TAGQ (That's A Good Question)

Episode 50!! Pinto Armrest Art

Ben Johnston & Scott Johnston Episode 50

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0:00 | 40:54

We trade college stories and current-life updates with Scott’s old roommate Bones, then veer into what arbitration really is and why it feels nothing like TV courtroom drama. The conversation zigzags through 1970s music, knees that will not cooperate, California’s complicated history, whale spouts in Bodega Bay, and a limo job that ends with a rock star reveal. 
• turning a busted Pinto armrest into framed “art” and what people project onto it 
• what an arbitrator does and why “private judge” is the simplest definition 
• why arbitration rarely produces funny stories and the one oath moment that lands 
• a college job selling “half a cow” and the slogan that still kills 
• testing 1970s song lyrics knowledge and arguing about deep cuts 
• a Whidbey Island weekend with matcha French toast and brunch nostalgia 
• knee injury mysteries, torn meniscus talk, and getting back to running 
• plant breeding history, diversity, and uncomfortable ties to eugenics in California 
• whales spouting in Bodega Bay and the fine art of prattling 
• a “Joe Garcia” limo pickup that turns into a Steve Perry story 
You need an arbitrator, give Bones a call. 


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Pinto Armrest Becomes Wall Art

Ben

Yeah. That Joe Garcia is he's no Garrison Keeler, that's for sure.

Bones

That's probably one of the nicest things we could have said.

Ben

Yeah, yeah, you know that's me, me and Admit Ben. Here we go. Greetings.

Scott

Good morning, Ben. Wow, there are two faces. Yeah. I guess we're not organized in the logical order. Groundbreaking. Yeah, it is.

Ben

This is Hi Ben. I'm Bones. Hi Bones. I know you. I know. I know we've met, but uh it's it's been a long time.

Bones

Yeah, and I I told Scott I had worked up about a 15-minute introduction for myself. Perfect.

Ben

Wow. All right. Go go for it. Yeah, it's kidding. Yeah.

Scott

I think.

Bones

Do you want me to start at first grade or should I move right on to Junior Hall? Just skip right on to your guest of Scott and Benz. Scott and I were roommates in college. I have some, I can reveal some skeletons if people want. Um, discover when living with Scott that he's the aficionado of fine art, and that's a whole story of its own.

Ben

Whoa. I've never heard my dad described as a aficionado of capital A art. Of anything. Well, but that's just maybe it's just because it was the waters I swam in growing up. I didn't even know how to appreciate it.

Bones

Beautiful. Well, the fine art, you know what I'm talking about with the fine art, don't you? The art in our apartment. Oh, yeah, okay. We we had no art in our apartment, and it was really lacking.

Scott

Our house.

Bones

Yeah, in our house when we were in college. So we had a picture frame, but we had no picture. So we could put the picture frame over this on the wall over the fireplace. Over the fireplace, but all you saw was the wall behind the picture frame. Yeah. So Scott had the brilliant idea because his pinto was falling apart every time we stepped into it. He pulled an armrest off of the pinto. It fell off. Oh okay. And we mounted that on the wall inside the picture frame, and that became the only piece of art we had in the house. Yeah, it was it was at an angle. I you guys didn't know jack shit about hanging an armrest. I had to come and do that. I mean, they wanted to put it horizontal to the floor. I mean, who does that?

Ben

Oh, he was he was the visionary, and you were the uh I I was like just a touch. Yeah, yeah.

Scott

Okay, yeah. The creative director. Yes, and then Eric, who is on podcast 48? Oh, by the way, this is podcast 50.

Ben

Wow, 50 right episode. Let's get the sound bing bing bing bing. Justin, can you turn on the horns? Justin's our sound guy who lives under my desk.

Bones

Oh, nice. Yeah. What else can you do under your desk?

Scott

But uh to finish the story of the armrest.

Ben

Moves my outlets, you know. Like the phone ball. Yeah. Take the computer out, put the phone in. Okay.

Scott

Eric's sister walked into our apartment and saw this armrest hanging over the the uh fireplace framed, and she goes, and she's an she was an artist, made a living living as a commercial artist, and she goes, That's God.

Bones

Well do you think she would have said that if the armrest was horizontal to the floor? I've never, you know, bones.

Scott

I've never thought about that. Yeah, so yeah, important.

Ben

It is what it is, you know.

Scott

It was what it was, and no one took a picture of it with their iPhone cameras, so we have no record of it. Well, yeah, not that part, yeah.

Bones

Yeah, we we did that intentionally.

Scott

I don't think we have a sing I don't have a single photograph from that house. No, nobody had a you didn't have did that intentionally.

Ben

You said no photographs, yeah.

Bones

Oh, we just there were a lot of opportunities. People I I know National Geographic wanted to do a whole spread on it, but we wouldn't allow it.

Ben

Yeah, but you had to like have a meeting, say what, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Scott

Well, back then the iPhones were about the size of a water cooler, and you know, not everybody had one. But we had that that joke, that joke didn't work.

Ben

Yeah, no, no, I yeah, yeah. I did have to think about it because I as soon as you said water cooler, I just had a had a cooler in mind. I'm like, we were talking about iPhones. Yeah, I goofed. I goofed it. Okay, I get it now. I get it. You can't carry around a computer in the 70s.

Scott

I meant an ice chest and I said water cooler, so that ruined the whole joke. Oh yeah, I was lost.

Ben

Yeah, oh that, yeah, that you fucked that up. Yeah.

Arbitrator Versus Arborist Confusion

Ben

Last time I think I was in the same room as you, Bones. I think you were talking about being on a limo driver.

Bones

Oh, yeah. I've had an illustrious career, yeah, yeah.

Ben

Were you a lawyer before that, though?

Bones

Yeah, I still am.

Ben

Okay, so you're a limo driver.

Bones

He couldn't find it, so it's it stayed in there. Yeah. But I'm a covered.

Scott

You're a recovering lawyer, yes. Okay, okay. Now he's uh let me get this right. He's an arbitrator. Don't call him a mediator because he'll he'll get pissed.

Ben

Yeah, arborist. Wow, you climb trees? He's an arborist.

Bones

Yeah, I'm an arborist. There is nobody better at climbing trees than I am. I I barely can climb into bed.

Scott

So but did when we lived together, did you have the upper or lower bunk bed?

Bones

Lower. Okay, there's no way I'm getting to an upper, there's no way anyone would sleep in a bed where I was in the bed above them. That would be dangerous. So, no, I was clearly lower.

Ben

No, so not a tree climber. Yeah, not an arborist, perhaps.

Bones

No, I am not, I am not an arborist.

Ben

You're an arbitrator.

Bones

Yeah, that's I'm an arbitrator, not an arborist.

Scott

If if you were doing maybe this is maybe this is the good question. Maybe Ben's got a better one coming. Okay. But if you were gonna do stand-up comedy based on your arbitration, do you have a do you have a bit you can do? Like I you I know you can't reveal anything. There's whatever HIPAA or whatever.

Bones

I was in a here though. Rarely does anything funny ever happen in an arbitration. Okay. Um one person my one attorney, she put her witness up on the witness stand and said, You work for Alina? And she said, Yes, I do. And how long have you worked for Alina? 14 years. And do you enjoy your job? Now remember, you're under oath. And and that's the that's the most amusing thing I can think of. It's not a it's it's not a reparing kind of job.

Ben

Okay, I'm gonna ask you to define two words. The first one is the fourth to last word you just said, and also arbitrator.

Bones

Arbitrator. And what was the other word?

Ben

It's not a pay back.

Bones

Yeah.

Ben

She said it's not a blank kind of job.

Bones

Rip roaring. Rip, I think rip rip roaring. Got it, got it.

Ben

Rip roaring. Okay. So what's the one?

Bones

Rip roaring as well.

Ben

Yes. Okay.

Bones

Arbitrator is just a private judge. So two parties have decided that they have a contract, and when they have a dispute over what that contract provision provides, and they can't resolve it themselves, they bring that issue to a third party and they will make a decision on what that provision means.

Scott

So it's it's driven by contractual law.

Ben

Yeah. So you're the guy in the sitcom that sits at the head of the conference table while the two characters that are getting a divorce sit next to their lawyers.

Bones

Yeah, right, right. I'm okay. Good. I'm the one they're supposed to suck up to. I think a lot of the times they're having trouble recognizing that you're sucking up to me here.

Ben

That sounds like a pretty rip-roaring job to me, but that's just yeah, that's just Hollywood to me. Yeah, yeah.

Meat Slogans And Self Sponsorship

Bones

Not quite as good as the job I had in college. I don't know if you know this, Scott, but I had a job working for Blue Ribbon Foods. Do you remember Blue Ribbon Foods? They made ice cream. No, Blue Ribbon Foods, that's Blue Bunny. Okay, Blue Ribbon Foods sold half a cow. You know, we would sell a half a cow on the phone, calling people up, trying to set up an appointment. And those I didn't know this.

Ben

Yeah, I was a salesperson for and their slogan.

Bones

The the best part about this company was their slogan. The best meat you ever thaw. I did, I did with a straight face. I've never heard that.

Ben

I there's a there's a meat shop halfway to destinations in eastern Washington called Owen's Meats, and their slogan is you cannot beat our meat. Wow, yeah, that's that's I have a friend that walks around with that on his shirt.

Bones

Really?

Ben

Yeah, all right. That's bold, Lewis.

Bones

Then I think he needs the t-shirt from the gas station. Either pump and munch or come and go.

Scott

That's a whole that's a whole episode right there. Yeah. Yeah, his his birthday's coming up. We'll do that.

Ben

Um there was something a little bit.

Bones

Oh, our I was thinking of maybe it's not the the arbitrator anymore. Um, can I just do a little ad? If you're in need of an arbitrary, please. We can sponsor this.

Scott

We can advertise what what how do they get a hold of you? You could be the ad today. We'll support you. Yeah, actually, yeah.

Ben

I mean, now that the the advertiser would actually be in our midst, uh-huh. Yeah, we want to make sure that contractually, especially with someone that actually understands how that works. This could this podcast could end real fast if we if we mess this up right now.

Scott

Yeah, oh yeah, we're gonna lose all our revenue. You might lose your listeners.

Ben

Yeah, what's yeah.

Scott

Why would I want to take away Bones Aldman as my mediator?

Bones

Well, say you had an issue with 70 song lyrics. Okay you needed somebody well versed in 70 song lyrics. Well, right away, I'm the person.

Scott

People are arguing over what this lyrics means, yeah, and they're about to whatever, break up the company or get divorced. Yeah, okay.

Bones

There really isn't other than that any real special talent I have, so anybody could do the role.

Ben

So for driving limos.

Bones

Yeah. I can tell that's my my brush with fame story.

Ben

Yeah, right. I will I was thinking about that. But before that, good you if we 70 song lyrics, we should like I I think we need to confirm this. No, you're gonna song bands. Where are some deep cups? I've been well, this might be I don't know. I've got other lyrics, just say the name of the song. I just recently discovered this artist from the mid-70s, and I it feels like discovering like Jimi Hendrix for the first time, so I don't know how well known he is. His name is Ted Lucas. Is this old news? Ted Lucas? Ted Lucas. I think these albums he did like two incredible albums that just got re-released, I think. I really think they might have been buried the time. They just came out on Jack White's record label.

unknown

Okay.

Scott

Have you ever heard of him? No. But if Jack White endorsed him, it's worth listening to. Yeah.

Ben

Uh no lyrics from Ted Lucas.

Scott

I don't know Ted Lucas. Okay, failed the first test.

Ben

Okay.

Scott

Let's pick another one. Like what one of those songs from you know Guardians of the Galaxy?

Ben

Rubber Bandman. Rubber Bandman, Rubber Bandman. I don't even know if it's just a feel like something anything for just one man. Who the artist?

Scott

Who knows?

Bones

Who knows?

Scott

How about that Chicago one?

Bones

That song about Back when my hair was short.

Scott

No, the Lakeside Drive song. You mean the night Chicago died? No, not that one. But but come on, show off some lyrics. No. I put them in a spot. I can't remember. How did Chicago die?

Bones

There was shouting in the street and the sound of running feet. And I heard someone who said about a hundred cops of debt. I heard my mama cry. I heard pray the night Chicago died. Brother Wanna Night It really was. Brother Wanna Fight, it really was. That's enough. Yeah, that's yeah, that's that's a really upbeat song. Oh, yeah.

Ben

I remember you answered that question well. That was good. Thank you. Was Boston from the 70s? Yeah, but I wasn't how familiar are you with their catalog?

Bones

I remember I remember Boston. I'm sure if somebody mentioned a Boston song, they all sounded alike. Boston, one song, and they repeated it with several several different sets of but the more than a feeling, you know.

Scott

More than a feeling. Yeah. I'm more bubble gummy than that. Bubble gummy, okay. Yeah.

Bones

You come on, the dream, peaches, and cream, lips, likes, drop everyone.

Ben

Oh wow, yeah, okay. Yeah, beautiful.

Bones

And you're my own.

Scott

I think that song's been casting.

Bones

That's Ringo. That's Ringo Star, isn't it?

Scott

What was he? 17 when he was singing that talk?

Bones

He was post that was after he left after after the Beatles broke off.

Ben

Yeah, he he went in a different direction.

Bones

Yeah, he sure did.

Ben

Nice. All right, so arbitrator. You need an arbitrator, give bones a call.

Bones

Yeah, please do. Okay.

Ben

Yeah. And it doesn't have to be just 1970s lyrics, I imagine.

Scott

No, no, I I could brand out things. I think you have other things. Yeah.

Whidbey Trip And Matcha French Toast

Scott

How you doing, Ben? I'm good. That's not like a normal podcast question, I know. No, that's not a good question. Bad, bad.

Ben

That's that's bad. I'm good. No, I had a really good week. I uh went to Whidby this last couple of days.

Scott

Um celebrated.

Ben

Whidby Island is where I lived when I first moved to Washington. Lived there for a few years before we're moving to Seattle, like a year and a half ago. So I have lots of friends there. Celebrating a friend's birthday. They just bought a house. I got Fremotch of French toast because it was a friend's last day working at a brunch shop. Same brunch restaurant that you and I, dad, and mom and your friend Bob Fitch, yeah, and his wife all went to. Okay, however many years ago. Second time I've ever been to this restaurant. And we know the manager, but it was her last day yesterday. And she gave us free mimosas, matcha French toast, fried chicken. It was good.

Scott

When you say matcha French toast, you mean it's made of what's matcha?

Ben

It's just a pile of green tea powder. That's what the dish was. Matcha equals green tea powder. There's so there's different green teas, and you can have matcha-grade green tea. And that I don't actually know exactly how they process it, but it's a it's like an ancient thing dates way back in Japan, but you like pulverized leaves and you like make a really, really strong green tea with matcha.

Scott

So you had caffeinated French toast.

Ben

Yeah, caffeinated. Yeah, we did. Yeah, yeah. And has this like earthy almost, but also sort of like sweet and creamy taste to it. Yeah. Matcha lattes are like they've been a big thing for the last number of years. Oh, I know. Yo, you know. Yeah. Amazing ex-benedict. Gonna have to send mom the picture.

Bones

Well, I think that's on tap for us today.

Scott

Mom's ex Benedicts are happening after this podcast.

Ben

Nice. Yeah, and once once the production company clears out of the kitchen, then Yeah, something like that.

Scott

And mom will turn on the blender. Yeah. Once she stops working on the jigsaw puzzle.

Knee Injuries And Basketball Memories

Ben

I also went to the doctor lately. Oh, good. Recently. That's and I got I got a got a prescription for my knee finally. And he was like, Well, it hasn't hurt for a while, so you should probably just hurt it again, and then you can come see me, and then we can decide what to do next. I'm like, Cool. All right. So green flag to just go go injure yourself. Go crazy.

Scott

What did you do to injure yourself?

Ben

In high school, I injured it playing football. And I went to the sports medicine doctor and everything. And it was a weird injury, kind of mystifying for like PT and sports med docs. Because I would go in and they'd do MRIs and they'd try to recreate the in like the pain in the office, but it just like never really worked. And then I'd go home. MRI showed nothing. And I would go home and like go for runs, and like I'd get 10 minutes in, and then it would just be back, and it'd be like a searing pain. Like I couldn't, yeah. Extremely painful. And then I just was never able to figure it out. So I just like got scared of running. And slowly over the years I've been getting back into it, but I'm still really worried about it.

Bones

I got scared of running, I've stayed away from that.

Ben

Yeah. Bones is good physical therapy appointments lately.

Scott

Bones needs ones.

Bones

Yeah, I I just was they just found torn meniscus in my knee, but seems to be getting better.

Ben

So oh, they just stumbled upon that.

Bones

I I was walking up some steps in a basketball arena, and all of a sudden it just ouched. And I couldn't I there were no railings, and so now I gotta walk down a staircase without being able to take any weight off because there's no railing.

Scott

Is this at Williams Williams Arena? You say you uh seeing the U of M play basketball?

Bones

Yeah, it was a University of Minnesota against Indiana, not a very favorable outcome for the Gulf.

Scott

Remember when we had season tickets? Yeah. We used to play all in college. Yeah, we saw a pretty good team. We saw Magic Johnson play. Yeah. When he was still in Michigan.

Bones

And the golfers in 82 won the Big Ten. So they were a good basketball team. Trent Tucker. Kevin McHale was already gone by then. Damn.

Ben

Back in the day. You were a basketball fan, Dad.

Scott

No, I had a roommate who said, hey, let's all get nice. Let's all get season tickets.

Ben

Cool. Mom took me to a me and Adam to a Stanford basketball game like 15 years ago or something.

Bones

Stanford used have really good basketball. Who's the guy? The kind of big white guy. Redundant, probably with Stanford basketball, but mad me or the mad can't I don't know.

Ben

We don't know.

Scott

We don't know. We don't know.

Ben

Ask mom. She loves Stanford Bass.

Scott

Yeah, yeah. Ben's mom is the real true sports fan. We find out.

Ben

She'll yeah, she'll go. You ask her 99. Who is who is on that Stanford team? And she'll just put those players.

Scott

Okay, she's not that kind of fan.

Plant Breeding And Eugenics History

Ben

I've been reading about the eugenicists of California back then.

Scott

Yeah, go Stanford.

Ben

Yeah, exactly. That's why there's a bunch of big white guys on the team.

Scott

Yes, they thought.

Ben

Yeah. Yeah. They're breeding children over there right here. Still do it.

Scott

The Termin, whatever experiment where the I don't know if he was president of Stanford at the time, but he was breeding children at some point to like prove early eugenics was real.

Ben

Jesus Christ, dude. Like, God. No, it's because I've been learning about chestnut breeding on the West Coast. And so a lot of the plant early West Coast plant breeders were either very adjacent to the eugenics movement or like smack dab in the middle of it and like actually, you know, hanging out with whatever that guy, David Jordan Starr, whatever the Burbank was a eugenicist. Yeah, Burbank was like full-blown eugenicist. And then he then there were just other plant breeders that obviously were in the same sphere, but because they believed as they were hybridizing the plants, like, oh, this is better or worse stuff applies to humans.

Bones

What's good for the fern is good for the human.

Scott

Well, like the white people are the hybrid that's superior. That's the whole thing about eugenists, right?

Ben

Yeah. Yeah. And intellectually it was they were pretty stupid, actually. The most successful plant breed well, I don't know. I don't know enough about it, but most successful plant breeders were actually ones that prioritized diversity over like trying to pick the best already existing cultivars. So that's interesting. Tomato. The Santa Lomas of the Right. And then it just connects to all the old California money. And like this, these are like the progenitors of like early California and white America and on the West Coast. So that's really interesting. And then I started seeing connections to like that farm I worked at in Central California and Mendocino. Yeah. And like I like you could start making these loose connections to like even like you know, the Grateful Dead or like stuff like that. Oh my. I mean, no, that's not to say all indirect connections, of course. Right. But it's like California is kind of seen as this like promised land in many different sort of movements and things.

Scott

It's also known for like industrializing agriculture or or or like the raisin commodity. It's like they were like a organized crime that said everybody's gonna sell the raisins through us, you know, whatever the raisin is, sun, sun made, sun something. And they used violence to like discourage people who didn't want to sell their raisins through Sunmade. But anyway, that's yeah, yeah.

Ben

I mean, there's a lot of I mean it's it's a wild one.

Scott

Well, you're saying California sucks. Is that what you're saying?

Ben

That is not. Okay. I said it has a complex and important history.

Scott

Wow, that was very wow, very uh smooth.

Ben

Very, very, very diplomatic,

Bodega Bay Whales And Prattle

Ben

yeah. Yeah, and then and then I looked at your location because you're at Bones' house, right? In Bodega Bay.

Bones

Yeah, yeah. I wish it was my house. My house for a month.

Ben

Oh, really? Oh, yeah. Is it a timeshare?

Bones

Just a rental.

Scott

Oh got it, got it. But we can stare and see the whales sprouting. Sprouting? Spouting. Sprouting, yeah.

Ben

Those whales, they're they've just given up. They're starving so much. We're just gonna be plants now. Just become kelp.

Bones

Uh-huh. Wow, do you see the photosynthesis coming out of that one? Sometimes that happens.

Ben

You're actually seeing like blow, blow spouts.

Bones

I have a few times this trip, but you see the spray, and occasionally you'll see a little bit of black behind the spray, so you can the back is coming out of the water. Cool.

Ben

Hey, I guess it is that time of year.

Scott

Yeah, yeah. I'm gonna go grab my phone so I can do the the timing trick at the end, you know? So cool. You guys keep talking for a moment and I'll be right back. Put the pressure on Scott.

Bones

Yeah, yeah. It'll just be a second. You're in Seattle?

Ben

I'm in Seattle. Well, uh to Ted Lucas lyric is I went all the way up to Seattle where the women like to prattle.

Bones

And what does that what does that mean? What does prattle mean? I sounds good.

Ben

Okay, I gotta I like women who prattle, I think, but it was actually funny and a song about how much he loves California, and he like went all over the country and was just like, nope, I gotta make it back to California.

Bones

I have no idea.

Ben

Talking at length about unimportant matters in a foolish, childish, or inconsequential way. It's a verb. She tended to prattle on about her neighbor's business for hours. Wow. Yes, it's yeah, yeah, yeah. That was that was Google AI that did that. So we can officially cancel them now. Thank God, finally. This is this is what's gonna set them over the edge. This is what's gonna set the AI.

Bones

I think that definition of Pradle is pretty much this what I do all day.

Ben

Yeah, yeah. I mean that is kind of what we're doing here, right? Yeah.

Limo Driving For Joe Garcia

Ben

I I am curious about hearing your uh your brush with fame. Okay, because I remember hearing about it. I I told him. I've heard some developments with the particular you know personally famous person. Well, not any develop. Yeah, not developments, but I remember like around the same time I heard the story from you. I was watching TV and he was at the baseball games.

Bones

And it was probably around 2015 or 2016, Memorial Day weekend, and I got a limo assignment to pick up God, Joe.

Ben

Wasn't it like Garcia? I think.

Bones

Yeah, Joe Garcia. I was to pick up Joe Garcia at the airport. I had my little sign near the baggage claim with Joe Garcia's name on it. He comes down. I said, Shall we grab your bags? He goes, I don't have any bags. He had just a little little kind of duffel bag that he was carrying. We go to the car, he says, I want to listen to music. I can't listen to any news. I said, Okay, that's fine. So we put on some music on the radio and we take off the stretch limo. No, nope. He didn't he didn't bite on the stretch limo. This he wasn't going look look what he got as a as a limo driver. You knew he wasn't going top drawer. So he wanted to see three things. He wanted to go to a hotel that was near the airport, he wanted to see a hotel in downtown St. Paul, and he wanted to see theater, a live theater that is in downtown St. Paul called the Fitzgerald Theater. So I explained the logistics. I said it makes most sense to go to the hotel nearby first. We'll go, then we'll go into St. Paul, see those other venues. We get to the hotel. I've never seen this hotel as busy as it was. Turns out they were there was an AA convention going on. I have not believed the number of motorcycles in that parking lot. Apparently, that's a good combination. Drinking and motorcycles. Yeah, yeah, that's yeah, that's a healthy one. So, or maybe stop drinking and motorcycles is what I'm saying.

Ben

Yeah, they don't get into biking until afterwards. Now I can't that's what I've heard.

Bones

Yeah. So I drop him off. He tells me he he's a little nervous about something. He wants to go visit a friend, but he wants my car right at the door when he leaves because he doesn't want kind of any anything stirred up by him leaving. I didn't know what that meant, but having a car where he wanted it was no problem. So he comes, he leaves the hotel within a half hour and meets me. Uh, we chat, and his friend was with him, an 85-year-old guy, not very cool. This guy was about 60 years old, and you could tell he had a little cool to him, but yeah, you know, but short hair, not not long hair or anything. We get into the car, and his friend now calls him on his cell phone and said, Joe, I don't think he said Joe. He probably wasn't in on the rouge, but he said that woman you saw in the hotel, she got in her car and she might be following you guys. So he says, Is anybody following us? We're on a major freeway in the twin cities. Yeah, there are a couple of cars behind us, but I'll lose them. So we we we exit, drive around a neighborhood. There's nobody following us. We end up going downtown. He wants to go to this theater. I said, I'll drive, I'll show you where your he wanted to know if he could walk to the theater from his hotel. I said, I'll show you where your hotel is. We'll drive to the theater, I'll bring you back to your hotel, but now you'll know how to get there. We get to the hotel or to the the theater. All he wants to do is see what the back door looks like. He doesn't care anything else, but he wants to know what the back door looks like. I should we drive up in an alley, show him the back door, said, Okay, this is good. Do you know if the hotel has a private entrance? No, I don't know. This isn't a common request. Um so I call the hotel. I call the hotel and I said, I'm driving over. I've got Joe Garcia with me, and he wanted to know if there's a private entrance. He said he doesn't need it today, but he will need it tomorrow. And the guy said, When Joe gets here, you just have him come see me. I'm the head of security. We get to the hotel, head of security. I asked for the head of securities, he said, That's me. And I said, I'm here with Joe Garcia. He goes, Where's Joe? I said, Joe's at the desk, he's checking in. And he tells me, Joe doesn't need to check in, I've got his keys with me. Okay, so now I know he's something, he's not ordinary because that's that's not protocol to for the head of security to hold your keys. And I drop him off, I go home, I've got to find out who Joe Garcia is. I Google it. There's a congressman from Florida named Joe Garcia. Then I looked at what this theater had going on the next day. You know, who's playing? There's a band called the Eels. Have you ever heard of the Eels? E-E-L S apparently out of Southern California. There was no Joe Garcia in the Eels. There was nobody in the Eels that was any note to me. Anyhow, I'm now to go see him the following day. He's gonna walk to the hotel the following day, but he said he had to do some sound checks. So I'm assuming, yeah, this guy must be a musician with the eels. I pick up his friend, the older guy from the hotel. We go to the eels or go to the theater. I drop his friend off at the back door, and Joe meets him and says, I'll have a pass for you to go anywhere you want in the theater during the day, but I need you to stick around. Uh so go park your car and come back. I do that, park my car, come back. He's nowhere to be seen by the back door, but the rest of the band of the eels out near the back door smoking cigarettes. So I start chatting with them and he's not coming out, so I open up the back door of the theater and I can see him. He's on stage and he's got a microphone in his hand, and he's saying, When the lights go down in the city, and I said, I recognize this is a great cover band.

Scott

The singer really likes songs like the original.

Ben

That's what he chooses as a sound check. Yeah, what's what's his real name?

Bones

Joe Gastillo is Steve Perry. Steve he was the lead singer from Journey 1989. He is he really that recognizable? He was in 1989. Yeah, okay. That's what the deal was. He was he was a long-haired, cool guy, used, would wear a sport coat, no shirt, yeah. And I think women went nuts over him. And I could relate because I know what he was going through, and yeah, yeah, so he was very concerned that after this concert there was gonna be a mob scene like what he was used to, because he wanted me to work on. Oh, okay, gotta. He wanted me to work on making sure we could get him out of the place. The old guy that was with us was his awesome. Okay, so he was there for the convention. Yeah, he was speaking at the convention.

Ben

God, so he wasn't even performing, was he?

Bones

No, no, Joe Garcia did perform the first time he had performed since it publicly since uh he left Journey. He came out with and did two encore songs with the eels, and they they did two journey songs, but he wasn't mobbed, he wasn't mobbed by by the after the nobody knew

Steve Perry Reveal And Goodbyes

Bones

who he was.

Ben

I mean, this he loved he seemed like the kind of guy that loved just basking in the fame. Because I remember after you telling us the story, we only have like 30 seconds left.

Scott

Yeah, tell us you're rebook removed.

Ben

I remember watching Giants games, and every time they would play, the nice go down, he would be at the games. He had like season tickets, and he'd always go like look at me, look at me, and the cameras would just be like, Oh, look at Steve Perry again, everybody. And he'd just be like, and everybody in the crowd like don't even notice him. They're just like, but he's loving it.

Scott

It's like my so a Giants game is different than Prairie Home Companion when it comes to his visibility.

Ben

I think a little yeah. That that Joe Garcia is he's no Garrison Keeler, that's for sure.

Bones

That's probably one of the nicest things we could have said.

Ben

Yeah, yeah. You know, that's me, me and my diplomacy. Well, awesome.

Scott

Cool, cool. We're breaking the rules here on this podcast, but that's what this podcast is made to do. Break the rules.

Ben

We just introduced a little bit more complexity to the editing process, so yeah. Thanks, Justin. I'm padding the mom head below my desk.

Scott

Yeah. Because we had such a famous guest.

Bones

We needed I don't know if you know this, but the Robert Altman you're referring to is dead. Did he make did he make movies? Yeah, Robert Altman made movies. This one didn't. Okay. I remember the day he died. I put on my office, I'm not the Robert Altman that died.

Ben

The one that the one that hung up Pinto armchairs.

Bones

Yeah, yeah.

Ben

That creative genius designed.

Bones

He's a creative one.

Ben

Yeah. He just networked. One that matters is still here.

Bones

Yeah, yeah, exactly.

Scott

All right. Well, we got some famous, you know, like celebrity one-off in the podcast. You know, since a lot of podcasts are you know driven by like what celebrities can you bring on to interview? So we this is like close to that.

Bones

We Robert Altman, after all.

Ben

And they we even got got him to sponsor himself too.

Scott

Yeah, yeah, that's a first. Yeah, we just break all the rules.

Ben

Okay. Enjoy your Holland days. Thank you. And I'm sure the rest of the day you all are just gonna be working on that jigsaw puzzle together. So now me. Have fun with that.

Bones

Your mom is making great progress.

Scott

I have to uh drive to San Francisco and beat on some drums, and then I'm gonna drive back here.

Ben

Oh wow, yeah. I guess I guess you're kind of in the neighborhood, sort of.

Scott

It's closer than yeah, closer than going home. Yeah.

Bones

Okay, man.

Scott

Good to see you, Bone. Good to see you, Pop. Yeah. Adios. I know this is weird. I've never had to end this on purpose. Okay. Bye. Bye.

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