Jon DelCollo
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
What did your dad do? My dad, at one point, he owned an accessibility company. He sold wheelchair ramps, that kind of stuff. At that one point. Yeah, that wasn't a good week. That wasn't the whole time. Okay. And then he eventually sold life insurance after that. What happened to the business?
I think he grew to hate handicapped people after some time of working with them and then didn't want to be in that business. Sure.
I think he grew to hate handicapped people after some time of working with them and then didn't want to be in that business. Sure.
I think he grew to hate handicapped people after some time of working with them and then didn't want to be in that business. Sure.
Before that, I think he worked at a hardware company. Okay. That I think was my grandfather's at some point. A lot of it's murky, a lot of blurry memories. Talking about rising and falling in America, in Wilmington. What'd your mom do? My mom worked for a lawyer, a secretary, but more of a legal assistant kind of thing. Paralegal type person. I think secretary is downplaying.
Before that, I think he worked at a hardware company. Okay. That I think was my grandfather's at some point. A lot of it's murky, a lot of blurry memories. Talking about rising and falling in America, in Wilmington. What'd your mom do? My mom worked for a lawyer, a secretary, but more of a legal assistant kind of thing. Paralegal type person. I think secretary is downplaying.
Before that, I think he worked at a hardware company. Okay. That I think was my grandfather's at some point. A lot of it's murky, a lot of blurry memories. Talking about rising and falling in America, in Wilmington. What'd your mom do? My mom worked for a lawyer, a secretary, but more of a legal assistant kind of thing. Paralegal type person. I think secretary is downplaying.
She's transcribing whatever the guy says in the tape recorder, all that stuff. The whole time that you were growing up, that was her main thing. Yeah, she was stay-at-home until maybe my sister was in kindergarten or something. Your younger sister. Yeah, my little sister. And then I guess she started back full-time when I was like 8 or 10 or something like that. Okay.
She's transcribing whatever the guy says in the tape recorder, all that stuff. The whole time that you were growing up, that was her main thing. Yeah, she was stay-at-home until maybe my sister was in kindergarten or something. Your younger sister. Yeah, my little sister. And then I guess she started back full-time when I was like 8 or 10 or something like that. Okay.
She's transcribing whatever the guy says in the tape recorder, all that stuff. The whole time that you were growing up, that was her main thing. Yeah, she was stay-at-home until maybe my sister was in kindergarten or something. Your younger sister. Yeah, my little sister. And then I guess she started back full-time when I was like 8 or 10 or something like that. Okay.
Mom was always rocking a Buick. A Buick. Shout out to a nice Buick American car. Pop-Up worked for GM, so they had the GM discount, so it was always Buick. Pop-Up, okay. And then my dad had a minivan at some point, a nice town and country once we had three kids. Dude, when the town and country's hit, that was a good vehicle. Let me slap a big old Santa Cruz sticker on the back of it. Really? What?
Mom was always rocking a Buick. A Buick. Shout out to a nice Buick American car. Pop-Up worked for GM, so they had the GM discount, so it was always Buick. Pop-Up, okay. And then my dad had a minivan at some point, a nice town and country once we had three kids. Dude, when the town and country's hit, that was a good vehicle. Let me slap a big old Santa Cruz sticker on the back of it. Really? What?
Mom was always rocking a Buick. A Buick. Shout out to a nice Buick American car. Pop-Up worked for GM, so they had the GM discount, so it was always Buick. Pop-Up, okay. And then my dad had a minivan at some point, a nice town and country once we had three kids. Dude, when the town and country's hit, that was a good vehicle. Let me slap a big old Santa Cruz sticker on the back of it. Really? What?
He was good to me when I was skateboarding. I respect that. He was my cameraman. Really? Oh, yeah. He did my Sponsor Me tape.