away cafe

We start off discussing Con Air and the amazing accents it brings to the big screen. We also spent time thinking about the relationship between animated movies and TV shows as the perfect media for certain story telling and narrative pieces. Somewhere along the line we go off the rails and completely re-invent the mall food court.

  • Who is the Hagrid of Lord of the Rings?

  • Emergency surgery! 

  • Aaron’s crazy week!

  • Don’t pull a Harrison dude

  • Con Air and the amazing accents

  • Gone in 60 seconds

  • Hanna-Barbera is BACK

  • Tom and Jerry and our thoughts

  • Stability issues 

  • Comedy and story telling

  • Cartoons with narrative and story

  • Duck Tails

  • Duck Tails Universe

  • Comfort food media

  • AND comfort food

  • Turkey Revolt Tuesday! 

  • Mother Road Market

  • A restaurant that’s just for DoorDashing..

  • The Rainforest Away Cafe!!

  • AMAZING hamburgers in a restaurant none of us remember…

  • We’ve reinvented the food court!!! You’re welcome

  • Malls… so sad…

  • Go Away Green

  • Restaurants with weird bathrooms...

Check out our other episodes: ohbrotherpodcast.com

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A VERY ROUGH TRANSCRIPT OF THE EPISODE

PROVIDED BY OTTER.AI

SUMMARY KEYWORDS

people, bathroom, movie, watch, restaurant, hanna barbera, place, happening, weird, food, sketch comedy, talking, cartoons, week, bit, eat, funny, coyote, color, literally

SPEAKERS

Collin, Aaron, Brandon

 

Collin  00:04

Welcome to Oh brother, a podcast three brothers trying to figure it all out with your host, Brandon, Collin and Aaron on this week's show the away cafe Hello

 

00:24

Hello.

 

00:26

Right Right on time man kind of predicting these things

 

00:33

sorry there we go.

 

Collin  00:41

I was just commenting

 

00:44

on my impeccable ability to predict when when I'm going to be places I'm here right on time.

 

Collin  00:58

Go Vizard arrived exactly when it means do so with podcast. Turns out You're a wizard. Lord of the Rings was missing or missing accurate.

 

01:21

What? Yeah, who's had who's the Hagrid of Lord of the Rings? Emily?

 

Collin  01:26

Who's the Hagrid? Yeah. I mean, only insofar as that he is bearded. Yeah, but you know, he doesn't get in like Gimli is not necessarily jovial and loves animals.

 

Aaron  01:39

I mean, Kaido is because

 

Collin  01:43

I think it's rad. aghast. I was gonna say Radek asked for sure. But he's tough because, you know, like Hagrid is just like, like a wee bit magical. Like he's not a full fledged. But rad agas that's only because he got kicked out of school. You know, I'm just saying he's not well, and he's not allowed to write technically. He's not allowed. Yeah,

 

02:05

so technically, you don't get to see the full extent of his power much

 

Collin  02:09

better. They never say that. Right? They don't there's the pigtail on the flying motorcycle, which actually he doesn't do anything about but he gets that from serious anyway. Yeah, I think it's I think it's right I'm pretty sure. his motorcycle does he get it from serious black?

 

02:28

So

 

02:31

I'm not

 

Collin  02:32

I haven't read the books in a couple of years now. So

 

02:40

I don't remember. Exactly. Pretty sure. Anyway, I think that that sounds right. To me,

 

Collin  02:48

from the mean, given this so given the character who else would be cool enough to have a flying motorcycle though?

 

02:57

Yeah.

 

Collin  02:59

Not looping that's for sure. Dangerous, right? No, yeah, we're breaking through the clouds right now and Oh, no. Oh, no. The mood anyway, back down crash

 

03:13

crash Oh, so bad. Oh,

 

Collin  03:27

well, that we have that question out of the way. Perfect. What a good show opener. Yeah. How's that?

 

Aaron  03:31

How's everybody doing?

 

Collin  03:34

Pretty good. very eventful week here. So now. Literally all the way down. For now. Everything is fine. soothing. Thinking soothing fives.

 

03:55

Cuz man

 

03:58

crazy right here. So

 

04:01

here we go now. Oh, man.

 

Collin  04:09

So yes, listeners to clue in. I will spare you some of the last week. My wife had to have like emergency gallbladder removal surgery because of not going well. And then they like we had to have an emergency follow up surgery to make sure everything was cleared out. It was like Gall Stone Age happening. So everything is good. Now that was a very I don't really remember the weekend because there's no

 

04:46

there was a hole

 

Collin  04:48

for surgery and then she goes back like here we go again. Yeah, she just likes to she just likes it there. Right just likes to hang out.

 

04:56

Does she enjoy ambulance rides this

 

04:58

what I'm feeling like I'm good. Yeah. Like she really does. She She, he she bonded as on duty. Right? It's fine.

 

05:09

Also

 

Collin  05:11

a small side note several of the ambulance people around here are graduates from the School that we work at. So like we know that the last time the last time she had to go Yeah, last time she had her other surgery. She like went in the ambulance with like, like one of the girls that graduated and so they were just like hanging

 

05:42

oh my gosh, this is very friendly. Just like hanging out talking everybody chill the ambulance. You know? Good. Cheese.

 

05:51

So yes.

 

05:53

Now we're good match up caffeine on our low fat diet, right being all chill.

 

Collin  06:01

Trying to avoid excitement for a while it's been too much the past several weeks. Too much excitement. So

 

06:09

you do need a bit downtime or lack thereof rather.

 

Aaron  06:16

So yeah. How are you guys doing? Man? Yeah, it's definitely not as as inventors as Brandon's. But my week has been absolutely crazy. So on certain weeks, I do what's called on call which anything after five. Or if law enforcement requests I'm I'm on call like if there's some sort of emergency or if law enforcement needs somebody they call me. This week is probably has probably been one of possibly my busiest weeks in a long time. Typically, like a normal one of my normal weeks, for me being on call is either. Oh, hey, let's you know, call Aaron. Maybe once. Maybe. This week. I've been called Brighton I have last week, twice. Two calls. Saturday, Monday. Maybe not Monday. I think Monday was like the only day I'm just going to sleep in or sleep. Tuesday. I got a call. Relatively not super late. And then that was Tuesday. Wednesday, I got a call late Wednesday night. And then I'm not gonna I'm not gonna Jinx anything else today. I'm not gonna say word. Because I don't want the DHS gods to smite me down or anything. If you if you talk too much ill on my own. My week was easy. So I'm not gonna say word. My, my week in that regard has been has been very chaotic. And I'm like, Oh, I'm gonna sit down and do this. Nope, I got to drive an hour and a half somewhere cool. These. Thankfully, everything has been relatively minimal. In some cases. They've all been, you know, pretty, pretty manageable, pretty, you know, relaxed I think last night It took me longer to get there that it was actually talked to people. Let's go that's the kind of puts kind of puts in perspective how big and annoying this places. But that's kind of been about my week. In a nutshell, I've established this a weird annoying cough that I was standing out in the rain last night so I probably Haha, where that came from. So here it is. Yeah, cuz i was i was in I had all these allergies. And then that and then I had an 830 meeting that I had to speak like 80% of the time and I was like, bent over there. And you know we have this is the reason why we got involved. Excuse me. Why? So? Yeah, that was me this morning. I sound way better, but not by much. Oh, I'm just not so airy.

 

09:55

Okay, I was gonna make a joke, calling you to have

 

09:59

synergy. than vinegar.

 

10:01

Oh, yes.

 

Collin  10:02

Yeah, the patented recipe that Brandon loves endorses.

 

Aaron  10:09

Also, I got, I got this really like little, little cough spray stuff. And it actually kind of works it actually kind of numbs, like, back, like numbers, my throat so I don't feel like I'm gonna cough every five seconds. So it's kind of nice. I got loaded up on that this morning. And last night and the night before. And everyone's like, oh, Erin's allergies. I'm sitting there like sniffling in the corner. Is allergies. I will find you in a heartbeat. I have no problem. I will take you out right now. Yeah, that's been a summary of Aaron's week. Just me just know working. Like, Ah, yes, I get a nighttime medicine. No, I have to go somewhere. Excellent. Okay, let me just give us a where I was reading. Oh, awesome. Perfect. This is the excellent. Yes, perfect. And, you know, sometimes I can't, I can't really complain, because there are some times where I'm like, oh, man, my Wi Fi guy got, you know, I had to drive down the road and talk to this person. And then like, I talked to some of my co workers and they're like, yeah, we had to talk to a family that had like, 12 children. I'm like, Oh, no, that's nice. I'm okay. Thank you. And then it completely flips. They're like, Oh, yeah, we haven't had to talk to that person. Like, in two weeks. And like, I'm literally talking to everyone in the state of Oklahoma. I've been having to do 1000 things. I've been going to court I've been doing all this. Why is it that me? In the you know, classic. I think it was Beethoven that wrote the Why does this happen to me?

 

12:03

Well known classic.

 

12:04

Yes. Beethoven. Mozart. Yeah. Like, yeah, see? Yeah, that plays like, this is perfect. This is my life. I'm having fun. All of the fun.

 

Aaron  12:21

That's in that's why we get a relative nutshell. Just don't play. Otherwise,

 

Collin  12:31

Harrison present Harrison did in the rain, but

 

12:36

Oh, yeah. No, no, thank

 

Collin  12:38

you. I don't have Oh, okay. I was like, give me a second. deep cut reference. One. Everybody knows. President William Henry.

 

12:47

Oh, yeah.

 

Collin  12:48

32 days into his egg. Obviously. Everybody, everybody knows that guy. It took me a minute. The first thing I was like Harrison Ford. Why don't you don't crash your plane into a golf course? Clearly, that's what the message is the moral of the story. Don't stand in the rain crash your plane in a golf course. And so when I got that

 

Aaron  13:25

I was talking to somebody yesterday and they're like, I don't know, man. I think Con Air is not that good of a movie. And I'm like, Okay, first of all, you need to leave this country now.

 

Collin  13:33

Why don't you put the money back in the ball? Definitely. Definitely.

 

13:39

A great movie. Exactly.

 

Collin  13:44

I mean, I don't love Cod, but for some reason Susan loves that movie. Like so much.

 

13:55

Why? It's okay, I guess. Fine. But like, no, that's definitely not why. I mean, come on hop lists there. I don't know.

 

Collin  14:10

Steve Buscemi. Cheers, Jamie. john malkovich. Mine it's got Malcolm it

 

Aaron  14:19

all you really need,

 

Collin  14:21

like how you're naming every single person not named Nicolas Cage in this movie. That's the vets have a hilarious part here that does

 

14:26

everything I need to know. Well,

 

Collin  14:30

I mean, if we're being real with ourselves, speaking of speaking of the worst accents ever put on film, whatever he's doing in that movie, like, who knows a true sounds like across like Miss Scarlet. Right. Like I declare deeper grab earlier like I don't really understand, but I don't think he understands. No No, he doesn't. It's amazing how you know how he does remain have some level of continuity with it through it.

 

15:06

So they must, they must

 

Collin  15:09

have had somebody on set. just paying attention to his accent be like look okay, he has no idea what he's doing but we need you to just keep doing this every I mean, I don't know about that that sounds like a level of like dedication that would not be president president please me in a movie called on air right that sounds like like that's like David Lewis level of dedication not necessarily i know i know like hating on Nicolas Cage like I don't like that's not what I'm doing here I'm saying Connie

 

16:04

great movie.

 

Collin  16:06

Nicholas is gone in 60 seconds because everybody's hilarious.

 

16:11

Whoa.

 

Collin  16:14

Man.

 

16:16

Because it's so goofy. Yeah, it's definitely one of those where

 

Collin  16:23

you do have to kind of take a moment go like, Wait, are they playing this seriously? Or is it all kind of tongue in cheek? Yeah, no, no, not after a while you realize oh, no, this is crazy. silliness, right like this. plays it off a little bit different. You know, but it's funny to watch. I saw it was on TV the other day. I just watched it. And I was like, still funny. Still silly. still gonna watch it, like, bright. Still a little too melodramatic for movie about stealing cars. But like,

 

17:09

it's just funny, right? It's just, it's just

 

Collin  17:12

like, I don't need to think at all through this. Right. Like, even the weird twist in it. Like, no, like it's

 

17:21

right. Yeah. I mean, it's, it's fine. Right.

 

17:29

But, you know, I like it for

 

17:33

just kind of silly, actually. Nice. That's what I

 

Aaron  17:41

like it a lot. So now,

 

17:44

I know. I know. hating on Nick Cage is a meme that I'm doing here. I do like that movie.

 

17:51

I just, you know, not Con Air or

 

Collin  17:56

many other ones.

 

17:59

Not you're not a fan of Wicker Man.

 

18:04

Oh, man, that was

 

18:07

that was

 

Collin  18:10

so weird. All To be fair, that movie is not only let down by Nicolas Cage, right? Like, there's a good movie in there somewhere. But it's like very deeply hidden. They made? The first one was not that bad. Right. Like, like, wasn't there? Yeah. Right. Like, the premise is fine. And you know, I think so. I don't know if I've seen that one. It's hard to say. Yeah. Like

 

18:50

it's a

 

Collin  18:53

it's a little rough. It's a little crazy. I'm out. Like,

 

18:58

I always wondered, like,

 

Collin  19:01

why is Nicolas Cage in all these way, like, weird off the wall movies. And then when I learned that, it's because he buys the rights to them. And then he does the production. And then like, he puts in all that work. I was like, Oh, he just like, he just likes acting. Right. Like, it's just what he enjoys doing. And he's just doing stuff. Yeah.

 

19:27

Yeah. Just these crazy things just to do something different, right? Yeah. So I get that. That makes sense. It's just

 

Collin  19:47

whatever. I don't know. I don't know. I

 

19:49

think what do you do?

 

Collin  19:54

Now, to segue out of this, I do have a brief follow up to a topic of conversation from The other day

 

20:01

I wrote down my little

 

Collin  20:04

paper here. Oh, hold on. I was just like this week.

 

20:10

Oh, okay, sorry. They want to join on the topic today came criminal. She might have. Oh, there we go. Hi. Sorry. Okay. Anyway.

 

Collin  20:34

So this is one of those like examples of like, whatever. We talked about this for two, I can't remember the name of it. Because I only ever hear called the wrong name, right, that thing where you like, you hear it once, and then it like shows up a whole bunch throughout the day, just because it's on your mind, you know? Yeah. That like psychological thing that happens, whatever that is. I was just like, hanging out. And I was just scrolling through my newsfeed and what, what name? did I see? scroll across my Google News Feed. That's right, ladies and gentlemen,

 

21:06

Hanna Barbera.

 

Collin  21:09

From our episode The other day explaining Raka Doodle, we were talking about how I did not know that Hanna Barbera existed until like 2000, or whatever. Apparently, it's coming back. there that would do it Time Warner or whatever, like at&t, Time Warner meat, whatever the giant media conglomerate that owns everything is are renaming Cartoon Network studios, Europe, Hanna Barbera studios, boom, and they're going to be involved in like several new, like Television Animation.

 

21:53

Like, series. Lamb that's

 

Collin  22:04

that's weird to me from a crazy the endpoint of like, why they feel like that name.

 

Aaron  22:11

Like, because nobody,

 

Collin  22:13

nobody knows what that is anymore. Right. Like, it just seems. Bring back? Well, I mean, I think part of it is like, is a name that has like, historic significance? Well, sure. In in, in that field. Right, right. And part, you know, that that. So like, it's a store game, they're, they're bringing it out part of it's a marketing thing, I think, right? Because like the kids that watch the show, or the young adults, whatever age group, these shows are aimed at, you know, this kind of like, early teen, young kid audience, they're not necessarily gonna care. Who is making what media companies behind making their thing but like, their parents will see like Hanna Barbera. And they will be like, Oh, yeah, I know that. That's a familiar thing. I feel okay with my kids watching Hanna Barbera, because I love him. Right? I have fond memories of watching that when I was a kid watching like, you know, you repair and the old Scooby Doo all stuff, right? Like,

 

23:32

so

 

Collin  23:35

it goes with that. And then again, you have potential to bring back those, you know, revive some of those possible properties like the associated with a new name. So if you are going to bring back like, I know, let's pretend you're going to bring back Yogi Bear. Right? I know why you would. It's not really relevant to anything. But now you have a name that is associated with it. And it kind of goes together. Right? Right. It would be rude if you produced a Yogi Bear movie. And it was like, dead like by at&t or whatever. Like, that's weird. It doesn't make sense. But if you have the right name attached to that marketing, then like, it makes sense, you know, at least a little bit. He says, I

 

24:21

think so.

 

Collin  24:22

I just thought it was cool. I was like, Whoa, I was just talking about that. Look at that. That's crazy.

 

24:31

Love it.

 

24:33

So I thought that was exciting. I just put that down into my little notebook arena thing.

 

Collin  24:40

Remember to bring up because I don't want to forget that one. So they go Hanna Barbera coming back. You too can I don't I forgot to write down what properties they were going to be making. But the studio is making your return below There we go. Some exciting, exciting news

 

25:05

that I heard randomly. Yeah.

 

Collin  25:13

The studio is currently in development of the Amazing World of Gumball movie. Oh,

 

25:21

there we go.

 

Collin  25:23

That's the working title. Apparently they are still deciding what they're exactly going to name it, but Gumball I mean, I figure that's a pretty good title.

 

Aaron  25:32

Although, it's actually a cartoon now. Like, that's like, yeah, the actual title of it. Yeah. Yeah.

 

25:39

So if you could just call it The Amazing World of Gumball

 

25:43

movie.

 

Collin  25:44

Yeah. Done. That's the most exciting title. No, I suppose. Like does have brand recognition. That's important. You don't want to call it like Steve's crazy time adventure be like, What? What does that even mean? Anything but sometimes they do that they're like, oh, we're gonna get so cute and creative with our title. And you look at it and you go wow. Yeah, I've that's happened a few times. To me. Like you see them you see them advertise like a show? Yeah. Or like a movie and just like the title and they know what to expect from that at all. I totally understand what that

 

Aaron  26:30

Whoa. Also, it's like, recently, I guess I don't know if it was like the tail end of last year or this year, they came out with a partially live action animated Tom and Jerry movie. And that that movie is hard, because everyone will make

 

Collin  26:51

such a bad job of explaining.

 

Aaron  26:56

Well, yeah, and so like it like maybe the market they push for like guys was gonna be like, best animated movie of the year, but like it tanked badly, because, you know, besides like, the CGI being that people like don't really care about Tom and Jerry that much like not as exciting as it once was. And so I think they're they were trying to bank so much on that recognition for that, and it was it was kind of disappointing was like, Oh, you know, live action. commentary moving on. It's kind of cool. And oh, it's too cheesy and too gimmicky and very predictable. than I expected that really,

 

Collin  27:32

but question, what are your guys What are your all's take on on Tom and Jerry was the one that you enjoyed.

 

Aaron  27:45

I would never see seek it out. Like if it was on TV, like it, you know, well, I don't remember watching it like, Saturday morning cartoons or anything. But it was one of those things where no, some of the episodes I found like really enjoyable and you know, something that was just like, oh, wow, this is Tom and Jerry orgo is like especially on like Boomerang, I remember that channel. Kind of throwing them back out there. But you know, it was a boomerang like, Oh, yeah. Watch it. You know, something interesting to watch Tom and Jerry's classic. It's iconic, but I never really went out of my way to watch it. It wasn't like, you know, the Dragonball Z for me, like I came home from school. I have to watch Dragonball Z. There would be like, Oh, my God, and then I just wanted I

 

Collin  28:35

never really liked Tom and Jerry. I think that's because of all of the cartoons. It was the one that seemed that I watched at least for worse.

 

28:48

What? Hello,

 

Collin  28:51

I said it's just said my inner critic was unstable again. So we'll see if this last. Okay. No, I just I just felt like it was one of the ones that was probably the most mean spirited, because I could never like as a kid can never tell. Like, they actually like each other. Like, I know. They're supposed to be like good friends that just bicker a lot.

 

Aaron  29:17

But it was

 

Collin  29:18

more so than just like the like another example of something that tried to do this was like the Roadrunner and coyote, where there was a kind of that felt like there was a purpose to it, of like what the coyote was trying to do. But I think it was because the Road Runner never actively fought back. He just dodged everything. Right. Like he was Yeah, he wasn't also building great big machines to go and train to injure coyote, right? If it was not a temper Tat, it was just kind of a kind of coyote schemes ever worked. That one it worked more for me, Tom and Jerry again just felt felt a little a little bit more mean spirited in the grand scheme of things.

 

29:58

I don't know

 

30:00

The wily coyote runner still had that problem of like,

 

30:04

Why?

 

Collin  30:05

Why is he going through such length? Why is he so? Hungry? I'll stop. Yes. Oh

 

30:11

yes, but

 

Collin  30:16

some point it's got to move on man. But you're right time of day does there's often like meanspirited like, like, cartoon violence for the sake of cartoon violence was like, I'm just gonna like smack this dude with a refrigerator. Yeah, that escalated quickly, like what is happening?

 

30:33

Oh man.

 

Collin  30:41

And the fact that they don't ever like talk really, it's like there's no other personality traits other than like, how mad they

 

30:49

see, that's why I'm saying like, anyway.

 

30:57

partying from my childhood.

 

Collin  30:59

Kind of weird, like, I don't know.

 

31:03

Oh, yeah, no.

 

Collin  31:05

I look back on many of those. And I'm like, Oh, that was a choice,

 

31:10

right? Yeah, I haven't watched a lot of those in a long time. So like, I don't really know

 

31:19

how to like a

 

Collin  31:21

reference. And I don't even remember a lot of them. Because like, vaguely remember, there was a thing, but I there were so like, throw away. As far as like plot goes, like, what was actually happening in the character development. It's like, so non existent or one dimensional? That now I'm like, I don't I guess that was the thing. I don't I vaguely recall that happening. Like, I don't really know. I guess that was kind of true for all of the cartoons, right? Like,

 

31:58

in the end, they're

 

Collin  31:58

all completely meaning. Oh,

 

32:00

yes. No, that's true.

 

Aaron  32:03

But like,

 

Collin  32:05

so you know, but other cartoons actually have like, stories that they tell. Or core like, character development sometimes.

 

32:16

Yeah. Not just like,

 

32:19

whatever, some of those like, to the Looney Tunes, right? I mean, there's some classic ones, but then there's all bunch of like,

 

32:28

what, what's going on?

 

Collin  32:30

I guess it's kind of the difference between, like you said, like a ongoing story versus sketch comedy. Like there is real no continuity from one to one. And most of those, like, Well, yeah, I guess that might be, I think, Well, I think the way he's broken down that actually might sum it up slightly for me, because I don't really like sketch comedy in any form.

 

Aaron  32:58

Like, really? There's a couple like, that are funny, but I don't

 

Collin  33:08

seek them out. And I don't remember most of them, except for like, the only sketch comedy thing I can think of right this second off top my head is the Monty Python dead parrot. That's because it's just so like, it's funny. Get it? Haha, like I'm always just like,

 

33:29

right?

 

Collin  33:30

Okay. I don't know, it doesn't hit me. The same, like skate company. That's why I never really

 

Aaron  33:36

liked

 

Collin  33:38

Saturday Night Live or the other one mad TV when that was a thing, right? Those are both on like, they were fine. And sometimes they were funny, I guess. But I wasn't ever really like, Oh, man. I've got to watch it this week. Cuz I'm so excited. Like, I'll watch it a guest. Like you know, it wasn't ever anything like I wasn't like waiting, super excited about it or anything like that. So I always been drawn more towards like just story telling things. And if there are funny story beats, that's one thing, but like, I've just been really drawn to narrative, I would say so even on my cartoons, right? Like, I liked Portuguese. I had some kind of story didn't so it had to be a good story.

 

Aaron  34:38

Right? But like,

 

Collin  34:40

tell me some kind of story like a lot of cartoons when I was kid. There's like adventure II, right? Like, there's the ones that I remember liking your like dovetails, right. Yep. Boom, there we go. There's a topical thing. So they brought that back a little bit ago. Like that's a fun. Yeah, that's like there. are silly, funny parts of that. But there are they are telling you a story. And there is like an overarching connectivity between episodes because there's no duckburg. Or that's the same cast of characters and there's different people around, right? That for me is more memorable. Right? Those are the ones I remember. Like,

 

35:23

like those big

 

Collin  35:26

cartoons of my childhood are like the Ninja Turtles, but not for because it's funny. I just really like those. First, I just kept with action reason I really enjoyed that. Like,

 

35:38

Buffalo as far as like,

 

Collin  35:40

in the style of DuckTales. Like those Disney style ones I really liked, like shipping Rescue Rangers, like we talked a little bit more for the same reason. Like there's a cast of characters that has like, unique character traits. And they work together to do thing. Right. Yeah. And so it's it moves around their silly parts, there's, but it's like a story. And it's, for me. It's just much more interesting. It's entertaining. You get invested in watching it, you want to watch more of it, because this story might continue possibly, right. They're gonna be connected in some way. you'd ever know, shows like that, like, they're so I don't know, sometimes they feel desperate because you're like, I think I'll happen and then like, next season, the character comes back and like, wow, oh my gosh, I remember experts. Right. So you kind of like,

 

36:38

that way.

 

Collin  36:40

I like that. I like that kind of stuff. tailspin. That was the other one. Oh, yeah. I think we've talked about that before too. But I like this point in the conversation where Aaron reminds us of cows of Moo Mesa. And then we move on straight I hear they're the real cowboys.

 

Aaron  37:00

Biker Mice from Mars a buddy.

 

Collin  37:03

I always forget about that, what I do. why

 

Aaron  37:08

they're so in the in the kind of the later theories like watching South Park. I know that's not everyone's like, favorite. But I, you know, earlier seasons of South Park, it was very, like, oh, there's this episode. And then this episode, but like, none of it was connected in later, in the later seasons of South Park. Like, they were very episodic, like they're all connect like a whole season was connected in some way or another. And I really liked how that was kind of Incorporated, because that was never really a good thing. South Park was known for just doing things very, you know, episodic key, very, you know, all tie in connected in some way or, or another. I liked you know, I like emphasis or stuff that I do that. I also really enjoy. You know, just the kind of the classic. Oh, this show does this. And then next, like the next episode doesn't tie in. But it's like trying to get like truly invested into it. It's like, Oh, well, this is actually like, connected into some way or fashion. And I just really like shows that are like that. There's What have I been watching? I watched a Amazon Amazon show called invincible. It's kind of like an animated superhero thing. Definitely not for the faint of heart by any means. But it's a really cool like, superhero genre movie. Or like, there's only like, five or six episodes, but they're almost like hour long each. And they they just have a unique kind of take on kind of like the super superhero family. And kind of how just kind of look into modern days. And then like that it's one of those things like every episode is tied in some way or another. And I just I just kind of like that part to it.

 

Collin  39:06

Yeah, it doesn't have to be directly tied. And that's why I actually gave my example as duck tails, right? Because like, every episode is like a standalone thing happens. But they take place in a very, like, common. I guess the modern word would be universe, right? where, like, the there's lots of reoccurring characters that show back up. So there's an interconnectedness in that like duck Berg is a character. Right. Yeah, we're like the town and it's Denison's are part of the story, as well. So you're seeing the same people consistently, so it feels more connected, even if like the actual events of each episode and the shenanigans that they get up to are not connected.

 

Aaron  39:56

Yeah, well, I

 

Collin  39:58

think that's that's why That example because I felt like it did a good job of that, like, it's one of those where it's like, it's its own character. Like the city is its own character kinda. So like the stories that happen in it are in and around it. And sometimes they leave they go off on, they do weird things but like, I helps to tie it together, right, that's kind of how old southpark was to like, South Park, the town is kind of that way to write. It kind of fill that role of the town is what's connecting everything together. So it's like its own special character in the whole thing,

 

40:39

right. That's it, that's

 

Collin  40:42

a way that you could do that. That's the way that some some stories work in that fashion. And it's interesting when they do that. Because they, you know, you have that familiar setting. And then the setting is kind of what ties everything together in a certain way. Right? Yeah, it's a very, it's a, it's a little deeper than you would necessarily think for like a cartoon show. Right? It reminds me of like, 100 Years of Solitude, right?

 

41:06

It's like that.

 

Collin  41:14

Right? Just the, in the fact that like, the location is so important, or like, oh, what's the other Pillars of the Earth? Like the kin folate novels there? Right? Like, those are like, the location is important. The characters are important, the stuff is important, the location is super important for that stuff, right? in that kind of just style

 

41:34

of writing. Yeah.

 

Collin  41:35

And that plays good to television series. You know, a lot of TV series you like that, really, if you kind of think about it, right? Like, you know, Doctor shows they take place in hospital like house, right? Like, a lot of those episodes aren't connected at all, they try to leave some time. So whenever, like, especially the latest series like guys, stop, you just you tried to stop it. But the hospital, that's kind of the thing, right? They take on that role, when there's a in the same setting over and over again, or like an older show, like Twin Peaks, right? That's like it, the setting is important to the storytelling. So it's just, again, even if those events aren't connected, the setting is so consistent and so big, that it can really carry and tie in a lot of different things. And that's cool, too, because sometimes you have a story that takes place in this part of the town. And sometimes a story takes place in that part of the town, but you're still in like the town. Right? Yeah. And so it helps tie things together. I think it's fun. I like that as a, as a certain method of storytelling. I don't know, trying to get with examples. But that's what I got so far. I think I think just in the more simplified version of that, I like to think of it as you get reoccurring bits, right? Especially if you're thinking about more comedy, right? Like the same thing. You start getting the same reoccurring things. And what that does is all of a sudden start being able to see more personalities for people, because you get that familiar, familiarity they start doing in the same in similar situations kind of over and over. And you're like, oh, okay, like, this person, really. I understand, you know, like,

 

43:23

where,

 

Collin  43:24

what this means, so that what kind of person they are now, because this is, you know, how they act or whatever. And I really like that because you can, you can, it's more, it's more predictable. Because when you during sketch comedy, like, good sketch, comedy is going to take you from, like, all the way from like, you've got to be intro to somebody become just familiar enough with them make whatever is gonna happen funny in that it's end. Right? But like,

 

43:51

yeah, build that

 

Collin  43:52

relationship with them. And it does sound kind of silly of like, yeah, oh, we're talking about this duck tail. Like, oh, like, it's not that big of a deal. But that is great. It is. Yeah. don't hear it. I'm not saying it's great. I don't know, fence token angry. But, you know, it applies to more than just serious cinema.

 

44:16

Oh, yeah, no, totally. It's just that, I think, I don't know.

 

Collin  44:24

Trying to formulate my thought here. And it's not coming together without just repeating exactly what I said before. So I'm just going to spare you that part. Yeah, I get that and I think, but then again, the reason that the sketch comedy, I think fall short with me is because it always feels a lot of it feels very forced. Sure, because they either are they are relying too much on the same thing. Or like they're just like forcing it in. Because it's a sketch. They have five minutes to do the thing and they move on. Right? And so it's like because after While it gets tired, right? Like, there's only so many times you can watch the, you know wily coyote, hold an anvil and fall off a cliff.

 

Aaron  45:11

That it's going to be funny. Yeah,

 

Collin  45:13

there's like a limit. Right?

 

45:18

Right. You get

 

Collin  45:21

there's only so many times you can see. Tom hit Jerry with a mallet. It's funny. Right? Right. Like, they do it all the time, because it's the familiar thing. It's what they do. But after a while, it's like,

 

45:35

yeah. Okay.

 

Collin  45:37

I guess whatever. Cool, at least in my opinion, right? It's kind of where I'm like, yeah, yeah. Don't even though I like like, Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck, I guess in principle, watching them do the same exact bit for the 400 time, in a mildly different circumstance. Not as funny anymore.

 

46:03

exciting thing in the world? Sure. Yeah. Fair enough.

 

46:07

give you that. That's predictable. Oh,

 

Collin  46:11

that's true. That's what that means. It's like, you can also think about it sometimes it's just like, sometimes media is just like, comfort food. Right? I'm just want that familiar thing. Right. Like, I know, that french fries are not like a gourmet don't see. I am aware that that is not like an exciting, new, wonderful invention. Sometimes I just want some stinky french fries. Right.

 

46:42

That's, that's it.

 

Collin  46:45

That's what I want. Because it's the familiar. It's the thing that I enjoy. So that's, I feel that it it can be that way sometimes, right? You're like, Oh, it's the thing that I like, it's comforting, it's familiar. I'll just sit down and watch it and,

 

Aaron  46:58

you know, whatever

 

Collin  46:59

I get, I understand that aspect of it, the comfort value in it. And that's what media is, as well, right? It's important that like, like you said, like, not all media has to be high art. It's okay, if you'd like conair or gone in 60 seconds. It's right. He's never going to be like really award winning art inspiring films. You can just like to sit down and watch them that is allowed, you know what I mean? That's what it's okay to watch. Nicolas Cage, launch a Mustang off a bridge for somebody. You know, whatever. Because, because he can for watch guys find out after the commercial break, right. There we go. I heard talking about comfort food. I heard this idea I cannot get credit for this. Um, I heard this. It sounded fascinating to me. In the world of you can order from your phone and from any restaurant and have it delivered because the person will go there in their car and pick up your order from the door and come and bring it to you.

 

48:33

What if

 

Collin  48:34

you still wanted the dine in experience? But we're able to order from other restaurants.

 

48:43

track with me.

 

Collin  48:46

You go to this is okay. So is this like when we were kids? And we went to McDonald's and you didn't like McDonald's? So we went to Burger King and you brought your burger king into McDonald's to eat us? Is that was that was happening here? Yes. exactly what's happening here but misters that really did happen. Listeners in America will be like

 

49:06

what? Why?

 

Collin  49:08

blasphemy? Yes, we totally did that. But what if you're able to do that you came in, you sat down, and they took your order. They ordered it from the other restaurant and then they drove to the restaurant and then came and put it back down. So you could get like French fries from McDonald's but a steak and shake burger or an like a windy shake. And then your your friend and compadre could get like a sirloin with mashed potatoes from the Windex or whatever. I

 

49:43

don't know. But like it just how cool would that be? First of all,

 

Collin  49:51

you're literally just describing mine and dusty is completely made up holiday turkey revolt Tuesday. I think we do it at home. I think I think you would be hard pressed to find businesses that would go along with that. Because while you are, let's pretend you are sitting in the McDonald's dining area, and you have pizza and tacos delivered to you. What you're doing is you are taking up space for people that want to be eating their food.

 

50:36

They don't have a place, does it? No, no, no,

 

Collin  50:38

hold on. Hold on. This is a separate establishment, though call it like, like, food court Rs. And you go, Whoa, okay. Okay, that know that? Yeah. All right. I was not tracking correctly. Oh, so you, you want to have just a restaurant, this just a building with tables in it done. And there's food from other places, and you can sit down and eat?

 

51:04

So what's the business model that

 

Collin  51:07

how do you make any money on this? He's just like, that's what a pavilion at the park is. Right? Like, there's like a picnic table in a park. That's what, that's what you just described to me? How do people like how do people like, like, doordash? How do they make money? Right? They take a little bit off the top to bring it to you. Right? That's

 

51:26

charge people to sit?

 

51:29

Yeah, that's your plan

 

Collin  51:32

to rent the table? doordash? Or some? No, no, we don't have that here. We're not we're not trans enough down here. And so right, which is the company and they read doordash as this national thing, reaches out to restaurants and says, do you want to be a part of this? Do you want to be a part of this. And if you say yes, that means that an independent contractor can get an alert on their phone and say, Brandon has ordered from lie lies and wants his food delivered. so darn, right as your order through doordash. To lie, lie, lie lies, it's the doordash order makes it and set it on a counter, the doordash driver comes and picks it up, brings it to your home, and ate right. So they take a little service charge as you can tip the person. Same thing, but instead of it being a national chain, it's more like local of like food corner us.

 

Aaron  52:25

And they take a little bit off. So what like what was what we're calling is describing is that there's there's a recipe or a place in Tulsa called mother road market. And what it what it is, is that it is like a lot of the food trucks that that I have like little tiny instead of the food trucks actually like in a little like kind of EOS kind of thing. And it's it's literally like a food court of like local places like Tulsa, like Oklahoma places, things like that. So it's, there's a place called Yeah, yeah, intels a mother road market. Not that far from wheat, from where we live, we go there all the time, because they have like such a wide variety of foods, but it's mostly like local places, or like food truck places. And you can just get, you know, pretty much whatever you want to get like a burger from this place, or like Chinese from this little, you know, counter thing. And they work with doordash, too. So doordash actually comes or you can sort of like for food from that place, and then just go pick it up. But then you have like, like outside eating. And like a little insight eating, it has kind of walkways, all this kind of cool stuff. And we used to have like little mini course on there. But it's actually really cool. If you get the chance I would highly recommend googling it. And if everyone comes down to Oklahoma one day, that is definitely where we're going to be taking people just because it is so unique. And I just love going there because it's like, oh, I don't really want burgers or Oh, I want you know, Italian or Oh, I kind of want you know, like Asian food or, or Indian food or whatever. So there's a lot of options that you get to choose from and it's all like really good.

 

Collin  54:20

But do they bring it to you? Can you sit in one spot and then throw curries and gather yourself? Because I don't want to have to walk anywhere. That's the whole I mean, that's the part that here I this is what I'm interested in calling saying is calling there is a building full of tables. Yeah. And probably bathrooms, right? Yes. You just go in there and sit down and randomly someone comes into the door and shouts your name and you just go get it. Right. Right. So you just tell you tell doordash to like deliver to that location. Right. Are you saying? No the building itself like whoever like foodcourt rs would take your order and they would be the doordash. Right? Instead of doordash delivering to your home, they would be the doordash and they would go get the stuff to you. Oh, so they have their own courier service that encourages Okay, so this building has a little has like a garage attached where there's like a fleet of dudes on mopeds, mopeds. They just literally go out to all the local restaurants and get your carry out order. They order the carry out for you.

 

55:28

Yes. And then you bring it

 

Collin  55:32

they bring it to and that way, you know, like we all like 20 people there and they can all order from a different place, but we're having a meal together at one location. And they don't actually okay the food, they just have like baby drinks. But then yeah, fleet of ice true. You could sell drinks, maybe Yeah, be good. And a fleet of of little, you know, Vespas or, or whatever. And obviously, little scooters, little men on men and women on bicycles zipping around the super cubs? I don't know. But they'll go around. bring you back hot noodles. And he'll be fine. Interesting. I wonder, I wonder how many people would patronize that place? Like, because it's like, it would only be good if you were going out to eat with like a bunch of people. Yeah. Right. Because like if you're eating by yourself prefers just like, me and Susan. Right? That place seems like it would not be useful. Okay, I think I think you'd have to have something else to make it maybe more of a destination place and more of an event thing. Like, I don't know, like, partner up with rain forest cafe and you got some animatronic monkeys swinging over your air, right? Oh, man, Donald, I haven't thought of that rain forest, because that's still around. Is that is that still a thing? It was when Megan and I went to Nashville, like, a lot like six years ago at this point. Maybe seven. Okay, well, if it was there six years ago, I haven't seen one since I was like, well, so I can Chicago right with mom.

 

57:15

Yeah.

 

Collin  57:22

Yeah. Wow. Okay. Yeah, I forgot that.

 

57:25

So now imagine, it's like a Rainforest Cafe. But with no food. Like they don't have their own

 

57:30

crappy food with no cafe. cafe. It's the cafe away. Oh, it's the Oh, it's the rain forest away cafe. Oh.

 

57:42

Okay, so all right. Okay. So I feel like

 

Collin  57:48

animatronic things. Because what is not enough of a draw to get people to come to that? It'd be like weird because you want to go see it one time. And after that you're like, yeah, that was on anyone monkeys in my life. So like, what else would you put in there? To make it like a place where people would want to go, like, legitimately want to go?

 

58:12

Not just like,

 

Collin  58:15

an empty room. Right? Like a warehouse. Yeah, it's like a barn, like a concrete floor and picnic tables. Right? Like, like garage doors is his office. So what do you put in there? And what do you put in there? To make people want to go there for like, Sunday, after church, right? When you have like a whole bunch of people, like 12 people, and you want to can't decide where to go eat. Maybe there's not enough room at a restaurant because that's a big thing. If you want to go with a big party, like say you want to get 20 people together to do a thing. Like if it's a birthday or something. Like oftentimes taking 20 people to go eat is impossible. Right? You want to go out you want to your thing, but you can't like you can't fit in a restaurant.

 

Aaron  59:09

You know? So what do you put in this shed?

 

Collin  59:16

We're gonna upgrade this nice building to make it like appealing. Other than drink service, you have to have like beverages, because beverage deliveries have it tricky. So you want to have like, all kinds of stuff there.

 

Aaron  59:34

So one thing that that that I've seen at this, I sent you guys a little like website link of it. If you want to take a gander, yes, but there's some places you know offer like live music or different kinds of atmospheres. But like I said, Shelby and myself when you know just for two people, and what we've been doing the last few times is that we've ordered like one thing from different types of restaurants. We got these Thai spicy fries has like all these like really cool sauces on them. And then like we'll get like a chicken tender platter thing from some sort of like, Chinese restaurant and then we'll get like some sort of like salad or something and then we'll get like dessert. And for two people like, that's pretty much all we can handle because there's just so much of it. But we always get me every time we go. It's always poppin like, it's just it's never not busy. I don't know if it just the food or just the kind of the atmosphere. I don't want to call it like a hippie kind of place. But it's a very light in a certain part of town. That is very like, Oh, this

 

Collin  1:00:43

place with a lot of hippies.

 

Aaron  1:00:46

Yes, yeah. Drum circles, Mater. No, not not. hippies. That's not the word I'm looking for. Yep. But more kind of, like hipster. More than anything. And so there's, there's a lot of that.

 

1:01:02

There long as there's a drum circles.

 

Aaron  1:01:04

Yeah, but it's not like, you know, anything like, like overly obnoxious or, or anything like that. It's actually like, okay, now I can you know, I can vibe here. This is kind of nice. Yeah, I mean, it's, it's just kind of a really, really chill kind of place to go with just different options. And if you just want something unique, like there's, there's always something new to go in there. And I guess that's kind of a good little slogan. You wanted to think about it. But yeah, there's always something new there.

 

Collin  1:01:34

Yeah, I like the entertainment idea. You could have like, little music thing, or like some kind of like, you could do like manga off screen in there. Again, right? You could just show movies like, or you could just show Hanna Barbera cartoons. No, here, hear me out on this. Okay, so we are trying to be one centralized location, or whatever food possibilities that you would like.

 

1:02:05

So what is

 

Collin  1:02:06

inside this massive warehouse? There are sections with different themed restaurants where you want the ambiance of an Italian restaurant but you're really craving sushi and Mexican so you can go across the way is the one like the fast food joint with like the you know, tables, and really sticky gummy surfaces that you could go they're all they're all uneven on purpose for all the tables are wobbly. But you did it that way on purpose. Yes, he like broke off one of the little plastic things on the bottom of every table. Obviously. Just keep it that flat. Right. So you could literally make what you're describing is a more grandiose version of Do you remember that random hamburger place that we ate at like vianne, Oklahoma? Remember that? The turtle column? Like every single booth had like some kind of weird theme. Like one was like a beach. The other one was like NASCAR. Like what? What what is going on in here? I know. I wish I could remember the name of that place because listeners I'm telling you it was the weirdest restaurant I've ever been in my life. I had the best hamburger. But the follow up with it in my entire life.

 

1:03:34

So good.

 

Collin  1:03:37

But it's so cause this guy to get more grandiose version of that, that would be funny. I would appreciate the irony of eating like tacos in the fine dining Italian section. That would just be humorous. Maybe the first two times but after that, okay, I would be like I need something else to do on if you have to have like something else like some other draw that you would want to go there. The more I think about this, the more I am like literally we're just reinventing a food court. And I mean really Yes, we are just like literally like an arcade and I'm just describing the battlefield mall food court circuit like 1995 price carousel I guess at a movie theater right there. Right That was the thing it well and man there we go. like weird tile floors. Got to have that weird tile floor who knows like bizarre that weird based trash cans right there kind of like a weird I guess that's more of a tope right. Oh, nothing. Nothing ever good. Comes with I guess it was hope. Wait, that's not as Tony gray. Maybe out somewhere. Hey token gray excitement, man that we got we for IKEA. We got malls on the list for job objects because that's a long one. But like, so I don't want to go into that right now but man speaking makes me sad the other day somebody went to one of the malls was like, yeah, there was like nothing in there. It's like man makes kind of sad. I got to know I like liked but it was enjoyable. Well, how much time there right? Like oddly, I don't know. Yeah right like, like you said it was like a thing like it was a while people were doing stuff, you could just go do something else. Right? It was. It's like a really large enclosed space, you sort of roam around, do whatever you want. And then somehow with a man without the aid of cellular phones, show up and meet somebody on a bench at the exact right time. Right. Yeah, right. We're gonna coordinate this bow bow. Here we go. Wow. They have clocks on the wall like every 20 feet. So that's probably how but it's fine. Yeah, we got to come back to that topic. Cool. I was reminded today Well, actually, I was reminded of when you said the word hope and I said nothing is interesting that is described as being tope I didn't know this, but Well, I So did you have to have a neutral color for all the flashy signage in the food court, that's why you have to have that be like, this gets to where I'm going. So Disney World Disneyland are studied for.

 

1:06:46

As far as like,

 

Collin  1:06:47

customer service, and the magic of whole, like, you know, there were there, like, you know, we do all this stuff behind and all the tunnels and trying to preserve everything.

 

1:06:57

They have

 

Collin  1:06:58

a palette of you know, one of the things that is called is go away green or no cm green or no cm gray, where they have scientifically derived colors, that they paint things that they don't want you to notice. And a paint like doors for emergency exits this or like speakers and rocks to obscure me baby, you should not pay the emergency exit in the invisible color. entrance for like the staff and trans right, like pay the emergency when rent, please. What do you mean, of course, we have exit camouflage. I don't know. No one could see it. But it was it's stuff that they have designed as a way of keeping places again, keeping you more in the moment. So that you know so you don't necessarily recognize all of the modern things around you or just obscure things from your your brain because it's like this color is literally so boring. Your brain blends in. Yeah. That's interesting. Yeah. It's very interesting. What you said green, the first thing that came to mind was the elementary school bathroom color. That was like a blessing. So I was very well, like that. That really like really pale green color. Greens I would pale green and white. Back Pain is not well at all right? No. encourage you to spend more time in there. I guess that was what they want. I mean, that's true. repulse you out. Like me. So warfare on our, our young children.

 

1:08:58

Yes. This color

 

Collin  1:09:03

make this place so unpleasant that you want it to leave immediately. Well, that's one thing you can do with colors.

 

1:09:18

I don't know if it works or not.

 

Collin  1:09:19

I just remember exactly what that bathroom looked like for some reason. You remember it so it had Yes. I remember the weird old soap dispenser. You know the one that has like it has the globe on the top and you have to push up that metal pin. Oh, it's so awful because it was like all right, I didn't gunky and you were literally pushing your hand into and through into a metal golf tee looking thing right? the leftover soap from the 40 people before you is Yeah. And then the paper towel thing was like it had that it was white. It had that little tiny chrome handle that smooth chrome handle like a pencil sharpener just epic wind it out oh yeah though good to make the bathrooms in the to go RS place whatever like much more appealing that don't put that color in there and make yeah don't use the go away green no have to work with some sort of interior decorator work this make this work but it's true I'm feeling this illness all that could be the other draw you know get rid of those restaurants where the bathroom is just like insanely weird looking. And he's just there's like all kinds of wicks like no really weird like the design is just like really bizarre. It's like

 

1:10:49

you're either like some restaurants wanting to like, I can't think of a restaurant but like the

 

Collin  1:10:57

like some bathrooms have just like an extreme like theme of weird things going on. Right like have you ever been to the bathroom in the Ripley's Believe It or Not in Branson? I've been to the Ripley's Believe It or Not in Branson, but I don't believe I have been in there or not bathroom. Yeah, well, one of the bathrooms like it's just got like, a lot of places like collections of stuff are just in there like that makes sense. For a believer not Ripley's be easy. Um, of course, you're gonna see the world's tiniest thumbnail while you're washing your hands or in you know, yeah, right. Like just weird stuff in the bed like that. So you got to make the bathroom like something because if you're going to have if you are going to go through the path of like having like separate kiosk areas of like, I keep imagining the warehouse idea. And it's hilarious, because I just think about like, a ceiling, it's like really tall, and then a bunch of partitions that are like, only eight feet tall. So you could just like see over. Right? You get like of lighting.

 

1:12:01

Anyway, like

 

Collin  1:12:04

the bathroom has to be like something insane, right? So it has to be like some wild thing, like all its own, like its own crazy like theme or whatever. Just like so nuts that people are like, Oh my gosh, you see the bathroom in there. That's because we're trying to combine so many different themes of restaurants. But I think if it was something like, like a pure African safari with like, waste and like tronic leopards, like, walk? Do that he was scared to children, right? Like I was killed at the bathroom. Almost. There's like all this or no, it has to be completely different. Right? Like,

 

1:12:41

it's got to be.

 

Collin  1:12:43

So the inside are all like restaurant themed bathrooms, or like restaurant themed seating areas. But the bathroom is like baseball stadiums. Like austere. Yeah. Yeah. Or like, what something else? like crazy like a

 

1:13:11

I don't know what

 

1:13:12

boat like I

 

Collin  1:13:14

do the head of the boat or like actual porta potties. Right? Like not even pretend ones like real legit with the blue stuff in the bottom, then Rio porta potties. Yep, yep. Wow. That's how I started. Because I thought we wanted this to be appealing, right? Like different, and rememberable. That's true. I'm also realizing that we're going to do something with sound dampening and music because the cacophony and assault on the senses from the different music each of these restaurants is going to be playing is going to be very noisy. No, no, no, you just have one track that loops, but you play like one song because it's a 25 foot ceiling with only like eight foot partitions. Yeah, it's one sound. I'll be honest from everywhere. So it's got but it goes on a little bit plays like one Italian song. One like 50s diner song. One like, Japanese pops off. And yeah, and then there's a mary loves it. Oh, yeah. That'd be great.

 

Aaron  1:14:31

That'd be while I know you know, it'd

 

Collin  1:14:32

be hilarious. Here we go. So the whole restaurants like food themed? Yeah, right. But then the bathroom is like literary theme for some reason. So the bathroom is just like Alice in Wonderland. Like what? What? The bathroom is just like crazy like the mirror is like upside down and Caterpillar in one. of the stalls. animatronic Caterpillar that's taking up one of them if there weren't any notice stalls to get to the stalls. Yeah, it's like you have to open a tree. Like there's one stall with it with a caterpillar. I was looking who got it. And a tree in the corner. Yeah. You have to open the tree up and that's like, Oh, okay. Yeah, it's like a mystery like what's happening?

 

1:15:29

We were all

 

Collin  1:15:32

security is going to be very busy finding great hilarious.

 

1:15:39

Well, welcome.

 

Collin  1:15:45

Welcome. here's, here's here's here's a pot many possibilities and attracted to make sure we can find you hit the red. Yes. When you get lost in the bathroom. And the bathroom was like way too big.

 

1:15:56

Right? Like, it was awkward. like

 

Collin  1:15:59

yeah, it's no this it's to make it like real Alice in Wonderland. Like you have to go like way off into a corner and the doors for the bathroom like jammed in the corner. At but it's like a false wall. So like the bathroom is actually like enormous. See, like, oh, man, it's just like a one person but oh my gosh is huge in here, right? Like you.

 

1:16:21

But all the fixtures are like three quarter size and a very large room.

 

Collin  1:16:26

Maybe even better,

 

1:16:28

right? Like the sinks are like,

 

Collin  1:16:31

like the faucet is actually like small like what? Yeah. Yeah. This may annoy your customers as much as possible as well. They have some ADA accessibility concerns. So that's fine. I love working out. That's okay, we'll get the code book and we'll figure it out. Okay, there's a loop. Me wonderful. Oh, well, better. I think that sounds really good. I'm really interested in the investors. a possibility Yeah, there we go. It's gonna have to be in a large area, like I have about my town probably cannot support this endeavor. I don't know if there's enough people to want to patronize this. This will go real estate. People in LA. They're gonna love this. Right? We'll see. It's really looking forward to Seattle. They're gonna basically they're gonna try and live in there and turn this into

 

1:17:45

obviously anything for them. Well,

 

Collin  1:17:52

I think probably button it up. Okay.

 

1:18:00

All right.