Dan The Road Trip Guy

A storyteller shows how road trips, front porches, and daily words can stitch a life together

Dan Season 4 Episode 90

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The conversation starts with trucks and detours into a story about a lost lottery ticket, but the road quickly opens into something bigger: how a musician-turned-writer used story, humor, and a cross-country drive to make sense of loss and build a life that fits. Sean Dietrich—author, columnist, storyteller, and host of Sean of the South—joins us to talk about growing up near the Alabama line, singing hymns before he could drive, and the porch routine that keeps his words honest at sunrise. He shares the pivotal return to Pike’s Peak where his father’s ashes rest, the unexpected validation that met him in far-off towns, and the rejection that redirected him from classrooms to pages.

We dig into why fiction can feel truer than nonfiction, how characters borrow our hidden parts, and why humor isn’t garnish—it’s the vehicle that gets truth through the door. Sean breaks down his daily process: just enough news not to sink the mood, then a search for one thread of grace that most of us would miss. We swap memories of Sunday drives and snap a mental photo in front of an old Buick, then ask when we got too busy to enjoy the ride. Along the way, an elder’s simple creed—life is about F-U-N—reframes joy as an act of love, not a distraction. It’s a reminder to notice, to laugh, and to record the stories before they disappear.

You’ll hear about Over Yonder, the twists that surprised even its author, and the timeless pull of storytellers like Mark Twain who still make modern readers smile. If you care about craft, nostalgia, healing, or the spark that turns daily life into something worth keeping, this one’s for you.

You can find Sean online by searching for Sean Dietrich or Sean of the South. You can find his Sean of the South podcast on your favorite platform. You can find his website at seandietrich.com and there find his writings, books and other interesting stories.

If you are in the Cincinnati area, be sure to get out to Sean's show on November 2. You can find tickets at this link: Sean of the South Tickets, Sun, Nov 2, 2025 at 5:00 PM | Eventbrite


Sean’s website: https://seandietrich.com/

SPEAKER_00:

Welcome to Dan the Road Trip Guy. I'm your host Dan, and each week we'll embark on a new adventure, discovering memory and life lessons of our incredible guests. From everyday travelers to thrill seekers and everyone in between, this podcast is your front row seat to inspiring stories of passion, resilience, and the pursuit of happiness. So buckle up and enjoy the ride. I am excited for today's show and I know you're going to enjoy it. My guest is Sean Dietrich. Sean is a author, columnist, storyteller, musician, podcaster, and has a brand new book out called Over Yonder. Now, Sean and I don't know each other personally. Linda and I had the opportunity to see him perform at the Grand Old Opry last November. And the good news is, for my Cincinnati listeners, he's coming to our city on November 2nd. And I would encourage you to get tickets and come and listen to Sean. If you want to get a sampling, he's got a great podcast. Comes out every few mornings. Sean of the South, it's called. Or you can look up Sean Dietrich. I'll post those in the notes. I hope you enjoy our time together here on this virtual road trip. Well, welcome to the show, Sean. Proud to be here.

SPEAKER_01:

Thank you.

SPEAKER_00:

Thank you very much for taking the time. My listeners may not know who you are, so why don't you take a couple minutes and just tell them who is Sean Dietrich?

SPEAKER_01:

Well, Sean Dietrich doesn't exactly know who Sean Dietrich is all the time, but I am a writer, a musician, and a stand-up storyteller, a humorist, and I I kind of travel around country telling stories and playing songs for people and hopefully trying to put them in a good mood. And uh that's kind of the goal of the books I write, newspaper things I write, and stuff I put out online, and everything is hopefully to put someone in a good mood.

SPEAKER_00:

Well, I know from personal experience they do. And where are you from originally?

SPEAKER_01:

Well, I grew up in Northwest Florida, close to the Alabama line. So I think it was about 38 or 40 miles from the Alabama line. Our county touches Alabama. So that's a part of the world that we call LA, Lower Alabama. Even the folks live in Florida aren't really sure whether they're Floridians with Alabama accents or Alabamas with a Florida driver's license. Anyway, that's where I grew up. I now I live in Birmingham. Okay. My wife.

SPEAKER_00:

That's me. That's you. I appreciate that. We got to see Sean at the Grand Ole Opry last November, and now he's coming to Cincinnati for those listening that are in the Cincinnati area on November 2nd. So get your tickets for that. We're just going to have a little road trip conversation together. This is Dan the Road Trip Guy, Sean. So my first question is always, what was your first car?

SPEAKER_01:

Well, my first car was a truck, and it was a Chevy, which forward is what I drive now, but it was a Chevy and it was a good car. A good truck. I've had multiple trucks in my life, but I look back on this one with fondness. I think it was a 19 1979 truck. Okay. I think. And I saw it in traffic, like after I got rid of it. I s I I would continually see that truck in traffic driving around town and I and I'd have all these memories come back to me.

SPEAKER_00:

Any uh funny car stories with that truck or trucks after?

SPEAKER_01:

I have one car story that it that took place in a truck. It wasn't my truck, but it was my good friend's truck. And it's a good it's a it's a good story. Okay. He bought this truck. I went with him to look and he bought this truck from a guy, and uh he really liked it. It was an old truck. I think it was I'm sh I think it was a Ford, like an F100, late 70s, I think. And he got it. He was driving away, and back then we were, you know, buying cars to the thrifty nickel. As he was driving away, he got a phone call, I guess, the day after, and the guy realized that he'd left a lottery ticket in the in the truck, and it was a like a like a winning ticket, I guess, or of some to some degree. I don't know that it was the it wasn't the big boy, but it was a winner. I can't remember how he got in touch with with my friend, but we drove back over there because we couldn't find the ticket. Together they tore the truck apart and found the ticket beneath uh something in one of the floorboards it had slipped down. Oh my. And sure enough, it was uh a winning ticket, and the guy was so eternally grateful. And I think he even gave my friend some of the winnings just as a thank you.

SPEAKER_00:

That's a uh interesting story for sure.

SPEAKER_01:

Mm-hmm.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, I'm sure you've been on some road trips in your life. Any epic road trips that stand out, just so memorable that she's like, oh, I would do that one again.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, there's there's been several. I wrote I wrote a book that included one epic road trip. That was my first nonfiction uh long form book. That was about that included a road trip I took to go see my father's grave. We scattered his ashes when I was a kid on top of Pike's Peak in Colorado. I tried to get back out there when I was a young man to visit his grave and decided that while I was out there, I'd yeah, halfway out there, I didn't want to, I didn't I wasn't ready. So I turned around and came back. And then later in my life, I I went for the first time. And that road trip was with my wife, with my my dog had recently passed, so we took her ashes with us too, because she was me and that dog were very close. And so anyway, that trip was pivotal. It was really it was really pivotal for me uh because I finally returned back to the top of that mountain where he was, and we went across. I mean, at the time we were living in northwest Florida to get from Northwest Florida to Colorado. That's that's like a I think it took us five days. It was a special trip. It was a uh my father's from southeastern Kansas, right where Kansas, Oklahoma, and Arkansas almost touch. And uh, we went through his hometown, went back through places that that I'd lived as a child that were just kind of traumatic. They had traumatic memories for me because my father died in a real ugly way. He took his own life and he went out with a with a lot of abuse and bad things. On the way back, it was an extremely healing, cathartic, wonderful trip, and it all kind of ended literally with a mountaintop experience. And it was probably the most memorable road trip of my life.

SPEAKER_00:

Well, yeah, I can imagine the memories that would have come back and the thoughts uh during a trip like that.

SPEAKER_01:

It was uh there were a lot of layers to it. I was already riding at the time, so as we were driving through into, you know, a foreign territory, I I had I was recognized a few times before. I was in Dodge City, Kansas, and someone was like, Are you Sean Dietrich? And it just about choked on my spit. Couldn't believe that someone knew who I was, and I I just was receiving a lot of affirmations and validations that I didn't that I've I didn't know that I needed that all kind of helped heal me from the inside out. That also, as I said earlier, started a uh kind of kicked off my career in in with the publishing side of life. So that was just it was a very formative trip for me.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah. Well, now you've piqued my interest in that book, so I'll I'll have to uh pick that one up next. Well, yeah, we'll talk about your new one a little bit later, but in my enjoyment of it. How old were you when your father passed away?

SPEAKER_01:

I was eleven years old. Okay. Eleven years old, and uh and he went out, it was not a a pretty way. The night before he'd just kind of lost his mind. My last image of my father is him walking into a sheriff's cruiser in the back seat, and that was it. They took him off to to jail. He was probably gonna be put on trial for uh trying to harm and kill my mother and and my sister and I. That was traumatic, and I've dealt with that for the rest of my life. So that that alone is what made that trip kind of special.

SPEAKER_00:

Sure. Well, thanks for sharing that. Oh yeah. Now I read up on you a little bit, and it said you I think it said from the time you were five, you knew you wanted to be uh a writer, a storyteller. Take me on that journey and what that looks like.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, I don't know how I don't know how how it started. I know that as I look backward on my life, I can see now the arc of the story. I can see now who I really was before I even knew who I was. And now I know why certain adults encouraged me to pursue this or that because they they could see, as an adult sees a child, they could see where my talents and where my interests lie. And that's so interesting to me because as a child, you're so unaware. There's a level of blissful unawareness that is really necessary for surviving childhood, but I had no idea what I was or that I had any proclivity toward toward storytelling. Storytelling wasn't even I mean, is that even a job? I mean, that's even today I think to myself, that's not a job. I mean, a job is where you go and clock in and do this and do that, or you have an actual occupation. A storyteller is just somebody who sits on the front porch. So I never viewed it as anything more than just who I was. I never really viewed it as a thing. Uh so writing was born out of that. Writing is, you know, just a form of storytelling and music, which is my other, my maybe my biggest passion, my biggest uh thread in my life has always been music. I made my living as a professional musician for many years before I got into writing. And that is just another form of storytelling that which is you know interesting to me. I never really considered that either. As I would sing and I've been singing in church since I was a seven-year-old, playing piano in church since I was nine. I wasn't any good, but they musical talent runs thin in a little church, so you take who you can get. That, as I look back now, you know, we played old hymns and all that. Every old hymn tells a story. Every old hymn accompanies a Bible story. So that's storytelling. And then the writing that I would do for fun as a child on a typewriter, on a manual typewriter, which I still have, I would just tell stories and my imagination would run wild as I'd sit in that little church and the preacher would be preaching, and our preacher only preached two good sermons with us in the time that he was with us, the day he joined us and the day he left. I remember entertaining myself with my imagination. I'd look up into the rafters and I I envisioned, you know, Superman or I envisioned something. And I think now, you know, even that, that's storytelling with yourself, you know, imaginary friends that I had growing up. That's storytelling. So I don't know. Storytelling has just always been one of the biggest pieces of who I am. And it wasn't until I uh graduated from community college that I really applied myself toward uh storytelling in the written form. And that was kind of when my life changed. Sure. Because other people started reading these stories and paying attention to it. That was maybe when I first realized that maybe in our nation right now, s uh storytelling is not nearly as common and it's not nearly as applauded as it used to be. Uh long ago, you would sit with your elders or with somebody who had a funny story to deliver, and that was important. That was entertainment. Everybody'd kind of gather around to to listen to a good story. They always had to have kind of a formula of of how they went. They always had to end with a punchline that was funny, so they were always delivered with humor. Storytelling is that's a huge important piece of storytelling that a lot of people in today's world neglect. Humor is is how stories throughout history have been delivered successfully. I realize now that that's it's kind of a, for lack of a better term, a dying art form. And yet it's such an essential art form because storytelling is what preserves our culture. Storytelling is what arguably is our culture. Our culture is story. When you look at old, old folk songs and the folk ballads that people were writing long before people were writing music to go on the radio or to be famous or to uh have their 15 minutes of stardom. All of the old songs, the ballads, they were all stories set to a melody so that they could be easier remembered and passed down, therefore, to the next generation, or passed uh across great distances and regions from one village to the next, from one community to the next. To me, that is something that is so important to our ancestors that the digital age causes us to neglect. That's part of what got me into storytelling and why why I feel that it's actually actually kind of essential.

SPEAKER_00:

And I I appreciate that. One of the regrets, I guess it's a regret, you know, when you're a child and you're growing up around your your family. Uh I had one grandparent, I had lots of aunts and uncles. And and then after my parents passed away in 2014, 2015, I looked at my brother and I said, I have about 101 unanswered questions that I am never gonna get the answers to at this point. And I've kind of lived with that, and that's a little bit why I started this little crazy podcast, because people are like, Podcast? Uh, can you make money with that? I'm like, I don't know. Uh was it really the uh the plan? And so I've just tried to record other people's stories that I've uh encountered in my life, and some are family, and some are like you, people I've literally never met, but just want to hear their story.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, well that's that's how I feel about uh stories too. I love to hear other people's stories. I find myself kind of much like that little boy who used to sit at the feet of the elders uh looking for a story, hoping to hear a good one.

SPEAKER_00:

Well, thank you for sharing that. That was uh that was good. Now, as I look at your website and you seem to write about every day, what is your process you go through today? Because I I resonate with a lot of these stories, and you you had one just here recently called the high tech world. I just sit there and go, hmm, yeah. And you mentioned front porches in that one, and that's where a lot of stories were told when I was growing up. Take me through your your process. What's what's that like to crank something out every day?

SPEAKER_01:

I find that it's hard for me to process my own life without writing it now. And that's that's I don't know if that's a good thing or a bad thing. But um I I find that going to a certain place, like a new location, you know, a vacation or a or a trip, and not being able to write about it sort of sort of takes away from the experience. But when you're able to write about it, I get to fully immerse myself in the experience in a way that I would not be able to do without writing it. So so I find that writing has worked its way in into my daily routine in much the same way that drinking a cup of coffee or going to the bathroom. Yeah. Uh and maybe they're actually a little bit alike. But the act of writing helps me live a little bit deeper, which is sometimes it can be a chore because sometimes you don't feel like writing. But I find that if I think what I enjoy most about my daily routine of writing, I am forced to locate the daily thread of some sort of gr daily grace that comes to me that I would have probably, had I not been writing, I probably wouldn't have even given credence to or noticed. It would have just gone by completely un unnoticed. And now I'm learning every day through writing to notice the little acts of mercy that that that come to me every day. And I for that I'm grateful because I I really have learned so much through this process.

SPEAKER_00:

Do you have a special place when you're you're not on the road or whatever, where you kind of you know you hear about writers, so they go off to this special room or this special place to to write.

SPEAKER_01:

Well, I do write on my front porch. Uh little section set up on the porch, and that's real important to me. I love writing on my porch because it's conducive to the whole experience. The birds start singing in the morning at about 5 30, and I'm out there usually before sunrise. I wake up early. I kind of familiarize myself with the day's news only to a point because I can't read too much of them or I'll start to get down. Yeah. Yeah. Then I just kind of ruminate on something that maybe has happened the day before, or I'll read through. People are always sending me stories of positive things. One of those kind of resonates with me, I'll dig into it and start researching and writing. So the porch is really good for me. Uh I'd like to be outside, so that that helped.

SPEAKER_00:

We uh we talked a little bit before we started. Is there a pivotal moment in your life that made you what you are today? Oh, there's been many.

SPEAKER_01:

I I guess one real pivotal moment was uh I got turned down to go to a major university I had applied to their to their writing program, and then I'd applied to their music program, and I'd got turned down from both of those. I had already rented an apartment on campus. I was an adult student because I dropped out of school when I was uh in the seventh grade. And I came I came back to school as an adult and graduated community college, and then I applied to a major university, so which was Florida State. So as I was there trying to get into Florida State and I'd been told that, sorry, your your transcripts or your high school transcripts, which were non-existent, uh give us pause so you're not we don't need you here at this school. I thought I was done. I thought I was I thought life was my dreams were kind of done. And that's when I started writing in earnest, and that's actually when my life took a completely different trajectory, and I'm glad that God didn't answer that prayer of letting me into school because I would have never been doing what I'm doing, which is probably what I'm supposed to be doing. Yeah.

SPEAKER_00:

So that was kind of pivotal. That's interesting.

SPEAKER_01:

You ever want to go back there and uh do a show or well I've done it's funny, I've I've done a few things in Tallahassee where FSU is, and they just go terribly, terribly, terribly. But that's been years ago now, and so there's something about that city that just doesn't like me. So I just got a we just got a call to do another one for the first time in like 10 years almost this year. So I think I'm gonna try it and we will see how that goes. Could be it could be a nightmare. Who knows?

SPEAKER_00:

Well, seems like uh God puts you on the path he had intended instead of higher education. Yeah, I agree. Back to a road trip. Imagine today you could head out on a road trip with anyone, living or deceased. Who would it be? Where would you go? What would you talk about?

SPEAKER_01:

I'm lucky because one of the the great things about having imagination is you can kind of imagine this story already. So I feel like I've already done it. Uh, but still, if I had to choose, I might choose someone like Mark Wayne. Okay. I might sit in the car with him and just just listen to how he does what he does because he to me he was a remarkable human band. He went through so much and yet retained an insatiable sense of humor that lasted with him all the way to the end. And to me, that is incredible how he did it, how he did that. I mean, people read him and they think of a humorist and they think of a funny storyteller and a and yet this man endured death upon death. One of his daughters drowned in the bathtub, his brother died in an explosion. He was, he just, he went through so much. And yet, for him to retain such a positive and humorous outlook on everything. I mean, and then the fact that his material, I still read his material every a little bit every, maybe not every day, but every week or so, it still retains its humor. And that is amazing for someone in the 19th century. Our language is completely different. And our the our dialect is is his dialect is almost unrecognizable from the dialect we have today. So the fact that his humor still lands with modern audiences in a timeless way is almost miraculous. I I don't know how he did that, how he transcended the language barrier of his era into utter timelessness. But that's someone I'd like to know. That would be a fun road trip.

SPEAKER_00:

Hey, as we uh we're coming to the end of our little virtual road trip, but leave my listeners with some life advice. Maybe it's on living a better life or living their best life. What would you tell people if they were in a in a room with you?

SPEAKER_01:

To say something I would say what I what I heard from a she's deceased now, but she was in her late 90s when I met her and I wrote about her. She was in a nursing home, and I was supposed to find a good story, and I didn't know where else to go but a nursing home because there's no better place. So I walked into the nursing home. It was a cold call, basically. The staff let me in, buzzed me through the doors. I went up to the lady at behind the counter. I said, Do you have anybody in here with a good story? And she said, Son, they've all got good stories. They introduced me to a woman named Miss Catherine, and she was she had her own little back bedroom there, a nice little room. I walked in, and she was drinking a Miller Light. And she said, Do you want one? I said, No, no, thank you. Uh she said, Well, I've been drinking a Miller Light every day, one only one, every day since I was 14 years old, because the doctor back in these in those days told me that I needed one for my stomach, and so I drink one every day. Okay. I sat there with this older woman who was drinking a beer, and I asked her eventually if she had any advice on what she thought the meaning of life was or what she thought the great point of this life was. And I was expecting something very different than what she said. But she said, Life is about F-U-N. She said, Life, if you're not having fun, what are you doing? And I said, Really? So you think you this whole life is just about fun. She said, think of all the things you find that are fun. And I I did. I started to think about these things. She said, what you're what you're experiencing when you're having fun is an expression of love. She said, and it's the greatest kind of love there is. If you're having fun, you're loving yourself, you're loving others, and you're loving who made you. That's the highest level of humanity when you're having fun. She said, so if you can find a way to have fun every moment of every day, she said, that is what life is all about to her. And I've never forgotten that. Life to me, I don't know if I can do it. I'm miserable at enacting it, but I think she's right to some degree. Life is about F-U-N.

SPEAKER_00:

That's great. And maybe in uh in our what's going on in the world today, maybe that's uh what we need to take pause and take this advice, right?

SPEAKER_01:

I think uh I think we would all be in a lot better moods. And we would treat each other with a lot more respect and kindness if we were having fun.

SPEAKER_00:

Absolutely. Wow. Thank you for sharing that. That was really good.

SPEAKER_01:

Well, thanks for asking me.

SPEAKER_00:

Okay, I mentioned you have a new book over yonder. I received it in the mail from a week or two ago. And I don't typically read novels. That's not what you find on my bookshelf. But I told you early on I could not put it down once I started. It was like I had to know what was going to happen. And I told you I appreciated the short chapters because I felt like I was making really great progress as I worked through this book. I literally just finished it coming back from a trip. And your writing style, I I said vividness. I don't know. The descriptions that you put into it are just amazing to me. Can you talk about just for a minute where this book came from?

SPEAKER_01:

Uh well, the book came from uh I I had read a story about a priest, an episcopal priest who had gone to jail. And I I read about the the struggles that came with that, that among many other things. The thing I like about fiction the most about building a story is, and this is a kind of a common expression in the writing world in the publishing world at least, they say, if you want to read fiction, read nonfiction. If you want to read the truth, read fiction. And there's a reason for that, because when you write nonfiction, anybody, when anybody writes nonfiction, even journalists, you have to move things around a little bit to make the story work. It's nothing is no such thing as a reporter of nonfiction. You you have to, even in the way that you tell a story, you naturally tell it in a story-like manner. You're not just reporting facts. If a story were were uh told the exact way it happened, it would be impossible just to report every fact. So so you tell it in a storytelling way. You you skip over certain things, you you speed the timeline up just for a moment, you know. That's how you that's telling a story. So in essence, that's that's not accurate nonfiction. Whereas when you tell fiction, you get a chance to completely make the story blow by blow what you need it to be in order to deliver what you want it to say. Whereas you can't you can't edit things out of nonfiction, you know, if it happened, it happened. Whereas in fiction, you can maneuver things around much easier, and therefore you find yourself being a little more honest than you would even be able to be in nonfiction. I mean, this is a long, long explanation, but it's it's actually a fascinating process because once you start writing fiction, you find that you're behind the anonymity of a story like that. You're telling so much of yourself, you're telling a lot of truth uh as it applies to you at least, and you're being even more vulnerable than you would be in nonfiction. And that's why I like it. It's it's a lot of fun, it's a soul-searching experience. And every time you create a character, what you're really doing is diving into your head and you're bringing out a piece of you, identifying with that piece of you, and you're giving it, you're giving it a name and you're giving it an identity, and then you just watch what it does, and and it's all you. And then when it's over, it's kind of sad because a piece of you is no longer in your constant consciousness.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, and I have to add, so this book took so many twists and turns, I was like, oh my gosh, what is coming next? But uh I have to ask as a writer, do you know when you start writing, do you know how it's gonna end?

SPEAKER_01:

No. No. And that's that's the fun of it because then it becomes a lot more like life. You know what I mean?

SPEAKER_00:

Right, yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

Like it's like the express the old Jewish expression, man plans, God life. Well, it's the same with writing a book. When you write a book, if you start at all to impose for me, and this is just for my process, but if you I start at all to impose an outline or an idea of how this is actually going to happen, uh, it it is quickly abandoned. It is quickly torn asunder. And and the characters end up doing what they want to do. They don't care about me, and they end up going their own direction. It's so fun to watch because there is no way to plan it. And that's just like life. There is absolutely no way to plan it because tomorrow something's gonna happen that was not planned, and you're gonna have to adjust.

SPEAKER_00:

There was uh near the end of the story, and I I just wanted to share this because it stood out to me as it brought back memories, number one, but it's near the end, and it said the ride reminded him of drives his dad used to take his family on when Woody was a kid. There was a time in this nation when the great American family went out for Sunday drives. When did those days disappear? When did we get so busy that we quit enjoying the drive? And that just brought back memories of my childhood. Just reading that little simple paragraph.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, that's so uh I miss those days. I uh we used to go on drives and I I think about that. I think about how nobody, uh not a lot of people at least, go on just a long drive and nobody poses. for family photographs in front of their Buick anymore. I mean No. No. It's amazing to think that you know the whole family, get the whole family together in front of the the old Chevrolet and let's let's get a picture.

SPEAKER_00:

Yep, absolutely. Well Sean, this has been most enjoyable for me.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh well me too. I really appreciate it. I appreciate you allowing me on your show.

SPEAKER_00:

But anyway, before we leave, do want to tell people how to find you. You do that. Just remind people again if you're in Cincinnati, November 2nd, I'll post a link in my show notes for tickets to that and to Sean's website. But leave my listeners with how to find you.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah you can find me pretty much anywhere. I'm kind of like stepping in horse dookie. I'm kind of all over the place. You can find me on uh my music on Spotify. You can find my writing on my website which is my name Seandrook.com or Seanothesouth.com.

SPEAKER_00:

But uh we'll look forward to seeing you on the second. Yes sir. Can't wait. And uh again thank you so much.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh thank you Dan this is this is great.

SPEAKER_00:

I hope you enjoyed this episode of Dan the Road Trip Guy. You can find me online at DanTheRottripguy.com. I hope you'll follow the show so that you don't miss any future episodes. I'd love your feedback so message me and I hope you'll share the show with your family and friends so that they can enjoy the conversations I have with my guest. And be sure when you're with your family and friends to record stories before it's too late. And for now remember keep driving and keep having conversations

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