Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
Hey, it's in the nature bar Rick Flair and we're
talking about the giant board villain, Big Show, I say,
the Big Show, and every morning they'd be styling and profiling.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
Whoo whoo, whoo, whooh, Lovanana.
Speaker 3 (00:59):
It is Thursday day, September twenty fifth, getting in the
short rows of September.
Speaker 4 (01:05):
Good morning, big.
Speaker 3 (01:06):
Show came morning boys, All right down, see we got
going on.
Speaker 4 (01:13):
It's National Daughter's Day. Hug and love your daughter.
Speaker 3 (01:18):
And someone never had three boys, got a grandson. I
got a brother of course, my older sister Debbie.
Speaker 4 (01:27):
Right, that was the female in my life.
Speaker 3 (01:29):
Was my mama and Jackie and you Marcy and Randy
the wifeld said.
Speaker 4 (01:35):
Oh yeah, my wife. Yeah, I don't forget that dog.
Oh listen Randy before my wife I heard, she's used
to it like that. My brother's got two boys. So
my daughter in law ellis who is my daughter? Right
thereby Daughter's.
Speaker 3 (01:52):
Day, National Case of DA Day, National Lobster Day, the
National tune up Day. To prepare for the winter season,
could we get into fall first here?
Speaker 4 (02:06):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (02:08):
They want you to check all your heating devices before
you crank them up.
Speaker 4 (02:12):
Okay, that was a good idea. Check your heating devices
and uh you all got it going on to you?
Speaker 3 (02:18):
Okay, good, We got three days in history saved up.
That's where we'll make some categories out of them and
get your winning beginning.
Speaker 6 (02:25):
All right.
Speaker 3 (02:26):
We are with big shows on a radio. Good morning,
Big shows on a radio. Haul ride falls?
Speaker 4 (02:34):
Is it Monday fall? Start Monday mondays? That's all right, yeah,
all right, that.
Speaker 3 (02:38):
Means hot seasons here boys, And we got a big
old Happy Herd prize back for you. Happy Herd makes
top quality attracting minerals and feet for deer, bear and hogs.
Two years ago got the North Carolina State Bowl record
and deer using Happy Herd.
Speaker 7 (02:54):
Man.
Speaker 4 (02:55):
I had the antlers over the farm, was passing them around. Man,
there's remember that.
Speaker 3 (03:01):
Click on the Happy Heard banner of the Big Show
dot com Enter coach JBB. You'll get tim percent off
of checkout. Listen up right here and you can win
you some delivered to your front door. Nineteen ninety five
Circuit Judge Joseph Wilson and Columbia, South Carolina refused to
allow attorney Heather Smith to enter a plea for her
(03:21):
client because the female lawyer was wearing pants whoa, the
hearing was postponed.
Speaker 5 (03:30):
Better than not having pants on it like this.
Speaker 4 (03:32):
Let me show back up in a minute, skirt like it. Yeah.
Oh one.
Speaker 3 (03:38):
Students heckled naked protesters during the tenth annual Nude and
Breast Freedom Parade in Berkeley, California. One high schooler said,
that's embarrassing and nasty. Old people walking through here could
get a heart attack.
Speaker 4 (03:52):
It's a nasty that's what they're talking about.
Speaker 8 (03:58):
I have a heart attack.
Speaker 3 (04:02):
Five was on the state, and three the US House
gave the Federal Trade Commission explicit authority to create a
national do not Call directory. I can't tell the difference.
Oh right, well, there you go. There's categories one eight
hundred Big Shows. You're told free line across America. We
play out Bursts next well, Thursday morning. It is September
(04:52):
twenty fifth, twenty twenty five. When our feature track fen
The Big Show, Big Box, Tacky Jackie's Hoose for hose,
back school sale. There's your key word, back to school.
Get the bed box app, the Big Show dot Com app.
Speaker 4 (05:08):
Right ups, Let's play Outburst. It's the game that anyone
can win. John Board and Billy to give the prizes
from the big prize being Let's go he contested number one.
This should really be a lot of fun when you're
(05:29):
playing ups. Have a hurry up and guest time you
love the best time you know a big shots. Let's say,
hey the Joseph from Franklin, West Bird Junia, we have shots.
Go Morner, Joseph, good morning, Hey Mory, welcome.
Speaker 3 (05:56):
All right there, Let's get you through these three categories. Joseph,
deliver'd happy hurd up to you and Franklin.
Speaker 4 (06:02):
You ready to go?
Speaker 3 (06:04):
I'm ready five seconds. Three things inside a courtroom, ready
to go.
Speaker 9 (06:10):
About a judge, a jury, and a lawyer.
Speaker 4 (06:13):
Bam. Now give us three types of protest, ready.
Speaker 9 (06:18):
To go, marches, ticketing, and a rally.
Speaker 4 (06:24):
And for the win. Three calls you do not want
to receive. Ready to go?
Speaker 9 (06:31):
How about a bill collector, a sales call or your
cars axtended born.
Speaker 4 (06:38):
You must already have one. That's great.
Speaker 3 (06:43):
Good work, Joseph, you got the prize back, buddy, appreciate
you listening.
Speaker 4 (06:47):
Glad you won, man, Thank you. Can I give a
shout out? Please go ahead.
Speaker 10 (06:53):
I want to shout out to my wife Amanda and
my two boys, Liam and logan.
Speaker 4 (06:57):
All right, that's more boys to the Big Show.
Speaker 11 (06:59):
We got no thank you, bottom of the hour and
Tobao nude God.
Speaker 4 (07:10):
I heard the riser's time capsule right on the on
the side, A star from Carl and a minute.
Speaker 12 (07:46):
This is the award winning John Boy and Billy Big Show,
the South's number one exports. Well well, well, it's hardly
a secret that men like to do things in the
(08:07):
most expeditious manner possible. Like Elvis said, a little less
conversation and a little more action please. Or if that's
too deep for you, remember the words of Larry the
cable Guy. Get our done, er er er, get our
(08:29):
done h.
Speaker 4 (08:35):
I don't know.
Speaker 6 (08:35):
It must be the regional thing.
Speaker 12 (08:38):
Regardless of your preferred philosopher, the facts remain. If you
want something done in the most direct, least complicated way,
call a man. Even the simplest chore like drive up banking,
is simpler when done by an average guy.
Speaker 13 (08:56):
Let me preach on it.
Speaker 12 (08:59):
A man will put his window down when pulling up
to the ATM at the last stoplight. He already took
his bank cut out of his wallet and made the
subtraction in his check book. He pulls within inches of
the machine. He punches in his pin, which he of
course has memorized, enters the cash amount and takes to withdrawal.
(09:20):
He gets his card in receipt and puts the window
up as he drives off. Simple right, Well, put that
same task in the hands of a woman and see
what happens. Drive up to the cash machine, put car
in reverse and back up the required amount to align
the car window in the machine, set parking brake and
(09:44):
put the window down. Find purse, Dump all contents into
the passenger seat to locate your bank card. Put all
the junk back in your purse. Tell the person you're
talking to on the cellphone that you will call them back,
and hang up. Attempt to put card into machine. Open
(10:09):
card door so you can reach the machine due to
its distance from the vehicle. Insert card, reinsert card the
right way. Dump the contents out of your purse again,
and find your diary where you have your pin number
(10:29):
written down, but you don't remember which page. Enter pin number,
press cancel and re enter correct pin number. Enter amount
of cash required, check makeup in rear view mirror, Put
stuff back in purse, retrieve cash and receipt from machine.
(10:55):
Empty purse again to locate wallet and insert cash. Write
debit amount in the check register, place receipt in back
of checkbook, recheck, makeup, drive forward two feet, put car
in reverse and back up to cash machine. Retrieve card,
(11:19):
dig through stuff from purse on passenger seat, find cardholder
and replace card. Put car in drive and its stalls.
Give a dirty look to the twenty five other drivers
waiting in line and honking. Restart engine and drive off redial.
(11:39):
Person you were talking to before, Drive two or three miles,
release parking break, go home and tell husband about the
rude people behind you in line.
Speaker 4 (11:57):
See what I mean?
Speaker 12 (11:58):
What an ordeal. It's amazing they can even manage to
get dinner on the table on time. When they can
even do that.
Speaker 8 (12:09):
That's right, I said it, John Boy and Billy Stupid.
You're talking crazy.
Speaker 13 (12:21):
Good morning radio, done right, all morning.
Speaker 4 (12:52):
That's a big show on the radio.
Speaker 13 (12:54):
And here we go, and now it's story with your
host her old children's.
Speaker 14 (13:06):
I used to play this movie up the nervous hospital
every year by name a wizard of Oz, I reckogon.
I can tell you about it.
Speaker 4 (13:14):
Iven you own me too.
Speaker 14 (13:17):
I heard this little girl there named Dorothy. She lived
out there in this place called Kansas, where it was
all brown looking all the time. She stayed out in
that little house with her aunt m and uncle Henry
and these three funny fellas.
Speaker 6 (13:33):
Well, sir As.
Speaker 14 (13:34):
Dorothy got her a little dog naming Totoe took the
digging up his main woman's flyer bed all the time.
And flyers must have been pretty special, because that main
woman gets it in her head in that little Totoe
ought to be put down.
Speaker 4 (13:51):
I'm a dog lover.
Speaker 9 (13:54):
By.
Speaker 14 (13:54):
Dorothy grabbed up that little dog. She runs off summers.
They met this old fellow are cooking hot dogs. He
looked in this big glass ball he had there and
told Dorothy that her.
Speaker 4 (14:05):
Aunt him was a dying.
Speaker 14 (14:08):
About. Then this whole big tornyder blowed up. Some folks
call it a twister. I called it a tornader. This
tornader blowed up. She run home with that little dog,
just in time for that farmhouse there to get sucked
up into that tornader. I can't figure out why folks
are so scared of tornders. Dorothy looked out the window there,
(14:28):
and folkses are riding bikes and rocking in chires and
rowing boats and having all sorts of big time wells
are that house there finally landed someplace where things was
in color, and then his plumb run over with these
little critters called Munchkins. Dorothy there she weren't no bettering
(14:50):
a squirrel leading muchkins. He's even smaller than she was
during near mouths size, I reckon. I like the way
they talk, especially when them little sucker fellas did that dance?
Speaker 4 (15:05):
Please?
Speaker 14 (15:05):
Munching cretis all getting to Dorothy's house squorshed some old
witch and had been causing trouble in the area. There
they so happy they even made up a song about
it that seemed kind of cruel to me. Then Munchkins
was having a ball right in the middle all the
singing and dancing. This green witch showed up a yelling, what'd.
Speaker 4 (15:25):
You kill my sister?
Speaker 7 (15:25):
Firm what you kill?
Speaker 14 (15:32):
Say that her sister was the one that got squorhed
by that house ar All she wanted was her sister's
red shoes and alone, comings pretty woman in a wedding
dress floating up in this big old soap bubble. She
gave him rich shoes to Dorothy, saying that to he's magic,
that green witch, Yes, sir, she's so hot. She disappeared
(15:53):
in the big ball of fire. Then munchkins started singing
and dancing again.
Speaker 4 (15:58):
They did that a lot.
Speaker 14 (16:00):
They send Dorothy down some yellow street there to meet
up with his wizard fella over in Oz so they
could get her home. Along the way, she met up
with his straw feller and a metal feller, some old
sissy catfella. Seems like he's all pretty much a sorry bunch,
couldn't do nothing for themselves. He's all headed Oz. They
(16:23):
get wizard for some or other. That wizard weren't no
more than a big oldhead. I reckon that wizard is
studying onto it some house cleaning, because he said he'd
help him out if they'd bring him that witch's broom.
I reckon brooms is probably hard to come by an
Oz there. So Dorothy and them it took off right witch,
(16:45):
but she seen him coming turned loose.
Speaker 6 (16:47):
Some monkeys on him.
Speaker 14 (16:50):
He's there one regular monkeys had Wayne's like birds. They
swooped down on them. Folks put a hurt on them,
but good except for Dorothy and that little dog there.
And monkeys told them on back to the witch's castle.
Some folks calls it the palace, I called the castle. Well.
(17:12):
That straw feller and that metal feller and that old
sissy cat fella. They finally pulled themselves together set off
to rescue Dorothy in tote snuck up on the castler
and whooped the tar out of these three soldier fellers
and stole their clothes. I think them soldiers liked them
a cook here too. He's always singing about oreos and
(17:32):
what not. Well for them boys, they found that Dorothy.
While they's making their getaway there, Dorothy throwed a bucket
of water on that witch. She plumb melted like a
popsicle on a hot day. Dorothy felt, man, I reckon,
but I don't think them soldiers as too.
Speaker 4 (17:53):
Upset about it. He just laughed and laughed.
Speaker 14 (17:56):
Gave Dorothy that room, and the wizard was a hanker
in for She took it on back to him. Some
fella hiding behind the shower curtain started handing out prizes
to give that straw feller, a piece of paper and
a clock to that metal fella, and a big oldmandallion
to that catman. That fella's gonna take Dorothy back to
(18:17):
that brown looking place. She wanted to go to in
this big hair balloon where she plumb missed it. She
commenced a blubber and something terrible. Then that soap bubble
girl come back and told her all she had to
do to go home was to knock her feet together.
While she's wearing them red shoes, that dead which.
Speaker 4 (18:33):
Was wearing.
Speaker 14 (18:35):
I reckon. She got pretty hot about here that she'd
hear that back in munchkin Town there she wouldn't have
had to walk all that way to us, getting towed
it off by flying monkey and whatnot. Though she popped
that soap bubble punch it pretty girl in the eye,
and she knocked her feet together and went home. She
woke up in that place where everything is brown, with
(18:56):
her hand and uncle and that hot noilt feller and
then three farm hands. Of course you can get back
their senses. That main woman come back. Grab that little
dog killed it more than the story. They ain't no
place like home, but at least them muskins won't kill
(19:19):
you dog.
Speaker 15 (19:22):
Story time was fuck to you boy, right car Graves
potted meat product chuck full of peckers and lips since
nineteen thirty.
Speaker 4 (19:29):
Seven, In you a munkin little podium. Good morning, a
big shows on the radio.
Speaker 12 (19:39):
Well, well, well you've obviously got nothing better to do. Well,
maybe you're just not smart enough to change the dial.
Whatever the reason, you're listening to John Boy and Billy on.
Speaker 6 (19:53):
The Big show Hunt they won.
Speaker 4 (20:32):
Good morning, it's a big Shawn the radio. Coming on
van minutes. We're gonna meet a special kid.
Speaker 7 (20:39):
Jack.
Speaker 3 (20:39):
You've got the pleasure of meeting out of Rutherford County,
North Carolina, wanting to compete in the wheelchair tennis in
the Olympics, looking for the monk madness.
Speaker 10 (20:51):
What a kid.
Speaker 3 (20:51):
I can't wait for y'all to meet Connor Stroud coming
up here in just a couple of minutes.
Speaker 13 (20:56):
All right.
Speaker 3 (20:57):
At first, I look at the day in history was
on this date, and eighteen fifty six Dean Martin and
Jerry Lewis broke up as a comedy team. I didn't
realize this that they had begun performing exactly ten years
before the same day they broke up in fifty six.
They started nineteen forty six.
Speaker 4 (21:17):
Yeah, I think there was a contract involved.
Speaker 3 (21:19):
Oh yeah, right, so man, they fell out and they says, oh,
you're talking about bidder for years and years. I think
they reunited when Jerry was doing the Labor Day telethon
and Dean came out, yeah, look we're real.
Speaker 5 (21:32):
Later on, that was a funny one with him and
Frank Sinatra and they're singing and stretching, Dean Martin and
Frank Sinatra. You can look that up on YouTube.
Speaker 4 (21:42):
All well.
Speaker 3 (21:43):
In the meantime, if you miss this Jerry Lewis album,
here at the Big Show.
Speaker 4 (21:48):
We got a bunch of them.
Speaker 6 (21:50):
For over seven decades, he was America's clown, comedian, actor, singer,
filmmaker and humanitarian. He was born Joseph Levitch, but you
knew him as the King of comedy.
Speaker 12 (22:05):
Jerry Lewis, Hey, lock you out with the thing, Please,
don't hurt my things. In twenty seventeen, Jerry went to
that big Friars Club in the sky, but he left
behind a legacy of love and laughter. When his estate
was cataloged, a number of Jerry's personal projects were uncovered.
Speaker 8 (22:27):
Now for the first time ever, Don't Tell Records it's.
Speaker 12 (22:30):
Proud to announce a brand new album of sensational hits
Jerry Lewis.
Speaker 6 (22:36):
Hey, Lady, she's a lady.
Speaker 4 (22:41):
Wow, Wow, Well she's a lady.
Speaker 8 (22:45):
I want to touch that sexy lay lady.
Speaker 16 (22:48):
Ooh, but she's got an.
Speaker 8 (22:52):
Ooh why are you loring above it?
Speaker 17 (22:54):
Though?
Speaker 8 (23:01):
Green night lady, missus.
Speaker 4 (23:03):
Lady.
Speaker 16 (23:05):
Know you want had some fun, Green night lady. Naughty lady,
I don't care.
Speaker 18 (23:21):
You're not.
Speaker 16 (23:36):
Lady Madaga, children and your breast. If you can your
pop off, we can.
Speaker 3 (23:42):
See the rest.
Speaker 12 (23:47):
Oh, only Jerry Lewis could take classic songs from every
era and make them his own.
Speaker 19 (23:55):
She's once, why, three times the size of a lady
and I can't len.
Speaker 7 (24:10):
He she's five.
Speaker 16 (24:18):
Six seven times the size of a lady. Wow by
Hernia mesh Patch is exploding.
Speaker 12 (24:29):
The heart of a comedian, the soul of a poet,
the voice of a songbird. Jerry Lewis presents Hey Lady,
Available now on Don't Tell Records and available for download
at www dot.
Speaker 20 (24:42):
Lavin dot shreds that very Clempton dot com. Dude looks
like a lady. Dude looks like a lady with that
la Jenna lay Jerry.
Speaker 6 (25:01):
Lewis, Hey Lady, order now.
Speaker 4 (25:06):
That's just stupid. Good morning, Big shows on the radio
coming up.
Speaker 3 (25:12):
We'll play john Boy Jeopardy for the big Old Lod
Tigers prize pack theay all about that in a second.
Be first, let's meet that young man I'm just telling
you about. Connor Stroud is a twenty five year old
tennis player. Jackie had the pleasure of meeting at the
Rutherford County Hall of Fame induction ceremony here in North Carolina,
(25:33):
close to to where we are. Jackie's man, David, was
getting inducted and came back talking about this kid that
she met and been talking about about Connor since then, said,
let's get this kid on the big show and see
if we can get him to the Para Olympics in
Los Angeles. Teddy, look that up for me, twenty twenty eight.
(25:57):
All right, we have Connor on the line right now,
Sir Connor Stroud.
Speaker 4 (26:01):
Good morning, Connor, Good morning, John Boy.
Speaker 3 (26:05):
Hey Weddy, welcome in here, my man, Welcome in all right. So,
uh so let's just start what here? Let me let
me just hit this right here in your own words.
Uh well, first of all, you say, I've always found
purpose and enjoy in pushing myself to compete at the
highest level. Talking about tennis player, Now, I might mess
(26:26):
this up. You were born with a bilateral proximal the
moral focal deficiency.
Speaker 6 (26:33):
P f f T.
Speaker 9 (26:35):
Yeah, it's a mouthful.
Speaker 7 (26:37):
Yeah yeah.
Speaker 3 (26:38):
So so so basically your your legs didn't grow from
from like around your knees or something.
Speaker 4 (26:46):
Can can explain that to us.
Speaker 7 (26:48):
Yes, so.
Speaker 9 (26:51):
Proximal for more social deficiency. It can be different variations.
I had it extreme in both legs. So some might
just have an inch order leg, but both of mine.
I didn't have hip joint means and so I had
to have an amputation at h two, and they weren't
sure if I would be able to walk, but it was.
(27:14):
It all worked out and I was able to walk
and run and play tennis and do all the things
I love. So yeah, I didn't use it as a setback.
Speaker 4 (27:24):
No you didn't. And I tell you what checked us out.
Speaker 3 (27:27):
So you you competed against able bodied players until you
transition to wheelchair tennis at age twelve.
Speaker 4 (27:37):
Yeah, so so man, you were you were players.
Speaker 3 (27:40):
That is unbelievable, buddy, So you knew you had a
gift on that tennis court.
Speaker 9 (27:46):
Yeah, if they if I didn't maybe have this good movement,
but if they hit it to me, I was going
for the winner on the court.
Speaker 3 (27:55):
That's that's neat and I'm on to coach you one
more time. You say, wielchair tennis is not only giving
me a platform to grow as an athlete, has giving
me a voice, a community, and a lifelong passion. I'm
proud of how far I've come, excited for what's ahead,
and committed to giving a sport and the people in
it everything I've got. And then I want to go back, Connor.
(28:16):
You did compete in the twenty twenty four Paris Olympics
and you won a singles match right there to become
one of the top players in the country. And I'm
looking at some of your career stats.
Speaker 4 (28:30):
I mean that that is awesome, man, it's amazing. That
is awesome.
Speaker 3 (28:34):
You got itf junior singles world ranking back at your
number two in twenty eighteen, junior doubles world ranking number
one in twenty seventeen, and then we're just going with
a champion, gold medalist in fourteen, fifteen, sixteen, even the
singles world ranking career high at number twenty three titles
(28:58):
professional singles titles thirty two, professional doubles titles thirty eight.
Speaker 8 (29:05):
So Connor, right, he's just twenty five.
Speaker 3 (29:12):
That's something so and what what we have Connor here
on the Big Show willed to put out there for
our listeners. Uh so, Connor tell us, Uh, well, well,
let's just sharp we get it. So, how is wheelchair
tennis different from able bodied tennis?
Speaker 4 (29:29):
What they call?
Speaker 9 (29:31):
So the main difference would be we get an extra bounce.
You can hit it on two bounces if you want to,
but in the top players, you you don't really want
to use that because if you hit it on two bounces,
you're giving your opponent more time. So at the highest
level it mainly still is one bouncer in the air,
(29:54):
of course, and the movement's a little bit different. And
that's what I had a little bit of trouble from
transitioning to standing up playing and then learning the movement
of the wheelchair around the court because I had the strokes,
but I hadn't use a wheelchair very much, So that
was what was challenging for me at the start.
Speaker 3 (30:15):
Again, So Sogna, can you can you switch hands, you know,
a forehand or a backhand.
Speaker 4 (30:21):
Do you get set up to get your chair right?
Speaker 7 (30:24):
Do you do that? Do you?
Speaker 4 (30:26):
Or do you keep it on?
Speaker 1 (30:27):
No?
Speaker 9 (30:28):
You would like mainly you just you hold the racket
and the wheel at the same time. You don't ever
really take the rack out of your hand, so it's
and you hit it the ball on the same side
of the strings, kind of like a windshield wiper to
allow yourself more time because you don't really have time
(30:48):
to change grips or because it's coming so fast and
you just have to be prepared.
Speaker 5 (30:55):
Right, Yeah, hand on the wheel that makes yeah, you
can't two hand it. Then a lot of times.
Speaker 18 (30:59):
Maybe I yeah to see maybe I need to see
the wheelchair. But is it a specialized chair for this event?
I mean, because I know from being in a wheelchair
at one point, when you've moved one wheel, you know
it turns the wheelchair.
Speaker 9 (31:14):
How do you go strength? So these I have an
everyday wheelchair. In the sports wheelchair, the wheels are a
little slanted and that allows for turning easier, and that's
the main difference. And you want to make it as
light as possible to be able to move around the court.
(31:34):
So like I don't need a foot guard like a
foot rail, so I took that off and to make
it as light as possible.
Speaker 3 (31:42):
We're talking to Connor Stroud, wheelchair tennis player, Connorstroud Tennis
dot com if you would go to his page, and
I will tell y'all we're going to put Connor up
on our John Boy and Billy Facebook page as well.
The reason we have Connor here we got time leading
up to twenty twenty eight. But Connor needs sponsors to
(32:03):
explain that.
Speaker 5 (32:04):
Yeah, like Olympians, right yep.
Speaker 18 (32:06):
So if you've got a business or corporation or something
they would like to, you know, see, support Connor in
his efforts. This is an opportunity and we'll put that up.
So then get in touch with him.
Speaker 17 (32:18):
I just want to say I met him, like you said, Johnny,
when David was inducted into the Rutherford County Sports Hall
of Fame, just not him, his entire family, just a
great group of people. But it was something about this
kid that just took my heart. Twenty five year old,
handsome young man, but what got me was just his
attitude and the way he is. So many people would
(32:41):
feel sorry for themselves or just you know, Okay, I
can do this, but I'm not going to try to
do this. He was determined to be someone different and
I'm going to do all I can to get him
out there. And get him seen and help him win
and develop the stuff that he wants to develop. I'm
just so proud of you, buddy.
Speaker 7 (32:58):
I love you.
Speaker 4 (32:59):
I'm so proud. That is awesome. That is awesome.
Speaker 3 (33:02):
So thank you, Connor Stroudtennis dot com. As easy as
y'all go to the John Boy Billy Facebook page and
finish this, we'll get it up there. The summer Paraplegic
Olympics will be in Los Angeles in twenty twenty eight,
and sponsorships, of course help him get there. Qualification year
we'll start in twenty twenty seven, so I guess you
(33:25):
got to plan, Connor, just need those sponsors to make
it happen for you. We're calling on no matter what
you can give, If you can do a little bit,
well sure would appreciate that. And I'm gonna be right
there on the list for your sponsors there, Connor. Is
an honor to be able to do that for you, buddy.
Speaker 9 (33:43):
Thank you. Thank you for giving me this platform and
allowing me to share a part of my story. And
you know, thank you for everyone who's listening and support
and in any way they can. It means a lot
to me.
Speaker 3 (33:56):
Awesome body, all right, neat neat all right, Connor, We're
gonna keep up with you too, all right, buddy, So
thanks you very much.
Speaker 4 (34:04):
When Jaggie starts getting on your nerves, you tell her,
I'll tell us daddy. Daddy loves me. And if it
should come up, don't ever get in the limousine.
Speaker 3 (34:16):
Oh God, I love you, right buddy. Connor Stroud s
t R o U. D. Connor Stroud Tennis dot Com.
Click on that length. We're gonna get him up as
the John Boy Miller.
Speaker 4 (34:32):
Fish amazing guy.
Speaker 3 (34:33):
All right, well, let's play, all right, John Boy Jepper
the game right here, let's jump right in here. According
to a report from the f d A, it is
currently impossible to make a food product that is absolutely
free of this ingredient.
Speaker 5 (34:47):
What is azo da carbona mind polybrominated I field?
Speaker 3 (34:51):
Somebody google mercury. No, but good guesses that's impossible. One
eight hundred Big show you told Free Live. We played
John Boy Jeopardy Next, Good morning, It's a big show
(35:28):
on the radio. Roll into your Thursday morning. I feature
tracks from the Big Show. Big Body, Jacky jacket is
closed for hose Back to school sound key worried Back
to School.
Speaker 4 (35:40):
In the midbots at the Bigshow.
Speaker 15 (35:41):
Dot Com and right now let's play yes live across America,
it's John Boy Japlin wo and now a man who's
noticed caso is Spanish for cheese, and everybody likes that,
but here in the South it also means here's something
y'all ain't gonna like hearing.
Speaker 4 (36:00):
Kay, So he's my boy, thank you.
Speaker 3 (36:05):
Let's say, hey, Bernie or is that Beanie? I can't
read Jackie's writing.
Speaker 4 (36:09):
I know they're out of Fayetteville, North Carolina. Hey is
this Beanie? Or Bernie is Beanie? Hey, Beanie?
Speaker 7 (36:18):
I like it?
Speaker 4 (36:19):
What was your parents thinking?
Speaker 7 (36:23):
We like this?
Speaker 9 (36:24):
Benjamin?
Speaker 14 (36:25):
Ay?
Speaker 11 (36:26):
All right, all.
Speaker 3 (36:27):
Right, Bennie, were welcome, man buddick Uh you got first
shot at John Boy Jeopardy this morning. So, according to
a report from the FDA, it is currently impossible to
make a food product that is absolutely free.
Speaker 4 (36:41):
Of this ingredient. I won't say sugar, Okay, is it sugar?
It's a lot of stuff. They're doing their best. They'll
get rid of sugar. Oh yeah, I think it's just fun.
Oh goodie, all right, bye, Buck.
Speaker 3 (37:05):
We appreciate you playing with us this morning. Bean You
have a great day you do, bro? All right, my man,
let's go to Scott. He is in New Martinsville, West Virginia.
Goome on to Scott.
Speaker 11 (37:17):
Morning, John boy?
Speaker 7 (37:17):
Here are you today?
Speaker 4 (37:18):
A man?
Speaker 3 (37:19):
If I was any better, I'd be better. Yeah, I
gotta come up with some more snappians.
Speaker 10 (37:27):
It's there any better, John Boy than people probably couldn't
stint you.
Speaker 4 (37:30):
I reckon. So, Scott, what are you thinking?
Speaker 3 (37:35):
It's currently impossible, impossible to make a food product that
is absolutely free of this ingredient. So beanie messing up?
Speaker 4 (37:45):
What you guys? Gott.
Speaker 10 (37:47):
I wouldn't say it was the ingredient, but I'd say
like bugs or insects or something always applying somewhere.
Speaker 3 (37:54):
So well show us bugs or insects or something you
don't want in there, insects.
Speaker 4 (38:08):
All right, Well, let's delve into this. Here is Scott.
Speaker 3 (38:11):
According to one study, a typical American unknowingly consumes one
to two pounds of insects per year. So there are
laws limiting what an acceptable amount is for packaged foods,
but the limits are very based on food products, right, yeah, changes,
So the FDA allows a jar peanut butter to contain
(38:35):
eight point four insect fragments per pounce.
Speaker 4 (38:39):
The scientific terms always sound worse, y'all, you don't. Don't
worry about it.
Speaker 3 (38:47):
Scott, good work on you and Buddy the big Old
Lord Tiger's prize pack cool swag headed up to New
Martinsville for you.
Speaker 10 (38:55):
Yeah, I appreciate John, Boy, thank you very much. Just
working around the shop this morning.
Speaker 4 (39:00):
Boy, well, I appreciate you doing it. Put the big
show on you hang for Jackie right there. Scott, thank you,
you have a good one. Thanks for noticing.
Speaker 3 (39:15):
Wat amout the hour and top of your new glory
of requests from Mad Mix is as I featured track.
Speaker 4 (39:21):
From the Big Box. I'll explained after this report. Good morning, that's.
Speaker 3 (40:02):
A big show on the radio for your Thursday morning.
Earlier this week, can't remember one day we had mad
Max bowing armies ran out of roast beef through short
and said, there's a several requests came in for that
and we played it. Always play our feature track of
the end of the of the Big Show. We'll get
(40:22):
it and uh so you know what we do that
because it's a big box. You know you you can
like y'all y'all who requested this again, you're only for
ninety nine cents.
Speaker 4 (40:31):
You can own it for the rest of your life.
I don't know what that one.
Speaker 11 (40:37):
I don't know when to.
Speaker 4 (40:38):
Make that kind of commitment. Man said, I had the
big box. We made the money.
Speaker 3 (40:42):
You know that's all right. I realized that that's why
we go. We're gonna take the call again for y'all.
You can't make what you have to play for the
big show. Blood sweating tears. Oh right, it's mad.
Speaker 7 (40:58):
Max had mags here.
Speaker 4 (41:02):
How's it going by.
Speaker 7 (41:02):
Now you think it's going I'm might in a sack
full of door knob Wait, that's how lumpy are anyway, y'all.
I went to the Armies drive through the other day.
As I'm putting my order in, the girl on the
speaker interrupts and says, sir, we're out of roast beef.
I said, sorry, it's kind of noise out here for
a minute the house thought us in we're out of
(41:25):
roast beef. Then she goes, yeah, we ran out of
roast beef. I repeat that in case any all missed it.
Speaker 4 (41:33):
They ran out of roast beef at Army.
Speaker 7 (41:37):
I've had now hold on for the last five years.
Y'all been beating me over the head with the same
four words. We have the meats, but now you're telling
me you don't have the meat. So I got four
words to say to that, my big on. Hey, Arvey's,
Remember about sixty years ago when the whole fast food
(41:59):
industry met for that big international summit in Geneva to
divvy up all the different food groups, and they said,
who wants roast beef? And y'all said, well take it. Well,
as far as I know, that treaty is still in
the class. Seems like Arvey's has got a pretty sweet
deal because there's a whole bunch of people trying to
(42:19):
sell cheeseburgers. But we ain't asking Arby's to go head
ahead with Burger King, McDonald's and Wendy's. Or we want
a chicken sandwich, here's Chick fil A's, Boat Jangles and
Popeyes and Zasbies. But when you won't slice roast beef
on a bun hand it out of a drive through window,
there ain't but one name in the business army. We
(42:44):
don't need that deep voice guy a TV commercial going
we have the meats. He can just say we have
this one particular meeting, then all they need to do
is make sure they actually got some of that meat.
When I get that. And you know what made this
woman even worse. Arby's has got roast beef categories so
(43:05):
locked down. I couldn't even flip the drive through gallibers.
They's threw y'all. I'm taking my roast beef business elsewhere.
You know why because Arby's is the only one that
tells will speed now. Look, I get it, supply chain
is the problem for a lot of companies. But when
you supply chain ain't got but one link in it,
(43:28):
you probably want to stay on top of it. When
the inventory got Arvey's gets this morning report that piece
of paper ought to have one number on it. How
much roast beef have we got right now? If it
drops below sixty five percent, it's time to get some
cattle farmers on the phone and order of refillw don't
(43:48):
get me wrong, Arvey's. I love you. I've been eating
you food at least once a week for the last
fifty years. But if you don't really have the meats,
what are we even doing here? No check inventory, fix
your supply chain, race stocky locations and quent running mother
lunch go On. Y'all have a nice name.