Drifting on Arroyo

Episode 137 - New Year, New Routines, Same Crew

Rick, Lano, Miggy Season 5 Episode 137

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New year, same crew, tighter habits. We kick off season five by getting honest about the small routines that make life easier: sleeping better, sharpening memory, and keeping our cars running smooth without breaking the bank. The conversation bounces from holiday food and family updates to a thoughtful look at aging, why some people stay sharp into their 90s, and how tiny, repeatable practices add up.

If you’ve ever blanked on a PIN at a flipped keypad or spiraled through password “special character” chaos, you’ll feel seen. We trade practical memory tactics—turning numbers into words, daily recall reps, and ditching the crutch of autofill—to rebuild mental stamina. Then we wade into a surprisingly lively debate on motor oil: OW-20 versus 5W-30, brand differences, lab tests versus real-world driving, and how often to change your oil if you want real longevity. We do the math on cost, talk transmission service, and share the simple driving habits that help engines cruise toward 300,000 miles.

We round things out with an EV reality check—connectivity subscriptions, driver-assist fees, battery life claims—and a much tastier topic list: ramen routes, pho favorites, and why hot pot gets better when you cook each slice with intention. There’s a theme threading it all together: consistent care beats last-minute fixes, whether it’s your brain, your vehicle, or your dinner plans. Hit play for grounded advice, a few laughs, and a Vegas wildcard preview that might get rowdy.

If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend, and drop a review to help more listeners find us. What maintenance habit are you bringing into the new year?

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Thanks for Listening!

Mig:

Welcome back to the Drifting on Arroyo Podcast. This is Mig. This is Lano. RK67. Happy New Year, y'all. Happy New Year. Happy New Year. We made it. We're all here. Fingers, toes, eyes intact. Two in a row episode.

Lano:

Feliz Dia de los Reyes. Oh, my wife liked the um well, I liked it too, the Champurado.

Mig:

Oh, you guys liked it?

Lano:

Yeah, but they had most they had drinking most of it by the time we went back. I just had like a little sip. Oh. But the but they I mean the girls liked it.

Mig:

Yeah. Oh, good. I thought you were I thought I thought being today's the sixth. I thought you're gonna have like a rosca right here, dude. So you can Oh, I forgot.

Lano:

You know, my parents always used to buy them.

Mig:

How kind of Mexican are you, dude? Did you you guys have him at your house? No, I didn't buy it. Manny, Manny hit me up just before I came over here. Um, that they were having uh a rosca. How's he doing? He's good. Everything uh Yeah, he was we were together for New Year's. He was we were chilling right at the house. And he looked okay?

Lano:

Yeah. Cause I mean, that that condition yeah, like it apparently was like half your manny. Oh, Manny the neighbor. Oh, I was thinking of Mark, sorry. No. Manny was um I was thinking of Mark.

Mig:

Mark the shark. Yeah, he he he just I uh Vanessa told me he just went back to work. So I don't I don't know, I don't know how how um how it was. I think yesterday, maybe yesterday was his first day or he didn't go over on New Year's with you? No, no, he was over there at um over there at Stacia's. Oh, okay.

Rick:

I thought he was gonna go over with me.

Mig:

Yeah, no, no, he was over there. Um yeah, it was um But your neighbor Manny came over. Yeah, he came over and he made some some um bombs like turkey, kind of like Tinga. Um turkey thinga? Yeah, nothing. That's I mean he called it thing I mean I mean that's what it's something similar to it. Yeah, yeah. But we I went to go get those those um artisan rolls or breads from Costco. Yeah, yeah. Then he made like uh an onion and tomato like topping. Yeah, he's not Mexican, right? What is he? Nice Honduran Honduran, Honduran, okay. And uh he made those and then he made his chili. Yeah, and then I bought some uh some cornbread, put it over it. He also bought rice if he wanted to put over rice, but yeah, it was bomb, man. I was gonna go, dude. But once I had my big ass bowl of pasole, I was done, dude. I made um over the weekend? Over the weekend, he made some clam chowder. I've been wanting to make clam chowder, dude. I want to his clam chowder is pretty much. Have you tried it?

Lano:

I mean, have you tried making it before? No, not I don't even know where to begin.

Mig:

It's because that that's the thing. I don't know. I don't know if I should start with uh or even attempt to try to do like fresh clams or or just do canned clams or or what, you know? Yeah, it's like and I was always like trying to find different recipes and see what they used and everything. So he made a big pot. He hooked it up. I'm gonna talk to him next time I see him. Yeah, see what uh what he used. I haven't I haven't wanted to make it. Like, what's the base, milk?

Lano:

Milk is the base?

Mig:

Yeah, a lot of cream.

Lano:

Yeah, I wouldn't know where to begin. Um so this is um season five, guys. Season five. Five years. We've been running this little mom and pop podcast.

Mig:

Can we call it a season with all the episodes that we missed last year? Yeah, let me know. I know. I I just ran into your mom right now walking in. She's like, Oh, I'm glad you guys are recording again. And it's like, yeah, I know. I go. We're trying, we're trying. If it wasn't me, it was me. If it wasn't Meg, it was Lano. Yeah.

Lano:

So I mean she she gets mad when she finds out there's no recordings, but I'm like, sometimes when we don't record, it's like um Yeah, we gotta be on it.

Mig:

I'm just tired, you know.

Lano:

We get tired of it.

Mig:

We gotta be on it. Yeah, hey, all right. Um we did that that review just before the year ended, the uh pastor, right? Right. Oh yeah. Alright. Well, I don't know if we could do it um next week. Next week, let's do the um I want you guys to try that ramen. Oh, where was it at again? Oh, I was actually I was driving through Valley today and I was I was looking for it. But I think I was I was already past it because I got off the freeway on Del Mar and started heading out towards Almani. Yeah. So I think I was already past it. Or but I have I've been wanting to go there. I mean, I just need to be sure I go to the right one. Well, hey Lano, what do you got going on? This weekend, nothing.

Rick:

Oh, we're gonna be in Vegas this weekend. Oh yeah.

Mig:

No, like tomorrow or Thursday.

Lano:

Oh no, I gotta ask the wife. Maybe Thursday, maybe.

Mig:

Maybe because if that that way we can eat. We'll just go right after work. We can eat, yeah. We can eat and then come and record. Oh, the same day? No, no, no. Oh, oh. No, eat and then come on the regular day and record. Right, right. We're gonna like miss. We won't record. Right, right. Or or I mean the goal is not to miss that many shows, but I think we I think we that's one show a month. If Thursday's good, then we'll we'll try to do it Thursday. Miss one show a month or one week a month. Go to San Gabriel. Just because it goes on. Yeah, I mean, because with you and me, work has been crazy. Yeah. I mean, that's a thing. And getting off so late and everything, and you know, having Lono sit around waiting for us until we're we're ready. I mean, that's not cool.

Lano:

And past a certain window, I start getting sleepy, so then I'm like, I'm I'm hoping you guys cancel out on me because I'm like already. I got it, dude. I get it.

Mig:

Sometimes I feel the same way.

Lano:

I was like, oh man.

Mig:

I'm like, man, none of these dudes have said anything in the thread. I'm like, hopefully they'll say it, bro. Uh today I got home and I I sat on the couch and I ended up knocking out. And because I I don't know why I had a hard time. I didn't I couldn't sleep yesterday. My mind was just going and going and going. And then I didn't go to sleep till like I think probably like 4 30 when it was almost time to get up. Oh wow. You know, I must have gotten up and gotten back to bed.

Lano:

And you still went to work?

Mig:

You just got up and went to work like that? Yeah, well I got up and got ready and yeah, watched. I had to go. Talking about that, dude, it's like I fell asleep on the computer because I was um I ordered some cards and I opened them and everything. I was checking like eBay, the value and everything. And it was already late. I was already like midnight almost, and I was still doing it. And I just I I fell asleep. Like I was just so comfortable I fell asleep. I wake up four in the morning, dude. I was in that damn chair for four hours, like almost like six, seven hours, dude. In that chair. And I get up, dude, my back's hurting so much, and I'm like you got colder now.

Lano:

I know that's that's no, because I got so stupid, man.

Mig:

No, I got I got my robe and everything. It's all like all warm, I was all bundled up and everything. But but I'm like, dude, it's like how the hell could it be four in the morning already? It and it's so stupid because like on the chair, or then like the sofa, like you're my neck's always jacked up, but I knock out right away on the sofa. Yeah. But then when I go to bed, yeah, exactly. It's like I'm the exact same way, dude. You like feel good all stretched out, and then you're like, then you can't go to bed. Everybody's like, well, why don't you just go to bed earlier? I'm like, I go and I lie down and I'm wide awake.

Lano:

So when you woke up at four, then you're like, you look at the clock, I I got seven hours left because Rick says you don't start work till 11.

Mig:

Hey, I'm not gonna say it. Hey, uh what happened? Uh um, you know what we didn't do when we came back off on air? We didn't uh we didn't um R.I.P. Rob Reiner. Oh yeah.

Lano:

You know, um because I saw on Instagram they had a list of everybody we lost in 2025. And I we should have like we should have done that.

Mig:

Um let's see how many people we know.

Lano:

Those are a lot, like the guy from the Cosby show.

Mig:

Oh yeah. Yeah, him I forgot, dude. When I seen him in the memoriams, yeah. The other one I forgot too was uh Michael Manson. Yeah. I forgot. Michael Manson. I forgot. Yeah, it was also we we talked about him.

Lano:

Well, this is just a list. Um Robert Redford, Diane Keaton, Gene Hackman. Oh, Gene Hackman and all that weirdness that went on in his. Oh, yeah, him and his wife, right? That was a murder too, or the dog, or he someone died, and then the dog died.

Mig:

Oh, it was a Diane Keaton. Was it a murder?

Lano:

Well, no, something like I think the wife passed, and then like he passed it the week later, but like no one knew something fishy. And the dog was there, the dog passed. Oh, that was weird. Yeah, Val Kilmore, Val Kilmer, Val Kilmer, Michelle Um Trekkenberg, I don't know who that is, but from Gossip Girl and Buffy. I don't know. Loretta um Swift from Ash, David Linton, these are now Ozzie.

Mig:

Oh, Ozzy, Ozzy, Michael Madsen. Some big heavy hitters there, man.

Lano:

Um Richard Chamberlain, Shogun, George Wynn, June. Oh, George Wynn, Cheers? The guy from Cheers, Norm.

Mig:

Oh yeah, Norm. Oh yeah, Norm. I didn't know I didn't know.

Lano:

Rob Reiner This is a little bit because there was more Ozzie Sli um Sly Stone? Well, I was thinking of Celeste Stone's brother, but Sly Stone, I don't know, I don't know who that is. Ryan Wilson, the beach board, Roberta Flight. This is short because they had um the guy from the Cosby show. It was on it was on Instagram. And then um Isaac White Lodge.

Mig:

He was from that that um wire, no?

Lano:

Yeah. Richard Smallwood. Oh, yeah. Um yeah, I don't know, a lot of these people. But um, yeah, I saw like a picture of Hulk at like at the Evan's Gates and like Andre was waiting for him. Andre was waiting for him. Well yeah, a lot a lot of people.

Mig:

You know, you know what's crazy. Who's still who's still going on his damn Kenny Eastwood, man?

Rick:

Yeah.

Mig:

Oh and uh Chuck Norris, dude. I don't know, how old is Chuck Norris? He's in his 80s already. Like mid eighties. Still good then. But he doesn't look it.

Lano:

Oh he's deteriorated. Oh, bland dude is great. Oh, that's great.

Mig:

I I saw I saw YouTube short, this guy, um these guys, I guess, do pressure washing. And they cleaned uh I think it was an uh 69 Chevy Suburban that was in the garage. Okay and the guy wanted to wash it for his grandpa, his 91-year-old grandpa. Yeah, his grandpa. And um, so they're telling the whole story how it's always been hand down from the family and this and that.

Rick:

Right.

Mig:

And the grandpa had it. Look at grandpa's 91 years old, and he all good, standing up straight and you know, talking real alert and everything, and just like normal. Like if he was in his early 80s and he's over there, he's like, Oh, like he's getting all teary eyed because his truck's all washed and everything, they had it looking good. I mean he's going and he just looks and then him and uh both both the grandma and the grandpa were still alive, like yeah, like crazy how good they are, man. Like, I mean, because it all depends on what you do after you're you're retired, dude. It's like that that's a thing, you know. You can either sit around and do nothing and waste away, or you know, you can do stuff to keep your your mind mentally sharp, and you know, as long as you keep your mind mentally sharp, then you should be good. You know, it's like when when a lot of these old people have trouble speaking and everything, it's because they don't do nothing to like mentally stimulate themselves. You know, that that's why so many of them they try to get them to do like painting or drawing or you know, read a book or so we're all we're all gonna be like that then because caught up on the phone.

Lano:

True.

Mig:

What do you do that stimulates your mind? Nothing.

Lano:

Yeah. Even the like the the games like crossword problems. I I don't do any of those. Yeah. I should be. Or matching or something like that, matching games.

Mig:

Um I'm telling you, I don't know if I said at the last show or whatever. Um I'm I'm trying to start remembering numbers. Telephone numbers, I try to get the number of people. Oh, you're trying to remember when I'm writing checks, I you know, I'm writing my account number or and then I was like Oh, that's a good thing. Yeah, I just remembering full telephone numbers. Yeah. Cause we were we were at uh I and before when we were kids, you knew everybody's number. You knew like, oh yeah, boom, boom, this, that, that, you know. Everyone knew their numbers. It's like the house number, so-and-so's number. Yeah.

Lano:

Did you guys ever get like because you know when you're when you're in high school, you have a locker, right? And it's always like probably most of the time it's a combination lock, right? Yeah, the ones you troll around. Um you ever get like like um like sleep or or or have a dream, like, oh, I forgot my my my lock or panel. Like, I hope today's not gonna because you just draw a blank and then like then it just comes to you like of not remembering your locker number? Yeah, locking number, then all your books are in there. Still right now? Not now, but I'm just back then, yeah. Back then, yeah.

Mig:

No, even now, dude. But not necessarily like with school. It's like it'll be shit like I need a a combination to open up a safe, or you know, it's like the door has a security code or something, or you know, I need a key for something and I don't have it, or yeah, you know, it's something that you need, and you know, you know you know it, but in your dream you can't figure it out. And like you start panicking and having anxiety shit and everything. You know, you know what would mess me up is my pin code. Oh, for the ATM? Yeah. When they flip the damn code, like they flip the pin instead of being one, two, three, four, five, and then it's like one, two, three on the bottom, then up, and then you're like, and then you like you go blank because sometimes the sometimes the the numbers the numbers are are start at the uh one on the top, one, two, three, oh gotcha, and then some start at the bottom. Oh, two, three, and the bottom, then the middle the middle numbers are the same, but but the top um muscle memory, yeah. The top and the bottom, yeah, that's what it is, muscle memory. So then I'm like, but then you forget, I forget the damn pin numbers. Like, what the hell? That's my pin. Like, I and you just go blank. Well, what uh what about um you ever you ever do a pin code, like a four or five digit pin code, but you spell out a word, yeah, and then you get to a pin pad where there's no letters on it. Oh you're like, oh shit. Yeah, yeah. You know, I was like, that's why I have to remember both. It's like remembering the word is easy, but remembering what numbers go with it, that's what you gotta remember. Yeah. Yeah, that I'm telling you, that thing would always drop me up, man. It's like I'm remembering all my passwords. When I'm logging into something, it's like that's the fucking password. What the hell? Like, and then it's like now you're locked out. Yeah, I'm like, now there I go, I gotta go then change the password because I can't remember it. No, well, because the thing is you probably use the same password, but the idiots ask you for one capitalized, one special character, yeah, one number. I but I keep it, I keep it like okay, so I'll do whatever the normal is a number, capital letter, whatever, and the special character. So first I'll do it all just regular. Boom. Okay, that's not it. All right. I I usually always add the number when I make a password now. Yeah. And then, all right, I'm gonna do a capital. Then if that does, if they don't allow me, they want it harder, then I do the capital. And then, you know, I go in the sequence in the sequence of how I do the the the passwords. Like, because I have passwords that I've had forever. And it's it's the same password forever.

Lano:

On multiple stuff or just one thing?

Mig:

Uh a couple things, like my email, my email account, um, and probably some other like different accounts. But um, whenever I like I start doing new passwords, like the bank asks you for a new password and everything. After a while. After a while, yeah, it's like I forget which one I used. Because I got like three or four passwords that I like to use in rotation, and I'll forget which one I used. It's like sometimes that don't they tell you like, oh, you can't use a password that you used before? Yeah, but you alter it. Yeah. You know, you put the you put the capital letter and this is that's how we, you know, like and I'll be like dicey. I'm like, this is what I used. It's like, but I just capitalized this. I remember that.

Lano:

No, at you know, and at work, I want to say they make us like re redo our passwords like every month, like on the computer.

Mig:

Different one, huh? Different one, or can you go back to your old password?

Lano:

No, no, you can't use it has to be all those like characters capitalized and more than eight digits and all this other stuff. But but it has to be a different password. It has to be a different one. It can't be a password you've used before. And this is like our laptops that we take home and then we take them to work in the world. Every month? Like it's a big it seemed like every month. So like I used to try to do like when I started like a random one every time, but now it's like I just I just have a number at the end, and and right now I'm at number like 72.

Rick:

Shit.

Lano:

So it was like before it was like I had this like sequence of letters and and stuff, and then one, and then two, and then three. Now I'm on 72 right now on the password because you can't you can't go back to the original, or you can't use a password you used before.

Mig:

The the reason the the number came up is me and uh uh Vanessa, I think we were a Stater brothers and we're giving her numbers.

Speaker:

Oh the the card or something or for the now was uh yeah.

Mig:

She got your number, yeah. I was like I was I told her, but what's your number? What's your number? She's like, you don't know my number? I go, you don't know mine. Well you're that's it, you're asking for a fight with my. And then she goes, she goes, I go, what's mine? She goes, 323. I go, go on. She's uh 252-1914. Yeah, she's up to 252. And then she stopped right there, 252. She's like, what about and she goes, what about me? I was like, yours is 909. Oh my my wife is 909 too. You're up there. But now I'm like, all right, now I know you know her her number. Like because of that, like, all right, now I'm gonna start remembering. That's it. That shit's funny, but I got into the same argument with my ex one time. We were we were somewhere and I had to put in her phone number and I had to About it a little bit and like, okay, I got it. Yeah. And I put it in, you know, and and you know, she was the same thing. She's like, You remember my number? I was like, What the fuck do I gotta remember it for? I told her that's why you're on speed dial. You know, but yes, I do remember it. It's like, do you know mine?

Lano:

Your number is number one. No, that's the one you pushed.

Mig:

You know, she'll she was like, No, I'm like, all right then. I'm like, be glad that I that I know yours. I used to remember yours, Lono. Yeah, yours is still the same? Yeah.

unknown:

Yeah.

Mig:

I used to, I think I forgot your number.

Lano:

Both my parents and my cell phone.

Mig:

Yeah, I think I forgot your number.

Lano:

You don't know my number?

Mig:

Yeah, I forgot. I think I forgot your number, dude.

Lano:

My wife, like my wife knows credit card numbers. My wife memorized credit card numbers. Like when she's shopping, yeah. She knows credit card numbers and she's pushing in.

Mig:

I've only done that with one credit card. But like I want to do that too. Remember my uh bank account numbers? I remember my bank account number. I know I know my personal bank account number and the business one. Yeah, me too. And I'm getting I'm almost getting good at knowing the routing numbers, the bank routing numbers. The the the bank of our personal one is 434078. Yeah, it's the routing number. They know this is a worldwide podcast. It's the routing number. Every bank has it's they could just look up California Union and then look at the damn browser. You're gonna have some bowl in India. Scoop it up. Ball, ball. I'm not gonna give my account number. But the routing number, you could just Google every bank's routing number. It's no secret there.

Rick:

Yeah.

Lano:

You you brought up um pressure washers. You guys ever watch like on YouTube? Oh, guy. Like pressure, like I'll I'll watch that all day. Like they're they're doing driveways or they're cleaning up a yard, like trimming trees. And yeah, you always have to sit there. I just sit there and watch it like all that stuff.

Mig:

Yeah, pressure washer and landscaping. I want uh the the guys I've watched are the ones that um find cars are like buried in barns and shit, and they're like filthy. Uh-huh. And they bring them out and they clean them like deep clean. Uh-huh. Right, really. Despite what happened with the interior inside and scrubbing all that fills. They leave those things beautiful, man. Yeah. They know how to how to wash every little thing. Nah, but that, and then there's a guy, uh, a building, they're like contractors, I don't know from where. Somewhere in the Midwest. But they have a little, like a kind of like a little Chihuahua dog that always wears a little hard hat. It's funny, man. Those those those videos are funny, man. I'll I'll show you, I'll show you guys a couple of them and then we finish. They're hilarious, man. They're like, and then they're always using the the equipment to like like sometimes cook their food. Yeah. Like whatever they have there on site, they use that to make their food. It's like it's it's it's it's hilarious, man. They're like the cool little short YouTube clips. Yeah. Or shorts that that that are pretty pretty entertaining.

Lano:

I was um I was talking about this with one of my coworkers at work, um, Daniel. Um, because we're like, you know, all over the world there's like pyramids and stuff. You ever wonder like why the US like doesn't have any? Like why like like Mexico has Aztecs and Central America, the Mayans and Egypt has um like the Egyptian, the Giza, whatever pyramids. But like our Indians were just like that running teepees and stuff? Well, I think there's there's pyramids in the Grand Pyramid. Yeah, that's what they say. But it popped up on um on on um Instagram that they said that our pyramid is um it's in the Grand Canyon. Inside the Grand Canyon? But like I've never seen it. See right here, look at these pictures. Those are ours? Well, this is the Grand Canyon, but like we haven't um either excavated or like they're hiding it or blah blah blah. But see how these these shapes are? Yeah. I just wanted to see what you guys um thought about it.

Mig:

Our pyramid is Mount Rushmore.

Lano:

But Rushmore. That's in the Grand Canyon. That's in the city. This is this is the Grand Canyon right here. And you could look at um like different pictures.

Mig:

Is that really a picture there? Did AI develop that? No, no, this is all around. You can't believe shit anymore.

Lano:

Like real, I mean, this is all like real stuff. So I was wondering if you guys ever um deep dive and stuff.

Mig:

You know what I'm gonna do? I'm gonna I'm gonna go find an encyclopedia set and I'm gonna look that up. Yeah, so that's what I'm saying. Show me an old book that has the exact same image. Otherwise, I'm gonna say bullshit, that's just something that someone made. I wanna say probably like five years ago when I was hiking. But this house. This house had had, you know, that they leave their stuff outside in the curb. Uh-huh. Right. They left their whole uh collection of encyclopedias. Oh, you didn't I was like it was somewhere. Yeah. But I was like, man, I'm gonna come back and get that damn set. I could just just to have it see what's going in there. For you youngsters out there that are wondering what an encyclopedia is or a set. Back in the day when your uh drifters were uh actually young ones, that was our Google. Yeah, that was our internet. That was our internet. That's where our source of information for everything whenever we had school projects. It's crazy, it had everything. It had everything.

Lano:

We had a set of sisters, remember?

Mig:

I went I went to those encyclopedias. You don't know how it has so much information in there. Yeah. You just go to the letter that you're looking for and boom, go. We can thank my mom for that, dude, because she's the one that pushed to get those? To buy that that set.

Lano:

They were in in English? I remember that.

Mig:

Yeah, in English, yeah.

Lano:

Everything's all alphabetical, right? You just grab the letter and go down the list.

Mig:

It's like so many projects, man, that got done with those encyclopedias, dude. A lot of book reports and man, yeah.

Lano:

And it's crazy because um, like I we had a set. I didn't know you guys had a set, but like some kids don't have sets. Some kids didn't have a set. Yeah, and that was the cart, like you said.

Mig:

Not everybody had it. Or in and like if you didn't have it, you had to go to the library and uh use uh whatever they had there. Right, yeah. I mean they had encyclopedias there, but you you would have to go, yeah. I'd always get excited going to the library. Going over there and then looking up your book and the little card, get it out.

Lano:

Right. You gotta go um you find that card, right?

Mig:

You find that card and then you gotta go look for your book. Yeah. And that was that kind of goes back to that video that you were saying, Lono. Like you get there, you gotta go to your card and find, you know, find that card first. Kind of like a little treasure hunt. Right, right. Uh huh. Where alright, you get it and then you find the where the area and the role and the section, and you go over there. They're like, fuck, it's checked out. It's called the Dewey Decimal system.

Lano:

Right, right.

Mig:

And that's how they would organize library books. Yeah.

Lano:

Yeah, then you go, like you said, it'll be missing. And you're like, did someone put it wrong or it's checked out? Most of the time it was checked out.

Mig:

Imagine all that, all that work for the librarians, dude. Yeah. To to keep everything organized. Stored it and all that stuff and squeeze in books, like because someone that pulls a book and then if it's just leaving it there, you know, they'll put it back somewhere where it's not supposed to be at. Then how how how long would it take to find that damn book? Yeah. Unless they already know, like, hey, this book doesn't belong here. Like, come over here. But then, like, I'm sure now. Isn't that why they would say that uh if you pull the book off the shelf to just leave it? Yeah. They leave it there. Yeah, leave it on the table, right? So they could put it back.

Lano:

Yeah, like between the right books or whatever. Um, um, I like that um you know they only had one book. It wasn't like they had five of the same thing, huh?

Mig:

Yeah, no, one. Yeah. One damn book. So if you're like looking for a volume, like, and then like you couldn't get all of them. It wasn't like the video store where they're like, was it like only like a you can only check out three books? Something like that.

Lano:

Three books at a time?

Mig:

Yeah.

Lano:

I haven't wasn't I haven't been in a library, like I want to say maybe 35 years. Oh, I'm sure it's all damn. Just computers. It's a computer lab. Or what is it? I don't know. Yeah, it's gotta be.

Mig:

Don't even have library cards anymore. You probably use an app or some shit. Yeah. Borrow it. You have an app that um gives you everything and you go and you tap your phone or you're probably scanning a QR code, scan a QR code.

Lano:

Yeah. Oh, it'll it'll probably give you like uh like a directions on your phone how to get there, like an arrow or something. Yeah. Like you just followed. Oh, you follow the GPS? Yeah, yeah.

Mig:

This is no fun. Yeah, that thing flipped that. Oh, um, last week they were talking about the the oil, the oil, the engine oil. Oh, yeah, yeah. Different weights of oil. You ever see the oil geek? Nah. Yeah, he's a youtuber. And he he ran tests. And he was saying he was talking about the the OW20 and uh 530, and and they did testing and all that. And they said that they're very similar in in viscosity in viscosity and what they do, right? And when they what do they call it, when they uh come out of sheer out of their what they're supposed to do? Yeah. Wow. He was he was giving a test and he was saying the that old old W20 you know performs just uh as good as the 530. But and then there was uh that guy that I told you that I would that I that I saw the video, this guy from Jersey that works on cars.

Rick:

Yeah.

Mig:

And he was and and he was saying otherwise, right? That old W-20 is like water, you know, but also depends on the brand, the brand of the of the oil. Okay. So what what brand is what do you guys use? So um depends on it, or no, what or is that a cheap brand? What that guy from Jersey was saying, he's like, yeah, he goes, that's he goes, like, they agree on some some ground, but they're saying that this they're taking, they had like a test done on on oil that's only been ran 6,000 miles, where his argument is like that's not realistic. You gotta go with what the averages where people are doing oil changes at 10,000, 12,000 miles. So the oil will probably still be good at 6,000 miles doing what it's supposed to. 530 will still be a little bit better than old W20, right? At 6,000 miles. But where where the difference is gonna be is when people are really doing their oil changes, when they're letting it go, because his the the what he's saying is like we're in the trenches, we're actually here with people, and people are stubborn, they're saying, Well, my deal, my manual, my dealer says every 10,000 miles, 12,000 miles. So they're they're telling him, okay, well, they're they're recommending that, but the way you drive and the way your car is and your conditions, you need to come more often. And and because they're like saying, like, these oil, these these companies are getting crazy. Like, yeah, they're they're trying to do like, oh, you can do an old change every 20,000 miles, is like that's what they're telling you, and I guarantee if people would truly pay attention to how their engine feels and how the car feels, yeah, and like throttle response and everything, you would see that there is a performance drop-off once you get past like five, six thousand miles. Because I'm telling you, there's it's like I don't know if it's just me. If it's me, then my ears are just or my senses are all fine-tuned to it or what. But I notice it in my truck. When I go too many miles from not having the oil change, uh-huh, I feel it start to run rough. I feel it sputter on the takeoff a little. Yeah. You know, it's like I notice that the gas mileage starts dropping off. But once I change that oil, everything comes right back. Yeah.

Lano:

Do you get that same feeling with um washing the car? I feel like when I wash it, like, oh, it runs better. But I know it's just in my tip top shape. Yeah, like it's psychological. Cut into the better air or something like that. It's like smooth.

Mig:

Not run better, but I just love seeing it clean. Yeah, yeah. Like right now, since it's been raining, I haven't washed it in like a week and a half, two weeks almost. Yeah. And I look at it and I see my tires all dull and shit and everything, and I can't stand that.

Lano:

I know, like just putting air in the tires, you feel like, oh, they're on roller skates or changing the tires, like it feels a lot smoother.

Mig:

This guy, this guy's pretty interesting here. That that guy from Jersey was saying he he wants those tests done. He wants those tests done. Oh, the motor oil geek. He wants those tests done at the the oil at 10 or 12,000 miles. That's more realistic. Like test like the manufacturers to do those tests? No, no, no. Whatever test uh, whoever's testing that oil. Because that was just that oil was tested at on cars that were at 6,000 miles.

Rick:

Yeah.

Mig:

So what's it? Where that where the the lighter oil is probably gonna lose out more. It's gonna thin in out, it's gonna thin out more. So the the 530 will last longer, it'll last longer in protection at that at that at that range. Yeah. And he's saying like there's only so much that the oil can do when it when it's going through and filtering out all the whatever debris or the wear or whatever, because once the oil can't do that no more, then that's when all that sludge and all that crap starts happening. What no, you you talked about uh I was kind of pissed when I saw his report. I was like, man, that's bullshit. And then I saw that the the guy replied to him.

Lano:

Huh? You talk about brands being different. What's the so what's a good brand?

Mig:

Penzoil?

Lano:

Penzoil's a good brand.

Mig:

Penzoil, I think they were saying, no. Penzoil, you I didn't you I didn't like penzoil back in the day, uh-huh, but I guess they kind of got with it and that's what that guy come better. You said penzo was like messing up back in the day and they got their their act together. Yeah. Um, I like Valveline. Oh, Valvine. Castro. Valvine and Castro. You know, that those are two that probably stick to. Yeah. Or those are like the main three, right? The top three. But lately I've been going a lot with the mobile.

Lano:

Oh, mobile. That was a Costco.

Mig:

Yeah, well, Costco and Sam's. Because I they saw that.

Lano:

So is that what you guys use on at work?

Mig:

That's what I've been using, yeah.

Lano:

I buy mobile.

Mig:

Well, on my personal.

unknown:

Yeah.

Lano:

What about working? Work you buying big old like drums or buckets. Oh, yeah.

Mig:

I mean, you're you're talking every truck uses at least like five gallons of oil.

Lano:

And you're going Penzo, or what brand do you guys use for work?

Mig:

Or it depends on uh it'll either be uh Shaol uh Rotella or um uh Dello A Chevron Dello. But uh you're I mean diesel, you're you're talking completely different animal than uh the regular car oil, gasoline oil. This one guy, this one guy mechanic says you want to get your car to the milestone of 300,000 miles, is like do your oil changes. You know? Do your oil changes at 5,000 miles. If you feel your your car going a little rough and your your engine's oils getting a little darker black, start doing them at 3,000. Yeah. Get the get you know, be more often getting the the cleaner oil in there. And he also says uh transmission flush. Or the transmission flush and the filter. I just did the transmission flush on my truck, too. Because he said he goes, these these dealers that they that again people are saying, like, oh the dealer says I don't gotta, you know, it's lifetime oil in there filters. No, no, no, no, no. He's like, no, they're gonna tell you that because they want you to get at that milestone because they're gonna want you to come back.

Lano:

So every car you said should last about 300,000 miles or an engine or more.

Mig:

No, this guy was saying if you want to make it to that. Who knows? I mean, how far a car can go if you're on that maintenance, like yeah, because they'll be like, oh man, this car's got 400,000 miles and it's still going. It's like I got we got our shop truck right now. It's a 2001 GMC Sierra 3500 with a 6.0 uh V8 Vortech. This used to be a city vehicle. Oh, so it was well maintenance then. So we we purchased it from some gasoline station that probably bought it at an auction. You know, because you had a few of them there. So this truck we've we've owned it already, I would say easily about 10 or 15 years. And I I believe last time I saw it's already up to about 250,000 miles. And we have yet to crack open that engine. And don't think that I do a good job maintaining it because I don't. I mean, poor truck, dude, I beat the shit out of it. The only thing is I drive it easy, I don't hammer it. Yeah, I take my time with it, I throttle up easily. That's that's a big thing, too. And I don't I don't abuse it. Yeah, but I should be doing a better job of maintaining it. Yeah. You know, it's like for example, right now, and everybody's gonna talk shit or whatever, but um for the past like week or so I've had well one indicator light is a low coolant, and that stupid thing comes on whenever it wants. That's because it's a faulty sensor, I don't worry about it. But the check engine oil level has been on for about a week, week and a half. And and I don't I haven't even checked it yet. So I know I'm I'm terrible. You know, and I can, you know everybody's gonna talk shit saying that what the hell, you know, that I'm a mechanic and this and that, whatever, but I mean it is what it is. It's like every time I wanna I wanna check it and top it off, I always forget.

Lano:

Maybe it was in the dark? Yeah, it's camera. You know when your camera went off?

Mig:

Not that well turned off again. Oh, it's a plug. Alright. Keep talking, keep talking, keep talking. So you guys don't get to see my beautiful face on. So you're abusing you're abusing your yeah. Your truck like my I abuse my lot more. Exactly. Not checking not checking it out. But the way I see it my truck is like we are. It's a Raider fan, so it's used to the abuse. It's almost like uh can live without it. Uh and it just keeps coming back for more. So I I can't believe the the outcome of them the NFL. We're just talking about it before.

Lano:

Wait, wait, I just wanted to um do some math on the oil change. All right. So at at 300 um miles and you change it at 5,000, that's about 60 oil changes. See? Okay.

Mig:

Now how much is an oil change average? Okay, so I took the car. I took the car.

Speaker:

Depends on the car.

Mig:

So I took the car and I think it was about um 80 bucks. But I had it done. Labor. 80 bucks. No, yeah. I mean, because it was raining and I needed to do it. And I was like, I'm not putting out the jack and to lift it up one side. In the summer, I get lazy to do mine because the geniuses at Ford decided to put a sway bar right in the middle of where the dream plug is. So it makes like this beautiful mess. And it just discourages me from doing the oil change every time. Especially in the summer. You gotta change your plug every change oil change? You know what? I didn't know that until one time they did it uh at uh the oil change place at the end. You're supposed to. I was never told that. No, but you're supposed to. I guess, yeah. And I never did. How much is it? How much is it, Alan? Well, the first time I changed the oil on my truck, I noticed that my my plug, it's like a plastic one that just unscrews like with some pliers. And once I saw that, I'm like, I went straight to the dealer and I bought a backup plug and I got that shit in my glove box. Yeah. Because I'm like, if this thing ever messes up and it's not available anywhere, yeah, you know, I'm gonna be screwed. I'm not gonna be able to do nothing. So I got that shit in my glove box right now.

Lano:

So what do you got? What's the total? So um at 60 oil changes, like the life of the car is about $4,800 at $80 an oil change. So it And that's about um $400 a year.

unknown:

See?

Lano:

I mean it's not that much. You're talking about the lifetime of the.

Mig:

No, it should, I mean, it's probably gonna be a little bit more because you're putting by $12. 12, yeah, $12,000 a year. I mean, you're that's the average here in this in in LA. So $12,000 miles on a vehicle a year is average. I know you're doing by 12 because you're thinking 12 months in a year. 12 months in a year. You can't do that because you're not changing your oil every month. Well, that's true. Yeah. So so divide um 300,000 by 12,000. Say 15. Nah. We were lower, yeah. Yeah, because because um wait, the miles, that miles Okay, so that's gonna be What a car supposed to have it's it's yeah. Well this is 300,000 miles. Oh no, no, by the way. You're right, mate. Five years. A year. Yeah, yeah. 215. Is that what you're supposed to calculate? The um Okay, so that's gonna be how many times you change the oil at 15,000 miles, right? At 15,000 miles. Twenty times. Twenty times.

Lano:

Lifetime from the cloud. No, that's not a year.

Mig:

Or a year? Oh, you're not changing it twenty times a year. Oh no, no, yeah, I'm sorry. That's how many times every 15. Every 15 you're changing it at 20. So conservatively, let's say three times a year. Three times every three, four months. Every three, four months.

Lano:

Okay.

Mig:

Which is uh do it, do it like that, Lono.

Lano:

Which eight eighty bucks?

Mig:

I mean just just say every four months. So divide it by uh by three. The twenty? That would be a year, your cost per year. I mean Oh man, what are you doing? Oh no no. So that you have the twenty the twenty oil changes, right? To get to three hundred thousand.

Lano:

Divided by three, yeah. So yeah. What's um six? I'm not gonna say that. A little bit over six or seven. Let's round it up, seven. Oh, not seven. It's either six or seven. Not six, seven.

Mig:

That was a setup, dude.

Lano:

All right, no, no, so what okay. Well, I got lost with you, your guys' um what your guys' math after. Okay, so look, three hundred thousand. I thought it said five thousand just because like you want to change it every five thousand miles.

Mig:

Okay, yeah, but in three hundred thousand miles, you're gonna change the oil twenty times.

Lano:

Uh-huh.

Mig:

That doesn't sound right. That's at 15,000 miles. 300,000 divided by 15,000? Yeah. That's gonna be 20 oil changes. 20 oil changes, yeah. So then you divide that 20 by by uh no. No. No. No, because you're you're doing your oil change every 3,000. 3,000 to 4,000. So the 300,000 is gotta be divided by by three. Three thousand. By three or four thousand. That's what you're doing. That's SAT problem. Okay, wait, wait, wait. So the the the goal is three hundred thousand, right? Right, right. Okay. So we're doing an oil change. What do you want to do it every three, four thousand? But I need a number, three. What do you mean? What's average? What's what do you say average? I re realistically, I think it's gonna be anywhere between four to five thousand. Or we'll just put four. No, do five. Do five. So it's three hundred thousand divided by five thousand. Which is the sixty. And that's how many oil changes? That's how many oil changes to get to three hundred thousand.

Lano:

Yeah, sixty in the car's lifetime, sixty oil changes.

Mig:

Now, now that's how many oil changes? How many oil changes are you gonna do in a year? We said three. We said three. Oh, so the number that comes out is seven years. Oh so 60 divided by three. So that's gonna it's gonna take seven years to get to the 300,000. So then you take that that seven year and you multiply that by whatever your cost was. Or divide it by that, and you get the cost per year.

Lano:

Right, so it's not as much as you guys think. No, make this you're what'd you do, Lano? Well, you first you said do the the 60 divided by three, which is 20, but but I don't know where we're this is 60. Like you know what?

Mig:

What I know for sure is that we're just pissing off the audience right now, dude.

Rick:

Isn't is this I don't know that's that everybody input?

Mig:

Everybody out there is like, what are these idiots talking about? And what the hell are they trying to get to? It's like because I tried to put about 10 minutes ago. Everyone's putting too many variables in here, exactly. And you know what? And you know what?

Lano:

Matt was my good subject. Uh yeah, and then Mickey's camera went out, so I don't know if there's gonna be a YouTube video. Oh man, the battery was died. I don't know. What the hell?

Mig:

Wow, man. I don't know if there'll be a YouTube this week. No, but we gotta figure this out for the people. I apologize for her stupidity. It's 60 oil changes, right? For the lifetime, yeah. Okay, what what are we trying to figure out? How much it costs? That's what I was gonna say. What are we trying to figure out? That that's the that's the problem that we don't know what we're trying to figure out. We're trying to figure out how much it costs. Per oil change or per year? Well, no, no, per per per year. Per year. Yeah. Okay, so how much you drive. Well, no, not per year. I mean, that's gonna be easy. It's if you're each oil change is 80 bucks and you're doing three a year, then that's damn 240 bucks a year. What were you trying to figure out, Lano? What did you want?

Lano:

I was saying that it's gonna cost about 4,800 every year. 4,800.

Mig:

So if it's no, so if it's no, man, it's not gonna cost that much. So if it's 240 bucks a year for oil changes, 4,800. The lifetime of the car, the lifetime of the car. Alright, so times seven. But is it is it seven years for $300,000? Yeah, because that's what we figured. Divided by $15,000. Well, that was at six point, whatever rounded up to seven years. Yeah. Oh, okay. No. All right. All right, so we figured it out. Yeah. All right, so then you do you do 240 times seven, and that's how much you got. So then 4,800 is how much you're gonna spend on all your changes to get to 300,000. 240, dude. 7280. I don't know. 1680? Oh, yeah, 1680.

Lano:

A year. In seven years. Oh, seven years.

Mig:

Dummy? Every seven years about sixteen hundred. Every seven years you s you would spend one thousand six hundred and eighty bucks on oil changes. To try to get to three hundred thousand miles. Yeah. I'll take that all day, then damn being in debt with interest on new cars and everything. Or spending three or four grand on a transmission or average two hundred and twenty-eight a year.

Lano:

We did it if they divide that sixteen hundred. For oil changes? Yeah, if you divide that sixteen hundred by seven, you said that's seven years. Average.

Mig:

Yeah, I mean that that's good because you're talking about a four-cylinder car, because for my truck, it comes out a little bit more. Because I use more oil and everything, so they charge a little bit more. On my truck, it I think last time when I did it, it came out to about 120, maybe? Something like that. Alright, uh bottom line is people, get your oil changed. Oil changes. And don't wait, don't wait till 10,000. Split the difference. Do it anywhere between three and five. Three and five. Well, you're really pushing it. If you're doing it, 4,000. Do it for 4,000. Check your fluids. It's it's worth it. Check your serpenty belts. If your if your car lasts until 300,000 miles, believe me, it'll be worth it. I mean, or go electric.

Lano:

Go electric, you don't have to worry about the math. Oh god, yeah.

Mig:

You just gotta worry about getting in a fight over a charging station. Yeah. In the parking lot of a KFC. And then and then paying extra money just to what I what do you pay? What's the subscription?

Lano:

Oh, you're uh the subscription I pay is for internet package, but you don't have to pay that. I mean it's for the the internet, like just to then why get the Tesla then? You're getting the Tesla because you're all like No, I why I get the internet package because like I stream the music and all that stuff, like without the phone. Like I'll stream music or you got YouTube.

Mig:

So you pay extra for internet on the car a hundred bucks a year or ten bucks. You could just have your phone that has internet already and then just Bluetooth it.

Lano:

Yeah. That or like because you know, like if I'm waiting, like I'll throw on YouTube on the car. I mean, I guess I could look at my phone, but yeah. I pay to have it, and then you know, it brings up traffic and um weather and all that stuff when I'm driving.

Mig:

See you you would save a hundred bucks and then you just dish out another 180 bucks on old changes. So so what I'm hearing is uh Lano money bags over here just uh has uh those hundreds just burning a hole in his pocket.

Lano:

So it's a a year. A year. I think I had to just um redo it like that.

Mig:

He didn't even have and he didn't even have a Rosca for us right here today. It's it's unnecessary because you already have your phone. It does all that shit. It's unheard of. It's a simple Bluetooth connection.

Lano:

Nobody and that's that's some people do that. That's what people do. I mean, if they don't want to pay it, that's what they do in the Tesla, yeah. Yeah. But I I can't do the karaoke in the car and all that other stuff.

Mig:

Play the how much is it to do the auto drive, auto auto driver?

Lano:

Um, it's 99 a month. The subscription. Or if you buy it with the car, you buy it with the car, it's like an extra six thousand. Wow. You buy it with the car.

Mig:

What's the life of the battery?

Lano:

I don't know. What do you mean?

Mig:

You don't know.

Lano:

I mean, I haven't I mean got there. I mean, people you can already do so many charges. There's some people that got in up to 300,000. There's some people.

Mig:

I just saw like I just saw a record, like what's the longest um a battery has not reached three hundred thousand miles.

Lano:

Let me see.

Mig:

Tesla And it has to be Tesla because Tesla's the top of the line. What's that?

Lano:

What is it? Like with some owners reaching 400,000 to a million miles on original or replacement pad. Bullshit! The longest Tesla battery life measured in high mileage, yeah.

Mig:

That's bullshit.

Lano:

Well, it gets it gets up there. I don't believe that. When when I got mine Tesla 2003, when did you get your car, Mickey? 2003. So um let's we'll see who's last longer. You got it in 03. No, uh, or 23, 20, 2023. When did you get your car?

Mig:

I got mine in 2018. Succa.

Lano:

Oh, and you? You don't have any cars in 2023, Ricky? I got mine in 1995. Oh. I just wanted to compare. Still going who got it that year, and then we'll we'll see who who lasts longer. What are you talking about? Succa?

Mig:

We'll see who who lasts longer, but hey, so like we talked, like I was talking about before um the show, we're gonna do uh that uh ramen place or what? We'll try. You want to try for Thursday? I'll try for Thursday. Let's do Thursday that we can talk about it, give the review on the right.

Lano:

Back in the day, um um Silver Lake ramen was like the best ramen? Like it had the best um what's that that piece of um pork chop or whatever? What's that called? Who had it? Silver Lake ramen.

Mig:

Silver Lake ramen.

Lano:

That was like known for the best ramen in LA.

Mig:

I wasn't eating ramen. Yeah.

Lano:

But that's all we eat now, so I'm not used to it. So that's why if you show me something that's better, like it'll be pretty.

Mig:

Why what why didn't we eat ramen? I have no idea. I mean, we're all about um did you guys start soups? Yeah. Wanton soups and because I'll tell you, I'll tell you this. The first time I tried pho, I didn't like it.

Lano:

Me either.

Mig:

You had to get used to it.

Lano:

Well, I don't know how to get used to it or find the right recipe. Because pho used to just taste like hot water.

Mig:

That that too. There's a cold noodle that they have. I don't know. It's always like over there at uh 626 pho by my house. The cold noodle is delicious, man. And I don't think I've had it before.

Lano:

I used to think it was just like hot water. Like it had no flavor. And then uh my wife started taking me to some spots.

Mig:

The ones I've tried, they would put too much. Um, I don't know if it's like a niece or some some spice. It would have too much or something, but once I started tasting ones that were good that I liked, yeah, then I was I was hooked. It's funny though, because I already went away from like all the beef ones and the chicken ones and everything. It's like now I just like eating a shrimp. Yeah. The shrimp noodles. Chicken rumors. I don't think I've had I don't know. I just don't like it. There's a chain of restaurants. It's called Bon Ban Me Sheikali. And they're all over, dude. They're all over Alhambra, San Gabriel Valley, Almani, they're all over. Uh-huh. I mean, there must be about like 10 or 15 of them. And I think they got pretty damn good phu for being like a chain. Yeah. That's where I like to go. And on you know, every day of the week they have a special.

Rick:

Yeah.

Mig:

Their sandwiches are good. They do, you buy two, you get one free.

Rick:

Oh hell yeah.

Mig:

And then uh the drinks, like if you get like a milk tea or uh uh Thai tea or whatever, you buy one, you get one free.

Rick:

Oh.

Mig:

So it's a pretty good deal. You know, you you go eat there. That's why they say the sandwich is good at that one six. And then and then uh when you when you get off, like some of them have drive-throughs, uh huh. But if you go in there and you order, they have like tables loaded up with like just food that's like wrapped up and ready to go. Uh-huh. And I see, like when we stay there to eat, see a lot of people go there and they grab all this stuff. I guess they're taking it home like for dinner.

Rick:

Yeah.

Mig:

You know, it's like they grab like rice plates, they grab egg roll plates, you know, they they grab these bags that look like have like soup or some something like that. You know, it's like they're grabbing all this stuff, dude, and just taking it.

Lano:

You know, and ha have you guys ever had um shabu shabu?

Mig:

I've heard of that.

Lano:

It's like a soup, but they have like the grills on the table, and then like you have to like they bring in your broth and then they bring you like all the raw meats and you have to like cook it yourself at the table.

Rick:

That's not like that hot pot stuff.

Lano:

I think so, yeah. I think it's yeah.

Rick:

It's hot pot?

Lano:

Yeah. Have you had that before? No. Alright, we'll try that after the ramen. I'll have my wife pick a nice spot. Like um in the middle where you guys will it'll be around the same neighborhood as ramen, but but I just like I've been eating that thing wrong the whole time until like I looked it up where my wife showed me, and then like you're supposed to like like grab each piece of meat, and I throw all the meat in and mix it in like a soup, but you're supposed to like grab the meat, like dip it for like seven seconds, and then eat it and then chew it. There's a process how to do it, but it tastes better when you do when you know how to eat it. But yeah, we'll try it. All right, I we'll just wrap up the show because I know Mickey's camera there might not be a YouTube video this week because Mickey's camera went out. But we'll see. It's still out right now, or then just put it on you fools, man. I mean, it'll be well, I'll I'll do the best what I could do. But um, we'll have the audio for sure.

Mig:

Hey, maybe maybe you can like AI uh a uh degenerate bear there. A face, a face or something like that. Throw something there while he's talking, his voiceover. Right. Do the degenerate bear. Oh, and then this weekend. Show some skills, producer. This weekend, and then we'll talk. Uh we're gonna go to Vegas this weekend. Oh, yeah. Wildcard play. Wildcard weekend. You gotta come back next week. I'm gonna I'm gonna have a uh degenerate apprentice with me. So yeah, that should be really interesting. Who's that? Cucko. My nephew Cuckoo is the code. He might win big. He wants me to show him the way.

Lano:

Show him.

Mig:

Show him that'll be fun. He's gonna be getting you should record the way take your camera, record it because he's a lightweight, dude. Yeah, he he likes to think that he could drink, dude, but yeah, as big as he is, you think his tolerance would be good?

Lano:

Take your action cameras and try to try to record a little that that'll be good. Oh, you can't?

Mig:

Some you can't.

Lano:

Well, I don't know, I don't know.

Mig:

Oh, rumble. Sorry, all right, but it should be interesting, folks. Yep, and uh I know we said this last year, but we are gonna try to stick with it and two in a row. Two in a row. Start the new year. One more, and it's called a streak. It has happened before. There you go. So, happy new year, everybody. Happy new year. Hope everybody had a good one. Feliz Dia de los Reyes. Everybody made it safe and sound. We love y'all. Thank you for listening. And keep drifting, yo. Peace.