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go back to the county, if I could, that day, or three or four, did he get back to me? Yeah, okay, Russell. Let's think about photograph records. I have mentioned, you know, I had a lot of records, but they were in high school. And, you know, the ones that were there when I was younger, they came from, you know, the household I lived in that were left there. Except for, let's see, I think it was a Flintstones episode also. So, back then, you know, of course we didn't have video like VHS. So, we got, you know, records that had those episodes on it, you know, it was voice only. But I think I wore out the judges one, because I listened to it so much. And there was a couple of other ones there that I listened to. Nobody else was using it, and, you know, I was too young to know, you know, you could go to the record store and buy more at the time. But I sure did play the ones there, and I figured out, you know, at really young how to use that record player. And it worked pretty good for, you know, being that long ago. You know, like, pre-1960, around 1960. So, I was only like five years old. And I started, you know, that, nobody showed it to me. You know, I just figured it out that this went there, I guess, and found the right, you know, how to use the controls and everything. All right, guys, that's what I had. I've got phonograph records for right now. One thing I always enjoyed growing up was comedy records. And listening to comedy shows kind of influenced it. For instance, because I don't know anyone else does this, so I think I could help the person that does this. If you know a comedy show that does this, then perhaps, because I don't. There was a show called the Sunday Bunnies on comment M on 104.5 here in Toronto. Reconscious, spun vinyl, and spun comedy records. What his niche was, he would do topics. And they were the strangest, craziest topics ever. It wasn't like, no, we're gonna do Christmas and play dirty Christmas songs. And he certainly did. He covered most of the holidays, right? Mother's Day, of course, Father's Day, where, like, everything he would play, they'd be like little three to five minute bits. Like, you know, Bill Cosby, Chris Rock, George Carlin, whatever. Emo Phillips talking about those things. But he had the strangest topics, though. Like, you know, he might say, today we're gonna talk about guns. We're gonna talk about cars. We're gonna talk about tornadoes. Whatever. And they would be all bits. Like, I was thinking he knows his stuff. He knows his ish. Because I don't think I could spin something like that. It's not the same as, like, hip hop. Uh, every song is gonna be about me. Every song is gonna be about killing fogs. It doesn't work quite like that with comedy. You have to really dig and listen. Right? And it's not just, oh, we're gonna do swearing bits. We're gonna push the envelope for an hour. It isn't like that. So he did topics. And I've never seen anyone bust those styles. Maybe you have. Props if you have. And props to anyone who spins like that. Because I can't. Maybe just teach me how. I learn from the best of them. Okay, anyways, all right, I'll turn it back in. And I go to J.J. Kyle. I ask for a bit. Can you get back to me?
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