GoManDo Everyday Moments Podcast

What's The Dill: ATM Fails, Pallet Scams, and a Caterpillar Massacre

24 min · I går
episode What's The Dill: ATM Fails, Pallet Scams, and a Caterpillar Massacre cover

Beskrivelse

Welcome to episode one of GoManDo, where Mike and Nelson sit down for exactly the kind of loose, roll-with-it conversation the show is built on. Mike kicks things off already flustered, wrong hat, wrong shirt, and a morning ATM run that went sideways when the machine flashed "out of service." No cash for Nelson, who cuts hair as his nine to five and does the podcast on the side, so Mike raids his mom's drawer for a hundred bucks with a promise to pay it back later. From there the guys get into the business side of the show: Facebook boosts that no longer let you set your own budget or timeline, a lingering Google ad running for a project Mike already walked away from, and a plan to loop in the folks who host and edit the podcast to figure out how to actually grow.The heart of the episode is a slow-burn scam story from Mike's day job at a pallet plant in Indiana. A supposed Wisconsin food company wanted 5,000 reconditioned pallets, then morphed into a $90,000 purchase order shipping not to Wisconsin but to an address in the Bronx, the exact same address Josh's cousin down in Kentucky got hit with too. Add in a co-conspirator whose emails read like pure ChatGPT, and Mike's spidey sense was tingling from the jump. The takeaway both guys land on: AI-powered scams aren't coming, they're already here.The back half loosens into everyday life. Mike weighs selling his canceled Sirius XM boom box and receiver on Facebook Marketplace, reviews the book "Wave Walker" and the ninth Nick Petrie novel (with a plea for authors to keep their plots local), and orders a lightweight Drive wheelchair for his 94-year-old mom, only to spot "Made in China" on the box after assembly. Then it's gardens: Nelson's cucumber tendrils finding a buddy, and Mike's dill plants getting devoured down to nothing by fat green-and-black caterpillars that turn into butterflies. Plus fresh grass seed, busted 1960s water valves, and the ongoing headache of syncing his mom's CVS prescriptions.Key Takeaways● AI-driven scams are already mainstream, and a "too formal," ChatGPT-sounding email is a red flag worth trusting.● A suspicious purchase order that suddenly changes the ship-to address (here, to the Bronx) is a classic tell, especially when the same address hits multiple businesses.● Facebook's boost tool now runs indefinitely until you manually stop it, so watch your ad spend closely.● For reselling gear, check eBay for real market prices and keep Marketplace deals local to dodge shipping scams.● Finding American-made products is genuinely hard, even a Drive-brand wheelchair can turn out to be made in China.● Sometimes a smaller, more local story (in books and in life) is more satisfying than one sprawling all over the map.Timestamps00:00 - Wrong hat, a dead ATM, and paying Nelson in cash01:56 - Plant tour, stray ads, and the podcast growth plan04:02 - Facebook boosts that never turn off and looping in the team05:25 - Canceled Sirius XM: should Mike sell the boom box?06:54 - The $90,000 pallet scam and the Bronx address10:31 - "Wave Walker," Nick Petrie, and keeping plots local14:47 - A wheelchair for mom and the "Made in China" surprise17:56 - Gardens, cucumber tendrils, and the caterpillar massacre20:32 - Grass seed, old water valves, and CVS refill headachesConnect● Website: https://www.gomando.com● Hosts: Mike and Nelson#GoManDo #PodcastLife #TravelPrep #LifeUpdates #EntrepreneurLife #AIScams #SmallBusiness #GardenLife #Books #EverydayLife

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episode What's The Dill: ATM Fails, Pallet Scams, and a Caterpillar Massacre cover

What's The Dill: ATM Fails, Pallet Scams, and a Caterpillar Massacre

Welcome to episode one of GoManDo, where Mike and Nelson sit down for exactly the kind of loose, roll-with-it conversation the show is built on. Mike kicks things off already flustered, wrong hat, wrong shirt, and a morning ATM run that went sideways when the machine flashed "out of service." No cash for Nelson, who cuts hair as his nine to five and does the podcast on the side, so Mike raids his mom's drawer for a hundred bucks with a promise to pay it back later. From there the guys get into the business side of the show: Facebook boosts that no longer let you set your own budget or timeline, a lingering Google ad running for a project Mike already walked away from, and a plan to loop in the folks who host and edit the podcast to figure out how to actually grow.The heart of the episode is a slow-burn scam story from Mike's day job at a pallet plant in Indiana. A supposed Wisconsin food company wanted 5,000 reconditioned pallets, then morphed into a $90,000 purchase order shipping not to Wisconsin but to an address in the Bronx, the exact same address Josh's cousin down in Kentucky got hit with too. Add in a co-conspirator whose emails read like pure ChatGPT, and Mike's spidey sense was tingling from the jump. The takeaway both guys land on: AI-powered scams aren't coming, they're already here.The back half loosens into everyday life. Mike weighs selling his canceled Sirius XM boom box and receiver on Facebook Marketplace, reviews the book "Wave Walker" and the ninth Nick Petrie novel (with a plea for authors to keep their plots local), and orders a lightweight Drive wheelchair for his 94-year-old mom, only to spot "Made in China" on the box after assembly. Then it's gardens: Nelson's cucumber tendrils finding a buddy, and Mike's dill plants getting devoured down to nothing by fat green-and-black caterpillars that turn into butterflies. Plus fresh grass seed, busted 1960s water valves, and the ongoing headache of syncing his mom's CVS prescriptions.Key Takeaways● AI-driven scams are already mainstream, and a "too formal," ChatGPT-sounding email is a red flag worth trusting.● A suspicious purchase order that suddenly changes the ship-to address (here, to the Bronx) is a classic tell, especially when the same address hits multiple businesses.● Facebook's boost tool now runs indefinitely until you manually stop it, so watch your ad spend closely.● For reselling gear, check eBay for real market prices and keep Marketplace deals local to dodge shipping scams.● Finding American-made products is genuinely hard, even a Drive-brand wheelchair can turn out to be made in China.● Sometimes a smaller, more local story (in books and in life) is more satisfying than one sprawling all over the map.Timestamps00:00 - Wrong hat, a dead ATM, and paying Nelson in cash01:56 - Plant tour, stray ads, and the podcast growth plan04:02 - Facebook boosts that never turn off and looping in the team05:25 - Canceled Sirius XM: should Mike sell the boom box?06:54 - The $90,000 pallet scam and the Bronx address10:31 - "Wave Walker," Nick Petrie, and keeping plots local14:47 - A wheelchair for mom and the "Made in China" surprise17:56 - Gardens, cucumber tendrils, and the caterpillar massacre20:32 - Grass seed, old water valves, and CVS refill headachesConnect● Website: https://www.gomando.com● Hosts: Mike and Nelson#GoManDo #PodcastLife #TravelPrep #LifeUpdates #EntrepreneurLife #AIScams #SmallBusiness #GardenLife #Books #EverydayLife

I går24 min
episode Rabbit Attacks cover

Rabbit Attacks

Mike and Nelson sit down for a working session before a big meeting Mike has with the company that hosts the podcast. The plan is to walk in with real questions: how to handle advertising when the views were sky high during paid promotion but flatten out without it, how to bring guests into the mix, and where the whole show goes from here. It is a candid look behind the curtain at a podcast trying to figure out its next chapter, with Nelson tapped as the sounding board for all of it.From there the conversation rolls through everyday life. Mike's 94-year-old mom took a tumble out of her sky-high adjustable bed reaching for something on the floor, which sends him down a rabbit hole on how mattresses and bed frames have completely changed, plus an Amazon return gone sideways when they shipped the wrong height. The guys compare notes on Nelson's underpowered electric lawnmower, swap notes on Mike's all-electric Ego setup, and untangle the modern paranoia of scam calls, endless DocuSigns, and a 59-page bank packet Mike just wants a clean copy of.The back half gets into camping plans at Maumee Bay, where GoManDo offers to cover a night for Nelson and his family, a detour into Insta360 and DJI action cameras for Mike's future trips, book series that started strong and went goofy, and the running war with the backyard wildlife. Squirrels tore up the fresh grass seed and rabbits mowed down a row of sunflowers overnight, leaving Mike plotting better defenses against the critters he swears are out there scheming.Key Takeaways● Mike heads into a meeting with the podcast's hosting company to push for advertising answers, guest appearances, and a clearer direction for the show.● His 94-year-old mom fell out of her tall adjustable bed, prompting a swap to a lower bed frame and a lesson in how much mattresses and frames have changed.● Electric outdoor gear comes with tradeoffs: Nelson's lawnmower battery dies on wet, overgrown grass, while Mike's Ego system keeps spare batteries charged and ready.● Modern money tasks mean wading through scam calls and long, confusing DocuSign packets, with Mike wanting a clean attachment he can save or print himself.● GoManDo offers to pay for a night of Nelson's family camping trip, with Maumee Bay pitched as the easier, closer option with trails, a pool, and beaches.● Squirrels and rabbits are winning the yard war, taking out grass seed and a row of nearly grown sunflowers overnight despite cages and fencing.Timestamps00:00 The hosting meeting, advertising views, and bringing on guests01:33 Tea blends, spearmint leaves, and Mom's fall out of a sky-high bed04:44 How bed frames changed and the wrong-size Amazon return07:22 Electric lawnmowers, dead batteries, and high winds11:00 The bucket hat, plant tour plans, and camping at Maumee Bay15:42 Pharmacy shuffles, scam emails, and a 59-page DocuSign packet21:30 Book series that started strong and went goofy25:21 Garden updates and the Insta360 vs DJI camera talk30:26 Squirrels, rabbits, and the losing battle for the sunflowersConnect● Website: https://www.gomando.com● Hosts: Mike, Nelson#GoManDo #PodcastLife #TravelPrep #LifeUpdates #EntrepreneurLife #ElectricLawnmower #DocuSign #Camping #MaumeeBay #Insta360 #BackyardGarden #RabbitAttacks

30. juni 202635 min
episode Name Change Nightmare: Government Websites, Nonstick Pans, and a Camping Trip Locked In cover

Name Change Nightmare: Government Websites, Nonstick Pans, and a Camping Trip Locked In

Mike finally has the court order in hand, which means the name change went through. The relief is real, but so is the bureaucratic gauntlet that comes next. He walks Nelson through the misstep that almost cost him: heading to the Secretary of State first, only to learn after the fact that Social Security has to come first or nothing else will stick. Cue thirty web pages that led nowhere, a Chromebook setting buried where no one could find it, and a lawyer who clearly wanted nothing to do with it. Enter Nelson, the technical hero, who sat down and pushed the whole application through to the end.The reward for all that effort? An appointment a month and a half out, July 24th at 11:20. After that comes the real overhaul: passport, driver's license, bank accounts, work, and whatever else carries the old name. With an October trip on the horizon, the timing should just barely work, and Nelson's advice is to squeeze the passport questions in while Mike is already sitting in the office. Add a guardianship certificate that had to be renewed for Mom's banking, and it's a vivid reminder that the paperwork of caring for aging parents never really slows down.From there the guys ease into lighter territory: Mike's quest to ditch Teflon for good after spotting the coating flake away, his okra pan that nails fried eggs but fought him on hash browns, and the eternal cast iron debate. Gardens are thriving, ladybugs have arrived, and a montage of Mike's recent home cooking is headed for the edit. Mike also goes on record with a heavy hockey take about trading Larkin, before delivering the real payoff: the GoManDo camping assignment is complete, with five lake-and-hiking spots scouted for Nelson's family visit, a stop at the legendary Tony Packo's, and a tour through Toledo and Detroit's old ethnic neighborhoods.Key Takeaways● Do Social Security first when changing your name. Hit any other agency before that and the change won't take.● Government websites and Chromebook permission settings can derail even a confident user, so having a tech-savvy friend helps.● Name changes cascade: passport, driver's license, bank, work, and utilities all need updating, so build in time before any travel.● Caring for an aging parent means constant paperwork, from guardianship renewals to banking access.● Stainless and okra-style pans can handle eggs beautifully but punish you on stuck-on potatoes; cast iron shines for baked goods and steak, not eggs.● The camping trip is locked in: Maumee Bay State Park near Toledo offers lakes, trails, cottages, and a Tony Packo's stop on the way home.Timestamps00:00 The name change saga begins and the Social Security misstep01:25 Thirty web pages, Chromebook settings, and Nelson the technical hero03:45 The July 24th appointment and the full name-change overhaul ahead05:38 Passports, timing the October trip, and how it actually feels now07:00 Spearmint tea, gardens taking off, and the ladybug report09:59 The okra pan, fried eggs, and the quest to ditch Teflon13:01 Guardianship certificate, banking, and the paperwork that never stops14:46 A food montage for the editor and a heavy take on trading Larkin19:17 Camping assignment delivered: Maumee Bay, Tony Packo's, and Toledo neighborhoodsConnect● Website: https://www.gomando.com● Hosts: Mike, Nelson#GoManDo #PodcastLife #TravelPrep #LifeUpdates #EntrepreneurLife #NameChange #SocialSecurity #Caregiving #CastIron #Teflon #Gardening #RedWings #Camping #MaumeeBay #TonyPackos #Toledo #Detroit

23. juni 202625 min
episode Is This Pan A Scam? Spearmint Tea, Scam Emails, and a Suspicious Japanese Pan cover

Is This Pan A Scam? Spearmint Tea, Scam Emails, and a Suspicious Japanese Pan

Nelson shows up to the GoManDo studio fresh off barber duty, and Mike's walking in with a brand-new haircut and a head full of talking points, minus the actual script he meant to bring. What follows is a loose, easygoing hang built around the small obsessions that fill a week: the spearmint plant Mike finally tracked down at Meijer, repotted, and is now bruising leaf by leaf into homemade green and white tea that he swears beats anything on the store shelf. The math checks out too, 200 bags for twelve bucks on Amazon versus three-fifty for a tiny box of the fancy stuff.In between sips, the guys knock out their very first official GoManDo assignment: finding Nelson a proper campground within a two-hour drive of metro Detroit for his mom, sister, and two young nieces coming up from Florida in late August. They want trails, a lake, and something the kids can handle, and they're putting it to the listeners. From there the conversation drifts through the modern annoyances, the flood of scam emails and fake DocuSigns from "statement lawn dot com," the wall-to-wall political ads already ramping up for the midterms, and a SiriusXM cancellation that may not have actually stuck, which is why Mike finally swapped his old boombox for a Soundcore Boom 2 Plus.The back half is all books and one very suspicious pan. Mike pitches Wave Walker, Suzanne Heywood's memoir about a childhood spent sailing the world, then riffs on the gloriously absurd ending of a Don Bentley thriller where the hero kills a man by biting him. Then comes the main event: an Okura titanium "non-stick" pan Mike bought off a Facebook ad that arrived with no handle, a tiny wrench, and a spare screw. Is this thing legit or did Mike get got? He's a self-described sucker for a slick ad, and this time he's putting the verdict off until next week.Key Takeaways● Fresh spearmint leaves, lightly muddled and dropped into plain green or white tea, beat pricey store-bought blends for a fraction of the cost.● The first GoManDo assignment is live: help find a kid-friendly campground with trails and a lake within two hours of the Detroit-Toledo area for late August.● Treat unexpected DocuSign and "loan wrap-up" emails as scams, search the company name first, and never click suspicious links or attachments.● A SiriusXM cancellation that keeps "updating" and playing is worth a second call, and a Soundcore Boom 2 Plus made a solid sub-$200 replacement boombox.● Suzanne Heywood's memoir Wave Walker is on Mike's reading list, alongside thrillers from Don Bentley and Kyle Mills.● Cheap cookware off a Facebook ad is a gamble: the handle-less Okura titanium pan is on trial, with a cooking test coming next week.Timestamps00:00 - Fresh haircut and the spearmint tea experiment03:30 - GoManDo assignment: a campground for Nelson's family06:24 - Tea sticker shock and the American-only Amazon idea08:45 - Scam emails, fake DocuSigns, and inbox overload11:47 - Political ad fatigue and the SiriusXM saga15:00 - Swapping in the Soundcore Boom 2 Plus boombox19:30 - Wave Walker, RF Kuang, and a hero who bites26:00 - The podcast company meeting and the titanium pan unboxing33:00 - Cooking tests, Lake James, and the Irish HillsConnect● Website: https://www.gomando.com● Hosts: Mike and Nelson#GoManDo #PodcastLife #TravelPrep #LifeUpdates #EntrepreneurLife #Camping #ScamAlert #SlowLiving #BookRecommendations #Cookware

16. juni 202637 min
episode Flood And Garlic: A Backyard Disaster, a Bear on the Loose, and the Great Speaker Search cover

Flood And Garlic: A Backyard Disaster, a Bear on the Loose, and the Great Speaker Search

Mike and Nelson open with garden talk, but this is no ordinary planting update. Nelson goes the budget route this year, seven five-gallon buckets of peppers, tomatoes, and strawberries on a rental property where a raised bed didn't make sense. Mike, meanwhile, comes home from a work trip to find water shooting over his back fence and his garden underwater, the handiwork of a strange elderly neighbor trying to scare off four blackbirds with a water feature. The knock-on-the-door confrontation that follows is peak GoManDo: awkward, a little absurd, and somehow resolved within a couple of days.From there the guys cover the bear that's been wandering downstate Michigan, hopping expressways and beehives and racking up local social media fame, before settling into the small stuff that makes the show tick. Mike dials in his spearmint tea at 200 degrees, hands Nelson a bottle of Garlic Expressions from outside Toledo, and finally, gloriously, cancels SiriusXM after a customer-service nightmare. That cancellation kicks off a hunt for the right portable Bluetooth speaker, with Nelson steering Mike away from Sonos and toward JBL, Bose, or Soundcore based on hard-won barbershop experience.The back half turns personal and practical: the annual legal-guardianship paperwork for Mike's mom and the oddly memorable court worker who filed a glowing report, a meatball stew Mike has been living on for three days, the search for a new caretaker that finally landed on a reliable local, and a deep dive into what to read after the Peter Ash series wraps. Brandon Sanderson, Don Bentley, and Douglas Preston all make the list.Key Takeaways● Container gardening in buckets is a smart, low-cost way to test the waters when you're renting and not sure you'll stay.● A flooded garden traced back to a neighbor's water feature is a reminder that a calm knock on the door often beats a confrontation.● Tea temperature matters: Mike swears the jump from 175 to 200 degrees pulls noticeably more flavor.● Canceling subscriptions like SiriusXM and medical alert services can be a genuine ordeal, but worth the persistence.● For a stay-at-home speaker, skip the $500 flagships; Sonos leans on a glitchy Wi-Fi app, while Soundcore offers solid Bluetooth sound for less.● Annual legal guardianship requires fresh paperwork every year, so a good lawyer and a reliable local caretaker make all the difference.Timestamps00:00 - Bucket gardens, seven veggies, and keeping the chickens out01:16 - The flooded backyard and the strange neighbor next door05:49 - Renting, reeling it in, and the bear loose downstate08:16 - Spearmint tea at 200 degrees and a Garlic Expressions gift11:02 - Godzilla clips, canceling SiriusXM, and the portable speaker hunt16:03 - Yearly guardianship paperwork and the odd court worker19:42 - Meatball stew and the case for a good local butcher26:33 - Finding a new caretaker who actually works out28:48 - Life after Peter Ash: Bentley, Preston, and Brandon SandersonConnect● Website: https://www.gomando.com● Hosts: Mike and Nelson#GoManDo #PodcastLife #TravelPrep #LifeUpdates #EntrepreneurLife #ContainerGardening #BluetoothSpeakers #SiriusXM #GarlicExpressions #BrandonSanderson #Mistborn #PeterAsh #MichiganLifeThanks for watching!GoManDo is all about life's everyday moments — from cooking and travel to growing older and finding humor in the little things. Join us as we talk about life, share personal stories, and reflect on the good stuff that makes it all worth living.🎙️ New videos every Tuesday 📍 Subscribe to follow along: https://www.youtube.com/@RealGoManDo👇 Connect with us on social: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/GomandoLLCInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/gomando/Website: https://www.gomando.com

9. juni 202632 min