This week's episode of the blog card podcast is brought to you by secrets. Secrets. Oh, oh, oh, oh! I got a secret!
I got a secret. Congratulations, Ron. Good. I murdered a guy last night on the way home.
Ron, you understand secrets are something you don't tell. I didn't have to. You don't. When you have a secret, it's something you keep to yourself.
You don't tell the world about your secrets, Ron. It's not a secret. Okay, no, no, I got it. I got it.
I got it. Oh, oh, I'm wearing a coat. Well, that's not a secret since you're obviously wearing a coat. Where are we supposed to see that?
We can both see that. So, never look at what secrets are. No, no, no, no. I know what secrets are.
I'm not dumb. We didn't say that. I'm not dumb. I've got a real secret.
This one's for real. Is it that you masturbated for two hours last night? Oh, man. This is not pleasant, Ron.
Wait, wait, do you need us to tell you what's the secret? This is a secret. You're putting the deodorant on right now? It's made for a woman, but it's strong enough for a man.
It's a secret. No, no, Ace. It is secret. This is frustrating.
Well, I'm sorry, Ron, but I guess this is an important moment for me. No, no, wait. Nevermind, I got confused. I know what a secret, nevermind.
This is a secret. Ron, that's a pancake. Pancake? Ron.
Okay, let's use this as a teachable moment. A secret is something you don't want to share with the world. It's like an idea or an experience that you want to keep private. Something that you want to make sure that other people don't know about.
It's not a piece of clothing or an object you hold. It is a mystery that you want to preserve. Oh, oh, oh, oh. Well, thank you for your guidance, Jeff.
Thank you. I understand how I get it. Wait, hold on a second. Do you see a murder guy last night?
Welcome to the Vong Card podcast. I'm your host, Jared Eaton, and my co-pilots on this journey to wherever are my good friends, Jeff Curtis. Hello. And the worst kept secret of all time is that Ron Blair, the treasure, is exactly as much of an asshole as you think.
That's true. I don't think I'm more. It's more than what most people have. It's good to perhaps.
No, I guarantee it. You guys have actor, and you guys have to rely on true faithfulness that you are. If not for my charm, I would be a hated man. The one thing we trust you is this podcast, the one thing only really, we do a topic if you feel, you know, everybody for it.
Sure. But we have to tell all of our legions of decades, those throughout time, what this podcast is all about. Before I do, I want to tell you how much I appreciate the names that you've given me over almost two years now, and I encourage you to continue, because they bring me joy every week. Oh, boy.
And the songs that Jeff, that I'm not going to leave you out. No, I agree. It's a time of appreciation. But this podcast is not about showing appreciation.
This week, this podcast is about reintroducing and attempting to popularize such words as, indeedy-doo, Johnny Brook, viscosity, hubris, swell, laissez-a-thair. Scissors. In no minious, double slippery. There it is.
There it is. It's called the epic list. Boom tang. Boom tang?
Yeah, Ibsen. What's that? Ibsen. Ibsen as in the author.
I don't know what they're thinking of. Hallelu. I'm going to tell a blue every day when you talk about it. Konnichiwa.
Castor oil. It's not a word. It's two words. Yeah, there are a couple of them.
Plunk. What? Curp-lunk. Rock-biter.
Pudgy. Worm-wood. Gee, I'm real sorry your mom blew up Ricky. And many more.
Order these words right now, and you'll also receive a copy of the Wild Cards newest record. Surely you didn't mean that. And if that wasn't enough, an all new home edition of the Wild Cards face the ultimate challenge. All this can be yours right now for three easy monthly payments of 1645, and a Liberty Euro front door by a man in a green trench coat with whiskey on his breath and sin on his mind.
Call now for more details. 866-724. 1 973. That's 866-724.
1 973. Call now. What if someone actually calls that number? What are they going to get?
He doesn't know. I don't know if that's my birthday. But he's a 724. 1 973.
That's my thing is, I want to immediately transition to that. Because most important thing we're going to talk about today. No offense to your topic. No offense to your what if I guess about no offense to my first section.
The most important thing we're going to talk about is that Jeff's road has been paved. Yes it has. Goodness. Merry Christmas to me.
I turned left on the road and I'm like, oh my. What a smooth road on my mind. And I closed my eyes and put my hand on the steering wheel. Let the road bring me here.
There are a few bumps and bruises on the way. Sure that would be. Sure. And the road isn't completely smooth at all places.
I'm not complaining. I was so happy even going in your driveway. There was a gentle cloud. It's like a gentle cloud.
It's since March of 2018. They've been messing with that road. And like a week before I went on vacation, I saw them out my windows. They're being thrown in.
Oh my God, they're being thrown in. The road to glory is now smooth. It's no longer like living on a dirt road without the dirt. It was just as bumpy and un-nagible when they patched the hole that they dug in it.
As it would have been with dirt. It just wasn't as it was. Speaking of bumping un-noditable podcast and each week on this podcast we endeavor to share a piece of ourselves. Right.
The our favorite section. As we do. And a lot of times it's like you ask me a weird question where it's like you try to go to the spot. But occasionally we delve into memory and stories from our past.
And that's what this week's favorite question is. In celebration of the New Year, we could have gone resolutions. Yeah, but who wants to do that? But often on New Year's Eve, there's partying that occurs.
Occasionally beverages are imbibed. Which makes me think, what do you guys' favorite and least favorite drinking memories? Memories of drinking and stories associated with your drinking memories. Oh my God.
If you can remember them. Well, now I remember. I used to. My favorite drinking memories are going out on Fridays after work when I lived in New York and I was working in Manhattan.
And I was working at Manhattan Day treatment center. There's a group of us that every Friday after work we'd go out, we'd cross the street to the art bar and we'd spend several hours there. I'd usually drink a couple drinks a night or I'd get drunk. But they would keep drinking.
And it was nice. It's the only time in my life where I just, after work I would go out and hang out with people. I've never, I never did that when I was growing up because I live in a small town that plays a hangout. Somebody gets together with friends and stuff like that.
And I never did it. It's not something I've ever done since. But for like a couple of years, two through your period, it was a nice social get together. Now I got to a point where I wanted to do something else besides just sitting in a bar and drinking every Friday.
You know what I was, you know, let's go see a movie. Let's get to some of them. At that point I realized it was just about drinking. And the social thing was nice but it was really about drinking.
At which point I started not doing it as frequently. But yeah, that was good memories. So you say you don't like any drunk? No, I get drunk.
But you have. I have been drunk, yes. Well, one time, the worst, I've only been drunk two or three times. Yeah.
One time I got- I'm the worst. The worst was when I went to one of our Christmas parties. This is the game when I was living in New York. And I had like seven glasses of wine.
And that's a lot of wine. That's a lot of wine. That might be a bottle and a half of wine. And I kind of fell asleep on the subway home and when I woke up, I vomited immediately.
On the subway. Suddenly there really wanted to other people in the car at that. I was probably like, what are I doing in the morning? And I just got up and walked off.
And you gave them the finger guns in the way out? You asked for a mop at the same stage. There's nothing you can do. You said somebody would walk on the go on the sofa.
Well listen, I've seen people urinate on the sofa in the car. Right. So you're vomiting is not the worst thing to ever. I'm sure it's not the first time whoever cleans the car has to clean up.
Ron is actually a huge fan of vomit. I love it, boy. I will hold in a vomit for weeks and weeks on end if that's what it takes to not puke. Oh, I hate it.
It's horrible. I'll hold a puke in forever and ever. Whereas I've thrown up so many times because it almost isn't you and seem to do it before. Yeah, yeah.
I hope I'll buy the dumpster. So the vomiting itself isn't a big deal to me. But away from that from it, I want to hear about Ron drinking his drink. I don't believe that there have got to be some good stories here.
The best and worst night is I was at a convention. I was volunteering and I was with the whole family was there. Caleb was about 10. Mickens was 14.
Now drinking the family fair. The whole family just drank him. Have a good time. And so I was with a friend of mine, Tiffany Sheppis.
She had done many films when he came friends during our days at the conventions. And so she asked me to go pick up some alcohol. And I was like, I don't think she had ever been to Kentucky before. So I picked her up some bourbon and she was like, you know, I'm in jule of any chance.
Right. Right. It was double fissing. And she took a shot with me and I think she took a second shot with me.
But then she moved on and then other people would take her place and I just kept taking shots, which whoever came around. And the events of the party are not important. They weren't really memorable. Because you don't remember them?
Right. I remember a few things. Not worthy. It was a regular night of drinking and being a bit.
So I go back to the room. I stumble down the hallway back to my room. I managed to find my way down there. And I flop onto the bed to pass out.
And I was sharing a room with the family. Yeah. We were all there. And Michelle was sharing a bed.
And then me and Caleb were sharing a bed. And I was on the side closest to the wall, on the bed closest to the wall. And at some point during my drunken restlessness, the mattress had scooted about a foot and a half towards the wall. And around three o'clock in the morning, I don't know how it happened.
I was going to say I've never in my life had a mattress scoot while I've been on it. That was the one and only time. We're just pretty impressive because you're one of the close friends. But you can't have some significant mattress.
No, we're big guys. We'll fill them back so much then. Right. But we're still pretty big fellas.
And so I woke up three, three, 30. And I'm laying on that foot and a half of mattress that is suspended, unsupported on the wall side of the bed. And about the same time I woke up, the whole mattress just flies up and lands me on the floor. And Caleb comes rolling down on top of me.
And then I apologize and put him back into bed. What was Caleb's response? As he was thrown in the air and came rolling down. I'm not sure what I was.
I'm pretty sure I was like, what? There's like a seesaw. Right. When you're sound asleep.
Hey, what? And I imagine it like a bomb going off in a lower floor that knocks the whole building. Boom. So I can hear him say, yeah, he never liked me drinking when he was younger.
So I'm sure that contributed to the whole thing. And then I got up and I vomited and so much and I couldn't go volunteer the next day to like one o'clock in the afternoon. The event guy was mad at me, but you know, fuck, I don't care. It's fine.
So that's where I'm drinking. That was what? Yeah. Caleb 16 now.
No, he's 16 now. No, he couldn't have been 10 then. Yeah. Fuck.
So 10 years old. He was like four to five. Yeah, that would have probably been a good one. Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. So there's no way he would have totally anchored me on that unsupported part and I would have slept soundly like on a blanket of air or whatever. So what about Ron Youngery?
Oh shit. Tell me something Ron. There's so many stories, something drunken nights of revelry and the one night I became a legend, the one night that I drank from the Iglucular. It was a big orange.
Was there a big straw? There was no big straw. We were tapping. We were hitting it out on tap.
It was a screwdriver. So it's like using like a shot glass either then? No, no. And we like, you know, measured it out to like such and such gallons of orange juice versus such and such gallons of heaven hill vodka and which is the worst vodka you can get.
It's horrifying. And then we were just drinking out of that and when it got too low for the tap to take it out, I lifted that side of a bag. I did lift it like a shot glass and just drank directly out of the cooler. A screwdriver out of the cooler with ice, flooding down my face.
That was the first night I was there. That is my brother, Blue now. And he was there ever since then. They're like, maybe he's kind of a legend.
He might be a legend. What are you wearing? I was not. I refused to wear a toilet.
Sorry guys. Sorry. Well speaking of dumb stories, I don't have any good drinks because I don't really drink. I've never been drunk.
But I've been around drunk people. I've been around drunk people. And some of the more memorable ones are 2008, I turned 21 in July 2008. And then in August, a group of five friends went with me.
So it's a total on a road about West. We had done something similar to a few of the people in Colorado, 2005. Okay. So it's not the same trip.
I was pitching this being the same one legendary trip. Both were pretty epic. Jared went to Australia. And then he spent a year going out West to Colorado and it was the year of traveling to find himself.
Jared is searching for Jared. He's heard his Hemingway, Charles Bukowski years. Not Hemingway, Steinbeck, Steinbeck. He travels with Charlie years.
So 2008, myself and Fama buddies, we traveled to Wyoming, West to Wyoming, went up to Montana. We went to Wyoming first. We did some climbing in the Grand Tetons. It was awesome.
We did a hostel in Jacksonville. How are those? I mean the rooms were small. Smaller than hotel rooms.
I never knew what to expect. It's not the people who were interested. It's not the dumb movie that makes me go, oh hostels. I'm curious.
I don't know what to say. I'm a few people who paid a torture me. I was a minimal torture. I was a very disappointed person.
I was a very cheap steak train. I went up to Yellowstone and got a couple of these. That's so beautiful. Backcountry camping.
That's the top of the grizzly bear. That happened. The grizzly bear followed by our tent. If you don't know Yellowstone, I haven't been there since I was five.
You don't know Yellowstone is what you're saying. I've seen pictures of me in Yellowstone when I was five years old. I do know it's breathtaking. It's because it's only very old faithful.
The sinkholes. The river that smells like sulfur. Yeah, there's a lot of sulfur. It smells like rotten eggs.
There's a lot of these pools that are emerging from the ground. Not to say guys are just like purple. But because of the bacteria that live there, they have various colors. There's also what's called the Grand Canyon of Yellowstone.
Oh, I see. It's a great, great river going through it. Awesome. We went up north to Montana.
We were visiting a friend of ours who was in Montana. She was interning at a ranch there. Not on a ranch, but at a ranch. She was working for a company called VoteSmart.
They were compiling data on people and how they voted like politicians. Before you voted, you could see what you were voting for and against and what they stood for. It was just like a data farm. We picked her up and it was my friend Mark's 22nd birthday.
The nearest town to this ranch was called Phillipsburg, Montana. About 45 minutes away. This town was a tic-tac-toe board. Two streets in each direction.
We found a restaurant that I think was called like a silver dollar in or something like that. Pretty good food. I had a nice burger and my friend said the buffalo meat was incredible. Anyway, there were six of us.
I was the designated driver. So there were five people drinking. Between the five of them, they drank seven of us. I was the drinking.
So six people drinking, they drank five bottles of wine. So six people. That was a bottle piece. That's a ton of wine.
Yeah, it was great. And then we went to the bar. And the drinking continued, everybody. We didn't get the heart stuff.
I put John on the outside. I helped him to have the breathe through up in the toilet. It was pretty short here. I just stroked at the gym.
I like to be sued when I vomit. And then I got to drive everyone back to the rich. A 45 minute drive, about seven or eight minutes, which was on a road. The rest of us was back in country.
There was obviously a defined road, but it was not paid. It was absolutely gravel and dirt and hills and jackrabbits running in front of us. And other six people are just in the back of this SUV still partying. Singing and dancing somehow.
And I'm trying to like see because there's no lights. There's no roads, no lights. Now I'm trying to make sure I don't know. Nothing's whatever.
But they were having such a... I remember that night fondly even as something that we tried to do. I remember that night fondly even as something that we tried because they were so much more. I remember that night fondly even as something that we tried to do because they were so entertaining.
I've been with people who were drinking where it was less entertaining. I remember in high school, obviously my friends were drinking illegally then. But they were camping one night. My buddy, his family was a part of this country club where they could rent out a lake with a place to stay around.
If we would camp there pretty regularly. And one night, I think this place senior here, we're camping. We got a fire made and my friends busted out some fireball whiskey. They just tried it as being big red and cinnamon milk.
I don't know that I would send a cinnamon milk by itself, but adding the cinnamon to it just makes it. I like the cinnamon. The cinnamon for some reason for me cuts the alcohol burn a little bit. With a different burn.
It's a burn. It's enjoyable. I enjoy it a lot. I remember my buddy Tyler was trying to drunkenly call an ex-opias.
I managed to stop that. My friends, Chris and Jordan, they went over to use the restroom to relieve themselves. But neither of them could stand on their own. So they were leaning on each other with their arms or shoulders as they were urinating into the wood.
I wouldn't know if they peed on each other. That's a magical moment of friendship. I knew when they came back they were trying to sneak back and just... I'm not good with anybody.
I'm good for those guys. That's different though. That's different though. We had a short time.
It was great. They were trying to navigate their way back to their seats. Jordan failed and couldn't make it into the chair and almost fell on the fire. I was able to stop that from happening.
Nightwares down a couple of people inside sleep in the trailer like the RV that they brought. Chris and Jordan passed out the hammock together. It was beautiful. I went down to this little community center.
Not even at that lodge. It wasn't that big of a kitchen in the living area. Gathering area. There was a full-out bed that I used.
I guess I was supposed to park over at 6am. I was like, yeah, another room came to the lake. They found Chris and Jordan passed out. One of the guys walked over and got real close and was like, you guys had a good time.
I scared them away. They got out of the hammock because they were exposed and came down and decided to join me in bed. That was a fun part. That makes it look better.
I don't hate alcohol but I just don't enjoy it enough to get drunk on it. I would just assume we have water or a sweet tea or something. I've never been drunk. I've consumed some alcohol.
I've never had a meal before. I've never had a meal before. I'm lost. I'm like ginger beer.
I'm like a fucking bull. I enjoy my first tequila not too long ago. I loved tequila. Everyone thought I was going to hate it.
I'm not at all. No. One of my more Joel things I had was with the silver. Yeah, I love silver.
I don't drink the gold tequila. I don't drink the brown liquor at all. That makes me vomit. I don't think I've ever drank rum about puking.
Really? I've actually had rum about times. I've actually on that trip until 2008. We were at the hostel and maybe a rum and coke.
It was just fine. I've had my share of rum and coke spent by vomit every single time. You share with me the coke. No, I drank a lot of coke and it's not made me sick.
Yeah. I was just drinking to get drunk because nothing's pretty much more than a drink anymore. No, no. No, no.
I never drank. And I was never an alcoholic. But I drank. Yeah.
I've had my drink and day share. I never drank to get drunk. I don't like being drunk. I don't like feeling like I'm getting drunk.
I don't like feeling, you know, starting to get a little buzz. If I start getting a little buzz, I'm done. I like drinking enough just to be that much more charming. And if I feel that slipping away into uselessness, then I'll just quit.
Well, I've seen friends with hangovers and I get hangovers from my grades. I don't want to work. No, I don't. So the bad decisions and the things I just tend to get away from.
The queue is one of the few alcohols that I can drink without getting hangover really. I'm a great with tequila. Well, I am great with the Jeff episode. Yes.
That's where we are right now. Jeff's surprised us with what your episode got about. Well, I'm so happy to be back in the driver's seat of this podcast. It's been five weeks ago.
It's been five weeks ago. Actually, it's been about 20 minutes because we've been in this stuff and we've recorded the last 15 minutes again. But hey, you didn't know that. It sounded genuine, didn't it?
You didn't know that. You didn't know that. You're looking at the second time. That shows what good actors we are.
Come and see Sherlock two weeks. One week. One week from the... Actually, we opened one week and one day from the time that this is released.
Well, we'll have it for a second. Yeah, exactly. Yeah. So, come and see Sherlock.
Yeah, settle in children. All right. Settle in. Get comfy.
So today we're going to be solving a mystery that began 50 years ago. A huge mystery. A huge mystery. A long mystery.
We're going to follow the clues to reveal the truth. Because the truth is out there. Is it the truth? The truth.
The truth. I've heard that. I've heard that. I've been covered up for five decades.
I think lives are the Greece that keeps society rolling my friends. By the end of our podcast, our deck heads will have a definitive answer to this mystery. There will be no confusion. It will be clear as mud.
All right. Act right. Act right. So, let me start off a lot.
So let me start off with a question. Okay. How many Beatles have died and who died first? There are.
They were. I believe John Lennon died first in 1981. In 1980. And then it was George Harrison.
I think I'd second. It was Mark. They killed John Lennon. It was a brain tumor.
It was a brain tumor. I think something else happened in the first. Can you remember my name? That's amazing.
I am so impressed. Especially with Jerry. Knowing this. He never talked about this before.
Never. Well, before George Harrison died of a brain tumor on November 29, 2001 at the age of 58. Someone broke into his house on December 30, 1999, and tried to attack him and his wife. George was stabbed 40 times.
40 times. Yet he subdued his attacker until the place got there and he survived. That is absurd. That is a testament to George Harrison.
It must have been once you did. Yeah. You know what a step. Yeah.
Oh my God. He's hitting all the wrong spots the entire time. I'm not going to be the wrong. Right.
I'll say it was he stabbed him with a Q-tip. That's why I do it. That's why I do it. And then it was not a lot of George's kitchen knives.
It should have broken. It's not a lot of George's kitchen knives and attacked him. That is insane. And he was uh, Lawrence miles back and people I thought he was going to kill peg, oh no.
He's going to kill Mark. He's going to get hit by. I was a birdinski that died. Never y'all can't fly behind him.
Terraines right there. I had a friend who he ran the same convention billion but never met one another. I don't run unless chased. We were involved in the social circles.
Only upon chase shall I run. Invasion of Kingsley plays, takes out his feet to the drive first. Well, Lou was beaten to death by a man with a baseball bat who had gotten out of prison like a day or two days before, and was just going to rob a house. Lou was inconsequential.
Yeah. It just happened to be my buddy Lou was in the house and the guy walks in with a baseball bat and beats him to death. Well, insanity. Well, you don't walk in with a baseball bat to rob a place.
That's true. That's true. We're going to rob a place if there's someone there that leaves. But otherwise, why would you have been there?
Lou had never met this guy. I didn't know who the guy was. Why did the guy just pick the house? Maybe not to rob a baby to death whoever was in there.
But insanity. That's true. It's not that bad to break into the house. Maybe.
I guess what most people leave if there's someone home and they figured out they just run. Yeah. Yeah. Weird.
I feel sorry for Lou, but it's not my story. This is not my story. This is a... What's your story, Joe?
My story is that... I can't believe George got stabbed. I didn't know the story. But we're not going to be talking about that either.
What we're going to be talking about is the fact that Paul McCartney died on the accident on November 9th, 1966, at the age of 24. What? And it's been covered up, man. It's been covered up.
1966? It's been like four years going. Let me stop you right there for just a second. All right.
I love George. I don't like his song so much. The big song, the Harvey Krishna. Oh, my love.
Oh, my love. Here comes the sun. Yeah, and I love that one. And something.
I love George Harrison. That's just not my favorite song. It's played a lot. Yeah.
And it's not my favorite song. It's also the song that he accidentally stole the tune from. He's so fine. Who's shit?
He got sued over that. I love it. I love the car. Anyway.
Okay. So this is the beginning of our story. All right. And this is after Stuart Sutcliffe.
Yes. Stuart Sutcliffe died in 1962. He was also murdered by a trained engineer. He died of cancer.
By a trained engineer? No, he died of cancer. But a trained engineer had something to do with it. A trained engineer had nothing to do with the German engineer.
Why was he in Germany? That's not true. Because the Beatles were playing in Germany in Hamburg. Oh, well, I think he's right.
That's right. And his girlfriend was German. And she killed him. No, he died of cancer.
But we're not talking about Stuart Sutcliffe. Okay. Fair enough. He's the fifth beat, though.
What are we talking about, Jeff? Oh, my God. So on Sunday, October 12, 1969, 30 minutes into Russ Gibbs radio show on WKNR. Yeah.
Tom Zarski from Ibsilanti, Michigan. A student at Eastern Michigan University phoned in and asked if Russ Gibbs had heard that Paul McCartney was dead. Wait, I mean, he supposedly died in 1966? We'll get to that.
Okay. Let me tell the story of the way I want to go. I just forgot the day I came to the day. I forgot.
So we're in 1969. Gibbs didn't know what he was talking about. Zarski told him about how when playing Revolution No. 9 backwards from the white albums, you can hear Turn Beyond Dead Man.
Oh. No, Beyond Dead Man. You had never heard of this. So he played it backwards on the air and everyone heard it.
Phones lit up and traffic outside the studio came to stop. So let me play a U.S. sample of Revolution No. 9.
Is this before after Strawberry Fields? This is 1969. Revolution No. It's after Strawberry.
But it's before Momo No. 5, by the way. Right. This is forward.
It was the experimental thing that John Lennon was doing that for everybody hates. Okay. This is the same segment of the record played backwards. Wait, what?
Turn Beyond Dead Man. If I'm listening for it, I hear it, but no. I hear. Turn Beyond Dead Man.
Exactly. Turn Beyond Dead Man. I think he's hitting on a guy named Deadman. That's what's happening.
So anyway. So Russ Gibbs began playing records backwards and they hear Turn Beyond Dead Man. They heard what you heard. Okay.
So within a short period of time, international phone lines from America to England were jammed because people were calling to try and get Paul McCartney to find out information. Other stations and news outlets picked up the story. Other radio stations began to play Beatles albums backwards. People began to play their own Beatles albums backwards.
You can walk down the street and every house you hear Beatles on being played backwards on people's and there's no record. This guy working for the studio so that people will damage the records so that they can find more records. You don't even have the name of the student who called in. It's not R.S.
No, R.S. No, R.S. Yeah, Tom's R.S. He called in.
The word Zarski makes me want cheese. Anyway, so because of the suddenly the Beatles albums were flying off the shelves because people were ruining their records playing backwards and they had to buy more records. Exactly. Because the music isn't actually that good.
I disagree with that. You take that back. You take that back. So that anyone would buy their music.
Okay. Several of the Beatles older albums re-enter the top 100 charts because all these, these albums were being sold out in the stores. Okay. So a student by the name of Fred LeBourne, a university student at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.
He was driving his car and listening to the radio during this Russ Gibbs broadcast. Okay. Now he was also a reporter on his university paper called the Michigan Daily. This is where he's at.
He's at Ann Arbor. So he had an assignment to write a review of the new Abbey Road album which had just been released. Okay. So two days later on Tuesday, October 14th, the Michigan Daily, his student paper published his name which was titled McCartney Dead New Evidence Brought to Life.