Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Well up in the city. I'll be okay, I feel
good about him. Well, you did say that last year. Okay,
what do I wanna say? You only say it's gonna
be terrible. I don't know what to do. I'm I'm
trying to be positive. In twenty twenty five, Fread's show
is on. It's The Friend Show. Good Morning, Tuesday, March eighteenth.
Let's get to stay or go? Next a couple of
(00:21):
minutes away, we'll debate some relationship drama. A little group
therapy is coming up thanks to Wake It Up with
Us Bright and Early on the radio, the iHeart app
Live and Anytime Search for a freend show on to
Man Fun, Biggest Stories of the day, Heavy, If you
would you mean a favorite? If you've eaten a Carls Junior,
would you call now? Three five? I'm just I did.
(00:42):
If you've eaten a Carls Junior, if you've eaten at
Long John Silver's, Hey, how often are you there? Not
often at all?
Speaker 2 (00:49):
Now?
Speaker 1 (00:49):
Not often?
Speaker 3 (00:50):
Now?
Speaker 1 (00:51):
What changed for you? Every couple of years? You know,
you get to a desperate spot because I'm sure it's delicious.
I'm not knocked it at all. I just there are
certain fast food restaurants. I drive by and I think, who,
I don't know. I don't believe I know anyone who's
eating there. Hardy's is another one, Hardy's Carls Junior. I
(01:12):
believe they're related, aren't they An't they can see somehow? Thanksgiving?
That isn't like one big restaurant, now, you know? And
then Long John Silvers is another one. Have you ever
been to Long John Silvers?
Speaker 4 (01:21):
No?
Speaker 1 (01:21):
I don't even know, Like, is there are those?
Speaker 5 (01:23):
Where are they nowhere?
Speaker 1 (01:27):
But like a fast food fish restaurant? Yeah, umpy cook
fish fast. I get Bellahmine in here. Carls Junior is
my favorite fast food ever. Okay? Is she just saying
that to get on the air. We're about to find out?
Speaker 6 (01:40):
No?
Speaker 1 (01:41):
I thought that was a West Coast thing. No, Carls Jr.
Well maybe that's why there's Hardy's. Carls. I think they're
the same. But maybe there's like you know some But.
Speaker 7 (01:50):
Even when I'm out there, like, yeah, I've never seen one.
Speaker 1 (01:53):
I never saw anyone.
Speaker 4 (01:54):
You did?
Speaker 8 (01:54):
Yeah, I see it there, not as much as Bellahmine. Okay, Carls.
Speaker 1 (02:00):
And she didn't tell I've had it. I love we've
been talking about Carl un for five minutes and you're
just now like, oh, yeah, I've been there. We call
we want to call out was eating And it turns
out a person who's five feet away from me, I
could have offered something on this topic inside the How
did you eat? Okay, it's a cheeseburger. Cheeseburger, belaham, Yes,
(02:22):
are you just be honest? You actually you actually think
that Carls Junior is the best during the pandemic. I
think I went to Carls Junior every day, really, and
what is one eating Carls Junior Another day? Two in
the morning, I'd get a little creaming. Well there was
nothing to do, okay, but what what did you eat there?
(02:43):
It's a I think it's a double Famous Star and
I get a.
Speaker 7 (02:47):
Lettuce wrap and a side of prise with their their sauce.
Speaker 1 (02:50):
That comes on the Famous Star. What is that?
Speaker 9 (02:54):
So?
Speaker 7 (02:54):
I know you guys are missing out.
Speaker 1 (02:55):
I thought I think Carls Junior is a West Coast
thing though, Yeah, and then Hardy's here and it's not
the same. Oh, I like, will die on that hill?
Someone said they used to manage a you know, Okay,
now you got to go back and then you got
to call this person. I want to talk to the
person who texted us. He says that they managed a
Taco Bell Long John Silver's combination. You want to talk
(03:16):
about two wild extremes cross contamination, right, Burrito Supreme and
A and A. Okay, we used to call someone about this.
Speaker 7 (03:29):
This this should not be This.
Speaker 5 (03:31):
Is an emergency forties. I'm so serious. They're poor plumbing.
Speaker 1 (03:36):
Oh my god. I mean I thought that, like the
Pizza Hut KFC, what is it like Duncan or is
it or what is it? Pizza Hudd and KFC and
thirty one flavors. Maybe they put them all together, one
of them. They were like four things in one.
Speaker 5 (03:50):
I could see the Pizza Hudd and chicken like that
to me makes sense. Yeah, but fish and tacos don't
make sense.
Speaker 1 (03:56):
No that no, no, And I realized they're not necessarily
like that. I get that it's just like an efficiency
where they're probably owned by the same company, so they're
just in the same space. But I mean, no, there's
no part of me that walks in there. And I'm like, man,
this is the best of both worlds land and sea.
Get me a fried fish sandwich. And U and a
(04:19):
crunch Trap Supreme and then we got a meal on
our hands and then I'm gonna go to work. That's
to work.
Speaker 10 (04:24):
I actually feel ill just talking about the Long John
Silvers that I have been to.
Speaker 1 (04:29):
It was a Long John Silvers and an A and
w oh okay, so you know there's another one you
don't hear enough about. Hey Dan, good morning guys, Hey man,
welcome to the show. So you managed man, you want
a legend. You managed Long John Silver's Taco Bell. It
was the same location.
Speaker 11 (04:47):
Yeah, so it's part of Young Rands, Long Gun Silver's
Tackle Bell, Pizza Hut, and I forget what the.
Speaker 2 (04:55):
Other one was.
Speaker 1 (04:55):
Were they all or was it just the two? No,
it's just fit too. Sometimes older like them, and sometimes
it's oh it.
Speaker 11 (05:03):
Was atrocious green Giant Fryars oil was you'd have to
change it almost every other week. Was water based.
Speaker 1 (05:12):
Now, now, Dan, what was the craziest combination of food
that you Because surely people did walk in there and go,
oh my god, this is great. You know I can
get that, and that we did. People go and get like,
I don't know, Taco Supreme and then walk over and
get them a nice hush puppy or something like what.
Speaker 11 (05:28):
Yeah, they would do French fries hushpuppies. So it was
weird combinations tacos, it was wild. But what we would
do with employees, we would do chili cheese fries.
Speaker 1 (05:38):
Okay, well because because tacomel.
Speaker 11 (05:41):
Cheese from Taco Bell. Yeah, the French fries from Walk
On Silvers and chili from Taco Bell as well. When
they had it, they don't have anymore.
Speaker 1 (05:48):
Okay, I'm not mad at that. That doesn't sound terrible,
all right, all right? And then now will you eat
any of those places anywhere? I'm not knocking any of it,
but you worked there? Will you eat any of those
places now that you work there? Are you kind of
done with it?
Speaker 11 (06:02):
No, I'm done with it once you because you get
free food while you work there, so eat it almost
every day. You get tired of it.
Speaker 1 (06:07):
Just too much? Okay, damn, this was enlightening. Thank you.
I really appreciate it. One of my favorite parts of
hosting this show is that we just we got a
little bit of everything out there. I mean, there's almost
nothing that we probably couldn't channel into some expert on
or that we have in the room. Well, yeah, yeah,
we were you planning on contributing in all, Pauline Nerd. Honestly,
I forgot that I had it. I honestly don't remember
(06:29):
that experience. It must have not been that good. Well,
it's like I manage a lung, John silver SARTs. That's right.
That one time there was a tuckle bell. Next it
was connected. Where was I? Oh my god, that was
a dark time. Caitlin's Entertainment Report. It's next the French
(06:52):
Showy's on. I think your mom younger than my mom,
but I think she's beginning to transition into that time
of her life where the craps begin to be fewer
and fewer. Oh no, but no, no, no, no, it'll
get worse.
Speaker 12 (07:05):
I saw that with Nana. But yeah, no, she's she's
doesn't care.
Speaker 1 (07:10):
I know she's in her late forties. You know, I'm
being kind, but she looks like she did her late
It looks like she's in her early forties, actually her sixties.
Is she really your mom experienced? I joke about this.
I joke. I've joke with you for the entire time
I've known you. She's so pretty about how hot your
mom is. But she's a very attractive woman. But no, okay,
(07:31):
well then she's a little bit behind my mom. But
it's getting really and I love my momm you know this,
My mom is like, there's no there's no convincing my
mom in her mid sixties that what she's saying won't
be accepted the way she intends it, and or that
like you're not supposed to say that. Yeah, you know,
she doesn't care, no, and she just thinks that I'm
(07:52):
over sensitive, which I probably am because I have to
do this every day where if you if you say
the slightest thing wrong, then you have a real problem
on our hands, where people dissect every other word you
say and then determine what it meant and then tell
you what you meant. So I guess I am a
little sensitive to it. But there's something that seems to
happen to people when they cross the sixty barrier, where
(08:13):
I think they just they just think they've earned the
right to do, you know, just do whatever. Life's more
than halfway over, so like I'll just say what I want.
Speaker 4 (08:21):
I don't care.
Speaker 1 (08:22):
And I think it's this generation too, because like the
way that we grew up is very different from the
way that people are growing up now and the way
they grew up is extremely different. Goodness, my mom's a boomer.
I like remind her every day, you're a boomer. Well,
my mom, my parents, luckily, my whole family, thank god,
doesn't subscribe to a lot of that stuff from the
you know, fifties and sixties and before, you know, the
stuff that they were exposed to when they were growing up.
(08:44):
They've adapted. My mom is one of the most inclusive
allies of all. She doesn't care about much of anything,
but like, she also doesn't care about much of anything.
So because of that, you're supposed to know that when
you look at her, you're supposed to know she's a
great human being who's an ally and an advocate. And
then she can say whatever she wants after that, not
like hateful, but you know what I mean, Like she
could say anything. Like she loves to compliment people on
(09:05):
their appearance. She's complimenting them. I think it's a very
nice thing. But she's gonna find the wrong person one
time and say something and they're gonna get in their
face about it, and she's only being kind. Yeah, you
don't have the same issue you do.
Speaker 10 (09:19):
Yeah, Ezra mom, like, I just think that what I'm
saying has I know my intent, right, however you take it,
that's the you problem, but my intent.
Speaker 1 (09:28):
No, see, And I love that because I used to
feel the same way. Like I used to feel the
exact same way. We're saying, Well, I know what I meant,
I know where my heart is, I know where I'm
coming from. But I've gotten past the part where then
I don't think that you have to care. I've accepted
that like people I don't know, I've accepted it. No
(09:49):
matter what your intent is, people are going to take
it how they're going to take it now to a
certain extent. That's not my fault, right, But I can
also just avoid certain things. You know what I mean? No, No,
what do you mean? It seems like okay, jameson.
Speaker 5 (10:01):
One way conversation, like I'm gonna say what I think
I like is right, and I don't really care how
you take it, But I'm.
Speaker 1 (10:08):
Okay, is right? But have you Jason, Jason, have you
ever have you ever said something to someone that you
meant entirely as a kind benign thing and because of
the tone of your voice or because of the I
don't know, inflection or the pace at which you said it,
or the timing of which you said it. Someone took
it entirely wrong, and you're like, how did you take that?
(10:32):
Like that? I think that's what she's talking about. That's
what I'm talking about, Like what and Calein and I
have had probably like fifty hours of conversation about this,
But I have the hardest time with people who go, well,
that made me feel like like when you said good
morning that way, that made me feel like you said
you're a terrible human being and that you should never
have gotten out of bed and don't leave your house anymore.
(10:54):
And I'm going, wait, would what?
Speaker 12 (10:55):
But they said why, like you want them to do
that and not point the finger at you and go,
you were at a hole when you said good more.
Speaker 1 (11:01):
That is what you're saying. No, but like that's exactly
what you're saying.
Speaker 7 (11:05):
What you're saying, that's how it felt to me. You're
not saying you did it on purpose.
Speaker 1 (11:08):
Yeah, but like that means but to Jason's point, therapist,
that means that I can I can then interpret anything
you say any way that I choose, and then somehow
you're responsible for that.
Speaker 12 (11:18):
But you're not deciding to feel a certain way, And
I think that's what you.
Speaker 1 (11:21):
Have a hard time with.
Speaker 12 (11:21):
You're very pragmatic, like you don't your feelings don't rule
you at all, but some people are very you know.
Speaker 1 (11:28):
I don't know that's entirely I know what you mean.
I don't know if that's just how I drew. But
my thing is that if I mean something kindly and
it's not, there's nothing controversial about what I said, or
there really is to.
Speaker 12 (11:39):
Say controversial, Like it's all in the eye of like
everyone runs something through their own filter.
Speaker 1 (11:43):
We all do it.
Speaker 7 (11:44):
So I can say hi, and five people could think
it's different.
Speaker 1 (11:47):
Yeah, But I don't get to blow up at you
for saying hi because I didn't like the way you
say it, and people do, and people take that as
well because I interpreted it that way interpreted because that's
how I took it. That's how I get to feel
and I get to own my feelings. And so that's
a you problem, and it's not because like you know,
you catch I need to be aware you catch me
(12:07):
on the wrong day at the wrong time. I need
to be aware that I'm going to be set off
by a lot of things. That people don't mean that's
on me though, right like I got it, I got it,
manifest or this is too early for big words. But
I'm the one who has to figure that out, not you.
It's definitely I think it's a two way street.
Speaker 5 (12:23):
But I think as I've gotten older, I have realized
that if I say something that rubs someone the wrong
way or hurts them or make it no matter what
it is, I have to take ownership of that and
I have to mend the relationship.
Speaker 1 (12:36):
I can't just be.
Speaker 5 (12:37):
Like, oh, well, you took it the wrong way, so
not my problem, and we just like keep on moving.
Speaker 1 (12:41):
Not that I like hurt you. I don't know. I
love you for this, but you're letting people. You're allowing people, Jason,
to then just put stuff on you. That's not if
you say something kind or you say something benign and
somehow they're upset with you for it, they're projecting onto
you whatever's going on within them. If you say you
should only get credit for the bad stuff, you say
(13:01):
that's bad and I mean bad.
Speaker 7 (13:03):
Isn't there a middle ground between what you both are saying?
Speaker 5 (13:05):
Like I think, no, I mean it's not like if
I say if someone says hi to me or I
say hi to someone.
Speaker 1 (13:09):
And that is the extreme. It's like completely off the road.
You're also a person that carries a lot of other
people's stuff around. Oh I know this about you, and
like that's that's something you do to yourself. That's unfair
because if you're genuine and coming full circle here, if
you're genuine and you're kind and you mean well and
someone else takes it poorly and I'm not talking about
like anything that's gray area. I'm talking about if you
(13:31):
mean well and you're saying well and someone doesn't like that,
then I think it's kind of on them. And it
comes back to what my mom is. None of this
is like bad or controversial or hurt fooling. She just doesn't.
She'll just say anything, and.
Speaker 8 (13:44):
It's just like you know, yeah, I'm heading that way
because I've been carrying bearing that cross for too long.
Speaker 1 (13:49):
Of like taking people's feelings walking around with them. Oh
did I say this nice enough?
Speaker 3 (13:53):
Oh?
Speaker 8 (13:53):
I gave attitude that I wasn't even attitude. It was
just me replying that's how I talk. And now I'm
like the bad guy. At this point, I just got
to let go otherwise.
Speaker 1 (14:00):
I don't know, because you can't fix everybody else's and
you can't take on everybody else's stuff either. Zero one hundred.
Speaker 5 (14:06):
I think it is, like said, there's someone usually somewhere
in the middle ground, like I, you know, I don't
want to go around just saying whatever I want and
hurting people all the time, Like I don't want to
do that, So it's got.
Speaker 1 (14:16):
To be a middle area. It's a two way street.
Isn't there a differentiation between hurtfull stuff and then stuff
that people might take wrong but you didn't. There's no's
on the beholder.
Speaker 5 (14:26):
I might not think I'm saying something that's going to
offend Kiki, but if I say it, then like I
want to mend that because I may have had good intent,
but if it rubbed you the wrong way, like I
don't want you to then change how you're looking at
me because of what I said to you with a
different like reason of saying it.
Speaker 1 (14:43):
Do you know what I'm saying? Like that's and I
guess my argument is some of that would be on me.
A lot of that would be on me. Like if
I know you to be a good person, I know
you to have good intent. I know that you would
never I don't actually think you would say it thing
to hurt me intentionally. I know that. So for some
reason you said something that was just whatever, and it
hurt me. I need I need to run that through
my filter before I put that on you. And I
think that's the step that a lot of people are missing,
(15:04):
because most people would rather than it just be somebody
else's fault, Like everything they're feeling is somebody else's fault,
as opposed to like looking in the mirror and going like, hey,
maybe I need to work on me a little bit,
or maybe maybe my little radar is off today, you know,
cause again, like I've come in here before where I know,
like I'm not in a good mood, and so I
got to try and force myself to remember you know that,
(15:25):
like the stuff is going to come at me today
that you don't mean that that I might not like,
and that's on me. I can't stand butt you for that, right,
especially what ten years of therapy has done for me.
Speaker 5 (15:34):
Theist say self awareness is a spectrum. Everyone's at a
different Self awareness doesn't exist.
Speaker 1 (15:43):
Self awareness is at a premium, and I will pay
for that up charge for anyone It's the Fread Show
Coude morning thanks to waking up with us waiting by
the phone. Why did somebody get ghosted? That's coming up.
Speaker 13 (15:56):
Calin's entertainment report is on The Fread Show.
Speaker 12 (16:00):
Music awards went down from La last night, hosted by
l Cool Jay, the Chairman of the Tortured Coet's Department
aka Miss Taylor Allison Swift absolutely cleaned up. She took
home all six of her fan voted awards, including Tour
of the Century for of course, the Eras Tour.
Speaker 1 (16:15):
Last night was actually the two.
Speaker 12 (16:17):
Year anniversary of the very first show of the tour
in Arizona. My best friend was there and she had
no idea what she was in for. She didn't know
it was three and a half hours, so she held
her peat the entire time, which is my favorite story
from the tour. Taylor thanked her entire crew as well
as the fans, and said the Era's Tour was the
hardest and most gratifying thing she's ever done. Some other
(16:38):
moments of my like some other favorite moments of mine,
I can speak, I swear Ashanti surprising her man Nelly
to give him the Landmark Award, which was the cutest
thing ever, Tory Kelly having the absolute guts to cover
a Mariah Carey song in front of Mariah Carey. Actually
one of my favorite songs always be My Baby. Before
Mariah accepted the Icon Award, Lady Gaga was also honored
(17:01):
with the Innovator Award at telling fans to quote break
the mold, which she certainly has over the years.
Speaker 7 (17:08):
Of course, she is unlike any other artists.
Speaker 12 (17:10):
I feel like lots more on the iHeartRadio Music Awards
next hour, including a possible reputation Taylor's version announcement, which
is crazy. Those US astronauts Sunny and Butch have finally
departed from the ISS. They left early this morning to
begin their long awaited trip back home after spending more
than nine months stuck in space. There aboard SpaceX is
(17:31):
dragon capsule called Freedom, which is set to re enter
Earth Tuesday with the Florida landing.
Speaker 7 (17:37):
Oh so today, I know a day.
Speaker 12 (17:39):
It is set for around six pm, So I guess
we have them back tonight. The stranded pair were originally
supposed to be in space for wait is it.
Speaker 1 (17:49):
Ladies in the studio? Does it take?
Speaker 7 (17:51):
How long does it take to get back from Earth?
Speaker 12 (17:53):
Is it today because my article says tuesday.
Speaker 1 (17:56):
I don't know. Okay, this is a great question.
Speaker 12 (17:58):
Hold on, I'm googling this live on the air because
I want to be right. But why would it say
tuesday if it was today? Hold on, let me see.
I want to get it right. Yeah, want to be
no longer way to journey back home. It says atmosphere Tuesday,
so I guess it's today. Oh wow, I hope they're
(18:20):
today before dinner time, I hope.
Speaker 6 (18:22):
I know.
Speaker 12 (18:23):
Yeah, hopefully they'll have supper. I need to figure out
what their first meal is going to be. I would
love to know that. But Texas, if I'm wrong, because
it says Tuesday and Tuesday is today, and I don't
know why the article written today would say that.
Speaker 1 (18:35):
But there you go.
Speaker 12 (18:37):
They were originally supposed to only be in space for
ten days last summer, do you guys remember this? And
they're traveling home with a fellow American astronaut as well
as a Russian astronaut as they finished their tour on
the Crew nine mission. They've been stuck since last June,
when that Boeing Starliner capsule suffered leaks and mechanical issues,
forcing NASA to return the craft without anyone on board.
Speaker 1 (18:58):
But it wasn't Boeing's fault. I'm sure of that.
Speaker 12 (19:00):
And I don't know if anyone has seen this, but
Tracy Morgan had to be wheelchair out of MSG during
the Knicks game last night after he threw up all
over the floor while sitting court side during the third
quarter of the game. They had to take a ten
minute pause so they could clean the puke off the hardwood.
And yes, there's photos and video which I wish I
hadn't seen. But in a video captured by a fan,
he is seen getting wheelchaired out of the arena trying
(19:23):
to stop a nosebleed with a towel. That's all I
know right now. Excuse me right now. But I hope
he was just drunk, and I hope it's not something
more serious. So we're thinking of you, Tracy. That's crazy.
And the photos save yourself. Do not look at them
if you're eating breakfast.
Speaker 1 (19:37):
By the way, if you.
Speaker 12 (19:38):
Miss any part of our show, The Fread Show, you
can search The Frend Show on demand on the free
new an approved iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 1 (19:45):
It's a Fred Show. Good morning, thanks for having us
on the radio, on the iHeart app live and anytime
search for The Fred Show on demand. Jason Braddy tried
to kill your partner last night? Is that my understanding? Yeah, yeah,
it was a couple of nights ago.
Speaker 5 (19:57):
But yeah, I decided to I am cooking more, and
so I decided to make a debut and new dish.
Speaker 1 (20:06):
Where are you getting these dishes that you're debuting magazines?
No lazymeals dot com? Oh okay, my skill is very low.
Speaker 5 (20:14):
Okay, so I go for the easiest of the easy,
and so this one was very easy. I will make
anything into a castle role. Okay, just put anything into
a baking dish there on the ovens, but's on top,
and like we're good, right, Well I made this. I
made this castle role. And I could just tell like
caflly there. I was like, I don't know, like this
isn't We were having the same issue when you were
(20:35):
at a bachi. Fred was looking at me like this
ain't seasoned and over.
Speaker 1 (20:38):
Like that, excuse me, excuse me. When I was the
chef at Benny Hannah a few weeks ago, all right,
and you guys hate the food. I hate the food.
Later and the food tasted fine. Yeah, it was great.
You need sauce, you need salt, dim soy sauce, and
problem solved sauce for what it was right after.
Speaker 10 (21:00):
But in the process I was like, wow, he's getting
like he's close to the finish line and I ain't
seen that salt shake yet.
Speaker 1 (21:06):
The chicken white, you know what? It was good? I
dare you? How dare you? Did all of you feel fine? Afterwards? Yeah?
All of you?
Speaker 14 (21:17):
I was hammered. But on the way home, okay, great,
you ate it in the car leftover?
Speaker 1 (21:25):
No, I didn't with your hands on. I guess it
wasn't spice directly. Then she was craving my, Benny, Hannah, right,
crave your meat, craved my Okay. So anyway, you were
making what what were the contents of said cast?
Speaker 4 (21:42):
Okay? So it was.
Speaker 5 (21:43):
Ground beef, egg, noodles, peas where it's some other vegetable
that was green. It so hamburger helper with vegetables basically
with cheese on top.
Speaker 1 (21:54):
Oh my god, everything This sounds actually horrible. But anyway,
so you you decided that it was ad idea. Yeah,
so I made it. I was like, ok, I can
do this.
Speaker 5 (22:05):
You just mix it all together and put in a
dish like hell yeah, right, So I say, get out
of the oven, and so like I'm like filling up
my water cup and he walks in. Mike walks in
and he just stops like in front of it and
is just staring at it, like not like getting a plate,
not getting just staring at it. But he doesn't want
to say anying because I like have my you know,
sort of back to him. So I'm like, you know,
(22:26):
looking through my peripheral and I'm like I'm looking at
my peripheral.
Speaker 1 (22:32):
And so I see him just standing there.
Speaker 5 (22:34):
So then he like takes the littlest scoop and puts
on his plate and he's just standing there in the
kitchen eating it. Normally we make our plate, we go
sit down and eat. He's just like sitting there like
sampling it, saying nothing, saying nothing.
Speaker 1 (22:45):
And I knew it was bad.
Speaker 5 (22:47):
So I made a plate and I'm starting to eat it.
And it was the most silent dinner and neither of
us said anything to each other. And then two days
later he was like, that was prison fit, which you
just gave me literal prison food.
Speaker 1 (23:00):
Wow, he accused you of giving him prison food.
Speaker 7 (23:03):
Yeah, how did you wait two days to say that?
Speaker 5 (23:06):
Like I brought it up. I made some comment about cooking,
and he was like, he's like, never made what you make?
You know again two days ago? Because that was awful
giving me prison food?
Speaker 4 (23:15):
Wow?
Speaker 1 (23:16):
How ungrateful? And it was time he cooked something for you.
Oh never. I don't even think he knows how to
turn the other on. I think if somebody cooks something
for you, you you have to you eat it and
you don't say a thing.
Speaker 3 (23:27):
What?
Speaker 12 (23:28):
Oh okay, I thought you're gonna say you have to
cook something for them. I was gonna say, don't you
start that? Well, I think that's a nice thing to do,
because your boyfriend, you're no. Tell me the theory. There
are cookers and then there are personality hires that stand
there with the cooker, the chef, if you will and
entertain them.
Speaker 7 (23:45):
They have a glass of wine, They tell jokes.
Speaker 1 (23:48):
Can I grab you anything? I say you personality higher?
Speaker 6 (23:52):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (23:52):
In the kitchen.
Speaker 3 (23:54):
Yeah.
Speaker 12 (23:54):
So I thought you were about to say some crazy
stuff like we got to each be cooking you know.
Speaker 1 (24:00):
No, I'm sure you. I'm sure you do your part.
Personality higher. No, but you know, if you if someone
makes a meal for you, you have to eat it,
and then you have to just be quiet about it. Yes, Now,
if if someone asks me and like like my mom,
my mom is a she's a very very good like
(24:21):
home chef, and she's taken courses and you've done all
this stuff. My dad's not. My dad is no dumby
in retirement. He has sent her to like various schools,
like for a week at a time or whatever because
she wants to do this. She wants to travel and
how to cook like food. So he'll be like, go
and then she comes home and she's, you know, making
the food for him. He's not an idiot, and she's
(24:43):
really really good. But like she'll make something and then
she'll ask for feedback, and I know in that case
she wants to know really what I thought, because she
is like actually concerned with you know, I don't know
she made it for other people, so I try and
be honest ish like, but she never made me anything really,
But the point is there's so much cooking for me.
I eat it and I'd say thank you, and that's
(25:05):
the end of it, like I'm not coming back later.
And by the way, that was terrible. The only problem
is if he thought you thought it was good, then
it's happening again, like that will be on the rotation
of lazy dishes, and.
Speaker 5 (25:17):
The rotation is small, so like we're, you know, every
two weeks eating the same thing. So I'm sure he
was probably like, we're not adding this into He could
have been.
Speaker 1 (25:24):
Better, though, he could have been like, you know, hey,
I like that these things. I didn't particularly care for
that one though. That's how you do that. And you
don't say you just fed me prison food. Oh, just
like my orange chicken. Ooh, that was so bad. Don't
ever try to make your own orange chicken. That was
a bad night too. That to me sounds like something
that I would just run down the street and pick up.
You know, there are certain foods I'm just you know,
I'm not making orange chicken. I'm not. I don't I'm
(25:46):
not doing that worth it.
Speaker 6 (25:47):
You know.
Speaker 1 (25:48):
I have another theory while we're talking about food, and
I think a lot of people would agree. But no
one ever cooks for me ever, really, because I either
order it or make it myself. It's just me at
the house. And I was at my friend Bruce's house
over the weekend and this guy cooks everything like bist
like like it's it's ten o'clock at night, and there
may or may not have well, let's just say everyone
(26:10):
was a little hungry on Friday night at ten o'clock.
I can see maybe he's rhymes with munchies. And and
he says to me, do you want cookies? And I
was like, do I want chocolate chip cookie? Like okay, sure,
And in my mind it's you know, slicing bake. No,
no glass bowl comes out, flour measuring cups, melted butter,
(26:31):
chocolate chips. Oh yeah, No, we did a whole thing.
The mixer. I mean, I was handed like one of
the little things that the little blender things. You know.
It's maybe that may have been something he wanted to watch.
I don't know, but it doesn't matter at the point.
But where I'm going with this is he cooked all
weekend and I was eating food cooking. He made me
a sandwich. Sandwich is made by other people for you
(26:54):
taste better than the ones you make yourself. That is
a that is a proven fat even theory. It's a fact.
Sandwiches somebody else makes for you taste better than the
ones you can make yourself. Why I don't know. Oh yeah,
and I mean at home because obviously you go to
like you know, Subway or Jimmy John's or whatever, Jersey Mics,
(27:15):
and then they make it for you. It tastes good,
but I get the house. Someone gives you a sandwich
that may taste better than any other kind of Sandwich's
so true. Yeah, that you should tell him next time
you make something that he doesn't like, be like, well,
there's lunch meat in the fridge. That's what my mom
used to say. I didn't like dinner, Like, well, then
there's bread and lunch meat. You should tell them just
like your mom.
Speaker 5 (27:33):
Okay, pick me up.
Speaker 1 (27:41):
Yeah, never mind. I actually don't do that. I'm not
equipped for that. You can't live with me. That show
is on. It's Stay or Go Diego is here Diago?
Good morning Diego. So it's group therapy and you get
what you pay for, which in this case it's free.
So just keep that in mind before you make any
(28:02):
like life altering decisions. But what's going on with this
is your girlfriend we're talking about today. Yeah, that's right.
So what's going on?
Speaker 15 (28:10):
Well, me and my girlfriend have been together for like
two years and honestly, I've been contemplating proposing.
Speaker 1 (28:17):
Okay, wow, is there you want to do that? So
you want to do that? Is that the whole? Is
that the whole?
Speaker 4 (28:24):
Call?
Speaker 1 (28:25):
Well no, I say, I say, you know, you can
live a very nice life without somebody else. But no,
that's not that's not the dilemma, right, you're thinking about proposing.
I'm very happy for you that you found someone. Yes, Okay,
well yeah, but the thing.
Speaker 15 (28:41):
Is, I'm Mexican and my parents they don't really speak English,
and my older sisters don't really speak English either.
Speaker 11 (28:50):
So I was having a conversation.
Speaker 15 (28:53):
With my girlfriend, the one I'm thinking about proposing to, and.
Speaker 1 (28:57):
Not the other girlfriend, right, yeah, as opposed to the others. Yeah,
I can see how this is a dilemma already. You're
talking to your girlfriend about this.
Speaker 15 (29:07):
Well, I was encouraging her to learn Spanish so she
can like communicate with my family and you know when
we take trips to Mexico in the future that I'm
thinking of, you know, that she would be able to
to talk to my you know, my mom and and
and all of that. But she said no, like she
(29:30):
wasn't even open to it at all, Like she didn't
say oh, uh maybe or or yeah, I could you know,
learn a little bit, like she was just like, no,
she doesn't have time to learn another language, and you know,
just saying that my family should be you know, able
to learn English as well, like you know, I've learned English.
Speaker 1 (29:50):
So so that's her solution. Her thing is, I I
realized I'm potentially marrying into a family uh who speaks
another language primarily. And her official position is I have
no interest in ever understanding anything they're saying about because
I honestly, selfishly I think I would want to learn
(30:10):
whatever language as best as I could so I could realize, no,
if you were talking about me, yes, number one, I
want to know if I'm sitting at the table, you know,
and y'all saying like this dude is a chump, and
I don't know why you're marrying him, and look, he
doesn't even speak our language. And then then what I
would love to be able to do in my fantasy
is go row rare country, oh you know, and then
(30:31):
and then tell them what I think. But look at
this Jason Brown. I mean he's been on Dua Liipa
now for what a year? Yeah, well more than that
I started in twenty twenty. Okay, so four five years five?
Have you ever broken your streak?
Speaker 5 (30:45):
Yeah, there's some freezes, like if I'm too inebriated one night,
but that's okay, it doesn't Again, you've learned.
Speaker 1 (30:50):
A lot, like you're really really good. Yeah, it wouldn't
be that hard for this woman to learn some I mean,
I think it would be endearing if she'd learn some stuff.
I mean, I don't think you're asking her to be fluent,
are you?
Speaker 6 (31:03):
No?
Speaker 15 (31:03):
I mean, and and yeah, that's that's how I feel.
I mean, honestly, I was turned off by her response,
and that's when I started questioning things.
Speaker 1 (31:10):
I don't know if I'm asking too much here just
learning something not.
Speaker 8 (31:15):
At all, of course, And my like, for example, my
stepdad did not speak any Polish and my mom is Polish.
My grandma doesn't say anything in English besides hello. So
when when she came here, I mean, hello Grandma saying hello,
so like it's the cutest thing ever. But like when
she was here, when should come visit, and you know,
(31:35):
they would have to like eat at the table together
like he would try, and I think that was like
he didn't do well.
Speaker 1 (31:40):
But he tried, was the point? Yes, right, And that
probably went a long way to this woman who is like, wow,
this dude cares enough exactly try and you know, figure
something out.
Speaker 8 (31:50):
Plus, like, if you guys have kids, I'm curious, diego,
are you guys going to teach them Spanish or do
you want to? I'm assuming yes, But what do you
guys want to do?
Speaker 1 (31:59):
Oh? Absolutely?
Speaker 15 (32:00):
I mean we haven't talked about kids really to be honest,
but I obviously would want any children, yeah, to be
able to speak both languages.
Speaker 1 (32:10):
Here, I would think, and that would look good not
only to your family the effort at least, but then
also the buy in on your culture and your upbringing
and your family for the kids that you guys might
have at some point, because you know, again, what if
they're looking at mom and Mom's like I don't know
what they're saying and I don't care, well, then what
is their incentive to learn? You know, if Mom's at
(32:32):
least trying, I just I feel like she, I feel
like this is something that's not that hard to say.
I'll try, right, you know, Like, again, no one's asking
you to be a Spanish professor in a year or something.
You know, no one's asking you to like go work
at Telemundo, deliver the news every night or whatever to
to you know, native Spanish speakers like, I don't know,
(32:53):
dieg let me take some phone calls on this, and
I would love to know what people have to say
if they've been through this before. But I don't know what.
I'm just going around the room here, I gotta say,
do we all agree? Like I think it's kind of
messed up? I think so.
Speaker 8 (33:03):
And another thing too, is like not only the great
is it effort, but like I feel like there's no
there's nothing bat will come out of this for learning
another language.
Speaker 1 (33:11):
Relli's trying to And like the only thing I would
say on.
Speaker 8 (33:13):
The flip side is maybe because I suffer with this
in my Spanish is like I'm shy, I'm gonna say
words wrong, right, So if I conversate with you and
you know you're obviously flu when you're saying this, I
might feel a little silly because I'm like, oh, I
can't say that word correctly. It comes off like you know,
I don't have the accent. But you know what I
learned from my mom My mom did to speak English.
Coming to this country, and guess what, every day she
(33:33):
still gets up and tries, you know, and she speaks
obviously way better English today than thirty years ago, but
you know, she still says words wrong.
Speaker 1 (33:39):
That's okay. You are Polish in Mexico, correct, And I mean,
and I don't want to tell you a story, but
I would say that the Polish aspect of your life
was more embraced simply because that was the presence, right,
because your mom was around, so I only grew up
with my mother, right, So then, so that was sort
of the emphasis, right, was the Polish learning Polish average,
(34:00):
And then you decided to sort of like explore the
other part of this on your own, and then you
wind up marrying into his in a Hispanic family. So
now it's like, and I know that you have some
insecurity about this too, don't you, like, Cause it's like, well,
this is part of me, but I don't really know
anything about it and I'm trying to learn, but yet
these people this is like what they know. And so yeah,
and so you kind of I'm sure you feel like
(34:21):
a little left out.
Speaker 8 (34:22):
Yeah, well, thank you for acknowledging that, because that is
like a huge thing for me. Personally as as a
mixed person. But also I know a lot of even
Mexican Americans go through that. Who you know, we're born
here who don't speak Spanish because they weren't taught there,
whatever reason that might be, right, your parents didn't want
to teach you, and they had their reasons.
Speaker 1 (34:37):
So I can't blame a lot of people.
Speaker 8 (34:38):
But a lot of times it's like your own community too,
coming after you, right, it's like, oh, you're a Nosamo kid.
It's like, yeah, I am, because I wasn't taught that
by a parent. Like that's something that was out of
my control. So as an adult, you know, what is
in my control is picking up Dualipa like Jason, yeah, and.
Speaker 1 (34:52):
Learning you know.
Speaker 8 (34:52):
And I was always surrounded by Spanish speakers in high school.
My high school was ninety percent Hispanic speaking, you know,
her Spanish speaking, so Hispanic you know, students. So I
was able to like kind of pick that up a
little bit too. So like that, I know I'm lucky for,
but I still struggle with it.
Speaker 1 (35:06):
I want to be the odd person out either. I mean,
let's just okay, so let's say this woman Diego doesn't
care about your culture, he doesn't care about your language,
doesn't care about your family or or ingratiating herself with them.
I wouldn't want to be sitting in the room having
no idea what my kids and everybody else talking about.
I don't know. So even if it's selfish, I guess
(35:26):
I would make the effort so that I wasn't shunned.
But let me take some calls Diego, I have the
radio on a good luck thanks for calling. Dump her. Yeah,
I think she's I don't like it. It seems very selfish.
I mean again, you're not asking her. It's not like
you're saying I need you to go. I need you
to be fluent. I need you to know past participle
and I need you to be I need you to
know all the irregulars the AI. Yeah. Cause again, I
(35:51):
took Spanish for twelve years, and I can tell with
a little bit of if I go to Mexico, you know,
and I sort of hear it a little bit. I
can tell you what's happening right now. Okay, I can
tell you what's happening right now. Do not ask me
what happened yesterday. Yeah, don't ask me what's going to
happen tomorrow. We don't do that to happen, that's what
you're doing.
Speaker 3 (36:07):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (36:08):
I don't know. I don't know what used to happen.
What I know is what's right in front of me.
Do you're not no in I pass out, don't ask
me that. Hello bridges at bridget, how you doing it.
Speaker 3 (36:24):
Is for JA?
Speaker 1 (36:24):
Good morning?
Speaker 16 (36:25):
How are you guys?
Speaker 13 (36:26):
Let you go?
Speaker 1 (36:27):
Thanks for calling and thank you so Diego just called.
If you just tuning in. And he's thinking about marrying
this woman but his whole family speaks Spanish primarily, and
he's like, hey, would you would you learn some words
so maybe you can, I don't know, make them feel comfortable,
make them feel like you care kind of thing. And
she said, no, I won't do it. What do you think?
Speaker 6 (36:47):
Yeah, I think it's time to go.
Speaker 16 (36:48):
When somebody shows you who they are and the effort
they're willing to put in or not put in, believe
them the first time.
Speaker 1 (36:54):
Yeah. Yeah. I've seen videos on TikTok of like men
or women learn entire speeches in another language to recite,
Like they'll take a year worth of classes to learn
how to give their wedding speech at the wedding in
the native language. And even though it's not good or
they stumble all over it or they're nervous or whatever.
(37:14):
It's like I've seen, you know, the people who it's
affecting are the people who it's being done for. Like
they they're so emotional because like this dude cared enough
to go take Russian, you know what I'm saying, like
or something really difficult to be able to do this
for me on this day. I think it really goes
along the way or.
Speaker 16 (37:29):
To show that you care about somebody's family. Yes, he's
not asking for much, he's asking just to try. Like
you said, he's not asking for Telemundo level speaking, no,
asking for trying.
Speaker 1 (37:40):
I agree. Thank you, Richie, have a great day. Thanks
for listening.
Speaker 6 (37:42):
Thank you you too.
Speaker 1 (37:43):
Appreciate you. That's a good point.
Speaker 8 (37:44):
And also to like someone kind of texted this in
and I thought it was a valid point. It's like, yeah,
like the language is a part of your culture, but
like there's more to that, like if they do have
kids or whatever, right, and like she's going to be
around like the family like like that that's the culture
is a lifestyle, you know what I mean. So like
the fo oh, the music, all of that all ties
into the language. So I think it's all important if
you're gonna marry to that family to embrace.
Speaker 1 (38:05):
All of it. My tech Well, and we know people,
well Bellahamine didn't become she didn't she didn't become Jewish
for her husband, but it was a part of him,
and she did it for herself and for him, you know.
But like I know people who have gone all the
way they've they've become Jewish, they've become you know, Christians,
are born again or whatever it is because they knew
(38:26):
how important that was to their partner. And he's not
asking for that. He's asking you to, like get on
YouTube and learn a couple of words. Hey, Angel, how
you doing. Good morning, Thanks for Colin. What do you think, Well,
I think, you.
Speaker 17 (38:40):
Know, as a Mexican, he needs to he needs to
let her go. I mean, he's not asking too much.
It's just kind of making a little effort and just said,
you know, she's not gonna make a speech, do a
speech or something like that. It just kind of how
something to stay with his family, and she's not willing
to like that is you know, she's dating him in
(39:04):
the first place she knows, I mean, she knows she's
getting into so she is she needs to let her go.
Speaker 1 (39:12):
I'm serious, and the whole like they should learn English stuff.
Speaker 17 (39:15):
It's like, and I bet she's beating all the Mexican food, right.
Speaker 12 (39:23):
She.
Speaker 1 (39:25):
Likes some of it and I don't like the other
parts of it. That's not how this works. I think
it's it's for me. It's not even the fact that
she didn't come to this conclusion on her own. It's
the hard no, which uh, which I think Toy is
about to talk about to thank you so much for
Colin have a great day. That's about as far as
I can go with that. Tory, Hello, Tory, We're on
(39:50):
the same page here, Like why the hard no is
so fast? Like not even let me think about that?
Speaker 16 (39:57):
Right?
Speaker 18 (39:58):
And I teach in the primary a school where people
primarily speak Spanish, and I'm not fluent, and I feel
so uncomfortable where I'm trying.
Speaker 8 (40:06):
To learn Spanish.
Speaker 18 (40:07):
So at least I have like an idea and I
can try. And so it's so bizarre that you would
just be in a family where you would have no
idea how to communicate with them.
Speaker 1 (40:16):
Yeah, yeah, I still think it's asking for much. Thank you, Tory.
Have a great day, you too, glad you call. Thank
you for listening. Miguel, good morning, good morning.
Speaker 3 (40:26):
How are you guys.
Speaker 1 (40:26):
I love your show. Hey man, thank you so much,
you say.
Speaker 4 (40:28):
Go.
Speaker 9 (40:30):
Yeah, so, I mean I'm in the same style of
the relationship. I'm Mexican and my wife is white. You know,
when we started dating and she came ound the family,
they do speak English, but you know, a lot of
the conversation does go to Spanish. She tried to pick
it up. She's doing to do a linga to uh,
to try to learn just with.
Speaker 13 (40:48):
Thout even me.
Speaker 9 (40:48):
Askedy, it's the effort that you want to put in
the relationship.
Speaker 1 (40:51):
Yeah, hard.
Speaker 4 (40:52):
No, I don't want to.
Speaker 9 (40:53):
Put any effort into it and just doesn't want to
be a part of it.
Speaker 13 (40:56):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (40:56):
I don't think it's that hard. Thank you, Miguel. Have
a great day and good for her. Yes, yeah, take care. Hey,
Liz Hi Lives good morning, Hi, good morning. Hey, so
you've been this has happened to you like this story?
Is somebody that he resonates with you?
Speaker 3 (41:10):
Yes, I dated someone for a couple of years. He
did not want to.
Speaker 19 (41:16):
Learn any Spanish. At all, and it just became too
too hard. It strained our relationship my parents.
Speaker 3 (41:24):
I'm Mexican, my.
Speaker 19 (41:25):
Parents speak Spanish as a first language, and he every
time he would come over to the house, he would
have me translate what my parents were seeing.
Speaker 1 (41:37):
And it's like, you can't learn anything, like you can't
greet them, or I don't know, learn basic sense like
not you're not willing to do anything.
Speaker 3 (41:46):
Yep, he just didn't want to learn. So I'm like,
you know what, this is not going to work. You're
not putting an effort. You're showing me you do not care.
Speaker 1 (41:53):
Yeah, I agree with you. Thank you, Liz, have a
good day you too. Okay, now this is going to
be fun. One more Anna, Hi Anna, cry good morning.
Speaker 6 (42:01):
An I'm calling a radio show.
Speaker 1 (42:04):
Well, oh my gosh, aim higher call a better one. No,
so you know you know Polish because of somebody?
Speaker 6 (42:12):
Well no, well let me okay, let me elaborate. So
mine black, and of course my son is too, but
my son his partner is Polish. And so I have
a black and Polish grandson. You, I mean, very young,
but my son and I are making the effort to
(42:32):
learn Polish on behalf of my grandson, because that's awesome
side of the family. His other grandmother only speaks Polish.
You cannot understand a word of her English, though we
want to be able to all communicate. She's watching his
(42:53):
other grandmother is watching Chesame Street to try to learn English.
Speaker 1 (42:58):
See this is how it should be. It's just so sweet.
She's trying. You're trying, and again no one's asking you
to be fluent. Say something to her and.
Speaker 8 (43:07):
Let's see about I mean, I'm trying a complete blank
right now.
Speaker 1 (43:12):
No, Leanna, you know you're you're a bop jaw. You
know that right, You're a grandma. You're about jest. Yeah,
don't call her that he.
Speaker 6 (43:19):
Wants him to call her, but yes, and and he
can of course call me that too. But I just
think that that is I mean, you guys have said
it already. It's very selfish and self tenator of her
not to be willing to share that with him and
his family, and of course what an impact I would
have on their kids. So I just you know, my
(43:41):
grandson just came to mind when I heard you guys
talking about this.
Speaker 1 (43:44):
Well, Anna, I commend you and thank you for calling
you call any time, Okay, We'll do all right, have
a good day. It's the Fresh Show. Coude morning. Thanks
for waking up with us waiting by the phone. Why
did somebody get ghosted? That's coming up.
Speaker 13 (43:57):
Caitlin's entertainment report. He's on the Fresh Show.
Speaker 12 (44:00):
The Universal Music Group issued its first official court response
to Drake suiting the label for defamation as it relates
to Kendrick Lamar's not like Us Now.
Speaker 1 (44:09):
The lawyers filed a.
Speaker 12 (44:10):
Motion to dismiss his lawsuit, calling Drake's allegations meritless and
tressing that public embarrassment is the real reason he chose
to sue. They wrote, and this is legal speak, but
he's getting bodied once again. Plaintiff, one of the most
successful recording artists of all time, lost a rap battle
that he provoked and in which he willingly participated. Instead
(44:31):
of accepting the loss, like the unbothered rap artist he
often claims to be, he has sued his own record
label in a misguided attempt to solve his own wounds.
Speaker 3 (44:41):
Now.
Speaker 12 (44:42):
UMG went on to argue that Drake issued his own
incendiary statements toward Kendrick during the battle AKA he threw
shade at Kendrick as well, including accusations that he is
physically abusive to his partner, that his business partner may
be the father of one of his children.
Speaker 1 (44:57):
So Drake was dishing it.
Speaker 12 (44:59):
However, Drake hyperbolic insults and vitriolic allegations legal speak, very fancy,
simply did not engage the public like Kendricks did. Basically,
Drake got bodied once again, this time in fancy legal
talk by his own label.
Speaker 1 (45:14):
So Drake said this one, oh man, just take.
Speaker 12 (45:17):
The l Yesterday, a judge blocked the release of police
images of Gene Hackman and his wife Betsy, who were
found dead in their home in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
The temporary restraining order also prevents the release of their
autopsy reports.
Speaker 1 (45:31):
The families.
Speaker 12 (45:31):
A state representative requested the order, saying, excuse me that
Gene and Betsy wanted to preserve their privacy during their
lifetimes and they were very private, and that photos of
their dead bodies should not be exploited for entertainment value.
The medical examiner did say that Betsy died of an
infection transmitted through rodent feces sometime around February eleventh. Jean,
(45:52):
who had severe Alzheimer's died about a week later of
heart disease, so he.
Speaker 1 (45:56):
Was living in there with his wife and didn't even know.
Speaker 12 (45:59):
It's so try there's not going to be a hearing
on March thirty first to see if it's going to
be more permanent to prevent the disclosure of those images
and those reports.
Speaker 1 (46:08):
So we'll see what happens there.
Speaker 12 (46:10):
And lastly, and happier news, Mariah Carey had Anderson Pack
with her at our iHeartRadio Music Awards last night, hosted
by Ell Cool Jay, where she was honored with the
Icon Award. He even helped her up on stage, which
was very cute. Now, they have been working on new music,
but they've been keeping those dating rumors alive for months,
so I think it's a little more than that. Elsewhere
(46:30):
in the show, Taylor Swift was the big winner with
nine total awards, including all six of her fan voted awards,
one of which she actually won with her man Travis
Kelce for his surprise appearance on stage at the Arastour
and his.
Speaker 1 (46:42):
Little top hat.
Speaker 12 (46:43):
Last night was actually the two year anniversary of the
very first Erastour show, and while Taylor wasn't there in person,
she spoke to fans in a video message, which was
introduced by Major Swifty Nikki Glacier. She saw her on
the Aristore a million times. I think she spent like
thousands of dollars on tickets. Well played never before seen
footage from that very first night in Arizona.
Speaker 1 (47:04):
But the only thing that I could focus.
Speaker 12 (47:05):
On was the fact that Taylor was wearing a snake
necklace in her acceptance video, signaling to me that reputation
Taylor's version is on the way. But I've been clowning
and I've been wrong before. But fingers crossed, why would
you wear that if not for that reason. By the way,
if you miss any part of our show, The Friend Show,
just searts the Fread Show on demand and catch up
on every single thing on the free iHeart radio app.
Speaker 1 (47:27):
It's the freend Show. Good morning, Thanks for having us
on the radio. On the iHeart app live and anytime
search for The Fred Show on demand. Kalen has walky
talkies in her home. She lives in a one bedroom apartment.
I have not been there. I've just I'm familiar with
the way you've described it. You and your boyfriend live
in a one bedroom apartment and he bought you walkie
talkies for Christmas. Yeah, because because you go to bed
(47:50):
earlier than he does. Yes, and God forbid, you'd have
to stop talking to each other at some point, even
though you're in bed, and the purpose of being in
bed would be to sleep. Yeah, Well, things come up,
so then you walkie talkie. So he'll be on the
couch in the living room. Yeah, and then you're in
the bed and then you walkie talkie.
Speaker 4 (48:06):
Yeah.
Speaker 12 (48:07):
And it has been the best investment that we have
ever made. Okay, first of all, so here's another example.
Speaker 1 (48:12):
On Wyan Street.
Speaker 12 (48:13):
So he wakes up earlier than me on the weekends
because you know, especially Saturday Friday.
Speaker 7 (48:17):
I don't know if you guys are dead like I am,
but I'm just dead to the.
Speaker 12 (48:20):
World, and so I sleep in a little bit later
because I'm catching up on all the sleep from the week.
Speaker 7 (48:24):
So this Saturday morning, I woke up.
Speaker 12 (48:26):
He was not in bed, and I didn't know where
he was, but he placed the walkie talkie next to
my head turned on. So I just walkie talkie and said,
what are you doing out there?
Speaker 1 (48:35):
And then he told me, because you know, you wake up,
you don't want.
Speaker 12 (48:37):
To get up yet you want to figure out, Oh,
can you bring me some coffee?
Speaker 1 (48:40):
Yes? I can, God forbid you, like just say hello,
pardon me. I mean you're acting like you live in
the taj mahll or something like that. You need that
you need, you know, this sort of communication.
Speaker 20 (48:53):
I do and listen when I go to bed early,
like I can't sleep, so like any me getting up
and seeing the light or the tea or anything like
it messes with my sleep, Like I have, I need
like four hours to really you know, wind down.
Speaker 1 (49:06):
But a speaker with a battery in it next to
your head that someone can yell into you into your
ear anytime. That's you need that though I was thinking
that I do.
Speaker 7 (49:15):
And also if I yell, our dog freaks out. She
doesn't like that. So me just like, can you bring
me some water?
Speaker 4 (49:20):
You know?
Speaker 1 (49:21):
Like is this to startle you?
Speaker 4 (49:22):
Though?
Speaker 21 (49:23):
No?
Speaker 1 (49:23):
Like is it like like the chirp remember the chirp phones?
Speaker 4 (49:26):
Is it chirping? No?
Speaker 7 (49:27):
It is not an Excel chirp phone.
Speaker 12 (49:29):
It literally just goes like like it doesn't there's no
beeping or anything.
Speaker 1 (49:33):
It's very nice. I just you know, I think sometimes
I go into a different room where there aren't people
so that I don't have to interact with them, right,
I don't necessarily get another layer of ways to communicate
with me.
Speaker 7 (49:46):
Well, we're not having full dialogues.
Speaker 1 (49:47):
It's just can you basically, can you bring me something? Gay?
I like that.
Speaker 7 (49:52):
No, I want to know, like what he's doing out there.
Speaker 1 (49:56):
I just okay.
Speaker 7 (49:57):
I's been a game changer.
Speaker 1 (49:59):
I'm not even joking.
Speaker 7 (50:00):
It's been the best decision we've ever made.
Speaker 1 (50:02):
I'm telling I like it. I just no, No, it's
just no. It's as an over me, Doug, And I'm
glad it works for you, guys. It's wonderful. But like
the whole purpose of me being like, hey, why don't
you hang out in the living room for a while
or you're going to bed? Okay, cool, then all hang
out here for a little while. It's okay. Switch to do. Yeah,
well it sounds like it with the walkie talkie. It's
where's my coffee? What's the score? What are you doing
(50:24):
for me? What are you cooking for me? What have
you done for me yet today?
Speaker 4 (50:28):
No?
Speaker 1 (50:28):
But I think I just think sometimes it's like, okay,
not to talk all the time. He's an other person. Yeah,
it's from time to time.
Speaker 7 (50:34):
It's not a lot of talking.
Speaker 12 (50:35):
But again, like he won't come into the bedroom when
I'm sleeping because he doesn't want to wake me up.
Speaker 7 (50:39):
So if I tell him, you know, hey, is your boyfriend?
Speaker 3 (50:42):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (50:42):
Big tim? Is he this thoughtful?
Speaker 4 (50:44):
No?
Speaker 10 (50:44):
And I saw like, hey, Well the other day, I'm like,
I like this walkie talkie idea because this man ignores
text messages.
Speaker 1 (50:50):
He's like, I didn't see your.
Speaker 10 (50:52):
Text, bro, you saw my text and you heard me
call your name three times.
Speaker 1 (50:56):
So I like this walky talky idea. We need like
a they think like a one I did walk it
talkie like where I do the talking and you the
listening happens with it. You can't you can't come back
to me with anything.
Speaker 12 (51:06):
That's like our text line when we black people like
they can text us, so we just can't reply.
Speaker 1 (51:10):
Yes, so we have a text, right, we have a
thing and we can look at you can text the
number and we can like look at what you're texting obviously,
and so if if you like are really terrible to us,
and some people are really terrible to us and we
block you, all that does is mean that we can't
talk to you. But you could still say terrible things
to us. It's a great blocking mechanism. It works perfectly.
Speaker 12 (51:29):
It's like we're tied down and they're just sell us
and we can't do it exactly.
Speaker 1 (51:33):
It's like we just meted ourselves basically and allowed you
to just say what you want one side. Oh, it's wonderful.
We played ourselves.
Speaker 4 (51:39):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (51:39):
Okay, so game changer, guys, we've learned it to start
the show, to start the week. Game changer in a
relationship is to always be in two way communication. Never
not be Okay, now, see Jason, you're not in your
head the same way. Like sometimes the silence is exactly
what I'm looking for. Yeah, I mean.
Speaker 5 (51:56):
We're always in the same room no matter what, Like
Mike and I are always It's like it's like what
we're following each other around, Like we're gonna go sit
in the den. We're like sitting watching TV and then
he gets up. I'm like, oh, is it time for bed?
And he's like yeah, I was like all right. So
we get up and we're like, oh no. However, like
I'll go to text him something and it'll literally be
like five days since we've texted, Like we don't like
(52:18):
talk like that, like back and forth, like I don't
know what it is like we all day without talking,
like literally, I'll be here all day and I will.
Speaker 12 (52:25):
You guys never sleep separate, like sometimes my boyfriend will
fall asleep on the couch and I'll be in the
bed or something.
Speaker 1 (52:30):
Yeah, we can't. I can maybe sleep with that. Maybe
you guys could just sleep then maybe maybe the don't distance.
Speaker 7 (52:35):
We're not in constant communicing.
Speaker 1 (52:37):
Ship sounds like it. And Hobby would never go for this, No, no, no,
he would break as a firefighter. That's for saving people's lives.
Can I just want some coffee? Yes, exactly, you know what.
I think. The batteries will be out of it all
the time. I don't know what happened to the batteries, honey,
(52:57):
I have no idea the caddie to batter he's again,
we don't have again.
Speaker 6 (53:01):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (53:02):
I don't know what happened. You've ever been left waiting
by the phone. It's the Fred Show, Heddy, Welcome to
the show. Good morning today. How's it going great? Everything
is good. Thank you for asking. We're all in a
great mood, happy to be here. What's going on? With
this woman Anya. We need to know how you guys met,
about any dates that you've been on, any conversations you've had,
(53:24):
and then what's going on now?
Speaker 22 (53:26):
Yeah, well we met on Hinge and we I mean
we headed off right away. Really, she gave me her
number before I even have to ask. She was like,
you know, we were super into it. It was a kind of.
Speaker 1 (53:35):
Quick click, which definitely signed, by the way, because you
could keep the messaging going forever, and it's an easy
way for someone to just kind of disappear and goes.
But once they have once somebody gives you her number
or his number. Now we're talking like, you know, this
is real communication.
Speaker 11 (53:49):
Yeah, that's what I.
Speaker 22 (53:50):
Talked too, because you know, I've been there where you
can just kind of talk forever on the app and
then at this stage away but now we switched the
text thing pretty quick.
Speaker 1 (53:57):
They could have a burner phone a bad idea. Yeah,
actually a dating app burner phone, you know where like
you just give them that number and it's not your
real actual number. But then when you carry around two
phones everywhere that I think people might be skeptical. That's
a sidebar. So you got her number?
Speaker 22 (54:12):
Actually, maybe maybe that's what happened, because I haven't heard
from her, so maybe she did have a burner phone.
Now listen, we it seemed to be going great. We're texting,
we exchanged socials, Instagram and stuff, and then finally we
did make a plan to go on a date. The
date comes and nothing, So we planned a couple of
days in advance, and on Friday night, she just didn't
(54:33):
respond to any text. She was just completely silent. So
the date never happened.
Speaker 11 (54:38):
And I have no idea why she just she.
Speaker 22 (54:40):
Just ghosted me. Now, was sheeling super bombs? She never,
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (54:44):
She didn't give me a chance at all, just just
stopped talking. And I'm like, maybe maybe she met someone
else or something, but really she could have just told
me that, and she just she just gave me nothing.
And I have no idea what happened.
Speaker 1 (54:55):
Okay, so you kind of had loose plans, but you know,
the idea was that you would be going out on
this on this Friday night, and then it just comes
and goes and you reached out like you attempted to
kind of circle back, but nothing.
Speaker 22 (55:05):
Yeah, I was like, how seven work for you? Do
you want to go here? Nothing, I said free text,
and I was like, all right, I don't want to
look crazy.
Speaker 1 (55:10):
But something's up. Let's call Anya. You'll be on the phone.
We'll see if we can get her on the phone.
We'll ask some questions. Don't say anything right at first,
but at some point you're welcome to jump in on
the call and hopefully we can figure out what's going
on and set you guys up on another date that
we pay for. Okay, all right, sounds good, Thanks so much.
You got I'm gonna play one song and then we'll
come back and do it. All right, Let's see what
happens next. Part two of Waiting by the Phone after
(55:32):
this song on the Fread show, Good morning, It's the
Fred Show. Part two of Waiting by the Phone Eddie. Hey,
how's it going? Hey, welcome back? Still going great. I
still feel like that's still in a good mood. Everyone's
still happy to be Yah.
Speaker 22 (55:45):
I go to IM just always asking people how they are.
Speaker 1 (55:46):
No, get Hey, we're good. We're good. Let's call Anya
and figure out what's going on. You guys, you met
on a dating app on Hinge. Your message and you
started texting. You had loose plans, plans come and go,
and now she ghosting and you want to know why?
Speaker 22 (56:01):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (56:02):
Something.
Speaker 22 (56:02):
I just I have no idea what happened.
Speaker 1 (56:04):
We're gonna call her right now. Good luck?
Speaker 22 (56:05):
Thanks?
Speaker 21 (56:11):
Hello?
Speaker 1 (56:12):
Hi is this Anya?
Speaker 6 (56:15):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (56:16):
Hey, good morning Fred. Yeah, Fred from the Fred Show.
The whole crew is here. I know this is kind
of weird. Thank you for picking up a number that
you don't know. But we're calling on behalf of a guy. Now,
first I have to ask you if it's okay if
we talk on the air. Can we talk on the
air for a second. Sure? Here, it's kind of ridiculous,
I know, but thank you so much. We're calling on
behalf of a dude who reached out to us. His
name is Eddie. You met him on a hinge. I
(56:39):
guess you texted a little bit, maybe had some plans
and it never happened with Eddie.
Speaker 21 (56:44):
Oh wow, okay, yeah, uh huh, so that's true.
Speaker 1 (56:48):
So you know what I'm talking about?
Speaker 21 (56:50):
I do, Yeah, I do?
Speaker 1 (56:52):
All right, Well, what happened because he reached out to
us and described what he thought was like a good
progression that you matched, and then chatted and texted, and
then you had some plans and apparently when he kind
of tried to follow through on those plans, you disappeared
and and he hasn't heard from you since. So why
why is that?
Speaker 21 (57:08):
Okay, sure, I'll get into it. Okay. So everything seems enormal,
uh for a while. But at one point while we
were you know, flirting, the like exchange instant handle.
Speaker 23 (57:27):
And I thinks just.
Speaker 21 (57:28):
Got weird after that?
Speaker 1 (57:30):
Why did they get weird?
Speaker 21 (57:32):
Started sending me like a lot a lot, a lot
a lot of memes, which I like memes. That's not
the weird part. It was just like it was the
content of them.
Speaker 1 (57:47):
Okay, So he's started supporting you in like in the
d MS weird memes? What what did they say?
Speaker 21 (57:53):
Uh? Of course, yeah, hold on, I think I have
let me just pull it.
Speaker 1 (57:57):
You can pull them up for us. Oh this is
wonder see.
Speaker 21 (58:01):
Yeah, we've got some receipts.
Speaker 17 (58:03):
Uh. So okay, so some of them.
Speaker 21 (58:05):
Are about like true love, oh homemade, and I was like, okay, dude,
that's cute, but that's way too soon. Yeah, way too soon.
And he was got into sending me the really sexual means.
And it's not that I'm even prude like I you know,
I obviously would like that to be a part of
(58:27):
my intimate relationship.
Speaker 7 (58:28):
But these were really weird ones.
Speaker 1 (58:30):
And yeah, can you give us an example of one
of the sexual ones please, I just I have to know, okay.
Speaker 21 (58:35):
So okay, Oh, here's one, so me when the airport
security finds the metal butt plug in my ass?
Speaker 1 (58:45):
Wait, wait, give us something? Do you have any more?
Speaker 13 (58:48):
So?
Speaker 21 (58:48):
Yeah, okay, So here's here's an Oh, here's a good one.
Speaker 1 (58:51):
Okay.
Speaker 21 (58:54):
So it's a girl like a cartoon woman, and she's
texting and.
Speaker 1 (58:57):
It's just why do you.
Speaker 21 (58:59):
Bring me to the beach every day? And then in
a thought bubble above the boy cartoon, it says, desperately
trying to get stung by a jellyfish, soci'll on me.
Speaker 1 (59:13):
True love, soulmates, and let me bring Eddie. And I
forgot to mention that Eddie is here.
Speaker 3 (59:19):
Eddie.
Speaker 1 (59:19):
I mean, don't you think that some of this content
would be a little better suited for someone who knew
you a little better and got your sense of humor?
I mean, she's never met you.
Speaker 22 (59:27):
I mean not really funny funny.
Speaker 1 (59:29):
I feel like they're funny really I love Okay, So
I mean you're all laughing, right, but we're also not
trying to go out with you or like interested in
being in a relationship with you. And I guess if
you're this comfortable with jokes like that and we've never met,
then I mean, what, I don't know, you know, it's
like people they don't get it means.
Speaker 22 (59:48):
I'm open minded, I'm I'm you know, it's hard to
offend me. It's I think it's a good thing.
Speaker 1 (59:53):
Well, and in fairness, I'm kind of with you on
that in some regard, because you know, if if if
that's your sense of humor and somebody can't handle it,
then it's probably better that you know, you don't hang
out anyway. However, sometimes it takes it, you know, a
few days to get to know someone develop interest in
them to then determine that okay, they got kind of
a raunchy sense of him where I can deal with that.
(01:00:14):
She doesn't even know you, she has no context, but.
Speaker 22 (01:00:16):
Like, why beat her on the bush?
Speaker 1 (01:00:17):
You know what I mean?
Speaker 22 (01:00:18):
Just show her who I am right away.
Speaker 1 (01:00:19):
But it does come off kind of pervy too, which
is the risk you take. And I assume Anya, that
was sort of your angle, was this dude's a weirdo?
Speaker 21 (01:00:25):
Yeah, to say the lead not charmed. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:00:27):
Look, he's saying that it's just his sense of humor
and he thought he was being funny. Maybe he can
tone it back a little bit.
Speaker 22 (01:00:35):
Oh no, no, I would never tone it back.
Speaker 1 (01:00:37):
Would you consider actually meeting him once and seeing if
maybe you know he's for you in person?
Speaker 21 (01:00:42):
I don't think so.
Speaker 3 (01:00:43):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:00:43):
All right, well that's a shame. So we don't have
a love match here, Eddie. I'm sorry it's not going
to work out.
Speaker 22 (01:00:49):
I'll find someone who gets my sense of humor.
Speaker 1 (01:00:52):
Okay, well maybe so. And I hope that for you
and Anya, thank you for your time. Best to luck
to you as well. No, I think it's the Fred Show,
so you're on a new what you call it, woo
woo journey? Yeah, and I just we've discussed crystals before.
Of course you have to charge your crystals, which you've
maybe heard on this show the clip a number of
times now, which is something I learned. I didn't know
(01:01:14):
it was like USB or if it was, you know,
I don't know what kind of is it? The new
apple cord? The old kind of apple cord? Did you
charge you this week? It was a full moon? Well,
I didn't know what charge you you. I tried sticking
all the different ones in there and I wentn't So
only on a full moon. I can only charge it
in a full moon. Yes, you have to partial moon
won't do it. No, you have to leave your crystals.
Those LEAs have been dead forever. Now, that's why it
(01:01:35):
don't work. And what is the latest step on your
woo woo journey?
Speaker 12 (01:01:39):
So I'm always on a new one. This time it's
you know how you've heard of grounding. I'm sure where
you take your bare feet and you put them on
the earth for at least a half hour, and there's
benefits because the charges in the earth charge your body.
It kind of neutralizes it with all the electricity were around.
Speaker 7 (01:01:54):
Well, I have purchased.
Speaker 12 (01:01:56):
Grounding sheets, okay, and they plug into kiki just bear
with me here, bear.
Speaker 7 (01:02:02):
They plug into the grounding plug in your plug.
Speaker 1 (01:02:04):
You know how.
Speaker 12 (01:02:05):
There's like the regular plugs, and then there's the other
thing you can stick it into picture an outlet and
they connect to the earth. So while I sleep, I
will now be grounding and I'm going to be a
whole new beach.
Speaker 1 (01:02:17):
I don't know why shell crow is the first thing
that came to mind to play. I don't know why
Cherl Crow. For some reason, I was like, yeah, I
bet she she's talking about grounding sheets. I'm like, you know,
I know just what to play here, Cheryl Crowd. No, no, no,
(01:02:41):
we're not, we're not. I don't know why you you're
talking about grounding sheets? I bet she grounds? What are
they made of? These things?
Speaker 12 (01:02:51):
So they have so they're just designed to connect to
the earth via the grounding outlet in your plug.
Speaker 1 (01:02:58):
So you physically them in. You ground them in the wall, not.
Speaker 7 (01:03:02):
Into the electrical but the grounding part of your pug.
Speaker 1 (01:03:06):
Which is like the little bottom part, and it's plugging
our sheets into the Wallah. I don't know about this, Okay,
I think this is how the wildfire started. I'm worried.
I'm serious. I'm not joking around. I'm serious about this.
People all the time. How can this be a good
idea to plug your sheets into.
Speaker 8 (01:03:24):
The wall, because they're not like using electricity, that's like
a heat of blanket. No, those are dangerous yet they are,
my firefighter husband threw right away.
Speaker 1 (01:03:35):
So yeah, see there you go. But you can figuring
ground stuff in other ways. I don't think you have to.
You can attach it to metal. You don't have to
plug in the wall to ground it.
Speaker 12 (01:03:45):
Well, where I live it's negative for right now, and
so I can't take my bare tootsies and put them
on the earth.
Speaker 1 (01:03:51):
No, well, no, grounding doesn't have to physically mean I
think I don't know. I thought there was another way
to do. I don't like plugging blankets into the wall.
You can't worried about it.
Speaker 7 (01:04:00):
Okay, Well, people use mats all the time.
Speaker 1 (01:04:01):
I'm sure you know someone who does. I'm I'm sure
I do. Yeah. When they Grounding come.
Speaker 10 (01:04:06):
Out, you describe it sounds like standing up, Well, do you.
Speaker 1 (01:04:12):
Stand up on the earth on the earth.
Speaker 12 (01:04:15):
Yes, when you say it's like when you tell me
to go outside and touch grass, it's the same thing.
Speaker 1 (01:04:19):
Okay, that's where that came from.
Speaker 14 (01:04:20):
Yes, you need to be a party, Like like, what
did that album Drop, Round and Drop?
Speaker 12 (01:04:26):
I would say it's being popular did in the last
like fifteen years?
Speaker 1 (01:04:30):
Yeah, I think some of Usher's best work. I thought
it was the Grounding album. A lot of people don't
talk about it.
Speaker 7 (01:04:35):
When I'm different.
Speaker 1 (01:04:37):
For the better guys are going to all get mass
We're all going to go to target and yet and
get sheets and stick them in the wall.
Speaker 12 (01:04:45):
Listen, at this point, I will try anything, okay, because
I'm going through it, brother, So I'm gonna ground every night.
Speaker 4 (01:04:53):
We had a.
Speaker 1 (01:04:54):
Sleeping Matt Mike tried to It didn't do nothing for him.
He's miserable old.
Speaker 5 (01:05:00):
He tried it, he was like thinking that was gonna
like I don't know what he thought or what Amazon.
Speaker 1 (01:05:05):
So those aren't sheets? How you put this on the
bottom of the bed then you sleep on top of it?
Speaker 6 (01:05:09):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:05:10):
Into the wall too.
Speaker 5 (01:05:11):
Yeah, I was just on the worst would go right
into the wall. Yeah, maybe it's gonna warm like something.
But it did nothing. It just plugged into the wall.
But I saw no change. And then he returned.
Speaker 1 (01:05:23):
How often did he use it? For a couple of.
Speaker 5 (01:05:25):
Weeks, like straight, So I don't know how fast it
is supposed to take. But I was like, I don't
know what targeted ad got.
Speaker 1 (01:05:29):
You or what I told you?
Speaker 7 (01:05:31):
What he going to the little fair meetings like I am.
Speaker 1 (01:05:34):
I want to We're going to find out on some
dateline episode or something. This is all just a scam
that some dude named Chad came up with this and
got rich and that's all a bunch of bs. Plug
my blanket into the water. I'm sorry, I have to
play a song and get a minute.
Speaker 7 (01:05:50):
You plug your phone into the wall and sleep right
next to it.
Speaker 1 (01:05:53):
Well, the phone requires electricity to operate, right sheets, I'm worried, Okay,
I'm worn. Think of you sometimes and I think about
as you.
Speaker 4 (01:06:08):
They nice not you. He ways be second heel can
make you happy? Now. Sometimes I don't think combodies you.
They nice you.
Speaker 23 (01:06:23):
He ways be second heel can make you happy he now?
Speaker 1 (01:06:29):
Usually I put then so we never think about you
and me.
Speaker 23 (01:06:35):
But I see are affections clearly in Hollywood.
Speaker 1 (01:06:39):
They are on the screen.
Speaker 13 (01:06:40):
You just need a better hide than this.
Speaker 4 (01:06:43):
You need from there I can have again.
Speaker 1 (01:06:46):
They got across.
Speaker 4 (01:06:48):
The room, it's gone out and hands calm. But sometimes
and I think, ambys you. They nice of the pill you.
He ways can be yell can't make you happy? Now
you can't fight it.
Speaker 5 (01:07:05):
You can't breathe you say something so open, but no,
I gotta legend.
Speaker 4 (01:07:13):
Might you be better off if someone you I don't
want to be.
Speaker 23 (01:07:19):
I know it has me too.
Speaker 1 (01:07:22):
You look so broken when you cry, and then I
say goodbye.
Speaker 4 (01:07:28):
So times I'd like to go back to you. They
nice into true he was a can be yell.
Speaker 23 (01:07:37):
He can't make you happy.
Speaker 4 (01:07:40):
Sometimes I'd like to go back to you. Today dies in.
Speaker 23 (01:07:44):
The true he wastes can be Yu can't make you happy.
Speaker 18 (01:07:51):
Now, I just want your dreaming, want asleep and smile.
Speaker 1 (01:07:56):
So come to the ball. I just waste that I
can be give you that. Then that's perfectly inside.
Speaker 4 (01:08:04):
Sometimes that I.
Speaker 1 (01:08:05):
Can compodies you the nice middle.
Speaker 4 (01:08:10):
He ways been freakingly, hes been freakingly sometimes accompanies you
they nice true he ways been freaking.
Speaker 23 (01:08:27):
Can make you happy.
Speaker 4 (01:08:30):
Sometimes of combodies you lay nice people true he waves
in freaking out?
Speaker 23 (01:08:39):
Can you make you happy?
Speaker 13 (01:09:06):
Camwon's Entertainment Report, and he's on The Fred Show.
Speaker 7 (01:09:10):
Our I Heart Radio.
Speaker 12 (01:09:11):
Music Awards went down from LA last night, hosted by
ellll Cool Day, to celebrate the music and artists you
loved all year. Bed Boon, Billie Eilish, Golrilla, Kenny Chesney
and more performed.
Speaker 7 (01:09:22):
Mariah Carey was.
Speaker 12 (01:09:23):
Honored with the Icon Award and also got an incredible
musical tribute by Tori Kelly and our iHeartRadio R and
B Song of the year winner Money Long Lady Gagat
to call the Innovator Award for her creative visions that
have transformed music and culture forever. We celebrated iHeartRadio's A
Tour of the Century, honoring, of course, the Eras Tour,
(01:09:44):
with an exclusive performance from the opening night of her
historic Eras tour, I Mean My Gosh, two years ago.
Last night, that was the anniversary where it all started.
Gracie Abrams took home the first ever Breakthrough Artist Award,
very well deserved.
Speaker 1 (01:09:59):
She did a live.
Speaker 12 (01:10:00):
Performance of that So True, which is just all I'm
listening to right now. Nelly was surprised by his boo Ashanti,
who presented him with the Landmark Award and did a
medley of his biggest hits.
Speaker 1 (01:10:11):
It was amazing.
Speaker 12 (01:10:12):
In other music news, Miley Cyrus has been teasing her
next musical Era Something Beautiful, with new visuals popping up
on our website and social media, as well as on
posters around the country. Miley has not dropped an album
since twenty twenty three's Endless Summer Vacation, So I'm very
excited for some new Miley music. And with that voice
and that talent, I don't know which direction she's gonna go.
Speaker 1 (01:10:33):
She can go any which way she wants.
Speaker 7 (01:10:35):
I mean, her godmother is Miss Dolly Parton.
Speaker 12 (01:10:38):
Lastly, those US astronauts Sunny and Butch have finally departed
from the ISS. They left early today to begin their
long away to trip back home after spending more than
nine months stuck in space. They're aboard SpaceX's Dragon capsule
called Freedom, which is set to re enter Earth today
with a Florida landing step for like six PM.
Speaker 7 (01:10:59):
Just before that, right in time for dinner.
Speaker 12 (01:11:01):
The strained pair were originally supposed to be in space
for only ten days last summer, and they're traveling home
with a fellow American astronaut as well as an astronaut
from Russia as they finished their tour on the Crew
nine mission. I think they need some sort of metal
of Freedom or something, but they've been stuck since last
June when they're Boeing Starliner capsules suffered leaks and mechanical issues,
(01:11:24):
forcing NASA to return the craft without anyone on board.
So they are coming home right as we speak, which
is very exciting news.
Speaker 1 (01:11:32):
By the way, if you missed any.
Speaker 12 (01:11:34):
Part of our show, The Fred Show, just search The
Fred Show on demand on our free new and improved
iHeartRadio app, and please set us as a pre.
Speaker 1 (01:11:41):
Set what the Fread Show is on? Yeah, Fread's fun.
Speaker 4 (01:11:45):
Fact, Fred's fun.
Speaker 1 (01:11:53):
So much, learn so much? Guys? Did you know? And
I didn't know this? There was almost a dwarf of
the Seven Dwarfs variety named Burpie, Oh wow, Burpy, which
is me, you know, after Taco bell, after a number
of different fast foods. Actually, but snow white and the
(01:12:15):
Seven Dwarfs as we know it came from a German
fairy tale. It's been around for centuries. The dwarfs were
always an important part of the story, but they didn't
have individual names, and then Walt Disney came along. Happy, Grumpy, Sleepy, Sneezy, bashful,
Dope and Doc weren't the only names that writers considered.
According to The Guardian, we could have had dwarfs named Jumpy, Burpie, Puffy, Stuffy, Lazy,
(01:12:40):
wheezy and deafy Oh wow nice.
Speaker 12 (01:12:44):
My friends and I were the sexy version of them
on Halloween one year.
Speaker 1 (01:12:48):
Which one were you, Burbie? I think I was like,
isn't bashful one? Yes? Yeah, I think you were a
sexy yes we did. Yes we needed a group costume.
I'm not proud of it, moron. I'm a sexy, bashful
of the Dwarf.
Speaker 15 (01:13:02):
Okay, okay, more Fred Show next right here,