Tune in to the latest episode of the Bumperpodcast, the beloved improvised comedy podcast set in the whimsical town of Coffee-Can Alley. In this hilarious installment, Natty Bumpercar is joined by the young and energetic Boliver. As the episode unfolds, familiar faces like Rufus T. Rufus, Producer, and Aloysius J. Pig make their entrances, turning the chat into a comedic whirlwind. The gang discusses the latest happenings in Coffee-Can Alley, delivering laughs and surprises with their trademark wit and spontaneity. Don’t miss this fun-filled episode that captures the essence of the Bumperpodcast’s unique humor and charm.
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Transcription
Natty Bumpercar 0:00
I’m so strange, so strange. So strange yesterday, I kind of died a little bit, which is I know a strange way to start a podcast, especially the bumper podcast, by the way. Hello, everyone. This is Natty Bumpercar. And this is the bumper podcast, your weekly jump into fun, Ray. And so let’s start it off with with that yesterday. Well, first of all, so I don’t know where anyone is here at the bumper podcast. I haven’t seen pig. I haven’t seen Rufus. I haven’t seen producer and doodle poodle, anybody for weeks. And I come in, and I just kind of click on record and it seems to be working. I mean, the thing is, Do I even need producer? I don’t know, I honestly don’t know. But that is not the question for today. To question for today is what in the world happened yesterday? What in the world? Well, I got up. And I took one of the kids to school. And then I came home back to headquarters here. And I had a little sip of water because water is good for you in the morning. And then the one of the other one of the kids had left, like a little glass of orange juice on the table, and not very much at all. But I was like, oh, I’ll just finish that. Because as a parent, I’m a vulture, and I just go and I finish off whatever the food is, it’s left around. And then I went upstairs and I was gonna go back to bed because I was tired. And it was Monday. And on Mondays. Sometimes I pass out because the weekends are so much fun. That’s what it is. I’m so tired from all the fun that weekends are. I used to love weekends growing up. I remember man, I’d be like, Oh, I can’t wait for the weekend. Everybody’s everybody’s working for the weekend. Here we go. It’s Saturday morning. Whoo. I’m gonna sleep in and then I’m gonna do fun stuff. And now it’s just like, oh, no, no, as a parent, the weekends got in the way it gets here. Oh, no. And then Monday comes in. I’m tired. But so I got into bed. And my hands were weirdly itchy. Like, I was like, What is going on hands? Why are you so itchy. And they were kind of dry. And so I was like, alright, I’ll just go, you know, like, put some lotion on him. And that’ll that’ll fix that. And then I started to feel and this was happening pretty rapidly. My my lip was feeling kind of weird. And it’s like, All right, well, let’s go check it see. And so I went to the bathroom, and I was I was looking for the lotion, and then I shut the mirror. That’s where it is. And I saw my face. And my lip was gigantic, and purple. And my eyes like were swollen almost to being shut and they were bright red. And then not only was the rest of my face, very swollen. But I noticed that my tongue swollen, my throat swollen and the breathing. The breathing was not good. And so I I grabbed my rescue inhaler, and I did the did that. Just hopefully I was like alright, this will open up my airways. And then I was just like, alright, calmly, calmly. Let’s find the shoes. Let’s make sure we have all the stuff the wallet, the phone, the keys are right. Where’s the jacket? Perfect. Let’s go downstairs. Let’s get to the car. Let’s go to the closest urgent care and I was doing this all as the everything was getting much worse. Like the breathing was just like and the like the tongue it was. I don’t I don’t like tongues. I don’t like to talk about tongues. I think they’re weird and kind of gross. But the tongue was a lot. It was a lot more than it’s supposed to be. And I also I couldn’t talk and so really just around the corner not I would say maybe is three quarters of a mile away from the house is is an urgent care. There’s one that’s closer, which is a CVS, but I looked on the thing and they were not open yet. And so I went to the other one. And at a light, there’s two lights in between my house in this place. So at the second light, it was red light. And so I texted my wife and I was just like, Hi, I’m having an allergic reaction. We’re going to urgent care, period. That’s all I saw at time, then the light turned her send light green, off, we go to the urgent care, get to the urgent care Park can’t breathe, like really can’t breathe, stumble into the place, lumbar into the place. There’s no one there. And I look around. And I guess they heard me come in. And so a woman came, you know, behind the desk, and her eyes got enormous. And she said, can I please have your ID? And I was just like, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, because it couldn’t talk. I couldn’t speak at all like, rules. No, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, is how I sounded. But worse than that. And then the woman who there’s another woman who kind of looked in and she was like, get him back here now. And they got me back there sat me in the chair and started taking doing my blood. What is the oxygen levels and the thing around my arm to check my blood pressure, and all these things? And it was great. But they were running around like chickens. They were just running around in circles, like, what do we do? What do we do? It’s Monday morning. This is the first guy that comes in what? It’s not a good way to start a week called labor ambulance call the man ambulance quickly. And so the ambulance comes, but it took them about, I want to say eight minutes. I don’t know pretty sure it could have died that eight minutes. And so they get there. And they’re like, should we do an EpiPen? Do we need to do what have you been? And they’re like, get them on the stretcher. It was all very like, but do this. Gotta do this, get into that. And I, they got me on the stretcher. And they were asking all these questions. And they asked me to write down my phone number because I couldn’t say it. And I wrote mine. And then I wrote my wife’s number. And then I said, I was trying to say hold on do you want me to call my wife but they couldn’t understand it because it came out like this rah rah, love, love. And so I took my phone, they were like, We don’t know what you’re saying. So I took my phone and I pressed the you know, I was like call wife. And then I handed them the phone. And then she got a call from a police officer. And you know, when you get that call, it’s scary. And so she you know, I was talking to him about the situation what was going on? Should she come back? And I was like, No, I got this, you know, and then I get whisked to the ambulance. And they put an IV in me and then it’s Benadryl. And then things start to come down a little bit. They were debating whether to do the epi pen or not. And epi pen is like, the guy was telling me about it. And I wish you wouldn’t have it’s a it’s a tube with a giant needle, he said, giant needle that they jam into your leg and then, you know, like, whatever. And it’s what they do. When I guess you’re going into anaphylaxis, which is not good thing. So they, they were going to wait until we got to the emergency room because they were kind of monitoring everything. And I was I still somehow was getting oxygen. Even though I the breathing was just like wow, right, very rapid. And we got to the emergency room on the thing, and then they get me in there and then they start pumping me full of all kinds of other stuff. And you know, I was plugged in, I’ve got tubes, I’ve got things in my fingers things. There was this a lot. And I ended up being at the hospital for like 10 hours. And because they it was it wouldn’t the swelling wouldn’t go down. Like it was very slow, like, my face would get a little bit better. And I realized that about like, three o’clock that I hadn’t eaten anything since pretty much five o’clock the last day and I was just like and they’re like, What, and that’s because everybody was like What What are you saying what? I’m sure. And they were like, oh food. We have two two sandwiches. I was like, oh, not and they gay and then I just like everyone, Apple car or, or yoga. And they’re like, ah, applesauce, we can give you applesauce and I was like oh Huh.
And I’m texting, you know, people updates. This is what’s happening. This is where I am, this is what’s going on yada, yada. I’ll give you updates as I have them. Yeah, and one of the annoying things was I couldn’t go to the bathroom because of these things tied into me. But eventually I was I was like, I was like, the bathroom. And they were like, okay, hold on, well, unclick you unclick I click, I click. And she’s like, okay, it’s doors right down there. And, and I started walking out of the room. They asked me if I could and I said yes. And I got like two feet out of the room, they had forgotten to unplug, like, some major thing. And it knocked me back. And it almost, and the equipment, like almost fell over. And like, so everyone in the emergency room was like, gasp it says everything. Okay? And I was just like, they were like, Oh, we’re sorry. And then I, you know, I use bathroom. And then like, a couple hours later, things were down enough. My face was okay. And they were like, Okay, you seem good. Okay, called the wife. She and the kids came and got me. And I Yeah, you know, it’s better. Now I was given all kinds of medicine, I’m going to see an allergist, see what happened. And because it was very random, and the only thing that we could figure out was it was this orange juice, because that was all I had. And we were looking at the bottle and it was orange juice that had calcium in it. And then I started researching, and it seems like calcium citrate or calcium phosphate, or some of the things that they put into the orange juice that I maybe had a bad reaction to. And so it was a pretty fun day, pretty much everyone thought that I was going to be dead or die or whatever. And my main fear was that they were going to intubate me. So put like a tube in my throat so that I could breathe, because then my fear was, well what is my voice sound like? Like, how is this going to impact how my voice sounds which I use my voice for a lot of things, talking being one of them, but now it’s all fixed except for the cleanup and the tears.
Outro 12:42
The bumper podcast is an oftentimes hilarious weekly romp with Natty Bumpercar and some of his pals. It is family friendly, clean and ridiculous. Thanks a bundle for listening. If you love our show, and you’d like to help support the podcast, check out our Patreon page at https colon forward slash forward slash www.patreon.com forward slash Natty Bumpercar also pretty please subscribe wherever you get your podcasts, share it with everyone everywhere. post about it on all of the social medias or leave a rating and review. The bumper podcast is produced at headquarters in coffee Ken alley. It’s recorded mixed and produced by producer. The bumper podcast features contributions from Aloysius jpg Rufus T Rufus doodle poodle, robot trunks and a gaggle of other silly rascals. Our head talker is probably Natty Bumpercar. We also have an absurd newsletter. Check it out and subscribe at Natty bumpercar.com/subscribe Also, you can follow me on Instagram and Twitter at Natty Bumpercar Hugs and hearts See you soon.
NonPro 14:01
This has been a non productive media presentation, executive producer Franco Blaue. This program and many others like it on the nonproductive network is distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution non commercial no derivatives license. Please share it but ask before trying to change it or sell it. For more information visit non dash productive.com
About This Episode
In Bumperpodcast episode 445, Natty Bumpercar brings in a fresh face after the chaotic previous week – his son Ollie joins the show as a guest co-host. After a mishap involving a hanging chair accident, the conversation flows from beach adventures and fish poop to the invention of "swim-jamas" – pajamas you can swim in. The duo brainstorm absurd ideas including throwing kids in washing machines to get clean. When Rufus T. Rufus shows up, things take a hilarious turn as Ollie interviews for his first job as the podcast's security guard, despite having zero experience in surveillance. This charming, silly episode showcases the improvised father-son banter that makes Bumperpodcast a delightfully ridiculous family comedy.
Memorable Quotes
“I have practice fighting people… the practice is my brother every time he barges in my room.”
— Ollie
“We would hose you off once a week to get the stink out. And it'd be great.”
— Natty Bumpercar
“What happened to all the people who was talking last week? Well, we had to get rid of them.”
— Rufus T. Rufus
Topics: #summer #beach #swimming #family #firstjob #inventions #fatherson #interview
Featuring: Natty Bumpercar, Ollie, Rufus T. Rufus, Producer
Full Transcript
Natty Bumpercar: well well well that was loud huh yes yeah oh wait who are you your son oh that's nice remember you gotta face up that way oh right yeah um well everybody after the terrible episode of last week we have decided to start fresh get rid of all the characters and um we have brought in this new gentleman uh how's it going uh pretty good i fell from what's that thing called again like it's a hammock um yeah okay yeah ollie is in the studio here and i have one of those chairs that hangs from the ceiling and you can sit in it it's like a swing and it's soft and comfy and great and while i was over here getting the wires set up and getting everything um ready he was on the chair i'll let you take it from there i was spinning around in it and then it just fell you were oh wait a minute you were spinning interesting i didn't know that part now i feel like it's operator error nothing okay you know what that means um no i was just trying to say was all your fault what you never learned how to float i did you years of my life trying to teach you the the the magic of floating and you just fell right to the ground well okay then you float i mean i can't right now because the equipment and it would mess everything up but i you know yeah late later later we'll do i'll do i'll show you some and for me it's tough because i can only do it at night when people really can't see so you know i'll but i'll do it tonight
Ollie: interesting
Natty Bumpercar: interesting right now what did you do yesterday uh we went to the beach i love the beach did you have fun yeah what did you do went in the water oh you went into the water yes do you know what what's in the water do you know what happens in the water uh there's fish poop in the water i was i wasn't gonna I wasn't going to go there, but wow. This is a kid's show, Ollie. And you're over here talking about fish. They go into the bathroom. Oh, I don't even know what to think. You are correct. I guess there is probably some fish poop somewhere. But so were there waves?
Ollie: Yes.
Natty Bumpercar: Big waves?
Ollie: Yes.
Natty Bumpercar: And did you, like, play with them, jump at them?
Ollie: Yeah, I jumped at them. Sometimes I jumped over them. Over? Yeah, I jumped through them at least. I don't know how to say it.
Natty Bumpercar: Oh, like you would dive through the waves?
Ollie: Yeah, and then a bigger wave would come, and then I would just be under the water.
Natty Bumpercar: Yeah, I saw you get knocked over a few times.
Ollie: Yeah.
Natty Bumpercar: Did it hurt?
Ollie: Yeah.
Natty Bumpercar: Now. What hurt worse? Getting knocked over by the waves or having the chair drop you on the ground?
Ollie: The chair.
Natty Bumpercar: The chair. Yeah, that makes sense. Why are you here today? Shouldn't you be at your job?
Ollie: It was a snow day.
Natty Bumpercar: It's June. It's June, and you were at the beach yesterday? And I'm supposed to believe that it's… It's now a snow day?
Ollie: Uh, because it's summer, maybe?
Natty Bumpercar: Is it summer?
Ollie: Yes, it is summer.
Natty Bumpercar: Oh. Oh. Interesting. So you're not going to go, um, to Australia?
Ollie: Uh, no.
Natty Bumpercar: Okay. All right. Uh, you're not going to take that trip to the moon?
Ollie: No.
Natty Bumpercar: Okay. Uh, what are your big plans for the summer?
Ollie: Um, more swimming.
Natty Bumpercar: More swimming. All right. Do you think you're going to wear pajamas the entire summer?
Ollie: Maybe.
Natty Bumpercar: Um, are there such things as swim-jamas?
Ollie: No.
Natty Bumpercar: And if there's not, should we invent them?
Ollie: Maybe. I don't know.
Natty Bumpercar: Yeah, so then you could…
Ollie: Could we?
Natty Bumpercar: Wake up, you're wearing your swim-jamas, you hop in the pool, and then you get out, and you're still… You're still wearing your swim-jamas?
Ollie: Yeah, that sounds like a good idea.
Natty Bumpercar: And they're, like, nice and soft, but they also dry really quickly.
Ollie: Yeah.
Natty Bumpercar: Yeah. And they could be, like, uh, second skin. You just never take them off.
Ollie: Well, wouldn't they get really stinky and dirty?
Natty Bumpercar: Oh, I mean, you'd wear them in the shower. We'd hose… We would hose you off once a week to get the stink out. And, uh, it'd be great.
Ollie: I have a better idea for how we could get the stink off.
Natty Bumpercar: Okay. Okay. I'm open. You know I'm… I love ideas. I'm open to ideas. So what is your idea?
Ollie: Uh… To throw me in the washing machine?
Natty Bumpercar: Wait a minute. That's actually not a bad idea. As long as we don't use the, um, hot water, then I think we'll be okay.
Ollie: Yeah. I think… I think that's a good idea.
Natty Bumpercar: Oh, your hair would get clean. I bet your teeth would get clean. Like, everything. It'd be amazing.
Ollie: Yeah.
Natty Bumpercar: Why don't we invent a, um… I don't know. Like, a… A thing that kids can get into that will make them clean. Um… What will we call it?
Ollie: Hmm. Maybe a bath?
Natty Bumpercar: A bath? Okay. I was thinking… Outdoor shower? Hmm.
Ollie: What do you think of that? Maybe. That sounds like a good idea.
Natty Bumpercar: Um…
Ollie: So, let me think. You're…
Natty Bumpercar: Uh… Wait. Hold on. Who's that? Hey, uh… He… Uh…
Rufus T. Rufus: Who's… Who's the kid? Who's the kid? What's he doing here? Hey. I ain't seen you in a long time. What's going on, bud? Uh… Not a lot. Hold on. Hey, pig.
Ollie: Are you…
Natty Bumpercar: Do you see Ollie? He's over here? Yeah. Yeah.
Rufus T. Rufus: I was just talking to him. He's on a microphone? Why? What happened to all the people who was talking last week? Well, we had to get rid of them. Ollie, did you listen to the episode from last week? Yeah. What did you think?
Natty Bumpercar: Chaos. Well, uh… Hey. This is, uh… Rufus. T. Rufus. The lawyer. And I gotta say, I also, uh… Made an attempt to listen to him.
Ollie: Uh… Uh…
Rufus T. Rufus: Uh… Uh… Uh… Uh… Uh… Uh… Uh… Uh… Uh… Uh…
Natty Bumpercar: like i would see people and uh very excitedly i would say did you listen to the uh last episode of the bumper podcast and they would be like yeah and i'd be like it was really bad right and they wondered why i was so excited you know i i think we need to improve the security
Rufus T. Rufus: is there is there any security anyway who's gonna be security i don't know do we have anybody
Ollie: that we could what is what was that like siri just activate i don't i was i heard something
Rufus T. Rufus: maybe maybe she wants to be security is that i don't think she'd be very good security yeah um are you do you want to take over the job possibly oh okay okay now if you was secure
Producer: this is your interview all right all right hold on we're gonna start doing interviews okay hold on i just want to make sure i can record all of this um alec can you talking to the microphone okay oh that's perfect it's actually really wonderful okay you can play
Rufus T. Rufus: a scene with your interview um thanks producer so uh what are your qualifications um i have practice fighting people you have practice uh fighting people yeah the practice is my brother every time he barges in my room oh so you're skilled in the arts yeah you're of fighting yeah but it doesn't get into a room often yeah all right so he gets into your room often now do you have any kind of experience with surveillance no okay you know there's no right or wrong answer to any of these questions i'm just kind of making sure we cover every every everything do you have an idea of a salary
Natty Bumpercar: that you would like um hold on pig did ollie do you know what uh salary is uh a type of food ah no that would be celery um yeah so salary is like how much do you get paid in a year oh yeah so do you have any he was asking like how much would you like to get paid a year yeah that's typically how they how they do it uh 200 hold on two hundred dollars yeah
Rufus T. Rufus: did he just say 200 i think we got that in the budget for the whole year yeah it's like this 500 days in the year so he's getting paid like uh what a quarter a day uh yeah hold on rufus is any of this legal well hold on now how old is is is is the boy um that's counting hold on 11 you're 11 years old uh i gotta look into the law baby mom i got a whole table lot
Natty Bumpercar: everything planned out and we gotta take care love don't worry about this breecık uh halfway across the street my love if you want wes a free camera maybe show it to model
Ollie: i'll take care j driver but i'm pretty sure it's uh not gonna be a problem wow ollie it sounds like it you got first uh summer job are you excited yeah uh oh security for the bumper vehicles finally i can't believe you have a future ahead of you what do you think i'm happy you're happy you're happy whoop whoop whoop whoop um might i talk to pigs again we'll talk to pigs someday
Producer: the pig for a second. The Bumper Podcast is an oftentimes hilarious weekly romp with Natty Bumpercar and some of his pals. It is family-friendly, clean, and ridiculous. Thanks a bundle for listening. If you love our show and you'd like to help support the podcast, check out our Patreon page at https://www.patreon.com forward slash Natty Bumpercar. Also, pretty please subscribe wherever you get your podcasts, share it with everyone everywhere, post about it on all of the social medias, or leave a rating and review. The Bumper Podcast is produced at headquarters in Coffee Can Alley. It's recorded, mixed, and produced by producer. The Bumper Podcast features contributions from Aloysius J. Pig, Rufus T. Rufus, Doodle Poodle, Robot, Trunks, and a gaggle of other silly rascals. Our head talker is probably Natty Bumpercar. We also have an absurd newsletter. Check it out and subscribe at nattybumpercar.com slash subscribe. Also, you can follow me on Instagram and Twitter at Natty Bumpercar. Hugs and hearts. See you soon.

