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Dave Let's Talkcarsradio dot com. Now here's the host of
Let's Talk Cars Radio, Dave Polage.
Speaker 2: Happy Saturday, America.
Speaker 3: You listen Let's Talk Cars Radio on WKQA Freedom Radio.
I'm your host, Big DAVP hanging out, CAMKAOS and AVB.
It is a great day for radio show. That is
the reason why you have tuned in right right right right there you go. It has been a rainy week,
thank goodness. For the most part, the rain is gone.
Speaker 2: It depends on where you're at.
Speaker 3: I guess, let me say for now, where you're at for now depends where it might be raining where you're at hopefully not.
Speaker 2: But if it's not rain, it means it's a great day.
Speaker 3: For a car show for you guys, like always say, I spent the week enjoying myself. I jumped on a
lot of different forms online, had conversations with a lot of our listeners, and.
Speaker 2: It was interesting some of the topics that came up.
So I thought we would.
Speaker 3: Spend today just jumping into some most funny topics because they were amusing. I've told a lot of different stories
throughout the years, thirteen years of having this show, and we've talked about a lot of different things in different capacities, and some of these topics we've kind of brushed on kind of here and there, but we never really, like I look back, I'm like, we never really kind of jumped into them. So the first topic, you guys ready, ready,
here we go. Personalized license plates? Okay, is it a must?
Like do you feel for your own personal reference? Is
a personal license plate a must on a car?
Speaker 2: Yes? Da, Let's go first, ends, I mean, in my
personal opinion, it depends. I mean for me to find
you the car, is it my car? Didn't it have
a personal license? Preate on it for for a long time,
a long time, and then I just finally yeah, I just find finally put one on there because I thought it was funny and I was tired of some of the drivers driving with me, and I just kind of wanted to give a message without giving a message. Your plate,
I think, Hilario, his plate is mine's bleep it. So,
I mean it kind of rise with the radio show almost and then kind of but it it fits you personality.
It's funny, like it fits you.
Speaker 3: Like when I see your plate when I'm driving behind you were going someplace as.
Speaker 2: You play, I like, I still laugh. But I've seen
it a thousand times.
Speaker 3: But I see people behind me all the time.
Speaker 2: You see them you're reading it, and they're like, oh yeah, you see it. The kicks in, They're like, got it.
Personalized license plate important? Not important?
Speaker 4: I mean, I'm down for it. I think you know
one right right. I think you gotta find.
Speaker 2: One that fits you on your car. No, I don't.
Speaker 4: I used to have one on the Civic. I have
really found that really coincides with what I want.
Speaker 2: I think it's great.
Speaker 4: The only thing I have issue with personalized license plate is that I feel like, as a consumer, you shouldn't really have to pay the extra fee to get.
Speaker 2: What you want. I'm okay with paying the fee?
Speaker 4: He ye, I mean, look, you can be all right with it, but do you agree with having to pay for it?
Speaker 2: Okay, Look, I feel like I do agree with Nate just a little bit. If I'm paying that fee, I
should be able to fully customize the plate, not just the letters. I should be able to change the color
of the plate a little bit. I can do you already.
You already have to stamp the plate my custom letters.
Why don't you just go grab a different plate?
Speaker 5: Well you can, you can.
Speaker 2: There is different places that you can use letters on extra fee as well. You can. You can change the
color to those plates, like Antike plate. You can't go
get a customer and take plate. And that's like, let
me tell you.
Speaker 3: So there is a company that now specializes in that, and I'm going to give it a shot and see if I get pulled over. So I am going to
put a custom plate on white noise. I already planned it.
And here's the thing, I'm not telling you what it is.
I made the mistake one time on this show of saying a really cool plate idea and then and I didn't want to and Larry, if you'll remember when when Larry was part of the show. Larry convinced me to
say the name of the plate, and I said it, and then someone took it. Now everybody goes, oh, that's coincidence,
and I go, not coincidence. I used to check regularly
and no one ever had that plate.
Speaker 2: He convinced me.
Speaker 3: And I didn't think much about it. You know, it's
not like I got a twisted my arm or he held a gun. I said it knowing that I probably shouldn't,
and I didn't want it. I even sat on the
air if you go back and listen, I was like, I don't really want to say it because I know someone's going to take it. And I said it, and
within a week someone took that plate.
Speaker 2: I told you, and I was upset.
Speaker 4: You should have put a hold on that license plate, because I know you can. You can't put a hold
on what I'm doing.
Speaker 2: I'm waiting for it to run out, waiting for somebody go ahead and get ready to run out, because I really want that.
Speaker 3: I've wanted that plate for a long time. I have
one for white Noise. I'm not going to say it,
but it's I think fit with the theme of the car.
Speaker 2: That we're gonna do it.
Speaker 3: But what I'm gonna do is there's a company that wraps your license plate.
Speaker 2: They'll wrap it.
Speaker 3: So I want because white noise is black and white car, I want the license plate to be personalized.
Speaker 2: But I want the license plate to be black and white to fit with the theme of the car. So
I'm gonna have the license plate wrapped in black and had the letters put white, and I'm gonna put my stickers on it, you know, I mean, like you know, for you know, my registration stickers on it, and just see if it rolls. Now. I know certain states. I
guess there's certain states that don't care. I don't know
if we're one of them or not. I haven't looked
into it. But to be honest with you, don't really
care either. I'm gonna go ahead and do it anyway,
and I ask for forgiveness, not for permission, and see what happens.
Speaker 3: To be really honest with you, I mean I like personalized plates. I think personal life plates define your personality
the vehicle, whatever it is.
Speaker 2: Now it's funny because as I was having.
Speaker 3: This conversation throughout the week of people people chimed in and sending their messages because it was an open conversation, and then people just sent me if they went back and read the conversation, they were sending me stuff later on and they're like, yeah, but what about the guys that have like personalized places. They none of us can
figure out because it's so niche to them that there's you, it's that car you pull behind, and it's like it's their hobby, right, so in their hobby, you're like, you're reading it and it makes perfect sense to them, but you don't know them.
Speaker 2: You don't know what their hobby.
Speaker 3: So as you sit there and look at the license plate, you have no idea what I.
Speaker 5: See.
Speaker 2: That would be the type of person that would actually be like creating random license plates just to confuse you when you're paying me. I would be putting just random letters,
like I'd be like you are and then just random letters.
Speaker 5: The guy you look.
Speaker 2: Constantly look but you do is put a camera on the back of your car that records everybody's reactions as you watch them, Like, because I can look in the mirror and watch people's mouth move as they're trying to figure out what the license plate says as they're reading it.
They're like, and you know that's what they're doing. Right,
you start laughing yourself, like, go.
Speaker 3: On, you can figure. You're almost like to yourself, go
You're almost there.
Speaker 5: I see it.
Speaker 2: Yet you almost got it, you know what I mean? Like,
that's how I when people are reading my license plate, I'm just like literally see it, and they're just like yeah.
So they just shake their head every time. I'm like,
do you understand?
Speaker 5: Here's the thing.
Speaker 3: So, as we were having the conversation and talking about the license plate on different forms I was on and stuff, it was the things that annoy people like about license plates, right, it was you know what one of the biggest things, number one thing was that annoys people. Now, keep in mind,
I'm in a car for them, so that should be kind of a maybe a little bit said way into what might be the one thing that.
Speaker 2: When you say, like what type of car, it is.
Speaker 3: Like, no, no, you're you're kind of you're in the right realm with it.
Speaker 4: Though, If anybody think I could think of a bunch of things that annoy me with license plates when they double put the sticker on and the.
Speaker 3: Personal plate personal plate, what would be an annoyance to somebody of a personal plate on a car.
Speaker 2: Don't I'll get you. I'll get you in the realm
of it.
Speaker 3: The number one annoyance was something reverencing a fast car on a slow car. The O is something saying, you know,
saying the.
Speaker 2: Car is fast, but it's from a movie or something like that. You're like, and they were like, I hate
what people put like something about their car being fast and it's on a slow car.
Speaker 3: I was just like, I don't. I haven't seen a
whole lot of those, but I have seen someones that.
Once I started kind of get into it and having the conversation, I started understand what people are saying. Number two,
what do you think of another weird one that people do.
I don't think they think about I think they think they're being clever, but I don't think they realize it.
Speaker 2: Think about this. This is this is pretty good saying
like hello on the plate or something No, no, Lathaniel.
Speaker 4: Maybe like just putting like a regular name on the license plates, like just like a John.
Speaker 2: I think I ever want to put my name on a lice spedal right, But you know, you drive through part of everybody's like Dave, you know you turning around, you know what I mean, constantly. So No. The number
two thing that's common that is they do is they put a reference.
Speaker 3: About being rich on a mid level car, like some of the ways like about like having money, like being rich and having money. They something they reference, they space
it out. They spell something about having money on their plate.
But the car is on is like a a mid grade sedan.
Speaker 2: You know what I mean. Fraud has their license plate.
They're driving around a Toyota Corolla.
Speaker 5: Right right, right right.
Speaker 2: So here's another one.
Speaker 3: Right, it's this one I kind of understood because I don't I don't see it being.
Speaker 2: An issue, but I understand where people coming from. Where
your license plate becomes like the advertisement for.
Speaker 5: What you do for.
Speaker 4: Yeah yeah, so in some business you work at and you've made it like the business title for the license plate.
Speaker 3: And they were laughing because they were like, poor kids got to ride around that van. Everybody knows your dad's
like the plumber, you know what I mean, Like Dad, you couldn't just keep that, you know, like why do you have to put on license plate? Like why does
our personal minivan have plumber license plate?
Speaker 2: You know what I mean?
Speaker 3: Like, so I thought that was kind of funny. I
was like, I was like, oh, you know, it was like every in there's and.
Speaker 2: So there's a whole bunch of people are like typing.
Speaker 4: Like other occupations what you mean, like when they're occupation on the license plate.
Speaker 3: But absolutely and they're like, okay, so now everybody knows what I mean. Not look, plumbers make really good money.
They don't be a shame to be a plumber. But
the fact that kids.
Speaker 2: Are just like, why does our personal car have to have like what we do for a living? You know,
everybody news my mom's real estate agent or something, you know what I mean, Like, okay, congratulations.
Speaker 3: You know so I thought that was the last one.
Was if it's like incomprehensive, which is what Zach, what you said, which is a lot of times incomprehensive is the inside joke, the inside joke that like we could think of something the three of us to do a license plate. They would be funny to us, right, but
it's our inside joke. Anybody behind us is like, I
don't get it, like you know what I mean, Like and people do that. We'll say a lot of those places.
Speaker 4: Especially don't get it, especially when they do only like one letter for a word, but usually, like you know, you're usually doing like two or three to kind of like make up the word.
Speaker 3: Is there some place when I was having this converse, people are spelling things out with eight letters. Those are
some states that have eight letters?
Speaker 5: Is that what it is?
Speaker 2: There's one plate that allows.
Speaker 3: What state has? What state has eight?
Speaker 2: Eight? There's one plate here? But can you do personalized
plate with eight?
Speaker 3: Well, because a lot of people are giving examples and they were eight, and I was thinking, well, here we only have we're only seven.
Speaker 2: I'm like, so where are people.
Speaker 4: So Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Oklahoma, and Virginia allow eight letter licensed?
Speaker 2: We don't we have seven here? There's one plate one personalized, right,
you can do it personalized, but it's one of the plate designs allow you. So you know, like how you
go do those plate designs. One of the plate designs
that nobody wants is like eight characters.
Speaker 4: Oh okay, my bad, I misspoke. It's only California and
North Carolina.
Speaker 2: Okay, all right, I'm do eight characters plates before.
Speaker 4: Man, and I do know what you're talking about. There
are some licenselates that do cut letters off, like, right.
Speaker 5: So, well there's what you got.
Speaker 3: We got a virgin and play only at you're six.
It's got the graphic on so you're going to get six letters. I've seen that one, but I've never seen it.
But people are giving people are giving me examples in the forum. They're typing like funny plays eight letters, and I.
Speaker 2: Was like, where's where's there eight letter plate? At I
was like, I don't have you know, but now I know? Okay,
so it makes sense, all right if you have an incomprehensive plate, good idea, bad idea, like like Camra. I
now I get it now that you've said I would laugh if I knew the meaning behind it, that you purposely did something that made me sit there and go.
Speaker 3: I think of everybody, it's never it like that's that's funny.
But I think the plate should either identify the car or identify a little bit about the person's personality.
Speaker 2: I don't really think like what you do for a living whatever, I mean like stuff like that. I think
it's you guys know I've talked about I'm into naming cars.
I think it's important to name your car. Maybe you don't,
but every car I've had, has been had a name.
I've named every car I've had, so you got do you guys remember what the Jimmy was? Anybody ding ding ming?
Speaker 3: We had a GMC Jimmy. I loved my GMC Jimmy.
I told I think I've told you guys story about it.
I had it for a long time. Everybody joked me
because it was the next current year.
Speaker 2: Of what the year was.
Speaker 3: Because for the time I bought it, every time something made a noise, it got a new part. That thing
had everything new on it for the longest time because I enjoyed driving it, and it did. I put two
hundred and seventy eight thousand s.
Speaker 2: No, it did not start with it. S did start
with an L. It didn't start with an L. Lfless
were starting to start with a B. Beverly, No, it
wasn't Beverly.
Speaker 5: Was a guy's name.
Speaker 2: Bra No, you probably won't remember fourteen beyond eleven because I mean I named Jimmy Brutus, and I don't know where I came up with Brutus. I liked the name
Brutus the time. Yeah, it was called Brutus. I had.
Speaker 3: I had a little thing Brutus. Yeah, I did because
it was a work. Was like, I put that thing
through so much and did so many things. I towed
so many things, with all kinds of stuff. I probably shu,
you're like over there with your buddies. You're like, man,
I brutus took me through the last night.
Speaker 5: That's cool.
Speaker 2: I can really brutal with this truck.
Speaker 3: That's That's kind of how it came up with maybe and then might be a little bit of hidden.
Speaker 2: One of his friends looked at it and was like, that's a great idea. No, it was a good name
for it. That's probably subconsciously how I came up with
the name, because I had it for a little while before I actually gave it its name, which I've done with every vehicle. I so, what's your name? Huh? What's
the Chevy's truck's name? Huh? Snow White say it's going
to be like, well, we know a little blue. What's
the cameras? I haven't named the camera. It's not mine.
I named it. It's not my vehicle. That's Don's vehicle.
Speaker 3: Hey, if you guys think naming a vehicle or having a personal plate on it is a good idea, bad idea?
Give us a shout out, send us a text. So
what would you guys think? On that note, I gotta
take quick commercial break when I come back. That's more
for your hold tight.
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thousand and three.
Speaker 1: Welcome back to Let's Talk Cars Radio. You're automotive specialist.
Now back to your host, Dave Polach.
Speaker 2: Hey, guys, welcome back. Hey.
Speaker 3: So, before we went to the commercial break, we were talking about personal license plates. So I got one last
question for you guys about license plates. What states do
you think has the biggest percentage of personalized lates license plates?
Speaker 2: Biggest state? Yep? Florida No, No, we're not even on
the radar. No or Kansas? No? Why Kansas?
Speaker 4: No, I'd say probably like California, or I thought so too, Maybe like no Data, No, Colorado, Nope, no.
Speaker 2: New York?
Speaker 5: Is it?
Speaker 2: Thought you guys would have hit it right off the bat.
It's Virginia?
Speaker 5: Is it really?
Speaker 2: Sixteen point one percent? Okay, that's what we're guessing. The
other state.
Speaker 3: Something like sixteen point one nine percent in the state of Virginia.
Speaker 2: Really, second state? Anybody, did I say r nof Dakota.
I don't think so. I don't think I heard you. Guys,
where are you pulling these guesses from? Like Westuh?
Speaker 3: Camra was close on one of his guests, but it's not the second second one is New Hampshire. Okay, thirteen
point nine nine percent. Uh one, you guys did say.
The third one is Illinois? Illinois thirteen point four percent.
Nevada is one you guys gave Nevada's twelve point seven three percent.
Speaker 5: Okay?
Speaker 2: Uh Montana, you said Montana nine point eight Really Montana?
Speaker 3: Maine, Believe it or not, Maine is nine point seven nine percent.
Speaker 2: Main? Oh, Main, Yeah, he said.
Speaker 3: Now you said South Dakota. North Dakota's on the list too, Okay,
So North Dakota has like six point like per Now keep in mind, it's been a while since they'd like put the numbers out, put the numbers out, but it was last time the numbers were done.
Speaker 2: These were the numbers. Do you know what the lowest
state is? And this blew my mind?
Speaker 3: That has the most personal that has the least amount of personalized places in New York, Idaho.
Speaker 2: Nope, this really blew my mind.
Speaker 3: I really thought this would be the state that would have a bunch of them. And there must be a
reason for it. I haven't researched final the reason yet.
Maybe it's hard to get one.
Speaker 2: I don't know. Utah, No, ready, Florida, Texas.
Speaker 3: Texas has the least amount of plates with zero point five percent.
Speaker 2: They ain't worried about no custom poates over there. They
they were just right on side of their vehicle.
Speaker 5: Have no points over there.
Speaker 2: I mean they're too busy running horses. No, I mean courses.
I mean I thought Texas would have had a bunch.
Speaker 3: So anyway, moving on now, you guys know, I got a question, like I said, question about plates, Send me the information.
Speaker 2: Here's your next story. Ready, but you get hitchhikers. So
another conversation I got into this week was about hitchhikers.
You ever picked up hitchhiker? No? Nope, no, don't plan
on it. And you know I've thought about it too,
and I'm like, this the day I don't want to die.
Speaker 5: This is the day I'm good.
Speaker 2: All right.
Speaker 3: So I told you guys stories back in the day when it was safer, I did pick up hitchhikers, and not because I really wanted to, because some of the stretch of roads that I traveled was far distance.
Speaker 2: Was it really? Was it really safer?
Speaker 4: Though?
Speaker 2: You had a choice, not that you didn't want to. You, Yeah,
I didn't have a choice. Yeah, Okay, I had a choice. Okay,
I had a choice. Okay, I take it back. I
had a choice.
Speaker 3: But I knew the distance from where civilization was, and I told you guys, this.
Speaker 2: Was far, and I mean far.
Speaker 3: I once stopped and picked up two hitchhikers that were not together in one trip. I was driving and I
came across the guy and he's walking and I know he's I think. I told you guys, he was like
twenty five thirty miles from the nearest anything carrying a gas can. So I stopped and I picked him up.
And then I was driving ten miles down the road.
It was walking over the gas can, and.
Speaker 2: Then they stopped and I picked him up. He was
not telling us the only reason why I picked up the second hitchhikers because it started getting afraid of the first phone. I'm like, this is really awkward.
Speaker 5: In here. It's like getting a cat, right, You're like,
I got a cat, you know what? My cat?
Speaker 2: So I was about to say that, right, So was it really safer or.
Speaker 4: Did you just feel bad for the people that were traveling so far because you, like you said you knew.
Speaker 2: How farceilization is.
Speaker 4: Because I feel like nowadays, right like first thought, people were like, well they got a cell phone, they can't call a friend.
Speaker 2: You couldn't do that back in the day, you know, like there's a pay phone. I'm gonna tell you something.
If you see a guy walking down the side of the street, most likely he don't got a cell phone. Okay,
you don't get or it probably dead and.
Speaker 3: He has because he don't gotta sell guys.
Speaker 2: If he's walking down the road, he why didn't just call?
Speaker 4: That's what we're saying. We're saying back in the day,
like it's not like they could call. So like did
you pick them up because of sympathy? You know, cause
like it was, it wasn't necessarily like safer back in the day because you think about like you can't call for help, so like, you know, if you did get in a you know, in some type of incident, and then you're kind of stuck with them, right, you know, you.
Speaker 3: Got to kind of know where you're going. Okay, I
told you guys the story. I think we talked about
this on ear ones. I told you guys the story
where I picked up the hitchhikers in the middle of nowhere.
There was two of them walking, two guys walking at like three o'clock.
Speaker 2: In the morning.
Speaker 3: I swear I told that story on the air. I
can't remember how a year, many years ago whatever, I was on a stretch of highway. It was the mill
of the night, Like I don't know, one, two, three o'clock in the morning. Whatever, escase me. It'll come back
to me. Whatever time the night it was, but it's
not important for the story. But there was two guys
and they were walking, and they were easily I think it was thirty three miles to that I knew to the nearest gas station, okay, like like it was far, but I couldn't remember if that gas station was open or not. So I and they were going the opposite
direct I know we talked about the story going the opposite direction. I want to say they were still like
fifteen twenty miles ago in the opposite direction to you know, to a gas stage, which, by the way, couldn't remember if it would be open or not, right because they were in the middle of nowhere, and a lot of these gas stations aren't twenty four seven. Weren't twenty four
to seven in the middle of nowhere. So to a
certain degree, yeah, I didn't want.
Speaker 2: To pick them up, but it almost felt obligated because I'm like, these guys have no idea how long they're gonna walk. And it's not like I was on the
highway and I saw any other cars. Like we're talking
about driving, and you can look as far as the eye can see, and there's no headlights behind you, and there's no tail lights in front of you. I'm probably
the only car driving that stretch of road gonna be for a while, and the chances is anybody's gonna stop and pick these guys up, even there was, it's probably something to none. Well, I picked these guys up, and
I put them in the vehicle, and I think if I didn't tell you guys the story or if I'm telling you it again, your schedul listen to it. Were
they nice? They were nice, but in the creepy way.
Speaker 3: Okay, it was already creepy. It's in the middle of
the night and I picked these guys up. There's a
part of the story I didn't tell. If I told
you guys it that makes this significant holds the creepy part.
Speaker 2: There were you picking them up, or you pulling up next to him and going hey, no, no, I stopped.
Speaker 3: What was bad about it was it was the middle of the night, and it was something to this story that makes it even worse enough to I don't want to blow it, but I'll tell you what I didn't like was is I got two of them and they got to sit behind you, one had to sit with me and one had to sit behind me. And it
made me outrageously nervous. Now, I worked for the government
at the time, and I did have a weapon on me, and I was.
Speaker 2: Pretty clear by taking the gun and making it insight that it was that I had one on me.
Speaker 4: That still didn't make me feel any safer. See, because
you're not going to get to it by the time he closelines you.
Speaker 3: Or something, right, I think if if if I said, if I didn't tell you guys the story.
Speaker 2: What ended up happened was the guy in the back moved around a lot.
Speaker 5: He just he was fidgety.
Speaker 2: He couldn't sit.
Speaker 3: Still, and I had to literally stop the car and have a conversation with you know, yeah, and I did.
I was like, hey, man, nothing for nothing, and I'm not trying to be short. You're gonna have to stop
moving around back there or I'm gonna have to put you guys out. Is that I mean, I was, and
I wasn't trying to be like a jerk, but like, I just picked up two people I don't know in the middle of the night on a stretcher road that there's nothing on this stretch of road for miles and to you. And this guy is moving around and he
just you could hear it him moving.
Speaker 2: He and I think it was I don't know, if he was just trying to get comfortable in the seat whatever.
Speaker 3: It was a cabin's chair. I was driving a van,
I had a surveillance fan. I worked for the government,
so there was a chair sitting So that.
Speaker 2: Chair there should be no reason to be moving around.
Speaker 3: It's in that seat, but he was, and it was making me really on edge. Now here's the part of
the story that I've never told, I think ever on air, or I don't think i'd share with you guys.
Speaker 2: Now, there's a couple people know it.
Speaker 3: Something happened to me earlier that night on that stretch of road, and I think you and I've talked about this, maybe about the stretcher Orizon was known to be very haunted, okay, and I had just had a really weird experience on that road, maybe twenty to thirty minutes before picking these two guys up.
Speaker 2: Was that the girl in the mirror, Yes, the girl with me?
Speaker 3: I know you we had this conversation. I saw a ghost.
You guys aren't gonna convince me any I've seen a lot on that stretch of road. I don't care what
your beliefs are. But I saw a ghost and it
was creepy, and it.
Speaker 5: Flipped me out.
Speaker 2: And then I picked these guys up. I don't know
if I picked the guys up because I was scared out of my You know what, did you at least touch them to make sure they were real? No, I
didn't know. I did not that'd been even were creeper.
Let me kind of touch you. I'm just saying.
Speaker 4: Like, you know, you just saw a ghosts. You know,
I'm gonna make sure he's real. But I mean, imagine
like turn around and he's not there no more.
Speaker 2: How are you explaining that to the person. Hey, I
got to touch you real quick because I just saw a ghosts about two miles back. You need to make
sure you're.
Speaker 3: Anything to those guys about what just happened to me.
But it had just had me and I knew I just saw a ghost And now I got these guys.
Speaker 2: So I'm already like paranoid on edge heightened, and now I had these two strangers in my vehicle. The guy
behind me won't sit still, and I am just you know what I mean, like you idiot, why'd you stop?
You know? In my head, I am if I remember,
I think he said that he was driving down the road.
The way that the story goes is he was driving down the road and there was a lady that you could.
Speaker 5: See was a guy.
Speaker 2: It was a lady, was a guy on the side, and he just drove right past him. And as he
looked up in the mirror. He was totally gone, Okay, no,
what happened? Something serious? So he was on the side
of the road when I passed him.
Speaker 3: I told you, I think I told you guys, like I said, if I told you a story, I know Cameron I talked about because I've seen a lot of ghosts on that stretch of road.
Speaker 2: I said, don't care what you belavese are. You don't
have to believe me. I just know what I've seen.
This very unexplainable. Take a drive.
Speaker 5: I just take a drive down the road in.
Speaker 3: The middle of the night, down that road, and you're gonna see some things you can't explain. The one I
passed was the one where I saw the reflection of my vehicle in its eyes as I yeah, I looked I was, and I feel like it was. It felt
like it was very much slow motion. No, I've had
this conversation somewhere.
Speaker 2: I swear it was up there.
Speaker 3: The h E double hockey sticks out of me and then I decided to pick up two hitchhikers and put them in a vehicle with me.
Speaker 2: That one can't sit still. I've had some weird experiences
with picking up pitch hikers. Here's the thing if you
lost if he turned to the side, they weren't there a lot. I probably would have wrecked my vehicle if
that would have happened, because okay, and I got some stories to tell.
Speaker 3: But they're in the vehicle with me, and they were very I got into where they need to go. I
didn't have any problems. I dropped them off, and the
one gas station that we headed to was open, which was great. Right, So, but I had a drive for
like another four hours.
Speaker 2: Through the night.
Speaker 3: In the dark, knowing what had just happened, and just be trying to process that, which is, by the way, not the first time this has happened.
Speaker 2: To me, probably won't be the last time.
Speaker 3: I still do drive that stretch of road and it always scares me or time I gotta be on that road, especially at night.
Speaker 2: Hold tight, I'll get back into this. I gotta take
a commercial break.
Speaker 5: I'll be right back.
Speaker 1: You're listening to Dave Palatch on Let's Talk Cars Radio.
Dave will be right back.
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Whitlow and Sons have been serving Hampton Road since nineteen forty nine, residential and commercial. You could always count on JF.
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seven one four. That's three nine nine one seven one four. JF.
Witlow and Sons Incorporated. Welcome back to Let's Talk Cars Radio,
your automotive specialist. Now back to your host Dave Pilach.
Speaker 5: Hey, guys, welcome back.
Speaker 3: So if you were with us for the last segment, we were talking about hitchhikers in highways.
Speaker 2: So if you didn't know, and you don't live out in the East Coast, how Way fifty eight is called?
It had. It has an aim to it, which is
maybe explain some things.
Speaker 3: It's called the suicide Strip, and the reason why they called it that was there was a lot of head on collisions before that road was expanded and made wider back before the nineties, tons and tons of accidents. And
that's the reason why they say that there's so many phenomenons on that road, and people spot a lot of different things.
Speaker 2: I had an experience on that Relax. I've had a
lot of experience on that road. I had one.
Speaker 3: I can't remember how many years ago it was, but go back to I want to say that was ninety probably ninety eight, ninety.
Speaker 2: Nine, somewhere right in there, and mid the night again.
Speaker 3: And if everybody wonders, while I was always traveling the road in the middle of the night, is because I would move. When I was working for I moved from
case to case, usually at night. So if I need
to go from one city another or one state to another, I would venture and drive at night. Because there wasn't
a lot of traffic. It was easier to kind of
get places and I could move a lot quicker, especially driving, and you get pulled over because you know, meeting right a little right. Absolutely, so I'll on that road a
lot I came.
Speaker 4: Did you ever get before you start that story, did you ever get like a pass because you worked for the government for speeding?
Speaker 2: Yeah, more than once, a bunch of times. Yes, yes.
Can you just say that you were on a case, I pursuing someone.
Speaker 5: I was a quick.
Speaker 2: Detour on this story.
Speaker 3: I was on a case, if I remember correctly, I was in Detroit, and I was following a subject almost like exactly like you'd see in the movies, and I was trying to He drove for so long. I was
behind him for too long, and I realized I was behind him too. My eye am behind this guy too long.
It got the point where traffic started to dissipate a little bit, and now it was going to be just kind of him and I. And if you take a
left and I got to take a left, then you take a right and I got to take a right.
Speaker 2: You eventually eventually you stand out. So I detoured and
he made a left on a major road, and I saw because I had enough distance between us.
Speaker 3: When he made the left, there was an alley way that I came to, and I looked and the alleyway basically followed the path.
Speaker 2: Of the road he turned on. So I turned down the.
Speaker 3: Alleyway just like you'd see in the movies.
Speaker 2: I am cooking it down the alleyway and I am hopping in between every little cross alley road.
Speaker 3: It dipped down and go up, and I am hitting.
I didn't hit any trash cans, but I could feel a.
Speaker 5: Van lift up and get that little you hear the.
Speaker 3: Tires screech as I and I'm going. I would come
to a side street and I stopped.
Speaker 2: I wait for to pass, and then I would keep on going and I'd wait for him to pass. And
I kept doing that, and then after I got back behind him, about four cars behind, because now there was some traffic and I was to ease back in. I
got pulled over because and lost my subject because the police.
Speaker 3: Officer had watched me going down this back alley like like a bat out of hell, and he pulled me up.
But as soon as I gave my credentials and showed him explain, he was.
Speaker 2: Like, gotcha, and I got But I there was probably thirty violations. They probably could have got me going down
that back alley. So but yeah, there was another one
where I was following a subject who just drove like a maniac.
Speaker 3: I mean, just the guy and you guys have seen it movie.
Speaker 2: Some people just they don't even realize you.
Speaker 3: The problem with being an investigator is is when you're tailing somebody, you always think they've made you, and most of the.
Speaker 2: Time they haven't. They just drive like idiots.
Speaker 3: Like you start to think, because the guy drives so much like an idiot, that you've been made right, You're like, God, this guy knows I'm behind me.
Speaker 2: Nope, just drives like an idiot.
Speaker 3: And that happens a lot where you start questioning yourself, like should you break off and stop following him?
Speaker 2: Did they make you? Whatever?
Speaker 4: Now they did make you, did you have to let someone else take over the case, or did you just back off for a while?
Speaker 2: No men, continue your It was.
Speaker 3: I instantly, as soon as I thought I was made, I went directly to the rental car place that we had accounts with, and I ditched my van. I jumped
into a rental car. I would outfit my rental car
with my equipment so I could still do things. And
when you say outfit, just like I said, we totally derailed from we were on this.
Speaker 2: But uh, if you.
Speaker 3: Understand what backlighting is, backlighting was really important when you were filming out of a vehicle, So I could sit right on top of you and you probably never know I was there filming you as long as I had the right uh backlighting right.
Speaker 2: So what I would do is I.
Speaker 3: Carry material in my band, blacked out material, and I would hang it up inside around a car with pins.
Speaker 2: I just take pincushions and pin it, you know, pin it into the.
Speaker 3: Headliner, and put a black backdrop behind me, a black backdrop between me and the back window. So now when
I lean my seat all the way back against the black you don't see that I'm literally sitting there watching you, and that I also have now propped a camera up on a tripod in between that I'm shooting.
Speaker 2: That's in the back seat, right, and it's on the tripod, so I can reach in the seat and I can hit it. Like nobody in the car. It looks like
there's no man in the car.
Speaker 3: When you're standing of the car, it looks like it has a black tennant window on the back, and it doesn't, and you can't see that I'm in there leaning against it okay. Now, obviously I don't wear bright colors, but
if you wear dark colors, you blend right in. And
then somebody looks at the car from across the street, it looks like there's no pay.
Speaker 4: Did you ever outfit your car for like scenarios like you know, you see some of the movies where like you know, now you're a plumber or.
Speaker 2: I had signs, So.
Speaker 3: I had the van that I had, I had a bunch of different signs, and I had a bunch of different credentials.
Speaker 5: Did you make a move?
Speaker 2: Where did they make.
Speaker 5: Today?
Speaker 2: On the plumber tomorrow? I'm the cable.
Speaker 3: Guy, you laugh, But that's exactly what I had. So
I had plumber, I had a cable company. I had
a package delivery company for private package delivery for like stuff, and I had credentials for.
Speaker 5: All those to back it up.
Speaker 3: So if somebody did walk up with the car like, hey, what are you doing out here, I'm like, oh, I'm just looking for this address. I'm such a you know
stuff like that, and you're a real company, right, And we had magnetic signs we throw on the side, So yeah, one hundercent like which a lot of things you see on TV is exactly how we did it. But once again,
I'll go back. I'll tell that story another day. I'll
talk about it because I got some funny stories of tailing people.
Speaker 2: But I you to go down that road that was haunted all the time. Fifty eight four sixty is the
name of the road.
Speaker 5: And I pulled up.
Speaker 3: I was coming down the road and I used to guys, i'd go a clip like I would haul, but like because I knew I could and I needed to get to our I was like going Statesway, like I leave Virginia and like go to Kentucky. And I'm like, okay,
I'll be to the Kentucky by morning, you know what I mean. Like, I'm you know, I just go straight
or start working a case. So I would haul butt down.
When I came and there was a guy on the side of the road and he had his hand up and he was like waving traffic by, and I'm like, oh, and I didn't see anything. And then I realized there
was nothing to see now. Then I started to question
myself and I was like, am I tired? Am I tired?
Speaker 2: Did I was it? You know? You start looking? Was
that like a branch there was like like a tree hanging over there was and I thought it was a guy or something like that. No, I clearly saw.
Speaker 3: A guy like like like moving traffic, almost like it was an accident or something like that.
Speaker 2: But then he wasn't there.
Speaker 3: Like and I'm like, I slowed down looking for like, was it bushes hanging over the road and that's what I saw waving around or something like that.
Speaker 2: I just think it was was I mean, because like I said, this is a night. I know what I saw.
That's where you mess up in the horror movie. You
started to slow down, I would have been punched.
Speaker 3: Question another time I was on that stretch of road in the middle of the night that a lady And when I told you about the lady that crossed in front of me, but she had she was holding a kid by the hand, and she walked across the street with kid in the hand. And we're you're in the
middle of nowhere. There's nobody out at two, three, four
o'clock in the morning. Guys, Okay, just so you know, uh,
walking their child. Shouldn't be walking their child across the
street in the middle of nowhere. But I know what
I saw, And of course when you get right outside, there's nothing. It's always every time I have stretch of road,
like when you get right to where you see it and you know, you slow down.
Speaker 5: Like a little bit of fog coming in.
Speaker 3: There's always fog in that road, by the way, at a certain time of the years, which makes even worse slungs like out here, how we get the flog it rolls across, so it makes it even more eerier, like it just always always always eerie. And somebody told me,
like I've talked many people about this stretched road, and it always happened. They can say it always happens within
certain certain hours, like they're like, you know, I never seen anything at nine o'clock. I've never seen anything ten o'clock,
cause I got to get past midnights when things start to be really strange on that road. And I agree,
if you don't believe me, I invite you to.
Speaker 2: Come out to those roads.
Speaker 5: Now.
Speaker 3: Another one I used to travel all the time. I
saw things that I couldn't explain. I think you used
to be called I thought it was called Devil's Highway.
I think you and I looked it up before it and the reason why it was called that is the actual numbers were the sign of the devil was the number of the highway, and they changed it so and they say they changed it because people kept on stealing the street signs that had that number on it, because stuff's kept happening on that And I told you it's also the road that has all the crosses on it.
It's everywhere, and it's US ninety three. I think we
looked up once for the road and it's between the bat and Arizona. And I traveled that road a bunch
and saw a lot of things I just couldn't explain.
That was the road that I think I told you guys about where I got passed by a car.
Speaker 2: Then that just disappeared.
Speaker 3: Now I truly believe I got passed by a car and either the car passed me and then just turned off its lights and just drove into the darkness without its lights on, or maybe I didn't get passed.
Speaker 2: By a car in the term of a car.
Speaker 5: A car passed me.
Speaker 2: I know a car passed me.
Speaker 3: What I can tell you was because it went past me, it moved in front of me, and then it just wasn't there that the tail lights disappeared and you couldn't have drove away from me that fast, So I don't know if they turned the tail lights off and just drove in the dark.
Speaker 2: You must have saw Percy Jackson's Taxi. Here's a movie.
Speaker 4: First, Jackson gets in a taxi to travel and it's a ghost Jackson book. Right, it's a movie too, Okay,
all right, but yeah, but it's in a taxi and it's a ghost taxi and it has like three ladies in it, and they all they're kind of.
Speaker 2: Like, I mean, you should want to turn their heads at the same time. I know, I haven't seen it,
but you know, they you know, they say Elbow Road is haunted, really because I see a lot of actions the road over here, and I probably believe that. They say,
like one person that used to live on the road, they call her miss something, and then there's also like a crying a crying girl on the road, and there's a bunch of stories.
Speaker 5: I believe.
Speaker 3: Well, they say that for sixty is also haunted because it runs through all the battle battle grounds and battlefield areas from like the Civil War and stuff like that.
So in people report seeing soldiers, like groups of soldiers crossing over the road a lot. I see that as
a big, huge thing. It's been reported tons and tons
of times.
Speaker 2: So if you.
Speaker 3: Want an adventure, try one of those roads if you're on the East coast. If not, if you're on the
West coast. I guess tried ninety three and see what
happens to you.
Speaker 2: I've seen some crazy things I can't explain. You don't
have to believe me, but it happened. I'm telling you
it just I know what I saw. And that note.
Let me take quick march of break and we will finish the show out with one more segment. I'll be
right back.
Speaker 1: You're to Dave Palatch on Let's Talk Cars Radio. Dave,
We'll be right back.
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Speaker 3: Hey, Michelle, thanks for coming in.
Speaker 2: No problem. What is that?
Speaker 5: Oh?
Speaker 2: Curtis dropped that off earlier this week.
Speaker 5: He calls it the excitement button.
Speaker 2: Every time you see liberty, I'm supposed to push this button.
Speaker 4: Liberty yeah, Liberty, ooh yeah, Liberty.
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You gotta admit it's got a ring to it.
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two three three three one three one. Liberty Transmission. Welcome
back to Let's Talk Cars Radio. You're automotive specialist. Now
back to your host, Dave Palach.
Speaker 5: Hey, guys, welcome back.
Speaker 3: Hey, like I said, you want it, you want an adventure.
Speaker 2: Hey, Halloween's right around the corner. So if you want
a haunted adventure headed one of those highways, maybe that's what it's a good idea.
Speaker 3: Yeah, all right, I got the last one for you, guys.
Speaker 2: Rady this topic, it was another top we talked about on the computer informs and stuff like that this week.
So radio etiquette, radio etique, radio etiquette?
Speaker 5: Is it okay?
Speaker 2: And it is mixed reviews.
Speaker 3: Is it okay to touch somebody's radio in their car when you're when you're the passenger? Depends on what depends.
Speaker 2: So if you're a new person entering the car, don't touch my radio. Don't touch me? Do you mean if
you're a new person, like they don't know that, Like they don't say you're inn in my car for the first time.
Speaker 3: You've never been in your car before. It means it's
like a new friend, right.
Speaker 2: Yeah, like a new friend. Like and then let's say
like let's say like you're a friend, but you don't have the AC control privileges yet they don't control yet, Like, what are you gonna do to get AC privileged controls?
Don't even know that was even options. Maybe I guess
I'm a little bit different. But like some people are
allowed to touch the controls in my car. Some people are
ever getting OX in my car.
Speaker 3: So I mean, here's how I feel. AC and radio
are two different things. A c Look, most car systems
have dual AC systems.
Speaker 2: Now, if you're oblivious to the fact that it's burning hot in your car, I'm gonna change You're on my side.
I'm not going to touch it.
Speaker 5: On my side.
Speaker 2: I'm going to change it so I'm comfortable. I got
to ride with you. You're right, I'm going to touch it.
But this man over here, anytime he's trying to turning on my you see you always like he's like always clicking around. It's like you can't find the button.
Speaker 3: He's got a big screen TV in his car that he's.
Speaker 2: Got to play fair.
Speaker 4: Camera screen doesn't work, so you don't really know what's going on. So you are putting a couple of hundred buttons.
Speaker 2: He really has a dual button that lights up. Is
it sink because your system?
Speaker 5: Okay?
Speaker 2: Yeah, yeah, I don't. I like the sink system to
a certain degree.
Speaker 3: I don't like it because most of the time the people I'm riding with I need to have different temperature than them.
Speaker 2: Mine's sink. But you can click a button to turn
off sink mode.
Speaker 3: All right, Well, you don't have a sink on a radio, so you're okay with people touching your radio.
Speaker 2: It depends, I mean, it depends if I'm playing my music or not.
Speaker 5: I don't I'm gonna park.
Speaker 3: You over here for a Secondaniel, He's he's got to think about how he feels about it.
Speaker 4: I guess for me, i'd say I don't really have an issue with it, but if you're but it has to be like someone we both like, right, Like I don't think that you should turn on some like I'm not a big like classical guy, right.
Speaker 2: But like, I think we all have to agree on what to play.
Speaker 3: I might not touch it if you Twitter in classes just because I'd be so like weirded out that you put classical ones right right, but like you.
Speaker 2: Know, done that in his car.
Speaker 4: But I think, I think, yeah, I mean Tenley, you're the driver. The passenger usually you know has radio control. Now,
like I say, like camera, Shane.
Speaker 2: Know why the driver has radio control? Do you know
why that became a thing?
Speaker 5: Uh?
Speaker 2: No, it didn't really.
Speaker 3: So they say that you shouldn't touch the radio in someone's car because it's distracting to them. If you touch
the radio why they're driving. It's just literally, rather they
realized it or not, it is distracting. Their mind are
already set into the volume level it's on the radio station they're listening to, so their mind has clicked into that.
As soon as you disrupt that, it becomes distracted driving.
Speaker 4: But couldn't one person argue that is distracting for them to touch the radio and.
Speaker 2: Nate, Nate could tell you I've told him about his car, this about his car the whole time. As many screens
as they're adding, why not, like you know, like the rail that comes across and stuff like on the passenger you're looking at the like the glove departments that rail shiny.
I'm like, why not just turn that into a touch screen where like you can just touch it and turn up audio.
Speaker 3: From thee that in cars, I think that that's like the best place to put like a sound barking.
Speaker 2: I'm with you on that. I'm like, what a great
place for a sound bar. Then nobody does it.
Speaker 3: But every time I see that strip like that laid out in a car like that, I'm like, center channel soundbar right there would be great in a car. Would
give cars such a for somebody who really enjoys looking music.
Speaker 5: You can do that and.
Speaker 2: Put a screen there. I mean, I guess you kind
of could. You can make it half a half danger
Like I told him, I said, you know, you could put it on the door. You put it on the
door where you can control the audio from the door sound bar. Yeah, but I don't. I don't want a
bunch of touch screens in my car.
Speaker 4: Like I I will say, I do. Like now they
answer your question before I get off topic. Mercedes does
do that. They do make the trim piece on the
passenger side and it makes touch controls. Yes, now I
can understand where that becomes beneficial. Like I said, I'm
not a big touch screen kind of guy. I do
like my two screens and stuff because they're more centered for the whole car so everybody can see it access it.
Speaker 2: When I showed you that design of what last year where they were showing doing like the whole dash as like there's stuff on the side for the passenger to touch, and they're stide.
Speaker 4: And that's what I like about my car because camera can easily reach the touch screen and that's in the middle. Now,
what I will say is I don't like where and the Mustang they give you two options. You can have
now both versions. You have a GT version, you have
the basic. Both come with two touch screens. The only
difference is that they merge both of them into one.
Speaker 2: Right.
Speaker 4: But what I don't like is that I wish they would have took advantage of where it comes together. It's
just a blank basically glass peace peace.
Speaker 2: Brings them together.
Speaker 4: I wish they would have done something with that where it's more functional.
Speaker 2: That makes sense.
Speaker 3: I am different than you, guys. I am a one
oun percent. Don't touch my radio while you're in my car.
Oh yeah, I don't. I don't like people touching it.
Speaker 2: I don't.
Speaker 5: Exception no you guys to the difference with.
Speaker 3: It is is the only reason why I think you guys get away with it more or anything like that, because we've done normally normally.
Speaker 2: Because you're turning it up. You're trying the volume up.
Speaker 3: As soon as a good song comes on, You're turning the volume up on it as a good song. And
that doesn't bother me. What I really hate is when
somebody turns my radio down. Yeah, well, I'm listening to
it and somebody turns it down jam and I'm jamming and they turn it down.
Speaker 2: It's annoying to me. And you know, annoys me when
people skip through the song. You're halfway through this song
and they skip this song. Karen does that song so much.
I am hold on one, I am jamming out the song.
I'm like, man, I really like this song in my head.
I'm not talking out loud. I'm like, man, I'm really
vibing on this song. And then also somebody goes and
changes it. I'm like, well, what you do that for.
Speaker 3: That's the reason why I had the rule don't touch my radio, because I because of those reasons, maybe people didn't do that to me.
Speaker 2: I probably wouldn't have that rule probably wouldn't bother me so much.
Speaker 3: My wife, by the way, loves to turn the radio down in the middle of like the coolest song. I
am jamming out, listen to a great song, and she's playing.
Speaker 2: On her phone. She's not even doing anything. Just look
at it, and she just reaches over and turns it down and goes right back to look at her phone.
I'm like, what'd you do that for? Oh, it was
too loud for who you're a passenger. I didn't make
you ride in the bed of the truck, although I could, or when they wait a ton of cell phone up to be louder than your radio.
Speaker 5: Right right? You know who does that?
Speaker 2: Your younger brother.
Speaker 3: So your does that? Your younger brother one percent are
my youngest. I'll be jamming out to a song.
Speaker 2: And he'll click his He'll click his phone up, and I'll sit there for a second. I'm like, I know
this mug did not just turn his phone up. So
I'll click the radio up a little, a little louder, and literally I'll hear his phone up a little little lotdterer, I've out of I mean, every shot went and knock the phone out of his end on for ext I'm like, hey, he's like what, I'm like, right, exactly what are you doing?
Speaker 5: Are you touching the radio?
Speaker 2: Why are you No?
Speaker 5: I'll say.
Speaker 4: Another thing that does kind of annoying me while we're on this conversation is when someone turns your radio up, Like from my car, there's a perfect setting. I keep
my radiar. I don't turn it too loud even on anything.
Let's just say, just like anything that plays music, there is a certain.
Speaker 2: Because nobody gets in his car.
Speaker 4: So let's well honestly, not just car general, but like stereo, stereo in general, right and stuff, there's a certain level.
I think a radio performs well at and I think there's a little spot where it just it can.
Speaker 2: Right, it can go It sounds right.
Speaker 4: Exactly, So I keep mind Like my radio I think only goes up to thirty. Okay, Now I don't know
why that as a new thing, Like nobody does one hundred anymore. They only do like thirty for the max.
Speaker 2: Because why right? Because why, I mean, it doesn't you
can make it go to ten.
Speaker 5: Right, right?
Speaker 2: You know who cares? No, I kind of do like thirty.
Speaker 4: But anyways, I got off of that, and so I usually keep it around like twenty ish. When did you
get to more than twenty It kind of annoys me that you're like purposely trying to blow my speakers out.
Speaker 2: Hey, will you turn my stuff down? It's not yours?
Right right? You don't know what this? No, I get it.
Speaker 5: I'm safe.
Speaker 2: Like there is a peak in the truck where it sounds great, and there's a where you're at the tip of where you probably shouldn't have it. And I most
people probab probably wouln't annoy them, but I can hear it.
Speaker 3: I'm like, eh, you know, it doesn't need to be that loud. Like now, if I had a system in
the truck and I would move it up high er, I'm guarantee I would, But I don't.
Speaker 2: I haven't put one in. I thought i'd put one
in for years. I just haven't done it. I don't
know why, because.
Speaker 3: You're waiting for the stock ones to go. Maybe the
mess is Maybe that's what it could be very well be, but I don't know. Etiquette says if you look and go,
it says that you're not supposed touch somebody's radio. And
there's a lot of reasons. Like I said, the distractedness.
It's also people's hearing preference. The driver is only hearing
preference that has any meaning.
Speaker 2: By the way, as far as etiquette is concerned, if you look it up, it's what he feels comfortable driving. Now,
now you're the passenger.
Speaker 3: Job is to fit his car. Passenger, do your job,
and passenger, you sit there.
Speaker 2: That's your job. Just sit there and ride. You ride along.
Not to touch anything inside the vehicle. You just sit there.
You're so glad I brought my car today.
Speaker 3: My car.
Speaker 2: I'm so glad it is. I don't know, Like I said,
there's a yeah, simple things, but I don't know.
Speaker 3: I looked it up because we got the conversation and I start looking at an etiquette said, you really probably.
Speaker 2: Shouldn't touch somebody's radio. It's theirs. Your Your job is
to be the passenger. Yeah, I can look out behind
that one thing. Nothing annoys when people are ride in
the vehicle, have no idea where they are. And I'm like,
how do you not know what it? Because you don't
spend time ever looking out the window. If you get
in a car, put your cell phone down. We didn't
used to have them come down look out the window.
Get some familiar with the surroundings.
Speaker 4: To be fair, though, I will say, when you're driving, you are kind of oblivious of what you're passing because you're so focused on driving. Sometimes when you're a passenger,
you might not notice some of the things in the same way.
Speaker 2: How many times time I heard me go, hey, help me out.
Speaker 3: We're getting ready to get close to where we need to be at right, Because I'm focused on the car in front of me, things I can't keep looking out the window to see is this where I turn at right?
Speaker 2: Like? I can't do that. I don't like. I don't
like I can do you don't like doing that? I
think that's very distracted.
Speaker 3: I got an accident that way, and ever since that happened to me get an accent way, I refuse to do it because I was trying to see. I was
trying to look to see if that's where I was supposed to go, and the guy breaked in front of me short. He shouldn't have he should have been gone,
but he wasn't. I mean, it's my fault I hit him,
but he shouldn't have.
Speaker 2: You know, hit on the brake short, so that'd be the case, and we weren't right through this show. It's gone.
Speaker 5: Hope you guys enjoyed the show. We're gonna get out
of here.
Speaker 3: If you've got a cool topic somebody wants to talk about, send it over to me. Remember, as always, today is Saturday.
Enjoy your Saturday. Sunday is right around the corner, and
make sure you unplug. Spend some time with your kids,
fire at the barbecue while you still can hide their cell phones from a playboard game.
A lively discussion unfolds around the quirks of personalized license plates, with hosts sharing their own experiences and humorous anecdotes. They debate the importance of custom plates, the creativity behind them, and the annoyances they can cause. The conversation also veers into the realm of hitchhiking stories, with hosts recounting eerie encounters on haunted highways, adding a spooky twist to the episode. Radio etiquette is another hot topic, as they explore whether it's acceptable for passengers to adjust the car's radio settings, revealing differing opinions and personal preferences.
This week on Let’s Talk Cars Radio, we’re talking about custom license plates; are they really worth it? We also talk about dave's stories of hitchhikers, haunted highways, and much more. Buckle up for a ride you won’t forget!