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July 11, 2025 16 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Bread's show is on Fread's Biggest Stories of the Day.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
We talk about that in this second two we talk
about location. Remind me of talking about location. Yeall are
obsessed with sharing location. I don't think it's necessary. Vicky
and I are lined on this too. Yeah, why though?
What are you hiding? Where you gotta go? Where you going? Guys,
your suitcase is fifty eight this mind your business? They

(00:26):
lined up. Your suitcase is fifty eight times dirtier than
a public toilet seats. Think about that for a minute.
I don't really remember. I'm not too sure I've ever
like disinfected my suitcase, honestly. A recent study found that
the suitcase wheels carry nearly fifty eight times more bacteria
than public toilet seeds. These wheels and the suitcase base

(00:47):
were found to harbor harmful microbes, including e. Coalive and
black mold. Soft sided luggage was particularly germ prone, with
thirty eight percent of travelers placing suitcases on beds or tables.
The risk of contamination is high. That's another one. I
don't get who like who comes home and is like, honey,
I'm home, and then just do you put the suitcase

(01:10):
on the bed actually the couch, but.

Speaker 1 (01:13):
Oh, I thought it was the bad But either way
is where everything lands.

Speaker 2 (01:17):
So one researcher says that you should use practical hygiene,
you know methods. I guess avoid rolling bags through unsanitary
areas like the poop farm. Don't right like that. Maybe
don't roll through there. I guess the dog park. Maybe
don't use the wheels. I don't know, use hotel luggage
racks or cover wheels with shower caps. Just infect wheels

(01:39):
and bases after trips, and wash your hands after handling
your luggage to reduce exposure. I believe that. I believe
that luggage is nasty. And then it goes in the
little underneath thing of the airplane with everybody else's bags,
so it's touching everyone else. Is nasty. And then the
cards I'm sure they don't clean nose. I mean, if
you've seen them, they're like rusted out.

Speaker 3 (01:58):
I mean take it to the bag. Yeah, yeah, this
is disgusting. I saw a crisis the other day. This
was actually a couple of months ago in Salt Lake City.
But I was sitting there, like waiting for the plane
to take off, and I'm just you know, minding my
business trinking my Little Starby, my Little Starby's you know whatever.

Speaker 2 (02:14):
Actually that's not true. I was drinking a michelada, but
which they were just serving them up at the Salt
Lake City Airport, of all places, to try and get
me hammered. In the airport, they were trying to do
this to me, and there was a man making micheladas.
If you're not familiar, it's like a bloody mary with
beer essentially. So and it was nine o'clock in the morning,
and while I was in the Delta lounge, so why
not let's go, you know, And the credit card got

(02:36):
me in and he was just serving them up. But
I'm sitting there and I'm, you know, just pondering to myself,
and a luggage cart goes by, you know, I think
a little tractor thing on the front of it, and
then like a bunch of carts and the bags are
on him, and one falls off and it's on wheels
and it just starts rolling down the taxiway, just rolling down,
just down, down down, And I'm like, hmm, this is

(02:58):
going to be a problem because before all one person's
chones are rolling down the taxiway and they're trying to
get to you know, El Paso, and they just want
their chonies when they get there. That was a new
city unlocked either or Toledo for some reason, I don't
know as comes to mind, but al Passo now and
then I'm thinking, like what if an engine sucks this thing?
And then we got a problem with the A So
I'm thinking, do I need to call it the authorities.

(03:21):
I'm very serious about this, like I'm watching this happen
before my very eyes, and I could either save someone's
day or save the airline a lot of money, you know,
or or worse. And then finally there was like a
meeting of things. I don't know. Some other luggage guy
was driving down the same thing and he sees it,
and then he turns around and then grabs it, and
then the other guy comes back. It was the whole thing.
But I thought, this could be a real problem for

(03:42):
somebody if this bag just winds up. I don't need
a bush somewhere at the airport and like, no one's
gonna find it. Somebody should have did that for your bag.
Someone should have, you know, but they didn't. They didn't
do that at all. But I'm sure bags are really
nasty so McDonald's millions of McDonald's job seekers had their
personal information and exposed after hackers cracked the fast food
giants AI a hiring bot with the password what would

(04:05):
you guess McDonald's was using as their internal password to
get to everybody's job information. Big mech one two three
four five six. That's mind two on my laptop. Don't
try anything, I'm watching. You mean, the one that controls
all the radio stations. No, no, no, my personal all

(04:28):
better than that even okay, good by much? Okay. So
their area hiring platform is called Olivia, and it's used
by many McDonald's franchisees. Uses a chatbot to screen candidates.
So I guess somehow the hackers I somehow they were
able to I mean, but miraculously they were able to
guess the password is one two three four five six

(04:50):
as the user name and password, and they were able
to get in. Once in, they say they could see
up to sixty four million chat records containing applicants names,
email addresses, and phone numbers. The flaw also let them
access records simply by adjusting applicant ID numbers. This is
the whole thing. But don't use that as your password.
Everyone knows one, two, three, four, five. Once you have

(05:12):
the six, you're extremely vulnerable. Vacation renters in the US
waste up to two point three billion dollars in uneaten
food each year, according to a new study. On average,
twelve dollars per night in groceries and leftovers goes uneaten
in airbnbs and similar rentals, about five percent of the
nightly state costs. It's kind of like an extra tax.
Most of the food ends up in the trash, especially

(05:32):
produced in pantry staples. Research or state travelers would welcome
help from hosts on how to donate or compost the leftovers.
You ever seen these guys on there's at least one
guy on TikTok who has airbnbs, And that's the content is,
you'll go in the airbnb after someone has left to
see what condition it's in and what they left behind.

(05:53):
And you know, you figure, you go to you know,
San Diego or whatever for your vacation and you rent
a house, so you maybe go to the liquor store
and you buy some booze, and you buy some stuff
for the fridge, and then you buy some you know,
Snacky's or whatever. And then when it's time to go.
You're probably not packing the you know, Las barbecue chips
because it takes up too much space, or the teeto's

(06:13):
because you can't carry the liquid on the plane, or
it's gonna break in your whatelse you leave it, you know,
the excess you just leave. So these guys wind up
cashing in a lot of times it's like, oh cool,
I'll take you. You know, I'll take the extra liquor
and oh wow, unopened you know this and that and
the other thing. I guess I'll take that too. But yeah,
it should there should be an easy way to donate
that stuff, for sure.

Speaker 1 (06:32):
I always hope, like the cleaning crew will just take
it because we left a bunch of food in Maine
and booze too, But I mean it's like, what are
we going to do? We can't fly home with it.

Speaker 2 (06:39):
And then that content series is why I will never
airbnb anything I own, because some people are very respectful,
and then some people they leave the place like it's like,
are you like an animal? Yeah, because it's not yours.
Then I guess you think you can just I don't know,
to terrorize it or something. I don't know, Like people
don't treat other people in general. They treat other people

(07:00):
stuff the way they treat their own stuff. Yeah, and
I also know what and I've not disrespected an Airbnb
or a hotel room, but you know, you know, inhibitions
go out the window. Well, I've disrespected it, but I
haven't like, I haven't left any sort of remnants behind.
But I've just respected it. But your self respect, your dignity. Yeah,
when the hampton incomes, there's a rocket, don't come a

(07:22):
knock in. You know, you know, we've left some self
respect and dignity behind, but you can't collect that, I guess.
But but I know what I've done on vacation in
other people's beds, so I'm not I don't want it
done in my bed. So I'm I you know, not
that I'm in a position I own a bunch of Airbnbs,
but I just I'm not. If like my aunt, for examples,
has her house in South America and she lives in

(07:43):
it full time. But in the season, which I explained
earlier in the week is December through March, where it's
their summer and our winter the South America, so those
seasons are opposite. She could make a ton of money
if she moved out and let somebody move in. In fact,
realtors will knock on the door of the house and
be like, hey, because it used to be a rental property,
so hey, can we rent this thing for a month?

(08:05):
And it's a lot of money because it's a very
you know, uh uh desirable place to be. And she's like, no,
it's my house, you know, So she can make a
lot of money. But like she moves that's where she
lives every day. This is that like Shenanigans. So she
moves out and then you know, clicking clack movie or whatever,
and then god knows what they're doing and they're on

(08:25):
their tropical vacation and then they move out, you know,
and there's no way you're ever going to get the
DNA out of the place. Yeah, I'm not okay with that.

Speaker 1 (08:33):
You're not moving into my bedroom and living there whatever
half the year.

Speaker 2 (08:38):
That's where would she go?

Speaker 3 (08:39):
Then?

Speaker 2 (08:39):
Like, well, I I don't know, I guess she'd. I
guess she'd. I think it's come back to the stage.
I mean there's a lot of places she could go. Yeah,
I'm not renting my house, Yeah I don't. I don't
think I would do that primary residence. No, let me
see if I have the audio for you here, because
there's a national anthem singer that's making all kinds of
news this morning because of his special rendition. It's not
loading fast enough. I'll played for you in just a

(09:00):
second when I find him. Thousands of excited fans have
flocked to a tie zoo to celebrate the first birthday
of Moodang. Remember Moodang, the adorable baby pigmy pygmy hippo.
It's become a social media sensation. The zoo was overrun
with fans of Moodang on the first four days of
activities marking a hippo's birthday. So you could go to

(09:23):
the zoo and you can see a little Moodang in
there he is. And the unique and original Burken bag.
Now we most of us. I think I've heard of
the Burken bag. I'm not sure if I've ever I
think I've seen one in person before. But they go
anywhere from what six thousand for like a little tiny
miniature like Barbie.

Speaker 1 (09:41):
Size one, Yeah but yeah, very tiny.

Speaker 2 (09:44):
To like millions and millions and millions of dollars. And
if you're not familiar to or Maze. It's a very
high end brand. Don't worry if you go in there
unless you buy Burkins. They'll pretend like you are. They
are more inconvenience than ever I was. I walked by
the other day. They are. They are even if you
want to go in there and look at it. They
are so inconvenience to have you there. But they don't know,

(10:05):
they don't know. They You can't be that way in
a rich person store because you never know. I know
a lot of rich people who don't dress like rich people,
So be careful with that people. And they treated us.

Speaker 1 (10:16):
Through when we got your guys, your Gucci hats, like
they were following us around. They wouldn't let us out
of their set. I'm like, you guys were not gonna
like take anything. I know, we're in sweats right.

Speaker 2 (10:26):
Right in my crocs walking through Coach. But they've done
it really well. They've done a really good job with
the Those are nice crocks. Those are nice brand new
Cross we talked about we're talking about it, yeah like that.
But these bags, you know, they've done a very nice
job with the allure of you know, not anybody can
buy one. You got to you got to have a

(10:48):
spending history. You gotta you know, you gotta know somebody
to get one of these bags. And for ten thousand dollars,
I mean, you know, it's a lot of money for
a handbag, but the original Burken just so for ten
million dollars, including fees and an auction in Paris. The
huge amount blew past the I guess whatever they thought
they were going to make it souther Bees and it

(11:10):
broke the previous record for a handbag according to the AP.
I don't know what that number is, but yeah, this
thing was designed for Jane Burkin, the original Burken bag.
It was commissioned in nineteen eighty four and it has
her initials JB on the front flap below the lock,
and delivered the finished, one of a kind bag to

(11:31):
her the following year, so eighty five she got it.
The subsequent commercialized version of the Burken Bag went on
to become one of the world's most exclusive luxury items.
And it's very high priced and years long wait list.
If you can even get one, ten million dollars.

Speaker 1 (11:45):
And shout out to Jane the muse. I didn't know
it was after a lady, but a lot of people.

Speaker 2 (11:49):
It's interesting.

Speaker 1 (11:50):
There's a lot of these businesses popping up now where
you can rent these luxury bags. So a lot of
rich people are getting pissed because now anyone can rent
a bag for a certain amount of time and it's
not like a status symbol any more. Really, the bergen,
I doubt you can runt anywhere, but like these chanels
or whatever, anybody can just runt them.

Speaker 2 (12:05):
Now, how much money do you have to have to
carry around a million dollar bag, A five hundred thousand no, no,
I mean this. Whoever bought this is obviously very rich,
but they're buying it because they're probably gonna, you know,
either display it or put in the museum or or
or just have it and make money on it and
sell it someday for fifteen million or whatever. I'm sure
the price of this kind of thing, you know, it appreciates,

(12:27):
But I mean, how much money do you have to
have to carry around a twenty five thousand dollars handbag,
a fifty thousand dollars handbag, Like I would be so
afraid of anything. Someone's gonna look at it wrong, someone's
gonna breathe on it. Then I'm gonna set it somewhere
Someone's gonna steal it and then I'm gonna damage it somehow,
Like how much money do you have to have before
that is just like h whatever, I mean Bezos money,

(12:52):
less in Bezos money.

Speaker 1 (12:53):
I mean less than Bezos money. But I'll just be scared.
I'm scared to carry things now that I have and
they're nowhere near that expensive. You know.

Speaker 2 (13:00):
The other thing is there's so many fakes of these.
This is kind of how I feel about different kinds
of diamonds. Like, you know, it used to be that
if somebody had a five carret diamond ring that they
were gazillionaires, right that they that they spent you know,
a million dollars on that thing or whatever. It was
Wow at the side of it. But now there are
fake rings and then the I know the lab grown
is not fake, but you've got different versions now where

(13:22):
you can get the same look for a significantly less
amount of money, Which makes me wonder why if I
had the money, would I go buy the big, huge,
real one when somebody else is sitting next to me
could have one. If I'm looking for status, someone next
to me could have one for a tenth of the price.
It's the same size, it might even be better prettier,
but it's not real per se or the same. So

(13:45):
you know, with all these fake or maze bags, like, yeah,
you feel like a poser walking around with a bag
that's really fifty thousand dollars, but you bought it a
you know, in an alley way for you know, two
hundred and fifty bucks. But I'd feel a lot better
walking around with that if it's good, because at least
if someone takes it off you that you know you
didn't lose well, you know what I mean. So that

(14:05):
would be my argument for fake stuff. You're you're you're faking,
you know, you're posing. I guess it would be also
the intent, Like why am I carrying this thing? Am
I carrying a fake bag because I like the way
it looks that I don't I don't care if it
gets stolen or damaged, or am I carrying it around
because I want you to believe that I have all
that money? And I think the latter is mostly true. Yeah,
for some reason, I'm always scared that somebody's gonna run

(14:27):
up on me with a diamond tester or like a bag. Yeah,
Like I don't know why right, Like I always think
somebody's gonna run up like you're a soldier wearing a
fake uniform, Like, oh, you're actually broke it. I don't know.

Speaker 1 (14:42):
If I can't afford it, I'm not gonna buy. I
don't want to do the fake stuff, Like it just
feels icky to me, Like I'm like, I want this
so bad that I'm willing to get one that looks
like it, but it's not it.

Speaker 2 (14:51):
I don't know, and I'm not a Jordan expert by
any means, but I've I've seen Jordans that are so
bad that I know they're fakes. And that's that's kind
of embarrassing because it's like you're trying to hype beast
but you yeah, but like right, but like he's dunking
the wrong way. He's doing a split like the baskets
over here, buddy, Like I don't know why you're dunk

(15:12):
in that way because it's yeah, so and you see that,
you're like, you know, and it's like a very limited
release or you know, something that was really coveted, And
in that case, I don't think you're wearing it because
you like the way it looks you're wearing it because
you want people to believe that you have it, in
which case I feel bad for you a little bit.
If it's if it's all you can afford, man, do
you Yeah, that's what I mean though. That's what I mean. Like,

(15:34):
if if you like the way it looks or it's
all you, then then by all means. But if you're
wearing a fake thing because you want me to believe
that you are that connected or that rich, or that
cool or what, then then it really defeats the purpose. Yeah,
when you know, when the Jordan logo is is a
white man and when it looks like me, when it's
a gunna be looking dude, you know, trying the entertainer

(15:58):
of four can's got that? Assuming it's on the Friend Show,
it's Friday,

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