Speaker 2
Anyway, that's a small little win for me as far as I'm concerned. Can I answer a couple of questions from the other day? Oh, yes. So we had an email that emailed in and said that Revere was not named after Paul Revere. Which surprised me. And it turns out it actually was. OK. Yeah, it was there. There's a long sort of sort of, you know, meandering history of the town when it finally became a town that they
Speaker 1
said, we want to name it after Paul Revere. So OK. That appears to be the thing with that. What about the daylight savings time question? Yes.
Speaker 2
So we wanted to know why is it in March? Like who decides when it actually is? Didn't ask me. I mean,
Speaker 1
nobody said, Tony, what do you think? Right.
Speaker 2
Which they should have. They should have gone to every person living in this country. So there's something called the Uniform Time Act of 1966. And they said, OK, it's originally going to be in the last Sunday in April. Then there was an amendment to that to move it up in 1987 to the first Sunday in April. And then in 2006, the Energy Policy Act of 2006, this would be the Bush administration, moved it up to the second Sunday in March. Could we call George on the phone? I'd say what?
Speaker 1
You know, or call his brother? I know his brother Marvin. And so what do you like this idea? Because I don't like this idea. Yeah. April 1st is fine with me. First weekend in April is fine with me. I mean, that usher's in spring. You come in the Masters is right after that. But but March 10th is absurd. Second Sunday in March feels a bit early for this. No, it's absurd. Yeah. And yes, it could be the eighth. It could be as early as the eighth. Yeah. Could be as late as the 14th or 13th or something like that. Yeah. Yeah. But it stinks. It
Speaker 2
does. And what was the reason for that? Was there not thing the first week does not stink. But if you're to wait to that point of April, you're already getting enough daylight at the end of the day. You might as well just skip it all together, which I think some people are saying is healthier for all of our bodies.
Speaker 1
And it's healthy for the animals
Speaker 2
and it's healthy for the farmers. Yeah, we just need to get this done through away. I don't like this. Are you still saying on my body clock or feels like right now? Are you back to just saying time is what it is?
Speaker 1
It's Wednesday and now for me, time is what it is. How about for you?
Speaker 2
I'm still saying feels like.
Speaker 1
OK, no, I'm by Wednesday and lift. My entire thing is based on the dog. My entire deal is feeding and walking the dog and and the dog's body clock to be jolted by an hour is a lot. You know, that's a lot. So I think we're almost back with the dog or or the dog is laughing, saying, I don't care about this. Just feed me. If you feed me earlier because it's on my earlier body clock, I'm happy to do it. Which leads me to something I wanted to talk about. I am one of those people who readily admits that I am influenced by advertising. If I see a good commercial, I'm if I think the writing is good, if I think the filming is good, if it's simply on an airwave where you don't see it and I think the writing is good, I can be influenced by that. There's no question about it. You know, I would buy something because the advertising around it is effective. And I think it's good. I don't know if everybody does this, but I assume everybody does because there wouldn't be advertising if it didn't work. What for instance, you have your hand up. The carousel wheel. Yes. Well, sure. That's the greatest. That's the greatest two minutes in the history of television, Don Draper. So in recent, you know, and I think that that is the basis of everything I say about Subaru. And I admire, I admire those commercials. I think that they if they can subliminally get you to think that if you buy a Subaru, you love your children more than the person next door. That's that's great. And it's it drives you not only out of guilt, but out of aspiration. It's great. And I admire it. In recent months, I have seen a lot of commercials for dog foods that are there appear to be like food, like
Speaker 2
food that you would eat.
Speaker 1
They come in little pouches when they're opened up, they appear to have vegetables and meats or chickens. And and the entire structure of the advertising is if you don't give your dog this, like you're hurting your dog. Yeah.