- 4/22/2025
The Bread Master calls in to check on Steve's sourdough and reveals that he's now a TikTok influencer.
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00:00This Saturday, the Keswick Theatre is going to light up with the comedy stylings of our next guest.
00:07He's a friend of the show. We love having him on. He's one of my absolute favorite.
00:10Please give some love to Mr. Tom Popp.
00:12Hey, hey, hey, hey!
00:14This morning.
00:15Yay!
00:15Yay!
00:16It's early. Hi, Tom.
00:18Yay!
00:20Nice to see you, sir. Tom's joining us via Zoom this morning. You look bright-eyed and bushy-tailed.
00:25Thank you. Nice to see you.
00:26Yeah, well, you know, you have a Cracker Jack staff over there. Casey sent me a reminder that we have the interview today at 4.30 a.m.
00:36It's better than nothing!
00:39He knows I was sitting there waiting for confirmation in the middle of the night here in L.A.
00:46I imagine you sitting, like, in a big lounge chair with a little glass of scotch and just waiting, just anticipating the moment at which you get to talk to us.
00:57Stroking my cat, when will they call?
00:59Like Blofeld.
01:01You know, I talked to Tom five minutes ago in the other room, and I told him that I failed at my job, and then you brought it on air.
01:11Well, see, this wouldn't be an issue if you were East Coast.
01:14Yeah.
01:14You know, but I...
01:15I know. It makes me very angry. I was like, every time I come on, I'm like, well, next time when I come through, I'm coming in the studio for crying out loud.
01:22Yeah.
01:22And I've got to be in Nashville the night before, so it always blows up.
01:26Well, the draw, obviously, was you love to surf, and that's why you ended up out there.
01:31Yeah. I'm big into surfing. I love yoga. I'm doing the 1970s version of California.
01:40Yeah.
01:40Exactly. The end of the summer.
01:42Everybody else has moved on. I'm walking around with my chest hair out, gold chains just hanging with my spooky cobweb body hair.
01:51It's funny you mention that, because there's a commercial with Mark Spitz on now. It's for some sort of, you know, a colonoscopy in a box or something like that.
02:01But Mark Spitz was like that, exactly what you just... The matted chest hair and the medallions.
02:07There's actually, there's a line in the song, Macho Man, from the classic village people, where he goes, you see all this hair on my chest?
02:16I'm like, wow, man, that was really, yeah, that was it.
02:20That's over the thing.
02:22There was definitely a thing.
02:22People were turned on by that, I guess.
02:25So, Tom, you're going to be at the Keswick on Saturday, and I feel like you're almost exclusively, when you come to this area,
02:32almost exclusively, you play at the Keswick Theater, and I'm not sure if that is, you know, your choice, management, or, you know,
02:40but I just, A, I love that.
02:42It's a great theater.
02:42It's a great theater.
02:43So good.
02:43It's a great little town and everything like that.
02:44Yeah, I like the town.
02:45So do you inform your booking manager where you want to play?
02:50Yeah, it's kind of like a back and forth conversation, but I do love that place, and they kind of cultivated me coming up,
02:57and the real reason I wanted to go back, especially this time, was the Keswick was the last show I did before the pandemic.
03:07Oh, wow.
03:08That was, I remember, I was in the lobby.
03:10I was signing books.
03:11You know, at the end of my shows, I sign books and meet the people, and I was out there, and people were like,
03:16should we shake hands?
03:17Is this okay?
03:18And everybody was all kind of screwy, and then I got on the plane the next morning.
03:23It's 6 o'clock in the morning.
03:24I'm on the plane, and I'm like, wow, this is getting weird.
03:27I wonder if I'm going to be doing stand-up next week.
03:30And Paula Poundstone, great comedian Paula Poundstone, comes onto the plane, and she sees me,
03:37and she just leans in and goes, where F?
03:41No, it's funny you say that because that's happening a lot.
03:45This Friday, I'm hosting a charity event for the Morse Animal Refuge here in Philadelphia.
03:51It was the last event that night, you know, a big gala.
03:56I remember everyone had that same sort of, what's going on here?
04:00What's going on?
04:01Things were going on.
04:02I lost an iPad that night, so I remember, you know, the whole thing.
04:06And this Friday, it's like, the sense is we're picking up where we left off because it's the first event back of that nature,
04:13which is kind of, it feels right.
04:15Yeah, it does, and it feels like a milestone for sure.
04:20I'm a little concerned.
04:21I thought you said I lost my eye patch.
04:26It turned out I realized I have a functional second eye.
04:30And I, why have I been wearing this?
04:33People say the pandemic's bad, but I was able to use both eyes for the first time.
04:39It's a joy.
04:41Oh, man.
04:41But the theater thing.
04:43Yeah, but I'm really psyched for sure.
04:45And it's, there's only, there's only some tickets left.
04:47There's not, I came on because I really want to sell the place out.
04:51I just want it to be like this triumphant kind of like return.
04:54Well, you're a dear friend of the show, so we, please help Tom realize his goal.
05:00And honestly, you're so good at what you do.
05:04And I think over the, over this period, which no one would want to say, hey, I hope we have
05:09a pandemic, but I think what you do, how you've done it, the way you've approached thematically
05:15your shows, I think it's meant a lot to people.
05:18So I'm sure you've got, you know, people will need to seize upon this opportunity to
05:23see you live after all this time.
05:25It is funny that now that I've been out for, for a bit and you know, you do see all the
05:30people when I, like I said, I signed books at the end of every show and I get to see
05:34all these people that have been like, they travel, like, you know, I used to just kind
05:37of skip out the back.
05:39Right.
05:39Now you're actually sitting and signing books and people come up and you forget like, oh,
05:43we traveled and we stayed in a hotel and we came from six hours and we flew in from
05:47Toronto.
05:48And the thing I keep hearing is that my Netflix special, you're doing great.
05:52Yeah.
05:54Was like therapy for people during the pandemic, like, cause it was kind of upbeat.
05:58It was very optimistic.
05:59Like you're doing great.
06:00We're going to get through this.
06:01And even the book was, you're doing great and even reasons and reasons to stay alive
06:06and other reasons to stay alive.
06:08And I didn't, I was just writing it, but I didn't realize it was like, became like a
06:13self-help book and a self-help special.
06:15It's, it's brilliant.
06:16And there's sometimes it's weird when you experience like a blowback, uh, from a desire
06:22to feel good and see the glasses half full.
06:24It's, it's, it's, it's how we survive as a species.
06:28And Preston was just talking about, we had a segment about long despair and, and, and all
06:33of the people who are still, who are just in the throes of dealing with all this stuff.
06:37That's the service you provide.
06:39It is a release.
06:40A comedy has always helped me throughout my life.
06:44Whether I was watching Bugs Bunny cartoons or whatever, going through a bad time, uh, it, it, it does heal.
06:49And so it's, it's gotta be very good for you to see those people smiling and reacting
06:54to you that way.
06:55A hundred percent, a hundred percent.
06:57And it's, you know, I named the tour, this, the tour that I'm on the family reunion tour.
07:02And I really feel like it's the, it's the family that I want to be with when I'm on the
07:09road and see all of the people.
07:12I, I literally was starting to say the other night on stage, I was like, remember back in
07:16the pandemic when they said we couldn't hang out with our families?
07:19They said, we actually couldn't see our families for like a year.
07:22Wow.
07:23Those are the good old.
07:27So, um, I think we may have discussed this before, but if not, um, your, uh, your standup
07:33is huge on TikTok right now.
07:35Um, and so I'm wondering if that has ended up, um, um, as far as your audience is concerned,
07:42is your audience trending younger these days as a result?
07:45So, you know, it's interesting that there, there are younger people showing up, which
07:50is very cool.
07:52It's like, you know, because their parents already know me and now the young people know
07:57me.
07:57And, and also when I was doing the NPR show, when I was doing right from here, which was
08:02the Perry home thing, I, uh, that was another thing that like the whole family could listen
08:07to.
08:07So the coolest thing is when people come up and it's like, uh, the mom and the dad and
08:13like two 15 year olds, you know, and it's like, yeah, it's very cool.
08:17The, uh, yeah, Casey, actually you tipped me off on the TikTok trend that was, that was
08:23happening for a while.
08:23Yeah.
08:24You're talking about like, you know, growing people and I mean, yeah, you'd see it constantly
08:28in the stream.
08:29You still do.
08:30Yeah.
08:30Yeah.
08:31Yeah.
08:31I had this line, uh, um, I made my own people.
08:35Have you, have you, have you ever made your own people?
08:37I've made my own people and I'm their leader.
08:40And all of these, all of these moms started taking it and lip syncing it and like showing
08:46their kids, like doing, like picking their nose or scratching their ass.
08:50Have you made your own people?
08:52I have.
08:54And it became this trend.
08:56And I was like the, the joy of being able to tell my 16 year old daughter that I was
09:02a trend on TikTok.
09:05Top that.
09:06Yeah.
09:07Yeah.
09:07She was so angry.
09:10And you know, we're all kind of students of comedy and fans of comedy.
09:13And, and I love just like everybody else in the room, the Netflix special was therapeutic
09:18and funny.
09:19But when you watch something at home, uh, you usually like kind of chuckle to yourself a
09:23little bit, maybe laugh if you're watching with somebody, but you don't know what I'm
09:26there's not like the double overlap or that you get at a live experience.
09:30And so I love going to clubs.
09:31I love going to like the Keswick and seeing comedy shows there.
09:34I've seen, you know, I saw Saget there.
09:36I saw Mike Barbiglia.
09:37So I'm curious as to like, when you perform live, getting that type of reaction versus
09:41getting the, um, Hey, that made me laugh type of thing.
09:45Like actually seeing people laugh, you know, the difference that I'm trying to explain.
09:49Yeah, no, it's, it's a huge thing.
09:51I, I, I was talking about this the other day that I feel like, um, we need to have a
09:56return of comedies film.
09:58Yeah.
09:59Like when we were kids, they were throwing so much comedy at us, like a comedies, B list,
10:04C list.
10:05They were just showing earnest goes to camp and, you know, revenge of the nerds.
10:10I mean, they just kept throwing comedies at us.
10:12And a lot of them were terrible, but we all went to the movie theater and sat there and
10:16watched and when you're, there's, there's this weird thing with human beings and this
10:22energy that connects us.
10:23And when you're in a theater and you start, you hear someone else laugh and then you laugh
10:28and then it connects to the other person and it's contagious.
10:30It's communal.
10:31Yeah, it's great.
10:32It really catches.
10:33When I do shows, I do like these corporate shows sometimes, you know, with a company like
10:37Microsoft will hire me to go do their thing.
10:40And the thing that they always screw up, which I literally have in my contract is no dance
10:45floor.
10:46Like you have to have people starting at the, at the stage.
10:50They used to put like a big dance floor and just that gap, just that gap between me and
10:56the audience.
10:56Like if you take 10 feet, you've killed it.
10:59You've killed the electricity chain.
11:01Right.
11:01So you've, but if you have the people up to the stage that laugh, my energy will connect
11:07to those people, which will spread through the theater.
11:09Hey, do you pick up on distinct laughers in the crowd?
11:13Because some people really stand out with, with their laugh.
11:17And if so, do you kind of target them if you can?
11:21Yeah.
11:21Well, I don't target them, but it's definitely conscious.
11:24And the thing that I have to do is remind myself that just, just accept it as a real
11:30laugh.
11:30Okay.
11:31Because when you, when I was starting and I would hear someone like, I, the insecurity
11:38was they're fake laughing.
11:40Right.
11:40Right.
11:41They're mocking me.
11:43And, and then I would attack them and everyone in the audience is like, what are you doing
11:47that for?
11:48He, he likes the show the best.
11:50And I'm like, uh, he's not real.
11:53There are some people that have that ha ha ha, like, like cartoon, like it's written out
11:58ha ha ha.
11:58Like the Frankenstein monster has learned to laugh.
12:01Yeah.
12:01Exactly.
12:02But that's how they laugh.
12:03Yeah.
12:04Yeah.
12:04I mean, I, I'll have to like say something just to get it off my chest, you know, something
12:09like, you know, I don't know.
12:11Thanks for bringing you the, the, thanks for bringing your pet seal.
12:14Yeah.
12:15Right.
12:15I wonder what, what percentage of your audience now too, because you've got, you know, you've,
12:20you've built obviously the, the podcast and, and, and your various shows and, and all the
12:24things you're involved with.
12:25Um, have you ever done sort of a casual breakdown of who's there and what they're there?
12:30What was their entree to getting into Tom Papa?
12:32I know.
12:33I'm always so curious of it, but about it, but it's, it's weird to just like stop in the
12:38middle of a comedy show and be like, okay, we're going to take a little survey now.
12:42And who in here drove more than two hours?
12:46More than two hours?
12:48Where did you, because it's, it's very, it really is a very, it is a mystery.
12:52And I kind of like that it is a mystery.
12:53Right.
12:54But there's times when I'll go play like a performing arts center and this, I know these
12:59people are like parents, you know, they've got, they've got families and stuff.
13:04And I know they're not on TikTok.
13:06I know they're not even on Twitter.
13:08Right.
13:08And I'm like, and I've been tweeting about my show all week.
13:11And I'm like, how did you find out that I was here?
13:14If you're not on Twitter, you guys don't use Instagram.
13:18Where did you come from?
13:20I don't know.
13:21It's, I think it's just a combination of everything, I guess, over the years.
13:25Well, it's almost like the, the, uh, we've been, we've been digital, but we re-embraced
13:31some analog technology.
13:32You know, we remember that, yes, the word used to get out regardless of social media.
13:37And so that, that is something that, that is every bit as important.
13:40I mean, we here with terrestrial radio, which is still, you know, the big mofo, it's still,
13:46it still has something that, that connects in a, in a very, you know, soundtrack of your
13:52life kind of way.
13:53And, and your, even your, your podcast and, and, and your, your shows, they all have a,
13:57a regular radio feel to it.
14:00You know, you don't want to get that sense of community, it's that, it's that, it's
14:04that thing of like, we belong to something.
14:07Everybody wants that.
14:08Everybody wants to know that we belong to something.
14:11And I think that, that that's what's lost in some markets when they don't have really
14:15strong local radio.
14:17It's such a shame because you, you look forward to like, oh, the band is coming to our town.
14:22Yeah.
14:22Oh, we're celebrating this thing this week.
14:25We're getting together and looking for his eye patch.
14:30Why was I even wearing that?
14:34But you're right.
14:35And then you, when a band would come to town and they were playing your, your city and
14:39they would mention the last town, I was like, oh, them, like, like an old girlfriend, you
14:44know, because it's only, do you remember a time when, I mean, I know we have, we've
14:50mentioned the George Carlin picture behind you and I know he's, he's very important, you
14:55know, to you.
14:56Do you remember a time as an audience member where you had that gasping doubled over moment
15:03where you were responding to a comedian on stage?
15:07You mean in the past?
15:09Yeah.
15:09For your entire life.
15:11Yeah.
15:11I'll give you a good broad.
15:13Yeah.
15:13Time frame.
15:14There's, it's such a, comedy is such a funny thing that like, you could just be watching
15:18a bunch of people, especially like on YouTube now.
15:20Yeah.
15:20Like you'll watch, I'll watch people, watch different people at different times and you
15:25just like, like you said, like, oh, that's funny.
15:26You know, you just kind of chuckle.
15:28And I watched John Panette a couple of weeks ago.
15:31Right.
15:31And remember John Panette?
15:32Yeah.
15:33Yeah.
15:33Yeah.
15:34Man, he, and then he just hooked me and I'm alone in my room.
15:39Just literally, he got me.
15:41He like, and every line was making me laugh harder and I was trying not to laugh so I could
15:45hear the next line.
15:46And I was like, oh man, this is such a beautiful thing.
15:50This guy just up there yelling about corn dogs.
15:57But I always tend to, I like stuff like Carlin and I love like stuff that gets, has a little,
16:02a little meaning to it.
16:04But I also love, that was the thing I liked about Carlin was that he also combined it
16:07with being very silly.
16:09Yeah.
16:09Like in Carnegie Hall, like he would be talking about something heavy and political and all
16:12of a sudden he's pretending he's a crab.
16:16Walked across the stage.
16:18That's great.
16:18I'm always attracted to a silly because I have a very low IQ.
16:23Robert Klein was, was, I remember seeing Robert Klein when I was in college and, and
16:27that, that, you know, that was it, which you just described.
16:31There was, you know, he didn't dismiss that part of the audience that would respond well
16:36to that as, you know, cause it's, I'm sure you designed your act away in a way to hit
16:43different groups.
16:43You want to hit the largest group, but you also want to have people go, that was for me.
16:47You know?
16:48Yeah.
16:48I mean, you can't really plan it.
16:50You just gotta, you just gotta kind of do what you think is funny.
16:53Right.
16:53You just gotta do like, if, if it makes you laugh and then it's, and it all of a sudden
16:57it, it, it hits with a couple of people and yeah, it's, you can't really, really plan
17:03out.
17:03Like I want to try and get this group.
17:04Cause like you said, I don't even know who's out there.
17:06Right.
17:07I don't know.
17:07I don't know who's in the audience.
17:08Uh, it could just be, uh, you know, Shriners.
17:12Yeah.
17:14Yeah.
17:14Or all stoners.
17:15I have no idea.
17:17Do you still, um, pop into the clubs in, in, uh, LA when you're working on material and
17:23stuff?
17:23And how often?
17:24Yeah.
17:24Yeah.
17:24I'm going to the, uh, I'm going to the comedy store tonight.
17:27That's where I've been going mostly is comedy store in Largo.
17:30I just, and, uh, I'm so jealous of, of, of, you know, of, uh, New Yorkers and LA people
17:36because you just go to a club on, on a Tuesday or Wednesday night and it's like, oh, well,
17:40you know, oh, it's a marquee name.
17:42Yeah.
17:43All like 10 marquee names in one night.
17:47That's just, to me, it's mind blown.
17:49It is pretty.
17:49I know they, they, they always, the comedy store always takes a picture of the lineup and
17:53posts it.
17:53And all the, all the comments are like kids from Kansas, like, God, what's wrong with me?
17:58Why do I live here?
18:00Well, we do have our moments.
18:02You can go into a restaurant here on any given night and see Jervis from the first season
18:06of Survivor.
18:07Yeah.
18:07Ooh, no way.
18:10See, you really, it's bad enough.
18:13I can't be in the studio with you.
18:14Now you got to throw that at me.
18:16Um, so I'm looking at, uh, you know, some of the guests that you've had on your podcast
18:20and, uh, I wanted to ask about, because I, uh, growing up, I watched short attention
18:24span theater, the half hour comedy hour.
18:26I loved all of that stuff.
18:28And so you would see just snippets of, of all these comedians and Judy Gold was one
18:32of them and she now known as the hollow queen, the hollow queen, or is that just because
18:38it's on the breaking bread, uh, podcast?
18:41Oh, holla.
18:43Yeah.
18:43Oh man.
18:44I thought you were making some Holocaust jokes.
18:47No.
18:48Oh God, no.
18:49Listen, people, Casey's Holocaust material is amazing.
18:55Oh my God.
18:56And you think, oh, this is just going to go south.
18:58But the way he finesses it.
19:00When he sent me that text at 4.30 this morning, he was like, wait till you see the Holocaust
19:06joke I've got for you today.
19:08No.
19:09Uh, yes, hollow, the bread hollow.
19:11Yeah.
19:11Yes.
19:12Judy Gold is amazing making hollow bread.
19:15I had no idea.
19:16I love Judy to death.
19:18She's one of my favorites.
19:19She's such a force.
19:20I put her on my live shows in New York and, uh, and I came on, she came on to the breaking
19:25bread podcast and her, her, her background that she put for zoom was one giant piece of
19:31hollow.
19:32That she had made.
19:35So talking about that time in my life, when I watched a lot of short attention span theaters,
19:38I mean, she had, um, uh, a punchline that like, I mean, what was this like 1989 and how
19:43many years later, 32 years later, uh, I still remember the punchline and it was silly.
19:48Uh, she was talking about getting changed in a, uh, uh, in a dressing room and the lady
19:52opens up the curtain and she says, you know, like, I don't need your help.
19:55Like I'm naked with a belt on.
19:57And I just, I don't know why that, why that punchline sticks out to me so much.
20:03And I think it's because it didn't dawn on me that like, I think she might've been trying
20:06to steal a belt.
20:07Otherwise, why would you be naked with a belt on?
20:10And, uh, I just, I don't know, but I loved that time in my life when I was just discovering
20:15these, these comedians, the Judy gold age, it was Judy.
20:18But listen, I mean, it was, um, it was Norm MacDonald.
20:21Yeah.
20:21You know, he had a big thing about wiener dogs back then, you know, like I just, and I remember
20:25that because it sounds like you were going through puberty.
20:27It sounds like between Judy gold naked in a dressing room and Norm MacDonald going
20:32wiener with his wiener.
20:34It sounds to me, Casey, like you were becoming a man.
20:38You were becoming a man.
20:40Still working on it, Tom.
20:42And now he's looking, he, he gets in touch with you at four 30 in the morning.
20:46It's all good.
20:47Uh, yeah.
20:48So, so, um, you're, is this an extended tour that you're going to be doing or?
20:54Yeah.
20:55I'm, uh, I'm on tour pretty heavily through, uh, through September.
21:00And then in September I shoot my next Netflix specials.
21:03Wow.
21:04Yeah.
21:04So it's all, it's all building up to that.
21:07Tom, I wanted to touch on the bread for a moment.
21:09Cause we wouldn't be talking to you.
21:11Yeah.
21:11Talk a little bit of sourdough bread.
21:13Have we, have you ever addressed the sourdough bowl concept and how you feel on that?
21:19As it seems like a kind of a big waste.
21:21I like sourdough bowls, but it would seem like kind of a waste of all that bread.
21:24Yeah.
21:25I only like it if when I'm in, you know, cause a lot of places, those are in theme parks
21:29and stuff.
21:30And, uh, I only like the sourdough bowls.
21:35If I see the person eating the bowl when they're done with the chowder, there you go.
21:41I think that's, if I look over and saw you gnawing at it, I would be happy.
21:45If someone just uses it as a bowl, I'm very offended.
21:49Why not a cup?
21:50Why not make a, I mean, can you make a sourdough cup?
21:53They just, like a tiny, like a shot glass?
21:56Just, no, not a shot glass.
21:57Just sourdough, there's a loaf.
21:58Just walk around with it.
22:00Just walk around town and munching on your cup.
22:03They could make the hat where you put two of them up here.
22:06Two sourdoughs with, uh, tomato soup coming out.
22:10Yeah, do, do, do sourdough loaves need to be a certain size or could they make a little
22:15one like Casey says?
22:16A cup size, you know.
22:18Casey's not wrong.
22:19Casey's not wrong.
22:20You could make them any size you want.
22:22All right.
22:22You could make them any size.
22:23But you can make them medium size and pretend they're Judy Gold's booze.
22:28By the way, I want you to know I'm keeping your sourdough starter alive.
22:32It is in my refrigerator.
22:34I tend to, I tend to it.
22:35It is, uh, I have to be honest.
22:37I am terrified to make a bread because Preston had a story the other day about, about, uh,
22:43Robert Plant breaking the strap on Paul McCartney's classic base.
22:47And I'm like, if I have a Tom Pompas starter dough.
22:51It's a lot like that.
22:52Uh, you've never made a, you've never tried to make a loaf.
22:54I was just about to do it.
22:56I had the, during the holidays and turns out our neighbor is a wonder sour, you know, dough
23:03bread maker.
23:03And we happened to get a loaf and I'm like, I can't, I don't think I'm ready.
23:08I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, it's like, it's like dancing the red shoes.
23:13I have to make a suggestion here.
23:14And Steve, you probably will disagree and, and, and, and, and cringe at the suggestion.
23:18And I, I, I, I love it as a child though.
23:20But you don't live far from the Keswick theater.
23:22I think Tom should come over on set on Saturday before his show and make a dough.
23:27Tom, if you can also bring some gardening shears, I'd like a little yard work done as well.
23:31Yeah, I'm, I'm, I'm the Martha Stewart of comedy.
23:36Yeah, we, we, we can make scarecrows for the holidays.
23:40We're going to dye some Easter eggs, get ready early.
23:45Yeah, you've got it.
23:46You've got to dive in and give it a try.
23:47I am just terrified.
23:48It's all right, man.
23:49Yeah, all right.
23:50Don't be a baby.
23:51Yeah, and you're only taking a tablespoon of it.
23:53You leave the rest there.
23:54It's protected.
23:55I just don't look up at me and go, you know, hey, why?
23:57Hey, what are you doing?
24:01Why are you wearing that eye patch?
24:04If only he had two eyes, he could have made bread.
24:08He could have made bread.
24:10All right, well, listen, we want to, we want Tom's show to sell out.
24:15There's just a few tickets left.
24:16He's playing Saturday.
24:17The show's at eight o'clock.
24:19You're going to love it.
24:20Keswicktheater.com, without a question.
24:22Tom is, is absolutely one of the best and you will have a good time.
24:26He's a TikTok star.
24:28You will laugh.
24:28He's a TikTok star.
24:29Bring the kids.
24:30Yes.
24:31They'll love it.
24:33But tickets are on sale now.
24:35So, Tom, it is great to talk to you.
24:36And we'll see you here in the studio.
24:37Great to see you.
24:38Next time.
24:38All right, my man?
24:39Absolutely.
24:40Love you guys.
24:40Love you.
24:41Tom Popper, guys.
24:43Yeah.
24:44He's great.
24:44Yep, he's the best.
24:46I can talk to him all day long.
24:48Last time.
24:57I can talk to him all day long.
25:04I can talk to him all day long.
25:04I can talk to him all day long.
25:05Maybe a thing.
25:07I'm félicitations.
25:08I can talk to you all day long.
25:08Without a sense, I can talk to him all day long.
25:10All day long.
25:11I can talk to him all day long, Matthew.
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