She Ran a Red Light & T-boned a Car – Rabiah Coon (Transcript – S5E12)

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Note: Transcripts are prepared by an AI program and as a result may not be 100% accurate. For those of you who know us, know we are working very hard for this podcast (with our 3 hour round trip commutes and full-time jobs), and as we have time, we are slowly working on correcting the transcripts. We greatly appreciate you for understanding and your patience. 

Listen to the episode

(sneak peek)

 

 

RABIAH: I didn’t see the light because there
were these lights that were like hanging and they were blowing and so I
couldn’t see them side go through this intersection, not knowing end up T
boning this other vehicle.

 

This man gets out
and he’s limping

 

 

(intro music)

 

BHAVNEET: Welcome back to another episode of drive
with us podcast. I’m Bhavneet.

TARANJIT: And I’m Taranjit. And we’re super
excited to have you ride with us for another week. As our drivers take us on
some adventurous drives around the world.

BHAVNEET: A little quick car keeping before we
meet today’s driver. Did you know that we record both audio and video for our
podcasts? If you’re interested in seeing our guests tell their stories, check
out the drive with us podcast, YouTube channel

and today’s driver
is Rabiah calling in from London.

TARANJIT: Rabiah is originally from California and
currently resides in London. She is a marketing manager for an it consultancy
and amateur standup comic, and the host of more than work podcasts.

 

Here’s Rabiah. 

 

(transition music) 

BHAVNEET: Welcome Rabiah to drive with those
podcasts. Thank you so much for joining us today.

RABIAH: thanks for having me on. I’m really
excited to talk to you about driving.

TARANJIT: We’re super excited to hear all the
stories that you have to share. Before we dive into that, how would you
describe yourself as a driver? And what would you say is your relationship
with.

RABIAH: I definitely am a more mature driver
than I used to be. So I’m kind of proud of that in a way. I was . Probably a
little bit more aggressive than I needed to be definitely faster than I needed
to be a lot. And I got a ticket when I was living in Dallas it was for going 38
on a 30 on my street.

So I was really
super annoyed. at that point, I had to go to traffic school and that changed
actually Travis school. , it was so effective on me. I really saw , my behavior
was a bit dangerous not that 38 incident, I was not, but in general. And so it
did change me as a driver.

I use cruise
control now. I don’t know, always stay super calm. Like I’ll still yell, but I
would say A mature driver compared to what I was.

BHAVNEET: That was a really interesting that you
said traffic school actually effected you in a good way. Like most people are
like, wow. To get rid of the points.

RABIAH: I was, but I’m such a, I don’t know
people who know me know I love school, and tests and I like passing tests. And
so I think I just ended up taking it more seriously than I expected. I was
shocked.

TARANJIT: did you learn anything from it that was
really useful? I’ve never had to go through a, so I have no idea what it’s
like, what is experienced?

RABIAH: Probably, what you think in a way, like
you watch videos that are kind of silly reenactments, but I think what affected
me was just watching some of the videos of the people being distracted or angry
and how it could affect their reaction time

 I almost felt very seen or attacked maybe like
I wasn’t a crazy driver, but I don’t think I was taking seriously the
consequences of being in a vehicle. Sometimes even though I’d been in accidents
already I just, it just kind of made me go, you know, what, in my life I try to
be, I would say, try to leave a positive impact.

I try really hard.
I realized as a driver, I wasn’t doing that. For me, it was watching the videos
really going, you know what, my reaction time is probably battery. Yeah. If I
looked down at my phone, I could not see this stuff like that.

TARANJIT: Do you think that there should be
incorporated in driver’s education? Or do you think it’s just like when you get
a ticket and it’s like, okay, it’s for the people who did something wrong.

RABIAH: I think it was useful. And I don’t think
it hurts to give people almost a nudge, like, Hey, just think more about this
because I feel like when in drivers, ed, , especially when we’re kids learning
how to do something, , everything’s very punitive. Like if you do this, you’ll
get in trouble and that’s not even the worst consequence, the worst
consequence.

Using your phone
while you’re driving is not getting a ticket, the worst consequences, injuring
other people or yourself, we’re just going too fast and realizing the time you
need to slow down because you’re going that fast or you’re not keeping a
distance.

I’m not always
perfect. And I get very impatient, but I just think. Knowing facts versus just
the shame, you’re being bad and you’re going to be in trouble versus like, no,
these are actual consequences. I don’t know. There was something about it. And
I don’t know if it would have resonated with me at 16 when I got my license.

And I think there
are more accidents right now. I was reading an article about that since the
pandemic and I didn’t read into it enough to know, but I’m not surprised in a
way, just because of people’s blood pressure’s up, so to speak,

TARANJIT: oh, I agree with that. I feel like as
soon as we got out of that locked down state, and then we started to go back up
people, I feel like they got worse and , they stop wanting to follow the rules.
Like red lights don’t mean as much anymore. People just run them now. And it’s
just like, what is happening.

RABIAH: Wild.

BHAVNEET: And the fact that you got a ticket going
38 and a 30, my mind is like, you weren’t even speeding that much.

RABIAH: I was so livid. But there’s nothing like
a Texas patrolmen coming up to your car with his gun on the side of your face
to like, make you not be livid. You’re like, all right, fine, whatever. Yes. I
was going eight miles over, which is technically, 20% over the speed limit.
Cause that was, I found out too.

I didn’t know, a
lot of the rules are, you’re going 10% over the speed limit. So I just thought,
oh, if you’re going 65, you can go 75. I don’t know. I just. Rules in my head.
And now I know it’s like, no, I could go 71 and be okay. And like, I put my
cruise control on that. So I I’m like very much a rule follower.

BHAVNEET: Yeah. It was I think it’s like, it’s
this unspoken rule, I guess as everyone here is like, oh, you can go five above
and you’ll be fine, but I don’t think that’s actually a rule. It’s just,
everyone’s like, you can do it.

RABIAH: Yeah not if you’re not, if you’re in
like a 25

BHAVNEET: Let’s dive into your crazy driving
experiences. What would you say is one of your top three crazy?

RABIAH: I was in Texas, so I was living in
California at the time and I was in Texas. Political campaign. I won’t do
anything to your podcast by saying which one, but I was on and it will, I know
it will because I don’t want people to think it was that one. I was actually on
the Clinton campaign in 2008.

And I got sent to
Houston and I was driving a rental car this is gross. I had just thrown up. I
was having like all these allergy problems I don’t know what was going on in
the car, which is gross into the passenger seat and I was driving. So I wasn’t
feeling.

And I didn’t see
the light because there were these lights that were like hanging and they were
blowing and they were like this. And so I couldn’t see them side go through
this intersection, not knowing end up T boning this other vehicle. My car was
wrecked . His was not as bad as he has a big truck I was driving like a flex or
something.

then I get out of
the car and I’m Already in this state where I wasn’t doing great. And I
couldn’t believe I got an accident. I was scared. I’m like, I don’t have the
money. I was sent there by some lady to work on the campaign and I didn’t have
money to be there.

This man gets out
and he’s limping and I just go, oh, I’m so sorry. And I thought I did this to
him. I was crying immediately and he goes, no, no, I’ve been like this for 25
years. I have my Hillary shirt on and I’m in Texas. I don’t know what’s going
to happen. And then he goes, oh, well, we’re going to tell our son, you hit us.

And I go, oh my
gosh. And I covered up, he goes, no, you’re fine with us. And I was like, oh, I
was so lucky. I hit this man. But it was pretty crazy the car was wrecked. Cause
the light was broken . It wasn’t. It was pretty, scary, but it was also funny
just because it was, the guy was so nice and I was so upset that I thought I
basically crippled him.

BHAVNEET: Good thing you didn’t. I was like, no,
no, I’ve already liked that.
RABIAH:
Can you imagine, this
guilt,

BHAVNEET: Exactly.

RABIAH: it was pretty wild.

BHAVNEET: And the fact that the lights are like, I
hate the ones that are on the wives, because I know exactly what you’re talking
about. They just blow and it’s like, why is this even a thing?

RABIAH: Yeah. It’s so unstable,

TARANJIT: and they’re coming up with these new
lights where you can’t really see what light colored is until you get right on
it. And you’re just like, how am I supposed to know from back there, it’s
turning red or it’s green I accidentally go through the intersection.

RABIAH: Yeah, I have you done that. another
crazy thing is, I’m not proud of like these aren’t things I’m proud of, but
I’ve gotten to where the light, you look at the light ahead of where you are.
You don’t realize there’s a more immediate light. Oh, I did that one day. I was
lucky.

BHAVNEET: Whoops,

RABIAH: Yeah.

BHAVNEET: or that indecisive moment where , it
just turns yellow and you’re like, should I, should I not? Is there a camera?

I just wish that
every single light had one of those crosswalk timers on the side, and then you
can figure out whether it’s going to turn.

RABIAH: exactly.

BHAVNEET: What would you say is your second
craziest driving experience?

RABIAH: I had a Mustang, I had a, I think it was
a 96 red Mustang, beautiful car. And I was in college and I was working two
jobs and tired, and I actually fell asleep at the wheel. These experiences that
unless you have them, they sound like, how could that happen?

But then it
happens and you find out. And so I got really lucky because at the time it was
really scary, I was driving near UC San Diego. And I was Going down the street.

And I was about a
mile and a half from home and I ended up looking up things and like,
statistically, if this is going to happen, it’s going to happen in a really
close proximity to home. And I was listening. I, don’t not like this album
where the in sync album where they’re like puppets, no strings attached.

And I remember
listening to that album and it didn’t keep me awake. So thanks a lot, Justin. I
ended up going over the median, hitting a tree and knocking it over and going
across the other lane and into the guardrail. One section of guardrail away
from going off a cliff. and half of the Mustang ended up on one side of the
street and the other happens to the one I was in.

I ended up, I have
a scar on my head from it. It was only me in the car. And, , I won’t get into
some of the details, cause that was a pretty dark time. Then my mom got the
bill for the tree And I was like this stupid tree. And then I would drive by
and they never replanted it.

Why do we have to
pay for this tree? And it was such an expensive tree and there was no way this
tree cost that much. And it was just the whole annoyance of this tree. And then
when finally there was a tree there, I would call it my tree. oh, there’s my
tree that I bought, which my mom bought.

 I wasn’t like a brat, but I was in college, I
didn’t have money.

BHAVNEET: The fact that they made You pay for the
tree,

RABIAH: You just don’t know, like you just don’t
know that certain stuff, right? Like, I wouldn’t know that they charge you for
a tree until that happened to us. And I just remember my mom getting the bill
and calling me and I have to say like, my mom’s pretty cool.

BHAVNEET: Um,

RABIAH: up so much about that accident.

I think I don’t
remember her doing that. She was more concerned than anything. But then the
bill for the tree really made her mad. I heard about that for a while. Cause I
think it was a couple thousand dollars

TARANJIT: hopefully you were okay after this,

RABIAH: yeah.

TARANJIT: Was it.

RABIAH: I mean, I had cut my head. I have a scar
on my head, but nothing happened otherwise. I mean, I was, I was really lucky
cause I fell asleep. The police said because I was sleeping that my body was
relaxed enough that I didn’t get more injured, so that’s the irony of it.

TARANJIT: Yeah. You never realize how dangerous it
can be to be driving and be distracted or be tired until something like that
happens. And you’re like, oh man, like I should maybe really pull over when I’m
tired.

RABIAH: Again, you’re so close to home. And you
don’t forget that kind of thing.

TARANJIT: What would you say is your biggest
driving Pepe?

RABIAH: Oh, I get really angry when I feel like
I’m going a safe speed. Cause I’m on my cruise control of my rules. And then
someone just comes up on the back of me and I have nowhere to go. If I have
somewhere to go, then I should get out of their way. Like I’m in, if I’m in the
fast lane, right. I feel like I should get out of their way, but you can see
when someone has nowhere else to go.

And I hate that. I
hate the whole trapping someone thing that gets me. Cause it’s just, it’s so
rude. And it’s like, I’ll put my signal on that. I’m going to get over, but
then they go around me. So I’m like, now you’ve eliminated my options too.
You’ve given me no accessible way of getting out of this. Other than me now
being the one who’s wrong by going too slow in front of you I don’t like that.
Cause I think it’s rude and unkind I mean, there’s a lot of things people do
that drive me nuts, but that’s one of them when I’m driving, I don’t want.
Behavior.

TARANJIT: Have you seen any differences, in the
driving here in the U S versus there where you are now in London

RABIAH: yeah. I don’t drive here. I haven’t
driven here. I’ve been here about two years and most of it was during the
pandemic. So I ride my bicycle a lot. So I’m seeing it from that view. And
there are some rude drivers and there’s a lot of loud cars on Sunday morning.

So if I go right
around this area of regions park, which I live in. there’s all these fancy cars
there. so The guys will drive kind of aggressive and like super loud, like
their mufflers have a problem or something. And I was living down the street
from where I am now. This is. it was a one-way street. And I would say once a
month, cause I was like right on the corner, someone would just turn the wrong
way and everyone come out, yelling out of their homes until they got it turned
around

and so I’ll see
stuff like that, which I haven’t really seen in the states too much, but I
also, wasn’t looking out a window like a creepy person. . But, I do see they’re
pretty, aggressive here. I don’t see too much, just because I’m not in cars.

And then , on the
bicycle, you definitely have to watch out. I mean, I get why bicycles are
annoying, but I also think vehicles are being a bit much, , and they drive the
opposite side of the road. So I had to get used to that even on my bike. .

BHAVNEET: Oh, yeah, don’t turn down the wrong side
of the road, driving into traffic.

RABIAH: Oh, my God. Well, when I was home, a
couple of times I had these surreal moments where I’m like, why are you
turning, that way? And then I was like, oh, because we’re in California.

TARANJIT: I guess he had like a mess with your
brain, especially when it’s the opposite size compared between the two
countries

BHAVNEET: and the fact that people would come out
of their homes to tell someone that they’re going the way.

RABIAH: So, funny. So I feel like everyone just
sitting at their window or something, and I would just sit there and laugh out
my window,

TARANJIT: Free entertainment.

RABIAH: like just trolling drivers. Yeah. It was
great.

BHAVNEET: Have you ever had a situation where
you’ve had road rage,

RABIAH: you know what I started doing, I would
say, thank you, like really aggressively. So it not look like thank you. I
still do that. It’s funny. but I did one time. I remember doing that and like
gesturing, but I didn’t flip the person off. I just was, you know, just cutting
it close on all sides.

Like thank you.
Thank you so much. And these people follow me for quite a while. And then I
said, okay, you gotta stop doing that. I’ll definitely say, I haven’t been a
perfect driver and I definitely haven’t been the kindest driver all the time,
but I think yelling, thank you.

Is my favorite
thing just because it tricks people.

Yeah.

BHAVNEET: them out of their anger.

RABIAH: Yeah. They’re like, what did you say?
What you ended it in you, so you must have said no, road rage is hard because
you’re in a car, so there’s nothing you can really do. You’re just giving this
really negative energy to people.

and I do, run hot.
My temper runs hot and people who know me know that, but I try to not do that.
I think about the energy I’m putting out. I mean, if you talked to me 10 years
ago would have been a different conversation.

TARANJIT: Yeah, whatever I’ve seen people get
angry over it. I feel like they’re getting angry because they’re in a rush and
then they’re just taking it out on you. I just let it go. And just like, you’re
only raising your own blood pressure only causing yourself more harm. Like as
long as you don’t hit me, I’m

okay.

Like.

RABIAH: That’s the thing.

But that’s a
healthy way to look at it, , and I didn’t always do that. .

TARANJIT: I feel like especially since we spend so
much time on the road, you you’ll see that a lot. So you’re just like, let them
be angry in their car. Just keep driving and just make sure they don’t hit you.
Like, that’s the only thing I’m concerned about.

BHAVNEET: So you said you’ve been to Texas and
California. I know they’re both notorious for their crazy drivers. do you think
is more craziest?

RABIAH: Oh gosh, I would probably say
California, just because of the ineptitude of, although there’s that exists in
Texas, like Texas will have more severe weather. In California really range. So
when it rains is like a big deal, but in Texas, I mean, I’ve driven on ice,
which I hated.

 That was bad. but, I just talked to someone
recently who lives in Texas and when they would have these ice days, if you
watch the news, there’d be those, on-ramps that were really, elevated and steep
and you’d always see some cards stuck on it and they’d be covering this on the
news.

that’s not really
crazy, but it’s just really inept cause like, why are you doing, I shouldn’t be
on the road. However, I think there’s probably more car chases in Southern
California.

So I would give it
to Southern California because of car chases, because starting with OJ Simpson
and moving on from there. . I think car chases are so stupid

because they’re
always going in the same. And it’s not going to be like the guy getting to
Mexico or wherever he’s going.

BHAVNEET: at some point you’re going to run out of
gas at some point, you’re going to have to get out.

RABIAH: yeah. So that was a journey I just took
you on, but I had to really debate the topic.

TARANJIT: I was actually listening to a podcast
earlier this morning and they were talking about California drivers. And I’m
curious to hear if you’ve experienced this. So you’re talking about how police
officers will weave in and out lanes, slow traffic down. like an accident
ahead, is that really.

RABIAH: Yeah. Yeah. It’s really bizarre. And
you’re always bummed that you didn’t make the cut, you know, and that you’re behind
the guy. Cause when you see it happening behind you, there’s no traffic, all of
a sudden behind you, no, it happens. We’ll do like a, I think they call it a
traffic break and it’s basically just to stop the traffic.

 Sometimes it’s like maybe someone got turned
around and they just want to get them back on the road or they do want to slow
traffic down because of an accident and filter people in. But yeah, it’s really
wild to see.

BHAVNEET: I didn’t know,

that

was a thing.

RABIAH: Yeah.

BHAVNEET: Visa, you guys go in California. It’s

RABIAH: Yeah. And they’ll just start weaving
across all. And it’s usually like, you know, four or five lanes or it could be
six lanes, so it’s , quite a thing.

TARANJIT: That’s interesting. When I heard that, I
was like, really, like, I’ve never, I’ve never seen that happen here. You just
kind of come up upon, the accident or something in the road. And you’re like,
oh, well get in one lane.

RABIAH: No, we need definitely to be, , guided
by a flying car, basically going across lanes.

BHAVNEET: Yeah, the like you’re on your own five
lanes. Get into one, figure it out.

RABIAH: Yeah. And you’re like, okay.

TARANJIT: Switching gears a little bit. Let’s talk
about the future of driving for the possibility of self-driving cars. What are
your thoughts on this? And is this something that you would get into.

RABIAH: I don’t know, I have mixed feelings
about this. I work in it and so I, I appreciate technology and what it does,
I’m a late adopter of some things and an early adopter of other things. The
thing I worry about is I don’t know how feasible these things are, but I know
like sometimes someone will have a Tesla.

The motherboard
will stop working and I just think, like today on my work computer teams was
acting crazy and I had to restart my computer so I could log into teams again.
And so I just think about what’s powering these things and how the delicacy of
it, or what if, hackers, like how they did that solar winds hack, where they
got into the system.

I mean, it was
amazing actually like a beautiful hack, they had infiltrated the vendor that
was then trusted in the government system. So then they were in the government
system. So I think about these things and I go, this could happen in cars and
you can just have all these cars crash.

I don’t know if
that’s feasible or not. I don’t know if that’s true, but it’s just where I go.
So. I would have to know that there was some, manual override for everything
and that someone would have to be in the seat. Cause I read about that dude,
who was in the backseat of his car.

I keep, I will say
Tesla again. Cause I think it was, but to me, that’s a problem. So I just worry
about is there enough caution around it? I do think it makes sense to, and I
think there’s probably in a way it’s more.

 I can see the benefits of it if it’s done.
Right?

BHAVNEET: Yeah. There’s definitely times where it
would be useful. Like if you’re commuting and you’re just exhausted,

Like you said
driving itself is fun. So like, if you’re going on a road trip, you don’t want
to just be sitting there in the car doing everything. What’s the fun in that.

RABIAH: Boring,

BHAVNEET: But then also, , I agree. I don’t think
that you should just be sitting in the back. There needs to be some sort of
manual override where if something were to go wrong, it is a computer like that
you can take away.

RABIAH: Yeah. That’s the thing that just freaks
me out,

BHAVNEET: we’ll see where it

RABIAH: yeah, totally.

BHAVNEET: Bonus question time. Are

RABIAH: Oh,

I am ready. I am
ready for this.

BHAVNEET: If you could make one, a new driving
law, what would it be?

RABIAH: Oh, I almost, oh gosh. Cause you know
what? My real pet peeve I hate is feet on the dashboard. I don’t know why
that’s such a. I just don’t like it. And I don’t like when you see a driver
doing it cause you should have both feet on the ground. In my opinion. I don’t
know what you’re doing.

So I’d probably
just have a thing about no feet on the dashboard. And I don’t care if it’s the
passenger driver, they just can’t do it. Cause it grosses me out.

TARANJIT: That if you actually think about it, if
you end up in accident and your feet.

are off of there,
how bad that could end.

RABIAH: Yeah. You have no feet.

BHAVNEET: Yeah. I see that a lot with passengers
with their feet up and I’m like, why put that down?

RABIAH: I don’t know. Yeah. It’s just a thing. I
just don’t like seeing them on the dash.

BHAVNEET: I don’t think I’ve ever seen a driver
have their feet up, that’s very scary.

RABIAH: Yeah. I don’t even know if I have, I
might’ve just been like extending it to the drivers.

 It’s too much. I’m like, what are you doing?
How are you driving? Oh, it’s a self-driving car. I can put my feet up now,

BHAVNEET: That was a good law. We should implement
that.

RABIAH: Thank you.

BHAVNEET: It’s not just because it’s gross, but
also for safety reasons.

RABIAH: Yeah, I like that angle, actually, that
the feet could go well now I was picturing them. What happens? They go through
the windshield or something. It’s gross.

TARANJIT: Do you have any final thoughts or any
tips that you would

like

to give other
drivers?

RABIAH: When you’re driving, think about that
should be your focus. It’s not the time to be doing other things, like, even
think about what you’re going to play on your music or think about how you’re
going to handle calls

 Driving is something that you should take
seriously and enjoy, but, those seconds you’re looking away from the road do
matter. . And then cruise. I love cruise control. I think it’s cool. And I like
seeing how far I can go without doing the controls, not to the point where I
put my feet where they shouldn’t go, but you know, just enough.

BHAVNEET: Yeah. that’s very important. To just
focus on driving when you’re driving, hopefully that resonates with our listeners,
like pay attention when you’re driving.

RABIAH: Yeah.

BHAVNEET: Well, thank you so much for coming on
before we let you go. Where can our listeners find you if they want to connect
with you?

 

RABIAH: thanks for asking. I have a podcast
called more than work, so it’s more than work pod on all the socials. And then
I do comedy. So it’s at Rabiah, a comedy on all the socials as well. And so you
can follow either one of those. And I’d love to hear if any of these stories
resonated with you and thanks for having me on.

 (transition music)

 

TARANJIT: Could you imagine hitting someone else’s
car and they came out Olympic and be like, oh my God,

BHAVNEET: I did that.

TARANJIT: Yeah. I would be like, I don’t know. I
don’t know what I would have done. I would, yeah. I would have been a shock. I
hope that doesn’t happen to anyone, but that story reminded me of something
that happened near our house.

And. I don’t think
I’ve witnessed the whole thing happening. I heard the, I think I heard like the
noise of the car, the 18 Wheeler hitting the car, but there’s an 18 Wheeler who
was trying to make this tight turn. And in order to make their turn, the UGA to
make a wide. You know how 18 wheelers are those make wide right turns.

And there’s a car
parked there where he had to start backing up because there was a car that was
blocking his way to make his cut to turn. So he was starting to back up and
then this old guy in some fancy-schmancy car decided to stop right at the back
of his trailer. Daniel really this guy, like it was beeping.

Didn’t even
realize that this guy was backing up. Did he even bother moving back? The 18
Wheeler guy. Backing off slowly. Not like he can see you. Yeah. He was backing
him slowly and he, tapped this guy’s car. Not even full on demolished it, he
tapped it and this guy immediately started grabbing his neck.

I was

BHAVNEET: like, dude, I just saw it.

TARANJIT: Yeah. But he stopped. And then the
driver got out and he was like, oh my gosh, I’m so sorry. Even though it was
clearly his fault, but you know, if he was like apologizing and then the guy
they were like having this whole conversation. And then the police and
ambulance came and then the guy like started acting, like grabbing his neck,
grabbing his back and saying everything hurt.

He even got to the
point of like getting in the ambulance and when they were about to take him
over. He’s like, nah, I’m good. And just like went back in his car, like who
wants to play,

BHAVNEET: pay that

TARANJIT: ambulance fee? Yeah, I think

BHAVNEET: that plan

TARANJIT: through, did you know? I just saw
someone fake getting hurt, like witnessed it happening.

It was crazy.

But in Robbie’s
case, this guy was already like that. And he was like, oh no, I’ve been like
that before you hit me. So

BHAVNEET: luckily Alicia can say like, you did
this. Yeah,

TARANJIT: Luckily no one was hurt and everyone was
okay after that. Yeah.

BHAVNEET: Well, that was Robbia stories. Be sure
to stay tuned until the end of this episode, to hear a sneak peek of next
week’s episode.

With Rob, from
Wisconsin,

TARANJIT: he shared with us about the time he had
to call the police about a drunk driver driving crazy fast past them.

BHAVNEET: And if you enjoyed this podcast, you can
help support the show by sharing it with your friends or leaving us a review on
Podchaser. It truly does help us get this.

 

TARANJIT: Thank you for choosing to drive with us
and we’ll see you all next week.

 

(outro music)

 

 ROBB: It was really late at night.

We are following this car and this car flies by us,

 and then all of a sudden 500 feet ahead of us. They slam on their brakes and they keep doing this for 6, 7, 8 miles and

car makes a right turn into the ditch, just boom. 

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