Walt
0:00
No
one's
gonna
be
like
David
Fix
on
that
motherfucker's
house.
Drew
0:07
Ladies
and
gentlemen,
Shortbox
Podcast
is
recorded
live
from
Jacksonville,
Florida.
Badr Milligan
0:32
Yo,
Short
Box
Nation.
Hello
again.
Welcome
back
and
thanks
for
pressing
play
today.
If
you're
brand
new,
welcome
to
the
show.
I'm
your
host,
Badr,
and
this
is
the
Short Box
Podcast,
the
comic
book
talk
show
where
we
bridge
the
gap
between
the
panels
of
your
favorite
comics
with
the
people
who
put
their
blood,
sweat,
and
tears
into
making
them.
Or
in
today's
case,
you'll
hear
from
the
original
fanboys,
the
original
host
who
put
their
blood,
sweat,
and
tears
into
creating
this
year
podcast
and
getting
it
off
the
ground
way,
way,
way,
way,
way,
way
back
in
the
summer
of
2012.
That's
right,
Short
Box
Nation,
I'm
proud
to
present
to
you
episode
500.
Alright,
this
is
a
special
monumental
moment
in
short
box
history.
It's
a
milestone
episode
that
honestly
most
podcasts
uh
don't
reach
500
episodes,
right?
So
this
is
a
big
deal
for
us,
and
I'm
so
glad
to
be
celebrating
it
with
you,
the
listeners,
as
well
as
my
co-host
for
today.
All
right,
I'm
talking
about
my
brothers
from
other
mothers.
First
up
on
mic
number
two,
we
got
Mr.
Andrew
Torres
calling
all
the
way
in
from
motherfucking
Denver.
Hello,
Swedish
pizza.
The
big
homie
Woke
is
also
on
said
podcast.
Yo,
wolves
in
Orlando.
I'm
in
Orlando.
It's
hot
as
hell
here.
Yes,
we're
pouring
live
from
Orlando
is
Woke.
We
got
the
original
trio
on
the
podcast
today.
Joining
us
to
celebrate
this
special
moment.
Uh
pour
yourself
a
drink,
light
up
if
that's
your
thing,
kick
your
feet
up,
turn
up
the
volume,
and
get
ready
for
a
damn
good
time.
But
first,
whoa,
are
you
pouring
up
a
drink?
Yeah,
yeah,
yeah.
Don't
worry
about
that.
Just
keep
doing
what
you're
doing,
bro.
Yo,
it's
just
addable
funny.
That
is
super
funny.
Yeah,
it's
like
super
net
set.
Walt
2:19
I'm
over
here,
like,
yo,
it
goes
into
what
we
were
just
talking
about,
though.
Pull
you
up
a
drink
real
quick.
Badr Milligan
2:24
Yeah,
that
is
true.
He
is
taking
my
yeah,
he
is
taking
my
drink.
Walt
2:27
That's
why
I
was
like,
yo,
I
gotta
let
him
pull
one
up.
Badr Milligan
2:29
Yeah,
well,
look.
Let's
take
care
of
business
because
you
don't
make
it
to
500
episodes
without
a
little
help
or
a
lot
of
help
along
the
way.
Big
shout
outs
to
our
sponsors,
including
our
presenting
sponsor,
coverprice.com.
They
are
the
ultimate
comic
book
price
guide
and
collection
management
tool
for
comic
collectors.
All
right,
if
you
want
to
know
what
your
collection
is
worth
right
now,
visit
bit.ly
slash
the
short
box,
or
just
click
the
link
in
the
show
notes.
That's
a
long
URL
to
remember.
Click
the
link
in
the
show
notes.
You'll
get
access
to
cover
price
for
one
dollar
for
a
month.
All
right,
it's
normally
$8
a
month,
but
you
can
save
$7
on
a
one-month
trial.
It's
a
great
tool.
I
use
it.
You
should
check
it
out.
Once
again,
coverprice.com,
visit
bit.ly
slash
the
short
box,
or
click
the
link
in
the
show
notes
to
get
the
app
for
a
dollar.
And
we
gotta
thank
Gotham
City
Limit
Comic
Shop
for
being
a
sponsor
as
well.
They're
the
best
damn
comic
shop
here
in
Northeast
Florida.
You
can
visit
the
shop
for
yourself
here
in
Jacksonville,
Florida
on
Southside
Boulevard,
or
buy
comics
for
them
online
at
GothamCityLimit.com.
All
right,
that's
our
sponsors.
Big
shout
outs
to
coverprice.com.
Big
shout
out
to
Gotham
City
Limit.
We
couldn't
do
this
without
them
or
without
the
loyal
supporters
over
on
the
short
box
Patreon.
You
guys
are
the
best.
Seriously,
we
couldn't
do
this
without
you
or
the
sponsors.
And
while
I'm
on
uh
a
shout-out
kick,
all
right,
let's
give
it
up
and
let's
raise
a
glass
and
cheers.
The
short
box
extended
family
and
uh
all
the
co-hosts
of
the
past
of
short
box
past
that
has
helped
us
get
here.
All
right,
I'm
talking
about
our
day
one,
super
day
one,
super
early
year
co-host
like
Amber.
Big
shout
outs
to
Amber,
big
shout
outs
to
Ryan
Gunwitch
Black.
All
right,
that's
a
little
throwback
for
for
you
longtime
listeners.
Big
shout
outs
to
Grant,
big
major
love
to
Adam
Waller,
Chris
Hojola,
all
right.
Much
love
to
the
exceptional
Edmund
Danzart,
much
love
to
the
first
lady
of
the
short
box,
the
matriarch
herself,
Ashley
Lenny
Hoy.
Of
course,
I
gotta
give
a
shout
out
to
my
boy
Cesar
Cordero.
Alright,
so
many
amazing,
incredible
voices
and
people
have
graced
these
mics
and
put
real
sweat
and
tears
into
helping
us
keep
this
show
afloat
and
building
this
community
for
the
last
14
years.
Alright,
it
wouldn't
be
right
to
celebrate
this
moment
and
not
mention
them
by
name.
But
today
I'm
celebrating
with
my
brothers
Drew
and
Walt.
We're
taking
it
back
to
day
one,
episode
one,
and
I
just
you
know
celebrating
with
the
founding
fathers
of
the
short
box,
alright?
So
without
further
ado,
boys,
how
are
we
doing
today,
man?
How
y'all
feeling?
Happy
Friday.
I
got
off
work.
Walt
4:55
Well,
I
didn't
get
off
work,
I
just
left
work
early.
Badr Milligan
4:59
Did
you
tell
him
you
were
recording
a
500
episode?
Walt
5:01
No.
I
just
told,
I
just
told
my
boss,
I
said,
hey
man,
it's
about
two
o'clock.
I'm
not
doing
this
no
more.
I
don't
like
looking
this
late
on
a
Friday.
I
didn't
tell
him
all
that.
I
didn't
go
that
far.
But
by
like,
you
know,
by
two
o'clock
is
the
type
of
gig
I
do.
We
not
whatever
ain't
came
by
lunchtime
ain't
gonna
happen
on
a
Friday.
Let
me
be
real
clear.
That's
that's
Monday
work.
Yo,
it's
Monday
problems.
Badr Milligan
5:28
That's
a
Monday
problem.
That
that's
that's
a
future
me
problem.
It
ain't
a
current
me
problem.
Walt
5:32
Yeah,
that's
not
a
current
me
problem.
So
I
got
off
work,
shot
up,
I
mean,
took
the
took
the
bus
home,
got
off
at
my
bar
real
quick,
had
one
drink.
The
bar
to
already
know
I
only
come
in
there
and
get
one
drink.
Because
it
always
be
dumb
hot
this
time
of
the
day.
I'm
not
walking
home
with
all
that
stuff
I'll
be
carrying.
So
I
get
off
there,
have
one
drink,
take
a
lift
home.
This
is
how
you
know
I
didn't
got
old
and
lazy
too,
and
take
a
lift
home
for
like
whatever
it
costs,
and
then
be
like,
all
right,
cool.
I
tip
these
folks
because
I'm
not
gonna
do
that
walk
with
this
laptop
and
my
backpack
and
my
um
my
whatever
provisions
I
went
and
bought
from
7-Eleven,
basically
my
squares
for
the
week,
for
the
weekend,
and
all
that
good
stuff.
I'm
not
doing
that.
So
I
have
that
one
drink,
tip
her
good,
and
now
she
just
knows
my
face
and
my
name.
Badr Milligan
6:24
So
we
good.
Damn.
Well,
you've
really
laid
out
that
Friday.
I
that
was
a
thorough,
thorough
plan.
Drew,
how
you
doing
today,
man?
Drew
6:32
Pretty
good.
No
complaints.
Uh
got
off
work
early.
I've
been
watching
Narcos.
I've
been
running
through,
I'll
do
the
speed
run
on
Narcos
season
three
per
your
recommendation.
Hey,
look,
it's
a
great
show.
It's
a
great
show.
Yeah,
and
I
had
to
call
you
because
of
that
big
ass
shootout.
So
now
I'm
here.
Badr Milligan
6:48
Yeah,
we're
watching
old
shit
to
celebrate
this
500.
Walt
6:52
Hey,
but
guess
what?
It
goes
back
to
what
we've
been
talking
about
for
years.
There's
too
much
of
everything
now.
So
now
that
there's
too
much
of
everything,
no
one
is
watching
anything
at
the
same
time.
Badr Milligan
7:01
Yeah,
it's
impossible.
Time
doesn't
exist
when
you
have
a
hundred
shows
that
you
need
to,
you
know,
like
the
concept
of
like
a
show
being
old
and
new,
I
think
is
kind
of
irrelevant
for
me
personally.
It's
like,
is
the
show
good?
Walt
7:14
Because
I
have
the
show
good,
and
then
I'll
jump
on
it.
Yeah.
Like,
I'm
low-key,
I've
never
watched
the
episode
of
Euphoria,
honestly,
until
like
about
three
weeks
ago
when
this
new
season
started.
I
was
just
working
from
home
and
I
was
like,
oh,
let
me
just
see
what's
happening.
And
I
was
like,
oh,
this
show
is
insane.
So
I've
been
kind
of
watching
them
now.
Drew
7:32
Okay,
hey.
Walt
7:35
I
didn't
watch
last
week's
episode,
but
now
I'm
kind
of
like
intrigued
enough
to
go
back
on
Euphoria.
Yeah.
And
one
time
I'll
probably
just
one
time
I'll
just
sit
back
and
watch
all
of
them.
But
I'm
I'm
just
kind
of
catching
up
on
Invincible.
Oh,
whoa,
whoa,
whoa.
You're
on
the
Invincible
train?
Yeah,
I've
been
watching
it
now.
I'm
on
I'm
on
season
three.
I
got
two
episodes.
I
did
not
realize
these
episodes
were
an
hour
long.
That's
like
most
shows.
I
did
not
realize
that
that
card.
Invincible
did
not
start
out
an
hour
long.
Badr Milligan
8:07
45
minutes,
50
minutes.
You
might
as
well
round
it
up.
Walt
8:10
It's
like
50,
it's
an
hour.
Badr Milligan
8:11
Okay.
Walt
8:12
It
says
51
minutes.
Badr Milligan
8:14
It's
a
solid
uh
50-minute
show.
Walt
8:16
No,
no,
I'm
not.
What
I'm
saying
is
this
it
is
basketball
playoff
season
right
now,
and
it's
NHL
playoff
season
right
now.
Oh
my
god.
Badr Milligan
8:24
I
got
my
sports,
goddammit.
Yeah,
I
ain't
got
time
for
this
shit.
Walt
8:27
Bro,
I
look,
I
really
don't,
and
then
this
year
is
a
World
Cup
year.
So,
like,
typically
when
I
would
be
trying
to
catch
up
on
any
of
this
stuff
would
be
like
coming
up
after
basketball
season
in.
Badr Milligan
8:37
Yeah.
Walt
8:38
But
my
daytime
is
gonna
be
built.
Not
even
my
daytime,
my
evenings
now,
because
these
since
the
World
Cup
is
in
America
this
year,
those
games
are
gonna
be
coming
on
in
the
afternoon
and
in
the
evening.
They're
not
gonna
be
coming
on
in
the
morning,
like
how
typically
it
is.
Like,
you
know,
you
watch
World
Cup
and
it
should
be
done
by
like
four
o'clock.
I
got
the
rest
of
my
day
to
go.
That
ain't
gonna
be
the
case.
Badr Milligan
9:01
Real
quick,
we
fell
down
one
hell
of
a
tandem,
like
rabbit
hole.
I
love
when
Walt
gets
to
talking
about
his
TV
watching
like
habits
right
here.
Yeah.
Um,
but
real
quick,
I
want
I
want
to
bring
up,
I
want
to
get
us
into
our
main
event
if
you
don't
mind.
I
had
tasked
all
of
it.
We
can
go.
Yeah,
yeah,
yeah.
I
had
tasked
all
of
us
with
this
being
the
500
episode.
I
thought
it'd
be
a
good
idea
if
each
one
of
us
was
to
go
seek
out
and
find
a
500th
issue
comic
book
to
talk
about.
Which
which
uh
surprisingly
was
a
lot
more.
There
was
a
lot
more
comics
that
had
hit
500
than
I
had
originally
uh
anticipated.
I
guess
what
what
came
to
mind
when
you
guys
thought
of
500?
Was
there
like
one
specific
comic
that
came
to
mind
when
I
said,
hey,
what
go
find
a
500th
issue
comic
book
to
read?
Drew
9:49
Um
uh
Amazing
Spider-Man
500.
Badr Milligan
9:51
Okay.
Walt
9:52
I
thought
X-Men
500,
and
then
I
was
like,
well,
I
also
want
to
read
something
I
normally
don't
read.
So
I
was
gonna
try
to
read
Green
Lantern
500,
but
I
couldn't
figure
out
what
the
500
issue
of
Green
Lantern
was.
Yeah,
I
which
we
can
come
to
that
tangent
later.
Sure.
Badr Milligan
10:10
We're
kind
of
here
right
now
because
um
uh
that
that
was
something
that
I
I
made
note
of
is
that
you
know
Google
to
find
a
couple
of
those.
Yeah,
and
I
mean
I
I
knew
that
some
of
the
flash
and
Google
don't
work
no
more.
No,
not
as
well
as
you
would
want.
Sometimes
uh
they
give
you
that
AI
overview
and
it's
completely
wrong.
But
some
of
the
ones
that
I
I
think
I'm
right
there
with
Drew.
I
think
Amazing
Spider-Man
500
came
to
mind
because
that
cover,
that
J.
Scott
Campbell
cover,
is
uh
iconic.
I've
seen
it
on
posters,
I've
seen
it
on
shirts,
I've
seen
it.
Drew
10:42
Uh
it's
the
one
where
he's
like
he's
swinging
and
Henry
Jane
is
behind
him,
and
then
you
have
all
the
rose
gallery
underneath
him.
Badr Milligan
10:50
Yeah.
It's
one
of
those
images,
if
you
when
you
see
it,
you're
like,
oh,
I've
seen
this
a
hundred
times.
So
I
knew
that
I
wasn't
I
was
expecting
a
lot
of
like
the
flagship
iconic
heroes
to
have
a
500
Spider-Man,
I
was
like
absolutely
detective,
Superman.
I
think
what
came
as
a
surprise
as
I
was
doing
research
into
what
other
yeah,
was
was
uh
comics
like
Archie
was
hit
500,
but
that's
not
surprising.
Walt
11:14
Basically,
you
had
to
assume
that
any
book
that
started
from
in
the
1950s
and
up
that
has
kind
of
had
a
continual
run
would
have
a
um
500
issues.
That's
why
I
said
Green
Lantern.
Because
there
should
be
500
issues
of
Green
Lantern,
yeah.
Of
um
just
going
off
DC
alone,
I
would
say
there's
about
four
or
five
of
them.
So
I
would
say
the
two
main
Batman
books,
the
two
main
Superman
books,
Wonder
Woman,
Green
Lantern,
and
Flash,
and
that
is
it.
I
don't
think
any
of
those
other
ones
should
they
may
have
500,
but
those
are
the
five
that
I
think
would
have.
Badr Milligan
11:53
Yeah.
Yeah,
it
turned
out
that
there
was,
I
think
where
it
got
a
little
confusing
with
DC
was
in
my
initial
search,
uh,
Flash,
there
was
like
uh
at
least
Google's
uh,
you
know,
Google
return
like,
hey,
Flash
had
a
500
issue.
But
that
wasn't
necessarily
the
case.
It's
like
it's
the
500
issue
is
technically
Flash
volume
two,
150,
because
if
you
you'd
have
to
tally
it
up
in
total
from
volume
one
to
500.
Walt
12:19
Yes,
but
that's
that
leg
this
goes
into
the
bigger
problem
right
now.
Go
off,
Wall.
Go
ahead.
It's
the
fucking
is
the
bullshit
of
them
like
restarting
books
all
the
time.
Drew
12:30
Yeah,
yes.
I
like
now
now
Spider-Man
is
there's
like
10
volumes
of
Spider-Man.
Walt
12:36
There
doesn't
need
to
be.
Amazing
Spider-Man
is
Amazing
Spider-Man.
Yeah,
so
those
books
should
just
only
have
the
legacy
number
on
them.
Badr Milligan
12:43
That's
it.
But
I
mean
we
know
why
they
do
that,
why
they
renumber,
because
it's
not
easier
to
do
that.
Walt
12:50
That
doesn't
mean
for
us
to
have
this
conversation
that
we
have,
we're
celebrating
American
legacies.
Badr Milligan
12:56
The
short
box?
Yeah,
I
agree.
Absolutely.
American
legacy
is
a
good
thing.
And
then
we
also
said
American
Legacies
are
comic
books
that
have
been
going
on
forever.
Sure,
yeah,
that's
a
good
way
to
put
it.
Walt
13:04
So,
like,
bro,
that
you've
been
able
to
survive
from
basically
right
after
the
Great
Depression
and
World
War
II
till
now
is
an
achievement.
Badr Milligan
13:15
Agreed.
Yeah.
Walt
13:16
It
should
be
treated
as
such,
and
it
shouldn't
be
treated
like
just
because
people
feel
intimidated
by
jumping
in
and
issue
600
doesn't
mean
anything.
That
thing
should
only
say
issue
600,
new
arc
starting.
That's
it.
Badr Milligan
13:29
Yeah,
appreciate
it.
No,
appreciate
it.
Walt
13:30
Because
guess
what?
We
wasn't
tripping
when
we
would
see
issue
200
of
a
book.
No.
I'm
not
about
to
go
back
and
read
the
other
200
issues.
I
just
picked
up
this
one
now.
Badr Milligan
13:38
You
know,
and
I
I
I
want
to
uh
come
back
to
this
later.
Uh
because
I
do
have
a
I
do
want
to
hear
y'all
thoughts
on
continuity.
Uh,
I've
been
thinking
about
continuity
a
lot.
Well,
I
don't
know
if
you've
heard
of
this
book
called
All
of
the
Marvels.
I
think
I
probably
told
both
of
you
guys
about
it.
Walt
13:50
I
bought
that
book,
I
just
haven't
had
a
chance
to
read
it
yet.
Badr Milligan
13:53
Okay.
Because
they
they
the
author
talks
a
lot
about
continuity
and
how
it
can
be
both
good
and
bad.
Um,
and
I
want
to
I
want
to
circle
back
on
that.
But
I
want
to
say
some
of
the
other
surprising
comics
that
have
also
hit
500
that
now
I'm
like,
oh,
that's
not
that
too,
that's
not
too
surprising.
But
2000
AD
is
currently
well
over,
I
guess,
2300
issues.
Like
they
hit
their
500
issue
back
in
1986.
I
thought
that
was
pretty.
Walt
14:23
I've
never
read
that
book
before.
200
AD?
Badr Milligan
14:25
Like
none
of
them?
Walt
14:26
Yeah,
I've
never
read
it.
Badr Milligan
14:27
None
of
them.
That
is
a
blind
spot,
100%.
I
agree.
That's
a
blind
spot
for
me.
I
know,
so
like
I've
read,
uh,
I
mean,
I
have
read
a
couple
of
2000
AD
for
Judge
Dread,
like
the
uh
uh
uh
Judge
Death
series.
I've
read
those.
And
they're
really
short
to
read,
too.
It's
not
like
you
know,
um,
they're
just
like
anthology
stories.
Drew
14:47
Did
uh
did
you
by
can't
see
what
Mad
TV?
Badr Milligan
14:51
Oh,
Mad
Magazine.
Drew
14:52
Yeah,
mad
magazine,
sorry.
Badr Milligan
14:53
No,
I
I
did
not.
Walt
14:54
Um
like
I
said,
uh
I
think
for
this
they
would
have
they
would
have
had
well
over
they
would
have
had
like
a
thousand.
That
book
that
went
on
forever.
Yes,
it's
still
going
on
right
now.
Drew
15:04
Did
they
they
brought
it
back?
I
think
so,
because
they
um
because
of
that,
the
the
absolute
universe
is
doing
so
good
that
they
made
a
parody.
Oh,
okay.
They
did
a
mad
magazine
absolute
parody.
So
uh
yeah,
but
that's
different
than
the
actual
Mad
Magazine,
dog.
Walt
15:17
I'm
talking
about
the
actual
Mad
Magazine.
Badr Milligan
15:20
A
quick
Google
search
says
Mad
Magazine
is
currently
on
issue
601,
which
is
was
released
in
uh
August
2026.
Okay.
Yeah,
pretty
crazy.
Okay,
so
anyway,
back
to
what
I
was
saying.
I
I
tasked
each
one
of
you,
hey,
find
500
issues
to
read
and
let's
talk
about
it.
Drew
15:34
Yeah,
500
issues
to
read.
Badr Milligan
15:36
Yeah,
read
500
issues
in
48
hours
is
what
is
what
the
insane.
I
just
downloaded
the
the
fucking
internet
to
my
brain.
I
just
plugged
in
my
iPad,
Marvel
Unlimited
to
my
brain.
Um,
so
let's
do
a
round
table
and
I
want
to
hear
what
comics
you
guys
read.
Um,
and
then
we
can
kind
of
just
go
from
there.
Drew,
I'm
gonna
I
want
to
start
with
you.
What
did
you
end
up
uh
choosing
uh
for
the
assignment?
Drew
16:04
Okay,
so
I
did
Flash
and
it
was
like
you
said,
it's
not
there's
no
issue
500.
Like
there's
not
a
flash
500.
You
have
to
like
figure
out
like
where
the
numbering
is,
and
it's
volume
two,
um,
issue
150.
Okay,
which
is
Flash's
technical
500.
So
and
what's
crazy
is
like
I
don't
even
think
DC
cared
about
cared
about
the
500
because
they
just
kind
of
went
with
it.
What
year
did
it
come
out?
Yeah,
I'm
looking
it
up.
Oh,
this
was
like
Mark
Wade
Wally
West.
So
this
would
have
to
have
been
this
is
literally
after
Barry
Allen
had
died.
Badr Milligan
16:39
Yeah,
it
says
um
July
1999,
written
by
Mark.
Walt
16:44
So
this
is
the
same
issue
I
kind
of
discovered
with
Green
Lantern,
but
that's
why
I
didn't
read
that
book.
Badr Milligan
16:48
Yeah,
yeah.
Walt
16:49
I
wanted
to
read
it,
but
we'll
get
I'm
I'm
jumping
ahead.
Drew
16:52
Yeah.
So
I
I
read
that
one.
That
one
was
okay,
in
the
sense
of
like
it's
it
was
the
tail
end.
It
was
like
issue
six
of
six,
so
I'm
literally
catching
the
tail
end
of
it,
and
I
read
it
to
see
if
they
did
anything,
but
it
just
came
out
like
a
regular
issue.
Badr Milligan
17:06
So
it
wasn't
like
a
big
deal
or
an
anniversary
issue.
Drew
17:09
I
would
say
it
was
a
big
deal
because
some
of
the
stuff
I
I
think
maybe
like
like
I
don't
want
to
assume,
but
since
Mark
Wade
was
writing
it,
he
probably
was
like,
I
I
would
assume
that
DC
editorial
would
tell
them,
like,
hey,
this
is
this
how
many
issues
you're
writing.
Maybe.
Yeah.
But
in
this
one,
it's
it's
a
time
traveling,
and
it's
one
of
those
like
um
Wally
West
fights
the
anti-monitor
in
a
different
universe.
So
it
was
definitely
pretty
interesting,
but
it
it
deals
with
the
same
things
that
like
Wally
West
is
always
gonna
be
running
into
Barry
Allen's
shadow.
Yeah,
like
he's
never
gonna
feel
good
enough.
And
he's
always
like,
Whoa,
what
this
do,
and
this
is
so
it
was
okay.
And
then
I
read
Amazing
Spider-Man
500,
and
to
me
that
one
was
a
bigger
deal
because
that
had
um
Ramada
Jr.
and
Ramada
Sr.
Badr Milligan
17:58
Oh,
they
both
were
drawing?
Oh,
they're
both
drawing,
yeah,
yeah.
Oh
wow.
Drew
18:02
So
I
and
so
then
Ramada
Jr.,
he
took
care
of
all
of
the
Spider-Man
panels,
and
then
Ramada
Sr.
did
all
the
Peter
Parker
uh
panels.
And
this
was
another
time
traveling,
which
is
crazy.
It
was
a
time
traveling
issue
as
well.
Badr Milligan
18:16
I
want
to
ask
this
real
quick
because
with
500
issues,
you
would
imagine
them
being
a,
you
know,
they're
I
think
all
of
the
ones
I
found
on
the
like
the
ones
that
Drew
mentioned
outside
of
the
flash
one
are
usually
like
oversized,
they're
like
50
plus
pages,
maybe.
Drew
18:30
Um
96
pages
for
one
low
price.
Badr Milligan
18:33
Yeah.
Yeah.
Do
you
guys
do
you
guys
prefer
those
kind
of
issues
as
uh
like
do
you
prefer
what
type
of
extra
content
do
you
prefer
in
those?
Well,
I'm
I'm
saying,
like,
do
you
prefer
you
want
like
splash
pages?
No,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no.
I'm
saying,
like,
do
you
prefer
when
they
have
the
when
they
do
those
issues,
those
anniversary
issues?
Do
you
prefer
like
it's
one
story,
one,
you
know,
all
50
pages
as
one
story?
Do
you
prefer
like
a
uh
uh
uh
like
knowledge-style
backup
stories?
Walt
19:08
Like
uh
it
should
be
50,
okay,
let's
say
it's
96
pages,
right?
Give
or
take?
It
should
be
50
pages
or
40
pages
of
the
wrap-up
of
whatever
the
main
storyline
is
going
on
right
now
for
that
book.
Oh,
so
you
don't
want
to.
I'll
just
use
Amazing
Spider-Man.
Let's
say
it's
96
pages
of
Amazing
Spider-Man.
It
should
be
50
pages
of
them
wrapping
up
that
story,
and
then
the
next
um
the
next
40
pages
should
be
four
separate
10-page
stories,
or
three-page,
or
three,
or
whatever
the
math
is,
of
the
other
great
creators
that
have
written
in
that
book.
And
their
people
and
their
and
their
artists
come
back
to
actually
draw
those
books.
Badr Milligan
19:52
Let
me
refine
that
question.
Do
you
want
an
issue
like
a
500
to
be
a
standalone
where
I
can
pick
it
up
and
read,
or
do
you
prefer
it
to
be
the
end
of,
you
know,
a
part
of
that
continuity?
It
sounds
like
well,
you're
of
the
latter.
Walt
20:06
It
needs
to
be
of
continuity,
and
then
the
back
half
of
the
book
should
be
the
greatest
people
who
ever
wrote
on
this
book
that
everyone
kind
of
recognized
it
always
like
how
we
always
bitch
about
somebody
like
not
doing
something,
or
some
like
uh
let's
say
Dan,
issue
500
for
Amazing
Spider-Man,
Dan
Slash
should
have
10
pages
in
that
book.
Stan
Lee
should
have
10
pages
in
that
book.
And
then
I
can't
think
of
the
another
person,
but
that's
what
I'm
saying.
Somebody
like
that.
Drew
20:39
You
make
it
a
legacy.
You
make
it
legacy.
Walt
20:41
Those
are
the
only
books
that
deserve
all
these
covers.
Badr Milligan
20:44
Okay.
Alright.
So
Drew,
to
go
back
to
you,
because
I
I'm
kind
of
familiar
with
that
story.
Like
it's
it's
a
I
what
was
the
story
about?
What
was
the
premise?
Drew
20:54
So
the
story,
the
story
is
about
Peter
Parker
is
in
he's
in
the
future
and
he's
in
the
past.
I
don't
know
how
they
split
him
up,
but
he's
watching
himself
about
to
be
bit
by
the
spider
and
he
can
stop
it
and
change
his
entire
life,
and
then
he's
at
the
tail
end,
he
sees
like
her
older
version
of
himself,
and
he's
um
he's
at
uh
Aunt
May's
grave,
and
he's
about
to
fight
a
bunch
of
cops
that
are
like
are
trying
to
like
arrest
him.
So
then
a
big
fight
breaks
out,
and
at
the
same
time,
um
Peter
is
watching
both
his
younger
self
and
his
older
self,
and
he's
like,
I
can
go
and
change
it
or
not,
but
then
Doctor
Strange
is
uh
talking
to
him
and
like,
no,
do
not
do
that.
He's
like,
I'm
gonna
try
to
bring
you
back.
So
he
brings
him
back,
and
then
he
brings
him
back
to
the
curtain
continuity
where
uh
all
the
Avengers
are
trying
to
like
stop
a
um
like
a
world
ending
event,
but
Spider
Man
has
all
the
information
and
he
tells
them,
he
goes,
Hey
listen,
I
need
you
to
trust
me.
Um
I
don't
even
think
he
doesn't
need
you
to
trust
me.
He
like
tells
them
that
they
shouldn't
do
this,
that,
and
the
third.
And
they're
like,
what
do
you
think?
They're
like,
nah,
that
sounds
right.
Like,
makes
sense.
And
Peter
talks
about
like
the
fact
that
he's
been
Spider-Man
for
so
long,
he's
earned
everybody's
respect.
And
that's
why
they
didn't
second
guess
anything
he
said.
Like
they
actually
believe.
Badr Milligan
22:14
I
like
that
approach
where
it's
like,
hey,
we're
going
to
celebrate
the
mythos
of
someone
like
Spider-Man
that
has
had
so
many
years.
You
know,
everyone
knows
the
classic
story.
You
know,
he
gets
bitten,
he's
got
to
make,
you
know,
a
with
great
power,
responsibility,
all
that
stuff.
But,
you
know,
they
tell
it
in
a
in
a
in
an
original,
like
this
kind
of
time
travel
retrospective
story.
I
do
appreciate
when
they
do
that
rather
than
just
give
us
like
the
greatest
hits
or,
you
know,
um
uh
regurgitate
that.
Like
uh,
like,
and
I
guess
what
we
should
mention
that
that
issue
is
written
by
J.
Michael
Sravinsky,
and
I
think
this
was
like
in
the
middle
of
him
and
Ramita's
like
kind
of
very
iconic
run,
that
500
had
hit.
So
it's
like
I
think
they
were
both
firing
on
all
gears,
anyways.
Drew
22:55
Yes,
100%.
The
artwork
is
really
good.
Uh
uh,
it
has
a
Spider-Man
feel
to
it,
and
it
goes
through
his
greatest
hits
because
while
Doctor
Strange
is
pulling
him,
like
Peter
ends
up
in
the
like
the
most
important
parts
of
his
lives.
Uh
and
the
end
is
really,
really
sweet.
So
he
like
ends
up
running
Doctor
Strange
gives
him
his
birthday.
Did
you
find
out
it's
it's
his
birthday?
Like
he's
fighting
and
all
this,
he
finally
gets
home,
and
then
Doctor
Strange
gives
him
a
gift,
and
it's
like
it's
five
minutes
with
Uncle
Ben.
So
Uncle
Ben
comes
up
and
they
have
like
a
whole
conversation.
So
and
that's
Ramada
Sr.
So
they're
all
having
a
like
a
whole
conversation.
Badr Milligan
23:33
I
think
I
think
in
hindsight,
where
we're
at
now,
knowing
that
you
know,
um
Ramita
Sr.
has
passed
away,
it's
just
Junior.
I
think
that
makes
that
issue
a
little
more
sweeter,
you
know.
The
fact
that,
you
know,
you
get
to
see
like
father
and
son.
Because
I
mean
Ramita
Sr.
and
Junior,
I
mean,
like
Ramita
Sr.
was
the
next
guy
up,
you
know,
after
uh
uh
Ditko
left.
You
know,
so
like
you
got
that
legacy,
and
then
Junior
made
a
name
for
himself.
I
think
that's
really
cool
that
you
get
to
see
father
and
son
work
on
this
character
that
means
so
much
to
both
of
their
careers,
but
especially
to
senior.
Drew
24:04
Yeah.
Especially
the
fact
that
they
added
the
whole
Uncle
Ben
and
Peter
Parker
aspect
of
just
these
two
dudes
that
like
Yeah,
agreed
100%.
Badr Milligan
24:12
So
Drew
sounds
like
of
those
two,
amazing
Spider-Man
what
500
was
more
your
gym.
All
right.
Yeah,
it
wasn't
even
a
risk.
That's
stupid.
Um,
real
quick,
uh
now
when
it
comes
to
like
these
anniversary
issues,
I
had
mentioned
like,
you
know,
uh,
like,
well,
I
think
your
answer
is
really
good
in
terms
of
like
re-inviting
some
of
the
iconic
creators
to
come
back
and
do
like
stories.
Like,
do
you
guys
do
you
guys
prefer
what
about
like
the
the
um
uh
I
can't
think
of
the
phrase,
but
like
the
extra
content.
Like,
do
you
guys
like
more
backup
stories?
You
guys
and
do
you
guys
care
for
like
character
sketches
or
like
write-ups
or
anything
else?
Drew
24:49
The
one
thing
I
want
is
the
the
backpack
things
that
shows
all
the
covers.
Walt
24:53
Okay,
that
part,
all
the
coverage.
That
all
the
covers
thing,
and
then
the
other
thing,
if
you
want
to
get
whoever's
a
leading
Spider-Man
um
person
who
has
studied
Spider-Man
like
a
college
club
course
or
whatever,
have
them
write
a
thing
in
the
back
on
why.
And
then
the
last
10
pages
or
whatever,
all
those
covers.
Agreed.
Either
you're
gonna
have
them
write
that
in
the
back
or
the
front.
But
if
you
write
in
the
back,
then
people
are
more
likely
to
read
it
just
because.
Badr Milligan
25:25
I'm
a
I'm
a
big
fan
of
having
like
uh
an
educated
person
write
a
dope
ass
like
essay
or
write-up
on
why,
you
know,
a
character.
Why
this
means
what
it
means.
Yep.
Agreed
100%.
Well,
let's
pass
it
to
you,
man.
What
what
uh
comics
did
you
end
up
reading
for
this?
Walt
25:38
Well,
I
only
re
ended
up
reading
fully
one,
but
I
will
tell
you
about
my
follies
with
two
others
before
I
get
to
the
one.
So
the
first
one
was
the
Green
Lantern
thing,
where
I
couldn't
figure
out
what
it
was,
and
I
was
like,
bro,
I'm
running
out
of
time.
I
ain't
got
no
time
for
this
shit.
The
second
one
was
Fantastic
Four
500.
Badr Milligan
25:59
I
was
expecting
you
to
do
that
one.
Walt
26:01
And
I
I
think
Mark
Wade
write
that
one
too.
Mark
Wade
did.
Mark
Way
did
write
that
one.
And
I'm
gonna
get
to
how
far
I
got
into
the
book.
It
seemed
like
he
regurgitated
some
of
his
shit
from
Amazing
Spider-Man,
because
guess
what?
Beginning
of
the
book,
our
good
buddy
Dr.
Strange
is
up
there
talking.
And
then
I
had
to,
then
I
had
to
look
at
my
phone
and
was
like,
oh,
we're
gonna
be
doing
this
at
five.
I
gotta
charge
his
phone,
and
then
I'm
kind
of
like
chilling
and
I'm
still
kind
of
relaxing
from
getting
all
work.
I
don't
know
what
I'm
gonna
have.
And
my
homegirl
called
me.
So
I
just
I
just
don't
have
no
time
to
read
this
book.
If
she
wouldn't
have
called
me,
I
probably
would
have
tried
to
power
through
it
real
quick.
But
I
was
like,
well,
I'm
talking
to
her.
Daughter
just
graduated.
I
remember
when
she
had
the
kid
and
all
this
other
shit.
Badr Milligan
26:46
I
think
in
a
weird
way,
this
is
kind
of
related
because
I
think
that
issue,
you
know,
like
Valeria
is
like
I
think
that
issue
introduces
I
think
Valeria,
I
think.
You
won't
be
able
to
do
it.
Actually,
the
more
I
think
about
it,
I
don't
think
it
is,
but
I
think
it
is
kind
of
sweet
that
you
decided
friendship
and
family
over
a
book
about
friendship
and
family.
Yes.
I
got
the
real
thing
at
home.
I
got
the
real
thing.
Walt
27:08
So
I
just
put
the
book
down,
and
then
the
book
I
the
book
I
end
up
reading,
yeah,
I
just
live
it.
Badr Milligan
27:20
I
mean,
I
is
it
safe
to
say
I
I
think
we
all
ended
up
reading
our
doing
our
homework
assignments
on
the
iPad,
right?
You
know,
like
I
think
we
already
didn't.
Walt
27:29
I
end
up
having
to,
but
I
could
have
did,
I
could
have
gone
pulled
that
out
the
box.
I
had
that
book.
You
have
Fantastic
Four
500?
No,
I
have
the
the
book
I
read
in
a
box.
Okay,
whatever.
X-Men
500.
X-Men
500.
Which
doesn't
surprise
me
500.
Badr Milligan
27:40
Real
quick,
have
you
guys
ever
to
me,
this
is
like
maybe
a
cheat
code,
maybe
not
too
many
people
know,
but
reading
digital,
have
y'all
ever
tried
to
hook
up
your
iPad
to
like
a
bigger
monitor
or
your
TV
and
read
like
your
digital
comics
that
way?
It
feels
fancy.
Walt
27:53
Absolutely
not.
And
now
I'm
gonna
start
doing
it
because
that's
the
only
way
to
read
those
DC
books.
Because
that's
my
that's
my
biggest
issue
with
the
DC
books,
is
that
the
um
with
the
DC
Unlimited
is
that
it's
not
as
good
as
the
Marvel
Unlimited
as
far
as
like
the
uh
guided
view.
Badr Milligan
28:09
The
guided
view.
Yeah,
the
guided
view.
Yeah,
yeah.
I'm
telling
you
right
now,
put
uh
connect
your
iPad
to
your
big
ass
TV,
dim
the
lights
a
little,
pour
a
little
drink
up,
set
that
shit
to
guided
view,
and
it's
like
a
movie.
Yeah,
that
comic
book
feels
like
a
movie,
baby.
Drew
28:25
I
read
that's
how
I
read
Tom
King's
Batman
when
the
DC
app
came
out.
When
the
DC
app
was
out
and
you
were
able
to
get
it,
I
put
it
on
you,
I
put
it
on
the
Roku,
and
I
just
had
my
like
a
clicker.
I
felt
like
I
was
giving
a
presentation
on
combo
books.
I
was
walking
around
my
room.
You
had
a
lady.
Steve
Steve
Jobs
had
a
black
t-shirt,
turtle,
jeans
in,
walking
around
reading
it.
Badr Milligan
28:46
Yeah,
like
if
you
look
right
here,
you
can
see
clean
clay
man
really
emphasize
the
cleavage
on
the
cat
woman
right
here
in
this
panel.
Let's
zoom
in,
folks.
All
right,
well,
so
you
couldn't
read
uh
Fantasy
4500.
Sorry.
Walt
29:00
I
got
to
about,
let's
say,
about
10
pages
in.
I
was
like,
I
don't
have
no
time.
The
homie
just
called
me.
I
need
to
tap
in
with
her.
Tap
tap.
So
I
was
like,
I
had
already
read
the
X-Men
book
when
I
got
home
and
you
sent
me
that
initial
text
about
this
thing.
I
was
like,
oh,
I
probably
should
read
this
X-Men
because
the
book
I
thought
was
X-Men
500
was
not
X-Men
500.
So
I'll
make
sure
I
went
reread
it,
and
there
we
go.
So
I'll
tell
you,
I
will
tell
you
my
brief
journey
with
this
book.
I
read
the
whole
thing.
And
it
was
the
I
feel
like
it
was
the
second
issue
after
they
got
to
San
Francisco.
So
it's
the
the
the
start
of
Utopia.
So
um
at
the
end
of
the
book,
Cyclops
does
the
thing
that
Professor
X
does
in
Korkoa,
where
he
just
talks
to
all
the
mutants.
But
at
this
point,
you
gotta
remember
the
mutant
population
had
dwindled
down
to
like
the
200
or
whatever.
So
he
was
like,
if
you
come
here,
you
save
the
X-Men
are
here.
They
all
in
the
bay.
So
they
all
in
Moran
County.
Badr Milligan
30:05
San
Francisco,
right?
Walt
30:07
Yeah,
so
yeah.
So
Moran
County
is
basically
where
um
George
Lucas
lives.
So
it's
got
to
walk
on
ranch
is
that
is
Moran
County.
Oh
shoot,
cool.
So
um,
and
it's
outside
of
it's
in
the
bay,
but
it's
outside
of
like
Oakland
and
San
Francisco
County,
or
whatever.
Um
what
else
happened
in
that
book?
Um
Magneto
doesn't
have
his
powers.
I
forgot
that
part.
The
high
evolutionary
is
the
guy
who's
giving
him
his
powers.
He
some
artist
gets
a
bunch
of
decommissioned
sentinels,
and
then
the
sentinels
attack
like
this
art
established
art
um
installation
because
they
are
the
art
installation
or
the
sentinels.
Because
the
mutant
the
mutants
are
there,
so
this
artist
was
so
um
douchey,
he
said,
um,
why
not
bring
their
worst
enemy
there?
Hey,
this
is
cool.
That's
fucked
up.
Yeah,
yeah,
yeah.
That's
how
people
work
though.
So
um
so
that
was
kind
of
legit
for
the
issue,
and
it
didn't
feel
like
a
500
issue,
but
it
was
it
was
okay
500,
but
not
um
what
I
thought
the
issue
was.
I
thought
the
500
issue
honestly
was
an
issue
where
I
don't
know
why
I
thought
it
was
the
extinction,
the
first
issue
of
the
extinction
agenda.
Oh,
that's
way
too
much.
Or
the
one
that
that
hope
popped
up
in.
That's
what
I
thought
the
500
issue
was.
Yeah.
Badr Milligan
31:26
And
I
don't
know
if
if
we
mentioned
this,
uh,
but
X-Men
500
was
released
in
2008.
This
is,
and
also
I
I
didn't
know
that
it
was
written
by
Ed
Brubaker
and
Matt
Fraction.
Two
of
our,
I
mean,
safe
to
say
two
of
our
favorite.
Oh,
yeah.
Walt
31:39
Yeah,
but
the
problem
was
the
problem
was
the
art.
I
don't
give
a
fuck.
I
watched
something
the
other
day
about
how
all
these
Terry
Dotson
covers
are
worth
all
this
money.
I
don't
care.
Badr Milligan
31:51
Oh,
you're
not
a
Terry
Dotson
fan
at
all.
Walt
31:53
I
thought
you
were
gonna
say,
I
thought
you
were
gonna
say
you
already
know.
The
other,
my
other
least
favorite
two
of
my
least
favorite
artists
drew
this
book.
Greg
Land
and
Terry
Dotson.
It's
a
lot
of
Greg
Land
and
Terry
Dotson.
Drew
32:04
And
they're
both
the
same.
They're
both
the
same.
They're
like
they're
the
same
thing.
You
better
watch
it,
man.
Badr Milligan
32:09
Wait,
when
did
we
start
hating
Terry
Donson?
We've
always
hated
Terry
Dotson.
I've
never
hated
Terry
Dotson.
Walt
32:14
I
think
uh
my
problem
with
Terry
Dobson
is
that
how
Greg
Land
draws
flat,
he
draws
bubbly.
Oh,
wow.
If
that
makes
sense.
Yes.
Yes.
And
you
can
compare
the
two.
That's
what
I'm
saying.
Okay,
and
I
don't
particularly
care
for
either
of
that
because
I
like
shit
like
um
What's
our
boy's
name
who
used
to
draw
the
boy
we
were
going
crazy
for
when
we
started
this
podcast?
Who
was
um
Pena?
I
like
that
kind
of
draw.
Badr Milligan
32:47
Well,
who's
your
favorite
uh
X-Men
artist?
I've
always
been
curious.
Walt
32:50
Oh,
to
be
honest
with
you,
the
the
two
people
who
drew
um
House
of
X
and
um
Powers
of
X
right
now,
those
who
dudes
Yeah,
Silver
and
um
the
dude
who,
you
know,
technically
Pepe
Lorez.
Badr Milligan
33:04
Pepe
Laraz.
Walt
33:05
Yeah,
Pepe
Lorez
is
Pepe
Lorez
is
the
best
X-Men
artist,
damn
near
if
we're
being
honest.
That
dude
is
incredible.
Badr Milligan
33:11
But
but
I
mean,
these
are
like
relatively
new
guys
that
I
mean
2018,
2019
of
uh
House
X,
Power
X.
You're
saying
like
those
are
your
favorite
artists?
Walt
33:19
Yeah,
because
the
problem
with
the
X-Men
books
is
basically
they
put
whoever's
the
greatest
artist
of
the
time
is
basically
gonna
draw
X-Men.
So
now
I'm
picking
between
Jim
Lee
and
David
Finch
and
all
these
other
people.
Okay.
Okay,
okay.
Badr Milligan
33:33
No,
that's
a
solid
lineup.
Walt
33:34
No
one's
gonna
be
like
David
Finch
sucks
at
drawing.
That
motherfucker's
awesome.
Drew
33:41
Oh,
so
you
know
you
got
Steve
McNeven.
Badr Milligan
33:43
I
mean,
you
know,
well,
I
almost
I
almost
read
X-Men
500
because
I
one,
I
remember
that
this
uh
had
a
a
there's
uh
there's
a
Greg
Land
cover,
but
there's
a
really
dope
Alex
Ross
cover
to
X-Men
500
and
a
super
good
uh
Michael
Turner
cover
um
that
I
I
think
is
one
of
the
best
covers
out
there.
But
I
remember
like
really
being
into
this,
I
was
collecting
this
run,
this
era
of
X-Men,
and
I
thought
the
decision
to
move
them
to
San
Francisco
was
really
interesting
at
the
time.
Obviously,
we
look
at
it
now,
it's
like,
you
know,
is
it
safe
to
say
that
was
a
they
were
kind
of
ahead
of
uh
placing
the
X-Men
in
a
different
location?
I
mean,
I
guess
you
can't
really
say
that
because
they
they
did
move
them
to
Australia
at
some
point.
Drew
34:30
They
moved
them
to
space,
they
they
moved
them
to
a
different
place,
a
lot
of
places.
Badr Milligan
34:33
So
yeah,
they
did
get
them.
I
just
remember
I
just
remember
thinking
San
Francisco
was
such
an
interesting
choice
at
the
end
of
the
day.
Walt
34:40
It
was
an
interesting
cover
because
it
was
an
interesting
choice
because
they've
done
it
before
with
a
superhero
because
Daredevil
spent
some
time
in
San
Francisco
too,
if
I'm
not
mistaken,
correct?
I
would
love
to
see
X-Men
in
the
South.
That's
what
I'm
wrong.
They're
in
the
South
now.
Badr Milligan
34:54
Alabama.
They
moved
to
Alabama.
Walt
34:57
They're
in
New
Orleans
now.
What?
No,
well,
the
rogue
team.
Drew
35:02
Is
Shaki
Bucks
gonna
show
up
as
one
of
their
villains?
Walt
35:05
It's
in
New
Orleans,
but
again,
I'm
just
not
reading
those
books
because
I
don't
know.
Maybe
I
just
put
too
much
into
how
good
that
I
know
that
people
have
their
issues
about
how
the
Kakola
era
ended
or
whatever,
but
I
choose
to
remember
the
great
times
I
had
there.
It
basically
for
me,
like
95%
of
that
run
is
pretty
good.
I
don't
care
what
anyone
says.
Because
I
I
don't
read
comic
books
to
make
sure
I
can
make
money
off
of
them.
I
read
them
to
enjoy
the
story.
Well,
you're
kind
of
like
Well,
real
quick,
real
quick.
Badr Milligan
35:40
Uh
you're
our
resident
X-Men
fan.
I
what
do
where
does
this
era
of
X-Men
like,
how
is
it
remembered?
Like
the
Matt
Fraction,
Greg
Land,
you
know,
the
X-Men
are
in
San
Francisco.
Like,
how
is
that
remembered?
Walt
35:51
Do
you
know
what
they
end
up
doing
in
the
grand
scheme
of
things?
What
they
end
up
doing
inadvertently
was
cleaning
the
slate
from
all
of
the
previous
things
that
happened.
So
basically,
with
them
starting
up,
so
with
all
those
pretty
much,
I
would
say
from
that
the
Marvel
Brain
Trust
that
we
all
love.
So
that's
when
they
had
Brewbreaker
and
Fraction
and
Tanahasi
Coates
and
Hickman
and
all
these
like
dumb
great
writers
in
a
room.
And
Kelly
Sudakonic
is
in
the
room.
Because
you
got
you
gotta
think
like
a
lot
of
books
from
like,
let's
say
from
the
80s
had
like,
from
the
80s
had
X-Men
and
Spider-Man
tie
in
specifically.
This
is
a
better
way
to
put
it.
The
business
era
of
Marvel
until
the
end
of
the
business
era,
which
is
technically
Secret
Wars,
that
stuff
cleaned
up
a
lot
of
that
bad
continuity,
or
started
to
lead
the
way
to
clean
up
all
the
weird
continuity.
And
then
so
by
the
time
Hickman
came,
like
they
brought
in
some
people
to
finish
up
those
um
runs
that
kind
of
ended
up
into
the
whatchamacallit.
So
that
was
a
start
of
the
cleanup
with
those
people.
They
added
some
things,
but
they
cleaned
up
a
lot
of
bad
continuity
that
happened
in
between
Claremont
to
Zim.
That's
what
I
would
say.
So
anything
that
happened
after
Claremont
and
until
that
um
Avengers
Disassemble
portion.
So
those
people
kind
of
came
into
the
forefront
after
that.
They
spent
the
next
seven
to
eight
years
cleaning
up
continued
on
those
X-Men
books.
Whether
people
like
them
or
not
is
irrelevant.
They
were
there
for
a
cleanup
job
to
make
sure
that
their
second
biggest
property
was
easier
to
jump
into.
And
that's
that's
to
be
commended.
Well,
yeah.
Because
I
jump
back
in
after
the
fact.
Badr Milligan
37:51
You
brought
up
Secret
Wars.
Can
I
share?
I
don't
think
this
is
a
hot
take
as
much
as
it's
a
strong
personal
opinion.
Um,
when
people
talk
about
continuity
and
and
things
like
headcanon,
right?
Like
where
I
think
one
thing
I'm
always
interested
in
is
especially
people
that
love,
you
know,
long
like
DC
and
Marvel,
I
think
are
perfect
examples
where
there's
like
super
long
continuities
and
years
and
years
and
years
of
stories.
I
think
it's
it's
always
interesting
to
ask
someone,
like,
where
does
their
headcanon
end?
Unless
you
meet
someone
that
is
still
actively
reading
and
they've
been
a
fan
for
years
and
you
know
they've
got
all
in
their
head.
I
think
for
me,
when
I
think
about
that
question,
I
think
the
my
in
my
personal
opinion,
the
last
great
Marvel
story,
and
I
think
where
my
headcanon
truly
ends
is
Secret
Wars,
Hickman's
Secret
Wars
from
2015,
and
I
will
die
on
the
hill
to
say
for
anyone,
I
think
that
is
the
perfect.
I
think
that's
a
perfect
spot
to
like
if
you
were
to
ever
stop
reading
Marvel,
ending
of
that
story
is
like
a
a
great
spot
to
end.
I
think
for
me,
that
is
when
I
stopped
collecting
Marvel
stories
on
a
or
keeping
up
with
it
on
a
regular
basis.
I
think
it
does
such
a
great
job
of
being
being
at
the
end
of
the
Marvel
Universe
story,
and
you
know,
with
the
whole
Fantastic
Four
emphasis,
the
first
family,
all
that.
What
do
you
guys
think
about
that?
I
guess
where
does
your
headcanon
end?
Walt
39:15
I
don't
think
that
my
head
cannon
doesn't
end
there
because
I,
you
know,
I
was
deep
into
Cocoa
shit
because
I
was
just
a
Hickman
guy.
But
and
right
now
my
head
cannon
is
ending
at
um
this
what
is
it,
Infinity?
Is
that
what
um
Hickman
just
wrote?
Yes.
And
he
brought
back
the
inhumans
after
they
killed
off
the
inhumans.
I
was
like,
bro,
you
built
you
did
this
big
build-up
to
just
kill
all
these
people,
and
now
I'm
pissed.
But
I
don't
I
don't
find
what
you're
saying
to
be
insane.
Because
that
the
ending
of
that
book
is
so
perfect.
Like
I
say,
that's
the
ending,
but
that's
the
ending
of
the
Bendis
run.
As
much
as
we
talk
about
it,
whatever,
that's
the
ending
of
the
Bendis
run
of
those
books.
Yeah.
He
may
have
been
the
best
writer
of
those
people,
but
that
was
the
end
of
everything
that
Bendis
had
done
basically
up
to
that
point.
Badr Milligan
40:10
Yeah.
Walt
40:10
And
then
they
gave
him
that
X-Men
book,
or
what
I
think
they
gave
him
the
X-Men
book
after
the
fact.
I
think
that
came
after
I
can't
even
remember
now
because
now
I'm
kind
of
lit.
Drew
40:18
It's
$500.
No,
no,
no.
So
like
he
did
his
Avengers
and
then
Avengers.
Oh
no,
he
left
after
that
because
he
went
to
go
to
the
Superman
book.
Yes,
he
did.
Walt
40:30
Yeah,
he
went
to
go
to
the
Superman
book.
Badr Milligan
40:31
Yeah,
yeah.
That's
the
end
of
the
business.
Walt
40:34
That's
the
end
of
the
business
era.
Period.
But
Hickman
was
the
best
writer
of
that
period
over
there.
Badr Milligan
40:39
Yeah.
Walt
40:40
And
now
they
got
him
on
these
special
assignments
because
they
can't
really
get
him
to
commit,
commit
to
like
a
long
series
no
more.
Drew
40:47
But
I'm
like,
I
feel
like
if
I
was
Hickman,
if
I
was
Hickman
and
after
all
the
legwork
I
did
for
making
X-Men
cool,
readable,
and
doing
all
that
stuff,
just
for
them
to
throw
my
shit
out
the
window
and
pretend
like
it
didn't
happen,
I'd
be
I'd
be
salty
as
dick.
Dog,
this
is
a
good
thing.
Walt
41:02
Let
me
be
real
clear.
My
issues
with
the
editor
are
are
yeah.
That's
Tom
Bravo,
right?
Yeah,
that's
that's
fire,
dude.
You
need
to
fire
him.
Well,
they're
not
gonna
buy
you
know
why
they're
not
gonna
buy
him?
Because
of
what
he
had
did
for
the
advent,
he's
the
adventures
editor.
Yeah.
Okay.
Badr Milligan
41:20
Long
time,
too.
Walt
41:21
He
was
the
long
time.
Guess
what
you
didn't
do?
The
CD.
Save
the
fuck
over
there.
He
needs
to
come
over
here.
He
could
have
saved
the
fuck
over
there.
But,
Butter.
Yes,
let
me
ask
you
a
question.
Don't
hit
it.
Come
on.
Yeah,
I'm
here
for
it.
What
was
a
500
book
you
read?
Badr Milligan
41:36
Hey,
there
we
go.
That's
the
type
of
baton
pass
I
like,
Walt.
Okay,
I
read
three
books.
I
was
trying
to
read.
Yeah,
real
shit.
Yeah,
yeah,
yeah.
Yeah,
yeah.
Drew
41:47
Act
like
he
runs
a
podcast.
Yeah,
fucking.
Tupac
41:53
Hey,
yo,
check
it
out,
motherfucker.
Badr Milligan
41:56
Yeah.
Yeah,
take
that.
Okay,
okay.
I
read
I
read
three.
First,
I
read
Batman
500,
released
in
1993.
Uh,
it
is
done
by,
it
is
written
by
Doug
Minch,
uh,
who
is
also
integral
to
like
uh
those
early
uh
Moon
Knight
for
sure.
Uh
drawn
by
so
it's
it's
got
three
different
artists,
and
it's
split
into
uh
chapter
one
and
chapter
two.
Chapter
one
is
drawn
by
Jim
Aparel
and
Terry
Austin,
you
know,
fucking
legends
in
their
own
right.
Walt
42:22
Legend
people.
Badr Milligan
42:23
For
sure.
Chapter
two,
though,
was
drawn
by
Mike
Manley.
And
when
I
tell
you,
I
was
unfamiliar
with
Mike
Manley's
game
until
now.
The
chapter
two
is
fuego.
Like
it,
I
it
reminded
me
so
much
of
David
Mazzekelli's
uh
Born
Again,
like
just
how
gritty
it
was.
I'm
telling
you,
I
it
it's
it's
a
wild
comparison,
but
I'm
telling
you,
Batman
500
um
also
has
a
dope-ass
wraparound
cover
by
Joe
Quissada
and
Kevin
Nolan.
Amazing.
It's
uh
it's
one
of
those
covers,
if
you
see
it,
you're
like,
oh,
I've
seen
this
on
other
stuff
before.
But
I've
seen
this
in
dollar
bins.
And
and
I
guess
that's
why
I've
been
asking
about
like
these
500s,
because
a
lot
of
them
so
far,
you
know,
uh,
I
think
if
we
were
to
celebrate
a
500
now,
I
think
the
the
the
common
uh
uh
thing
now
with
big
anniversary
issues,
whether
it
be
annuals
or
you
know,
25th
issues,
is
that
they'll
be
like
completely
standalone
stories
versus
something
like
Batman
500,
where
it
is
part
19
of
the
nightfall
story.
You
know
what
I'm
saying?
It's
like
the
number
didn't
matter
so
much.
Walt
43:28
Hold
on,
wait
a
minute,
hold
on.
Is
that
the
fucking
wait
a
minute?
You
talk
about
is
that
the
story
with
Azriel
in
it?
Badr Milligan
43:33
Yeah,
yeah,
yeah,
yeah,
yeah.
Walt
43:35
I
had
that
book.
Badr Milligan
43:37
Yeah,
it's
a
good
one.
It's
it's
as
a
kid.
So
this
issue,
500.
Walt
43:41
The
Chrome
cover,
right?
Badr Milligan
43:43
Yes,
yeah,
yeah.
Yep.
Die
cut,
all
that.
Walt
43:45
I
did
not
realize
that
was
a
500
issue.
Yeah.
Badr Milligan
43:48
That
book
came
out
when?
1993.
Walt
43:52
I
had
that
book.
Badr Milligan
43:53
I'm
telling
you,
it's
it's
really
good.
It
so
it's
the
final
chapter
of
the
Nightfall
run,
and
it
it
is
Focus
uh
specifically
on
John
Paul
Valley.
So
he's
the
new
Batman
right
now
because
you
know
Bruce
Wayne
is
recovering
from
getting
his
ass
beat
from
Bane.
He's
in
a
wheelchair.
John
Paul
Valley
has
stepped
into
the
role
of
Batman.
He's
like
a
different
Batman,
right?
He's
like
a
lot
more
brutal.
He's
a
lot
more
focused.
Walt
44:16
Wowly
violent.
Badr Milligan
44:17
Yeah,
and
super
violent.
And
he's
determined
to
get
extract
revenge
on
Bane
on
behalf
of
you
know
of
Bruce
Wayne.
So
it
is
all
about
John
Paul
Valley.
And
it's
also
the
issue
where
he
premieres
like
his
Azreel
suit.
So
in
the
big
Which,
by
the
way,
thank
you,
Drew,
for
bringing
that
up.
I
gotta
say,
I
think
Azreel's
has
one
of
the
dopest
suits.
And
I
and
this
is
the
obviously
he's
got
like
his
like
the
red
hoodie
flame
one,
right?
And
but
this
one
is
like
the
chrome,
more
like
a
metal
Batman
suit.
I
forgot
that
he's
got
like
basically
two
different
suits.
Drew
45:02
What
is
that
called?
Like
a
thigh
belt.
He
has
a
thigh
belt.
Badr Milligan
45:05
Yeah.
So
this
issue
is
basically
like
hey,
John
Paul
Valley
like
making
his
own
Batman
suit
and
him
and
Bane
uh
have
like
a
big
showdown
in
front
of
like
all
the
GCPD.
When
I
tell
you,
it
is
an
amazing
issue.
It
was
like,
I
didn't
know
what
I
was
getting
into
with
this.
I
was
like,
oh
whoa,
this
is
like
in
the
middle
of
nightfall.
Okay,
uh
I
was
trying
to
remember
a
lot
of
details,
but
it's
one
of
those
like
standalone
issues.
There's
a
lot
of
action.
It
is
like
it's
it's
worth
the
read,
I
gotta
say.
That
was
a
Fuego
issue.
Uh
so
I
read
Batman
500,
and
then
I
read
Iron
Man
500,
which
was
released
in
2011,
written
by
Matt
Fraction,
art
by
Salvador
LaRocca.
Uh,
there's
actually
three
artists
in
this
because
they're
this
is
telling
a
kind
of
like
one
of
those
future
present.
It's
like
three
different
timelines.
Well,
two
different
the
future
as
well
as
the
present
story.
So
the
present
story,
which
focuses
on
Iron
Man
and
Spider-Man,
is
drawn
by
Salvador
La
Roca.
And
then
the
future
story
is
drawn
by
someone
named
Kano,
and
then
uh
Carmin
De
Gian
Dominico.
I
think
that
is.
Drew
46:09
Oh
my
god,
I
love
Carmen.
Badr Milligan
46:11
Oh,
he's
dude,
he
is
when
I
tell
you
when
you
see
the
two,
when
you
bounce
between
the
two
different
stories,
yeah,
it's
a
kind
it's
a
lot
of
fun.
Because
Salvador
La
Roca,
you
know,
is
a
lot
more
like
paintery,
it's
more
like
rendered,
you
know,
he
does
digital,
but
it
looks
painted.
Um,
but
then
when
you
get
into
Carmen's
uh
uh
artwork,
it's
a
lot
more
scratchy,
a
lot
more
energetic.
Drew
46:31
Yeah,
everybody
just
looks
like
they
haven't
slept
in
weeks.
Badr Milligan
46:37
Or
they
got
like
dark
eyeliner
and
mascara
under
his
eyes.
I
don't
know
what
it
is,
yeah,
yeah,
for
sure.
Um,
I
will
say
the
story
doesn't
really,
it's
a
little
all
over.
It's
one
of
those
where
it's
like,
okay,
I
see
what
you're
doing.
You're
trying
to
tell
two
different
stories
where
it's
like
the
actions
that
Spider-Man
and
Iron
Man
do
in
the
present
is
impacting
the
future.
And
this
is
cool.
It's
basically
at
this
point,
Iron
Man,
and
I'm
trying
to
recall
some
certain
details.
Iron
Man
in
this
run
has
lost
his
memory
or
he
has
like
uh
No,
he's
making
himself
stupid.
Yeah,
he's
like
basically
He's
been
deleting
his
memories.
That's
right,
because
his
brain's
like
a
hard
drive,
he's
deleted
all
his
memories
and
he's
trying
to
remember
things
at
the
same
time.
And
one
thing
that
he
remembers
is
like,
oh
shit,
on
my
free
time,
I
built
this
weapon
of
mass
destruction
and
I
don't
quite
remember
where
I
put
it.
And
he
goes
to
Peter,
he's
like,
dude,
where's
my
car?
Dude,
where's
my
weapon?
Dude,
where's
my
weapon?
So
he
goes,
he
goes
to
Peter,
he's
like,
Hey,
I
think
I
had
you
help
me
build
this,
and
Peter's
like,
Oh,
you
talking
about
that?
Oh,
yeah,
no,
that
was
a
really
terrible
idea.
We
hid
it
somewhere.
Well,
then
it
at
the
same
time,
you're
seeing
um
this
future
story
where
it's
like
Tony
is
a
slave
of
the
Mandarin.
The
Mandarin
has
him
like
hooked
up
to
all
these
machines,
he's
keeping
them
alive
to
keep
him
alive,
and
that's
grime.
Uh,
and
he's
got
like
War
Machine
is
basically
like
this
authoritarian
like
police
force,
and
there's
a
lady
named
uh
a
girl
named
Jenny
Starks,
who
is
supposed
to
be
Tony
Stark's
uh
daughter
in
the
future,
and
she's
like
rebelling
against
it's
like
you
know,
one
of
those
apocalyptic,
like
you
know,
underground
the
worst
case
scenario,
yeah,
yeah,
yeah.
Okay,
so
the
story
is
a
little
all
over
the
place
because
they
don't
explain
a
lot,
they
don't
tell
you
much
of
like
what
the
weapon
actually
is
or
what's
going
on
as
you
know,
they
kind
of
just
throw
you
into
it.
So
I'll
say,
story-wise,
left
much
to
be
desired.
I
also
realized
that
um
this
jumped
the
so
you
know
Matt
Fraction
starts
writing
this
Iron
Man
run,
I
think
in
twenty
2008,
shortly
after
the
first
Iron
Man
movie.
And
I
remember
being
a
huge
fan
of
that
run.
I'm
I
think
Drew
will
vouch
when
we
first
like
that
run,
before
that
note.
Walt
48:48
That's
like
a
classic
Iron
Man
run.
Badr Milligan
48:50
When
me
and
Drew
first
started
hanging
out,
and
I
would
I
would
talk
his
ear
off
about
this
Iron
Man
run.
I
think
I
was
the
biggest
Iron
Man
fan
at
the
time
because
of
this
run.
Drew
48:58
Um,
do
you
want
to
know
something
that's
even
cooler
and
crazier?
That
Iron
Man
run,
and
only
I
think
Butter
will
appreciate
it.
Tony
Stark
is
um
Sawyer
from
Lost
Salvador
La
Roca
took
a
lot
of
Sawyer
stills.
Like
really
like
mirrored,
mirrored
Tony
Stark
after
Sawyer.
Badr Milligan
49:22
I
had
no
I
always
thought
that
he
was
mirroring
um,
you
know,
at
the
time,
uh
uh
Robert
Downey.
Drew
49:27
No,
he
doesn't
he
does
mirror
mirror
Robert
Downey
Jr.
a
lot,
but
a
lot
of
like
the
uh
panels
um
have
been
taken
off
of
lost
stills
and
is
of
Sawyer.
Walt
49:37
And
Sawyer
was
Sawyer
was
that
dude
at
that
time.
Yes,
he
was.
He
was
the
man.
Badr Milligan
49:43
Sawyer
was
that
dude.
Hell
yeah.
So
anyway,
so
Matt
Fraction
writes
up
to
issue
33,
and
then
they
immediately
jump
to
500,
right?
It's
like
boom,
500
issues
of
Iron
Man
is
here,
and
then
they
continue
the
um
the
numbering
that
way.
So
after
that,
it's
501,
502,
and
so
on
and
so
on.
So,
anyways,
I
think
that
is
a
story
that
you
can
read
solo,
but
at
the
same
time,
it
probably
helps
to
read
the
previous
run.
I
think
when
I
had
read
it
originally
years
back,
I
had
read
all
it
the
context
was
there.
So,
anyways,
I
would
say
it
was
my
least
favorite
of
the
of
the
three
I
read.
The
other
500
issue
I
read
was
actually
that
Archie
500,
which
was
released
in
two,
and
no,
no,
no,
it
was
released
in
in
the
year
2000.
It
is
written
by
Angelo
De
Casari?
I'm
saying
it
wrong.
Drawn
by
Stan
Goldberg,
who
I
do
know
is
one
of
those
like
Archie
artist
names
that
you
know
he's
like
a
gold.
He's
the
archie
drawer.
Yes.
When
I
tell
you
this
Archie
issue
was
so
fucking
fun.
Like
it
is,
it
is
incredibly
I
like
Archie
books,
bro.
Bro,
it
was
it
and
it
was
shorter
than
the
rest.
Like,
you
know,
Iron
Man500,
Batman
500.
I
think
they're
like,
you
know,
42
issues
or
50,
you
know,
they're
obviously
a
little
more.
This
Archie
comic
was
like
27
pages,
and
it
was
so
meta.
Walt
51:00
Like
there's
a
straight
Betty
Veronica
action.
Badr Milligan
51:03
No,
no,
no.
Check
this
out.
Okay.
So
the
first
story
is
um,
the
first
story
is
Archie.
There's
an
Oprah
Winfrey
show
in
the
Archie
universe,
and
it's
like
some
funny
name.
I
forget
what
it's
called.
Um,
well,
actually,
I
can
pull
it
up
right
here.
Hold
on,
one
second,
one
second,
one
sec.
So
the
first
story
is
just
like
a
quick
little
fun
little
like
a
story
of
the
okay,
okay.
Where
is
that?
Where's
it
at?
Where's
it
at?
Okay.
Archie
is
on
his
way
to
a
taping
of
the
Over
Weeply
show.
Over
Weeply
is
the
name
of
the
Over
Weeply,
uh,
where
his
family
and
friends
have
gathered
to
celebrate
his
anniversary.
The
problem
is
the
longer
they
wait
for
Archie
because
he's
running
late,
he's
driving
up
to
this
taping,
this
studio,
driving
a
truck
full
of
Archie
comics
that
he
plans
on
dumping
and
sharing
with
everyone.
So
there's
that
story,
and
then
the
the
main
story
is
a
very
meta
story
called
Happy
Anniversary.
And
it's
like,
it's
just
like
your
typical
Archie
shenanigans,
like
around
the
context
of
the
500.
So
it's
like
everyone
that
he
meets
is
like,
oh,
this
is
my
500th
date
with
Betty
and
Veronica.
Veronica's
like,
oh,
let's
celebrate
our
500th
date
by
letting
me
fly
you
out
to
Paris.
We'll
go
to
this
club,
we'll
have
this
nice
dinner.
Meanwhile,
Betty
overhears
it
and
she's
like,
oh
shit,
it
happens
to
be
my
500th
date
with
Archie.
So,
Archie,
I
want
to
take
you
roller
skating.
Meet
me
after
school.
And
Archie
obviously
has
an
Archie
problem.
He's
like,
fuck,
I
can't
be
there
for
both
of
them.
So
he
ends
up
getting
the
tension
on
purpose,
and
it
happens
to
be
his
500th
detention
that
he's
gotten.
So,
like,
you
know
what
I'm
saying?
It's
like
all
these
like
little
gimmicks
and
meta
commentary
about
like
500.
So
uh
the
character
Reggie
ends
up
like
player
hating
and
dirty
Mackin.
There's
a
lot
of
dirty
Mackin
and
Archie.
Walt
52:47
Because
Reggie's
a
dirty
Mac,
bro.
That's
how
you
know
he's
he
is
a
dirty
Mac,
he's
the
definition
of
a
dirty
Mac.
And
you
can't
explain
Dirty
Mackin,
and
nobody
be
like
Reggie
from
Archie.
Reggie
from
Archie,
dirty
Mac
to
her.
Badr Milligan
53:00
Yeah,
so
it's
like
so.
Reggie's
like,
oh,
bet.
I
I'm
gonna
go
ahead
and
play,
I'm
gonna
go
ahead
and
use
this
opportunity
to
get
Veronica
to
dump
Archie
so
I
can
date
her,
and
this
will
be
my
500th
little
trick
that
I've
played
on.
So
it's
a
bunch
of
like
funny
little
um,
you
know,
500
quips
and
commentary.
Drew
53:17
That's
cool.
Badr Milligan
53:18
Yeah,
so
highly
recommend.
I
think
out
of
all
three
of
them,
Archie
might
be
my
favorite
just
by
a
little
because
I
wasn't
expecting
it
to
be
that
much
fun.
The
Batman
is
number
two.
I
read
it
last.
I
tried
to
read
the
Spider-Man,
but
I
just
ended
up
running
out
of
time.
Uh
but
the
Archie
was
fuego.
Walt
53:39
Look,
I'll
say
this
much.
The
Mark
Wade
Archie
books
were
incredible.
Dude,
and
I
was
pissed
when
they
ended
up.
Badr Milligan
53:47
I've
never
read
that.
Walt
53:48
I
was
pissed
when
they
ended,
and
now
I
know
this
year
they're
redoing
all
the
Archie
books
again,
I
think.
Badr Milligan
53:54
Yeah.
Oh
really?
Walt
53:56
I
want
to
say
they
sent
them
to
not
Dark
Horse.
They
sent
them
to
someone
else.
Badr Milligan
53:59
I
think
Oni.
I
think
we
talked
about
this.
Oni,
Oni
Preston.
Walt
54:02
I
think
so.
So
that's
cool.
But
they
got
a
bunch
of
um,
let's
just
say
top
top-tier
people
to
write
these
books.
Badr Milligan
54:12
Yeah.
Drew
54:13
I
wanted
to
read
Chips
and
Darcy's
Jughead
because
I
know
that
he
did
a
lot
of
Archie's
uh
before.
That's
a
good
point.
Walt
54:19
I
mean
that
before
Archie
because
Archie's
one
of
those
comic
books
that
you
don't
realize
is
a
comic
book
when
you're
a
kid.
Badr Milligan
54:24
Dude,
well,
this
issue
made
me
realize
I
had
me
a
strong
Archie
phase.
I've
had
a
super
strong
Archie
phase
when
I
was
younger.
Like
I
would
read,
my
I
would
beg
my
dad.
My
dad
was
buying
me
Archie
comics
and
little
those
digests
from
when
Dixie
every
time.
Drew
54:44
Right
next
to
the
crossword
and
the
winter
fresh
and
the
juicy
tree.
So
the
Archie
book.
Walt
54:49
I
feel
like
I
don't
know
if
they're
still
there.
I
feel
like
I
seen
an
Archie
book.
I
think
they
are.
Badr Milligan
54:53
They
are.
They
absolutely
are.
Walt
54:54
I
feel
like
I
seen
an
Archie
book
like
a
month
ago,
give
or
take.
At
public.
Badr Milligan
54:57
So
do
y'all
know?
Um,
this
was
new
to
me.
Do
y'all
know
what
year
Archie
um
debuted?
Like
if
you
just
had
to
take
a
guess.
Well,
what
what
year
do
you
think
Archie
debuted?
Them
people
going
to
SOCOP,
so
56.
Okay.
Drew
55:13
When
was
Back
to
the
Future?
When
did
Back
to
the
Future
come
out?
Like
when
did
um
when
did
Marty
go
back
into
the
past?
Badr Milligan
55:21
Drew,
if
you
had
to
guess,
what
year?
Drew
55:23
Uh
1968.
Badr Milligan
55:25
Okay,
you
guys
are
both
way
off.
Archie
debuted
in
Pep
Comics
number
22,
which
was
released
in
December
1941.
And
then
he
got
his
I
could
have
been
wrong
about
the
year.
Walt
55:38
I
was
not
wrong
about
a
soccer.
Drew
55:39
Is
there
a
archie?
Did
Archie
ever
go
to
World
War
II
or
Vietnam?
Have
they
ever
done
any
type
of
thing?
Archie,
they've
done
everything
for
Archie,
bro.
Badr Milligan
55:48
Archie's
been
around
forever.
Yeah.
My
my
favorite
Archie
series
no
one
talks
about
is
Archie
gets
hooked
on
heroin
during
the
70s
era.
Yeah,
yeah.
Archie
comes
back
from
Vietnam
now.
He's
got
a
dope
problem.
Damn
it.
Walt
56:07
Archie
came.
Archie
came
back
and
jumped
you
with
a
thing
for
a
thing
for
being
a
means
whip.
Oh
my
god.
Badr Milligan
56:14
Archie
very
archie
and
the
dead
presidents.
You
guys
are
fucking
stupid.
Okay.
Archie.
All
right.
This
is
part
of
the
we've
kind
of
gone
through
the
main
crux
of
the
show,
so
we
can
go
wherever
we
want.
But
whatever
I
would
like
to
take
it,
since
we
are
celebrating
our
own
500
episode.
And
well,
you
mentioned
um
you
brought
up
the
Fiona
Staples,
Mark
Wade,
Archie
run.
And
anytime
I
hear
Fiona
Staples,
obviously
I
gotta
think
about
saga.
And
I
was
thinking
about
saga
earlier
today
because
Saga
came
out.
Walt
56:44
Just
on
another
break.
Badr Milligan
56:47
No
surprise
there.
It
doesn't
surprise
me.
But
do
y'all
remember
another
trivia?
Do
y'all
know
what
year
saga
number
one
came
out?
I
want
to
say,
was
it
the
year
we
started?
It
was
the
year
2012.
Issue
one
came
out
in
2012.
And
I
think
when
I
think
about
them
early
years,
and
now
I
kind
of
just
want
to
reminisce
about
like
those
early
weeks.
Walt
57:09
It'll
be
2040.
It'll
be
2040.
He
said
the
book
is
going
to
like
120
or
something
like
that.
I
think
they're
like
70
or
80
or
something.
Oh,
yeah.
There's
a
finite
number
that
he
already
said.
I
will
have
to
go
in
the
books
to
look.
Badr Milligan
57:22
When
I
think
about
the
first,
you
know
what
I'm
saying?
It's
like
obviously
I've
had
the
the
short
bikes
on
mine.
I've
had
like
I've
been
very
nostalgic.
And
I
was
thinking
about
like
the
those
first
couple
of
episodes,
in
the
first
episode
we
recorded,
you
know,
like
that
we
started
recording
this
pod
in
the
summer
of
2012.
It
just
took
us
a
while
to
release
episodes
because
we
were
we
were
waiting
on
Cody
to
build
us
a
website,
get
the
RSS
feed
up.
But
we
were
recording
episodes
like
in
the
summer
of
2012.
We
didn't
release
the
first
one
until
December
15th,
2020.
Walt
57:53
Oh,
you
it
took
that
long
for
Cody
to
get
on
point.
Badr Milligan
57:56
Bro,
it
was
Cody.
Yes,
it
took
him.
Okay,
there
you
go.
Walt
58:00
Okay,
yeah,
yeah,
yeah.
Badr Milligan
58:01
Because
I
was,
you
know,
I'm
I
was
looking
at
the
release
date,
December
15th,
2020.
First
episode
of
Short
Box.
Um,
The
Stranger
was
the
name
of
the
episode,
but
we
recorded
it.
A
little
Scrubs
joke
for
you
guys
out
there.
Walt
58:14
It
took
crazy,
and
now
Scrubs
is
back.
I
have
not
watched,
I
watched
a
half
of
the
first
episode,
and
I
have
no
idea.
Oh,
wait,
wait.
Badr Milligan
58:20
You're
saying
like
they're
like
a
whole
new
show
is
back.
Walt
58:23
Yeah.
Oh,
we
bought
Scrubs
Scrubs.
Yeah,
I
didn't
know
that.
JD
JD
went
back
to
Sacred
Heart.
And
um,
him
and
what's
I
can't
think
of
the
blonde
girl's
name.
But
him
and
her,
him
and
Elliot
bro
got
divorced.
Badr Milligan
58:38
Oh,
I
didn't
know
that.
Okay.
Interesting.
But
as
I
was
saying,
this
might
be
now
I'm
gonna
have
to
like
check
this
out.
It's
a
body,
it's
on
Hulu.
Good
to
know.
But
it
got
me
thinking
about
how
how
I
can't
not
think
about
those
first
couple
years
of
the
short
box
and
us
doing
this
podcast
and
not
think
about
image
comics
and
how
it
was
really
dope
that
we
started
this
podcast
around
the
same
time
that
Image
was
having
one
hell
of
a
like
a
renaissance,
like
a
like
a
you
know
what
I'm
saying?
And
and
I
think
what
makes
it
even
dope,
aside
from
having
a
a
channel
and
a
vehicle
to
talk
about
that
time
frame,
was
that
we
were
also
me
and
Drew
at
least
were
working
the
shop
at
that
point.
Yep,
and
it
was
like
we
were
so
close
to
that
era
of
of
comics,
and
you
know,
like
saga.
It
was
like
every
week,
Image
was
putting
out
a
brand
new
number
one
that
was
like
game
changing
Saga,
Black
Science,
Deadly
Class,
Deadly
Class,
Southern
Bastards.
Drew
59:40
Yo,
Deadly
Class.
Oh
my
god,
dude.
Did
you
guys
hear
that
Southern
Bastards
is
is
getting
an
um
Yeah,
TV
show.
It's
either
it's
a
TV
show
or
animated.
Badr Milligan
59:50
No,
it's
a
TV
show.
They're
doing
just
doing
a
pilot
um
to
start
it.
Walt
59:54
They're
gonna
bring
back,
are
they
gonna
finish
the
fucking
story?
Badr Milligan
59:57
They
are
not.
Drew
59:58
I
think
they're
just
going
to
be.
They're
bringing
Cody
Rhodes
to
finish
the
story.
That's
a
less
than
joke.
Walt
1:00:02
Yeah,
yeah.
Again,
look,
I
get
it
that
Jason
Latour,
I
you
know
what?
Let
me
shut
the
fuck
up.
Drew
1:00:13
Probably.
Tupac
1:00:16
I'm
about
to
say
he
was
creepy.
He
wasn't,
you
know,
the
other
shit.
Badr Milligan
1:00:22
So
anyway.
Well,
I
bring
all
that
up
to
say,
I
guess
I
have
I
have
personally
shared
the
stories
of
like
those
first,
that
first
recording,
those
first
episodes.
But
I
don't
know
if
y'all
have
ever
had
a
chance
to
like
really
voice
it.
And
I
mean,
it
and
if
y'all
have,
then
fuck
it.
I'm
asking
again.
I
have
not.
Well
then,
well,
you
kick
us
off,
and
then
Drew,
I
want
you
to
chime
in.
Actually,
you
know
what?
I'm
gonna
give
you
a
specific
question,
and
then
Drew,
I
got
you
a
specific
one.
Well,
what
do
you
remember
the
first
time
that
you
met
us?
Because
I
think
me
and
Drew
have
a
certain
memory.
Walt
1:00:51
But
what
do
you
remember?
Okay,
so
this
is
we're
about
to
really
get
into
Riverside
Lore.
Badr Milligan
1:00:58
Hey,
but
real
quick,
real
quick,
the
double
entendre.
We
get
into
Riverside
Lore
recording
on
Riverside.
Come
on,
man.
Walt
1:01:05
Okay.
So
I
can't
think
of
Carrie's
last
name.
But
Carrie,
I
think
right
now,
is
like
one
of
the
main
cooks
at
one
of
those
fancy
restaurants
downtown.
So
Carrie
used
to
own
her
own
um
Italian,
not
really
bichro,
but
she
kind
of
had
like
an
Italian
market
or
whatever.
So
I
would
go
there
and
they
would
make
and
I
would
get
this
specific
sandwich.
So
she
had
a
turkey
club
on
I'm
also
really
getting
into
lore.
Oh,
man.
Badr Milligan
1:01:35
Yeah,
I
had
no
idea
you
were
gonna
bring
up
a
turkey
sandwich.
Walt
1:01:39
We're
talking
sandwiches.
She
would
make
this
turkey
club
for
me,
but
she
made
it
the
first
time,
and
I
was
like,
it's
not
enough
meat
on
that
sandwich
for
me.
This
is
when
I
was
a
real
fat
ass.
And
I
was
like,
this
is
not
enough
meat
for
me,
but
I'm
gonna
get
it
this
time.
Next
time,
we're
gonna
work
on
this
together.
And
I
have
no
problems
paying
for
the
extra
ingredients
you're
using
on
the
sandwich.
That
is
not
a
problem
for
me.
I
want
my
sandwich
to
be
the
way
I
want
it.
So
she
kept
making,
so
we
got
this
sandwich
completely
thorough.
And
she
said,
you
can
get
this
version
of
the
turkey
sandwich,
turkey
club
sandwich,
or
you
can
get
the
waltz
version.
And
the
walk
version
was
making
people
pass
the
fuck
out
because
it
was
a
cabin
too
much.
But
as
she
was
cooking
the
sandwich,
I
would
walk
around
the
corner
to
the
shop.
Because
that
was
a
that
was
a
week
I
always
got
paid,
and
I
tried
to
be
a
little
bit
on
point
at
that
time.
I
wasn't
making
that
much
money.
So
I
would
try
to
be
at
least
a
little
bit
on
point
to
go
in
there
and
try
to
clean
out
my
pool
as
much
as
possible.
And
that's
how
I
met
you
guys.
So
we
went
in
there
and
we
was
talking
because
I
knew
it
was
gonna
I
knew
it
was
gonna
take
her
a
little
bit
to
make
the
sandwich.
So
we
were
talking
and
she
got
a
rap
and
all
this
other
shit.
So
guess
what?
She's
gonna
be
able
to
make
a
sandwich.
I
can
come
back.
Because
you
met
you
met.
Sandy
ain't
gonna
go
bad
in
15
minutes.
Nah.
And
we
and
we
were
in
there
talking
about
um
what
was
the
um
the
dame
dash
shit?
The
DD
172
or
whatever?
Badr Milligan
1:03:11
D
one,
yeah,
yeah.
Real
quick,
whoa,
whoa,
whoa,
real
quick,
real
quick.
I
think,
and
Drew,
you
feel
free
to
chime
in.
Well,
I
think
you
met
Drew
first
because
I
remember
Drew
telling
me,
uh,
and
maybe
some
additional
right,
real
quick,
some
additional
context
for
those
that
don't
know
our
history.
Me
and
Drew
were
working
at
a
comic
shop
here
in
Jack's
called
Universe
of
Superheroes
around
2012,
13-ish
time
frame.
And
then
Walt
was
uh
shopping
at
said
shop.
And
Walt,
I
think
I
you
met
Drew
first
because
Drew
told
me
when
I
came
when
we
were
hanging
out,
yo,
I
met
this
really
cool
guy.
I
think
you
would
fuck
with.
He's
a
really
big
hip
hop
head.
Drew,
does
that
ring
a
bell?
100%.
Walt
1:03:50
Okay,
the
other
problem
is
that
my
man,
not
Drew,
but
who's
the
guy
who
used
to
be
the
main
guy
that
worked
at
all
the
time?
Tim
Groom.
The
worst
poor
puller
ever.
By
far.
His
his
level
of
not
putting
this
shit
in
your
pool,
unprecedented,
at
least
for
me.
Badr Milligan
1:04:10
Unprecedented
is
fucking
funny.
Walt
1:04:12
Yeah,
unprecedented.
I'd
be
like,
hey
bro,
I'm
missing.
I
one
day
I'm
gonna
have
to
really
go
through
my
books
to
figure
out
what
the
fuck
I'm
actually
missing
that
should
have
been
in
my
pool.
Yeah,
yeah.
Because
he
was
so
bad
at
it.
But
anyway.
Badr Milligan
1:04:26
What
do
you
remember
from
uh
uh
me
and
Walt
that
first
time?
What
stands
out?
Drew
1:04:30
I
stand
out
the
standout.
I
remember
me
and
you
being
in
the
shop
when
Walt
came
in,
and
we
would
just
like
I
would
get
excited
when
Walt
would
come
in.
Because
there's
some
people
that
would
come
in
and
they
would
just
get
some
weird,
creepy
shit,
and
couldn't
talk
to
some
people.
You're
just
like
okay,
but
Walt
just
like
very
relatable,
respectable,
and
just
like
you
know,
anytime
you
meet
him,
you're
like,
This
guy
just
talks
so
cool.
Like,
yeah,
yeah.
And
I
just
remember
us
being
very,
very
young,
and
just
like
when
he
would
come
in
talking
to
him
was
just
like
made
my
day
in
the
sense
of
like
I
was
like,
Yeah,
I
really
like
talking
to
this
guy,
the
guy
knows
what's
up.
Badr Milligan
1:05:06
I
remember
us
talking,
I
remember
us
talking
out
loud
in
the
shop,
if
that
makes
sense,
as
if
no
one
else
was
in
the
shop.
Because
I
think
I
one
memory
specifically
that
stands,
and
Drew,
I
think
it
maybe
it
is
the
one
that
you're
mentioning.
Walt
walked
in
and
we
both
screamed,
yo,
it's
hip
hop.
At
the
time
we
just
called
Walt
hip
hop,
and
then
we
would
just
talk
like
and
I
like
granted,
that
shop
wasn't
always
busy,
like
on
Wednesdays,
it
was
slammed,
Saturdays
slammed.
But
I
think
Walt,
you
would
come
in
like
when
it
was
kind
of
like
I'm
a
Friday
person,
I'm
always
a
person.
Walt
1:05:38
Because
when
I
got
paid,
I've
always
been
a
person
that
like
support
and
I'm
smoking
a
cigarette
and
I'm
about
to
go
ahead
and
pour
another
drink.
But
this
conversation
came
up
earlier
this
week
with
me
and
a
guy
gig.
A
man
should
be
able
to
support
the
habits
he
has.
So
if
I'm
a
comic
book
head,
guess
what?
I
need
to
be
able
to.
Support
my
convoy
habit.
Cigarettes,
whatever
my
vice
is,
I
need
to
be
able
to
support
that.
If
you
like
Warhammer,
you
gotta
support
Warhammer.
That's
all
I'm
saying.
So
I
support
the
habits
I
have,
and
the
minute
I
get
paid,
after
I
pay
my
actual
bills,
I'm
gonna
go
and
pay
my
other
bills
that
are
actually
bills.
And
a
comic
book
pool
is
in
essence
a
bill.
No,
for
sure.
It
is
a
bill.
Straight
up.
It's
a
bill.
That
is
a
big
bigger.
It's
a
building
gets
bigger.
So
you
need
to
go
there
every
week
or
every
two
weeks.
Badr Milligan
1:06:40
And
they
will
evict
you
by
removing
your
pull
list.
Walt
1:06:44
Guess
what?
If
you
don't
come
in
to
the
people,
if
you're
on
this
Patreon
episode,
or
if
you're
on
the
mainstream.
Badr Milligan
1:06:52
Real
quick,
well,
this
is
the
500th
main
episode.
You're
on
the
main
feed,
brother.
Walt
1:06:57
Okay,
that's
okay.
Badr Milligan
1:06:58
Millions
of
people
are
listening.
Walt
1:07:00
Okay,
bet.
So
even
better.
So
what
it
goes
down
to
is
this
when
you
don't
come
pick
up
your
pool
and
they
forget
to
put
your
book
that's
in
your
pool,
in
my
pool,
guess
what
they're
gonna
do?
Take
your
book
and
put
it
in
my
pool.
That's
what
they
do.
Yeah.
So
that's
probably
what
Tim
was
doing,
maybe
to
me.
Drew
1:07:25
Oh,
I
know
exactly
what
you're
talking
about.
Yeah,
yeah.
Tim,
yeah,
yeah.
Because
if
somebody
was
asking
for
something,
Tim
would
go
right
into
the
system,
see
who
had
who
would
have
that
book,
and
he's
like,
oh,
this
person
doesn't
pick
up
this
person,
so
I'll
be
able
to
get
him
another
copy
later
or
whatever.
Yeah,
yeah.
Badr Milligan
1:07:38
And
then
Tim,
I
will
admit,
you
know,
no
shade
that
Tim
was
really
good
at
knowing
who
would
pick
up
on
the
regular
and
who
he
could
like,
okay.
Let
me
like
Drew's
point.
Let
me
let
me
hook
you
up
because
I
know
they
won't
be
here
in
two
weeks,
and
I
can
have
a
replacement
for
them.
Yeah,
we
love
Tim
though.
Walt
1:07:59
And
I
fuck
with
Tim.
And
it's
not
like
Tim
was
like
a
bad
person
or
anything.
Badr Milligan
1:08:03
No,
yeah,
I
didn't
have
any
comment
rendering.
We
were
all,
yeah,
we
were
all
young.
All
right.
All
right.
Let
me
ask
you,
let
me
ask
you
guys
this.
Um,
because
now
I'm
just
gonna
stick
in
this
pocket
here.
What
do
y'all
remember?
So
we
talked
about
what
we
remember
from
our
first
time
meeting
each
other.
What
do
you
guys
remember
from
that
first
episode,
that
first
recording
when
we
got
together?
Walt
1:08:24
I
don't
even
know
why
we
it's
a
dance
live
bar.
Badr Milligan
1:08:27
You
know
what
I
wish
I
would
have
done
more
is
because
I
was
trying
to
look
up,
I
was
like,
damn,
I
really,
I
mean,
now
nowadays
I
take
I
take
a
lot
of
photos.
For
me,
it's
kind
of
like
a
great
way
of
you
know,
just
when
I
need
to
recall
some
shit.
Walt
1:08:40
You
know
what?
Hold
on.
Let
me
be
real
clear.
The
older
you
get,
let
me
be
real
clear.
Anyone
can
take
any
picture
of
me
anytime
they
want
to.
You
know
why?
Because
you
once
someone
is
gone,
they
gone,
gone.
You
recognize
you
don't
have
enough
photos
of
them
or
any
of
that
shit.
Badr Milligan
1:08:57
I
was
looking
up,
I
was
trying
to
find,
and
I
may
have
done
this
before.
I've
I
was
trying
to
find,
I
was
like,
what's
the
earliest
photo
from
those,
you
know,
beginning
years
of
short
box?
And
I
don't
have
many.
I
have
like
a
very
few,
but
I
wish
I
would
have
taken
more
pictures
of
the
actual
space
of
the
shed
and
all
of
that.
So
I
I
guess
I'm
looking
for
you
guys
to
help
me
kind
of
flesh
out
some
of
those
memories.
Drew
1:09:20
One
of
those
people
still
have
that
shed
back
there.
I
don't
think
it
was
up
to
code.
Walt
1:09:29
I
can't
remember,
I
can't
remember
what
Sky
Magic.
Oh,
why
are
we
talking?
Hold
on.
Before
we
go
any
further,
uh-huh,
this
podcast
in
essence
started
because
of
we
had
me,
Sky
Magic,
and
Willis
L'Roy
had
an
idea
to
start
a
podcast
network.
Before
podcast
networks
even
was
a
thing.
Yes,
we
had
the
idea.
I
was
like,
well,
look,
I
know
people
who
can
do
podcasts
that
I
talked
to.
It
was
you
two
guys,
and
it
was
also
Shayla
and
Bethany
that
both
worked
in
the
library.
I
thought
they
could
do
a
girl
podcast,
and
then
I
can
come
on
there
every
so
often
and
shoot
a
bunch
of
bullshit.
And
that
was
my
initial
idea
because
those
guys
didn't
have
anybody
who
they
could
go
with.
And
Shayla
and
Bethany
did
a
couple,
I
think.
And
I
don't
think
they
even
got
that
far.
A
couple
maybe
push
it.
I
think
they
came
on
there
with
me
on
the
short
box
on
the
short
box.
But
I
had
the
we
had
an
idea
and
we
had
a
plan.
But
you
know,
you
gotta
be
committed
to
the
shit.
In
order
for
a
podcast
to
even
remotely
grow,
you
kind
of
gotta,
you
gotta
even
gotta
be
committed
to
it.
Badr Milligan
1:10:48
100%.
And
at
the
time,
like,
it's
like,
what
the
fuck
are
we
doing?
What
is
a
podcast?
I
think,
I
think
for
us,
we
already
were
doing
this
just
without
Mike.
So
when
you
were
like,
hey,
I
got
a
spot
for
us
to
record
this
thing
called
a
podcast,
and
I
think
it
also
helped
that
me
and
Drew
were
big
fans
of
the
other
podcast
that
you
were
recording
with
said
Willis
and
Scott.
Like
we
would
we
would
talk
about
side
hustle
that
podcast
as
if
you
weren't
like
our
friend
that
we
would
see
every
week.
Like
it
was
like
looking
back,
it
was
kind
of
silly
that
we
would
mention
the
jokes
y'all
would
mention
on
the
podcast
as
a
you
know
what
I'm
saying?
It
was
like
it
was
interesting
to
have
that
kind
of
real
real
big
Sandusky
joke.
He
loves
Sandusky
jokes.
Drew
1:11:31
Oh
my
god,
he
loves
Sandusky
jokes.
Wow,
you're
bringing
me
back.
Okay,
I
was
like,
no,
the
biggest
thing
that
blew
my
mind
memory-wise
is
listening
to
that
podcast
and
then
finding
out
that
Will
is
white.
Because
he
is
shit.
Badr Milligan
1:11:45
I'll
never
forget
that
voice.
Yeah,
we
had
a
totally
shitty.
Yeah,
we
had
a
met
your
co-host,
Walt,
and
then
I
remember
you
invited
us
to
go
hang
out
at
Wall
Street,
R.I.P.
Wall
Street.
Um,
and
that's
when
we
got
to
meet
change
of
Wall
Street.
Walt
1:11:57
Yeah,
Wall
Street
ain't
Wall
Street
overall.
Badr Milligan
1:11:58
And
real
quick,
it
uh
to
its
credit,
Riverside
uh
Liquor
Lounge
is
fire.
It's
it's
a
dope
ass
spot.
Walt
1:12:04
What
is
Riverside
Liquor
Lounge?
Badr Milligan
1:12:06
Oh,
it's
a
dope,
it's
it's
Wall
Street
3.0.
It's
nice
as
fuck.
Well,
next
time
you're
in
town,
uh
we'll
go.
Walt
1:12:12
Is
it
Wall
Street?
Is
it
the
old
Wall
Street
or
something?
Yeah,
it
is.
Badr Milligan
1:12:15
It
is
you're
I
don't
think
you're
allowed
to
smoke.
I
know
that
that
the
tears
you're
gonna
be
saying
I
knew
it.
I
knew
it.
But
but
I
want
to
say
real
quick,
I'll
never
forget
walking
into
Wall
Street,
and
then
you
were
like,
yo,
this
is
Will.
He
does
the
podcast.
Y'all
like
the
podcast?
This
is
Will.
And
I
remember
thinking,
yo,
you're
not
black.
Like,
what
the
fuck?
Where'd
your
voice
come
from?
Um,
Drew,
what
do
you
remember
about
our
first
record?
That
shed.
Drew
1:12:40
That
shed.
Honestly,
that
shed.
To
me,
that
shed
that
is
so
iconic
because
you
we
had
to
go
through
the
house
and
then
you
go
to
the
back
and
you
just
see
the
shed.
And
it
was
just
it
was
dope.
I
just
remember
being
like,
like,
oh,
this
is
fucking
cool.
This
is
tight.
So
I
will
always
remember
the
shed.
Badr Milligan
1:12:55
Yeah,
I
I
was
thinking
about
that
too,
where
it
was.
I
remember
thinking
like
how
official
I
felt.
I
mean,
in
hindsight,
it's
like
it
was
just
it
was
Scott's
backyard
shed
where
he
had
someone
living
on
the
second
floor
of
said,
it
was
like
a
shed
barn,
like
a
shed
and
a
barn.
Walt
1:13:13
And
I
hope
people
were
my
homegirl.
Badr Milligan
1:13:15
But
he
would
occasionally
walk,
he
would
occasionally
walk
downstairs
and
be
like,
yo,
what
y'all
doing
while
we
were
recording?
It'd
be
like,
yo,
we're
recording
a
podcast.
He
was
like,
oh
what?
He'd
be
like,
oh
what?
This
is
my
backyard.
But
I
remember
walking,
I'll
never
forget
walking
into
that
that
shed.
And
I
guess
for
some
context,
uh
Scott
Magic,
big
shout
outs
to
Scott.
We
would
not
have
the
podcast
without
him.
Yeah.
He
was
an
audio
guy.
He
was
in
bands,
so
he
had
a
lot
of
audio
equipment.
And
I'll
never
forget
seeing
the
little
setup
that
he
had.
At
the
time
it
felt,
you
know,
not
to
get
too
flowery,
but
I
remember
it
felt
magical
because
he
had
like
he
had
like
he
had
like
the
Christmas
lights.
Yes,
thank
you.
He
had
the
Christmas
lights
lit
up.
He
had
like
this
big,
I'll
never
forget
this
big
ass
mixer
board.
And
I
was
like,
whoa,
we're
like,
oh,
we're
in
a
studio.
Oh,
yeah.
Walt
1:14:06
He
was
an
actual
A
V
guy.
That
was
his
job.
He
actually
did
the
um
AV
for
the
hotel.
He
still
does
the
AV
for
Mayo
Clinic.
Yeah.
Badr Milligan
1:14:14
I
think
so
too.
Walt
1:14:15
He
just
moved
from
um
from
Jacksonville
to
the
Phoenix
area,
give
or
take.
Oh,
yeah.
Okay.
He's
in
Arizona.
Somewhere.
He's
out
there.
Hottest.
Badr Milligan
1:14:27
But
I'll
never
I
also
I
also
remember
there
was
a
dry
erase
board
that
we
would
use.
Like
we
would
just
show
up.
Because
on
Sundays
we
would
record
on
Sundays.
That
was
always
our
day.
Walt
1:14:37
Sunday
or
was
it
Saturday?
It
was
Saturday
evening.
Badr Milligan
1:14:39
No,
it
was
Sunday.
Because
y'all
recorded
Friday
side
hustle.
And
then
on
Sunday.
Walt
1:14:43
Oh,
it
couldn't
have
been
Sundays
in
the
summer.
Badr Milligan
1:14:45
There's
no
way.
No,
I'm
telling
you.
Walt
1:14:50
We
always
cooked
out
on
Sundays.
Oh,
because
Saturday.
It
was
Saturdays.
You're
right.
Saturday
afternoons.
100%.
Badr Milligan
1:14:56
You're
right,
you're
right.
Yeah,
you
got
that.
And
and
I
think
that
also
vary
because
sometimes
Scott,
obviously,
it
was
like
his
house,
so
he'd
be
like,
I
kind
of
don't
want
people,
you
know,
like
I'm
chilling.
So
we'd
work
around
his
schedule.
But
I
remember
we
would
pick
up,
well,
either
Drew
would
drive,
I
would
drive,
we
would
pick
up,
you
know,
we
would
all
get
in
the
car.
We
wouldn't
even
like
pre-plan.
We
would
just
plan
on
the
way
there.
And
then
write
it
on
that
dry
erase
board,
and
we
would
just
go.
It's
like
we
had
no
concept
of
like
segments
or
runtime
or
we
definitely
weren't
editing
back
then.
I
don't
know
if
y'all
ever
heard
any
of
the
old
episodes
there
or
not.
So
like
it
was
canceled.
I'm
canceled.
We
were
some
horny
boys,
I'll
tell
you
that
much.
All
right.
I'll
tell
you
that
much.
We
were
some
naughty
boys.
Walt
1:15:39
The
show
was
was
kind
of
split
between
comics
and
happens.
Comics
and
hip-hop.
And
hip-hop.
Badr Milligan
1:15:45
Yeah.
Our
two
big
loves,
our
two
big
shared
interests.
Walt
1:15:48
And
what
happened
was
that
hip-hop
kind
of
changed.
Well,
it
didn't
really
change.
It
just
um
the
rappers
got
worse.
So
we're
gonna
talk
about
like
bad
rappers
all
day.
Badr Milligan
1:16:01
Agreed.
Walt
1:16:02
Because
if
you
notice
that
like
most
of
we'll
just
use
Joe
Budden
show
as
an
example,
they
don't
talk
about
rap.
They're
gonna
be
talking
about
rap
music
tomorrow
because
old
boy
dropped
three
albums.
Three
albums?
I
was
up
this
morning
and
seen
that
shit
and
was
like,
absolutely
not.
I
haven't
listened
to
one
of
them
yet.
Nah.
I'm
gonna
listen
to
them
to
at
some
point,
probably
when
we
get
out
the
phone,
but
I
have
not
had
the
time
to
listen
to
three
albums
of
him
whining?
Absolutely
not,
my
nigga.
Absolutely
not.
Are
you
kidding
me?
Drew
1:16:32
Of
him
whining
is
perfect
because
the
first
song
is
literally
him
bitching.
Walt
1:16:38
Yeah,
so
I
don't
even
have
to
listen
to
the
shit
to
know
that
most
of
the
songs
are
gonna
be
about.
A
quarter
of
those
songs
gonna
be
three.
He
out
here
doing
Chris
Brown
shit,
and
what
he
could
have
did,
honestly,
and
this
is
how
I
know
this
dude
just
don't
be
thinking
like
everybody
else.
He
could
have
dropped
this
album
this
week,
this
album
next
week,
and
then
the
album
the
third
week.
He
could
own
at
least
a
quarter
of
the
summer,
because
I'm
sure
there's
good
songs
on
there,
but
guess
what?
It's
not
good
songs
enough
for
me
to
listen
to
three
albums
in
one
fucking
day.
What
are
we
talking
about,
bro?
Play
just
I
agree.
Badr Milligan
1:17:10
Can
I
also
mention,
I
think
another
memory
that
comes
to
mind,
an
integral
one
at
that,
but
one
that
we
kind
of
just
shot
from
the
hip.
I'll
never
forget
Scott
was
like
the
guy
to
press
record
for
it.
Like
we
were
so
I'm
I
know
I
was
green,
super
green.
I
didn't
even
know.
I
yeah,
I
think
I
jumped
in
as
the
tech
guy.
I
was
like,
I
think
one
of
us
needs
to
be
the
tech
guy,
and
that's
gonna
fall
on
my
nerdy
ass.
But
I
remember
Scott
would
set
up
everything
for
us
and
even
like
press
record,
and
he'd
be
like,
hey,
just
call
me
when
y'all
done.
And
I'll
forget
when
when
he
came
back,
I
think
it
was
either
we
recorded
the
episode
or
he
had
press
record,
he
was
setting
everything
up,
and
then
he
was
like,
Hey,
by
the
way,
what's
the
name
of
y'all
podcast?
And
we
all
looked
at
each
other,
and
I
think
I
think
the
lore
goes,
I
think
Walt,
you
mentioned
short
box
or
I
mentioned
it.
And
I
think
Drew,
you
gotta
be
the
tiebreaker.
Does
anyone
remember
who
said
oh
the
short
box?
Walt
1:18:00
I'm
gonna
say
you
said
the
short
box
because
guess
what?
I
only
bought
long
box.
Badr Milligan
1:18:03
Yeah,
yeah,
yeah.
Walt
1:18:06
I
didn't
start
buying
short
box
because
you
told
me
that
was
an
option.
Badr Milligan
1:18:10
You
are
fucking
stupid.
I
only
comic
box.
Comic
box.
That
was
good.
That
was
good.
Real
quick,
I
guess
I've
always
been
curious
because
I
remember
thinking,
like,
oh,
we
just
shot
that
from
the
hip.
It
was
just
like,
uh,
we
didn't
think
about
the
name.
We
just
wanted
to
get
on
the
mics
and
talk.
That's
how
it
was.
Walt
1:18:24
The
problem
with
the
name
is
that
somebody
else
has
the
short
box,
so
we
had
to
change
the
name
of
the
Jack
Shortbox
or
whatever.
Because
someone
else
already
had
short
box.
Badr Milligan
1:18:31
Yeah,
I
didn't
find
out
until
a
couple
years
later
that
there
was
the
thing
that
separated
us
us
is
that
the
short
box,
there
was
another
short
box
podcast.
But
they
started
two
years
later.
I
I
guess
my
question
is
this
if
we
could
go
back,
I
guess
was
there
ever
another
name
that
we
should
have
considered,
or
you
would
have
absolutely
not.
Walt
1:18:49
Nope.
Short
box
is
a
perfect
name
for
what
we're
doing
over
here
because
it
evolved
into
a
short
box
situation.
In
what
way?
What
does
that
mean?
We
pretty
much
only
talk
about
comics
on
this
bitch.
Like,
and
and
guess
what?
The
only
thing,
you
know
what
else
you
can
put
into
short
boxes
that
don't
exist
no
more?
Music
magazines.
Ooh,
okay.
Badr Milligan
1:19:10
Technically,
you
didn't
you'd
need
that
magazine
box,
but
yeah,
yeah,
yeah.
Drew
1:19:12
Yeah,
I
honestly,
I
don't
know.
Would
you
ever
change
the
name?
Walt
1:19:17
I
have
thought
about
because
short
box
is
like
middle
call
memo,
so
you
would
be
nah.
This
fool
out
here
acting
like
Brian
McKnight
right
now.
Tupac
1:19:27
He
probably
name
his
other
kid,
he
probably
name
his
new
kid
the
short
box.
Walt
1:19:35
No,
no,
he's
gonna
name
this
kid
T
shortbox,
T-H-E-E
short
box.
What
are
we
talking
about
here?
Nah.
Badr Milligan
1:19:44
We
not
enough.
Imagine
if
my
mom
at
when
I
turned
21
was
like,
you
know,
Bonner
is
a
hard
ass
name
to
pronounce.
I
I
think
Bradley
is
the
name
we
called
it.
She
was
like,
I
meant
to
call
you.
I
will
say,
I
remember
I
remember
early,
Drew
had
recommended.
He
was
like,
Man,
I
think
this
was
like
way
back.
He
was
like,
Man,
we
should
have
called
it
bags
and
boards.
And
I
I
still
did
as
they
think
about
what
the
show
would
have
been
like
had
we
called
it
bags
and
boards,
because
it
just
rolled
off
the
now,
now
there
is
a
show.
Walt
1:20:20
Bags
and
boards
is
what
we
do
when
we
hang
out.
Badr Milligan
1:20:23
Yeah,
that's
a
Patreon
show.
Walt
1:20:25
So
basically,
we
still
get
to
use
bags
and
boards,
but
we
only
use
bags
and
boards
as
an
ancillary
name.
Oh,
well,
please.
Drew
1:20:33
Okay,
all
right.
Badr Milligan
1:20:36
We're
chilling.
You
with
the
boys,
all
right?
You
ain't
gotta
drop
ten
dollar
word.
I'm
gonna
get
the
ancillary
tomorrow
in
the
settings.
Walt
1:20:41
Yeah,
yeah,
yeah.
Yeah,
yeah,
you
know
what
I'm
saying.
Badr Milligan
1:20:44
Yes,
yeah,
yeah,
yeah.
All
right,
all
right.
One
more
question,
one
more
question.
Um,
now
we
just
kind
of
in
our
deep
bag.
Has
your
relationship
with
comics
and
or
podcasting
changed
in
any
since
being
podcasters
yourself?
Like
doing
a
comic
podcast,
has
it
changed
the
way
you
interact
or
or
um
uh
uh
enjoy
comic
books
in
any
way?
Absolutely,
or
as
a
podcast
or
for
podcasting.
Walt
1:21:09
I
won't
you
can
go
first
and
yeah,
go
drink.
Drew
1:21:12
It
it
has
changed
because
I
mean
when
we
were
first
doing
this,
I
was
very
much
in
like
into
podcasts,
listen
to
my
bag
of
podcasts,
and
then
a
lot
of
like
you
know,
a
lot
of
podcasts
have
changed.
The
nerdist
doesn't
exist,
fat
man
and
batman
doesn't
exist.
Walt
1:21:28
I
thought
about
that
today.
I
thought
about
the
nerdist
because
I
was
listening
to
um
Sex,
Drugs,
and
Money
and
Matt
Mirror's
wife
was
on
there,
and
it
was
a
repeat
episode
of
how
they
were
trying
to
go
through
and
have
a
kid.
Yeah,
yeah,
I
remember
that.
And
then
I
went
through
and
listened.
I
went
through
and
tried
to
say,
what
is
Matt
Mirror
doing
now?
And
I
have
no
idea
what
the
kid
is
doing
now.
Drew
1:21:52
Because
I
feel
like
him
and
his
wife
actually
did
a
podcast
talking
about
trying
to
get
pregnant.
Yes,
correct.
Okay,
100%.
You
are
correct.
Yeah,
so
I
really
don't
know
how
that
story
ends
for
them.
Or
they
had
a
child.
Oh,
congratulations
on
that,
then
yeah,
yeah.
Because
I
yeah,
I
just
remember
listening
to
the
nerdist,
really
enjoying
it,
and
then
Fat
Man
on
Batman
to
me
was
just
so
dope
and
awesome.
And
then
once
sponsorships
came
and
obviously
things
change
on
podcasts,
like
I
was
like,
nah,
like
I'm
done
listening
to
those
tunes
like
that.
And
it's
just
like
to
me,
it's
like
so
hard
to
like
get
into
a
new
podcast.
Walt
1:22:28
That
part
is
not
that
hard
for
me.
So
I'm
gonna
piggyback
off
you.
So
what
happened
was
for
me,
I
and
because
I
was
an
early
podcast
adopter.
So
I
would
listen
to
Joe
Rogan
in
the
beginning.
This
is
how
early
I
go
back,
and
I
had
to
stop
listening
to
Joe
Rogan
because
I
was
like,
he
had
one
of
them
um
mind
calendar
niggas
on
there,
and
I
was
like,
what
does
that
mean?
Badr Milligan
1:22:52
Someone
that
believes
that
like
the
world
will
end
when
the
mind
calendar
ends.
Oh,
okay,
okay,
okay.
Yeah.
Walt
1:22:57
And
I
was
like,
you
know
what?
This
is
a
stupid
podcast.
I'm
done
with
this.
This
is
how
far
back
I
go.
And
this
happened
when
I
stayed
on
Atlantic
Boulevard.
Damn.
Before
I
met
y'all.
Badr Milligan
1:23:09
Yeah,
that's
like
early.
Walt
1:23:10
This
is
when
I
first
moved
to
Jacksonville.
So
we're
talking
about
2000
and
we
talking
about
2007.
I
started
listening
to
Joe
Rogan's
podcast.
Oh
shit.
Yeah,
this
is
yo,
he's
been
piling
for
a
while.
That's
why
he
gets
paid
when
he
gets
paid.
Yeah,
yeah.
So
anyway.
Badr Milligan
1:23:26
Joe
Rogan
used
to
have
literally
like
five
10-minute
ads
in
the
beginning
of
his
episode
selling
like
dick
pills
and
energy
pills
and
stuff.
Walt
1:23:35
Just
how
much
podcasts
are
changing
in
general.
I
can't
get
an
Adam
and
Eve
thing
no
more.
So
I
can't
go,
I
can't.
Everybody's
too
good
for
Adam
and
Eve.
And
then
like,
yo,
I
can
go
in
there
and
just
order
like
a
like
a
bunch
of
condoms
real
quick
and
go
on
about
my
day.
I
order
condoms
and
sex
toys
and
all
these
other
stuff.
Can't
do
that
no
more
on
a
podcast.
Everybody
too
good
for
Adam
and
Eve.
But
then
everybody
was
out
here
selling
um
fucking
like
fleshlights.
Full
stock.
All
these
podcasts
that
weren't
on
like
a
major,
major
company
were
selling
flashlights.
But
for
me,
my
podcast
listening
really
changed
when
it
became
more
black
people
in
the
space.
So
I'm
always
gonna
listen
to
like
black
folks
talk
because
I'm
black.
So
I
kind
of
want
to
hear
what
niggas
is
talking
about.
Because
I
just
be
sitting
here
in
like
in
a
circle
in
a
bubble
by
myself.
Do
you
listen
to
520
in
the
morning?
Sometimes.
I
don't
listen
to
it
all
the
time,
but
Jeff
Teagan,
Jeff
Tegan
is
the
funniest
dude
that
ever
lived
there.
Bro,
that
dude
is
hilarious.
Drew
1:24:38
Yes,
100%.
Um,
Shaggy
got
me
into
them
because
like
anytime
I
hang
out
with
him,
he
always
has
it
on.
And
Shaggy's
a
big
sports
guy.
Like,
yeah,
I
mean,
he
he
loves
New
York
Knicks.
Walt
1:24:48
So
I've
been
like,
Well,
I
don't
know
he
should
have
listened
to
Joe
Buddh
podcast
at
the
beginning
of
this
week
for
damn
sure.
Okay.
The
first
fucking
15
minutes
of
Joe
Button
this
week
was
him
playing
the
Knicks.
He
was
playing
like
every
New
York
song
that
says
he
started
off
playing
Frank
Sinatra,
and
then
he
started
going
to
all
the
other
I'm
from
New
York
songs
and
all
this
shit.
And
in
between
interspersed
was
the
Knicks
hitting
19
of
the
first
23s.
And
he
was
like,
oh,
three,
three,
three,
three.
And
it
was
fucking
hilarious.
Damn.
So
what
I'm
saying
is
that
I've
been
listening
to
podcasts
since
podcasts
existed.
Because
I
need
to
listen
to
something
at
work.
And
I've
never
been
a
person
who
don't
have
these
headphones
in
my
ear.
Badr Milligan
1:25:37
Damn.
Now
that
you
bring
it
up,
well,
I
think
I
have
never
seen
you
without
a
pair
of
wired
Apple
headphones.
Like
I
might,
I
think
subconsciously
I've
bought
I
buy
them
all
the
time
now.
Um
for
my
work.
Walt
1:25:53
Because
I'm
not
gonna
spend
fucking
$120
and
move
headphones.
The
minute
headphones
stop
being
normal
headphones,
guess
what?
I'm
just
gonna
buy
these
cheap
ones
until
they
burn
out
and
I
go
get
another
cheap
pair.
Because
God
forbid
I
drop
a
pair
of
$120
to
$40
headphones,
and
I'm
gonna
be
irate
at
me,
and
you're
gonna
be
irate
that
I
thought
that
I
could
keep
a
pair
of
$100
air.
Badr Milligan
1:26:23
Drew,
we
gotta
team
up,
Drew.
For
Christmas,
we
gotta
team
up
and
get
one
for
sure.
Do
not
buy
me
no
shit
like
that.
Walt
1:26:29
You
can
just
buy
me
a
bunch
of
these.
You
can
buy
me
four
pairs
of
these
or
some
shit.
Badr Milligan
1:26:33
I
don't
care
for
both
of
you.
All
right,
so
you
guys
have
talked
about
how
your
relationship
podcasting
has
impacted
being
podcasters
yourself.
How
about
from
a
comic
perspective?
Has
has
has
your
relationship
with
comics
changed
any
since
being
a
part
of
the
show,
starting
the
show?
Walt
1:26:51
In
what
way?
I'll
go
first
and
then
Drew,
you
can
follow
me.
My
relationship
has
changed
because
I'm
just
not
gonna
read
as
many
comic
books
now.
I'm
just
not
after
that.
For
me,
as
a
Krakoa,
I
was
just
not
gonna
be
out
here
spending
like
basically
$150
every
time
I
go
to
the
combo
shop.
That's
insane.
That
is,
but
I
was
doing
it
because
I
was
really
trying
to
keep
up
with
all
those
books.
Yeah.
And
now
there's
nothing
that
attracts
my
attention
enough.
So
now
I'm
kind
of
following
the
the
botter
mode
of
like,
I'd
rather
just
grab
some
of
these
indie
books
from
my
favorite
creators,
and
then
if
someone
tells
me
some
book
is
good,
I'll
grab
that
other
stuff.
But
that's
kind
of
where
I'm
at
right
now.
Badr Milligan
1:27:40
And
I
think
to
that
point,
I
think
that's
been
the
biggest
change,
is
that
because
the
show
at
some
point
evolved
from
being
like,
you
know,
us
kind
of
just,
you
know,
catching
up
and
talking
about
tops
we
wanted
to
to
being
a
more
interview
style
show,
is
that
I've
had
the
opportunity
to
interview
so
many
different
creators,
and
I
think
it
kind
of
opened.
Opened
up
my
eyes
to
the
to
the
industry
in
a
way
where
I
want
to
support
the
creators
as
much
as
I
can,
especially
indie
creators.
I
think
hearing
so
many
different
stories
about
how
difficult
it's
been
to
get
in
the
industry,
how
difficult
it
is
to
maintain
a
legacy
and
do
work,
and
you
know,
like,
and
not
just
like
from
creators,
but
also
all
the
news
that
we
see
about
how
the
industry
can
break
a
creator
down,
you
know,
how
they're
not
paid
accordingly,
how
you
know
there
is
no
uh
they
don't
have
any
rights
to
these
characters.
I
think
the
podcast
has
helped
me
appreciate
creators
a
lot
more.
Walt
1:28:36
It's
capitalism,
bro.
Yeah,
real
shit.
Is
he
gonna
be
a
person
who
wants
to
support
the
creators?
This
is
why
I
feel
the
way
I
feel
about
like
like
people
like
I
ain't
gonna
say
like
Joe
or
whatever,
like
yo,
I'm
paying
for
anything
that
people
create,
whether
it's
pornography
or
fucking
a
movie.
Yeah,
yeah,
all
that
shit
to
me,
all
art
is
the
same
and
support
the
shit
that
you
like
so
people
continue
to
make
the
shit
that
you
like.
And
that's
what
it
really
really
boils
down
to
support
your
favorite
creator
so
they
create
creating.
Yeah,
and
if
you
can't
and
if
you
don't
do
that,
then
the
game
is
a
game.
But
guess
what?
Those
people
aren't
gonna
do
this
forever.
And
I
don't
think
it's
cool
to
see
a
go
fummy
for
the
He-Man
dude.
What
do
you
mean?
Some
people
is
talking
about
they
need
a
go
fummy
for
the
dude
who
created
fucking
He-Man
and
Mattel.
Oh,
oh,
oh.
Yeah,
so
yeah,
that's
it.
That's
what
I'm
saying.
Badr Milligan
1:29:34
And
I
think
we
see
that
a
lot.
Walt
1:29:35
Where
it's
like
we
should
never
see
that.
Why
these
people
not
get
they
may
at
this
point,
they're
gonna,
this
is
gonna
be
the
second
or
third
major
movie
of
fucking
He-Man.
Drew
1:29:45
Yeah,
it's
it
goes
back,
okay.
To
answer
your
question,
uh
B,
um,
I
hate
the
state
of
comic
books
in
the
way
that
it
is
right
now.
I
do
not
respect
it,
I
do
not
like
it.
I
it's
quality
over
quantity.
I'm
sorry,
it's
quantity
over
quality.
I
I
I
told
you
a
couple
days
on
on
the
phone.
Absolute
Batman
number
20
has
a
hundred
and
twenty
variants.
That
exactly,
exactly.
Yeah,
exactly.
It's
seriously,
like
there's
no
reason
to
have
that,
and
it's
just
like
you
guys
really
do
you
lost,
you
lost
it.
You
really
lost
it.
Walt
1:30:19
They
lost
it,
but
guess
what?
You
know
who
they
got
bought
by
recently.
Disney.
No,
oh
who?
Paramount.
Yeah,
yeah,
yeah.
We
should
not
know
all
these
corporate
mergers
and
all
this
other
bullshit
either.
Drew
1:30:29
No.
But
it
at
the
same
time,
like,
I
don't
have
any,
I
don't
have
any
type
of
respect.
Like,
I'm
telling
you,
the
state
of
comic
books
right
now,
I'm
waiting
for
this
bubble
to
burst
because
of
the
state
of
everything
that's
going
on
in
the
world.
And
comic
books
is
like
an
elective,
it's
not
it's
not
a
need,
it's
a
want.
It's
a
leisure,
yeah.
Yeah,
yeah,
yeah.
So
it's
just
one
of
these
where
I
like
to
tell
you
how,
like,
being
in
the
podcast,
being
in
the
comic
books,
and
stuff
like
that,
like,
bro,
when
like
when
we
were
in
it,
I
wanted
to
buy
all
the
issues.
I
wanted
to
stay
up
on
date
because
I
wanted
to
give
really
good
quality
episodes.
But
I'm
making
myself
crazy
and
bleeding
myself
dry
to
read
everything
and
do
it
the
like
legal
way,
in
the
sense
of
it
buying,
you
know
what
I'm
saying?
Yeah,
buying
everything
and
everything,
like
something.
I'm
like,
nah,
man,
like
fuck
that.
Like,
honestly,
like
uh
it
kind
of
it
really
does
make
me
upset
and
sad
that
this
is
like
the
state
of
where
it's
at,
where
it's
like
like
variants
were
cool,
like
in
the
early
2000s,
that
they
were
like
a
one
one
in
50
variant,
a
one
in
the
room.
Walt
1:31:31
It
OD'd
on
bariants
because
they
can't
because
they
can't
OD
on
issues
no
more,
so
they
OD
on
bariant.
Yeah,
so
your
barians
become
this
shit
where
it's
like
one
in
every
500
and
that
type
of
shit.
Badr Milligan
1:31:43
Can
you
play
devil's
advocate?
Can
I
may
I
play
devil's
advocate
real
quick?
You
better.
Yeah,
yeah,
yeah,
yeah.
Let
me
play
devil's
advocate.
Because
I
I
I
hear
what
you're
saying.
You
know,
absolute
Batman
has
a
hundred
variants,
you
know,
every
issue
now.
You
got
blind
bag,
craze,
and
all
that.
Drew
1:31:59
That
to
me
is
cool.
Like,
I
like
that.
That's
cool.
Badr Milligan
1:32:02
I
if
I'm
being
honest,
I
am
more,
I
am
okay
with
the
variant
thing
more
than
I
am
with
the
blind
bag.
Only
because
I
am
not,
I
I
see
gambling
becoming
more
and
more
ingrained
in
the
biggest.
Walt
1:32:15
Don't
even
get
me
started
on
that
bullshit.
That's
are
we?
That's
a
whole
other
podcast.
Sports
fans.
Sport
fan,
baby.
That's
a
whole
other
podcast.
Yes,
we're
not
gonna
talk
about
it.
Badr Milligan
1:32:24
So
so
I
will
say
blind
bag
to
me
is
is
more,
I
think,
uh
uh
detrimental
in
the
long
run
to
uh,
but
in
terms
of
the
variants,
just
talking
variants
specifically,
it's
not,
I
guess
what
would
you
say
to
like
you
don't
have
to
buy
the
variants,
right?
Walt
1:32:40
It's
like
buy
the
variants.
What
what
I'm
saying
is
this
you
don't
get
an
opportunity,
you
acting
like
everyone
gets
an
opportunity
to
buy
those
variants.
He
said
120
variants.
Some
of
those
variants
are
just
gonna
be
two.
Badr Milligan
1:32:53
Sure.
Walt
1:32:54
There's
gonna
be
only
two
issues
of
that
variant,
and
now
that
variant
issue
is
the
most
expensive
issue
of
said
book.
Badr Milligan
1:33:01
I
guess
what
I'm
getting
at
is
I
see
something
like
Absolute
Batman
20
had
a
hundred
variants,
but
I'm
not
I
don't
care.
I
I
just
want
to
buy
one.
Drew
1:33:08
No,
that's
predatory,
man,
because
you're
taking
advantage
of
people
that
are
completest.
You
have
people
that
are
like
like
really
love
and
care
about
comic
books
and
the
medium,
and
they
want
to
come
like
you
want
a
complete
set.
You
want
a
complete
set.
Like,
and
there's
some
people
and
here's
the
thing
there's
some
people
that
care
about
it,
and
some
people
that
don't
care
about
it
and
stuff
like
that.
But
for
the
most
part,
like
yo,
you
you
go
to
the
comic
book
shop,
you're
like,
I
I've
these
are
my
people.
I
like
them.
I
really
like
and
and
that's
cool.
If
you
have
a
job
that
can
afford
you
all
that,
that's
awesome.
But
like,
not
for
the
average
Joe.
Walt
1:33:40
And
keep
cooking,
because
the
other
issue
to
me
is
that
the
comic
book
industry
needs
to
cater
to
children.
We
we
are
doing
this
podcast
and
we're
having
a
ball
doing
it.
But
this
is
the
same
way
I
feel
about
Star
Wars
shit.
A
lot
of
this
shit
is
kid
shit
that
we
are,
I
don't
want
to
say
arrested
development,
but
the
people
who
are
completely
like
Drew
is
talking
about
arrested
development
motherfuckers.
I
like
to
read
a
good
story,
and
I'm
not
gonna
read
a
fiction
book.
If
I'm
gonna
read
a
book,
I'm
gonna
read
uh
an
actual
like
non-fiction
book.
That's
what
I'm
typing
on
read.
Yeah.
This
is
where
I
get
my
non-
this
is
where
I
get
my
nonfiction
from.
It's
comic
books.
Yeah.
Drew
1:34:26
This
to
me,
this
to
me
are
is
my
like
um
what
is
it
called?
Like
um
your
stories,
like
the
young
and
the
restless,
the
oh,
this
ain't
my
stories,
bro.
Walt
1:34:34
That's
good
stories.
But
what
are
you
talking
about?
Uh
no,
they
call
um
soapers.
These
are
my
comics.
Yeah,
exactly.
Badr Milligan
1:34:43
You
know,
I
I
I
think
that's
what
made
reading
that
Archie
really
refreshing,
is
that
Archie
to
me
represents
It's
not
built
into
that
mode
at
all.
It's
low
stakes,
it's
easily
accessible,
people
from
any
age
can
enjoy
it,
and
there
isn't
such
a
uh
uh
like
this
very
glaring
capitalist
angle
to
it.
It's
like,
you
know,
like
there
isn't,
you
know,
a
collector's
mentality,
I
think,
to
Archie.
My
thing
with
the
variant
conversation
is
that
this
isn't
new.
Like
the
90s
had
this
issue.
And
I
mean,
granted,
we've
we
saw
what
happened
to
the
90s
in
that
bubble,
but
I
don't
I
guess
I
I
I
start
I
would
get
worried
about
the
number
of
variants
if
it
becomes
blatant
that
the
cre
that
the
creative,
the
the
storytelling
becomes
second
to
that.
Walt
1:35:32
No,
you're
talking
about
102
fucking
variants.
The
storytelling
is
not
variant
to
what
the
fuck
we're
talking
about
right
now.
It's
a
hundred
and
two
variants.
That's
a
crazy
amount.
That's
a
that
that
number
is
so
absurd
that
I
didn't
even
know
that
that
was
a
number
until
he
said
the
fucking
shit.
Drew
1:35:49
Are
you
kidding
me?
102
variants,
bro.
And
all
it
is,
dude,
all
it
is
is
literally.
So
if
you
want
to
like
break
it
down,
it's
literally
50,
it's
50
variants.
The
only
difference
is
is
50
of
the
big
trade
dress
have
absolute
Batman
and
the
other
one
is
virgin,
like
you
said.
It's
like
it
doesn't
have
the
apps,
so
it's
just
like
a
full
um
either
or
I'm
saying
that
is
a
level
of
scammer
shit,
yeah,
that
the
world
we
live
in
right
now.
Walt
1:36:17
So,
like,
no,
I
I
could
100%
disagree
with
like
nah,
bro.
Badr Milligan
1:36:23
Uh
I
can
I
can
see
how
it
would
leave
a
bad
taste.
But
let
me
ask
you
this.
Drew,
last
time
we
talked,
we
were
talking
about
how
dope
absolute
Batman
is.
Drew
1:36:30
No,
absolute
Batman
is
dope,
but
don't
fucking
don't
insult
me
and
then
come
up
with
120.
Like,
bro,
but
it
is
dope.
But
that's
what
I'm
saying.
Like,
that
is
so
disrespectful
to
the
readers.
Like,
yo,
the
book
is
fine.
Yo,
the
book
is
yo,
like
he
said,
the
book
is
perfect.
You
don't
need
to
fucking
mess
with
it.
Why
do
you
need
to
add
all
these
different
colors
to
it?
Walt
1:36:48
You
need
no
more
than
20
variants
of
a
book,
and
that's
that's
being
insane.
Yeah,
straight
up.
Okay,
cool.
If
you
want
to
do
20
variants
of
the
people
that
actually
buy
the
book,
yeah,
because
the
way
that
DC
works,
DC
is
really
more
on
that
model
of
paying
for
that
app.
Sure.
Drew
1:37:05
At
this
point,
if
I
swear
to
God,
if
I
go
to
a
comic
book
convention
and
I
see
a
dude
in
front
of
me
with
all
120
issues
to
get
him
signed
in
front
of
me,
I'm
punching
that
motherfucker
in
the
back
of
the
kidney
as
hard
as
I
can.
You're
gonna
see
it
on
TMZ,
you're
gonna
see
it
on
Reddit.
Like,
yo,
just
make
sure
you're
not
wearing
shit
a
short
box
shirt.
It
doesn't
exist.
It
shouldn't
exist.
I'm
gonna
be
dressing
up
like
Daredevil
Bluey,
just
handing
out
justice.
Badr Milligan
1:37:32
Oh
my
god.
I
feel
like
I
feel
like
I'm
getting
uh
episode
one
flashbacks.
We
are
I
I
try
I
I
we
tapped
into
something.
All
right,
y'all
don't
fuck
with
the
variants.
Walt
1:37:42
I
don't
fuck
with
the
bear,
I
don't
fuck
with
the
barriers,
I
don't
fuck
with
the
gambling,
I
don't
fuck
with
the
gambling
at
all.
Hold
on,
hold
on.
Especially
in
this
time
where
people,
where
groceries
are
four
times
what
they
fucking
cost.
And
like
Drew
said,
this
is
a
this
is
a
hobby,
not
a
necessity.
Nah,
bro,
I
don't
need
that
shit.
Every
so
often
I
may
luck
out,
and
my
guy
will
send
me
a
bearing
because
he
fucked
up.
And
then
he
send
me
the
regular
version
of
what
I
wanted.
I'm
fine
with
the
regular
version
because
I'm
buying
comic
books
to
read.
Drew
1:38:18
I'm
at
that
age
where
I'm
okay
with
the
second
printing.
Walt
1:38:20
Yeah,
I'm
at
that
age
where
the
second
printing
is.
Oh,
but
Drew,
I
told
somebody
about
your
book,
I
told
somebody
about
your
Spanish
ass
a
couple
of
weeks
ago.
I
was
telling
them,
I
was
like,
man,
my
man
Drew
used
to
have
this
hobby
when
he
was
in
the
game
for
real.
He
goes
by
the
first
issues
of
books,
and
this
motherfucker
had
first
issues
of
Walking
Dead,
Invincible,
and
all
that.
I
was
just
talking
about
that.
Badr Milligan
1:38:42
Yeah.
Walt
1:38:42
And
that
man
taked
the
fuck
out
of
me.
She
was
like,
oh,
you
can
have
this
shit.
I
haven't
read
this
book
a
bunch
of
times.
Yeah.
This
book
is
worth
what
it's
worth
right
now.
This
bitch
will
go
down.
Let
me
get
this
bitch
out
the
paint.
Badr Milligan
1:38:53
We
were
literally
just
talking
about
the.
Yeah,
yo.
We
were
talking
about
um
Drew
having
a
couple
of
invincible
ones.
And
so
Drew,
to
Walt's
point,
Drew
has
always
been
good
at
keeping
his
finger
on
the
pulse
of
stuff
and
selling.
Walt
1:39:13
It's
not
so
much
that
shit.
Drew,
Drew
was
a
smart
person
that
I
go
to
the
shop
on
Wednesday
and
I
just
ask
the
guy
politely,
put
every
number
one
in
my
box.
And
I'm
either
gonna
buy
this
number
one
or
I'm
not.
And
the
number
ones
I'm
gonna
buy
are
gonna
be
the
ones
that
are
um
not
on
like
Marvel
and
DC
for
the
most
part.
I'm
not
gonna
buy
them.
Badr Milligan
1:39:36
Yeah,
yeah.
Walt
1:39:37
Because
those
are
legacy
characters.
Yeah.
But
Walking
Dead,
I
can
I
can
take
a
risk
on
that.
That
book
is
$1.95,
$2.
I
can
take
a
risk
on
that.
Back
in
the
day.
That
book
being
worth
fucking
$10,000
is
not
what
anyone
seen.
Invincible
and
worth
$10,000
is
not
what
anyone
seen.
So
that's
the
best
hobby
for
comic
book
collectors.
You
want
to
get
into
this
shit
and
you
a
kid,
just
buy
all
the
number
one.
Badr Milligan
1:40:03
Yeah.
Walt
1:40:04
And
get
a
parent
that's
within
the
put
in
the
bread
for
you
getting
number
one.
Badr Milligan
1:40:08
Yeah,
yeah.
I
mean,
shit,
you
need
a
parent
if
you're
a
kid
trying
to
buy
comics.
20
20
bucks
that
that
lawn
money
ain't
gonna
do
it.
Drew
1:40:15
Yeah,
20
bucks
when
we
were
collecting,
like
when
we
started
off,
20
bucks
could
have
bought
us
how
many?
How
many
issues?
Badr Milligan
1:40:21
Oh,
at
least
10.
I
mean
books
was
like
$2.99.
Drew
1:40:25
Yeah,
$299.
These
books
is
$5.99
right
now.
Yeah,
yeah.
But
like
I
was
saying,
$20
when
you
got
the
fucking
the
discount,
especially
if
you
paid
cash.
If
you
paid
cash,
I
miss
it.
Badr Milligan
1:40:34
I
love
me
a
good
cash
discount.
All
right,
gents.
Um,
I
think
we
are
uh
we're
getting
to
the
the
finish
line
here.
Um,
I
want
to
end
it
by
asking
what
we've
been
enjoying.
All
right,
let's
end
it
on
a
high
note
uh
and
do
an
impromptu
little
champion
season.
Walt
1:40:48
I'll
go
real
quick.
I'll
go
warrior.
I'll
go
warrior
is
the
book
I've
been
enjoying.
And
that
is
Leo
Williams
and
um
David
Balderon,
I
think
is
his
kid's
name.
Badr Milligan
1:41:01
Is
this
a
comic
book?
Walt
1:41:03
Yeah,
the
comic
book.
Badr Milligan
1:41:04
Okay,
okay.
So
from
Ignition
Press,
okay.
Walt
1:41:07
Yeah,
yeah,
Ignition
Press.
I
I
I
gotta
finish
the
last
issue
because
I
just
got
my
pull
in.
I
just
paid
for
my
pool.
My
pool
is
so
low
right
now
that
I
just
got
my
pool
in.
Because
I
was
like,
yo,
okay,
it's
like
60
bucks,
okay.
10.
Badr Milligan
1:41:22
Well,
real
quick,
can
you
tell
us
what
the
hell
Voyeurs?
I'm
looking
at
the
A
cover,
by
the
way.
I
I
refuse
to
find
a
variant
for
it.
I'm
looking
at
the
A
cover
and
it's
a
little
bit
of
it's
a
sexy
cover.
And
I
I
feel
like
I
know
why
you
would
champion
it,
but
what
is
the
premise?
What
is
it
about?
Walt
1:41:38
The
premise
is
that
the
girl
is
basically
the
woman
is
a
is
a
seller
of
fine
art.
And
um,
she's
a
sealer
of
fine
art
at
um
places
where
fine
art
exists.
She
meets
a
guy,
and
the
guy
was
like
out
here
scoping
her,
like
how
we
talking
about
on
his
cover.
He's
scoping
her
on
the
cover.
And
then
they
start
talking,
and
that
guy
is
a
head
of
security.
And
I've
not
finished
the
fourth
issue
yet.
But
that
book
I've
enjoyed.
I've
been
reading
that.
I
like
the
storm
book.
Um,
and
as
far
as
combo
is
concerned,
as
far
as
music
is
concerned,
Kaylani
album
I
liked
a
lot.
Like
that
was
the
album
I've
been
kind
of
playing,
and
then
I'll
go
to
my
my
little
playlist.
And
then
as
far
as
movies
are
concerned,
the
last
movie
gonna
see
was
Devil
Wars
Product
2.
Oh,
okay.
Did
you
watch
the
drama?
Drew
1:42:36
Um,
no.
Okay.
What
about
Project
Hail
Mary?
Walt
1:42:41
Oh,
yeah,
Project
Hill
Mary.
Oh,
you're
talking
about
the
drama,
the
um,
oh,
the
drama
was
fine.
Drew
1:42:45
Dude,
the
drama
was
fucking
insanely
good.
Walt
1:42:49
Yo,
the
drama's
good.
Oh,
okay,
hold
on.
Okay,
okay,
okay.
So
the
drama
was
good,
and
so
was
um
the
other
movie
I've
seen.
Project
Hail
Mary
was
good.
And
I
don't
want
to
turn
my
phone
over
anymore
because
I
think
I
did
it
like
twice
here
because
somebody
asked
me
for
something.
I
had
to
send
them
something
doing
his
thing.
But
um,
I
went
to
go
see,
I
went
to
the
movie's
last,
the
last
movie
I
see
was
Double
Wars
Prada.
Okay.
So
I'm
gonna
go
next
week
and
I'm
gonna
see
my
plan
is
you
go
see
Obsession,
um,
Is
God
God
or
Is
God
Is
in
the
Grogu
movie.
Okay.
Because
I've
been
I've
been
kind
of
on
point
with
going
to
the
movies.
That's
what
I've
been
actually
staying
on
point
with
to
go
to
the
movie
theater
to
go
see
this
stuff.
Oh,
and
the
other
thing
is
this
I
will
tell
you
my
main
champion
season,
if
you
have
Shudder,
Tales
from
the
Crypt
is
on
Shudder,
and
I'm
done.
The
original
Tales
for
the
Crypt?
The
original
Tales
from
the
Crypt
is
on
the
club.
Why
have
they
not
made
a
sequel
to
that?
Drew
1:43:55
I'm
talking
about
that's
a
TV
show,
it's
not
a
YouTube.
Oh,
not
Tales
from
the
Crib.
I'm
thinking
Tales
from
the
Hood.
Sorry.
They
have
like
three
Tales
from
the
Hood,
but
those
are
right
to
DVD.
Badr Milligan
1:44:04
I
think
they're
ready
to
be.
Yeah,
that
was
good.
All
right,
well,
that
was
solid.
Drew,
what
about
you,
man?
Anything
the
champion?
Sports.
Drew
1:44:15
You're
gonna
get
me
shut
on
that.
Badr Milligan
1:44:17
That
sounded
like
a
Cesar
ass
answer.
Drew
1:44:19
Because
living
here
and
like
Shaggy,
Shaggy
loves
video
games,
comic
books,
manga,
and
sport.
Sport
has
been
the
one
thing
that
I'm
just
like,
oh,
this
is
like
I've
been
watching
some
good
basketball,
seeing
some
good
bot
basketball,
and
I've
just
been
I've
just
been
in
a
basketball
mood
lately.
Um
I
love
like
I've
been
watching
the
uh
the
Cavs,
and
then
I've
been
watching
uh,
was
it
the
Spurs
and
the
Timberwolves?
Because
both
of
them
played
well,
the
Cavs
play
the
night.
Walt
1:44:49
The
Cavs
and
tonight,
whenever
this
podcast
comes
out,
it's
game
six
of
the
Cavs
and
it's
game
six
of
the
um
Spurs
game
tonight.
Drew
1:44:57
Yeah,
the
the
the
Spurs
player
Wemby,
like
bro,
that
thing,
like
not
that
that
thing.
Sorry,
he's
a
he.
Walt
1:45:03
Oh
no,
no,
that
thing.
Drew
1:45:07
Bro,
he
is
we
ain't
seen
we
ain't
seen
no
shit
like
that
ever.
That
don't
exist.
No,
not
at
all.
So,
like,
I've
just
been
really
in
in
a
fan
of
just
like
watching
sports.
Um,
being
in
Colorado,
obviously
you
already
know,
like,
every
everything
here
is
sports,
it's
sports,
it's
sports,
and
it's
like,
oh,
okay,
like
what
sport?
Like
you
would
just
use
the
Florida
Gator's
football,
basically.
Badr Milligan
1:45:31
No,
no,
straight
up
Jack
Iceman,
baby.
No,
no,
no,
bro.
Walt
1:45:34
We
only
out
there,
it
is
Denver
Bronco
football,
and
then
it's
Nuggets,
and
then
it's
Avalanche,
and
then
it's
other
shit.
But
no,
that
is
a
Denver,
that's
a
Denver
Bronco
place,
dude.
Drew
1:45:47
I
it
and
it's
like
anytime
I
get
on
the
train
or
if
I'm
walking,
I
can
keep
a
tally
of
people
wearing
any
type
of
sports
memorabilia,
yeah,
even
if
they're
not
playing
right
now.
It's
crazy
to
me.
So
that
to
me
has
just
been
very,
very
crazy
because
you
everybody
ain't
you
from
Florida?
Badr Milligan
1:46:04
Real
quick,
uh,
this
is
a
complete
random
question.
Do
y'all
remember
when
do
y'all
remember
when
the
universe
closed?
What
year
that
was?
Universe
of
superheroes?
Drew
1:46:15
Damn,
it
would
have
been
when
Nick.
It
would
have
been
after
we
all
left.
Yeah.
When
did
he
be
closed?
Because
he
kept
the
same
name,
right?
Did
he
keep
the
name
or
did
he
change
the
name?
He
met
the
universe
for
a
little
bit
and
then
he
changed
it
to
Black
Hive
Tattoo.
Badr Milligan
1:46:26
No,
no,
he
changed
it
from
he
changed
it
to
Black
Hive
from
Universe,
Black
Hive
Comics,
and
then
it
became
superhero
hive,
and
then
Coliseum
took
over.
I
thought,
because
I'm
like,
I
was
trying
to
do
the
timeline.
I
was
like,
when
did
me
and
Drew
start
working
at
the
shop?
Podcast
was
you
know
2012.
I
I
reached
out
to
Nick,
Nick
Wagner,
big
shout
outs
to
him.
I
was
like,
hey,
can
you
tell
me
when
you
took
over
the
shop?
And
he
says,
it
looks
like
I
took
over
in
November
2012.
Oh,
wow.
Yeah,
that
that
kind
of
throws
my
timeline
off,
like
big
time.
So
I
guess
we
worked
the
shop
like
2011.
Walt
1:46:59
He
took
over.
That
was
him
silently
taking
over.
Badr Milligan
1:47:02
Hmm.
Okay.
Yeah,
it
throws
me
over.
Walt
1:47:05
It
was
silently
taking
over.
I
was
still
down
there,
and
your
boy,
um,
what
was
my
man
who
was
on
it
before?
James.
James
Basham.
James
Bascom.
James
as
was
still
there
when
I
left.
Badr Milligan
1:47:20
Yes.
Drew
1:47:20
He
was
still
up
there
working.
But
um
Nick
Nick
Cape
kept
him
um
on
as
the
face
because
of
the
fact
that
he
was
uh
a
great
um
rapport
with
you.
Badr Milligan
1:47:33
I
think
he
was
still,
yeah,
yeah,
yeah.
That's
a
good
point.
Walt
1:47:34
And
another
word,
rapport.
Badr Milligan
1:47:37
Yeah.
You
know
what
I'm
about
to
do?
I'm
about
to
report
my
dream
here
in
the
city.
Drew
1:47:48
Bumble.
Walt
1:47:48
What
you
gonna
champion
before
you
can
do?
Yeah,
what
you
champion?
What
you
chapter?
Badr Milligan
1:47:52
Um,
I'm
gonna
champion,
I'm
gonna
keep
it,
I'm
gonna
keep
it
late.
I'm
gonna
champion
Archie,
because
I
did
not,
you
know,
just
a
wholesome
fucking
comic
book
that
has
been
going
on
since
1942.
I
mean,
that's
Archie
is
Americana,
man.
I
mean,
comic
books
are
Americana,
all
of
that.
So
I'm
I'm
gonna
champion
Archie.
Drew
1:48:14
You
know
what?
Walt
1:48:14
Basically,
all
bullshit.
Badr Milligan
1:48:18
You
and
then
go
to
the
sock
hot.
Walt
1:48:22
What
these
have
been
trying
to
do
with
all
this
other
shit
is
what
Archie
has
been
doing
for
years.
Archie
is
basically
an
American
mango.
Badr Milligan
1:48:29
Wow.
Holy
shit.
Well,
you
should
have
led
with
that
30,
45
minutes
ago.
That's
been
dope.
Walt
1:48:36
We'll
go
into
that
later.
Badr Milligan
1:48:37
That's
another
episode
for
everybody.
So
I'm
I'm
a
champion
Archie,
and
then
most
importantly,
I'm
a
champion.
I'm
a
champion
us.
I'm
a
champion
the
short
box,
I'm
a
champion
of
the
short
box
nation.
Because
at
the
end
of
the
day,
500
episodes.
Walt
1:48:50
The
patronies.
The
patronies.
Badr Milligan
1:48:53
We
love
them.
Uh,
but
most
importantly,
man,
uh
even
patrons
or
or
not,
I
think
it
is
worthwhile
to
shout
out
the
listeners
in
every
aspect,
whether
it's
someone
that
has
been
riding
with
us
since
day
one,
someone
that
maybe
has
been
on
and
off,
maybe
this
is
their
first
time.
It
is
truly
insane
to
think
how
long
we've
been
doing
this.
Uh,
the
short
box.
I
mean,
you
know
what
I'm
saying?
14
years
is
crazy,
500
episodes.
And
I
mean,
truthfully,
it's
not
even
500
episodes.
We've
released
way
more
than
that,
but
yeah,
I
do
want
to
say
none
of
this
would
be
possible
or
worthwhile
without
people
listening.
Walt
1:49:25
So
big
shout
outs
to
the
can
I
say
something
real
quick
also
to
end
this.
Badr Milligan
1:49:29
Yeah,
yeah,
but
come
on.
Walt
1:49:32
You
have
been
fantastic
with
keeping
this
alive.
Fuck
yes,
hell
yeah,
bro.
Big
up
hell
yeah.
If
you
could
just
when
I
left
and
when
Drew
left,
you
could
have
just
stopped
doing
it
because
me
and
Drew
could
have
moved
on
from
my
life.
You
would
have
been
doing
a
whole
bunch
of
other
shit.
Badr Milligan
1:49:50
I
could
have
been
famous.
I
could
have
been
rich
by
now.
I
could
have
you
rich.
Tupac
1:50:00
Pretty
enough,
man.
You
could
have
you
could
have
went
on
and
done
the
buttons.
Bro,
yeah.
Honestly,
bro,
you're
wasting
your
time.
You're
wasting
your
potential.
You're
wasting
your
potential.
He's
a
sexy
man.
You
could
have
been
throwing
that.
You
could
have
been
out
here
throwing
that
thing.
Yo,
yo.
Drew
1:50:13
You
could
have
been
like
OnlyFans
podcasting
shirtless.
Tupac
1:50:16
Like,
you
could
have
been
out
here
showing
feet.
Badr Milligan
1:50:19
I
could
have
been
right
now
watching
the
sunset
in
the
Galapalos
Island
with
a
linen
shirt
having
a
little
bit
of
a
little
bit
of
a
little
importantly
showing
feet.
Walt
1:50:34
And
it's
been
a
beautiful
game.
And
then
the
one
homie
kept
that
shit
going
for
a
long
ass
time.
And
it's
been
good
anytime
I
tap
into
the
shit.
You've
been
running
this
race.
Drew
1:50:47
You've
been
running
this
race
a
long
time,
bro.
Yeah.
Badr Milligan
1:50:51
They're
like,
yo,
did
he
get
did
he
get
the
memo
that
that
race
ended?
Walt
1:50:56
You
was
actually
people
came
through.
Badr Milligan
1:51:00
All
right.
You
guys
have
been
great.
Yo,
Short
Box
Nation,
as
you
can
tell,
this
has
been
a
damn
fine
time.
Uh,
we've
talked
a
little
bit
about
everything,
right?
We
talked
about
500
issues.
We
celebrated
issue
500.
We
got
into
a
very
heated
conversation
about
variant
covers.
If
you
enjoyed
the
show,
if
you
want
to
chime
into
the
conversation,
man,
I
would
love
for
you
guys
to
text
us
some
fan
mail.
You
can
also
leave
uh
voicemail
now.
Uh,
there's
a
link
in
the
show
notes.
But
that's
what
we
got
for
you,
man.
Uh,
we
have
made
it
to
500
episodes,
14
years
in
the
making.
Who's
to
say
where
we'll
be
at
uh
14
years
uh
later,
you
know,
uh
500
episodes
later.
With
that
being
said,
yo,
Short
Box
Nation,
we
love
you
guys
truly.
Thank
you
so
much
for
hanging
out.
And
we'll
catch
you
next
week.
Peace.