Episode Transcript
Don Mock 0:20
Episode 123, we’re back Rob.
Rob Broadfoot 0:22
123.
Don Mock 0:24
it’s like the electric company.
Rob Broadfoot 0:25
ABC 123, yeah.
Don Mock 0:27
Speaking of, I saw a hilarious post social post the other day, speaking of, like, electric company and things like that. And I wish I could pull it up and read it to you, whatever. But it was, it was basically this. It was, have you ever considered that cookie cookie monster? Okay, the character it was, it was, basically, have you ever considered a Cookie Monster speaking English, is a second language, basically. And wouldn’t it be great to hear him speak in his in his native tongue? You know. And I’m butchering the tweet or the post or whatever like that, you know what I mean. But the concept of the fact that, oh man, it makes so much sense that cookie monster that English isn’t his first language, and that’s why he speaks all weird. It would be hilarious if we saw Cookie Monster. It’s speaking in his native tongue, native tongue, and then just with subtitles or whatever, for some weird Sesame Street promo, you know
Rob Broadfoot 1:22
Somebody was, it wasn’t Cookie Monster. It was Oscar the Grouch. Okay? And Howard Stern was…about how Ronnie, the limo driver, who’s now moved out to Vegas and whatever else. But it is basically Oscar the Grouch. This is not gonna be a funny story for anybody who doesn’t listen to it, but he’s so angry. He’s so angry all the time.
Don Mock 1:46
I did, I did love Oscar the Grouch.
Rob Broadfoot 1:48
Oscar was great.
Don Mock 1:49
I mean, all my kids are, like, grown up and stuff. I mean, I’m assuming all this stuff is still rocking and rolling, right?. There was something where Sesame Street moved over to HBO or something, I think, right? Or wasn’t it, like, there was some kerfuffle about, like, but I think all that stuff still rocking and rolling, right? Well, didn’t
Rob Broadfoot 2:05
they, didn’t they? The writers come out and said, the guy who wrote for Bert and Ernie came out and said they’re a gay couple.
Don Mock 2:10
Oh, I don’t remember that.
Rob Broadfoot 2:11
I think I just read a thing about it the other day. They, he the guy who,
Don Mock 2:14
of course, they’re a gay couple,
Rob Broadfoot 2:15
of course they’re gay couple, but he modeled it after his own relationship.
Don Mock 2:20
Oh, really,
Rob Broadfoot 2:20
yeah. I read that, like, two days ago, and I didn’t, I didn’t go into a deep dive with it, but I just saw the, yeah, the guy who forever writer, was like, Yeah, of course. They’re a gay couple, and a model after very much, after my own relationship.
Don Mock 2:32
Hey, man. I mean, don’t they say, if you’re a writer, that like, write what you know. You know truth and you know, humor is found in the obvious, right? The true stories. Anyway, episode 123, went on a little electric company tangent there. Thought today we’d talk about spam. Spam
Rob Broadfoot 2:49
The only other tie in I can do real quick. I saw a campaign for Top Golf, and they,
Don Mock 2:59
you’re talking tie into 123?
Rob Broadfoot 3:01
yeah. I’m tying into Sesame Street.
Don Mock 3:02
You just killed my spam intro.
Rob Broadfoot 3:04
I’m tying into Sesame Street. It’s two puppets
Don Mock 3:09
For Top Golf?
Rob Broadfoot 3:10
Yeah that are at the broadcast. They’re, they’re broadcast guys for Top Golf, and they were developed by Henson’s company as Muppet creations.
Don Mock 3:20
That’s cool. I mean, Muppets they’re legit. I mean, come on, Muppets are awesome.
Rob Broadfoot 3:24
Who’s your favorite Muppet?
Don Mock 3:25
Who’s my favorite Muppet? I mean, it’s hard to knock the the two old guys up in the corner, or, you know, the balcony. I can never remember their names. They have crazy names, you know? And then the band, man. I mean, you got the animal. You got to love the band. You know, everybody else. I mean, they’re fine, you know I mean,
Rob Broadfoot 3:43
beaker is pretty good,
Don Mock 3:45
yeah, beaker’s good. The Swedish Chef was pretty good, yeah. It’s like, yeah, yeah.
Rob Broadfoot 3:52
I mean, a little shrimp is running around,
Don Mock 3:54
yeah. Little shrimp, prawn kind of person, you know? I mean, I don’t, you know. I think when I was a kid, if you asked me this, when I was a kid, I was all about Pigs in Space,
Pigs in Space was great
Because it was rare. It was so good, yeah, yeah, exactly, yeah. But it was rare, but, like, you only saw it, like once every two or three weeks. It was a Pigs in Space, you know. And then I did have a soft spot. Shockingly, everyone will be shocked to hear this for Super Grover, you know? Oh, Super Grover, yeah, you had the arm out, the arm out, and the cape. And I think it’s because it was just an Adventures of mischief, you know what? I mean, it was the Greatest American Hero before the greatest, yeah, right. I mean, it’s just things didn’t work out. But yeah, I mean, and, dude, the guests, I mean, you look back on
Rob Broadfoot 4:06
everyone
Don Mock 4:11
dude, everyone was on that show, and it was, they’d go on as themselves, they’d go on as their movie characters. I mean, they had the Star Wars in, right? And it’s like, here’s all the Star Wars
Rob Broadfoot 4:48
I think friends was on it a few times, I think everybody,
Don Mock 4:52
yeah, definitely a who’s who of you know, like, Hey, I’m hanging at the grocery store,
Rob Broadfoot 4:56
If you get invited to go. Like, you can’t not go. I mean, you gotta do it,
Don Mock 5:01
yeah And then as an adult, I did love there was some book in the library or something, like, you know, how all of the Muppets came to life. I always thought that was really cool. Like, how he animated Big Bird, like, how there was person here and then his hand was up, you know, like, yeah, they had all the, like, the in between, like the X ray vision drawings or whatever, yeah, or something. That was cool. So, I don’t know what was your favorite muppet?you’re gonna say Fozzie. Who was the dog that played piano? What was his name? So he was pretty good
Rob Broadfoot 5:27
Rolf. Rolf.
Don Mock 5:28
Rolf, yeah, it was Rolf,
Rob Broadfoot 5:30
I mean, and It was just animal, yes, maniac behind the drum kit. I thought he was great, but I don’t know there were so many good ones. I mean, beaker. I always thought it was funny. I saw because I used to go up. I did a five year run where I went up to Newport at Folk Fest. One of the last ones that I went up to on the clip, they always do a big closing set on Sunday evening. Okay, as the sun’s going down over the water, it’s beautiful sometimes before and Jim James, who’s the lead singer of my morning jacket came out and closed the festival by singing Somewhere over the rainbow with Kermit.
Don Mock 6:07
Oh, was there an actual puppet?
Rob Broadfoot 6:09
Oh Yeah. I mean, he Kermit, someone was doing next to it. Did rainbow connection. I mean, Rainbow connection, Rainbow connection, not somewhere as the closer
Don Mock 6:19
A million years ago. This is gonna sound so strange when I think of Kermit the Frog singing, I think of my dad, okay, and it makes no sense whatsoever, but my dad and I did, we did karaoke in Singapore. I mean, 30 years ago, okay? And we had a few beverages, and we sang like a bridge over troubled water, and I could not stop laughing, because my dad sounded like Kermit the Frog and it’s, it’s still I have no, yeah, like, intrinsically, they are meshed together in terms of like my dad and Kermit the Frog, and it makes no sense.
Rob Broadfoot 6:57
He wasn’t trying to sound like Kermit the Frog, it was just his natural…
Don Mock 7:00
No, he was giving it his all.
Rob Broadfoot 7:02
He was going for it.
Don Mock 7:03
Yeah, it was going for the gusto. You know, one of the only times I’ve ever done karaoke. It was super fun. So that’s a strange thing. It’s weird. Anyway, there’s no way to pivot back to spam. We were gonna originally talk about spam.
Rob Broadfoot 7:17
Not the lunch meat
Don Mock 7:18
yes, which I do love the tagline that was updated recently, or, what a sizzle pork and Mmm. Have you seen this commercial? Oh, it’s the great. It’s like a, you know
Rob Broadfoot 7:28
When does a spam commercial come on?
Don Mock 7:30
I don’t know whatever I’m watching. I’m watching spam commercials. You know, remember the old Jimmy Dean, how it was like the strapping scene of the cooking, like the click, like sound designs, all sound, it’s all tight, like the cast iron skillet and the egg breaking, and the this and that, you know, it’s kind of like that. It’s like, you know, you’ve got the can of Spam, and they’re chopping up the spam, and then it’s, yeah, it’s in the, like, the lodge, kind of cast iron thing, you know. And they have renamed it sizzle pork and mmm
Rob Broadfoot 8:01
that’s not just the tagline. That’s like the name of it now?
Don Mock 8:04
well, it’s spam, I don’t really know what spam ever stood for. I mean, does it stand for something? I don’t even know. I never looked into it.
Rob Broadfoot 8:12
There’s a place in the world for spam. You had spam?
Don Mock 8:14
I mean, not, not speaking of my dad, probably not, since I lived with my parents. I mean, so it’s, you know, 40 years
Rob Broadfoot 8:20
For camping we take Spam. When we’re camping as Boy Scouts or whatever, yeah,
Don Mock 8:25
what’s, what’s the difference with that in like, corned hash, some type of corned beef hash, corned beef hash, well, corned beef hash, I feel like they’re kind of together aren’t they?
Rob Broadfoot 8:33
Well Spam is a little more like sausage, like loose.
Don Mock 8:40
It’s like, it’s like the Thanksgiving cranberry sauce for meat. You pull it out of the thing, and it’s, it’s, it looks like the shape of the can
Rob Broadfoot 8:48
Yeah. My kids love that canned cranberry
Don Mock 8:51
Yeah my kids do too.
Rob Broadfoot 8:52
I can’t stand it,
Don Mock 8:55
I like, just regular cranberry sauce.
Rob Broadfoot 8:57
But that’s not the kind of spam we’re supposed to talk about.
Don Mock 8:59
No spam, no, we’re talking about, like, the inundate. I mean, it’s, I mean, we could have, we could have done this podcast 10 years ago, right, in terms of the inundation of inundation, is that even a word? I don’t even know.
Rob Broadfoot 9:11
Yeah, I’m gonna accept that.
Don Mock 9:12
How we all just get overwhelmed and bombarded with everything. I mean, it’s, it’s everything. Now it’s your it used to be like, Okay, your email now it’s like, your email, it’s your text messages, it’s your phone constantly. It’s your office.
Rob Broadfoot 9:27
My phone has gotten bad.
Don Mock 9:28
It’s your cell phone. I mean, it’s just this constant, constant, constant, you know, to the point where, I mean, hey, we run our own business, and we need new clients, you know, from time to time, and we solicit new work and new like, I don’t even answer my phone sometimes, you know, I’m like, I don’t know that person. Know that person. Like, that’s spam dude, you know, someone’s calling to sell me whatever So, and it is, you know, within our industry too, it is constant, just media this, or collaboration that, or white label this service. And I’m sure it’s like this for every other industry too, right, where you just get industries. This. But, I mean, it is just constant, constant, constant bombard.
Rob Broadfoot 10:04
Well, you you thought it was gonna get better there for a while, or at least I did.
Don Mock 10:08
Well, I think when we had the no call registry,
Rob Broadfoot 10:13
You can join the no call.. and but you know how I feel about unsubscribe buttons,
Don Mock 10:16
yeah, go ahead and tell our subscribers.
Rob Broadfoot 10:19
Yeah, that’s just a ploy to get more spam
Don Mock 10:23
but verification that there’s a person on the end of that email
Rob Broadfoot 10:26
yeah, you’re, you’re confirming, yeah. But it’s, it has gotten, it has gotten bad, yeah.
Don Mock 10:32
And we’re heading into political season.
Rob Broadfoot 10:34
Oh, dude, it’s well, so now the new, the latest and greatest that I’m getting recently is the Spam is a text. And it’s not just because I get Trump texts. I get Democrat texts. I mean,
Don Mock 10:47
You got everybody.
Rob Broadfoot 10:48
nonpartisan. I’m a nonpartisan spam receptor.
Don Mock 10:51
Yeah you get it all.
Rob Broadfoot 10:53
I get it all. But the newest is it’ll lead with George Clooney here, or Julia Roberts here. Or Jimmy Kimmel here.
Don Mock 11:01
Oh that’s total BS
Rob Broadfoot 11:02
Well of course it is, Jimmy Kimmel’s not texting, but it leads with the celebrity to then get you to, yeah, you know, whatever the political motivation is.
Don Mock 11:13
Oh my Lord there. What about have you ever gotten the like, the like, Hey, this is Jessica. Who is this?
Rob Broadfoot 11:23
Oh yeah, all the time.
Don Mock 11:23
you know, those types of weird, nebulous, like, Hey, new phone, blah, blah, blah. And I’m like, what? Like, just trying to get the fish on the line right. Of like, you know, this is a real number, so, yeah, do you block? I block every single number on my phone.
I hit delete, report junk.
But You don’t hit info, you don’t do info, and then go to the number and then block it? I block all them
Rob Broadfoot 11:47
because it’s always different.
Don Mock 11:48
I mean, yeah, it’s a bank of 1000s
Rob Broadfoot 11:53
But what I love, I mean, you know, you know, one of my favorite pastimes is the spam call to mess with those folks, lately they’ve been offering me a lot of drugs.
Don Mock 12:03
Yes, you get a lot of medicinal calls.
Rob Broadfoot 12:05
and it’s the same guy, because we’ve now we’re in a bit of a TIFF.
Don Mock 12:08
Yeah, Frederick, you called me last week
Rob Broadfoot 12:10
It’s a fun game that me and this gentleman play.
Don Mock 12:15
I mean, we have a PG rated podcast, but, you know, I’m pretty sure he told you to f off at one point
Rob Broadfoot 12:19
Oh he told me to f off after I told him I didn’t need Cialis or any of the boner pills
Don Mock 12:24
When was the last time someone called you and then they told they told you to f off? Yeah, that’s fantastic. I mean, that’s the world that we’re in.
Rob Broadfoot 12:32
I mean, I gave him a pretty hard time, but
Don Mock 12:34
yeah, so you know, I mean, all all this being said, I mean, the world is. We could talk about it for another 20 minutes, just in terms of how awful it is and funny little anecdotal stories, right? But the question has to surface, or there has to be, you know, it has to continue to exist, because it works on some level it works
Rob Broadfoot 12:57
doesn’t cost hardly anything to execute, right? Yeah. And yeah. If, even if you have a point 0003, yeah, you know, rate of return on it. I mean, you’re it’s working, yeah, yeah. But the question then becomes, you know, when does, I’ll say cold calling? When does cold calling become spam? It is cold calling spam?
Don Mock 13:22
Do you consider cold calling spam? I kind of do.
Rob Broadfoot 13:27
I think some cold calling is absolutely spam, but not all cold calling is absolutely spam, okay, okay, and we were talking before we started talking to our broader audience of millions, yeah, globally.
Don Mock 13:39
Well, there used to be, well, go ahead. Well,
Rob Broadfoot 13:41
I was going to say so. So example, we here at the office. We were in search of a new cleaning service, correct? And it just so happened that this particular local company, well, not local, but the local franchise, yeah, called, and we happened to answer, yeah, that particular and lo and behold, we had the absolutely had the need that they were offering and we said, You know what? come on by. And they did. And they presented themselves well, and we ended up hiring them
Don Mock 14:10
it totally worked.
Rob Broadfoot 14:11
So it totally works cold call.
Don Mock 14:12
So now, Do you consider that? So in this instance, do you consider that cold call spam? because there can’t be any way, like, I’m gonna call that a lightning strike moment, right? Meaning, we didn’t put anything out there in the ecosphere, letting anyone right? I mean, it was just the perfect timing, which is fine, like, sometimes you call and you get lucky, and you hit exactly a pain point for somebody that they need, you know? So it was a lightning strike moment, and I totally ended up working out. But so is that a cold call, right? Or is that spam?
Rob Broadfoot 14:43
I would say it’s absolutely a cold call, okay, is it spam? I don’t know. I mean, I mean, I think here’s, here’s my problem. the connotation of Spam is that it is nefarious, yeah, that there’s nefarious activity. Okay, oh, the Saudi prince, yeah, owes you. Yeah, you know, send this Bitcoin and blah, blah, blah, yeah, you know what? I mean, yeah, but, but it’s not always nefarious. I mean, if it’s, if you’re talking about political spam, the Dems are doing this. Make sure you give to Biden or make sure you give to Trump or whatever else. I mean, is that spam? I would consider that spam, even though it’s not nefarious. Spam’s annoying. cold calling is not annoying.
Don Mock 15:30
I mean, if, if, if a photographer moved to Atlanta and was calling all the advertising and design firms, yeah, right, to introduce themselves and say, Hey, I’m new. I’d love an opportunity to blah blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. That’s a cold call. And to me, that’s not spamnbecause there’s relevancy there, right?
Rob Broadfoot 15:47
That’s business development,
Don Mock 15:48
yeah, yeah. You know, we recently got GSA certified. Well, recently, about a year or so ago, GSA certified, right? And we are listed with the government right on every single level, yeah. You know, federal, state, local, everything, right? Once you’re in the database, man, I mean, the floodgates are, I mean, the amount of of stuff we get just because of that listing, right? To me, that’s all spam. Dude, that is 100% spam. Like, I don’t need to buy 10,000 chairs, you know, I don’t need ladders, you know, we’re just now we’re in the list of everything, right? Spam, right? But, but, but, again, I’ll go back to like. It wouldn’t happen so much and increase with such frequency if it didn’t work. Now, I don’t understand that the calls, right, the calls, I don’t think I’m surprised that that still has ramped up as much as it does, because I don’t know anyone
Rob Broadfoot 16:40
general cold calling?
Don Mock 16:41
well, General, like, like, calls and texts to your to your cell phone. Of just randomness, you know, yeah, just random. I’m selling, you know, medicine, drugs, yeah, I’m, you know, solar panels, or I’m, you know, just, just anything. You know, that, to me seems so strange. You know, that’s like the new version of the direct mail, right? Of, like, you know, oh, I got my packet of postcards of people selling me stuff or whatever that.
Rob Broadfoot 17:04
I think, because the word spam is so close to scam, yeah, that there’s a negative connotation to it
Don Mock 17:12
Well, so, so we just blatantly explained that it totally worked for us. We got a lightning strike moment, and we have a great service. We have great partnership with those guys. Whatever Can you think of anything else where a cold call out of nowhere or a spam or whatever that has totally worked for you, personal or business or whatever?
Rob Broadfoot 17:30
So trying to think about, I was trying to think about the idea of
Don Mock 17:39
I mean we used to, we used to run on a LinkedIn campaign. I thought that’s where you might be going.
Rob Broadfoot 17:43
That’s where I’m going with this. So years ago, back when LinkedIn was less inundated with advertising,
Don Mock 17:51
well, pre Microsoft purchase,
Rob Broadfoot 17:52
yeah, it was, it was, was actually a pretty great resource. And I’m not saying it isn’t still but
Don Mock 17:58
No, we just ran a LinkedIn campaign for a client and had incredible success. Actually it’s just not what it used to be.
Rob Broadfoot 18:03
It was a different it was a different environment, right? As all things are, but, and we ran a very successful LinkedIn campaign for ourselves, and a lot of times, what we’ll do, just in a broader sense, for clients, is we like to beta test things on ourselves, yeah, and for our shop to make sure that a, we understand how they work. And B they’re effective so we’re selling something that works to our clients. It’s very important to us, yeah. And so we did that with this particular initiative. This was years ago, and we put together a LinkedIn campaign, and we very specifically targeted two separate audiences, sort of B2B stuff, and we had success
Don Mock 18:40
totally worked.
Rob Broadfoot 18:41
Now I would say that’s not spam. I would say because we had a very targeted list, and we were
Don Mock 18:48
I’m gonna call it like a connection based campaign, meaning we connected with like minded individuals, and they had to opt in to accept call it, call it a friendship request. It’s not what it is in LinkedIn, but they had to actually link in to get another message. So, you know, there was an outgoing message that was like, hey, so and so, you know, we’ve got the same you know, there was relevancy there, whatever. That message was very specific and targeted them. If they didn’t want to accept, they didn’t have to accept, right? By any stretch.
Rob Broadfoot 19:17
It wasn’t like, we subscribed them and they had to then go unsubscribe
Don Mock 19:21
Or they, they never subscribed in the first place, and then 20 emails later, they’re like, get me off it. Like, that wasn’t the point of that. There was no automated magic once you interact, if that makes sense. You know but to your point, it was a different was a different world. And, yeah, that was the kind of a conversational marketing outreach program, you know what I mean, it worked really well. And that was like a person. It was us, you know what I mean, it was us, connecting with people
Rob Broadfoot 19:47
me, to me. Maybe, this is it. Maybe, maybe the the difference between cold calling and spam is fundamentally if you’re cold calling, um. Or otherwise, and doing it right? There is a shared, common interest in the person that you are reaching out to, right? So, like, with the LinkedIn, or whatever else, it’s like, okay, we’re we operate in this particular space, and your company is in this space. Can we be of service to you? Yeah, so maybe that’s it. Maybe it’s just there, you know, it’s when you get stuff out of the blue that’s like, I don’t when I get Trump texts, Clearly they have not done their research, just that. And it’s just a blanket, it’s just a numbers game, just a numbers game, without any relevance whatsoever. So maybe that’s the difference, yeah.
Don Mock 20:41
But outside of our cleaners, I can’t tell you another time where, where lightning struck and there was no connection or vetting, or any of that kind of stuff.
Rob Broadfoot 20:51
Well, I mean, I just sent a bunch of Bitcoin over to Persia. Any minute the funds are supposed to end up in my account.
Don Mock 20:56
I like that you said Persia yeah, the old Yeah. I mean, you know. I mean, we joked on a previous episode about, you know, Instagram ads and things like that. I mean, there’s a lot of scamming and things like that happening. I mean, you know, credit card being all of a sudden, boom, it’s gone, and all that kind of stuff, you know. So that’s interesting, but I think that’s different. I I think just the amount of, like, calls we get and emails, there’s all this stuff. Is just, I mean, it’s overwhelming, you know, and I can only imagine so
Rob Broadfoot 20:56
I think to your point also, like, you know, when somebody sends you, like, seven emails, like, oh, “did you not see my last.. I’m surprised I haven’t heard back from you”
Don Mock 21:39
“bumping this to the top” God.
Rob Broadfoot 21:42
When you’ve gone seven times without getting a response, like, Let’s limit your drip campaigns. I mean come on.
Don Mock 21:51
I would say, like, two years ago, I think I had it. And was like, if one more person sends me a virtual cup of coffee calendar invite like you now have just, you’ve sent me a calendar invite, like you didn’t. There’s no form of communication, and we’re having a virtual cup, like, just the phrase virtual cup of coffee. I was like, I want to punch you in the face. Like, like, I will never do business with you, just on principles. Like, this is making me nuts, you know? Like, no, I do not want a virtual cup of coffee with a stranger, you know, like, but that was, you know, again, covid special, right? So, I mean, people are trying anything they could to survive. So, well, spam, I’d say, like, hey, send in your crazy spam stories or spam successes
Rob Broadfoot 22:36
How about people just coming to the door? this is a funny we’ll end on this funny little anecdote.
Don Mock 22:42
Which story are you gonna tell because, well, I mean, we’ve been in our building long enough to we’ve got many.,
Rob Broadfoot 22:45
this was, this was a couple of weeks ago, and it
Don Mock 22:50
couple weeks ago. I wasn’t here for this was I?
Rob Broadfoot 22:52
No, you were not here, and I was on a call. Doorbell rings and Lou the dog, the guard dog goes crazy, barking away,
Don Mock 23:03
barking away, doing her job.
Rob Broadfoot 23:05
Yeah, so I’m on my call, and somebody here goes and answers the door,
Don Mock 23:11
Well, it should be known that we keep our door locked now, we used to keep the door open and, like, I mean, 10 years ago, you’d have like, copy repair guys, just wander on in and you have, you have, like, I’m your local FedEx rep, and I’m interrupting your story, but now, you know, and then covid, and then people in and out of the office we just keep the door lock. We don’t need to walk in customers.
Rob Broadfoot 23:32
the company shall remain nameless, but the person said, Oh, hey, I work with this particular company. It was a media company, I can say that. And I was here, are either Don or Rob here, and gentleman who answered the door said, Oh, Don’s out of the office, and Rob’s actually on a call right now. And that wasn’t like BS, I was literally on a call, yeah. And she goes, Oh, okay, well, can you go get him? And he kind of looked at her and was like no.
Don Mock 24:10
Yeah, no. He’s on a call.
Rob Broadfoot 24:12
I’m not gonna interrupt his call. And then proceeded to drop off, which was very nice, drop off some food and some treats. But they were questionable food and treats.
Don Mock 24:22
Yeah, I don’t think anybody ate those foods and treats.
Rob Broadfoot 24:24
It was a cookie.
Don Mock 24:25
Oh, boy. Okay, it was a cookie that was consumed.
Rob Broadfoot 24:28
It was on a wrap tho.
Don Mock 24:29
love the balls, though. I mean, just like, hey, I don’t care what kind of call he’s on.
Rob Broadfoot 24:33
Oh he’s on a call? Great. Yeah, go get him. Go get him.
Don Mock 24:37
He’s presenting next year’s campaign for something, you know. Ah, doesn’t matter I’m here with a questionable cookie.
Rob Broadfoot 24:43
Needless to say, that did, that did not work.
Don Mock 24:46
No, that’s pretty funny.
Rob Broadfoot 24:48
No, don’t do that. Yeah,
Don Mock 24:50
I know that’s another, that’s another episode of, you know, random people that have come in off the street, you know some funny stories there.
Rob Broadfoot 25:00
Or interviews.
Don Mock 25:02
You and I are both thinking exactly the same thing.
Rob Broadfoot 25:05
We’ll save that for another time.
Don Mock 25:06
That’s a good teaser. All right, where can people find us on that other time Rob?
Rob Broadfoot 25:09
All right, you can spam us at either Rob or Don at www.mocktheagency.com on the internets, and then, of course, on the socials @mocktheagency we’re not hard to find people.
Don Mock 25:19
All right, everybody.
Rob Broadfoot 25:20
All right, good luck avoiding spam out there. We’ll talk to you next time.
Don Mock 25:23
All right bye.
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