[ laughter ] [ cheers ] i took a walk through this beautiful world felt the cool rain on my shoulder found something good in this beautiful world i felt the rain getting colder sha la la la la sha la la la la la sha la la la la sha la la la la la la chef: what if we just get dino s and go to edgefield, then go to robert s? chef 2: edgefield closes at midnight. chef: you gotta see have you been to robert s? chef 2: but dino s definitely anthony: i haven t been anywhere. chef 2: starter and that s it. anthony: i saw the hotel. the [ bleep ] do i know? [ laughter ] patrick martin: hold on, time out. stop, stop, stop. you ve never hung in nashville? anthony: no. martin: you re gonna have a fun time. anthony: i have no doubt. [ laughter ] anthony: nashville. if you haven t been there, you probably know it as what? a country music capital, grand ole opry, and it is music city. and there is indeed plenty of country music, bot
an institution. doors open at 10:00 am and close at 2:00 pm, with a rotating selection of a dozen lunch staples, you re pretty sure to find what you came for. okra or black-eyed peas? what do you think? what should i do? jeese: okra. anthony: okra, okay. this gentleman too, is something of an institution jesse boyce, a two-time grammy award nominee, instrumentalist, songwriter, producer, and ceo of sovereign music group in nashville. anthony: this is a big nashville tradition, the meat and three. jeese: absolutely. see, you see a little bit of everybody in here from truck drivers, to mothers, to lawyers, whomever. you can see it s multicultural. everybody s just like really comfortable with each other. it s like the microcosm of what nashville is really like. anthony: now, i mean, most people, i think, who haven t been to nashville, outside looking in, they see nashville, they think country music. jeese: exactly.
anthony: i ve been thinking about this all day, since the minute i woke up. jeese: have you? anthony: oh, hell yeah. jeese: it s the real deal. anthony: dandgure s in downtown nashville is just such an institution. doors open at 10:00 am and close at 2:00 pm. with a rotating selection of a dozen lunch staples, you re pretty sure to find what you came for. okra or black-eyed peas? what do you think? what should i do? jeese: okra. anthony: okra, okay. this gentleman too, is something of an institution jesse boyce, a two-time grammy award nominee, instrumentalist, songwriter, producer, and ceo of sovereign music group in nashville. anthony: this is a big nashville tradition, the meat and three. jesse: absolutely. see, you see a little bit of everybody in here from truck drivers, to mothers, to lawyers, whomever. you can see it s multicultural. everybody s just like really comfortable with each other. it s like the microcosm of what nashville is really like. anthony:
instrumentalist, songwriter, producer, and ceo of sovereign music group in nashville. anthony: this is a big nashville tradition, the meat and three. jesse: absolutely. see, you see a little bit of everybody in here from truck drivers, to mothers, to lawyers, whomever. you can see it s multicultural. everybody s just like really comfortable with each other. it s like the microcosm of what nashville is really like. anthony: now, i mean, most people, i think, who haven t been to nashville, outside looking in, they see nashville, they think country music. jesse: exactly. anthony: but it s really not that at all. i mean, yes, there is a hell of a lot of country music here. jesse: but we have two strands of music that were emerging at the same time, historically. 50s and 60s, we had hee haw and night train. archival: all aboard the night train, now boarding, and you have the best seat in the house, so let s get rolling to great entertainment.
producer, and ceo of sovereign music group in nashville. anthony: this is a big nashville tradition, the meat and three. jeese: absolutely. see, you see a little bit of everybody in here from truck drivers, to mothers, to lawyers, whomever. you can see it s multicultural. everybody s just like really comfortable with each other. it s like the microcosm of what nashville is really like. anthony: now, i mean, most people, i think, who haven t been to nashville, outside looking in, they see nashville, they think country music. jeese: exactly. anthony: but it s really not that at all. i mean, yes, there is a hell of a lot of country music here. jeese: but we have two strands of music that were emerging at the same time, historically. 50s and 60s, we had hee haw and night train. archival: all aboard the night train, now boarding, and