Super Familiar with The Wilsons

Old Man, New Branding, and The Wilsons are ASMRtists

September 19, 2021 The Wilsons Season 2 Episode 37
Super Familiar with The Wilsons
Old Man, New Branding, and The Wilsons are ASMRtists
Show Notes Transcript

Greetings gentle people, as the market changes, so must The Wilsons. We roll out new branding and then become Super Familiar with ASMR. This one promises to be divisive.

Good Stuff.

Music: "Super Familiar, ver 2", "Old Man Theme", "Acquainted with The Wilsons",  "Wilson Suite, Radio Edit"  by Josh Wilson.

Super Familiar with The Wilsons
Find us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/wilsonspodcast
on instagram at instagram.com/superfamiliarwitthewilsons
on twitter at https://twitter.com/familiarwilsons
and on Youtube
Contact us! superfamiliarwilsons@gmail.com

We are part of a network of Gainesville Podcasts...check it out and listen to more great content. The ImaGNVille Podcast Network: www.ImaGNVille.com

Josh Wilson:

exciting new branding for the Wilsons.

Amanda Wilson:

Let's go

Josh Wilson:

Welcome to super familiar with the Wilsons. I'm Josh,

Amanda Wilson:

I'm Amanda.

Josh Wilson:

Amanda. I am so excited for today's show. We got so many things to talk about and to do...so let's get right to it.

Amanda Wilson:

I'm excited because you wouldn't let me do any research or listen to any of the things so this is brand new for me.

Josh Wilson:

Well, I mean, I just wanted to I know you've had a really stressful week. So I wanted to take the pressure off and just let you lay back and enjoy. Oh God, not...

Amanda Wilson:

moving on. And enjoy..Birthdays this week in 1918 Audra Lindy was born this week. Do you know who Audra? Lindy was? Did she invent the Lindy Hop?

Josh Wilson:

She was Helen Roper on Three's Company. Oh, well, maybe

Amanda Wilson:

she invented the Lindy Hop. Do

Josh Wilson:

you remember threes company?

Amanda Wilson:

I do. It was a little bit before my time and just too chaotic for me, but

Josh Wilson:

it was hysterical. All right. In 90 john six. I said jack that was his character, right? Yeah, but also his friends called him jack. I don't know if that's true. In 1926 john Coltrane was born. saxophonist musician, the Love Supreme 1930. Another very famous accomplished musician. Ray Charles was born love it. In 1947. This week, Stephen King was born

Amanda Wilson:

Happy Birthday Stephen King.

Josh Wilson:

If if you have a chance bump on over to Stephen King's Twitter. He's very entertaining.

Amanda Wilson:

I do enjoy the Stephen King Twitter

Josh Wilson:

In 1950. BillMurray was born.

Amanda Wilson:

You do love the Bill Murray.

Josh Wilson:

I do. Did you know that he was sorry. It lives first replacement cast member?

Amanda Wilson:

No, I did not know that.

Josh Wilson:

1970 this week on ANi DiFranco singer musician was born. And in 1975 Most important of all, Juan Montoya was born Indy 500 winner in 2020 15 Happy Birthday everyone.

Amanda Wilson:

Wait, he he would Oh 2015 I was I swear to God, I was like 2025 has not happened yet. Are you predicting the future? It has been a rough

Josh Wilson:

week. It very much. I we did some good things this week though. But before we get to that, it's time for another installment of Josh is getting old. Just

Amanda Wilson:

old?

Josh Wilson:

Yes. That's right. This week I turned my attention to noticing the things on me that are Bustan that are breaking. So this week, Amanda and you were there you know this I woke up and I discovered I had a deep deep canyon like line impressed on my head.

Amanda Wilson:

Yes. But I didn't discover it until you had been awake for like well over an hour. It was just still it was there.

Josh Wilson:

I have the sleep headphones and I was using my air pods but they're very uncomfortable sleeping I like to sleep. I like to move around. And and if you have your head against the pillow with an air pod on extremely uncomfortable, so I went searching for a sleep head device. You have one it's fancy. It's basically a headband that goes over your ears and the speakers are flat and it's very comfortable. So I sleep with it. I usually listen to podcasts to fall asleep, usually the same one or two podcasts. And I guess this thing had been on my head for most of the night and it left this deep canyon like furrow in my head. But the alarming thing wasn't that because that's expected. The alarming thing is that that thing stayed in my head all day. And

Amanda Wilson:

to clarify by that thing, you don't mean the headphones You mean that deep crevice it made and what's confusing to me about it is you sleep in that every night and you usually have it on for a good portion of the night. You also don't know that I then wake up at night and go and turn the speakers down on it because it's so loud. And I'll wake up and someone is yelling at me from inside your head. So I have to go turn it down.

Josh Wilson:

psychiatrists please give us a call dm us. That's right. My skin now has gotten to the point where it just doesn't pop back anymore.

Amanda Wilson:

No, it's like memory foam.

Josh Wilson:

I guess so but I look like an old pair that someone had left in their lunchbox all day.

Amanda Wilson:

I think children take pairs to lunch anymore. That's another way that you're showing your age now we do packed a whole pair and your lunchbox

Josh Wilson:

so that that happening and again and another sign that I'm just stuffs breaking my mind is sharp as a thing but

Amanda Wilson:

sharp Things

Josh Wilson:

you were That's right. What else happened this week? We went over to someone's house this week.

Amanda Wilson:

Yeah, we had a lovely nice dinner engagement with some fellow podcasting friends.

Josh Wilson:

We went and saw Nate Hensley and his wife, Jamie, they are have a scary Home Companion podcast, which is an exceptional podcast. I absolutely recommend it. But it made me think I'm, as you know, I'm kind of socially awkward.

Amanda Wilson:

I don't think you're socially awkward. I think that you're socially reserved.

Josh Wilson:

Okay. I stress out about every little social thing. So I don't know what we call that. There's a social anxiety, maybe of social anxiety. Yes. And so I never know when it's appropriate to leave

Amanda Wilson:

that. Yes, but so do you think that we stayed too long?

Josh Wilson:

See, I don't know Nate and Jamie, did we stay too long. But I do stress about that. And I kind of wish either whenever you were hanging out with someone that we can agree on a time Okay, at nine o'clock, we're done here. Our appointment is done. Right? Or if there were a socially accepted clue that like I like it, like a second long table, like a social safe word, maybe. Where everyone involved knows, knows. Okay, now, now's the time. So I looked that up. And the only thing I could find is that if you're in the Midwest, and those of you who listen in the Midwest, we have some listeners in Chicago and the like you tell me if this is true, because this is off the internet. But apparently, if you're in the Midwest, and you're hanging out with someone, and let's say you're sitting down and you slap your knees, and you say well, oh, yeah, no, that's

Amanda Wilson:

a sign that it's time. Really, you

Josh Wilson:

knew that? That's,

Amanda Wilson:

I think that's a southern thing. Okay. Well, they

Josh Wilson:

were saying that it's not but anyway, so can I start using that?

Amanda Wilson:

Sure. But is that just like that's like, well, you guys need to get out of my house now. Or? Well, we gotta go now.

Josh Wilson:

I think it's pretty useful for either, right? We

Amanda Wilson:

don't have people over at the house. So do you think we could try it with the children?

Josh Wilson:

Now we we have to keep them? That's not that's not a choice. But we had a lovely time. We did. We did have a lovely time.

Amanda Wilson:

I don't think that we left, too, too late. Because Jamie and I have done nothing but continue our conversation. all weekend via Instagram instant message about the conversation. We were continuing to have Friday night. So we had a lovely time. It was nice to socialize with people and know that we were being safe speaking about not being safe. I've been back home on quarantine with the four year old this week because they've had a positive case in his classroom, and everybody had to quarantine which is absolutely what should happen. But it felt like Groundhog's Day, friends, we had done it for 18 months, we spent about three weeks going into school, I spent about three weeks getting dressed like putting on makeup doing hair in the morning. And then we stopped doing it again for the week. And let me tell you, by the end of the week, he and I were both ready to see other people. It was time for us to spend time with other people and get out of this house. So I'm very thankful that he gets to go back on Monday. hoping that that will not happen again.

Josh Wilson:

Yeah, I was. We don't have to get into this because I do want to kind of keep this light. But I was filled with rage at how that whole thing happened. And so folks, just please, please, please, please get your vaccine. Where am I mask? socially distance do all those things that that will count you amongst the responsible parties in our society.

Amanda Wilson:

Yes, please. Our babies cannot protect themselves. They do not have a choice. We have choices. Please make smart ones.

Josh Wilson:

Speaking of protecting yourself and I meant to mention this to you this morning because I was just reading about it. You have Apple devices and if you haven't already iOS Yeah, update update the whatever is whatever you have your device, your phone and also your computer. It's a critical update. People can take over your hack your phone hack your computer without you doing anything. So

Amanda Wilson:

how it that's like some weird Voodoo. How does that happen? I

Josh Wilson:

don't know not here to give that answer. Have no idea but just go ahead and do that security update. And it got me thinking about Apple products in general. And why? Why do we choose Apple over other things, especially now and so I did a little research you know what computers are better? What I What, what iPhones, listen to me. brands are better. I'm brainwashed what computers are better. What phones are better and technology has pretty much caught up.

Amanda Wilson:

It has for me though because I use Apple products at work and we have Apple products at the house to me It's more user friendly and more intuitive. Now, could I learn Android stuff? I'm certain kind of learn PC stuff. Sure. But it's what feels comfortable. And maybe that's just my, my age and or anxiety.

Josh Wilson:

I don't know that. I mean, that's pretty legitimate. But I also know that on the other end of it, there's people who use Microsoft products, who would say that that's easier for them to use, because that's what they've always used, you know, for them. That's intuitive. And I think that there's a certain cachet, or there has been with Apple product, what's brand

Amanda Wilson:

loyalty, right? Like, if you look fancy, and then you have brand loyalty? Yeah. And

Josh Wilson:

that that, you know, we have a some teenagers and the whole idea of, of having the luxury thing. You know, that's that has cachet. Wouldn't you say that that's the thing.

Amanda Wilson:

I would say that two out of our three probably care about that. But I mean, specifically, the 14 year old was definitely into that. However, she started talking to me the other day about this folding phone that Samsung has or somebody has, it's an it's an Android phone. And she thought it was pretty cool. I think maybe, because it's kind of throwing it back to the 90s, which is really a very big thing right now. But maybe also, it just looks cool.

Josh Wilson:

But I would say in general things that are considered Luxe or luxury. There's a certain cachet to that, that speaks less to the quality of the of the actual product than it speaks to how it makes you feel.

Amanda Wilson:

Oh, absolutely. I remember being very upset. So when I was when I was younger, I went to a private school. But my mom worked at the school to be able to afford for me to go to the private school. And but I was with a lot of people who, you know, money was not an issue. And they had all the brand name things now I can throw it way back and show my age and say they had the swatch watches and the Coca Cola, polo shirts and all those things in the Gucci jeans and the Oh, what was it? What? Bongo I can't remember. But anyway, and I wanted, I was very upset that we were buying like the generic version of things at the grocery store. And now I just cringe thinking back about that. But yeah, I mean, it's definitely a thing. I think that I feel just because of my experience parenting one and being one. teenage girls might be the most susceptible target group for that.

Josh Wilson:

I'm banking that that's not the case. Yeah. Because now we're going to talk a little bit about the Wilson's podcast pre branding. Okay, so I've been listening also to different podcasts I've been really getting into there's a new podcast app called good pods. we've downloaded it. And it's a cross between podcasting app, but also social media. So you can comment on different episodes, you can like the episodes. And as a result of doing this, I've been listening to a lot of different podcasts. And I will say that podcasts that have a certain sound a certain professional veneer are a lot easier for me to get into than ones that don't, you know, and so, no, no. And it's it's a vibe, it's like a type of music. It's a way that the people present themselves. It is for lack of a better word. And for purposes of this discussion, like luxury, it is they go all out their production is wonderful. So this is what we're going to do. We're going to rebrand, super familiar with the Wilsons as a luxury podcast.

Amanda Wilson:

Okay, so we are no longer the generic version of the podcast. That is

Josh Wilson:

correct. Okay. If you will, I'm going to give you a little taste of what that's going to be like alright, writing.

Amanda Wilson:

She says throw a mouthful of wine because I feel like I need this to prepare for whatever is about to happen.

Josh Wilson:

Hello, Amanda, shall we podcast?

Amanda Wilson:

Let's go.

Josh Wilson:

Welcome to quite acquainted with the Wilsons.

Amanda Wilson:

Nelson's are gonna hate you.

Josh Wilson:

I'm Jay Vanderbilt Wilson. And on today's program, we're going to speak about the latest news of course talking about how our crypto logical currency is doing quite well. As such, we will never have to denigrate ourselves with going into Walmart or whole foods with those wretched middle class 1000 heirs. And then I'm going to tell an amusing little anecdote about what happened when I went to put a down payment for admission to Yale and Harvard for our lovely children. Muffy in Winthrop Wilson. Alright, what do you what do you think about that Amanda?

Amanda Wilson:

That's a Luxe super posh So I figure

Josh Wilson:

that that's going to be the way that's work. That's gonna we're gonna we're gonna hook them that way. Who are

Amanda Wilson:

you? Are you gonna break the news of the children that they are Muffy and Winthrop now?

Josh Wilson:

I mean, they'll find out all right with the different websites and when they go to Yale and Harvard ad campaigns and whatnot, we already don't say their names now. Right? Actually From now on, they're gonna be my four year old by the way. Oh, goodness. So anyway, that's just some thoughts that are going around in my head just to increase our listenership. We're going Lux I,

Amanda Wilson:

I like it. It's It's It's a choice. Which was where maybe choices

Josh Wilson:

you read what happened with levar. Burton?

Amanda Wilson:

No. Does he get to be the Jeopardy? host? No. In fact, he's

Josh Wilson:

being interviewed by Trevor Noah. And he said he's glad he didn't get it. Oh, really? Yeah. He said that he thought that he wanted it. And really what he wanted was like he was enjoying the competition of it. Yeah. But that he's happy. He didn't get it. Now. I don't know if he's, if this is a realization that he's coming to later and it's so or if he's just putting a positive spin on it. Yeah. But I just want LeVar Burton to be my best friend.

Amanda Wilson:

I love LeVar Burton, let me talk to you about how important Reading Rainbow was to me as a child. And also, how old is this gentleman because he does not look like he ages.

Josh Wilson:

I don't know. But he he sounds the same. And I mean, he's got gray, but otherwise he looks to satisfy.

Amanda Wilson:

And he was I was little and he was doing Reading Rainbow so. Oh, man. I loved Reading Rainbow so much.

Josh Wilson:

I want LeVar Burton to come back. Not Steve. I mean, it was nice that we saw Steve from Blue's Clues a little bit. Yeah, but LeVar Burton is the one that they need to bring back.

Amanda Wilson:

Well, because Steve wasn't for us. Steve was for like the 20 something year olds right now.

Josh Wilson:

Oh my gosh. So you're saying that Steve was there? LeVar Burton, because we absolutely got the better end of the deal.

Amanda Wilson:

Yeah. 100%. So let me do let me say this though, Blue's Clues. So we've been Blue's Clues started before we had kids. But I mean, I experienced to the first time around when MFI was little. And it um, we went through Steam, we went through Joe, then we went through now there's a new blue, and you and it's Josh as his name. But Blue's Clues has always been incredibly. What's the word? I'm looking for progressive, and inclusive. And they have they do some really great things for Pride Month. And I just I applaud Nickelodeon and the producers and really just politicals is one of the shows I could watch with the kids and be happy that I'm watching it.

Josh Wilson:

Yeah, for my two oldest sons, the 21 year old and the 18 year old. They did watch it. And they were into it. And I didn't mind it then. I found Steve to be a little his personality was different. He was sedate as opposed to just really bouncing off the walls and out there and so he's not Blippi No, he's not Blippi but even back then for children's programming. It was a little bit different to me. It was his his attitude. He was kind of like the emo Mr. Rogers.

Amanda Wilson:

Yeah, that's a good way of putting it. Yeah. So

Josh Wilson:

but all of that is to say LeVar Burton, want to be your friend. Man, we're gonna take a look at a subject and maybe learn a little bit and then have a little game based on that subject in this little segment that I called becoming super familiar with ASMR now, I will say that before we get started, this will be either one of our most loved sections of our episode or most hated. It will absolutely be divisive, but I think that everyone will have strong feelings on it.

Amanda Wilson:

It's polarizing. Okay. I think ASMR is weird. I think that it I don't like it when people whisper at me. I don't like it when Alexa whispers I don't like it when I don't like it. I don't want to hear people chewing things or I don't know. So my understanding of ASMR is it it's this auditory thing that's supposed to stimulate some sort of pleasure receptors. Whether or not that's like a sexual thing. I don't think so. It's just supposed to like comfort you and soothe you and feel good and it's I just think it's kind of great be

Josh Wilson:

so that's what I thought too. Okay, the the part about noise but it's not just limited to sounds or noise in fact, ASMR It stands for Autonomous Sensory Meridian. In response, and so it's the thing, it describes the thing that happens to your body when you receive these stimuli. And it can be touch, it can be something that you see like these videos most satisfying,

Amanda Wilson:

satisfying. Yeah, I can, I can kind of drive with a satisfying videos, though.

Josh Wilson:

Okay, so, so then you understand this, or at least, maybe you have a beginning of understanding it. And so it's described as, quote, a tingling sensation that typically begins on the scalp and moves down the back of the neck and upper spine. Now what this reminds me of is, and I did it last night to you is the thing that we used to do as kids because we had nothing better to do, we did not have iPhones is the thing where you pretend to break an egg on someone's head. So you put your fist on the top of the person's head from behind, and you kind of tap it and then with both hands, you you lightly trace your fingers down there, the back of their head and the sides of their face. And if someone did that to me, You bet I would get all tingling in and and it would be it would definitely engender a response.

Amanda Wilson:

You did it to me yesterday, and I got chills just on my left leg. So apparently, just the left side of my body is into this whatever Meridian Response, this is,

Josh Wilson:

okay, well, I'm I'm looking up left leg, hang on for a second, folks Be patient. Anyway, as I was talking to the 21 year old, he thinks that common usage now just refers to auditory. Yeah. And I'm not going to argue that with him because language and meanings of words change with usage, they evolve, and that's fine. I'm just telling you that ASMR, when you're talking about it scientifically, it's referring to the response that you have to stimuli. And the response that you have, in this case is always relaxing and calming. It is not in this, in this definition is not sexual.

Amanda Wilson:

Okay, so it's a it's a physical response of your body to sensory stimuli. And it can be any of your senses is what you're saying. Yeah. And

Josh Wilson:

the response is defined as this feeling of relaxation, but then also this, this tingling sensation, that's some people like into, like carbonation on the skin, or so interesting. Now, we're going to talk about it in the context of sounds of noise. That is the most common thing of course, we have these ASMR videos and these ASMR audio things that people can get. There's about a billion ASMR podcasts they sell ASMR microphones. Yes, I've seen that. And they sell these microphones that's basically like a cylinder. And on either side is a is a fake plastic ear. Oh, gosh.

Amanda Wilson:

I saw that in Good Mythical Morning. I think probably.

Josh Wilson:

Now, when we are talking about noises and repetitive noises, I have I am self diagnosed as having misophonia. Which is which literally means a hatred of sound. So I don't like repetitive noises. I don't like certain sounds. I don't like tapping noises. I don't like whispering or hearing people breathe or my god people eat? Can not with that mess.

Amanda Wilson:

The thing? You don't have any other people living in this house with you?

Josh Wilson:

Yes, exactly. And so what I have is the opposite of ASMR. You're gonna hate ASMR. Well, so what I've done here is I've constructed some ASMR files for you to listen to, okay, you're not going to listen to them. I mean, they're going to be on the podcast, but you're going to tell us your response to the sound. Okay? How it makes you feel, okay. And then you can tell me what it is. Some of these are very, so it's

Amanda Wilson:

okay, I'll give you my automatic response to it. And then I try to figure out what the message is. Okay, got it.

Josh Wilson:

Yeah, and just by way of definition, some of the other things that can trigger ASMR Of course, listening to whispering is while like it, listening to quiet, repetitive sounds, watching someone attentively execute a mundane task, like preparing food or something.

Amanda Wilson:

Yeah, the things that are like those satisfying videos though for me, like there's weird ones where they're cutting soap and the soap like falls away or whatever, and that's cool. And I but it doesn't make me feel tingly. I just is it relaxing? Cool. So I think that there I think I have experienced this and let me really quickly give us analogy. So when Hollywood Studios it Disney World, was MGM Studios when it first opened. There was an experience that Dolby sponsored. Sure. And the quick gist of it. Is that you went into a sound booth by yourself or with one or two other people put on these headphones, the room the sound booth got dark, dimly lit. And then you listened to this little like vignette and it was that you were going to go get your hair cut. And so the sound would be in stereo. But then also, when they it's the thing that you were talking about, so the sound would move. So it would be like this, the scissors cutting on this side of your head, and then it would move around. So the sound would move, and then the blow dryer and it was like you could feel and that that made me have that experience of kind of like chills and like you felt like you were actually feeling the blow dryer. And so that was a pretty cool kind of, you know, innovative thing that was happening in the mid 90s. So I think this is I understand what you're talking about. But that was much cooler than watching somebody with or listening somebody whispered to me on YouTube.

Josh Wilson:

Okay, so here's some other ones that they say receiving personal attention, such as grooming or makeup application or hair brushing. And interestingly enough, take this back to how this might be an evolutionary thing. You know, like monkeys and chimps that that sit there and and groom each other for a long time. They may be tying that to a, an activity that is meant to to calm the other critters in the herd or whatever. And so that's a super interesting thing.

Amanda Wilson:

I like to have my hairbrush. Okay, well, yeah, I

Josh Wilson:

do know that. Yes. Listening to tapping typically nails onto services such as plastic wood, paper metal that drives me crazy. So I shine to be doing it. hand movements, especially into one's face. Why don't like moving your hand into my face? Yeah, I could do that. Listening to certain types of music while of course, listening, a person blower exhale into a microphone. Which by the way, sometimes we just bought these little wind screens for our for our microphones, because I assume that sometimes it's just distracting. How especially me I'm just like, like breathing so heavy. And then listening to crinkly items such as paper or clothes. And again, that just gives me the willies. Thinking about

Amanda Wilson:

you know what I hate? I hate paper being rubbed on carpet. Why is that a thing? I know. I don't know. But I hate that sound. So this could this is quickly becoming sounds I hate instead of sounds I recognize you're

Josh Wilson:

welcome. So maybe you'll hate these sounds. Okay, so the first sound that I want you to hear? Is this one.

Amanda Wilson:

Okay, that 100% maybe have chills down my neck and I honestly was really thinking none of this was gonna affect

Josh Wilson:

me. Did you enjoy that sound? Kind of that super interesting. What do you think? At first

Amanda Wilson:

I thought it was like a dog breathing heavily, but I think it's like a pencil.

Josh Wilson:

Sketching more specific place. Oh, well,

Amanda Wilson:

I need to hear the sound again, Alex. I don't know what that like other little sound in there is but that's the one that's getting me. It sounds like a pencil on a sketchpad.

Josh Wilson:

It is me signing my name while chewing gum.

Amanda Wilson:

Okay, so these are home grown ASMR clips. Like I thought you were just snagging in them off the internet. No, no, no, we're luck's around here. Okay, so I actually really enjoyed the scribbling sound, but that little like the chewing of the gum is what made me get all kind of like, I guess it did make me feel away, but it wasn't pleasant. Can I get one of those clips without the chewing of the gum, please?

Josh Wilson:

We'll see. All right, here's the next sound. Alright.

Amanda Wilson:

Well, it's interesting. It didn't make me feel any kind of response like physically. But it's it's interesting because it sounds like it's getting closer. And that's cool. Like I liked the progression of it. So I enjoyed that. I don't know what it sounds like somebody walking in the leaves toward me on a cool autumn day.

Josh Wilson:

Close. That's me scratching my arm after realizing that I got bit by ants while I was sitting outside eating my lunch at work.

Amanda Wilson:

Sorry, that happened. See? Okay. I like kind of liked it. But Okay, here we go.

Unknown:

Next, next.

Amanda Wilson:

What is that? Okay, I didn't have a physical response to it. Now. Now I'm just focused. The first ones you only want to have a physical response to now I'm just focusing on what the sound is and I can't discern it.

Josh Wilson:

That shouldn't matter it. If it's going to evoke a response. It'll evoke a response. And now I'm just trying to figure out what it is. This is me rubbing my beard as I try to figure out who to bench in my fantasy football league. This Week.

Amanda Wilson:

Oh, okay. All right. You think I would recognize that one because you rub your beard a lot.

Josh Wilson:

Which by the way, it's not looking good this week. Last week I cleaned up I did very well, this week, not so much because you talked about it last week. I think it's because I overthought it I rubbed my beard too much. Alright, next page. Here we go.

Amanda Wilson:

Okay. That's you breathing heavily. But I had a response to that because you have done this to me. Like when we're laying in bed, and you're all like, getting, like, frustrated at me for like, not turning my phone off or something like this noise. I know. Did it elicit a response? It did, but not a relaxing one.

Josh Wilson:

Alright, so what do you feel? So that's actually me thinking about what sound to make next.

Amanda Wilson:

Okay, but it's definitely using like breathing heavily and being like, yes, yes. Okay. This is noise. I

Josh Wilson:

know. Okay. All right. And then lastly, this sound Oh, God, I hate it. You are so squirming right now. You're so uncomfortable right now. Let's listen to it again.

Amanda Wilson:

You can't see my toes curling under like I'm squeezing my toes. I hate the zoo much. Okay. Um, is that you like? That noise with your with your mouth?

Unknown:

Can you please describe the noise? where you put your finger in your mouth and you go like that? Is

Amanda Wilson:

that what you were doing?

Josh Wilson:

No. Is there water involved? That is me blowing spit bubbles.

Amanda Wilson:

l L. Okay, well, that's why I had a scrubby response. Why does ASMR have to be unhygenic scratch on bug bites and blow and spit bubbles?

Josh Wilson:

That's just my ASMR and so that's a little bit about this. Maybe you learned whether you enjoy it or not? Me I don't but clearly there are some things that you respond favorably to you're in your knees signing my name that's it. That's the only one I responded favorably to the other one just made me kind of like cringe a little bit. If you've had any experience with ASMR please let us know go to Twitter to at familiar Wilson's reached out to us on Twitter. We're most active on Twitter. We're on Facebook and Instagram and email and this and that and all of those are in our show notes wherever you've gotten this podcast, but Twitter's where we're most active.

Amanda Wilson:

You can see pictures of what was his name Worthington. But only like the back of his head. what's the what's the kid's name now? Whittington? Worthington?

Josh Wilson:

Winthrop,

Amanda Wilson:

Winthrop. Yeah, you can go over there you can see pictures of the pop. You can see the back of Winthrop, Ted. It's a good time on Twitter.

Josh Wilson:

That's our show for today. But before we leave you, we want to ask you to subscribe to our show. If you aren't subscribed already. That way, it'll just come to you automatically. You don't have to go looking for it. And also tell your friends. We want your friends. Now I want to thank people from the following cities. The last few episodes we've had an explosion of listeners. And so we want to thank our listeners in Cornwall, in London, and Livingston West Lothian in Birmingham and Liverpool and Canton, Michigan, Orlando, Florida St. George Utah. Peterborough, Peterborough. I think that's in Russia. Burlington, Ontario, Medicine Hat, Alberta. Santa Cruz, California. Germantown, Maryland. Baltimore, Maryland Helsinki, somewhere. Where's that? Where's Helsinki?

Amanda Wilson:

I don't think he's in like a Scandinavian country, isn't it?

Josh Wilson:

Wow, we are so uneducated. Why are you listening to find out where you are? DeLand, Florida, Finland. There you go. DeLand, Florida, Frankfurt, Tel Aviv, St. John's, Florida, Jacksonville and slouch to name but a few. Thank you, all of you people. And we are greedy. We want more listeners. Tell your friends. Tell your friends, tell. Tell your neighbors, tell your co workers listen to us at work. Listen to us around the water cooler. The music you are listening to now is a repetitive sound that I do love. And all the music in today's episode was a Josh Wilson production. So hope you enjoy that. So until next week. Go be nice. Do it. Bye bye. And berming in Burma and Birmingham and Liverpool in Canton, Michigan, Orlando, Florida, St. George, Utah.