Jen Kling loves NKOTB again

Finding Favorites with Leah Jones

11-04-2021 • 1時間 9分

Jen Kling loves New Kids on the Block. Jen takes me through her teenage crush on Joey and becoming a fan all over again when the band reunited in 2008. Concerts, meet & greets, and cruises - Jen loves all of it and hopes that one of these days she can sit down with Joey for coffee.

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Jen  0:00   Hi, I'm Jennifer Klang. And I love New Kids on the Block (NKOTB).

Announcer  0:05   Welcome to the Finding Favorites podcast, where we explore your favorite things without using an algorithm. Here's your host, Leah Jones.

Leah Jones  0:16   Hello, and welcome to Finding Favorites -- it is actually still Saturday, but you'll be hearing this on Sunday. I recorded this episode today, and we'll get it posted before I go to bed because Sunday is vaccine number two day for me. I'll be driving back down to Springfield, Illinois, for my second Pfizer shot. I'd originally thought when I went down to state for the shot, that I would be one and done with Johnson and Johnson. That wasn't the case, and so I am heading back down state for shot number two. I'm very excited, because then everyone in my generation in my family and above will be vaccinated. I feel like it'll be a little bit safer to spend some time together this summer. And I'm very excited for that.

----more----

Leah Jones  1:10   Today's episode is one that I *thought* was just going to be about '80s and '90s nostalgia, but learned quickly that New Kids on the Block have a really vibrant career. And so I talk with Jen Kling all about New Kids on the Block. She is someone that I got to know when I was freelancing. And I was working for SAP for their CX [customer experience] group -- worked on a couple events in Barcelona and Orlando, and met Jen at those, and when I put the call out for people ready to come and talk about their favorite things or things they love, and she was volunteered by our mutual friend Amy, who you'll remember from the Disney episode.

Leah Jones  1:52   So, this is just really fun. And after talking to Jen, I'm ready to go on a cruise. Can't believe we're at the point in the pandemic where I am thinking cruises sound like a good idea again. I think anything with a lot of people just having fun and loving the same thing, just sounds really good to me right now. So I'll keep this short -- I need to go to bed and rest up for my long drive tomorrow. So wear your mask, wash your hands, stay safe.

Leah Jones  2:37   Hello, and welcome to Finding Favorites. I'm your host, Leah Jones. And this is the podcast where we get recommendations and find out about people's favorite things without using an algorithm. Today, I am joined by Jen Kling. Jen and I met each other for the first time in Barcelona, when I was working on events for SAP. It was called CX Live, and it was one of the nicest convention centers I've ever traveled to. So Jen, how are you doing today?

Jen  3:08   I'm doing good. And Wow, it's so funny to talk about doing live, in-person events ... "In the old days ... "

Leah Jones  3:18   "In the before time ..."

Jen  3:19   "... in the before times when we would travel and see people in person."

Leah Jones  3:24   When we would wear like our business clothes with tennis shoes to walk miles and miles across that convention center. Remember the day when we all got up and the rain was coming *through* the convention center? It was like a day before?

Jen  3:41   Yes. Oh my goodness, that was crazy -- that was also like we had to -- there was no way -- I think you and I were at the same hotel. There was no way to get to the convention center without walking for a long time outside. Like there wasn't--  even if you did get an Uber for a minute and a half drive, you still had to walk five minutes outside. And so when it was raining, it was not a wonderful experience. But then, you went inside and it was raining. Yeah. Yeah, that was crazy. It was quite a week.

Leah Jones  4:20   That was one where I looked at that. And I was like, "Oh, I'm glad I'm just in charge of the speakers and the presentations. That is not a problem I have to solve. But that was so stressful.

Jen  4:33   Yeah. It was good times though. I miss that.

Leah Jones  4:38   I miss in-person events. One of the things I loved about being on the CX team for those two events because I did Barcelona and then the first CX Live and well, probably the last one because it was actually like October 2019, right?  And we were in Orlando, and that was just a few short months before COVID started.

Leah Jones  5:02   But, I loved being on a big team working towards a singular goal, getting together in person, making it happen. It was so stressful. But the feeling of pulling that off and getting to do that twice with your team -- I loved. I loved it.

Jen  5:20   Yeah, it's the best. I've been in marketing for a lot of years -- for many, many years. And,  I've always been attached to events in one way or another. I was an event planner for a long time, so it was on the logistic side. And now, I mostly just kind of participate from like a speaker and doing sessions and things like that. But, I just absolutely love it. There is something about that very last stretch, when you look around and everything is still a mess. And you've got workers everywhere, and things are still being constructed, and you're looking at the clock and you're going "There's no way this is going to come together."and then it does. And it's the most amazing, most satisfying feeling. I love it.

Leah Jones  6:12   Yeah. And so you have obviously moved online this year.

Jen  6:18   Yes. Yes.

Leah Jones  6:20   How has that been?

Jen  6:24   You know, it's a different experience. Right? It's, you know, in fact, the group I'm with now,  SAP Litmos, has their virtual events coming up now ,SAP Litmos. We're doing this virtual five track, 25 sessions, one day event? It's just a different type of experience. You do cameras on with Zoom, and the technology is great now, but it doesn't really replace that in-person interaction and the networking, right? We'll have like a virtual networking lounge and stuff like that, but it's not the same. It works, and thank goodness, we have the technology we have now. I mean, if we were doing this in the 80s, or the 90, you know, I don't know how we would have done it. I mean, we just wouldn't have, right? It's it's just a different experience. But it works, it works. Thank goodness for technology.

Leah Jones  7:21   Having a product where you can quickly call people, you're not looking for their phone number, you're not having to get people --  you know, just having a link to click on. And the chat has made a huge difference. Because even if we just, I don't know, like a month before, we just each had our, our dial-in numbers, even a year and a half ago, how we could have accomplished what we've accomplished.

Jen  7:45   You know, it's funny, because I mean, you know, how SAP is -- we're a global organization, we have people everywhere, and teams are made up from people that are spread across the world. And even that even small team, I'm on -- I have people in, I'm in California, half the team's in California, I have people in Birmingham, Arizona, and Australia. And so we were kind of used to always being on a Zoom call or a Teams call, with people and you know, doing camera on a lot, just because it's nice to be able to see those people.

Jen  8:19   But I will say that now that *all* of us have been working from home, and there isn't half of us that are together in the office, and the other half of the team, not, I feel like it's in a weird way, brought the whole team closer together.

Leah Jones  8:32   Absolutely.

Jen  8:34   And, you know, we're all in on something together. And, I have mixed feelings about the office now. I want to go back because I miss the people, and our office is nice, and we have free lunch and I miss the Impossible Burgers. But I don't miss the -- my commute wasn't bad, it was a 35 minute commute. And as Bay Area commute goes, it's pretty amazing. But it's kind of nice to *not* have to have that commute, and *not* have to put makeup on, and be able to work in my sweatsm or whatever. But, I do miss people. So it's gonna be interesting for us. They're saying, you know, they'll support whatever works for any individual through the end of the year. And they're starting to work on a controlled reopening of the offices, but it'll still be very limited. And for me, since I only have a few members of the team in the office, if we all can't be there on the same day because our desks are too close proximity or whatever. It's kind of like well, then what will the point be in going in? So, so we'll see how it goes. We'll see how it goes.

Leah Jones  9:37   Yeah, I want to go back if we have  -- my perfect vision is Tuesdays and Wednesdays are all-in days. We all go on Tuesdays and Wednesdays. So we've got in-person, but we're all there to really mix with each other. And then, if if you want to come in more days than that, great, but I want like a couple days where we where we all try but right, but then that breaks the safety protocols, possibly.

Jen  10:13   Yeah. It'll be interesting. Yeah. We'll see how it goes.

Leah Jones  10:16   Yeah. For us, it's been -- we used to only have one member of our team who was in New York. And we'd get into a meeting, I was like, "Oh, man did somebody call Shannon?" Like, we forgot about her all the time. And, now we've never been closer to her, because we were like, all on the same page. And so we'll have to be really mindful that we don't forget about Shannon when we go back in person, you know?

Jen  10:47   Well, and I don't think you will. Because, you know, it's it's brought this whole new awareness of what it feels like to be remote, because now we've all lived it. And so people who were already remote, we have a more, empathy, if you will, for them. So I think -- you won't forget Shannon, *I'm* not even going to forget Shannon, you're not gonna forget Shannon. [laughter]

Leah Jones  11:11   Have you in this year at home picked up any hobbies, or any new habits that are exciting, I don't know? Or are boring> Or TV shows.

Jen  11:23   You know, we did a lot of the same thing that everyone was doing. We went through several puzzles, made several loaves of banana bread. Never got into the sourdough starter thing. But I did purchase a Peloton. Yeah, in fact, when at the end of 2019, when there was that whole scuttlebutt about that commercial they had, and then Ryan Reynolds did like his amazing clapback to it, which was, he's like a marketing genius. But, I at the time was telling my husband like, "I want one ... hey, *I* won't complain if you get me one for Christmas ..." So I was talking about it then.

Jen  12:06   And I wished I really wish I'd done it then, right? Because then by the time I did it, so did everyone else in the country and the delivery times were very long. Yeah, it took two months to get here. But once it got here, I haven't -- almost every day, not every day -- but I love riding. If we were going to do a second podcast of things that I love, Peloton would be that my next topic, but I absolutely love it. All the classes. So I would say that's the biggest habit I picked up.

Leah Jones  12:42   Because I also got one and I got it in November. And I I would say I ride it right now about five days a month.  I did a challenge last month, and I after like, five or six days fell off the wagon, because I'm trying to figure out like, how do I make the rides less precious, so I do them?  That I don't psych myself out from them. That a five minute ride is okay, getting on the bike is better than not getting on the bike. And I don't know if I've got it in the wrong room, like maybe I *do* need it in my living room or closer to my desk or like more in my life than in my guest bedroom. What was the thing about Peloton that made you fall in love with it? Was there a teacher? Like, were you a spinner before?

Jen  13:36   Years ago, I used to love doing spin classes. And over like the last couple years, this trend popped up of where it was just cycling classes that were opening up like the Soulcycle. And there was a Flywheel near me, and I loved doing that. So I always liked spinning. And my problem has always been, in general, is finding the time to work out. And I like the idea of having something in my home, so that I can do it whenever. Especially like since I've been working from home, if I have an hour between calls, and I need to sort of clear my mind? I will hop on the bike for 20 minutes and do a ride. So, if I get to the end of the day, my preference is to workout in the morning, but that happens maybe twice a month. But, if I get to the end of the day, and it's 8:30 at night, yeah, I'll hop on the bike because I can -- it's there. And instead of -- I you know, I would never go to the gym at 8:30 at night.

Leah Jones  14:42   No, never.

Jen  14:43   That's not gonna happen. No, it's like the time it takes to get there and everything. So I think for me, it was just a matter of just setting a commitment. I'm also very, you know, there's all the badges that you can get -- and the streak, and  that drives me .For example, today, I just finally hit my 60 day streak and got that. It was the longest day streak I think that you can get. Literally I've been -- there was a day this week that I wasn't going to work out. And I said, "Well, I have to, I'm four days away from getting my 60 day streak. I can't start all over again, like I've done so many times." So that drives me, too. I think starting off, short and small. Because when I first got started, I mean, I was at the heaviest I've been in my whole life, and it was hard to move. I jstarted off with like, short 20-minute low-impact classes, just worked my way up. In July, -- so my bike arrived the first week of June. And I think it was mid-to-late July, I discovered the power zone training --

Leah Jones  15:47   Yeah, I see that in my Facebook group.

Jen  15:52   I cannot recommend it enough. So there's a program, there's a collection of power zone training, I only did like the first two or three weeks of it until I got the hang of it. But what's great about it is, it's all about training at your fitness level. And gradually working just above that and each zone has its purpose. So whether it's training at your fitness level, just above, your VO2 max, your blah blah, blah. What I think is so great about that is many of the classes on Peloton, when you're looking at them, you can't tell what the focus is of the class. And so many of them are almost like an all-out every time, and that isn't necessary. For fitness, for whatever, you know, whatever your fitness goals are. So I can't speak highly enough of the power zone training.

Leah Jones  16:50   For the power zone training? Do you need a heart monitor?

Jen  16:54   No, in fact, people often get confused between heart rate zone and the power zone. So, they're completely unrelated. So what you do is you start by taking what they call an FTP test, and fitness threshold profile. You take a 20 minute -- you first do a warm up, you do like a 10 or 15 minute warmup class.  And then, you take a 20 minute all-out class.

Jen  17:29   And what's great about it is -- Matt Wilper, he's one of the coaches -- his all-out and my all-out, don't look anything the same, right? So it's all about whatever your all-out means. And that comes back with what your average threshold is, and then gives you this power zone bar at the bottom of your screen that has seven zones. Then what you do, is you go through, you take the classes, and there's actually a website called a group -- it's called power zone pack. Powerzonepack.com. And they have challenges and different things that you could go through. But you take these classes and maybe like, in the beginning, after like eight weeks of consistently doing at least three power zone classes in a week, take your FTP test again, and then you can see your improvement.

Jen  18:19   So I love looking at the stats and the numbers and the data and you know how I've improved and it's great, because you'll start off, you'll just do some short endurance rides. Which -- I've had a friend who tried it, she's like, "It's too easy,"  but it's you know, it's about training, it's about time and intensity. And so, it's not supposed to be breathtaking every time. So, it's great. For me, it helped me kick off my weight loss. And anytime I start to hit a plateau, I go back and I say I'm drifting off into these fun rides too much, I need to come back into power zone training and focus on that, cause it's a total plateau-buster.

Leah Jones  19:07   Now have you done -- I see a lot of people talk about getting like a fitting from Matt Wilper's team. Have you ever done that?

Jen  19:13   I have! Game changer. I could not believe the adjustments that they made weren't the adjustments that I thought were needed. They even look at how the clips on your shoes are positioned. It's practically a workout, but they'll have you do like some movements beforehand. Like a plank and like, I can't remember the stuff that they'll have you do just to kind of get a sense. So, I have scoliosis, so I'm a little uneven. And so I've got one hip that's higher than the other, all this stuff going on. And so they can see all of that and then they and then they watch you pedal.

Jen  20:00   Like the first 10 minutes, was of him just watching me move, and then have you pedal and they watch your pedaling. And then he just starts with the adjustments. There were so many things  -- like he had me move the seat back. And I'm super short, so I thought -- the first thing I did when I set it up, was have the seat all the way forward, cause my legs are short. Nope. He had me move the seat back, all sorts of things. The tilt of the seat was wrong. I mean, just things that I never would have thought of.

Jen  20:30   He had my cleats set differently for each shoe. In my head. I'm thinking, you know, this should be symmetry. But no, because my legs aren't. It was so worth it. I mean, we make this investment already in the bike, might as well make a little bit more investment in making sure you're fit properly. It's totally worth it.

Leah Jones  20:55   Okay. I'll do it.

Leah Jones  20:56   So as a segue, has there been a NKOTB? We're here today to talk about New Kids on the Block. Aka NKOTB. Yes. Has there been is there has there been an artist series of New Kids? There has not, however, one of my absolute favorite coaches, Cody Rigsby, he has a class that he did. It's a 45 minute ride. And the second half of the class he did half New Kids on the Block, half Backstreet Boys. So he would just he went New Kids/Backstreet. And that was amazing. You can search for by artists, and so I one of the very first things I did when I got my bike was searched and bookmarked every class where there was a New Kids on the Block song.

Leah Jones  22:04   I love it.

Jen  22:06   So yeah, but no New Kids artists series yet, but I'm hoping, I'm hoping.

Leah Jones  22:12   Fantastic. So we're here to talk about New Kids on the Block. Let's time travel. How did you discover them?

Jen  22:22   We're gonna go back. We're getting into the DeLorean, is that what the car was?

Leah Jones  22:27   Yes.

Jen  22:27   Yes. We're gonna get in the DeLorean. We're going back to 1989-88? And I was 13-14. And they were the biggest thing since the Beatles. And yeah, I was buying the magazines, and I was buying the cassette tapes, and I was listening to them nonstop, and begging my mom to let me put the posters up in my room.

Leah Jones  22:56   Did she let you?

Jen  22:57   She did only a little bit. She didn't like the like, tape on the wall, because it was a rental, and she was worried that she'd have to paint, that kind of stuff.

Leah Jones  23:08   Right, fair.

Jen  23:10   And so, I was a huge fan. And I had my group of girlfriends -- we were a group of six. And we were all fans.

Leah Jones  23:23   Does that mean you each picked a --?

Jen  23:26   Yep.

Leah Jones  23:27   So two of you had to do double duty.

Jen  23:29   Two of us had double duty -- and it worked out really well because everybody liked a different guy, except for me and my friend Ellen. We were the Joe girls. Okay. And, you know, we fought over him like you wouldn't believe, but it was our life for a little while. And then I remember we went it was December of 1989. I'm in the Bay Area -- grew up in Concord, and they were in Sacramento at the Arco arena, and we got tickets. And you have to keep in mind too, that like, I was 14, I didn't have a job. And my mom was a single mom raising three kids, and money was tight. And so to get tickets to go to a concert was a really big deal.

Jen  24:22   And I think even my friend's parents might have actually got my ticket. And then like, we paid it back or something. But, it was a really big deal.

Leah Jones  24:30   And someone had to go and go to the mall and stand in line at the Ticketmaster booth to get the tickets all together, right? You're not on the phone, "Okay, click now, get this ..."

Jen  24:43   Yeah, it didn't work that way.

Leah Jones  24:45   Somebody had to go get in line. So would make sense that one of the parents would take the hit for that group. [laughter]

Jen  24:51   Yes, absolutely. So, it was so different then, right Oh, my goodness, kids today have no idea. So we all piled into my friend's car. So there was there were two of us that were like 14, two that were 16, or maybe three were 16. And then the oldest sister of my best friend, she was 18. Okay, so we all piled all six of us into a Honda Civic.

Leah Jones  25:19   Yeah, absolutely. It's the 80s.

Jen  25:21   I certainly wasn't in a seatbelt. And we drove through the Sacramento -- totally fogged. And I swear it took us two hours to get there because the fog was so thick she could barely see. But for the New Kids, it was worth it. And we got into the Arco arena. And you know, the seats weren't great. We were like on the very top deck, maybe fifth row from the top, but off to the side of the stage, and screamed and loved every second of it. And I know, like I absolutely know, that when Joey came out and was singing "Please Don't Go, Girl" to our section ... I mean, Elena say it was her, but it was me -- he was looking straight at me.

Leah Jones  26:06   Absolutely, it was.

Jen  26:09   Yeah, it was amazing. It was uch an amazing experience. And then, you know, that was '89. And then I think in '90, maybe late '90-'91, grunge started coming on to the scene. And the music scene was changing. We were growing older, they were growing older, they wanted to do new music, different things. They came out with an album that I think we just weren't ready for. What was I starting to listen to then? . Maybe I was starting to listen to like Depeche Mode by then, or something like that. So, just everything changed. And then they broke up, and they went away. And it was such a short time really, that they were so huge.

Jen  26:52   And then, you know, through the '90s, they all did their own solo stuff. I didn't really think about them much. I think when the first thing --- I'm trying to remember from a timeline standpoint -- Donnie Wahlberg was in Sixth Sense. And I remember going to see that movie in the theater, watching the movie, and then seeing the credits and seeing his name in the credits and like, "What? Who was Donnie Wahlberg in the movie?" Do you know who he was in the movie? No. So have you've seen Sixth Sense, right?

Leah Jones  27:24   No, but I know the twist, because I use the internet.

Jen  27:28   Okay. So spoiler alert, if you haven't seen it --

Leah Jones  27:34   You are allowed to talk about a movie that was spoiled by Jay Leno. You know, billions of years ago.

Jen  27:42   So, Donnie Wahlberg played the patient who shoots Bruce Willis in the beginning of the movie, and then shoots himself. But he lost something like 60 pounds, so he was unrecognizable, he was super skinny -- a really amazing performance for a short time on screen. You know, I can't say it's a small role, because it's pivotal to the premise of the movie, but was really amazing. So that was incredible. Like, "Wait, Donnie is an actor now?"

Jen  28:12   And Jordan was doing solo music.  And was on MTV TRL [Total Request Live] all the time and Joey was doing solo music. And he was on MTV TRL all the time. But you didn't have the internet, so it was hard. It wasn't like today, where you just follow them on social media. So it was hard to keep up with what they were doing, and then I'm growing up and trying to live on my own and to get a job and all that stuff. So it was hard to keep track.

Jen  28:42   I remember once I found out, after the fact, that Joey had done a concert at the Concord Pavilion and I literally lived down the street from the Pavilion, and I didn't know he was going to be there. And I when found out after I was **devastated, devastated.** Because of course, it was before either one of us were married, I could have met him and then we could have gotten married and had millions of children together. I missed my chance.

Leah Jones  29:10   Yeah, but at least Ellen also didn't know.

Jen  29:13   Right, exactly. Well, and when Ellen got married, she got married before I did, so at that point. I said to her at her wedding, "This means that Joe is mine."

Leah Jones  29:23   So, you tricked her, you outlasted.

Jen  29:29   So time went on. And then Joey was on Dancing with the Stars. The premiere season of Dancing with the Stars.

Leah Jones  29:38   WHEN the stars were *bigger,* right? Were people who you were so excited to see back, who you hadn't followed. And so that is a really exciting announcement -- that a teenage celebrity crush and someone who meant so much to you when your brain was forming, was going to be back on TV.

Jen  30:07   And I should say he had done some TV stuff as well, he was on a TV show called Boston Common, it was about a school or something, he was a teacher for a season and a half, or something. To be on Dancing with the Stars, and then for me to be able to support him, and vote for him, and he made it into the top three. He was so amazing, I remember talking to one of my girlfriends, I was like, "He's so great, he's perfect, he should win!" And she's like, "I don't know, he seems kind of stiff." "Bite your tongue!" It was amazing -- that was the 2000s, mid-2000s, 2006, maybe?

Leah Jones  30:53   Yeah. 2006. He was in Dancing with the Stars. Yeah. And then they did a tour. Did you go to the tour?

Jen  30:59   I did not. And I don't know that Joey participated in that, I'm not sure. But I did not do that. But then, in 2008, there was this teaser on their website, that something was going to come. And then it was announced that they were going to be on the Today Show. And I can't remember the exact sequence of events. But, they released an album, there was a new song that they premiered on the Today Show, they announced they were doing this album, they were gonna do a tour. They performed on the Today Show. And it was like, "Whoa, what's, what's going on here? This is amazing." And you've got like these feelings of like, my favorite band from when I was 14! And so, I wasn't as close to the girls that I grew up with, anymore. They're, you know, everybody scattered, you know, that happens, right?

Leah Jones  32:01   Yeah, yeah.

Jen  32:02   But I had, you know, my new besties. And they were all fans, as well, back in the day, we just didn't know each other. So I was like, "Well, I mean, we gotta to go, right? We gotta go at least like show and see if they still have the Right Stuff." Yeah, sorry. I can't help that. [laughter]

Jen  32:22   And so we did -- we got tickets. And a group of us got together, we had dinner, we talked and we joked a little bit -- like, think they could still do it? Like, can they still do a whole tour? I mean, we're all kind of old now. We *weren't,* but ... and so you know, it was just kind of a nostalgia thing. We loved the album, we loved the songs. And we went, and again, didn't have amazing seats, we were in the second deck. This is in San Jose at the thing was called the HP Pavilion at the time, now it's a SAP center, ironically. And we were on the second deck, still the same side of the stage that I was on with my one show that I went to when I was a kid. And when Joey came out, and started singing, and it was like, "Oh, my God, I'm 14 all over again." This feeling just came over me -- this rush of adrenaline -- and I was screaming, and I'm screaming, "I love you, Joey!!" We had such an amazing time, and it was such an amazing show. And then afterwards, we were like, -- we need another show.

Jen  33:51   And we'd screwed up because they'd been in Sacramento the night before. So it was like we could have gone to Sacramento last night, there wasn't much left to tour ...

Leah Jones  34:02   But when you bought the tickets, you're like, we're gonna go see these people who are a little bit older than us try and sing and dance. And it might be embarrassing. We might be embarrassed. So we should only go once.

Jen  34:17   I didn't even tell my co-workers what I was doing. This was like a secret. I was at the office and I had to leave the office early. And I remember I changed my clothes --  Iwas more professionally dressed, literally suited up -- and I had to change the jeans and whatnot. And I'm like, "I'm leaving early today. " People were like, "What do you got going on?"

Jen  34:39   "Oh, yeah, I just -- go hang out with some friends just you know, going out for dinner, meeting in San Jose ... bye!!" And I didn't tell anyone, I kept it a secret. It was like, "I can't can't tell anybody. This is embarrassing." And so then yeah, we went to the show, and we were like, "Well, we got to go to another show." So we're looking at what's left of the tour, and we're like, "But we could go to Seattle, it's three days before Thanksgiving. Can we do that? We can do that." So we did, we took a quick road trip to Seattle. And because it was last minute, we didn't have amazing tickets, but it was still that same rush of feeling. And I don't know why I thought that was gonna be it, but it was not it.  It was --

Leah Jones  35:23   Okay.

Jen  35:23   --- not it.

Leah Jones  35:24   It was the start of it.

Jen  35:27   It was just the start. of. it.

Leah Jones  35:30   Well, right. It could have been that it was only your group that were like, this was fun. So, you go to Seattle, and then the tour ends a couple weeks later?

Jen  35:43   Tour ended a couple weeks later. I would imagine for them, but group, that they were even like, "Huh, that went probably a little better than we thought it would." And there was so much demand, the fans were loving it.

Leah Jones  36:01   Because now the fans are grown up, have jobs, have budgets, the internet exists, so you can better coordinate going.

Jen  36:10   Yep. Well, and then you also have to think about 2008 -- that was when the economy was in the tank.The finance market had tanked, people's mortgages --

Leah Jones  36:29   -- everybody's underwater.

Jen  36:30   Everybody was underwater. And so it was a stressful time.  But, it was also a hopeful time. I think it was just the right timing, because when you talk with different fans, you'll hear people say "They saved my life, because they gave me something to enjoy at some of the most miserable time of times of my life." And you had sort of some people who were maybe going through divorces, maybe they were unemployed. They were taking care of parents now, like so many things going on, that the timing really was perfect. It just kind of happened. I think. I don't think they did it intentionally. I don't think they said "The economy's in the tank, let's make a comeback."

Leah Jones  37:10   You don't think any of their houses were underwater and their first round of NKOTB money was maybe ...

Jen  37:16   I don't think so, actually. Donnie had a great career going. I think Blue Bloods was just getting started at that time, he had just starred in a movie with Robert De Niro and Al Pacino.

Leah Jones  37:28   Okay, fine, not slacking.

Jen  37:30   Yeah, but I think the all the guys were doing fine. But just the timing happened to work. Actually, there's a lot of interviews about it-- but Donnie will talk about part of what the timing was because he was going through a divorce. And so he started pouring himself into music and writing music. And so I think that kind of spawned the timing. So he needed it, he will actually say he needed it, just differently. Different reasons why others did.

Jen  37:55   So then they were like, let's throw together another tour. And so then they started another tour. I remember they did a performance on the Jimmy Kimmel show, and it was gonna be in like that little outdoor theater that he has.  And it was like in April, and one of my friends and I were like, "Let's road trip. Why not?"  And so we took a few days off of work, drove down to L.A., I had a friend who knew someone who worked on the Jimmy Kimmel show, so she helped us get a better spot, not front row, but like third or fourth, and so that was amazing. And then yeah, then the tour kicked off. I think I did, like three shows back-to-back. But what we have discovered with this second tour, was that the New Kids do these meet and greets before the concert. So you buy a ticket, and you have to be quick because they sell out.

Leah Jones  38:55   So fast.

Jen  38:56   Yeah. And we were like, well, we gotta do that -- and so we did.

Leah Jones  39:08   Did you do meet and greets for just one show? You're like, or did you do multiple meet and greets on that tour?

Jen  39:14   So yeah.

Leah Jones  39:17   So I don't publish the video of these interviews. But the face you just made --  I wish I could have a GIF of it. It was tremendous. And suggests to me, maybe you went to more than one meet and greet.

Jen  39:36   Yeah. If you were to ask me  --so the New Kids tour, in the beginning it was for a few years every year and then it's been every other year -- so if you were to ask me how many meet and greets I've done, I don't know. I can't count that high.

Leah Jones  39:56   What you're saying is, you are a fast clicker.

Jen  40:02   I am a fast clicker. There are some people who are faster at clicking than I am, but I have a fast clicker. And I have done many meet and greets. Each tour I do at least a few. The meet and greet experience is  -- it takes this whole "relationship" with the New Kids to a new level. You get to see them and talk to them, for a fraction of a second it feels like, I mean, it's longer, but you're talking 30 seconds to two minutes -- you're not hanging out with them for an hour. You get a hug from each guy --

Leah Jones  40:45   -- and you pass your phone to someone, right? To get photos of it  or --

Jen  40:51   It's highly, it's super organized. So you actually go through and there's a company, there's a photographer, who does the photos. So they can move through, because they probably meet 1,000 to 2,000 fans a night. I mean, it's like super fast. I can't even imagine what the experience is like *for them.*

Jen  41:13   Because we go in and the fans organize ahead of time. "Okay, we're looking for two Joe girls and a Danny girl," and you get in, and you line up, you find out the order that they're, and then you line up in that order. Okay, you know, Jo, girls, Jordan girls, Donnie girls, and you go that way.

Leah Jones  41:34   So you line up with your competition --

Jen  41:36   -- you line up with your competition, and you walk in and you hug each guy, you say a word, and then you get to the end of the line, and you stop at your guy. And each girl goes on for each person -- there are man fans -- and each person stands on either side of the New Kid. And then they take two pictures super quick, and then you turn and say maybe one or two other words, and then you move on. And then, you you hug the New Kids that you hadn't gotten to in line yet, and then you head out. And so that whole thing is like, two minutes. So I've done several -- usually what people will ask me that I haven't given you an opportunity to ask, but you're probably wondering is, "Well, do they know you by now?"

Leah Jones  42:25   Yeah. How are your chances with Joey, now that you've been that you've paid many times to meet him? Do you like wear the same outfit, so he can start to like, piece it together in his head? Have you slid into his DMs?

Jen  42:43   I can't even tell you like, the funny thing is, and I actually have a girlfriend who jokes because anytime I post, like on Instagram or something, pictures from the past of meet and greets between my hair changes, my weight fluctuation, you know, with sometimes a year or even two years going by before they see you again, I've made it impossible for him to recognize me. I'll go from like, pixie haircut, super-long hair, shoulder-length bob, and having weight fluctuate, you know, 70 pounds or whatever. And so it made it impossible for him to be able to recognize me.

Jen  43:26   But there are people that have, there are some fans who have like a schtick to get recognized, and that has worked for them. And then there are some people that for whatever reason have clicked and have genuinely become friends with the guys. I have not  -- I am not smart. I go into these meet and greets, and for a while after I had already

Leah Jones  11:11   Have you in this year at home picked up any hobbies, or any new habits that are exciting, I don't know? Or are boring>