Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Morning Run with Amy and TJ and iHeartRadio Podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
Hey the folks, it is Saturday, June fourteenth, and in
this episode, are there some breakups you just can't come
back from? Also? Who is Brian Wilson? And who is
Aaron Rodgers's wife? And the Miracle Man speaks. Welcome everybody
to this episode of Amy and TJ on this weekend edition. Roes, Yes,
(00:27):
this is where we want to keep talking. We ain't
get to say enough during our Monday through Friday morning run.
So these are some of the stories that jumped out
of us and had us still chopping it up.
Speaker 1 (00:35):
Yeah. Yeah, you like to say, these are the stories
that got us scot it.
Speaker 2 (00:40):
So you know what, some of the stuff get it? Does?
I think I've said that in the morning sometimes. Man,
that one got me. That one got me, Man, that
does that one got us going?
Speaker 1 (00:46):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (00:46):
So that's that's very accurate.
Speaker 1 (00:48):
Yes, And so I would say, well, we'll start with
the one that got everybody talking, the world talking, President
Trump and Elon Musk. Of course, they had that explosive
feud in front of all of us on social media,
two different social media companies that they own. That was
their preference and how they eviscerated one another. Then some
of those tweets that Elon put out were deleted. And
(01:12):
then the tweet that got everyone talking and possibly thinking
that there could be a reconciliation. We had Elon Musk saying,
I regret some of my posts about President Trump last week.
They went too far. I like how we just said
some of my posts, not all of my posts, just
some of that.
Speaker 2 (01:30):
Hey, it's a good step for it.
Speaker 1 (01:32):
And then Trump that same day we at least it
was published that day in a podcast, said this about
Elon Musk, things like that happen. I don't blame him
for anything.
Speaker 2 (01:46):
Hmm.
Speaker 1 (01:47):
That reminds me of what my grandma likes to say,
or what she used to say.
Speaker 2 (01:50):
Oh, these things happen.
Speaker 1 (01:51):
Yeah, my grandma when anything, and there was a lot
of drama in her oh ninety plus years of living
with six children and count as grandchildren. And I'm sure
I added to it, but yes, her response to a
lot of troubling moments was these things happen.
Speaker 2 (02:06):
Do you there's some of this. We are all examining
these two guys. See if they all these huge egos
and huge bank accounts, right, are they actually going to
back down at all. My question, more so as I examined,
was can you come back from some of the stuff
they've said about each other publicly, in particular elon about
(02:27):
President Trump, Like, are there some things that a friend
has done that you just cannot come back from.
Speaker 1 (02:33):
Yes, the answer is absolutely yes. And I think if
let's just say just words though, yes, not deeds, but
words that you then tell everybody about. It's not even
that you just had words individually with that person. I'm
having a disagreement or even an ugly fight with you,
and it's just between the two of us. This was
literally done deliberately in front of the world, and he
(02:56):
went after several things that I can't imagine Trump completely
forgiving him for. But who knows. Maybe he's a big
boy and does big business and knows it exactly. Sometimes
make big mistakes, you know.
Speaker 2 (03:11):
Sometimes that's a part of this as well. I'm not
very good at this, but some people can do this.
It's not personal, like they don't take anything personally. It's
just business.
Speaker 1 (03:19):
Okay. So going back to our Gabby Bernstein discussion, when
you think about that, it really is a projection. So
if you can actually say it's not personal. That person
is angry and is now projecting on me the worst
things they think about themselves or the things that they
don't want to deal with about themselves, and they'll just
put it on me. So yes, when he started letting
(03:40):
people or at least wanting people to know that President
Trump was a part of the Epstein files, and that's
why we'll never know the truth about what happened and
who was a part of it. That was a really.
Speaker 2 (03:50):
Low blow, yes, and he could have been just popping off,
and nobody's saying that that is actually the case, of course,
not your speculation and all that stuff. But it was
just so ugly that I've thought about that. How can
you come back from that? I think it takes a
certain kind of person not just able to forgive, but
how could you sit across and trust that person and
fully embrace that person again, especially when that person has
(04:11):
hundreds of millions of followers and can get attention any
time they want. How can you? I don't know. Maybe
they won't trust each other fully, but at least maybe
they'll come back together in some way.
Speaker 1 (04:21):
The interesting thing is they have a vested interest in
doing so, a vested financial interest in doing so because
obviously Elon Musk and his ability to take US astronauts
to and from space with SpaceX, that's a huge, huge
issue if there is a forever fracture or fissure between
these two men, because that's actually going to impact our
(04:43):
space program.
Speaker 2 (04:43):
He is the one guy's in control of our astronauts
going to and from.
Speaker 1 (04:48):
Spaces and then as well, and then Trump can absolutely
impact how Tesla's are taxed and incentivized for folks to
buy or not buy electric vehicles. He can absolutely have
an impact on his business.
Speaker 2 (05:04):
You could just go out and start talking ish about
Tesla correct and stock prices will go down. Yes, I
mean it just nobody wants that fight. It was just
an ugly It was a really ugly and unfortunate back
and forth. And they started out really hot. You knew
it had to flame out in the same way.
Speaker 1 (05:20):
It's just like a relationship. When you go too fast,
you fall hard. And that's what happened. All right. Well,
I hope that we could see maybe not the bromance
that we had before, but just a casual friendship.
Speaker 2 (05:33):
How about that? Which one you want to do next?
You want to do? What the legend music legends, or
you want to do Aaron Rodgers. What are you doing?
Speaker 1 (05:39):
Let's do the music legends. I actually so this was
so interesting. Sly Stone passed away Monday and Brian Wilson
passed away Wednesday. I didn't know sly Stone's name and
you didn't know Brian Wilson's name, and both of us
were aghast. I mean, we obviously know their music, but
I was like, Sylvester still sliestalone. I got confused, and
(06:03):
you were like, who's Brian Wilson.
Speaker 2 (06:04):
We do this all the time. It really is incredible.
It's been fascinating to me and I've enjoyed it and
just learning and the back and forth we have about it.
But I know I can sing you Beach Boys songs,
and I thought it was more of a compliment me
saying I didn't know his name because I didn't come
up in a house. My parents have never mentioned the
(06:25):
Beach Boys a day of my life. There are no
Beach Boys forty five's upstairs or eight tracks and then
LPs and CD. We didn't know nothing. Nice, But how
impactful are you that? A kid who goes his whole
life with no Beach Boys introduced to him by anybody around.
But he still knows every single word to your songs
(06:46):
because they're just ubiquitous. They're just everywhere, you know.
Speaker 1 (06:49):
And that's exactly how I feel about sl Stone. When
you start hearing or the songs are named that he
and his family produced and wrote and obviously were phenomenal,
that's just an absolute soundtrack of my life. I mean,
both of these men came up in the sixties, had
some of their first big hits in the early nineteen sixties.
(07:09):
So in the seventies when you and I came into
the world, they were being played at nauseam. So both
of these men, and honestly, I was reading an article
Rolling Stone did something really interesting about these two men.
Stone passed on Monday, Wilson passed on Wednesday. They were
both eighty two when they died, and they both had
incredible bright art. You know, these were positive songs, these
(07:31):
were hopeful songs, these were happy songs. And yet at
the same time they both struggled with mental health and
addiction issues. And you would think with the mental health
and addiction issues they had, they might have lived short lives,
but somehow both men ended up living to eighty two
and died within a few days of each other. People
were talking about the coincidence of it and just how
(07:52):
they both are considered legends. They both, these two men
transformed music.
Speaker 2 (07:58):
It's hard to I hate and we had a can't
remember off the top of my head. Maybe you can help,
But like icon't these are not just folks who made
a lot of music or were successful or so on
and so on time Grammy winner or these folks changed
the course of music. They changed the landscape. So here
we are. Their stuff is still being sampled by artists
(08:22):
today who are twenty years old. Their stuff is still
being used and played in music and excuse me, in
movies and in commercials. These guys changed. And sly Stone
what he did in terms of putting together all these
genres the first I think major diverse band. You had
men and women, black and white in one group. And
his sound is so unique.
Speaker 1 (08:44):
The beach you know what is also cool. Both of
them had very simple like. Their songwriting was simple. Their
lyrics were catchy. They didn't try too hard. Everyday people,
it's a family affair, talent, yes, surfing USA around right,
Just like just very simple lyrics that were catchy and
bright and fun and made you feel good. And every
(09:05):
time I hear either of these men's songs, I'm happy.
There is a nostalgic happiness that comes with those songs.
Speaker 2 (09:12):
Did the Beach Boys do any ballads you I'm sorry
to put you on the spot?
Speaker 1 (09:16):
Would be nice? Is probably a little bit slower, sweeter,
it's a sweet.
Speaker 2 (09:23):
I'm thinking about both of these artists and you just
said it. Their music was uplifting. Yeah, and music made
you feel good, made you feel fun. You weren't not
even a sad love song. And even when Sliding the
family Stone were doing something that had I guess taking
on an issue of the day, it still came with
a positive or love on the other side of it.
So yeah, that was just you know who's like this? Now?
Who's our guy? We say it all time? Nico Moon.
(09:47):
Nico Moon, who has every song he plays get puts
you in a place where you want to be, on
a beach, where you are just uplifted in some way,
even his his sappier or sweeter songs.
Speaker 1 (09:59):
That you're coming over coming. What's the heartbreak song with?
Says the one about Mack nine, Yes, on the.
Speaker 2 (10:06):
Whole songs talking about getting over a woman, but he's
doing a golf analogy on the whole time.
Speaker 1 (10:12):
Yeah, and those are the types of artists that are
rare and fun. And yes, not a lot of people
know Nico Moon. So yes, as we talk about Slyestone
and Brian Wilson, check out a new young artist called
Nico Moon. All right, let's move on now to the
(10:33):
story that was one of my favorites of the week,
if not the favorite story of the week. Aaron Rodgers
was able, with the scrutiny he is under, and with
all of the paparazzi trying to find out everything about
any celebrity's love life, Aaron Rodgers was able not only
to keep the fact that he was dating someone's secret
(10:54):
in terms of who she was or anything about their relationship,
but he actually got engaged and then got Mary married
and no one knew, no one. Two months he's been
married to Britney with an eye and someone, a reporter
noticed a ring on his left finger and actually asked
if it was an ORR ring gave him an out saying, oh,
(11:15):
is what's your sleep score today? And he said, no,
it's a wedding rink and that's how he announced the news.
But it's so funny. That was earlier in the week.
I have been checking and there are all these headlines,
all this clickbait, all you need to know about Britney.
What do you want to know about Aaron Rodgers's new wife.
We have it here, headline after headline, every single time
I click. They know nothing. And I think you and
(11:39):
I have, you know, had our share of false headlines
and wanting to know if we're engaged or married or
details of our wedding. It's frustrating because when people don't know,
oftentimes they just make it up. Well, they just that's
what they do. And they say they have sources on
this one, they haven't even tried. They were so uh
(12:02):
just without any clue that this was going on. They
didn't even have any alleged sources.
Speaker 2 (12:07):
This is the biggest win of Aaron Rodgers' career. I
love love this and I am rooting for him and
them harder than anybody. I love love love this. You said.
The paparazzi has been chased will chase out around a
celebrity about their love life. That plus he's been getting
chased by sports cameras as well, he was in the
(12:28):
middle of a free agency trying to find out where
he was going to play. He was in headlines. A
lot of everybody was watching him. Where's he going? Which
team is he?
Speaker 1 (12:36):
Like?
Speaker 2 (12:36):
He has been chased?
Speaker 1 (12:37):
How did he pull that off?
Speaker 2 (12:38):
I don't know how I did it. I have no idea.
Speaker 1 (12:40):
You know what, we need to find a way to
secretly reach him and get some tips from him, because yeah,
we could have that was.
Speaker 2 (12:46):
And Tom Brady and Giselle those are the other you
know what.
Speaker 1 (12:49):
I think you need though, A lot of money for
security detail, maybe a decoy car. There are ways to
do it. You just have to have a lot more
money than we do.
Speaker 2 (12:58):
Yeah, I just have to I have to walk out
the door.
Speaker 1 (13:00):
Yeah, if you could just download as much as you can, maybe,
you know, try to get as many of these episodes in,
because then and only then would we be able to
evade the paparazzi. Okay, now, this is also one of
the most I think this is the most miraculous plane
crash story I have ever heard in my entirety.
Speaker 2 (13:21):
I gotta hear more. This still doesn't make any sense
to me.
Speaker 1 (13:24):
Okay, So on Thursday, Air India had two hundred forty
one passengers and crew on board. Just moments after takeoff,
it was headed to London. It crashes into a fiery ball,
hitting a medical university's dining hall, a killing people on
the ground. Everyone died except for one person. And not
(13:48):
only did he not die, he walked away. It's mind
blowing and a lot of us, and I'm sure several
reporters there were hesitant to even believe it was true,
that perhaps apps someone was just scamming everyone, But it
really and truly appears that Vi Shawash Kumar Ramesh did
(14:10):
get on that plane. He was sitting next to his
brother in seat eleven A and he is speaking, or
he spoke for the first time on Friday. He said,
and he described that he thought he was going to die.
He said, everything happened in front of his eyes. He said,
the side where he was seated fell to the ground
(14:32):
floor of the building that was the medical dining hall.
There was some space and a door broke and he
saw the space and he just jumped out because he
says he thinks the door broke on impact. This is
what he described. There was a wall on the opposite side,
but near me. It was open. I ran. I don't
know how. I don't know how I came out of
it alive. For a while, I thought I was about
(14:54):
to die. But when I opened my eyes, I saw
I was alive. I opened my seatbelt and I got
out of there. And then he said, the air hostess
died before my eyes.
Speaker 2 (15:04):
This doesn't I don't understand. This is the most important
person on earth right now. We need to talk to
this guy. Those things just do not happen without some
type of intervention that we don't understand. Scott Chills, This
does not happen. And you know a lot of plane crashes,
certainly we've seen some lately. People have been surviving. Some
(15:26):
maybe even a bunch of people die. There's a few survices.
Something this nobody, nobody.
Speaker 1 (15:33):
Brothers sitting next to him is missing. So he you know,
I'm sure, I don't know if the seats all got
broken apart, but he's missing, presumed dead. They're having to
do DNA tests to try and figure out who is who.
That's how awful the scene was. And again, if you
see the video, how did he survive? Was it just
this weird part of the plane that dipped down and
(15:55):
had some space where it didn't completely explode or imps.
Speaker 2 (15:59):
He jumped something you were reading, he said, he jumped.
Speaker 1 (16:01):
No, I'm well, he jumped out of his seat and
got out. But he said the way where he was seated,
that part of the plane hit the ground floor and
there was some space just the way it hit. Somehow
it didn't completely explode like the rest of the plane.
But it's weird that only his seat was there. That's
the other thing you'd think of a group of passengers
(16:21):
and a part of the plane got out, it would
make sense only one man in one seat, and he
wasn't really I mean, he's in the hospital, but he
does not have life threatening injuries.
Speaker 2 (16:32):
Did you mention at the top how he got out
of that He walked out of this.
Speaker 1 (16:36):
Yeah, he walked.
Speaker 2 (16:37):
He walked out.
Speaker 1 (16:38):
Yes. And so he has another brother who was not
on the plane, and he said, this reporter is about
what his brother told him immediately. He said, our plane
is crashed. I don't know where our brother is. I
don't see any other passengers. I don't know how I'm alive.
I don't know how I exited the plane. He said,
I'm scared to fly now, to even stay on a plane. Now,
I can't imagine ever getting on a plane again having
(17:01):
lived through that. And he said he saw the air
the flight attendant die before his eyes.
Speaker 2 (17:07):
I have so many start with your list of questions.
If you get in front of this guy, and it's
not really about the crash, just those details will come out.
I want to know where are you from, how'd you
grow up? Did you go to church? Do you volunteer?
What are your beliefs? I want to know about his life.
(17:28):
What is it that happens? Is it just a coincidence?
Is it just this is the way things happen sometimes?
But this is such a miracle that I can't help
but think because I thought it was a hoax, So
did I not that? Then this something else is going on.
He needs to be studied, and I would like to
have an answer.
Speaker 1 (17:47):
I agree, And I would also like to ask him,
what are you going to do with your life now?
Was there something that you wanted to do you dreamed
of doing? It's such an opportunity to now live in
a way that he never would have before. And I
actually am really interested in following up and seeing what
happens with this man. But my God, it was proof
(18:07):
and I like how we ended on this. There is
proof for me, it's proof miracles can happen, miracles exist.
Speaker 2 (18:15):
You're laughing at me, No, I'm not. I am one
hundred percent agreeing with you. They do. We say that
was a reporting on that story. It starts with tragedy
or it can start with miracle. Which one you want
to go with? Right?
Speaker 1 (18:30):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (18:30):
What kind of person? Are you? A miracle in India today?
Speaker 1 (18:35):
Very very cool. Well, we hope that maybe starts your
weekend off right. Thank you as always for running with
us and thanks for joining in on the conversation about
what got us this week. We hope you have a
wonderful weekend and thanks for listening.