Local lawyer and reality TV hubby from Real Housewives of Potomac, “Happy” Eddie Osefo updates Nestor on his real cannabis line and journey from attorney to Eddie-ble gummy chew education and wellness on the Maryland Crab Cake Tour.
Nestor Aparicio interviews Eddie Osefo, aka “Happy Eddie,” about his journey into the cannabis industry. Eddie, a lawyer and husband of a Real Housewives of Potomac star, partnered with Curio Wellness to launch Happy Eddie’s cannabis brand in 2020. They offer edibles, including strawberry lemonade gummies, aimed at normalizing cannabis use and addressing stigmas. Eddie emphasizes the industry’s capital-intensive nature and the importance of education. He also discusses the medical benefits of cannabis, such as managing chronic pain and anxiety, and the role of social equity programs in making the industry more inclusive.
SUMMARY KEYWORDS
Cannabis brand, Happy Eddie, Real Housewives, Maryland legalization, social equity, stigma, normalization, edibles, medical benefits, Curio Wellness, social advocacy, generational wealth, product quality, industry challenges, consumer education.
SPEAKERS
Nestor Aparicio, Eddie Osefo
Nestor Aparicio 00:00
Welcome home. We are W, N, S T, am 1570 Towson, Baltimore. We are Baltimore, positive. We’re positively here at readers crab house. We’re in Reisterstown, beautiful Reisterstown, Maryland, Baltimore County, with the Back to the Future scratch offs from the Maryland lottery. I’m distributing these out here today. Hope we’re gonna get some winners, also our friends at Liberty, pure solutions, putting us on the road, and Raskin global, and one of our foundational sponsors, of course, is curio wellness and our friends at foreign daughter, I haven’t been out lately doing like a show on scene. Wendy hasn’t been around lately. She’s off running around, building the business, and they’re in Mississippi and out in Missouri and doing other things. But there are partnerships that curio wellness and foreign daughter have had with all sorts people. And I met Al Harrington at Pikesville a couple weeks ago when they opened what used to be Panera. I used to have, I had a lot of bagels there in my day. You can now stop by and get products like happy Eddie’s, curio wellness, strawberry lemonade shoes, the happy edibles. No no, no edibles. Edible, edible, edible. There you go. That’s hilarious. It’s actually a real name, Eddie isefo. Is here. He is happy. Eddie better known to Richard from the Shay’s wife, as one of the stars of the Real Housewives of the Potomac. You’re not the star, though. You’re sort of like entourage. Yeah, I’m part of the entourage, the background, the dancers, right? Yeah, I support the sporting cast, supporting cast, right? There you go. The the ensemble. There we go. I like that, yeah, yeah. Like, you know what it would be if you were a music would be the course? There you go, be a part of the course, yeah? But you’re Baltimore guy, man. I
Eddie Osefo 01:36
bought born and raised.
Nestor Aparicio 01:37
So, you know the cannabis thing? People listen. Say, Hey, you know we gummies, pop, whatever, give me your journey on this, because I’ve met you. I’ve known a couple years, and I started seeing the happy Eddie brand, and then Wendy was explaining to me about the television show, which I didn’t know about Potomac, but I knew about the original housewives a million years ago, and all that there’s some level of celebrity, and your wife’s work at the hospital, and you’re an attorney by trade. You have this interesting African name, you’re, you know, all of this going in, this wasn’t something, I don’t think you dreamed of having a business when you were back in college, right? No, no,
Eddie Osefo 02:15
you know. So I went to school engineering, computer engineering, actually, and then I went on to law school. And my wife, she’s actually a professor School of Education. So I think we’re professionals. We’re professionals. Born and raised in Maryland. And so the cannabis thing came about when, you know, Maryland legalized cannabis. But before legalized cannabis, I knew, like, that’s a burgeoning industry that I want to get involved with. So when I knew that, you know,
Nestor Aparicio 02:37
you know, this will be popular, it’s gonna Yeah, this will be popular, yeah. So when I knew that
Eddie Osefo 02:41
they were gonna be, you know, legalizing marijuana, I said, Okay, how can I get involved in the business? And so I knew I was on the show. And so this name kind of went viral. Happy Eddie, one of the women tagged me with this name, because I smiled at her, introducing myself to her. And it kind of took on a life of zone, because it’s like, okay, you can’t smile at somebody without them thinking you’re advancing on them. And so, oh, that was the that was a plot, because I was hitting on it, because I smiled and said hello, and so that was kind of the thing that just went viral online. So I’m like, I got a name. Why don’t I start a cannabis brand? And so then I partnered with years this. This is around 2020
Nestor Aparicio 03:11
it’s 2022 so we’re adding COVID. That feels like five minutes ago, dude, just out of COVID. I mean, like, yeah, it feels like a minute ago. I had masks on. I saw one in the car. I found the other day. Yeah, and I’m like, so this is only a three year, yeah, from three years to, like,
Eddie Osefo 03:26
T shirts and edibles, what flowers allowed
Nestor Aparicio 03:30
you to believe a that it was possible? You mean, you’ve read a lot of books and whatever. But what’s the pathway? Because I’ve asked Wendy about this, because her father was in the pharmaceutical space, yeah, all of that, and the science part of this. This went from chitter, chitter joke, let’s get high. And, you know, was the old movie from 100 years ago that they used to show on MTV, Reefer Madness, right? Like all of the stigma, part of that has started to melt away. It’s not fully there somebody out there who’s talking about weird, you know, but, but this the medicine part, the GI part, and I think the unexplored science part of this, not just economic opportunity or makes you feel good at a concert or it makes you go to bed, but they but we’ve been taking some hard narcotic drugs in this country, some opiates. I It ain’t a drug, it’s a plan. I’ve done research, Williams said, but I think it’s all about, you
Eddie Osefo 04:26
know, normalizing the behaviors. It’s been highly stigmatized. It’s been highly regulated industry, and there’s a lot of science behind it, but a lot of people aren’t educated. They don’t know about the science behind it. They just think it’s a get high, you get lazy, you don’t really, you’re not a productive member of society, and that’s why a lot of things we do with my brain is just to normalize the behavior, to show that you could be an everyday professional, a professor, an attorney, and you can still indulge in cannabis and be a productive member of society.
Nestor Aparicio 04:51
And I’m a parent too. Well, there’s got vodka and beer up on the man in the back. Shot. It’s a lot safer than boxing beer. Oh, you know what I would say to Wendy, and I would say this to you. Know my parents, if they were alive, and asked me about my cannabis sponsorship, and, you know, online and my, my endorsement of it, I don’t endorse the ants getting
Eddie Osefo 05:11
into your gummies. Children. Keep the happiness away from the ants or in children. And children, yeah, 21 and over, please.
Nestor Aparicio 05:18
And your parents, because they, you know, my
Eddie Osefo 05:20
mother in law just asked me about, okay, let me take a few edibles. So what even that generation
Nestor Aparicio 05:25
that freaked you out, it did it a little bit. How do you feel years ago on this,
Eddie Osefo 05:29
oh, she was like, What are you doing? Are you selling drugs? Or is the police gonna come knock on the door? Like it’s really, you have to change the mindsets.
Nestor Aparicio 05:35
But the interesting thing for me, from just a science and a grown up, I’m 56, years old, so this has been something for the first 50 years that you know, joke about it in Amsterdam or Jamaica, right? That, but it is what it is, schedule one, like all of that. And I said to Wendy maybe about a year ago, I don’t think that was on the air, off the air, because she tore me in the facility up at Timonium, where the grow is, and all of that. And that’s kind of like a Willy Wonka fun thing. You put the suit on, but it’s not something I need to go back and do again for kicks or whatever. You know, it’s not a field trip. It really was very scientific. I’m sure you learned a ton too. But it begins as chitter, chitter, and you sort of laugh about it, and then I think to myself, I turn around here and I’m at readers, crab ass, and I’m like, All right, vodka, right? I remember throwing up from that Ocean City 96 morning beer, don’t get me started. Tequila, whiskey. Oh yeah, tequila, to kill you, right? I love to kill Yeah, all of these products I have had some level of a love affair with. At one point. My parents were alcoholics. I’d say that straight up. So I’ve never had that problem. You know? I mean, I have his beer sponsored forever, but when Budweiser and Coors and Miller built this radio station, I’m 27 years into this, okay, nobody ever said, Well, what’s that beer doing for you? What’s that what’s getting you drunk? You feel Yeah, it’s making me feel uninhibited, right, right? And then it’s making me feel loose. What was it doing through your body then? But then the next morning, as I got older, alcohol, oh yeah, really has become something that I cannot over indulge. I mean, I love Margarita, and if I invite you and your wife over and we have Mark, you’re gonna have the best margaritas you’ve ever had. My I promise you, I have a margarita master that has taught me how to make a
Eddie Osefo 07:21
problem take you up on that. I don’t
Nestor Aparicio 07:24
do my Margarita guy, so I do radio and I do Margarita. Okay, well, it’s sales for advertising. That’s another story. But, like, I had a I have avion and aradura G for me when I have good tequila, man, I’m a silver drinker because I’m mainly a margarita drinker. So I’m not in an apostolic guy, although I don’t dislike them. I did this add a little like, I’m not a Mezcal guy. I don’t like smoke. I made these drinks and they were good, man. I mean, like, I really fresh lime squeezed, you know, okay, and my agave, the thing, the way I do it on the second one, I’m like, This is really good. And jets, like, we got fresh lines. You got limes. Got plenty of limes, so squeezed them on. I made another batch. And the next day they had pounding. And no reason. This is a Tuesday night. We’re just eating nachos. And I’m like, this is going down good. I want to have another right? I want to have I want to have another drink, right? And the next day, I wasn’t good till two in the afternoon, yeah. And it wasn’t awful. It was that level of hangover where you’re like, not throwing
Eddie Osefo 08:26
up, a little groggy, couldn’t focus. Yeah, it
Nestor Aparicio 08:30
hasn’t been one more head hurt, yeah, and I’m like, my head doesn’t hurt. No. It hasn’t been one
Eddie Osefo 08:34
morning I woken up a day after being high that I felt, oh, man,
Nestor Aparicio 08:38
I’m hurting. I’m hitting. I can’t go to work, can’t do I can’t focus. Yeah, never, never. And I look, we’re at a restaurant. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve driven a porcelain bus from some of those products behind that bar, while I’m endorsing on the air and while society no people laugh at me as well. I was throwing up on a coastal highway. I got too drunk. Did he hurt anybody? He’s not violent. He’s, you’re happy, Eddie, I’m a happy drunk, okay? I am. I am a happy drunk. I’m not an annoying I am. I am peaceful, I’m loving. I’m not, I’m not the angry, yeah, you know, call everybody I am a euphoric drunk, okay? But now, you know, I mean, I like to drink. I’ll have a couple of rum and cokes on a flight, I’ll have some I drank, and when I drink too much beer. Now, beers different story, you know, like, I gotta really be careful as I get older about how it makes me feel. So my point would be, I said all this to Wendy last year, Wendy brought fine from Curia. I’m like, nobody ever asked what’s in that drink that is other than the label or the pretty girl in the course, like commercial or whatever, and I’m thinking to myself, this is a whole different thing that’s been stigmatized to the point of federal stigmatization, to the point where Nixon said we’re not going to do any science around this product, because there can’t. There can be no scientific benefit, right? Which you and I. Is bullshit. You know? I mean, I just call that what it is. So now that we’re into this space, what have you learned in the last three years that you could talk to my audience about that came from that stigma side to what you’re learning in making products, partnering marketing, and then also being an African American, well educated lawyer out on the street with this stigma and this part of this, and I know also there were some things that were done at the state level to make sure people, Hispanic, African American, could participate in this, because this wasn’t this a big money project, yeah, a lot of money to be involved
Eddie Osefo 10:32
in this industry. It really is a capital intensive project. Everybody’s the Yankees or the Dodgers kind of, sort of, yeah, it is. You gotta be, you gotta have a little bit to play in the in this ballpark. And that’s another thing that we try to do, because there’s a lot of social of social equity applicants, social equity people who want to be involved in industry, because it’s capital intensive, the barrier to entry so high, and so the state has set up these funds, these grants, to try to give them the opportunity to be involved in industry. But it’s still the barriers of entry is still high, because it’s so capital. Were you a beneficiary of the grant? I was not, okay. I was not I was not one of them. You’re not a grower. I’m not a grower. So I partner with a licensed partner in the State Security
Nestor Aparicio 11:04
Wendy took me into the facility. It’s up in Timonium. I’m familiar foreign daughter. I got to meet you and your beautiful wife. In the last two years you’ve done the show a couple times level set how you came at it with, I’m nasty Nestor. You’re happy, Eddie, if I wanted a nasty Nestor brand. I bring X amount of dollars, X amount of partnership to go in. I thought you were just doing flower when I knew you now. You’ve got edibles, great edibles, by the way. So for your brand and your hopes and your dreams and your profit center, what you’re trying to do, give me the whole you and your wife talked about two, three years ago, from where you were now to here with the happy Eddie brand, that is a line that’s created by curio and curios.
Eddie Osefo 11:47
Top a line, top of line, quality is beyond out of this world. That’s why I’m a spokesperson for There you go. There you go. But no, we’ve come a long way, because when we were searching for partners, we wanted to search for a partner who has experience quality products and has a reputation that they breed excellence. And so, you know, we’re on the show. We have this platform is a million plus viewers every week that watch the show. And it’s like you can leverage that platform to a market, your products, a market the normalization of, you know, and try to eradicate the stigmatization of cannabis. But then b You can also do some social good. So I do a lot of partnering with social advocacy organizations, like last Prison Project. So you’re not just benefiting last Prison Project, last prisoner project, last prison help formerly incarcerated people who are who have cannabis convictions get expungements or get out of prison for these convictions. So they do a lot of great work and community, but shining a spotlight on the work that they do, you don’t see it much, and it needs to be seen, because now that it’s being legalized state by state, they’re legalizing cannabis. You know, as a lot of people were still locked up for cannabis, but it’s now a multi billion dollar industry, and so just shining a spotlight on those organizations that are doing the work is very much so non violent people, yeah, not just cannabis to fit, like they’re selling what maybe. But that was years ago, before it was legal. But now they’re still locked up now. And so it’s kind of one of those things, where, how, why are they still locked up? And now folks in their same states are selling what they sold back in the day, and it’s now legal. And so they being taxed, and being taxed very heavily. It’s actually going up July 1, I believe, to 12% in Maryland. But I think that
Nestor Aparicio 13:14
that’s another thing we I mean, I talked about that revenue generation. Oh yeah, go ask Wes if he needs more revenue. He’s freezing state. But like, literally, I talk about this with a lot. Even sports wagering has contributed a lot. There are new streams of revenue, and this is
Eddie Osefo 13:29
one of them. It really is. It really is the rate at which, I don’t feel what the numbers are, but the rate at which people consume cannabis, it has increased since
Nestor Aparicio 13:37
really affected the alcohol industry, right? I mean, it just an issue. It’s been a disruptive it’s been a
Eddie Osefo 13:44
game because an alternative. There’s a lot of people now. It’s no longer just a dry it was a dry January, and a lot of people are extending it throughout the year because they have these alternatives in terms of cannabis, in terms of using plant based medicine, because a lot of people don’t use it for recreational purposes. Sometimes they have pains, they have anxiety, they have depression, they have other ailments that they’re dealing with that they use cannabis for. So it’s not just a get high and party with the friends. It’s like an actual medicine that folks are using. So
Nestor Aparicio 14:08
talk about that part of it, because I talk about that I saw Michael bronfine I had at the Maryland party a couple months ago. The whole genesis of Curie on foreign daughter was Michael having GI issues and being formerly in the pharmaceutical space where drugs weren’t helping people with their gut issues, and having, you know, Crohn’s serious diseases that. And you know, I can speak this. I have a family member battling Parkinson’s right now. The only thing that helps him is sativa, flower. Oh, wow. The only it helps his balance, it balances him out. He’s had falls. It’s a tragedy. I mean, to have Parkinson’s, yeah, to have anything that can improve the quality of your life when you’re battling, right? You know, when my wife had cancer, they said they told her at the hospital, do not. Smoke it because of her lungs. Like, whatever you do you have cancer, don’t smoke a cannabis product when you have, you know, really because of her lungs. She was, I mean, my wife, I can’t, she’s bad at leukemia. But it wasn’t like, don’t take the product to sleep or take the product for pain. Got it. You know, it was just sort of like the smoking part bad. And I guess that’s where other things to say put like going to bed. My wife has more trouble sleeping than I do. Okay, I’m a i I’m up and down. Good. I’m up when I need to be up. I don’t need that issue. But, you know, she has to go to work in the morning. I mean, they have time elapsed. Good night. Products, it’s just, it’s amazing when I talk about it, because it used to be taking Excedrin, take a buffer, have a shot. You know, you know, whatever it was, none of that was really, it was masking things and all of that. This is, this is a very comfortable, safe, well used now, much easier to pick up adult use. And you know what’s in your product. And there’s a science involved in this that if, even if you don’t subscribe to it because of whatever your beliefs might be, there’s science. There’s science. There’s science that supports it, and I don’t, and we’re just scratching the surface of that. Yeah, so with your products, what were you trying to do? And did you pick strawberry lemon? How many flavors
Eddie Osefo 16:29
you got? Right now, we just have strawberry lemonade, and it’s actually five milligrams, so it’s like, you know? So you can start off slow, and then, if you’re one of those experienced users, I wouldn’t suggest take 10 of them, but you may look for something else, right? But this is for the everyday soccer mom, you know, or person who’s just on the go, just to pop in and go. But, yeah, we have take the edge off. Take the edge off a little bit, you know, but it tastes
Nestor Aparicio 16:50
really good. We have a drink here. We take shot the edge off. Nobody has any that’s a social socially acceptable exactly since prohibition, at least during Prohibition, I guess. But I think we’ve come a long way in the last couple of years, right? Certainly in my space of 50 year old, educated people, nobody comes up to me and says, right, so we moved that way three years ago. No,
Eddie Osefo 17:20
it’s making strides. I mean, I would tell you that a lot of people aren’t snuffing their sniffing their nose at, you know, me being involved in industry as much as they were in the beginning, it has changed. There’s any friends over it. I didn’t lose any friends. But a lot of people were questioning, like, your attorney, what are you doing? What do you you know, it’s even if, you know, taking aside the business aspect of it, there’s like, I mean, it’s still cannabis, you know, still, like an industry where people, you know, you go to jail for that, like, the stigmas are still attached to it. And so I think just changing the whole, you know, landscape to know that it’s science based. There’s education behind everything. It’s actually, there’s things that have gone on to make people, condition people to think that it’s bad. And so now we have to recondition people to know that it’s not all bad. It’s actually good. There’s some good that can come out of it, in terms of, you know, generational wealth for different people who are from the communities that were impacted by the war on drugs, they can now get involved in the industry and now change the trajectory of once, what their lives were when they were, you know, getting impacted by the war on drugs, but now they can actually benefit from the cannabis industry, but there’s also people who have these chronic pains that traditional medicine doesn’t address, doesn’t help, like you can’t smoke if you have cancer, like different things like that are now being addressed with cannabis. And I think people are open their eyes, and that’s
Nestor Aparicio 18:33
why the move bomb. I have it on my neck even now. Oh yeah. Oh my god, yeah. It works one night, right? Smell. It’s not tacky I wear and when I go into yoga, kind of like, really helps me. And I am, if you don’t do anything today, the move product is I am on the front of that I use it. It’s on my back. It’s on my hip right now, I keep it in my gym bag, playing a fitness when I put it on. And it’s tingly relief based I feel better after I have it on. I more I open up a little better when I’m stretching and doing my hot yoga.
Eddie Osefo 19:06
You know, even just that, it’s not just smoking. You have, you know, the bars that you use for the move. You have, you know, edibles. You have, you know, pills, you have shots. You have so many different form factors that you can get cannabis, and it’s not the traditional I just think a lot of things are based on education. A lot of people don’t know. You only know what you only know what you know, and that’s why I’m here. There you go. And so once they learn about the different ways you can take the product, you know, they may be open to it, you know. And so I think that that’s been my journey. I’m still learning each and every day, but I think that a lot of the marketing and a lot of things that go behind the brand is more so educating folks. On a, what the mission of happy Eddy is. And B, why are you even involved in this industry? And that’s to change the stigmas that are associated with it and normalize the behavior. It’s really, if you wanted to distill it down, it’s really to normalize the behavior and educate people on why they could benefit from it. If it’s not your thing, it’s not your thing. But if it, if you’re open to it, you
Nestor Aparicio 19:56
know, you try it, how’s your famous wife? How’s your real house? She’s a real housewife. She’s a real.
Eddie Osefo 20:00
House. I’m a real housewife of Potomac husband. You know, there’s a hyphen in there.
Nestor Aparicio 20:04
She’s doing great. How much face time you get in the show? You know, I get quite a bit. Actually,
Eddie Osefo 20:09
I’m actually now the longest tenured husband on the show. We had divorces already, already, unless you gotta catch up, there’s been quite a few.
Nestor Aparicio 20:20
You okay, though, I’m good,
Eddie Osefo 20:22
we’re good, we’re good. 14 years, we’re we’re good to go. We got three How is she doing? What’s going on? She’s doing great. She’s actually, she’s she’s traveling a lot. She’s actually filming right now. So she’s filming this show, and she’s doing good. She’s still teaching too. She teaches the actual course name, I’m not sure, but she has a new course that she just launched is the sociology of reality TV, and she’s able to leverage both her teaching with her experience being on reality TV and the social norms and the social, you know, things cues that go into reality TV that we don’t realize we’re consuming it as a viewer. And so it’s like a very you think, like, Oh, it’s just reality TV. It’s like a science behind taking her class. You could be student. I audit it. I do audit it. I’m not signed up for it. I’m done with school. You’re not gonna give me any grade. Your lawyer. You had enough. I went to Rutgers for law school, and then I got my LLM from
Nestor Aparicio 21:13
Georgetown. Our time at Rutgers. Yeah. Are you all right? Man? Well, I spent a little time up on that campus as well. Happy Eddie, you set fo is affiliate, but our friends at Curia wellness and foreign daughter, they do bring us out on the road doing the Maryland crab cake tour, along with our friends at the Maryland lottery for being a guest on the show. Happy Eddie’s gonna get a lottery ticket back to the future scratch offs. I’m gonna be on the eighth in the morning at deepest squales and Canton, first time there. I’m looking forward to that. And then on the 10th in the afternoon. We’re gonna be over Costas and Timonium, the new location. I’m looking forward to that if you are a happy Eddie fan from television, you can pick up the edibles, edibles, if you can see that. And Eddie did bring me a t shirt. I’ve been trying to get you out for months. I’m glad I came out. I’m glad I made it. You already got a dozen crabs on the way. I got a goodie. Back to readers, crab ass. We’re up here in Reisterstown. We’re doing the Maryland crab cake Tour presented by the Maryland lottery, curio wellness, as well as liberty, pure solutions. I’m gonna wrap things up. They brought me a crab cake. I gave it to Izzy Patoka assistant, because I didn’t have time to eat it. They’re gonna I’m gonna have a proper crab cake you need with hope and brand in here. We’re gonna close things down. We had a great, great tour stop out here in Reisterstown. I want to thank everybody for making things happen around here. My friend Richard Miche pest control, as well as Luke and Allen that were here earlier, and Izzy patok, who stopped by from the second district, talking about the Reisterstown Main Street and the music thing they do on Friday. And I don’t know if you’re a dessert fan, it’s 100 degrees outside. You look physical.
Eddie Osefo 22:41
You know about the cow around the corner? Yeah, I do. Actually, I’ve been there before. You
Nestor Aparicio 22:45
got to go to the cow. Yeah, on the way out, I’m going on it. You got I’m going to the couch, and so I’m gonna eat it, you little ice a thing on the way home, the whole way back. So you go, gotta get down to 795 All right, we’re up here Reisterstown. Your products just go to foreign dollars. They’re available in other dispensary, whichever
Eddie Osefo 23:01
dispensaries whichever dispensaries closest to you, definitely check it out. They should be available. If you go to Leafly or go to your neighborhood dispensary, they should have it available. But foreign daughter
Nestor Aparicio 23:09
definitely has it black, owned and locally operated. Happy Eddie, yeah. Oh, and look for is that pride month? That you do that, or is that all year round color? We’re still about happy year round. It’s rainbow year round. Just check it out. The vibrant colors, all right, packaging. Well, at some point we’re gonna get together and do Raven? Do you think anyone say on the Ravens before I go? Because I just want to give you the some oxygen on that.
Eddie Osefo 23:29
I know you’re Raven, yeah, hammer, even Super Bowl. I think so. Nothing. I think last year, last year, prepped them for this comeback this year.
Nestor Aparicio 23:37
I hope you’re right. I’m tired of watching them lose in the end, you know?
Eddie Osefo 23:39
I mean, it’s not fun at all when you make it this close and you can’t get over the finish line. But they’re there. Notice
Nestor Aparicio 23:47
I didn’t mention the Orioles. I did not miss
Eddie Osefo 23:50
okay, I pitch about them enough. Okay, okay, Eddie, we’re happy. We gotta be happy. We got to end on make me sad. We got to end on a happy note.
Nestor Aparicio 24:00
I am Nestor. We are W, N, S, T am 15 70,000 Baltimore, back for more from rise of town right after this, stay with us. You.