the best beef jerky at Stonehouse Provisions near Fort Necessity ($52/pound but worth it)
• Planning upcoming comedy shows throughout September and October

Check out GildedTrash.com for our merch, show dates, and to share your own local legends - we want to hear your stories about Miller's Church Road, Becky's Grave, or any strange happenings in your area!


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Speaker 1:

Yeah, we ride and drive, track, talk, talk and go. Just got another line on the mic. Stories unfold.

Speaker 2:

Okay, cool. So it is our first time for you One year. Yep one year.

Speaker 1:

Unbelievable, unbelievable, unbelievable, unbelievable.

Speaker 2:

One year, one year, unbelievable, unbelievable unbelievable, but no, it's hard to believe I was gonna throw together like a whole year thing, but we just did that on new year's years, so instead just want to highlight so, one of the things that I wanted to re-ask you now, since you've been doing comedy for a while do you remember what was on your original rider? No, I don't. Orange Tic Tacs.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, Orange Tic Tacs, that's still one of them.

Speaker 2:

Gallagher's Iced Tea.

Speaker 1:

Still.

Speaker 2:

Whatever the chips are, I don't remember.

Speaker 1:

Gibbles or one of them, who cares, it doesn't have chips.

Speaker 2:

It was the Utz, but it was the.

Speaker 1:

Grandma Utz Barbecue.

Speaker 2:

Grandma Utz, not just regular Utz.

Speaker 3:

Well, now I would like to throw Gibble in the mix.

Speaker 1:

So both Gibble and Grandma. So Mama Gibble and Grandma uts barbecue. Both barbecue, though, and also like 14 pre-rolled blunts. I'd also like 14 pre-rolled blunts, a couple of yinglings Ice cold, ice ice, ice cold Canned. I don't want bottles. Get that fancy shit out of here. Unless they can get me ice cold draft like a little mini keg, then that would be ideal. But I'm willing to compromise and I'll take a couple of cans 12 ouncers too. Not the tall boys, I don't like them, they get warm too quick, that's fair, that's fair.

Speaker 1:

Okay, I should use a koozie. Though I should use a koozie.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you should, I should, I really should. You should use a Gilded Trash Koozie.

Speaker 1:

I should use a Gilded Trash Koozie.

Speaker 2:

The website is back up and running. Yep, I'm so excited.

Speaker 1:

Very happy.

Speaker 2:

It's much simpler. I went with a simpler layout this time. It does get you to all of our socials. It does get you to our YouTube channel, but it's just a simpler. Oh, and it gets you to our merch, which is where the koozies live.

Speaker 1:

You need to pick me one of them up. Yeah, head on out there to GildedTrashcom and pick me one up, get me and keep my beer cold.

Speaker 2:

And then so what gosh? We've done so many things. Is there a highlight that we've talked about this past year?

Speaker 1:

A highlight. Hold on, I got a little pain in my head.

Speaker 2:

Oh, that's not good.

Speaker 1:

You know how I get them.

Speaker 2:

It's that, gallagher's chemical. You just took a big chug of their tea.

Speaker 1:

Now, don't put that hoodoo out there on them. Don't put that hoodoo out there on them Now. I just got one of my little like my. I got them migraine headaches, them demon headaches. You don't know what that's from? No, no, you probably don't know what that's from? No, no, you probably don't. It's from Fletch. And Chevy Chase is pretending. When he's pretending to be the preacher, he's like she gives him headaches, them migraine headaches, and then he's like dude demon's out.

Speaker 2:

I love it. So what was your favorite highlight? Do you think of this past year? That's real tough, I'm sure it may be on the podcast either way, because we talked about everything Except for something that we can't talk about, which is the highlight, but whatever.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, yeah For sure, Whoa for sure, for sure. But we'll get to that. But no, I mean, I don't know, there's been so much. I guess putting together our first shows, that was really a lot, a big milestone, I would say, I mean. But I love it all, though. That's just it. Though I don't view it as like greater than other, I like it all all. I mean, we've had so much fun, yeah, doing wild stuff, like all the thing, and it just keeps getting more fun the more we do. So I'm looking forward to getting out there.

Speaker 2:

Uh, now it's like a whole pandora's box has been open now I know I'm so excited like we're having so much fun because there's just—so we started this thing that I'm referring to as Explore Nation and I'll put it up on the screen. But it's Explore L-O-R-E Nation having a blast with it. But before we get into that, what so? Just a couple funny things that have happened to us over the filming of this podcast. One is that we have switched rooms and chairs and I know, and I'm not quite in my element- yet I'm still getting used to this.

Speaker 1:

I'm not quite in my element, yet I'm still getting used to this. It's a new chair, I'll get there, I'll get there, but it's all new, it's all new. So, yeah, it's different, do you?

Speaker 2:

feel different up there yeah, I do actually, because I feel like I'm not squinting as much because the camera is further away from me, so I don't have the ring light in my face.

Speaker 1:

Back to business.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, we've been moving around the house More to come on that because we got some super secret kind of things in the works that we're doing with the house.

Speaker 1:

There's a reason we're doing a lot of house stuff that we can't say but we will. But we're doing a lot of house stuff. We're getting new windows, we're doing a lot of moving and shifting, shifting and moving, making them night moves, baby.

Speaker 2:

So then so, but the funniest thing that happened to us like I think it was episode one was that your chair broke. So we had two of those chairs originally and yours broke on camera that was fantastic. Welcome to your life.

Speaker 1:

Where's my mark Whoa?

Speaker 2:

Oh shit, where we go Is the chair broke already. Yep God, oh my God, do you want to sit in the desk chair? Do you want me to sit in the desk chair?

Speaker 1:

Unboxing of a team chair.

Speaker 2:

That wasn't a team chair, that was a fucking Amazon chair.

Speaker 1:

That was Fat Guy's worst nightmare.

Speaker 2:

So there was the chair incident, and then the biggest, I would say, technical glitch of the year was me forgetting to record an entire episode of Scott's Game.

Speaker 1:

I honestly forgot about that until you brought it up, but that was horrifying. That was because it was so good and you'll never get it back. That's one of things like because I don't I mean we rehashed some of the stuff we talked about, but like there was stuff in there that was gold, jerry gold and uh, it's lost out there in the ether somewhere. I feel like I'm in some sort of weird world.

Speaker 2:

I know Like, first of all, this is a good angle of our house, which is, as I stated earlier, oh hey, we're sitting together.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, something happened. That's funny because we'd never done that in the middle of a podcast, but it is still the same day, it's only five minutes later, but we had some super technical difficulties.

Speaker 2:

We think it's five minutes later. I don't know. Maybe we time jumped, maybe we did, maybe forces wanted us to stay together this time.

Speaker 1:

Maybe to learn how to do it yeah.

Speaker 2:

Because it's way different. It is way different.

Speaker 1:

Because I'm usually, because I like to look at you when we're talking, like we're at a thing. You know what I mean.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

And so it's a lot of this.

Speaker 2:

We'll get used to it.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it's fine, it doesn't matter.

Speaker 2:

It's just for this episode. Who knows what the next one will bring us. Maybe we'll actually set up the studio quickly.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but this is just so we can bring it to them. Yeah, because we don't want to miss out. We don't want you to miss out on our bullshit.

Speaker 2:

We don't want to lose valuable recording time either.

Speaker 1:

Right, we structure our schedule to get this in. So if we don't do it now, then that just starts a domino effect. We've gotten to. We've hit some of the dominoes before. Yeah, we have, and it's it gets we hit dominoes that turned into three-month-long breaks.

Speaker 2:

But we're here now and you're stuck with us, and this past weekend we started out in Cambria City in Johnstown, pennsylvania, at.

Speaker 1:

Oh, squonkypalooza, wonkypalooza, I'm a squonky palooza, I'm a squonky palooza.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I wore my shirt yesterday. So we talked about cryptoteology, Cryptoteology. We talked about that in the last time. Yeah, they made this shirt. They did not make this shirt, but we saw them at Kecksburg. We bought some shirts there. We saw them again at Sponkapalooza, bought some shirts there. So, like, I'm like obsessed and I found out they are local and they print at I think it's american ego printing right here in downtown johnstown.

Speaker 1:

So you gotta love johnstown, things like when they get everybody involved yeah in the sense of, like, these people are from the johnstown area, right, they? Uh, so they love and they love crips. So they then they use a Johnstown area Right, so they love and they love Crips. So then they use the Johnstown business to make their shirts that they designed. Yep, it's just a beautiful thing.

Speaker 2:

Yes, none of that internet stuff and our merch is from the internet.

Speaker 1:

But Nobody's merch. This is probably where you can get private t-shirts.

Speaker 2:

But the thing about it is like they have some really cool local haunts. So as I was rummaging through their sales then I found a Becky's Grave.

Speaker 1:

If you guys are from the Johnstown area, you've heard of Becky's Grave, right, and I had never heard of Becky's Grave. I was like she's flipping out over this t-shirt and I'm like who flipping out over this t-shirt and I'm like what, who? Her mom's name is Becky. So I had no idea. I was like Becky's got a grave, so apparently it's the same.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so apparently Becky was a Rebecca was her name and we actually went and we found the actual grave that she was buried at. But there's also the alleged lore, the haunt where she was buried. I don't know, there was witch trials and there was all these things, but the reality is her house burnt down and she died in the fire and she wasn't buried or hung on the property. There's an actual grave you can go visit. I'll share the location with you, but we want to know more, because I remember growing up and that was scary to talk about.

Speaker 1:

I want to hear the stories. I don't know what she remembers. I mean, like we want to talk to somebody that's like heard some good stories. I want to know what they are, because I don't know what to be If you're going to a scary place and you don't know the scary story. It's not scary, I love it. Why does my? Why is it doing that? It keeps doing it.

Speaker 2:

I'm like yeah, maybe you, and, oh my god, so what? Um, so there was another. Oh, I know. So obviously there are so many vendors right at these places and we love to discover vendors. We did discover a vendor who we should have known about because they're from Greencastle Pennsylvania.

Speaker 1:

Which is where I grew up, and it was called Chaotic Sweets. Chaotic Sweets, and let me tell you something about these cookies boy. There goes that, bro. Let me tell you something about these cookies boy. Okay, I can't control it.

Speaker 2:

I feel it.

Speaker 1:

Take it over, okay, okay, chaotix, this is chaotic, chaotix, please, but these cookies, they're like. I don't even know if you can call it a cookie. Right, it's beyond a cookie.

Speaker 2:

So the one that I had? Oh no, we both tried that one. It was more like a donut cookie cake.

Speaker 1:

It felt like it had a honey bun stuffed inside of it. It was that what it got me sick? No, but it did.

Speaker 2:

It had a honey bun inside and the one that my mom had tried. It had a green icing on it. She said that that tasted exactly like a cinnamon swirl bun thing.

Speaker 1:

Now I do want to say this, I do want to say this so, at the place, it's too late to want to say no, no, so Chaotic Sweets. At so chaotic sweets At this stand. They had descriptions and titles for each of these things, right, and I should have took a picture of which ones I was buying, but I just picked ones that I thought would be good. Right, and Stop it, I'm sick of it. Stop making, I can't see. Stop looking at yourself. So I know I'm going to have to just look at you the whole time. No, so this. So, like you said, the first one that you tried that we gave, I know the first one we gave to your mom, yeah, and she said that, like you described, Like a Cinnabon.

Speaker 1:

The first one that we also had was like now they all have, they have many things inside of it, so there's also chunks and candies and things in there that like, like I said, I couldn't identify.

Speaker 2:

It's literally called chaotic sweet.

Speaker 1:

And it is chaotic. It's chaotic, but that second one we tried, the chocolate one. That was fudge. It was like it tasted like it was a cookie, allegedly, but it tasted like a cupcake. It had the moisture and the density of a cupcake.

Speaker 2:

Almost a brownie, but not plain. Right, right, not that dense Right, but not a cookie either, not like a not a cookie texture, they're indescribable and they're all that kind of texture like you cannot describe their texture, but they're good and I'm not you.

Speaker 1:

I'll say I'm not usually one for, like, decadent sweets. You know that, like I'm not, I I mean I'm for decadent food, but not usually with the sweets. It's usually too much for me and I thought that this might be because it looks like it would be and it is, but it's not overpowering like I expected. It's very well balanced. It's balanced, very well balanced, so maybe not so chaotic after all.

Speaker 2:

And they do fundraisers with their suite. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, check it out, you can go to their store, but they also, like she said, support fundraisers, stuff like that. So it's a great little thing, yeah, so shout out to them, yeah that was cool.

Speaker 1:

We were talking about vendors. Of course we bought and we're suckers, I'll admit it. I buy everything. She does too. You'll see us, they see us coming them up. That's how we got windows. We're getting in windows. We got stuck by Anderson windows at the place At Squonkapalooza. To be fair, we had already talked about it, we were going to do it anyway. It just so happened.

Speaker 2:

They happened to be there. The universe threw young Jose, was that? His name, something like that In our face and we like to support young kids who are doing that like sales thingy-dingy Sometimes, not always Because we've been there, we've sold things, we've been telemarketers. So I just wanted to give them like the little sign-up thingy. So I just wanted to give them like the little sign up thingy. It literally progressed from zero to a $500 a month payment in 10 seconds.

Speaker 1:

But anyway, it's not that much and don't be putting that out there like that.

Speaker 2:

But anyway, regardless of any of that, we also bought that same weekend $100 worth of meat snacks at different festivals and things, but not just the festivals let's talk about. Let's talk about that jerky boy. Let's talk about this jerky.

Speaker 1:

Stonehouse Provisions. Pretty sure that's what Stonehouse Provisions butcher shop on Route 40 near Fort Necessity, like right down from Nemecol and Resort and stuff. Let me tell you about this beef. This is now, mind you, I'm going to sell you my jerky credentials right here. I'm a man, that's me and I've been eating jerky my whole life, you know that You're a man out there.

Speaker 2:

You eat jerky. You're eating jerky my whole life.

Speaker 1:

You know that You're a man out there. You eat jerky, you're eating jerky. We all eat jerky. We know our goddamn jerky and I know it and I make jerky. I try other people's jerky, I buy jerky, I love jerky, and when I say that this is hands down the best jerky that I've ever eaten in my entire life?

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

I mean, it has all the elements that you look for in a classic grape jerky and it's go down there, get yourself some.

Speaker 2:

So I can't say the word because I hate the word. But it's not dry. That's all I'm going to say.

Speaker 1:

It's not dry when you open it, it's like soft and tender.

Speaker 2:

Yes, we'll go with tender.

Speaker 1:

Because it's not formed. You know it's not a jerky that's chopped or formed. This is real cuts of steak. But what they do they must use like great cuts because it's so tender, so tender, so tender and so flavorful and the more you chew it you just want to suck every little juicy, freaking morsel out of every strand that's how he feels about jerky.

Speaker 2:

but yeah, so we, that is what $52 a pound? Now, we're not $52 a pound people.

Speaker 1:

No.

Speaker 2:

He just happened to. He just happened to.

Speaker 1:

I want a little bit of money at the casino. It's large, right, but what I'm telling you, though, is normal beef jerky even like the worst jerky, like Jack Link's or whatever, a pound is going to cost you like $25. If you go to Walmart and buy a pound of it, it's going to be like $25. Your more premium jerky that you see, like your handmade stuff, maybe like a wild bill from the jar, you're talking in the range of like $35 to $38 a pound. For a decent jerky, this is $52, but it is worth every. You don't realize how much a pound of jerky is either.

Speaker 2:

Right right.

Speaker 1:

We were eating on it for five days.

Speaker 2:

Oh my gosh.

Speaker 1:

And if we'd been a little bit responsible, we'd have had it more than that.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but I mean, I ate it as a. We had it half of the summer, yeah, on the way down. You, I ate it as a lunch. We had a half of it, yeah, on the way down.

Speaker 1:

You can eat it as a fine cuisine. Yeah, it's like it is a lunch. You just eat it as a steak for lunch.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I mean, it was just phenomenal. So we had the jerky vendors and then the t-shirt vendors. Oh, we actually sell speakers this time. We don't normally stick around for that kind of stuff, but we really want to learn who the key group of people who speak around these parts are. So we stayed and we listened.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it was very good, Ron Murphy. Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Oh my gosh, it was great. It was really great.

Speaker 1:

If you get to see Ron Murphy speak, if you're interested in cryptology or anything like to do with lore, there was lore.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

In this area. Well, I say this area, you listen to wherever, where we live. Where we live, he's like an expert. Western Pennsylvania, the Chestnut Ridge.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but he threw a lot of fun facts in there, a lot of pop culture type cross-references, and he's funny, like he should be a comic.

Speaker 1:

He's a great speaker. He introduces all the elements that you need, including humor, but what I love about is he weaves stories, like you said, of culture, history. Yeah.

Speaker 2:

It's not relatable. You're not just listening to somebody spew facts about some imaginary creature, you're getting like a, yeah, it's fun, it's good. So that was cool. And then we learned about a couple of new podcasts, so Strangeology was the one right.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, we did listen to some of it. That was good stuff.

Speaker 2:

That was so Strangeology. I'm going to give that dude a lot of credit. He's very well produced, he has a ton of episodes, he's a great interviewer, so I mean he's obviously well established. But we also did check out a newer podcast. I think they have a lot of episodes, but they were speakers. Yeah, they were also speakers. They're called Cryptids of the Corn.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, Cryptids of the Corn. Go check it out. We did as well.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, we listened to a little bit of one of their episodes as well. So, yeah, we're learning guys. It's a fun experience. Experience. We want to try everything. So um. So we talked about checking out becky's grave. I got some footage of that. I want to hear y'all's stories. Go to gillettrashcom and drop us some information. Let us know what your experience was with Becky's Grave or any lore around it If you're from Pennsylvania.

Speaker 1:

Actually forget that If you're from anywhere.

Speaker 2:

Anywhere, just tell us, your story. We'll make our way out eventually.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, we'll check it out. Tell us about what's going on where you live, like little hauntings, little local legends. We want to hear it. All hauntings, little local legends. We want to hear it all um, because that's what we like to do.

Speaker 2:

We travel to places all the time just to look at one thing yeah, I mean, and now we can combine some of our favorite things and bring it back to you guys. So, um, oh, that's what else. We did the drive.

Speaker 1:

We went around. So we went looking for a Bigfoot at what's it called Hinkston Run. That supposedly is a Bigfoot crypto. What's crypto theology? They have a shirt, a Hinkston Run Bigfoot shirt. Go check it out, go get it. But yeah, hinkston Run is a local little stream. There's like a dam there and a lake and there's a lot of Bigfoot stories out there. A lot of Bigfoot sightings, supposedly some footprints. One ate a small child, citing supposedly some footprints. One ate a small child. But no, they're supposedly out there. We went looking for them. We didn't find them.

Speaker 2:

No, but I did find a piece of coal. Well, I mean, there's coal all along there, but I brought a piece back with me because they wouldn't let me put it down, and that's a whole other story about.

Speaker 1:

Using it for makeup, making shadowy eyes.

Speaker 2:

You can. That's how they did it back in the day. I'd love to see if it's that core, different core. That's what they said. I don't want to just go putting that shit on my eyes and then all of a sudden I get that.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it's cold, oh my gosh.

Speaker 2:

Oh my gosh, Trying to get off the roll. That sounds like a PSA here in Pennsylvania we're trying to get off the roll by fracking and then the next day.

Speaker 1:

So we talked about Mr Ron Murphy. Mr Ron Murphy was just recently on a show that I like to call Beyond Skinwalker Ranch, and that's what it is called. That's what I call it.

Speaker 2:

But I like to call that Saturday Night.

Speaker 1:

Live so, but he was recently featured on an episode that they did. They were out in Kecksburg, but they weren't just in Kecksburg, they were talking about another place. On the Chestnut Ridge up near Blairsville there's a old town, livermore yes, livermore, and it was like there's a lot of local legends around there strange lights. You can walk out. We went out there. You can walk out on these bridges, all these bridges. There's like a trail that you can walk and it crosses. So the Connemara river does one of these and they got a walking trail that goes right through the middle of it. So you just keep walking over these bridges and you know what I mean, where the river is. It's very cool.

Speaker 2:

It was cool. I mean I only walked about 400 feet, but it was the longest I've walked in months.

Speaker 1:

It was great she has no concept of actual distance or measurement. Just always remember that Listen.

Speaker 2:

the universe gave me a very technical brain. I can't have all the components of it.

Speaker 1:

But yeah, no, so they supposedly. There's a lot of strange lights out there. There's a lot of people see things. It's part of the Chestnut Ridge. We were out there checking it out. While we were out there, we made a discovery.

Speaker 2:

Oh my gosh, I don't even know how we landed there, but we just drove into this town and you just drive the town and then at the end of the road, boom, the river, and it's gorgeous there. It is so pretty, I mean it's just—.

Speaker 1:

You want to talk about a great little Pennsylvania, quaint little town for like a little just quick getaway Salzburg. So it's where the Loyal Hannah Creek empties into the carnival.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, yeah, and like that's the other thing about this whole looking for paranormal cryptid thing or whatever is that we're discovering all these beautiful little tucked away. Nobody wants you to stop their towns because they want to keep it all to themselves.

Speaker 1:

Towns and nature spots, like little secret hiking trails like that other one, and stuff like that was absolutely amazing. Or even if you just want to take a ride in your car. We like doing that too. We just drive and we just drive around, look at some stuff. If we see something cool, we stop.

Speaker 2:

Um, that's fun too, and these towns are great for stuff like that yeah, I mean, and then the dams too, like because tucked in between all of this river stuff, you, we got output footage up. We got a really good footage of the one dam just open.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, there's two dams, there's the Lohana Dam and then the Connemaw Dam, and they have a reservoir and they like.

Speaker 2:

Let's just let the guy talk about it.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, let's let the guy talk about it.

Speaker 3:

As a result of the St Patrick's Day flood of 1936, the Flood Control Act was passed by Congress authorizing the construction of Connemon Dam. Construction began in 1949. The dam became functional in 1952. However, september 18, 1953, marks the official dedication and entrance into service.

Speaker 1:

We pressed the buttons so you could hear this.

Speaker 2:

We pressed buttons for you because we like to explore for you.

Speaker 1:

Yes.

Speaker 2:

I'm being such a toll right now.

Speaker 1:

No, I'm just kidding. And then we've been to the Loyal Hanedam too. We were there before. We didn't realize it at the time, but it's just up the road a little bit.

Speaker 2:

I'm pretty sure it was the last time we were at Hexburg. Goof it off. I'm pretty sure it was the last time we were at Hexburg it might have been, I don't remember either.

Speaker 1:

But yeah, I mean, we talk about it all the time.

Speaker 2:

We're talking about it again Pennsylvania's great treasures there's so many so many it's a wealth of resources and I don't think everybody realizes it it's the West Virginia of the North.

Speaker 1:

I like to call it Because it's just filled with woods and hills and good folks.

Speaker 2:

We discovered a super secret water spot in West Virginia that nobody fucking told us about either.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, because I think, because it's like rich. It's so weird. But Cheat Lake nobody ever told us about this place. It's just beautiful. Why isn't it advertised, right? Nobody's talking about this.

Speaker 2:

Like when I was growing up I didn't have friends that were, like my family's, going out to Cheat Lake for the weekend and you did have friends who would go to other expensive places like indian lake, indian lake, deep creek. I had grown up I had friends that went to deep creek. That's rich right.

Speaker 1:

These are all places that like we didn't vacation there, but like we still knew about them and you still knew people that did. But i've've never heard it cheat like Never. They cheated on you. They cheated us right out of it because it's beautiful.

Speaker 2:

It is gorgeous, although we didn't explore enough because I didn't see any like dockside restaurants or anything like that. I'm not saying there was not any, I'm just saying I didn't see it.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, we didn't see them, we weren't there. We just we stumbled apart. I'm just saying I didn't see him. Yeah, we didn't see him, we weren't there. We just we stumbled apart. Yeah, we weren't prepared for it. It came out of nowhere, just driving down the road, bang there, it is Tough. Acting to an acting.

Speaker 2:

One on one side, water on the other. There was, everybody was in the water. They were. They were ragged. It looked like you were up someplace called Martha's no no space? I don't know.

Speaker 1:

Zipping around at Martha's.

Speaker 2:

Vineyard. They were speed boating and kayaking and floating all in the same strip of water.

Speaker 1:

Anyways, that was very cool.

Speaker 2:

Very cool, very cool, very cool. But before we got there, we started doing some exploration down around what Uniontown, pennsylvania?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that's how this all started. We went to a couple places First off. Did you know, did you know, that the Silence of the Lambs house is in Periopolis? I forgot how much we do.

Speaker 2:

I forgot that I have a video of what's his name.

Speaker 1:

Buffalo Bill, buffalo, buffalo Bill's house. Now let me tell you something, a little bit about Buffalo Bill's house. Okay, it's like on an island it is. It's like weird to get to and it's like on an island it is.

Speaker 2:

It's like on this, it's like weird to get to and it's like on this little thing and like it's on a jetty, like yeah, it's private property, but they do have a little placard outside so you're allowed to take pictures and stuff, just don't bother the people speaking of awesome, like abandoned towns, what was the name of that town?

Speaker 1:

Dawson, dawson, dawson. Yeah, right, on the Yawka Ganey, you can like it's super secret. I don't even want to put it out there, but nobody listens to us so it doesn't matter, nobody. That's going to be triaculity-ac. That's not our customer base, no, but what I'm saying is like Ohio Pound stuff. It's super busy to get on the yacht and a lot of those drop-offs and stuff can be, but there was like nobody there. It was like a real cool show place. Yeah, it was really good and it sounds like it's almost like it's an old west town. It's like a ghost town, right? Very weird, right.

Speaker 2:

It's all right, like there are definitely pockets of places out there where you can understand why people are seeing Bigfoot, and it's not because they're crazy, it's not because they're drinking moonshine although I'm sure they are it is just literally because there's a whole energy out there. That's.

Speaker 1:

It's a chestnut bridge baby. It's vibrating like the Skinwalker Ranch. It's a spiritual. I don't know if spiritual is the right, but it's alive. It is alive. The place is alive with energy and things moving around.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

There's something going on there.

Speaker 2:

I don't know if somebody's already coined this, but if they haven't hear me out, I'm coining it now. Fuck salt life Ridge, life Ridge, life Ridge life.

Speaker 1:

I feel like that's because we know Ridge. It's very weird?

Speaker 2:

I don't think no, but you literally talk about the Chestnut Ridge 40 times a day. You talk about Ridge Ridge first, regular Ridge, like once, twice, three times a week. No, we talk about him a couple times a week because he's always got a show. We're always like, oh, where's Ridge? He's always. Oh, speaking of Ridge.

Speaker 1:

That's like a where's Waldo, Where's Rich yeah where's Rich?

Speaker 2:

You never know. You never know, he just he's always.

Speaker 1:

He's putting up comedy shows. He'll do it anywhere. You don't even know, you could just be walking along. Bam, we did buy a hat, a comedy farm hat. He's got some good merch.

Speaker 2:

They're really well made. Yeah, I like it. I just haven't worn it yet because I'm always talking shit and I don't want to get him in here, as if Nike doesn't get in trouble for everybody that's wearing a.

Speaker 1:

Nike hat. Right right, he can't be responsible for everybody that's wearing a comedy farm hat, or should he? That's the real question that needs to be asked.

Speaker 2:

So we ended up watching what was the episode where we got the idea to go out near Union Town and Derry and stuff.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it's called Finding.

Speaker 2:

Bigfoot, is that the one with the two girls, and they were out at Union Town somewhere.

Speaker 1:

At Union Town out Union Town way somewhere Out Union Town way Out.

Speaker 2:

Union Town way Out Union Town way and what was the guy's name that was the head of that show? I don't know.

Speaker 1:

We don't really watch that show. We only watched it because of the episodes.

Speaker 2:

And I felt bad for those girls because first of all, that Rachel lady.

Speaker 1:

I tried to like tell them. She said listen, I know that you're lying, she's like.

Speaker 2:

I know it's a costume, like there is. I was about to say, babe, no, you didn't do it, she didn't. But there is better ways to engage people who think they've seen something without just like bursting their bubble. These were young teenagers. We don't want to prevent that. I don't think they were hoaxed. They really believed it. I don't think it was.

Speaker 1:

I'm not ruling it out that it was a hoax on them.

Speaker 2:

Right, but I believe that they believed it.

Speaker 1:

But I believe that they believed it Right.

Speaker 2:

Yeah Right, agree.

Speaker 1:

I'm a believer in their belief. I'm a believer in their belief.

Speaker 2:

I would like to do a. Where Are they Now? Because that was 10 years ago. Have they continued exploring? Have they seen more Bigfoot? I don't know. Get in contact with us if you do, if you know them, but we'll be out and about that way because, like they did, that town hall right In Uniontown.

Speaker 1:

And like it was a— and the answering buddy, everybody at the town hall raised their hand.

Speaker 2:

Right, there was hundreds of people in the state theater and like they were all like, like raising their hands to like give a story. Um, so I mean they only cover three of them on the show.

Speaker 1:

there's hundreds or more people out there who have stories I know I joke about it and I call this area the skinwalker rancher, pennsylvania, but it really is. There's portals, portal stories, bigfoot stories, ufo stories, paranormal they all go hand in hand and, matter of fact, this brings up an excellent point. You can go get ron murphy's book about the goblin universe of the chestnut Excellent read, by the way.

Speaker 2:

Excellent read there you go, but there's some kitsch along the way. There's some fun stuff. So we stopped in Derry Pennsylvania and we got some cute pictures of the Derry Bigfoot statue.

Speaker 1:

We found a red balloon.

Speaker 2:

He is not even joking either, like here's. The worst part about that is we were going to Derry and I forgot that it was set in another Derry, not Derry, pennsylvania. We were going to the Derry area, and so when we left there we were driving down the highway. Not there, but there was a red balloon just laying in the middle of the road, just weaving and bobbing. It wasn't trying to move. It wasn't moving with the like when cars were passing it. It wasn't trying to jump around, it was just stuck to the center. I'm not even lying. Oh my God, my hair is shaving up so but what's in Derry, though?

Speaker 1:

What is in Derry? I thought I said that to you.

Speaker 2:

I know I said that already.

Speaker 1:

That did we are we going to put in our pictures? That was amazing.

Speaker 2:

I thought I didn't even hear that part you must have time jumped and skipped over that. Scott has a click remote. He clicks past some of the shit I say and then forgets.

Speaker 1:

I did have a time jump one time and come to find out it was in the Chestnut Ridge and I didn't even know it.

Speaker 2:

Not at the time, he didn't.

Speaker 1:

No, at the time I had no idea that it was. I didn't. I knew that it happened. Obviously I time jumped. I was driving home from work and all of a sudden there's like 15 minutes gone and I'm on a different road and the radio did a little and I don't know where it went and I could not place what happened. That's what's weird is like I'm totally gone.

Speaker 2:

And he told me when he got home and I believed him.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and I just like it was so profound and weird, right, it was just and it's the only time it's ever happened to me in that manner and come to find out years later that happens to people out there.

Speaker 2:

It's a. Thing.

Speaker 1:

It's a. Thing.

Speaker 2:

Portals and aliens and UFOs and Bigfoots. So our adventures then took us closer to Uniontown, away from Derry, and we went down to. It is called gosh Quaker Cemetery, outside of Minneapolis. No, it's called the Quaker Friends. Quaker Friends, quaker Friends. It is a cemetery that is allegedly wracked with paranormal People crying, children laughing. So we were on our way up there and just as we were about to run, it was like a sharp, sharp, sharp right going up to get up to but coming down, almost ready to make the sharp right, my camera turns off. I tested everything no battery glitch, no button. I couldn't replicate it. I've tried To be fair. I researched it. It is a known glitch with the iPhone Pro Max, so we'll go with that.

Speaker 1:

However, I was going to say classic Skinwalker rant.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, exactly Like. That's the thing about it and I'm going to keep saying it. Ron Murphy has turned me on to the phrase woo. I do not want to be woo-wee. Like things happen, I'm going to log them. But there are natural explanations for a lot of things, especially technology. Right, and I'm a statistical analyst, analyst, analyst. I can't say that right ever. I just say I'm a tech person, I'm a tech person, I'm a tech person. I can usually attribute something back to its good root cause and not paranormal, but it's still kind of whenever it happens in a place like that where you're expecting something like that to happen.

Speaker 1:

Right, it was just sort of coincidental where it happened, if you understand what I'm saying, yeah, for sure.

Speaker 2:

And then we get up there and it's surrounded by barbed wire. You can't get in. So we want to see if we can arrange a tour. So more to come on that, because I would really like to just make sure that we're covering the actual history of the place.

Speaker 1:

Yes, it's an old Quaker, meeting house.

Speaker 2:

Right, and his family is Quaker-meaning people. Yeah, they all Were they.

Speaker 1:

I don't think we were anti-Quaker.

Speaker 2:

What are you talking about? Like on Ancestrycom, like all your family came in through Philadelphia and Quaker meeting stuff. That was all your family, not mine. More to come, I have paperwork. I usually drop our seeds but regardless of that, yeah, friends Creek is Quakers. Your family settled Friends Creek.

Speaker 1:

I don't think they were Quakers, though I'm saying I'm pretty sure that they were. They were like what do you call it? I can't think of the word. There's a word Puritans, no, but it's a different. They were like early Lutheran, like early that stuff. Like the Protestant Reformation, like stuff. Okay, okay, the Protestant Reformation-like stuff.

Speaker 2:

Okay, okay, now I need to love my ancestry because my brain's remembering something different. But regardless of all that, the Quakers didn't have a habit of marking their graves. It was part of their simplicity. So there are over 500 graves that are not marked. That's interesting. Yeah, that's interesting.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that's interesting.

Speaker 2:

But there are also marked graves and the chapel had been rebuilt because it had been destroyed. But even the rebuilt chapel, I think, was rebuilt in the late 1800s. So there's like a lot of alleged spooky, scary kind of haunty things there. There's like a lot of alleged spooky, scary kind of haunty things there. There's allegedly a note inside the chapel that if you read it you will be cursed or something bad will happen to you. So I mean there's good lore around it. It's definitely worth exploring. It's outside of Periopolis, pennsylvania, but you can't get in. So you got to know somebody. So we're going to figure that one out. But again, I would like to bring the history too, absolutely.

Speaker 1:

I mean, because that's the beauty of it, of this, is you get to experience. It's no fun to go and just experience one part of it.

Speaker 2:

Right. I don't care if it's haunted or not. Now I want to know about that. I honestly feel like we owe it to history to talk to anybody who's still available to talk about it and get it documented and recorded.

Speaker 1:

Well, it gives you the context of where a lot of this stuff comes from. And back to Ron Murphy, he does a lot of that, connecting where it's like, where did these stories originate? We have this story about this ghost of this thing, but why? What is the history of the area? What led people to think that these people were crazy or what? Not these people, but I'm saying it on any story but, like, what led to the events that people started telling these stories? Right, you know what I mean. Like, was it maybe to keep people away from a certain area?

Speaker 2:

or Right, that's exactly it. Like I said last episode about the moonshine, stills like some of that lore in Appalachia came from that. Like moonshine.

Speaker 1:

Oh, absolutely. When you don't want somebody to know what you're doing, it's super easy to make up a story to keep people out of that part of the world If you don't want people going in there and finding your whiskey. Still, you're going to make up this and maybe you even take it a step further. Maybe you dress up and put like things and do it to scare people, keep them out of there because you don't want pride eyes.

Speaker 2:

Right. But is that a one zero Tuesday Right? Because the overall vast experience of many people not everybody was moonshining or had something to protect.

Speaker 1:

And I also think with that. I think those people were probably just using already existing folklore, Right.

Speaker 2:

To try to ward people off. That's exactly it. They just adopted it as part of their security regimen.

Speaker 1:

Now, that made how some of these stories became popular, right right, but the stories didn't originate with that Right that's exactly it, yeah.

Speaker 2:

No, that's a great call out. I love that. So, on the flip side of it, though, we tried out another folklore, and that bust Zero Nothing, so that was called the Gates of Hell. The Gates of Hell. Cue up.

Speaker 1:

Alan Jackson, but we went looking for him. They were supposedly at this place in this field.

Speaker 2:

We ran the whole length of Tent Road twice and did not find no damn gates of hell.

Speaker 1:

No gates. What I think happened is somebody bought the property, tore the gates down because they weren't important and put up their mailbox.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, there's a lot of new construction in that area, but regardless of that, there was nothing spooky scary about that region. That 10th road Again, unless we got to the wrong road somehow, and there was two, I don't think. I don't think. We looked, we looked. There's no, the gates of hell. We're giving that a zero on the creepiness scale. Oh wait, we can't take his stuff.

Speaker 1:

What was that called? I'm not even going to say it. What do you give that on the woogie boogie scale?

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, we'll think of a meter for these things, for something like that.

Speaker 1:

But if you do want to speaking of, because Ozzy did just die.

Speaker 2:

Right.

Speaker 1:

While we both love Ozzy's music, I want to give a shout out to Ozzy and not the star of the Osbournes, but Ozzy, the reality TV show that he matured into. Right, because Ozzy and Jack's world detour, speaking of like traveling and history, yeah, they were doing what we were. We're doing yeah, just with more money, that's yeah, with and resources and friends and contacts, imagine. But if you want to get an idea of what we would do if we had those connections, watch our austin Jack's World Detour. It's a great show.

Speaker 2:

That's exactly it.

Speaker 1:

And then also another one of my favorite shows the Osbournes Want to Believe.

Speaker 2:

I love that show.

Speaker 1:

It started off during COVID and they just so. Jack Osbournes, who you know is very into the paranormal I love his paranormal specials that he does, like the ones where they run around UFOs, bigfoots, and he tries to convince his parents. He shows them videos from around the Internet of supposed aliens, aliens, ghosts, whatever. All this stuff right. And then they have to decide what they, sharon and Ozzy Osbourne, decide what they think about the videos Right, bull lightning, bull Right, bull lightning, bull lightning, bull lightning. It's bull lightning Jack.

Speaker 2:

Oh, Sharon, it's not bull lightning. Oh well, because it's our case, so good. It's so good to watch it. And it's so endearing too, like when they're playing with the animals and stuff and you can tell when Jack's getting a little over their craziness. But I mean it's so. I love the dynamic of that film. It's really good.

Speaker 1:

Auti truly is beloved.

Speaker 2:

He, is he really, oh my god, he's just a good guy.

Speaker 1:

Right to darkness down the mountain.

Speaker 2:

So then we had a little bit more time to kill and we drove on down to Morgantown. Um, just because, not because it's paranormal, just because I don't know if we got. Morgantown yeah, wvu. I actually got accepted to WVU and didn't go when I should have, but I wouldn't have met baby you never know what might happen you did totally you might have been going to WVU too yeah, you never know.

Speaker 1:

You never know what might happen. But now this all brings us.

Speaker 2:

I don't even want to talk about it. I'm so pissed off. You know that we've talked before.

Speaker 1:

You know that we love going places. You know that we love going to drive-in movie theaters. Specifically, we've been to what probably 20 different drive-in movie theaters.

Speaker 2:

Last time I checked we were well. Last night should have made 18 different ones.

Speaker 1:

Never had a bad experience. I mean some okay ones, yes, but never one that was like.

Speaker 2:

Not collectively across the board. No, no.

Speaker 1:

Not where we would be like I hate that place. I never want to go back there again. No, but we found one.

Speaker 2:

Unfortunately, because I did a whole TikTok video on this earlier, I don't want to join the swamp on this one. But like seriously, I I'm all for business owners. I want to give small business owners every chance to do well, to come up out of holes, whatever it is. If I had resources, my show would be fixing drive-in movie theaters.

Speaker 1:

And this one needs fixing. It does they need something? Because, first off, we've talked about this before it's a cardinal sin. Who doesn't have butter for their popcorn? In what world are we living in, folks? These are basic human rights. It just sounds so obscene to me, absurd. It'd be like. If you're like, yeah, I'm starting a Christian church, but we're not going to talk about Jesus, you know, it's like it doesn't make any sense.

Speaker 2:

It's just like America, scott, we deserve popcorn with butter.

Speaker 1:

The popcorn wasn't even heated. No, it didn't have butter.

Speaker 2:

So first of all, you didn't catch this, but when we went in to peep the menu real quick, all the popcorn was in big-ass yellow garbage bags, already popped, probably already seasoned. Like you could tell. It was like industrial, like they bought it like that. It's not like they were pre-popping it and stuffing it in these weird—no, this was already made, bought to order.

Speaker 1:

They went down to Walmart picked up a big bag of popcorn that you buy for $4.99, but they bought the big, big bag.

Speaker 2:

It was pre-soldered, they put it so they have the kettle machine. They have two of them, two kettle machines Just for show. Just for show, it's there to warm the stale garbage bag popcorn that they were serving.

Speaker 1:

And then to not even offer a butter topping.

Speaker 2:

Right, like, at least mask that shit. I need some fucking fat to drown that. Oh my god, I was so mad.

Speaker 1:

I don't know what world we're living in, where you can't afford that congealed mess that they turned into the oil that they put on popcorn. It's like.

Speaker 2:

I know Orville Redenbachers is expensive, but you could buy the cheap house for some of that squirty shit.

Speaker 1:

We will say we know for a fact that it wasn't just a glitch. They weren't out of it Because the car in front of us he said come on over here. He had a mason jar. He said come on over here and step out this shine jar boy. Look at that there bud. Yeah, that's that liquid gold butter Butter. Yeah, for that hoo-hoo. It's made from corn, for corn. But no, he did, he had it in the mason jar like it was moonshine. He was protecting it. He said you get my butter boy. But they brought their own butter. So that tells me they've been there before. They know the butter situation. People should not be bringing their own butter to the movies. Although shout out to them because stay ahead of the game.

Speaker 2:

Right, I mean, if you know, you know right. Well, and it wasn't just that.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, these are minor things. I could have forgiven all of that.

Speaker 2:

All of that they it was cash only and we did not know that it was not on when we looked them up. I mean it could be, maybe it's on the website and I missed it, but it should be flashing in big, bold letters.

Speaker 1:

No, or cash only. Normally place it when the drive-ins have cash only. They have signs out front. They have signs at the snack bar they have. Some of them have ATMs there for you to use. They did no signs. It's not on the ticket thing. It's not anywhere that they don't accept cards, which I'm not again. This is not a major issue. Not a major issue.

Speaker 2:

In and of itself. So we've talked about this. They've got stale popcorn. That's not pot there. They got no butter, no ATM cash. Only they don't tell you that before you get there. We got there early because we had been out driving around all day and our goal was to chill, hang out, eat a little bit before the movie started, just relax right. I got to the bathroom. They'd only been open a half hour. Nobody was there yet. One toilet was completely overflowing with toilet paper so it looked like somebody just sat there and fucking put all the toilet paper in there. One toilet was closed. One toilet was spinning. It would not stop flushing. And there was one toilet that I could use right, went in there to use it. Fucking dropped half my shit on the floor. The floor was flooded. There was three inches. There was that much water. So it was about three inches, I don't know. There was that much water on the floor. I was standing in toilet water.

Speaker 1:

And then so they shut the bathrooms down. They shut the bathrooms down. Then they have this parking attendant that's driving around hassling people about the way they're parked. They're not even. They're maybe 30% full.

Speaker 2:

Not, even, not even 30% full.

Speaker 1:

And they're enforcing the parking rules. Like you're worried about the parking, you don't have butter for your popcorn and, it's strange, there's water in your bathroom, bub.

Speaker 2:

Right, get your priorities straight Jesus Christ, and it's so. I hate these. We've all. This is so. Lots of drive-in movie places have a guy on a golf cart. I like to call him a dip Drive-in police, but dip for real, because these guys all look the same they all got a belly and they're all A lot of more advisors.

Speaker 2:

Oh my God, they all. You could just tell they were like the crossing guard in school. They were like I don't know what the redneck version of this is, because these are all rednecks too, but they're fucking. Permit patties.

Speaker 1:

My grandma used to call them little tin Hitlers. Little tin Hitlers, Little tin Hitlers. You give them a little bit of power. They're trying to take over the world.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, my God, and like this guy. First of all, he's fucking driving so fast on that car. If a kid would have accidentally got in front of me would have taken them out. As soon as he saw somebody park wrong, he zipped I mean was zipping over to their car.

Speaker 1:

Zip it, buddy Zip it.

Speaker 2:

It was ridiculous.

Speaker 1:

Oh, and all of that aside, because we gave them all those chances, we're like okay, okay, okay, okay, we're still here.

Speaker 2:

It's been a long day. We're here.

Speaker 1:

The movie starts and the audio is messed up. It sounds like they're talking through a speaker box, like it was staticky, it kept cutting out we left, we left.

Speaker 2:

I don't like to be this way. I am kind of a spoiled brat and when I say I want to go home, but when you've made that many mistakes, it's an accumulation of events.

Speaker 1:

And then you're like I can't even watch the damn movie now. I can't even watch the damn movie. Shut up, shut up now.

Speaker 2:

Freakier Friday guys.

Speaker 1:

No, we still haven't seen it. I have nothing to tell you about. I was looking so forward. I was about to break a record that I hadn't broken.

Speaker 2:

Well, I was looking so forward. I was about to break a record that I hadn't broken. Well, you could tell him about that other movie that you saw without me. He went to movies without me.

Speaker 1:

That's what I'm doing. Oh, I'm talking about breaking my record for watching the most movies in a time period.

Speaker 2:

Oh, I thought you meant breaking your record of talking about a movie on every episode of this podcast.

Speaker 1:

Oh, no, no, no, I'm talking about I was about to. I would have seen three. This would have made three movies that I'd watch in a seven-day time frame. Personal record, at least as an adult in the last 20 years.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

And they took that away from me. So now the only movie that I've seen in the last seven days was the new Naked Gun movie, which was very, very good. But I only recommend it if you like those type of movies. It's very funny, it's hilarious, and Liam Neeson is fantastic. Pam Anderson is fantastic. Oj Simpson is terrific. Stop it. It's a great movie. Go check it out. But no, but seriously, like back to the driving thing, like I don't usually ever leave a bit, I'll take it on the chin.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, Like, and we're not, and I've said it all day that we are not Karens. We are not Karens.

Speaker 1:

We didn't bring up any of those issues with him, we just took it and we were like looking at it, give each other the look. I gave one of these Missile code yeah, missile code Code to get out of here.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

We should have known right from the get-go. But it was after the third thing. It was like you're like, but you want to watch a movie, you want to enjoy it. You paid to get in, you paid for the popcorn, you paid for the snacks. I got to know I bought my candy at Dollar.

Speaker 2:

General baby and I ate my sub from the seat.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and we never do that.

Speaker 2:

No.

Speaker 1:

We had to go to—.

Speaker 2:

Sacrilegious. You don't do that to a struggling venue like a drive-in there's only 350. They like a struggling venue, like a drive-in there's only 350.

Speaker 1:

They're going extinct. We know from personal experience and researching drive-ins all movie theaters make their money from concessions. Right, especially drive-in theaters. Because first off, you get to watch at least two movies Right, you're getting two for one. You can't eat that price-wise because it costs like $14, $15, $16 to get a regular movie and you get to watch two for like $10. Right, and they skip the previews, these pricks.

Speaker 2:

Now I did chat to JBT that and they said that a lot of the newer movies don't do previews now because of, like how limited but I went to the theater last weekend.

Speaker 1:

I saw naked gun there was. We even commented to each other this is the most previews I've ever seen. It was like 12 and they were all good movies.

Speaker 2:

So there's movies out there to be previewed if you want to see Freaker Friday I can't even say it, freakier Friday and you?

Speaker 1:

Didn't see a preview.

Speaker 2:

Didn't see a preview. Let us know.

Speaker 1:

Or if you did.

Speaker 2:

Let us know.

Speaker 1:

I'll call Jamie Lee Curtis myself. You'll do it. I'll do it.

Speaker 2:

Because I wanted to raise up Lindsay Lohan for coming up out of the darkness and escaping the Hollywood bullshit and coming back around and whatever happens.

Speaker 1:

And she's been so good in everything that we've seen recently and that's why we were trying to give a little Lin Lohan support, you know.

Speaker 2:

Lin Lohan.

Speaker 1:

I'll tell you what we didn't talk about this episode Comedy.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah.

Speaker 1:

But we've still been doing it, still been out there, still been hitting spots, checking out some new spots, got some shows coming up. We'll have more to come. Check out the website. You'll see them on there. I think this week we just got some mics, then we got next week in Bellefont, then I got some shows coming up in September, october, all over the place, and then, once October gets buddy, october's also the anniversary of my first show. Yes, so buddy.

Speaker 1:

October's also the anniversary of my first show. Yes, so the show that we're putting on in October, buddy, is going to be it's going to be a rager.

Speaker 2:

It is. I can't wait. Oh my gosh it.

Speaker 1:

It is a combination of all the things that we do best Cook, entertain, comedy um, yeah, yeah, but we, yeah, yeah, I mean it's gonna be just fantastic, dude, it's gonna be, and my birthday, yeah, all the things it's gonna be great. We have shows coming up, but we have a lot of like in september and october it's like every weekend it's like yeah, bam, bam, bam, bam and bam Benedictine's company.

Speaker 2:

What a fizz. And everywhere in between we're going to be sneaking in encrypted research and things like that. So stay tuned guys.

Speaker 1:

But I do want to bring up one more other important point. If anyone out there any of our Franklin County listeners. Any of our Franklin County listeners, any of our Washington County Maryland listeners, if you have any. We're talking about all these scary places and we're talking about the people that make these great shirts for all these great local haunts, if you have any Miller's Church Road stories.

Speaker 2:

Yes, Miller's Church Road it yes.

Speaker 1:

Miller's Church Road. It's out there, it's in between Hagerstown and Waynesboro. People from the area you know what I'm talking about Don't act like you, don't. You know. You've heard the stories. You've heard the local lore. Some of it's true, some of it sounds fantastical, but I want to hear it, we want to hear it, and we want to hear it. And, uh, we want, we want to hear anything that you have to do with that, because we're going to start to feature certain spots for feature spots, like in episodes where we really deep dive. Yeah, we really go out and get the history, get stories, put it together. We'll do the research for you so you can learn about it too, along with us. And so if you have any Miller's Church Road stuff, we want to hear it. So check out getupatrashcom, you'll see our contact information. Miller's Church Road. We want to know.

Speaker 2:

And Cambria County Becky's Graves. We want to hear what you remember about that story.

Speaker 1:

We sure do. Did we have any food hot bites this week? Did we eat anything real? I mean, we talked about the jerky.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, the jerky. But.

Speaker 1:

I felt like there was something that we ate. That was like we were like wow.

Speaker 2:

The berries off your bush out there.

Speaker 1:

The berries off my bush. And they're not dingleberries, they're blackberries. Thank God no, the turkey Tomatoes are good Tomatoes, all that stuff, but yeah, no, I don't think we have anything else.

Speaker 2:

Send us your weird and if nobody's told you today, stay trashy. And Atlanta got nothing to hide from the gold to the garbage.

Speaker 1:

We bring the sass Welcome aboard. This is.

Speaker 2:

Gilded Trash Bye.

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