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August 21, 2025 64 mins

C&R react to research about NFL fan's "booty" being affected by wins & losses! They debate the use of force on the kid who got crushed by security after running onto the field in San Diego! 'OLD-SCHOOL WHEN 50 HITS' celebrates Senior Citizen Day, as their topic is about our grandparents. Jerry Jones' has new comments about Micah Parsons, Rich is over his Mets, & MLB realignment!

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Hey, thanks for listening to the best of Cabino and
Rich podcast. Be sure to catch us live every day
from five to seven pm the eastern two to four
pacifics on Fox Sports Radio. Find your local station for
Gabino and Rich at Fox Sports Radio dot com, or
stream us live every day on the iHeartRadio app by
searching FSR. We throw it back and today we do

(00:25):
talk about old people on National Senior Citizens Day. Geezers.

Speaker 2 (00:29):
Yeah, it is Thursday. You guys know what happens exactly
two weeks from today.

Speaker 1 (00:34):
Neoty magazine day. Oh no, the kickoff to the inn
for let's go count two weeks and you know two
weeks ages quick. So before you know it, you guys
want to kick off that first Thursday of that game
with some wings or something. We got to do something
TV like wingy. I think I got one of my
buddies as a restaurant tour. I think he's gonna cater

(00:56):
for us that day. Oh, some food and sandwiches and
wings and everything sounds good. We were going to talk
some NFL today. We're gonna go old school, like you said,
But I gotta ask you this. I saw an article
Danny sent this and Danny I saw this as well.
Really interesting and it's so up our Steampie Valley because
you remind me of Mario Canton. Does anyone else remember

(01:18):
that show? Was that Valley a local kids show on
the East Coast? It might have been Steampipe Bally thrown
it back on a Thursday? Was a kids show hosted
by Mario Canton, the comedian. So here's my question for you,
which is right up my Steampipe Bally. Apparently my wife
and I recently had this conversation about how when it

(01:40):
comes to your intimacy in the bedroom, oh oh oh oh.

Speaker 3 (01:48):
By the way, guys, Dan Byer, he might hate the
word no word more than the word intimacy. Really, so
if you want to get under his skin.

Speaker 1 (01:56):
Say intimacy. Intimacy.

Speaker 3 (01:59):
For a lot of people, it's like moist, Yeah, intimacy.

Speaker 1 (02:04):
Good thing. Low Crown's here today. He loves that word. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (02:07):
He's the most I mean, I mean, you mean your
honor Isaac Loan Kron presiding.

Speaker 1 (02:12):
Look at this guy, Isaac. When I think of the
word intimacy, I think of Isaac. What's up, Isaac? What's
going on?

Speaker 4 (02:18):
Man?

Speaker 1 (02:18):
That's so funny. He's got your updates. He's on standby
waiting just to say hi. We were It's so funny.
We were talking about Isaac today on our podcast. We
were here today and we're google really, we're google imaging
photos of Isaac and man, Isaac, you do you do
quite a bit.

Speaker 5 (02:34):
Huh.

Speaker 1 (02:34):
You're out and about there, out and about rich seems surprised.
I want you to know that I was not. I
know either. You're a man of many talents, Isaac. Thank you.
I didn't know you had a only fans page though.
I was. Yes, well, as long as you mentioned it.

Speaker 6 (02:49):
Same great sports commentary, only without pants.

Speaker 1 (02:54):
I mean, you know, panteless updates are what we all
meet as a big market for that. So back to
miss how do we get derailed? Oh yeah, by oight
word derailed. That's funny too. Men stereotypically are good to
go all the time, and women need a little more

(03:15):
mental stimulation than men for the most part. Like a
woman will say, is that why you do? It's so
mental for a woman to really get in that. You know,
you have that connection where a dude is very simple
and dumb. Let's be honest. You put a good looking
woman in front of a dude, he's ready to go. Yeah,
sweet little breeze could get you going. That's true. These

(03:36):
a lot of times you have to emotionally and mentally
finess a woman, and accidental and accidental grays could get
you all fired up exactly an add you knows. So Anyway,
my long winded point is this, there was an article
that's fantastic and it's indicative of the football season. We're
talking football and how we're two weeks away. Did you

(04:00):
your sexual mood change based on if your team wins
or loses on the weekend. Studies are showing that men
lose their mojo if their team lose the odium the
mood like to an amazing degree, Like why is Danny
G so excited? Say Danny G. With the way the

(04:22):
Raiders are playing, I'm surprised you have a son. Well,
actually that just conceived.

Speaker 2 (04:29):
That year he was conceived, they were looking promising and
then Josh McDaniel's ruined everything.

Speaker 1 (04:34):
Yeah, I'm feeling good.

Speaker 2 (04:36):
But two thousand football fans were surveyed for this. Forty
of American football fans report getting more intimate with their
partner after their favorite NFL team wins.

Speaker 1 (04:48):
You know, and on the flip of it, one in
three men say that if their team loses, they're like,
not in the mood, there's no sex. Let me tell you,
I know I ever thought of it from a sexual standpoint,
but I'll I'll tell you this the Monday after your
team loses. It's been established. We've talked about this for years.
Where you strutting to work that Monday either feeling great

(05:12):
or sort of crappy if your team had a rough loss,
because that sort of sets the tone for your week.
If your team wins a big Sunday game, even Sunday night,
especially like if your team is primetime Sunday night football
and you come away with a w you wake up
Monday morning as if you're on the team. So are
there less babies born in Cleveland around football time? Or

(05:34):
you know, does that give us reason to root harder
for our teams? Hey, this is a weird stat too,
so there's something to it, cause there are more stats
on the flip side that sort of go with this story.
According to online research, game day Surges research shows a
ten percent increase in reported domestic violence incidents on NFL

(05:56):
game days, with a stronger correlation to opposite losses. The
rise is concentrated in the hours following the game, suggesting
it stems from the emotional reaction to game outcomes rather
than behavior of the players themselves. So not only sexual
stat with some real talk, but I don't, but it

(06:19):
proves that moods are changing, moods are shifting based on
wins and losses. I mean, people got money and and
fantasy at steak and all these things at stake and
just theyir heard online emotional emotional emotions are rising. Situation.
So you're saying fantasies are fulfilled when your fantasy team performs. Yes, yes,

(06:42):
so again that's kind of a sad truth to the
to the flip side. But yeah, I guess people get
more booty when their team wins. So let me ask
you this. Do we accept this? Is it understandable or
do you think this is a sad reflection of sports fans,
like if you really are invested? I both I believe it,
but I also think, wow, that's sad. You're a Sea

(07:04):
blocking yourself because your team lost. Hey, but I'm got
to be better than pick a Randall team Steelers. Right.
If you're a Steelers fan, you're rocking your new Aaron
Rodgers jersey. You got your you're waving your terrible towel,
you got the TV on. You're sitting in Pittsburgh having
a sandwich or French frise on it. That's what they do, right,
mm hmm and Cole slam right some slaw delicious. I've
had one. So picture of the scenario, Aaron Rodgers. You

(07:27):
guys are in a nice tight game, You're all pumped up.
You lose a heartbreaker to like Lamar and the Ravens.
Maybe the vibe is like, yeah, honey, I'm not really
feeling yeah, because you got the feeling of aw man,
I go, well, you know what, I speaking sexy time.

Speaker 2 (07:46):
They have a chart here with every team and according
to their their results, only fourteen percent of Steeler fans
are that depressed to not have intimacy afterwards. Did you
see the fan base though, that goes the hardest, that
celebrates the hardest after a win. The New York Football
New York Football Giants seventy eight and that that.

Speaker 1 (08:07):
Is a fan base that to me has experienced the
highs of highs and then the lows of lows like
the Giants either play out of their mind and upset
the Patriots in the Super Bowl or they're trash. So
there's an emotional sensence effect women football fans too, though,
Do they get extra turned on if their teams are winning?

(08:28):
A lot of women love the NFL. If Jimmy Garoppolo
is playing, Yeah, no, I'm wondering how it or with
the late Well, football fans men and women are in
this study. Okay, so what are your thoughts on this?
And you know, just to add more to the story,
Rich and I have years of theories when it comes
to this stuff. If you want to get it on
and you're playing in a sexy night, yes, root for

(08:50):
your team to win. That's going to help. But also
keep in mind, don't overeat. You ever eat a big
giant steak and then you're like, you know what, I'm
not in the mood anymore because I feel like a slob.

Speaker 2 (09:02):
That's a veteran tip right right, No, seriously, Like, how
often do you see that.

Speaker 1 (09:05):
It's a mistake we've all made. Yeah, because when you
feel sluggish, that's what she said, veteran. No. No, Danny
g No, you nailed it. Yeah, you know you have
all these intentions of oh, later on, and then you
wanner some sort of Tomahawks seventy two out steak and
you're like, you know what, I don't know, man, digest. Yeah,
you feel like exy time is not a priority at

(09:29):
that point like it once was. So I see how
all this matters, and it really does, because all these
things affect your mood. Isn't that a lesson we all
learned in college for the first time where you were
about to get it on with some good looking woman
and you drank too much or ate too much, and
you're like, oh my god, I totally just you just ruined.
I'm the idiot. Yep, yep. So your team plays a

(09:51):
major factor, more of a factor than you probably think.
But you know, I know every conversation we have here,
your your feeling is that we need to leave with
a lesson. Well, I think there's truth to this. By
the way, I don't think there's a theory, but I
say there's absolute truth because if if stats prove the opposite,
and there's an equal and opposite reaction right for every reaction,

(10:14):
then the flip side, the positive side, has to be
true as well. People are more romantic and feeling upbeat
and feeling a little more sexy and happy and more
willing to get it on. So if you want to,
if you want to take a lesson away from this,
should it be don't let your football team effect or
is that inevitable? Like what was there is harder, harder root,

(10:36):
harder intended, the harder.

Speaker 2 (10:40):
The rams are in second place. By the way, seventy
six percent ram it all day, ram it all night.

Speaker 1 (10:48):
It's a It's an interesting study. I feel like I
could have told you that, but it is wild to
see that. You know, in writing a study done that
people are genuinely turned off when their team loses, and
they're really excited when the team wins.

Speaker 3 (11:01):
You feel more optimistic after your team wins. You're like,
I can crush this whole week, all the problems in
my life. I can kind of push this side.

Speaker 1 (11:08):
I do think the reminder or the seed planted here
could help. So you said, what lesson do we learn?
I learned a lesson back in the day was not
to bring your personal problems into the workspace, Right, so
you compartmentalize whatever's going on in your personal life. You
leave it at home and come here and do a
great job, have a fun show. You have to take

(11:28):
that seam sort of mindset with Yeah, you're said your
team loss or you're aggravated you lost some money. It
was a heartbreaker. How can that happen? You're pissed off?
You have to be able to say now consciously, because
we're reminding you not that, not to let that effect
the bedroom. Don't don't bring that into the bedroom like
Danny after the Dodger swept the Padres over the weekend.
You're telling me Danny didn't come in here on Monday

(11:50):
with a little extra strutting, a step and a smile.
I mean, it really does affect you. I know that
sounds ridiculous. Cameras celebrate. We're talking to a sport audience,
so they get it. But if you tell someone that's
not a sports fan, they'd probably have some layme answer,
like you're gonna let your team affect you? But hold on,
does this matter too? Like, all right, if we're hardcore

(12:11):
into sports and our teams are that meaningful to us
and we're that emotionally invested. If your wife or girlfriend's
emotionally invested in some stupid show and the plot line
is weak, does that ruin your chances are all these
things in factor? Then if she's so emotionally invested in
a character on some stupid show and that characters voted

(12:33):
off the island, their dies or whatever she's watching, now,
does that ruin your night?

Speaker 4 (12:41):
Like?

Speaker 1 (12:41):
Because I never thought of it that way.

Speaker 2 (12:43):
I don't think people take the TV shows so as
serious like people.

Speaker 1 (12:48):
Treat I'm worrying if all these things play affect well.

Speaker 2 (12:52):
People go to church on NFL Sunday though, that's like
their version of church. Now she's a little more serious.

Speaker 1 (12:58):
Okay, yeah, fair enough, fair enough, all right? Eight seven,
seven ninety nine on Fox. Your thoughts on this. Don't
let it happen to you. Don't bring it into the bedroom,
just like you wouldn't bring your problems and frustrations into
the workplace.

Speaker 2 (13:11):
Cardinals are number one, by the way, as far as
romantic dip after a lost sixty six percent.

Speaker 1 (13:17):
Saint Louis takes it, takes a bed.

Speaker 7 (13:19):
Huh.

Speaker 1 (13:19):
They're just and they're in the rough season, So sorry,
Saint Louis. Wait first, Arizona, Arizona's you're thinking Cardinaline is
Cardinals many something to think about? Something? Do I? So
Kyler Murray really really upsets that fan on Senior Citizen Day.
Some of that old people would say, put that in

(13:40):
your pipe and smoke it. So think about that. And
we got a lot of me. There's a lot of
people not getting any action, and they're gonna blame it
on Joey Flacco. So I his fault? Is it the heat? Sam?
I don't know. I don't know if it's like mentally
like football is about to start this week, starts, my

(14:00):
kids fall ball, you know, working fun. But I just
like to so many things that I'm like, you know what,
right now, if you told me lay down, I can
falls think now and wake up tomorrow morning. I mean
now that you I was feeling good. But now that
you mentioned it, I'll take these phone calls. You could
lay down. Joe in Virginia. Yes, sorry, guys, I'm not
in the mood. It's funny. Can you smack these guys
around please, Joe in Virginia. We're talking about how the NFL.

(14:22):
There's a study done where your team success or failure
affects your bedroom activities. What's up man?

Speaker 8 (14:31):
Yeah, guys, thanks, thanks for the call out here.

Speaker 9 (14:34):
I appreciate your.

Speaker 8 (14:35):
Hill entertains me on the way home every day perfect.

Speaker 7 (14:38):
This one kind of boils down to.

Speaker 8 (14:40):
Just your overall stress capacity. So if your team stresses
you out, your brain goes into a fight mode or
a flight mode. You just want to go to bed,
or you want to be pissed off all night. It
doesn't want to go into Uh do another thing.

Speaker 1 (14:53):
Dude, if you're a Bengals fan and you you you
lost so many close games last year, do you think
on a Sunday night you watch your team lose a
close one, Joe Burrow did everything it could. Yeah, but
think about it. Joe Burrow isn't cashing in later that night.
He's got hot model girlfriends. So Joe Burrows the guy
on the field, he's still getting it on. One last

(15:13):
thought about this, and you're that sad about the whole thing.
The point of this discussion is there's no doubt that
it affects our moods. There's no doubt that there's one more.
But the reminder here is let's not let it. Let's
not let it ruin sexy time. I wouldn't say this
is a rub, but it's just a another little fun
point from this article where it said that NFL fan

(15:36):
bases their sexual activity is affected by whether or not
their team wins or loses. I found this really interesting.
The team that a loss affects the least in the
study the Jacksonville Jags, and I wonder, is there almost
like an expectation to lose where their emotion they You
know what I'm saying. If you go into a Sunday

(15:57):
as a Jags fan over the last few years and
you're like, yeah, we'll pro we're not gonna win, then
the letdowns not as much and you're like, whatever, man,
I'm gonna get with my girl tonight. Yeah, you're so
used to it. Yeah. I think that shows and the
biggest swing are from big market teams that expect to win,
so when they lose, the letdowns more makes sense. In Pennsylvania.

(16:18):
What's up, Kurt? Hey?

Speaker 8 (16:19):
What up?

Speaker 5 (16:19):
Kurt? Hey? What's going on? Guys?

Speaker 1 (16:21):
Anybody nice to talk to you?

Speaker 5 (16:24):
So, actually, your Jacksonville thing makes perfect sense. I gotta
start off by saying, I'm a Cleveland fan, so I
go into everything not expecting anything. And I'm talking about
baseball in football.

Speaker 1 (16:38):
So what you would almost assume, Joe Kurt, a guy
like you, if they lose, it's not gonna affect you,
but if you win, you're gonna be super pumped.

Speaker 5 (16:46):
Well, once you're getting stomped, then it's just like, hey, babe,
let's go do something else.

Speaker 1 (16:51):
Makes sense? How do you mean by something else? You know?
Oh yeah, put on that sexy playlist. You may light
up some candles, give me massage, yeah, Sean Watson style.
Yeah what uh? Let's go to Eric in Springfield. What's up?
Assashe always ends up being a butt massage. We know
how that works. Yeah, let's Eric.

Speaker 10 (17:14):
Hey, hey, guys, than listening to the show.

Speaker 4 (17:16):
I wanted to chime in on that.

Speaker 10 (17:18):
I honestly kind of have the opposite effect of what's
going on because I'm a longtime Lions fan and I
get pretty passionate about it. However, when Jared Goff throws
all those interceptions because he'll be fire fire, fire, then
one game he just blows up. Yeah, I feel like
my wife. She's more sympathetic towards me, and then she's

(17:39):
more sweet to me, and then I end up having
some good nights after that.

Speaker 1 (17:43):
But that's that's working smarter for sure. I saw some
feedback to on our Twitter page rich of people saying
that too, it's like you get sympathy booty, like compassion booty,
like oh, don't worry you up. Yeah, yeah yeah. During
the Mets playoff loss, I feel like my wife has
been like, came here, babe, and no Tim Winters. Tim

(18:03):
Winters hit us up and said, if my team loses,
I need like a different constellation sort of prize. Tim
Winter's cashing in too. So that's again, that's working smartest
being aware of Yeah, I'm not gonna let this get
in my way. In fact, I'm gonna cash in well.

Speaker 3 (18:17):
Or also there your significant other is reading you a
little bit more fine tuned and they're like, I need
to be there for him or her.

Speaker 1 (18:25):
I like that. That's a good right there. Yeah, it's
good loving. So we wish you all some good NFL
booty this year. Yeah. Yeah. And you know what, in
any sport for that matter, whatever your team is, yeah,
you're emostly involved and invested. So gotta talk a little
baseball and we'll take the rest of your feedback at

(18:46):
Covino and Rich at Fox Sports Radio. Thanks for the
calls eight seven, seven ninety nine on Fox. I think
we all saw the clip of this little kid and
you're just saying you say, you say little kid, and
I agree, he's not. He can't be more than like
a preteen or teenager. Rich was convinced he was a teenager.
I was like, this kid looks like he's nine, ten

(19:07):
years old. I thought he was maybe twelve. Yeah, yeah,
he he doesn't look like a teenager. He looks like
like a preteen. He decides to storm the field, and
we all know that's a no no, and storm is
a pretty big word. It was just like a twelve
year old kid, like running on the field like old Dufus.
Storming the field would make hellics. It sounds like stormy

(19:27):
the Capitol. It was a twelve year old kid. That's like,
and they're calling it now slam diego because this kid
was slammed by security and dude, let the boys be born. Yeah, slam.
He was taking out pretty aggressively considering he's just a
skinny little kid, and we see little kids like got little,

(19:49):
skinny nothing, and he's running around shaking his booty like aha,
I'm on the field, and they were like, yeah, we're
not playing Boom no I boom. You would think conventional
wisdom would say you go in the field, it's almost like,
what are that fafo fuffo? F around and find out?

(20:11):
I get it. You go in the field, guess what
you're something not something good is not gonna happen. But
I do feel like sometimes it's like a bouncer at
a bar, you know, when there's some bouncers that overdue
becaus are just waiting. They got pent up aggression and
they're just waiting. This kid's he's not gonna go tackle
Fernando Tattoos. He's not gonna do anything. Clearly, he's just
a little knucklehead. They have him contained, as you could

(20:34):
see in the video that spots playing on our Fox
Sports Radio YouTube page. He's contained. Look a little knucklehead
running all right, they have him surrounded. There's no Actually
he runs around for.

Speaker 7 (20:45):
A litt while.

Speaker 1 (20:46):
It's pretty funny. Now they got him. No need for
that last tackle right there. Well, it's very funny. Queue
up like some Benny Hill music. It's hilarious, right, and
the little case just having fun. Probably dared. I don't
know what inspired him, but it's kind of bold for
little kid to do that. He did sand the end.
So here's the story too. The side story is this

(21:08):
the San Diego fans were like immediately unhappy with that.
They all started booming security like, yeah, that was unnecessary.
And then you see players reactions. Boooo. You see the
players reaction. You see the padres, they're all watching and
I'll see it's a little kid. And even they like
they they like ooh, they can like, oh wow, that
was a little aggressive. It's a little boy. One of

(21:30):
the players said, he's a kid. He's a kid. How
small he is? Leave them alone now. I also want
to throw back Thursday. Want to reminisce, like, come on,
remember morgana the Kissing Bandit. I'm probably dating myself. Lone
Crown remembers she'd come bouncing out to the mound immediately
her Yeah, she'd come out, bounce into the mound and

(21:51):
it was like all accepted, all good. She'd kiss like
cal ripkin and then go back into the stands. Everybody
loved it. She was famous for kissing Major League Baseball
players and think about how many people storm the field
after their team won. Back in the day professional sports.
The famous clip of Hank Aaron I love that clip.
By the way, those two seventies disco dudes with their

(22:12):
leather jackets On, you know, shaking the hand of Hank
Aaron like we've seen so many legendary clips the players
and Chris Chambliss is just just rummaging through the fans,
just trying to get the home plate, and Reggie Jackson
trying to get back to the dugout, just barreling fans.
That was just the way it was. Now a little
kid can't even shake his booty, get the crowd behind
him and have some fun. He got security taking them out.

(22:35):
He got like, now, do you remember the wrest of
Goldberg would give people like the sphere? Yeah? Do you
think he got what he deserved? Or do you think
it was too aggressive? The two fans there watching it
live all seemed to think that it was a little
too aggressive. Brok and again he's breaking the rules like
you never know? Like do you do?

Speaker 4 (22:56):
You?

Speaker 1 (22:57):
Like you no exceptions? Like you great? I love a
good fight. I love a video where someone gets crushed
or smashed. I I'm with you. I like three officers
had to take down an eight year old. I don't
think we needed three security guy guys. I don't think
we needed three security guys surrounding and then essentially doing

(23:18):
a wwe move on this kid. Now, he didn't look
hurt by any means, Like he got up and could well.
When you see actually the frame by frame and the
still shots, you see like his reactions like he gets up,
kind of proud about it. He lift him up and
he you know, drag him off. He gets squorshed as
my stepdad would. But he's a little kid squorshed squshed

(23:39):
from Washington. Our video was just up. There's a point
where one of the guys has him, and the minute
a guy, the minute the one security guard has him,
some other guy comes flying in and you know what,
he was probably just embarrassed, like this kid's been joking me.
This kid like he just wanted to take out that
frustration again. It's like you've seen videos where bouncers are

(24:01):
so they're just itching for self scratch the overzealous nature
of like all right, I have a little bit of
power that I could do this, and a bouncer like well,
you know, essentially slam some guy into the ground. It's
also a matter of consistency because women have stormed the
field and they don't seem to impose any danger, and
they've been taken out pretty aggressively too, And I've seen footage.

(24:21):
I've seen a lot of articles written about this story
because it's gone pretty viral. And while fans have disapproved,
as they booed like how could you do that to
a kid? Security handle, the first fan, Adam Jones, condemned
the fans' actions. I don't know if you saw this,
says anyone who runs on the field should be fined
ten thousand or harsher. There's no space in it for baseball.

(24:45):
Jones posted that on X yesterday morning. So your thoughts,
I don't know if you saw the clip or not.
Is your mindset like there's no exceptions because God forbids
something did happen. Well, then you still go back to security.
But where was secure? You don't want to encourage other
little knuckleheads to do it. But maybe that's nipping it
in the butt. Maybe that is like, yeah, you're listen,

(25:07):
you you're a little kid. We don't care, we're gonna
we're gonna smush you. Yeah, but I just think it
was kind of funny. I was Sam, you're a reasonable guy.
I mean, you know you can't be run on the field,
but not unnecessary to slam this kid down. Yeah, it
was an over zealous tackle at the end there. But
I have a solution for this.

Speaker 3 (25:21):
You guys have seen Planet of the Apes, the original
one from the nineteen sixties. Uh, the way that the
apes will kidnap the humans. They have the two on
horseback and then the net. Let's bring out a giant
net and just net people up and then swoop them
up like in a hammock, and we just take them
off the field.

Speaker 11 (25:36):
It seems who's gonna who's gonna be on horseback though,
well maybe not horseback but just by or maybe they're
riding miniature ponies or something, or like they're riding donkeys
and then they get the net and they just net
people up.

Speaker 1 (25:47):
Take your stinking paws off me, you damn dirty ape.
I do think though, for purposes of this Sam, every
stadium should have too many a trip ponies on standby
at a net ready to Uh. Speaking of women, a
woman storm the field later that game, I believe, in
the ninth inning, and they also took her out, not
as aggressively. No, so you know, maybe.

Speaker 2 (26:08):
There's an update about the kid. By the way, this
is from San Diegoville Padre's website.

Speaker 1 (26:13):
It says.

Speaker 2 (26:14):
The young trespasser has since identified himself in a bizarre
video he posted to Instagram. He's from Carlsbad Kickboxing Club.
He says that it was worth it. He says, Hi, guys,
my name is Frankie Swartz, and I was the Padres
kid fan that ran out on the field last night
in our win over the Giants. And then he gives
his kickboxing club a shout out, and he says, live

(26:37):
your dreams like I did. Thank you Tatis for winking
at me. I saw you and know you didn't want
to get in trouble. Yeah, it was definitely worth it
and fun.

Speaker 1 (26:45):
What a thrill. Still, it's a thrill, he said. School
for that.

Speaker 2 (26:50):
He said it took a stupid bet from somebody in
his kickbox.

Speaker 1 (26:54):
How it usually works. I'm not surprised Lo and Cron
We dare you to do it at a Dodger's game.
I'll do it right now.

Speaker 7 (27:02):
I know.

Speaker 1 (27:02):
I know you're a wild man, So your thoughts on it.
I think it's a man The kid has to have
a set of weiwhoes to pull that off. Yeah, but
is this like a no exception sort of thing nowadays?
I mean, it's been that way. But it's it's interesting
to look back to see how much has changed when again,
growing up, storm in the field seemed to be the standard.
Now it's there's saying you should be fined ten thousand, arrested,

(27:25):
slammed to the ground and treated like a criminal.

Speaker 2 (27:28):
He said it was worth it and it was fun. Yeah,
so he came away from me like I didn't care.

Speaker 12 (27:32):
How.

Speaker 1 (27:35):
I want to know how old this kid is. Though.
If he's happy about it, then a good for him.
And it's a non story. But I listen, I guess
it's a message being sent. Don't go on the field dopes. Yeah,
you can't have you have to have a zero talent.
Well rich and I also have another rule, and we've
had this rule for years. Don't defend something if you
wouldn't do it. Yeah. Now it's a kid, granted, But

(27:56):
when I was a kid, there's no way in hell
I would have done something like this. So I might
defending this little nose picker is the question, because I
would have never done something like that. Imagine what our
parents or grandparents would have did to us to punish us. Look,
I would have been too scared to do something like that.
In the first place, But second off, like, I would
have never wanted to disrespect the game in anywhere or
stop the game and making it about me, Like, that's

(28:18):
a weird situation to put yourself in. No way would
I have done that. So why am I defending it
because it's a kid? But I would have never done that. Yeah.
Now it goes with you're right, it goes with the
theory of would you do it if the end? But
then again, if you were a security guard, would you
have slammed the kid in front of fifty thousand people?
Some people are just waiting for that moment. Yeah, and
I think that's what it was. Yeah, waiting for that moment. Damn.

(28:38):
All right, well, hey, let's go to Isaac for an
update then, uh yeah, anything going on in the world
of sports.

Speaker 6 (28:47):
Sorry, guys, I was just catching up on morgana videos
for research. All right, let's get to your New York
mess right now. They have a three two lead at
Washington bottom half of the fifth inning. The Mets for
and Cisco Lindor let off this game with a home run,
his twenty fifth and then Starling Marte at the top
of the third inning and his seventh home run of
the season, by the way, speaking of the Mets guys,

(29:08):
speaking of running on the field, Cavino and Rich do
you remember the Bill Buckner game. In the first inning
of that game that guy parachuted in a.

Speaker 1 (29:19):
Shave stadium and Ron Darling game of a highest I
mean it was a different time. It was embraced by
the way that guy was Rich's dad. I'm gonna start,
you know what, it makes sense, you have his chin.

(29:40):
Time for our tire rack play today the Padres bounce
back payoff pinch. Devers swings hits into the air to
very deep right field. Bernando's back, he is at the wall.
He will leap up and he did it again.

Speaker 13 (29:53):
Fernando Tatis over the right field wall. Did it a
couple of years ago out there in almost the exact
same spot and one of the great home run robberies you.

Speaker 1 (30:04):
Will see this season. What a play. Git much better
than that, damn Fernando tatists Junior robs Raphael Devers. You
know it's Devers relaxed. San Diego got back within one
game of the Dodgers last night, beating the Giants eight one.
This courtesy of Padres Radio Network. That was our tirect

(30:24):
play of the day. Look at the cock. It's time
to go old school. There's a certain.

Speaker 14 (30:32):
Ya.

Speaker 1 (30:32):
What we gonna do is go back.

Speaker 12 (30:36):
Back into town, throwing it back for a Thursday. Old
School won fifty hits. That's fifty after CNR give you
the time capsule topic and we reminisce together.

Speaker 1 (30:48):
Yeah. So it's National Senior Citizen's Day. How you're so
much stronger? Yeah, yeah, yeah, shout out to all the
old guys and old ladies with old people names. Old
man Clemens, what's the oldest man name you could think of? Scott,
Old man Clemens is a good one. Emeneezer's an old guy, Mnezer,
y Ezekiel. Yeah, those are all. George, My grandpa's named George.

(31:10):
Sam's an old guy name. Yeah. So you know what
old guy name came back? Which one? William Bill? Like
you know, there's a lot of little kids, a lot
of Williams in the schools now. Well, it's also sister Gene.
You remember sister Jean, not my lover sister, she now
lover because she's one hundred and six today. She became

(31:31):
the Loyola Ramblers mascot. They went on that run and
the reason they went on the run was because of her.

Speaker 3 (31:37):
She made in six years old. She was born when
Woodrow Wilson was president.

Speaker 1 (31:45):
Nineteen Woodrow Wilson and for gold Did she ever uh
Lam Hill? So she was part of the gold Rush.
She's an original forty nine er. If she went out
on the court, do you think they would tackle her?
Probably not. Actually, yeah, they're considered. They don't care if
she's an old nun. But we celebrate her and all

(32:05):
senior citizens. It's their day. I want you to start
thinking about old people and special old people. You know,
there was some study. I forget the stats, so I
don't want to butcher it, but I usually we underestimate
the impact that grandparents and older people had in our lives. Yeah,
they're responsible for our core values. No offense to the boomers.
They're not the grandparents that our grandparents were. No, our

(32:26):
core values mostly come from our grandparents, and I forget
like the percentages they used, but today we honor them.
Tho the best memories and stories you have about your
grandparents and old people in your life, well before we
share those memories and funny stories and things that remind
you of your old grandparents' generation, like Dance cookies, Dank's cookies,
and then yeah, it was like is there threaded needles

(32:50):
and a pincushion in their or their actual cookies. I
think the one thing that will remind all people of
that oldest generation, that World War two generation. You see
like random footage of like New York City nineteen thirty something.
Everyone has a hat on them when everyone's dressed to
the tea. Yeah, either they were selling watches or flashing
people because they always had trench coats.

Speaker 3 (33:11):
No one wore deodorant, like and it must have been hot,
you know.

Speaker 1 (33:14):
They had class, dude, they did. They went out and
they represented. They all look good and more their best.
But they were stinky though. But they stank. Yeah, and
they were no clothes on. They were after shape. Either
that or they were like standing on the shoulders of
their wives to sneak into the game. Trench coats, yea,
trench coats. My grappa smelled like whiskey, like old spice,

(33:35):
old spice. Oh yeah, if you want to bring up
things that old people said, your favorite stories from old people,
things aren't remind you of that generation. Like to me,
I think of like bad candy and gum like my
grandparents would have lucky what is it a that liquorice gum?
Blackjack gum? Who is licorice gum?

Speaker 10 (33:51):
Like?

Speaker 1 (33:51):
They were an interesting generation. So we'll share some stories,
reminisce a little bit, and then of course talked more NFL.
We are two weeks away, which is awesome, So more
coming on, Rich and your story's next. We're gonna get
back to our old school conversation on National Senior Citizens Day.

(34:13):
But Jerry John's saying that him and Micaeh Parsons had
like an agreement and the agent said, stick it up
your ass. That's that's a wild story. Huh. But it
is a wild one, and you heard it. I oh,
I can't say that was awesome. Well, Jerry Jones didn't
Jerry Jones say it? Yeah, he can, you can't. It

(34:36):
is an interesting one because who knew that? And who
knew that Michael Irvin had a YouTube show. That was
also a surprise to me. I didn't know everybody has
a show. Everybody's a broadcaster, so stick to everybody. So confused. Yeah,
I gotta do my FCC training. You gotta stop paying
your son to do your FCC training. That's true, do
it yourself. That's next, all right? Old school when fifty hits,

(34:57):
we do it every Thursday, and it is Senior Citizen's Day.
And it got us thinking about the wild and crazy
world of our grandparents generation. They fought in a war.
They the oldest hell way young. Her grandparents are different
back in the day. My grandmother, I feel like she
were a moomoo who her whole life. Did your grandmother
wear anything like that your mom wears? Now? My grandma

(35:19):
had the same clothes for as long as I could remember,
So whatever she had when I was a little kid
is the same clothes she was wearing when she passed
away when I was an adult. Right, That's just how
grandparents were. And they wore the hammy. My grandma, Mexican
lady wore like whatever pair of sneakers that her grandkids gave.

(35:39):
She wore my brother sneakers. You know what I mean?
Like this, It doesn't matter if they fear their clothes.
Moon moves like you said. My other grandma looked like
missus claws. She gave me grandcrackers, she baked your birthday cake.
It was a different breed of grandma and grandpa back
then what their grandpa told. Stories. Grandparents now are even

(36:00):
want to hang with their grandkids. When you think grandparents,
do you think, I think expressions. I remember shaving a haircut,
two bits, all kinds of stuff like that, and how
was a praise? And my grandparents would make coffee in
a percolator. They would say things like you don't know
s from shine Nola. So grandparents, stories, the memories, the

(36:24):
commonalities we all have, we all share, Like I'll give
you one. I'm pretty certain that everybody remembers your grandma
giving you like grandma candy. We mentioned those Danks cookies,
you know, those cookies that came in the tines, like
the sugary Pretzel one and the sugary rectangle one and
all the other ones. Rich is right. You don't know
if you were getting cookies or sewing sewing equipment. You

(36:47):
don't know what was in that tin. And how about
those strawberry candies, the strawberry candies, the old people candies.
I don't know if Graham Grandma only had. I don't
know if Grandma got like shipment of them. I don't
know where they got them from, the only place that
they still have a lot of old people candy? Dollar
Tree I was recently. I was recently, and that where
Grandma's got like generic strawberry wrapped candy that was recently?

(37:10):
Is a Dollar Tree or Dollar Store? They're all the
Dollar General, yea. They have in their candy aisle all
the things that you would think old people, like individually
wrapped Tootsie rolls, and you know the strawberry candies that
are that look like they are a strawberry.

Speaker 2 (37:24):
Can you tell me the brand of that though nobody
knows who makes those?

Speaker 14 (37:28):
Knowing?

Speaker 1 (37:28):
How about that old hard can like they magically appeared
on earth. They'd have like old fashioned hard candy. Read
the ribbon candy is yeah, candy.

Speaker 3 (37:37):
They got sham old root beer barrels for you peppermin stick.

Speaker 1 (37:41):
Hey, Grandpa, you got candy. I got root beer barrels.
That ribbon candy is horrible. Grandma may have had like
a Werther's or some sort of butterscotch, some sort of
Brox butterscotch at the bottom of her purse, and she'd
give you. But again, I my one, Grandma. That's a
good one. By the way, root beer barrels PM Herman
loved them, and your grandpa loved people group here about taffy. Yeah,

(38:02):
your grandpa loved like bowls of peanuts too, right crack today?
You know what else? You know what else? Your grandparents
loved each and every one of you. Every grandparent had
one of these in the basement or somewhere. It was
like a workout machine, but we didn't know what it was.
Like it was just a band that went around your
waist and like, what is that it was? I don't

(38:24):
know if they had it on an infomercial, but you
remember it looked like just a belt that went around
you and like, who knows what it was? I was
just on the carousel of progress at Disney World. Yeah,
that's when they take you through all the decades and
they actually showed that like when people had that thing,
no grandparents love to do too. Maybe it worked because
people weren't as fat then as they are now. You

(38:46):
know what it is, OBC is a problem because we
don't have those shakers anymore. Old people loved hanging laundry.
They have though episode in my mom when I was
a kid, so if you hit my dad's tidy whities,
it was an automatic double. It was always it was
always interrupted. My withootball games. What I'm saying like there

(39:07):
were drivers. Take Dad's on the word now, Sam, and
there were drivers in the eighties. I'm just saying. I
remember my grandparents would hang all their laundry in the yard.
Like it sounds funny now because clothes pins were put
to use. Like can you imagine now, like Danny, imagine
you and Brenda were doing like the family's laundry and
you just hung it on a line in your yard
and just feels weird. My mom still does that. We

(39:29):
have a farm.

Speaker 3 (39:30):
Yeah, so she hangs it out and it's like windy
and hot, it'll get it dry pretty quick.

Speaker 1 (39:34):
So my grandma used to do a few weird things. Again,
she my one grandma. Again I have I feel like
I have a white grandma and like a Mexican grandma.
So that's who I am, right, So my Mexican grandma,
I guess she would like take as much as she could,
like from the diner that she was at or whatever,
like sugar packets and jelly packets, saltines. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

(39:58):
So she'd always like like she'd be like giving me
treats like June little here you go. Like because I
was a good kid, and she give me little jelly
packets all the time, like, thank you, Tita, little little
jelly packets out of her purse all the time. You
don't really love those little diner marmalades and yeah, seriously,
I would eat those like they were candy when I.

Speaker 2 (40:18):
Was always the reject. Flavors like orange, yeah, and.

Speaker 1 (40:23):
What else would she always do?

Speaker 5 (40:24):
You know?

Speaker 1 (40:24):
Growing up old school. It's more of an old school
because they're from the old country. They're just old people
from a different generation. I remember opening up her fridge.
I told this story recently, and I remember saying, Teta, gross,
what's that? And it was a tomato with like fungus
all over it, like an old rotten tomatoes popping there
for three months. I'm like, why don't you throw this away? No, no, Juno,

(40:47):
it's okay, it's okay. And she rubbed it out with
her thumb thumb and took like a giant bite at it.
So it was just like different generations of people. They
wasted nothing. That's just how it was, not for real.
And you know what, there something more. I don't know,
there's something really special about your your grandparents and old
people looking back. Seriously, they were there, they wanted to
spend time with you. They were great role models. And

(41:11):
that's what we're getting at because National Senior Citizens Day.

Speaker 2 (41:13):
Did they love jars the way my grandparents did. Everything
was in a jar quarters nicking change. Yeah, jars. Yeah,
My grandma in the kitchen had one jar of saltines
and one jar of pieces of sourdough, bread, jars of things.
If you were hungry, shut up and go get a
slice of sour dough and put some butter on it.

Speaker 1 (41:31):
They'd give you sweet grandparents snacks just like that. Like
I said, yeah, maybe some Graham crackers with jelly on it,
or tortilla gonmnte guilla little salt, whatever it was. You know,
your grandparents did different things for you. So your best
grandma grandpa stories and memories and if they're sports related,
that's cool too. Mauser hits us up in Cincinnati. Everyone's

(41:54):
grandparents had recipes written on index cards. That's a good
They always had the recipes for sure, recipes written down.
And let's see, Grandma was always bacon stuff. Do you
know what grandma's love to do Go to the salon
and put their head onto that. Uh. That astronaut looking thing.
Oh under that helmet. Yeah, it could be like like
hot air. I think they love. I feel like richieus

(42:16):
to get his haircut like that when I first met him, Like, dude,
get a fade. What is it with your mel Gibson quaff?
RICHI used to sit under that moon helmet. I feel
like grandparents love perms for some reason. They love bingos,
So did Gary Carter. I think Gary Carter and grandparents.

Speaker 3 (42:30):
Curling irons and then also wearing curlers to bed. My
grandma's names were Helen and Nancy. How more grandma is that?

Speaker 9 (42:37):
Hell?

Speaker 1 (42:37):
Okay? My grandma Harriet and Celia was a very grandma name. Yeah,
very grandma names. Let's go to Dave and Idaho share
some grandparents stories. Then we'll get to some more again.
A few reasons. It's National Senior Citizen's Day, and studies
proved that all of our core values, our core values

(42:57):
were passed on from our grandparents. So they had bigger
impact than you even realize on your life and who
you are. And they just were different than today's grandparents.
That's just a fact. And it's also Sister Jean's one
hundred and sixth birthday the mascot of the Loyola Ramblers.
So happy birthday to her, and we get to your

(43:18):
phone calls now eight seven seven ninety nine, O Fox.
You know what grandparents love to do? Hide cash? Oh yeah,
because they came from a generation under the that that
didn't believe banks. Thanks for failing again, hide the money?
Do you guys remember this? I just started watching The
Sopranos again just because it's been twenty years.

Speaker 7 (43:35):
Right.

Speaker 1 (43:35):
Do you remember when Poulie Walnuts dos his mom in
the old age Home? But he really didn't want to,
but he threw it in the old age home and
one of the ladies it gets out that she keeps
money under the mattress, and Paulie Walnuts breaks into the
old lady's house. Remember that?

Speaker 3 (43:49):
Hey, how about the we talked about this a few
months ago, the guy who found forty grand sewn into
a couch.

Speaker 1 (43:56):
Oh yeah. Old people loved hiding money. Absolutely.

Speaker 2 (44:00):
That's why a lot of our grandparents hoarde things or
hoarded things too, because their parents went through the Great Depression.
So everything they got their hands on that was some
value to them, they kept it forever.

Speaker 1 (44:11):
You find some old band aid tin, some old suecrets,
tin and a medicine, capitals and nails or something. All right,
that's an emergency fund. You know what old people loved.
Old it's just in case of an emergency, a ready
day fund. Give you a couple more. I think I
think these are all universal. I think old people love
rocking chairs. Oh yeah, Oh, they love to rock in

(44:33):
a chair. They rocked out, They rocked out. Furniture was handmade.
Back then, people made rocking chairs all the time. You
know what old people loved, Ethan Allen. Old people loved
china closets. They love to display their plates. Now our generation,
do you think you know one grown man or woman
that's like thirty forty fifty years old that displays plates.
That's to find china. We break out for the holidays.

(44:55):
Find china is definitely a generational thing. People of our generation.
Don't give it, squad, We're gonna eat off paper plates.
Oh you know what else? Old people love? God bless
my grandma, my nana, my dad's mom. Hummeles, old lady hummels.
Like those collectibles, you know, little statues that they had, figurines.

Speaker 2 (45:13):
Yeah, glad you bring up the way they decorated. Oh yeah,
they covered all the furniture. Yeah, Doileys. Doile was my grandmam,
the only one who hung up spade shaped fans on
the walls.

Speaker 1 (45:26):
Yeah. And they loved screen doors with like a covered
wagon on the on the front. Oh, every screen door
had that same design. It was a white screen door
with like a wagon, some sort of gick, some sort
of enter like. I'll give you not. They love what
do you call those rug spot Remember we looked at
it recently, those rag mats or something. We're like when

(45:47):
you would go in their house to wipe your feet,
it would just be a bunch of strings connected by
a different colors. Look up or is it rag mat?
Rag rug or rag matt? And you'd be like, yeah, Greg,
grandma had that right in front of the sink. You know.
Grandpa hants loved. I used that for naptime and kindergorns.
Shoehorns are painting the butt again. He needed a horn, Harriet,
where's my shoehorn? It's not bending over you put it somewhere.

(46:12):
Every grandparent and you know what TV's back then, they
were a piece of furniture. Think of like how your parents,
your grandparents TV set. That's what it was, a TV set.
It was a wood piece of furniture that like sat
as the centerpiece. And you know what they sat in
watching the TV set. We mentioned it the other day,
Grandpa's lazy boy. Grandpa loved his recliner. Grandpa fell asleep

(46:34):
and as a recliner all night. That's how it was.
And he smelled like him. Am I right? And he
smelled what do you smelled like? Stets in brute, old spice.
That's what Grandpa smelled like. So we're celebrating old people today.
We'll get to your phone calls. Dany G. You you
said something before I think, did you say after shave?
Someone said after shave aquavella? Was it you? I was saying,

(46:56):
do you know any young person that uses after shave?
I do well? I used like you like cramo, like
a cream, like really yeah. If I'm shaving my neck
and I don't want wolf neck. But I'm just saying
like I don't I don't know. I want frog eggs
developing underneath their I gotta soothe it out. I can't
stand that old spice smelly. That's in my mind. I'm like,
I didn't know after shave was still a thing my

(47:18):
dad had. I think he probably got used it because
his dad used it. But it was called royal lime
l y m E and that stuff just smelled like
an old man. It's all royal lime U l's.

Speaker 3 (47:28):
You should bring it back, sir. You can buy it.
I get I don't know where you buy it. You
buy anything on the internet.

Speaker 1 (47:36):
For your birthday. What's your birthday?

Speaker 8 (47:37):
Sam?

Speaker 1 (47:38):
Uh? Let's go to Idaho and Dave. What's up? Dave?

Speaker 14 (47:41):
Hey, brother, Thanks taking my phone call.

Speaker 1 (47:43):
No problem, man, you were talking old man names.

Speaker 14 (47:46):
My grandfather's name was Dwayne.

Speaker 1 (47:49):
Was Dwayne Wade and Dwayne this is Dwayne the Rock John,
So that Dwayne is an old guy named though. But
there's some young Duins.

Speaker 14 (47:55):
Back in the early eighties, my dad's whole side of
the family diehard brown Fans, and we came home from
overseas because my dad was in the military, got us
Packers Brown's tickets a fifty yard line in like nineteen
eighty two or eighty three, hoping I'd come out of
that game a Browns fan, but I walked out of
cheese it. So my best memory of my grandfather is

(48:16):
going to that football game and coming out of Packers.

Speaker 1 (48:19):
Fan, you made a better choice. Packers, way better choice
than the Browns. Thank you, Sorry man, Thank you Kyle
and Montana. What's up man?

Speaker 5 (48:27):
Hey guys, what's up?

Speaker 8 (48:28):
I got I gotta got a.

Speaker 9 (48:29):
Story for you. Well, my great grandparents were.

Speaker 1 (48:32):
From Iowa, like all time Iowa, let's go like like,
died in their nineties after smoking cigarettes since their twelve
like like old like don't believe in seat bills old
Like my grandparents they would be like seat say they
restrict you.

Speaker 4 (48:50):
And I'm glad you brought the recliner because they both
died in their recliners, watching like their daytime television shows.

Speaker 1 (48:56):
I'm not surprised. I don't think my grandfather price is right.

Speaker 4 (48:59):
I don't know you got good on your prices, Kyle.

Speaker 1 (49:02):
I'm I'm quite sure if everyone else's grandparents the Lawrence
Welk Show, but i I grandparents loved that show. I
don't know if my I'm being serious, I don't know
if my grandparents slept in their bed the last like
ten years of their life. I think they slept every
night in side by side recliners. Did your grandfather sleep
in a bed every night? I feel like, yeah, asleep
on the recliner. I have the same memory.

Speaker 3 (49:23):
They couldn't get up the stairs, so they slept in
my grand My grandma Helen and my grandpa Bernard had
matching recliners. They didn't even have a couch.

Speaker 1 (49:32):
What old names do you remember them bringing up? Like
Grandpa Mike Tyson is the greatest of all time?

Speaker 4 (49:37):
Eh?

Speaker 1 (49:38):
Well, excuse you hadn't seen Jack Timpsey fright, I'll tell
you and that Rocky Marcian like that. You probably heard
them bring up some old ass names. So again, taking
your phone calls At eight seven, seven ninety nine on Fox,
McKinny in Ohio, what's up, McKinny.

Speaker 8 (49:54):
Greeting from Yellow Springs, Ohio?

Speaker 1 (49:56):
Jones, what's up? Man?

Speaker 8 (49:58):
Doesn't much?

Speaker 12 (49:59):
I love this?

Speaker 14 (50:00):
See.

Speaker 7 (50:01):
I ended up becoming a chef because of my grandmother.

Speaker 14 (50:06):
My grandmother was the head cook for Birmingham Skit City
Schools in Alabama.

Speaker 1 (50:11):
Nice and I.

Speaker 5 (50:12):
Got all of their cookbooks.

Speaker 4 (50:15):
She bought me an easy bake oven for Christmas one time.

Speaker 1 (50:19):
How many cookies? And what's that? You must have made
a lot of slow burning cookies.

Speaker 7 (50:26):
Well, I ended up understanding the principle of cooking.

Speaker 1 (50:31):
That's all that you know. I uh, what happened to him?
I don't know. Did we reset the I think we
reset the whole phones. Wow, the phones are blowing up.
People love talking about grandpappies. Yeah, the phones are melted.
Hey man, if you want to call back, make it snappy.
I'm sorry about that. Eight seven seven ninety nine on Fox.
I do appreciate the phone calls. I'm glad you'd like
this discussion. It's our way of just paying homage and

(50:54):
honoring the old people that had huge impact on our lives.
Like I said before, your core values, you think they
come from your parents. But where do you think your
parents got those core values from. They see, most of
it came from your grandparents. So we pay our respects
on National Senior Citizens Day and later today rich In
about forty minutes on over promised our bonus podcast. We're

(51:16):
gonna talk about the old people, the old seniors in sports,
or at least the people we thought were super old
when we were little, like the Don Suttons of the world.
Yeah like that. We're gonna we're gonna talk about that
on over promised Fox Sports. Actually on our YouTube page
YouTube dot com slash Covino and Rich FSR. Let's say,
how to Andy in Mississippi? What's up Andy? Real great?

Speaker 7 (51:41):
My grandmother.

Speaker 14 (51:42):
Yeah, when she comes visit, we play Hide the Thimble,
which is basically hot cold.

Speaker 9 (51:49):
It was an actual thimble.

Speaker 7 (51:51):
We'd hide in the room somewhere.

Speaker 1 (51:53):
That's that's fun. Rich plays at with his wife though
every weekend. Thank you very much, thank you, Oh, thank
you man. It's a really nice memory. I was actually
just waiting to see where is gonna go with this
the minute he said hide the thimb grin like like,
But he said, Cavi, you look like you don't have
the grinch smiles. And I didn't want to. I don't

(52:15):
want to disrespect the family game, and that wasn't the point.
So thanks for sharing. But you know what else I
thought of too, I thought, does everybody have this memory
of Grandpa and his obsession with his Cadillac or Lincoln
town car, whatever he wanted. And they would play elevator
music like they played some old guy elevator music. It
was just a different sort of thing they were into

(52:36):
as far as listening.

Speaker 2 (52:37):
When you guys were home from school sick, did you
have memories of your grand any of your grandparents being
around watch me. Yeah, remember, yeah, I was just going
to say, I know somebody brought up Prices right when
I was answering the studio lines. My grandmother she loved
Bob Barker. She wanted him so bad. She talked about Bob. No,

(52:58):
she did, she's she would watch the Prices right. I
swear she drooled the whole time because every time he
came out. She was like one of her dreams was
she wanted to get on that show so bad so
that she could give him a kiss, wow, dig in
his pockets.

Speaker 1 (53:12):
Yeah, it was a fun show. A guy giving that
the best kisses. Family feud. Richard Dawson, he was creepy.
It was oddly kissing everyone. Hey, you know what, the
phones are all hot. We'll take your feedback at Covino
and rich Now, coming up, we are going to talk
a lot of NFL, because you know, we are two
weeks away from life changing exactly exactly life changing, meaning

(53:33):
you know, every week we very much focus on our
NFL team. In fact, the first hour we talked about
how even affects your bedroom activity. So we'll talk some
NFL and my goodness, my Mets are losing. This is
no good. We're done the foot We have three nothing
mess five to three. Oh my goodness, Yeah, this stinks.

(53:55):
Share your stories now, we'll wrap it up. We'll do
a quick rapid fire eight seven seven ninety nine Fox,
and then there's an update about MLB ye and we'll
talk some NFL to wrap it up. Ronnie in New Orleans,
you're on with C and R. What's up, Ronnie?

Speaker 14 (54:07):
What's going on? Man?

Speaker 10 (54:09):
Yo?

Speaker 1 (54:09):
Ronnie? What's up?

Speaker 14 (54:10):
Man?

Speaker 9 (54:11):
Little same home?

Speaker 5 (54:12):
Getting off for work?

Speaker 10 (54:12):
Heading home?

Speaker 1 (54:14):
Nice? So, so, what did grandparents love?

Speaker 14 (54:17):
I went, Grandpa loved the Yankees and the Boston Celtics,
and he passed it on to you.

Speaker 5 (54:23):
And I passed it on to my son.

Speaker 14 (54:25):
When he passed it on to my mom, Marsman my dad,
and he passed it on to me and to my son.

Speaker 5 (54:30):
It goes generational.

Speaker 1 (54:32):
I was gonna say, way less teams than things to
choose from. Back then. We grew up in an area
where there's a lot of people that love the Brooklyn Dodgers,
a lot of grandparents love the Brooklyn Dodgers, and they
were caught in a pickle of what to do. Now, Uh,
let's say, how to Rodney and Sacramento. What's up? Rodney?

Speaker 5 (54:46):
Hey, what's going on?

Speaker 6 (54:47):
Fellas?

Speaker 1 (54:48):
Anybody?

Speaker 7 (54:49):
Hey?

Speaker 4 (54:49):
So, my I just want to point out that our
grandfather's man were a different breed of gentlemen. I remember,
you know, being Filipino and Hispanic. He always smelt like
slicking his hair back, and he would always carry a
b or a comb in his pocket and a handkerchief handkerchiefs.

Speaker 1 (55:10):
Rodney, thank you for that. I know what I'm looking
for with these phone calls. I'm looking for something like
that to make you go, ah, to think how gross
that is, think about Grandpa would be like and then
put it right back in his pocket. So this is
really a question of grandparents loved blank, didn't they And handkerchiefs, hankerchief, handkerchief.

(55:31):
It's like, you're right, they would blow their nose in it.
And he mentioned the you mentioned the different breed on
my dad's side. My dad's daddy a butcher, right. But
when you see that he's a butcher, his fingers are
mangled like mangled, right, Like there's a different type of man.
It was that type of man back then didn't care
about his skin. They would.

Speaker 6 (55:55):
Yeah, do you guys remember the Mister Good Wrench commercial
when we were growing up about the pair of hands
washing the hands and all the dirt and grime would
come off, and that was the whole commercial.

Speaker 1 (56:06):
Yes, same principle. It's just how it was in Missouri.
What's up, Clay? What up?

Speaker 7 (56:11):
Hey guys? How you doing? Old guy calling in on
the topic? All right?

Speaker 10 (56:16):
Six heay?

Speaker 7 (56:17):
So I went to my grandfather World War two. Ben
Box in the army. Came out of World War Two.
He's a pullman conductor out of Saint Louis, Missouri, which
was on the trains, the guy the entertainment trains, and
he had trained from Saint Louis to Vegas. A lot
of drinking going on and such, and so he had

(56:37):
to take care of that work. Well page where he died.
I went up to Saint Louis to visit him, and
we were watching Roadhouse and that line where uh, he said,
you're nice to you, it's not time to be nice anymore.
Grandpa just pointed at it and looked and grin because
he had taught me that exact same line my whole life.

Speaker 1 (56:58):
That's awesome, man, that's that's really cool. Grandpa loved Roadhouse.
You know Grandpa's loved Let's make this simple. You know,
grandparents loved having the same job for fifty years. People
job hop Now, how many grandparents do you know? They
were like he worked for the electric company for forty
eight years old. People love keeping the same job their
whole life. You know, I was thinking when he was

(57:19):
telling that story, world War two veteran, all that you
always hear a similar story followed up. He boxed in
the army and he would come home from work and
never complained. So that was another like different personality trait
of that generation. Hey rarely complained about you know, the
stuff they'd seen. They'd seen some stuff. I always think
about that. My grandfather was in Germany, I lived World

(57:40):
War two everything, and I think that generation was told
to just I just tuck those thoughts away. Yes, they
never talked about.

Speaker 2 (57:46):
It, and rich we got to shout out the US military.
Course the breed they were, they would win medals of
honor and hide those they like. My grandma would ask
my grandpa to take out his medals and he said no,
he never wanted to show off anything. And now think
of this generation and how everybody wants the spotlight.

Speaker 1 (58:05):
On them O man, you said it dude for real,
but yeah, a different breedy guy. Thank you guys. We
got what two or three more calls. I'll tell a
couple more quick as we'll go to Robin, Texas.

Speaker 9 (58:15):
Hey Rob, Yeah, So I get punished in college, bad
grades and I got simp for spring break to go
clear Land with my grandfather who I grew up with
a we'll just say he was respected, but he was feared.
And my grandmother first down there bust me for having
cigarettes and a zippo lighter. It takes them away from me.
Very next day go out and crew the land. My

(58:38):
grandfather would be getting the truck after work and he's like,
right here we go. We go through a drive through
liquor store outside of work, get the bottle of gym bean,
the six pack of coat, and a pack of cigarettes,
and he goes, We're not going home until he finished this.

Speaker 1 (58:55):
Damn. Grandparents cut from a different cloth. Grandparents used to
come from hank great grandparents used to also. Grandma loved
to knit and make blanket, make quilt.

Speaker 10 (59:07):
You know.

Speaker 1 (59:07):
Grandparents also love scarfs. They were big on using alcohol
with like for children's like sore teeth or something like
grandparents were quote love to be like, that's put a
little whiskey on it. Yeah, my grandma loved vix Vapo
rub for everything. Yeah, let's let me know what this.
Let's say I to Kyle in Missouri to wrap it.
What's Kyle?

Speaker 4 (59:27):
Hey, what's going on?

Speaker 14 (59:28):
Guys?

Speaker 1 (59:28):
Hey? Grandparents? What did grandparents love? Kyle?

Speaker 7 (59:32):
My grandpa was.

Speaker 8 (59:33):
He was retired before I was born, but he loved
waking up in the morning and putting on his coveralls.
He also had a goodie drawer that was filled.

Speaker 10 (59:42):
With those orange Circus peanuts.

Speaker 7 (59:44):
And maybe it's good, coach, you.

Speaker 1 (59:47):
Know, Orange Circus peanuts is a good one. You just
said another one. Old people they love to wake up early.
I want when we're older, we don't want to wake
up at five in the morning just for the hell
of it. I think they go to bed at eight o'clock,
so they're up at five thirty. I'm I told you.
I worked at a cards and gift store once that
opened at like five thirty six in the morning, and
I hated it. But when I got there, there were
all people waiting for the store to beat. You want

(01:00:08):
to scratch, I need my scratchers and my lucky strike.

Speaker 3 (01:00:11):
You want to go to the diner at six am
for their black coffee and their toast and their meat loaf.

Speaker 1 (01:00:15):
And you know what, we're better for knowing them. So
we'll finish with Craig and then we'll talk some MLB
real quick, right quick, Covino and Rich? What up Craig, Craig, Hey, I.

Speaker 9 (01:00:27):
Love you guys in the afternoon.

Speaker 8 (01:00:29):
So anyways, I used to go walking with my granddad
and he would always tell me weird stories. But he
would say when he was a little kid, him and
his brother would walk on.

Speaker 5 (01:00:37):
The sidewalk and pull car out of the crack and
show it from bubblegum.

Speaker 1 (01:00:42):
Wow, that's that's for some manly stuff. Do you ever
know how to say that your grand won't be kids
today with your hubbabubbas? You ever your grandparents ever tell
you a story where you couldn't believe it because of
how cavalier they seemed to be back at the death.
It's called the movie. It's a movie called Big Fish.
Like my grandparents, they would tell story and this is
a true one. I mean, the proof was in his hands.

(01:01:05):
My grandfather got his finger cut off by his brother.
They were chopping wood. And I remember being like Crimpa,
like from the knuckle down like he was had a
half a finger, and I remember saying, well, what did
you do? And he goes, I just picked it up
and threw it out. I'm like, you just picked up
your finger and threw it out. The old people were,

(01:01:26):
that's how old. And he goes, and my brother ran
away for a week because he thought he'd get in trouble.
I'm like, and for a week, no one looked for him. Yeah,
he eventually came back like what, Wow, they operated differently.
God bless him. The greatest generation. Yeah, happy old people
and the old people around today. I mean it is
Senior's Day, Senior citizen Day, and again happy birthday, sister Gene,

(01:01:48):
one hundred and six years old. Now we were just
hanging here getting all the phone calls. Dannyg was hard
at work eight seven seven ninety nine h Fox and
Rich started doing what Rich does best. He started looking
at these potensial what would you call it, rich rearrangements.
There's the Baseball Division. There's a lot of chatter. There's

(01:02:08):
a lot of chatter about divisional realignment. If in when
there's expansion in baseball. Rob Manford open a can of worms,
intentionally or not during the Little League Classic when he said, Oh,
we're looking at expansion and perhaps realignment. And by saying that,
I said, the baseball in the sports world has now
since speculated what would these divisions look like like city

(01:02:29):
who's getting the team. There's been some projections, I said.
The guy from the Athletic I thought had the best
possible projections, But based on thirty two teams, I just
read something else that if every team's going to play
each other the way the schedule has been working with
that number thirty two, they're saying they wouldn't be shocked if,
with all the revenue and everything coming into baseball two

(01:02:50):
new teams, they may cut the schedule to one fifty
four or one fifty six. And I said, look, I
want all the baseball I could get because I'm a fan.
I don't care dragon out as long as you want.
But in reality the problem with baseball is that the
season is too long, and for the casual fan, I
think if you shorten it up a few games, that's

(01:03:10):
another win for Basebally. Yeah, but there is a part
of me though, that thinks all six games does I
mean it would take it eight games, would take it
back to what the OG baseball season was, one fifty four,
right before they went to one sixty two. Correct, Yeah,
the babe birth days. That might be the only argument, like, well,
we used to have one fifty four with the babe.
But I think taken away games baseball such a statistically

(01:03:33):
driven sport. Everything in baseball, in my mind, has something
to do with stats and streaks, and out of one
hundred and sixty two, I think just by elimiting any games,
you're messing with baseball stats, which, for some reason of
all the sports just seems to have some relevance, right, Yeah,
But I think we're sort of getting away from that that, yeah,

(01:03:53):
because I mean, we've made so many changes in the
game and it's all benefited for the greater good. So
if it did go down to one fifty four, I
think you'd see, again, just another positive change for the game.
People like quicker, people like shorter. It's just how it is.
Our attention spans don't have the bandwidth, Like, for example, tonight,
would you rather watch a forty minute show or a

(01:04:16):
documentary on Netflix or a two hour movie? I so
keep watching the Biggest Loser documentary, simply because they're like
three forty minute episodes you think of movie. I ain't
got time for that. So one hundred and sixty two games,
it just feels like forever, everyone would sign up for
a shorter season, even the players would
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