Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Wait. Fred's show is on now hot this morning show.
Who came in here mess with my stuff? Who came
in here messing with myself? Wasn't mean? I promise. I
set everything up, I made it perfect, and then I
(00:20):
come in here and that's all different. We'll mess with
my stuff.
Speaker 2 (00:24):
Gotta keep you on your toes.
Speaker 1 (00:25):
Why you mess with my stuff? What'd you do? I
just was cleaning up for you, turning everything off.
Speaker 2 (00:33):
I try to make it pretty. I like the colors
on the board.
Speaker 1 (00:37):
Well there were more colors when it was what's going on?
Somebody came in here messing with my stuff, and I'm
gonna figre out who it is. I don't want to
put surveillance cameras in here. I think we need to.
I've been telling you because people come in here. I'm
gonna put a ring camera in our studio. Because people
come in here, they mess with stuff, They're pushing buttons,
they're doing things. I don't know what they're doing. Morning Everybody, Tuesday,
September thirtieth, It's The Fred Show. Hi Klem, Good morning,
(00:58):
Hi Jason Brown, Hi Kiki, Good morning. Shelby. Shelley is here.
She's got money in the showdown next hour for fifty
is the price that let' mean on the phone in
the tech stay five five three five stay Agobal debates
and relationship drama, waiting by the phone, Why does somebody
get ghosted? All of that is coming up, and the
Entertainer Report, headlines and blogs this hour already working on.
Speaker 3 (01:21):
We're talking AI actors, the real reason the Super Bowl
halftime show is going to make history, and a very
shocking breakup.
Speaker 1 (01:31):
This is a debate of the of the century. I mean,
we've had a lot of debates on here that have
gotten people really heated. I'm trying to think of what
the last one was. There have been many tipping. Oh well, well, tipping.
It's my favorite topic of at least once a year.
People love it. They're so kind about it too, you know,
the different perspectives of tipping. A lot of them really
(01:52):
open minded about it. But I saw this this morning
and I didn't even realize this was a thing. However,
let's take a little pole eight five five, five nine
one three five. How do you eat your banana? More importantly,
how do you I guess, open the banana? Well, there's
(02:16):
really debate about this, Like you're not in your head,
like you've heard this before.
Speaker 3 (02:19):
Yeah, because there's a way that we're all supposed to
be doing it, and there's a way that we all
do do it.
Speaker 1 (02:24):
Well, what is the way that you are supposed to
be doing it?
Speaker 3 (02:26):
At the opposite end, like not the top stem.
Speaker 1 (02:29):
So there's the antenna side, yeah, and there's the butthole side.
Speaker 2 (02:32):
Yeah, you're supposed to open it from the butthole.
Speaker 1 (02:35):
How can that even be? How would you even do that?
Speaker 2 (02:38):
Ask a monkey? I don't know.
Speaker 1 (02:39):
You rip it? You ripped the antenna side, like you
break it a little bit, you have a little leverage
there and then you peel it down and then you
peel it down and then you eat it.
Speaker 2 (02:49):
That's not how they were made. Apparently that is how
you eat a banana.
Speaker 1 (02:51):
There is no other way. There's no other way to
eat it. And I don't know monkeys, they can do
whatever they want, but like they obviously haven't been taught
the proper way to eat a banana. But there is
a fierce debate on Reddit this morning about the proper
way to eat a banana, and I'm I'm shocked at this.
They won ever reading it the other way? How would
you do that? Do you like break the butthole end
(03:12):
and then peel it from that? How do you how
do you break it like in the middle or something.
How do you do it?
Speaker 4 (03:17):
Well?
Speaker 2 (03:17):
I do it wrong.
Speaker 3 (03:19):
But I think there's a way that you pinch it
and doesn't it all just pop open? I think it's
supposed to be a lot easier than we're making it.
Hold on, let me look constructions.
Speaker 1 (03:26):
Yeah, yeah, can you look up instructions on how to
eat a banana?
Speaker 2 (03:29):
Because from the butt side first?
Speaker 1 (03:31):
Yeah? Is it the antenna side? People say pinch from
the bottom and then you pinch and peel. No, you
don't do.
Speaker 2 (03:39):
I gonna run and see if we have one in
the kitchen.
Speaker 1 (03:42):
I suppose maybe for like demons demonst purposes and that's
a word monster, demonstrative and make up a word. I
still want to know what ghost came into your mess
with my stuff, because I mean, I have a routine
every day. I have a routine. I walk in here,
good morning everyone, I come in here, and I do
this same thing every day, push all the buttons, set
everything up, dude, the thing authenticate three different times to
(04:05):
get into all my different you know, corporate stuff, which
everyone's trying to hack into if you heard there's a
meeting today with all the admirals and generals and President
Trump and then you know whoever's in charge of the
Department of War. That's what it's about. It's about how
many times I have to authenticate every morning just to
get to the banana debate. Okay, do we find one?
Speaker 2 (04:24):
They failed us once again.
Speaker 1 (04:26):
We don't have no bananas on the fruit plate that
we don't really have in the morning today. Did you
tell the chef to make sure they're bananas here tomorrow?
Speaker 2 (04:35):
Oh, I heard my own echo. There was no one
in there.
Speaker 1 (04:37):
It was just what about the otlooch station? What about
the otload station? I demanded. I wish okay sideways with
the peel, someone said, And then what is this other
person we tried to get a hold of. I'm really
trying to get a hold of someone. I need to
understand how often you eat bananas from the bottom, You
pinch and peel and then you throw away the black part.
(05:01):
That the spiders crawling. I don't want spider crawling in anything.
Stop that French should go teach the monkeys since he
can reason with animals. Thank you, Yes, I should. I
absolutely could now. But the more shocking part of this
debate maybe I eat a banana is in a comment section.
I mean, there are people that just do absolutely insane things, like,
(05:22):
for example, apparently one person peels the whole banana, the
whole thing, throws it away, and then holds the oh,
the raw banana, and then just eats It's like with
their bare hands. Why would you do that. The peel
serves as like a holder for it, so that your
raw fingers don't touch the banana. Why would you just
(05:44):
peel the whole thing and then just eat it raw?
That's eating ice cream with your hands, like you wouldn't
do that.
Speaker 2 (05:50):
That's like biting the string cheese just like in half.
Speaker 1 (05:52):
Right, then just go buy a block of cheese. You
got the string cheese, You string it right, everybody knows
you string it.
Speaker 2 (05:58):
Yeah, I don't know.
Speaker 3 (05:59):
This just said if you pinch the butt, the skin
just pops off.
Speaker 2 (06:03):
So I really wish we had a banana.
Speaker 1 (06:04):
Hold on a second, this this might be this might
be history. Is it Caysia?
Speaker 4 (06:09):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (06:10):
It is.
Speaker 1 (06:11):
A second it says you you're calling from Norfolk, Virginia?
Is that true?
Speaker 4 (06:14):
That is correct?
Speaker 1 (06:18):
One we got one. This is crazy. Yeah, we wanted
we were on in min not we weren't sure, but
we are. And then but that but Norfolk, I thought
for sure there was no way that they actually turned
us on there every morning, because apparently they do good morning,
well welcome, Well, thank you very much for that. How
do you what is the proper way to eat a banana?
(06:38):
You obviously are a genius.
Speaker 4 (06:41):
Well yeah, you know, but technically you're supposed to. Well,
so they say you're supposed to pinch it ut and
then yes, it does pop open. Now I don't do
it that way because that's where the little hard bit is.
So like when you do it the opposite way, you
can pinch that off and not eat that. But that's
what they say. You pinched the butt it opens and yeah.
Speaker 1 (07:04):
Okay, relax, all right, I need to come to Norfolk.
Apparently I need to get that on the top of
the list. I've been trying to go to mine now,
but no, I need to come pinch the button Norfolk. Apparently. Hey,
have a good day, Thank you so much for listening.
Please tell me tell five people today and that will
be five. That will be five total, six total listeners.
(07:26):
If we have that thank you. You know, I will
thank you, have a good day bye. It's amazing. Look,
I mean, we really are. Was beginning to wonder if
these other places are really actually airing the show or not.
Speaker 2 (07:38):
She's a plant. I think she might be.
Speaker 1 (07:40):
She might be, because there's no way for us to know. Really.
I mean, I guess we could. You know, we could
go to the website and it says we're there, But
I don't know. Apparently there are people that eat the
whole banana too, with the peel. I'm learning in the
comment section of red It this morning, and you asked
how often I eat a banana? I eat it. I
probably eat a bana three times a week because it's
my pre run energy.
Speaker 2 (08:01):
Okay, look at you.
Speaker 1 (08:02):
Yeah, I mean why are you not eating more bananas?
Speaker 2 (08:05):
I don't.
Speaker 1 (08:05):
Yeah, you don't like.
Speaker 6 (08:06):
A banana, not really in sorry Jason, because he's actually
allergic to p Yeah.
Speaker 1 (08:12):
So I don't peel them at all. If you touch them,
you'll have a problem it just if I eat them.
Speaker 7 (08:17):
I don't know why, like a world where I would
peel it and then not eat it lest I'm feeling
it for somebody else.
Speaker 1 (08:22):
I grab the banana in the middle. I snap it
in half and then remove the two halves from the
now broken peel.
Speaker 2 (08:29):
Oh, you should be arrested.
Speaker 1 (08:31):
What on earth? I used to open it from the
A side all my life and was frustrated that the
banana would sometimes be very hard to open that way
or end up making that side mushy. When I heard
you can do it from the B side, which I
think is the butt side, I try to. It's super easy,
works every time, doesn't damage the inside. I've been doing
it ever since. Apparently it is much easier and messier
(08:56):
to open it from the butt side. This is wild.
Speaker 6 (08:59):
I feel like they've been into us our whole lives.
Look at the cartoons like they always have it peeled
from that little top piece.
Speaker 1 (09:06):
Okay, And then then someone else said my reasons after
reading all the comments, I am not a monkey a
b I love the feeling of breaking the antenna. The
antenna end. Three. When you leave bananas outside on a
flat surface, the weakest part is the antenna, so a
little hole appears naturally in the antenna, and then you
can peel the banana. Also, bananas are usually joined to
(09:29):
the stem where I live, so you have to take
the banana from it. Sometimes the antenna remains joined to
the stem. So okay, this is very elaborate. Thank you
sir for writing a whole yeah really on this whole
thing ban on us. I honestly, I truly did not
know there was another way to do it. Really until
this morning. I had no idea.
Speaker 2 (09:49):
I'm a little monkey maybe, Okay.
Speaker 1 (09:52):
The biggest stories If you think about it a bana,
it's kind of a weird thing. It's kind of a
strange process of eating. Someone takes it. I eat my
banana with eye contact. I mean, I'm not one of
these people that, like, I know men that like insist
on breaking it because it looks too fatic for them.
Is it can get over yourself, moron. I just eat
the banana, like come on.
Speaker 2 (10:13):
Or like laundrink out of a straw.
Speaker 1 (10:15):
Really, dude, like what are you? What are you really
afraid of us finding out about you? Is what I think?
Someone else said that they bite the banana and then
peel it with like they fight off part of it
and then peel it with their mouth. What what kind
of barbarians are out there like than me? I honestly
(10:35):
was I was shook by this. I was shook at
this way, like, wait a minute, were you talking about
you grabbed the antenna, you you know, break it, peel
it down, eat the banana throat. That's what you do.
And then someone else said, the only way that I
would eat a banana is peeled in a bowl with
ice cream, nuts, and hot chocolate. Well, yeah, yeah, banana split.
I mean, but it's it's a banana there, so it's healthy.
Speaker 8 (10:54):
Right, it's salad, right, there's fruit, there's fruit, there's dairy's
chocolate as I think good for like your blood pressure,
cardiovascular health.
Speaker 1 (11:04):
I think I read somewhere, so there it's fine. So
how are you going to feel now when you go
to Chipotle or whatever and you go to close out?
And now, apparently there are gesture pass codes that could
replace a pin or just the simple tap. So researchers
have developed develop a touchless passwords system that could let
(11:25):
people authorize purchases by swiping their credit card up in
the air, tapping twice, sliding horizontally, and then swiping right.
It's a gesture combination that's much harder to observe or
copy than traditional codes. The system is called NFC jest.
It recognizes nine different gestures, including swipes, taps, and slides,
allowing users to unlock devices or access secure areas by
(11:48):
performing specific movements. So, now unlock my phone. It would
be like I'm moving my hands, like.
Speaker 2 (11:54):
Yeah, you guys can't see. He's a very well on YouTube.
Speaker 1 (11:58):
Nobody would be that's it. I don't want people so
they hack me, so only but my problems. I wouldn't
remember what I did. It's like me to be coordinated
enough to remember the gesture, right. People gonna look crazy
when they're doing this. The goal is to enhance security
while providing a more intuitive and user friendly experience by
utilizing gestures. This system aims to offer a seamless and
(12:21):
secure method of authentication that could replace the need for
traditional pins. So now I got to come in here
and do like a TikTok dance every morning to authenticate
all my different accounts and make the radio station work correct.
I mean, this is crazy, and in other news and
this is not funny, but it just sounds funny. Fifty
eight million pounds of corn dogs and other sausage on
a stick products are being recalled across the US because
(12:43):
pieces of wood might be embedded in the batter. People
are reporting injuries. Fifty eight million pounds of corn dogs
and sausage on a stick. It seems like a lot
like it seems like I didn't realize there were fifty
eight million pounds of corn dogs laying around. I mean,
I don't remember sm that I purchased a corn Maybe
that's why, because I can't remeber the last time when
(13:04):
wass at a grocery store, I'm like, I need it.
Where's the call? Where's the corn dog section? I buy
them often from Trader Joe's. You buy corn dogs, yes,
because the corn dogs? So yeah, I better be careful.
But they have turkey corn dogs. I can finally eat them. Hey,
my one of my proudest flexes. I'm not really proud
of it. I just refuse now to be different, to
have it be different. I've never been to a Trader Joe's. Now.
(13:25):
This is not on purpose. It's just because there isn't
one that's convenient for me to visit. And so it's
sort of like Star Wars movies, where now I'm not
going to see one, and I don't think I'm going
to go to Trader Joe's as good for my life
as it could be because I can now just keep
that flex going that I've never been to one. But
I see these people making fun of Trader Joe cashiers
(13:48):
on TikTok. Are they really that passionate about like one?
Speaker 3 (13:53):
And then if you're crying a little secret like if
you're having a day, they'll give you free flowers. But yes,
they are required to comment I don't know on how
many at least one of your purchases and like be
really like they make really like I did a good
little job grocery shopping. That's probably why I go there
because I need someone to tell me I'm doing a
good job. Because literally they'll be like the sweet tato
(14:14):
oh my clip for her everybody, the dramatics and not.
Speaker 1 (14:19):
Really because that's what that's what the TikTok videos would be, like,
oh my god, you got the you got the turkey
tofurky lettuce.
Speaker 2 (14:26):
Rasp, Oh my god, slap they are so what are you?
Speaker 1 (14:30):
Oh you're incredible.
Speaker 6 (14:32):
That's how the customers act too, because Kaylee is their spokesperson,
went to this whole thing.
Speaker 2 (14:37):
When I first joined the show, she was like, you
need to go. She was bringing me products people will.
Speaker 1 (14:42):
Act like it's this secret society that like your eyes
will be open once you look in, like some sort
of religious experience, like like if I go to one
of those churches where the guy wears easies or something,
you know, you know, I mean, but I I have
no issue with it. I'm sure I would enjoy it
the experience. But I I just dare one.
Speaker 7 (15:00):
I guess there's not one too far from me. But
it's just never been Carbabe. It's just but I'm not
I'm not driving there. I'm not driving there, all right.
You don't get a started, No, don't get started anyway.
So I don't think it's your corn dogs though.
Speaker 1 (15:12):
These are the State Fair corn dogs on a stick,
Jimmy Dean pancakes and sausage on a stick. Texas based
Hillshire Brands, a subsidiary of Tyson Food. If you have
one of those in now, you might want to Jimmy.
Speaker 2 (15:23):
Why did you have to put pancakes and sausage on
a stock?
Speaker 1 (15:25):
I don't know that, I don't I'm not sure that
I hate this idea. One I have realized that was
part of the corn dog family. I thought that was
a sausage on a stick. With a pancake. I didn't
realize it corn dog. I didn't realize it was the
same thing.
Speaker 2 (15:38):
Why do we need that?
Speaker 1 (15:40):
Why don't we need that? It's breakfast on a stick,
a home on one minute, No, it's on a stick. No,
hold on, no, no, I need you to be careful now,
because you know, a hot dog and the dips and
the thing like, it's not really something that I'm not
a child. I don't eat it at home. If I
had a child, maybe I'm sure Polly likes that may whatever.
If I supposed if I went to the state fair
(16:01):
and I maybe had ingested a gummy by accident before
I went, that would be something that I would like.
But I'm not at home cooking them up. I'm just
not And there's nothing against it. I'm just I'm just not.
Speaker 2 (16:11):
They're delicious.
Speaker 1 (16:12):
You're a coin dog buyer.
Speaker 2 (16:13):
I used to eat them religiously as a child. My
mom has to hide them from me.
Speaker 1 (16:16):
Well, you're a hot dog.
Speaker 4 (16:18):
A dog.
Speaker 2 (16:19):
I'll not put like some pancake on top of it.
Speaker 1 (16:21):
Whatever. Oh I'm eating, Actually I don't. That's not that.
They need to make sure they fix this. Pro get
the wood out of those things. Immediately because that is amazing.
On AI actress is apparently one of the hottest sensations
in all of the talent agency. An AI actress is
sparking outrage from the ranks of human performers. The synthetic
talent known as Tilly Norwood was created by an actor
(16:43):
in an AI studio. The founder of the studio says
he thinks that she will be the next Scarlett Johansson
or Natalie Portman, and that she's very close to getting
a representation deal with an agency. They're all fighting over her.
The acting community has called on performers to drop the
agency that science her. Norwood's creator says that she is
not a replacement for human beings, but rather a creative work,
(17:04):
a piece of art. But if you look at a
picture of Tilly mc norwood or whatever, she looks like
a person. It's like an attractive person. And here we are.
Would you watch a full movie with with But here's
the thing before you say no, have you ever watched
The Simpsons? Have you ever watched anything animated? Of course
you have, so you would watch The answer is yes, no,
(17:25):
it's different when not. But how is it an AI person?
I'm standing on that that we know to be AI.
How is that any different than watching an animated because the.
Speaker 6 (17:33):
Voice actor is getting paid, thank you for that. There
is a human brain that is being hired and paid.
Speaker 1 (17:39):
Well, there was a human brain that made brain that
made the character and is telling the character what it is.
It's a computer AI, but somebody had to make it
on it.
Speaker 2 (17:46):
Let me say something.
Speaker 6 (17:47):
She start out in a movie, next thing, you know
that half on a radio show. I don't have time
for this.
Speaker 2 (17:52):
I'm not doing this. So no, she's canceled in my book.
Speaker 1 (17:56):
I'm gonna call my agent. I need an AI approval arrangement. Yeah,
I need to put that in there.
Speaker 6 (18:01):
It's scary though, Like I'm watching her performer right now,
her in her video, and they like a person.
Speaker 3 (18:07):
Everything looks very real. They put her on the red
carpet photo. She doesn't need to be on the red
carpet in her photos?
Speaker 4 (18:13):
Why not?
Speaker 1 (18:15):
The biggest story she's just in station. Everyone's trying to
sign her right.
Speaker 2 (18:19):
There, Holly.
Speaker 1 (18:21):
We got people in l A right now. They're working
there underway to but it's to make a coffee in
Starbucks and they can't get signed. But nearly mctorwood over
whatever her name is. Tilly Norwood is signed by by
CIA Agency. It's crazy. A Waldhub study has ranked the
top US cities for foodies. And this is actually pretty
controversial because New York and Chicago were not included, and
(18:43):
that they did that on purpose, right, they did that
on purpose, because this is why we're talking about it now,
because AI, because Aim, I'm dating Tilly Norwood. Now that
might be a great relationship for me. But if you
make a list of the best food in the country
and you don't put New York and Chicago on it,
then you're you're asking people to say, do what I'm
(19:03):
doing right now, which you talk about it. So it
was on purpose. Yeah, Surprisingly, New York City, renowned for
its diverse food culture, ranked twenty six, primarily due to
high costs and lower affordability. Miami, Portland, San Francisco, Austin,
and Seattle. These are the top five cities for food
in the US. Apparently New Orleans not on there.
Speaker 2 (19:26):
That's crazy.
Speaker 1 (19:27):
New Orleans is good. I'm not sure. A diversity I
think would be a thing. I'm not sure how diverse.
I mean. You could certainly get all the New Orleans
style food, you know, like the gumbo and whatever.
Speaker 2 (19:37):
Diversity they got steakhouses.
Speaker 1 (19:39):
Well, but I mean, I mean as diverse as Miami.
I don't know. I don't know the answer. As divers
as San Francisco. Yeah, I mean, you know not so yeah,
I mean I mean cultures. So I'm not talking about
like kinds of food. I don't know. I don't know
what the answer is, but they're not on the list.
McDonald's is rebooting a fan favorite game after a decade
in an effort to get you to go buy stuff.
There once a cultural phenomenon, the McDonald's Monopoly. The monopoly
(20:04):
game is back now. It's not going to hit the
same from me, because while it is starting on October
sixth for unlimited time, it's not going to be in
the way that many of us remember. The physical board
is not in place now. It's all on your app,
so you don't get the you know, if you're a
child of the nineties or I guess maybe two thousands.
Maybe they did they do in the twenty tens, maybe,
(20:24):
but you've got an actual board, like a piece of
paper that was a monopoly board from McDonald's, and then
you had to go and get you know, the products
that had the little things on them, and you got
to peel them off the cup or peel them off
the fries and then match them to the board. It
was a very tacticle experience. I liked it. I remember
there's this famous story in my family that I was
(20:44):
very young and we drove past McDonald's and said, Mom,
we got to stop in there because I want to
get the Monopoly board. I want to play Monopoly, and shit,
I am not taking you to that restaurant so that
you can play some gimmick game whatever. So but most
things when I was young, I think they were getting
divorced at the time. My parents said she felt guilty.
I probably brought it up. I was probably like, can't
remember when dad cheated on you? And then she turned
the car around and took me to McDonald's. I don't think.
(21:05):
I don't think I phrased it like that, but I was.
I got a lot of things out of the divorce.
I think I got a bike, pretty sure, I got
a gaming system. I got a Gerbil out of the divorce.
I mean, come on, any any children of divorced parents
knows that there is some guilt, and usually that results
in some sort of bribe. So we went to the McDonald's.
We pull in the thing and I ordered whatever and
(21:25):
get a little bored, and we pulushed, let me see
this thing, and so we peel it off and whatever,
and she's like, looks at it and does it. This
is kind of cool. And for the Fredericks are gamblers.
We have gambling in our DNA. So she pulls around
and buys ten large fries because she wants more of
the little things. And then we went like every day
and so but for some reason, we'd never want a
(21:46):
million dollars or a car or whatever it was. But
that was That was the fun though, is you get
to peel it off and the thing. I guess it's
all now in the app, which I don't know, not
quite the same. This is a couple random stories to
finish here, but reading Rain was coming back. The classic
Amias series, produced by Buffalo Toronto Public Media out of Buffalo,
New York, is being revived on YouTube on kid Zuko,
(22:09):
which is a kid focused YouTube channel operated by Sony Pictures.
Michael Threetz. He is a librarian and digital creator, and
he will be the host of the new version of
reading Rainbow. LeVar Burton hosted the first one. There's a
little song Butterflies in the Sky. I'm not going to
sing it by myself. You have no idea what I'm
(22:29):
talking about?
Speaker 6 (22:30):
Yes, about myself?
Speaker 1 (22:33):
Did your parents? Did your parents? Letigame meter the whole
thing and swallow ita. What kind of childhood? I want
to know what kind of childhood you had? This is crazy.
And a Vietnamese man who hasn't cut his fingernails in
thirty years earned a Guinness World Record and they look
exactly like you think they would. Guinness World Record when
they were measured at a total of nineteen feet and
(22:54):
six inches long. I don't know how to say this
guy's name. I don't want to be Lulu lu Earn
the record for longest fingernails and a pair of hands
when his nails were measured at longer than the height
of an average adult giraffe. He says that maintaining the
long nails is a lot of work. If it rains,
I have to keep them dry. They get wet, they
will soften and fall off in a credited place. If
(23:16):
someone bumps into them, they'll be broken for sure. So
I have to protect them Furthermore, when working, I have
to be extremely careful climbing up and down the scaffolding.
I guess the guy's like a roofer or something. Every
move has to be deliberate, and I mean really careful.
I don't know how you do it with like the
half inch long nails, like the French nails or whatever.
People get. I don't know how you guys do that.
(23:37):
This dude's got, you know, they just they like roll.
I don't even know how to describe it. They they curl.
So I don't know how this guy's doing much anything.
How does he brush his teeth? How does he do
how does he do that? I'm concerned. It's National Love
People Day, which is why not it's apparently a dirty
parody of it, which of course there is because it's
(23:58):
the interwebs. But yeah, this is crying.
Speaker 2 (24:02):
I can go twice.
Speaker 1 (24:05):
Take a look. It's a book reading rain. It was nice.
Can you missed out.
Speaker 2 (24:19):
Reading rain?
Speaker 1 (24:21):
Okay, assume they got to bring back the theme, right,
you know, it'll be like em.
Speaker 5 (24:30):
A book a reading rain, like Dead Mouse's Entertainment a
bread show.
Speaker 3 (24:42):
I also think that that song went viral on TikTok
during COVID.
Speaker 2 (24:47):
Do you guys remember that that's where I heard it. Yeah,
do you remember?
Speaker 3 (24:50):
And then like you would use the effect like there
was like some weird effect that it would put you
into space or do some trippy thing, and you guys
remember that.
Speaker 1 (24:57):
It was a nice show. It was like, if I
remember directly, the premise that he would read a book
to you, and then it was you were like, look,
you could look at the adventures you can go on
if you you know, read, that's beautiful, which it didn't
really work on me. I didn't like reading until I
was like thirty five. But still, you know, you go
to library and you could look at all the different
things you could learn and do and experience and whatever else.
That's such a nice thing. I don't know how you
(25:19):
never saw that. I know you're younger than me, but
it was on for a long time.
Speaker 2 (25:22):
But if Klin saw, and she's younger than me, I
don't know, right we missed.
Speaker 3 (25:25):
I don't think I count like I think my soul's
like nine thousand, So I don't know which body I
saw it and I saw the eating room.
Speaker 1 (25:32):
Maybe we need to do like a like a segment
or a series where you just get to relive your childhood.
And then people are saying they can't do the monopoly
game like they used to anymore because of that whole
thing about the people who stole the pieces from McDonald's
a documentary about it on Netflix. They sold the pieces
so that they could win. So now it has to
be digital, so nobody cheats. I don't know, it just doesn't.
(25:52):
I don't think it's going to hit the same, but so.
Speaker 2 (25:53):
Be it, all right, so be it. You got this
as you know.
Speaker 3 (25:58):
Bad Bunny has been announced as the headliner for the
super Bowl halftime show on February eighth in Santa Clara,
and his performance will make history as the first super
Bowl halftime show entirely in Spanish, which is pretty cool,
with the Puerto Rican rapper saying that his performance is
a tribute to his heritage. He said, this is for
people my culture are history and emphasize the significance of
(26:20):
representing Latin music on such a prominent stage. Now, the Internet,
I don't know, have you guys been seeing the internet
about this, Like some people are losing their.
Speaker 1 (26:28):
Minds because he wears women's clothing. They won't watch it
because it's not going to be the English Oh no face.
Just go to Facebook and you'll see which people you
didn't know were awful.
Speaker 3 (26:39):
A few gentleman reminders. Everyone is entitled to their own opinion. However,
I don't know that you always need to share that
on a public platform, but do you, baby?
Speaker 2 (26:47):
Also, he is a citizen of this country.
Speaker 3 (26:51):
I've seen a lot of misinformation about the Atla Rican correct, Yes,
which is the territory of the US.
Speaker 8 (26:56):
Right.
Speaker 3 (26:56):
People are like, oh, they're trying to do a weird
international you guys, he's a SI.
Speaker 2 (27:00):
I just want to remind everybody of that.
Speaker 3 (27:01):
And also, unfortunately they cannot cater a halftime show just
to you specifically, so some years you won't like it,
and others you will.
Speaker 1 (27:10):
Yeah, turn it off and then put your favorite Steely
Dan YouTube on or.
Speaker 2 (27:13):
Something, and then you know, Buffalo Chicken did. It's okay.
Speaker 3 (27:16):
It's going to be okay, right, And if you wanted
Taylor Swift, she will have her time. This is Benito's time,
and a lot of people are happy about it moving
right along.
Speaker 1 (27:24):
And I was thinking about it. That may be in
Nashville Super Bowl because they're building a new stadium, so
it's possible I don't know if it's a big enough
market for it, but.
Speaker 2 (27:30):
Maybe well, the mayor put in a bid for twenty
twenty nine, so I don't. I doubt he'll get Wichita,
So I don't.
Speaker 1 (27:38):
Everybody. I don't know. For whatever reason, it's that this
is it's the first middle market down that comes to mind.
Everything I'll pass it might not put in a bit.
I don't know what. Honestly, I've been standing all business
with mine. Not for a long time. I've been calling
Roger Goodell. I don't know. You guys are overlooking mine.
Not for the super Bowl. It's an obvious choice. Yes,
there are only four hotels. I know that because I've
(27:59):
looked recently. But that should be fine. We can camp.
It could be like Coachella. It meets the NFL.
Speaker 2 (28:04):
Hello, listen. Also, one thing about Swifty's is we're gonna clown.
We're gonna get everything wrong. So that's just my theory.
I'm probably wrong, you think issue by the.
Speaker 1 (28:11):
Way, starting to interrupt you with the minor super Bowl?
Is it February is not. It's a very cold time
and mine not.
Speaker 2 (28:16):
Okay, we'll go on side. Put your jacket not, Michael,
We'll make it happen.
Speaker 3 (28:20):
Yeah, that's all right, continued, that's okay. Speaking of Nashville,
this shocked me yesterday. Nicole Kidman and singer Keith Urban
have separated after nineteen years of marriage, having.
Speaker 2 (28:33):
Me, is that a lot of No, I'm dead, You're
just finding out now, Isn't it heartbreaking? Heartbreaking?
Speaker 1 (28:40):
At however, I thought that they had come through like
some of his addiction stuff, and I thought that I
thought they had made it through a lot of that,
but maybe not.
Speaker 3 (28:48):
I mean, he credits her with like saving him. Yeah, right,
she really was there for him. So that's why this
is particularly heartbreaking for me. They just celebrated nineteen years
in July. I know Key's about to cry. I am
so up, you'll cry even more. Word is she did
not want the split. She has been actively trying to
save their marriage since they chose to live apart at
the beginning of summer. She's been taking care of their daughters,
(29:09):
Sunday Rose and Faith Margaret in their shared Nashville home
while he stays in a separate home nearby. He's currently
on tour, though, will perform in Hershey, Pennsylvania, on October second.
Next This is her second marriage after her eleven year
marriage to Tom Cruise. This is his first and like
we talked about, he has, you know, gone to rehab
and often said like she saved me.
Speaker 2 (29:30):
She's been there for me.
Speaker 3 (29:31):
We don't know what happens behind closed doors, but that
one that was a tough one for me when I
found out yesterday, and I'm sorry that I had to
break the news and really quick. The Simpsons movie sequel
has officially started production.
Speaker 2 (29:43):
Fred, you were just talking about the Simpsons.
Speaker 3 (29:44):
The movie is set to be released on July twenty
third of twenty twenty seven, two decades after the first film.
The show was turned into The Simpsons Movie back in
July in two thousand and seven, and the film earned
an impressive five hundred and thirty six million at the
global box office from the original seventy five million dollar budget,
which is crazy.
Speaker 2 (30:01):
I guess you can do more when you literally draw
the actors.
Speaker 3 (30:04):
But the plot for the second movie, we don't know
anything about that if you're a Simpsons fan, and the
story will build upon though I do know the first one.
So if you are a fan, you're gonna have to
wait a little while, but you are getting a second
movie By the way, a if you want to see
what we're wearing Fred Show Radio on YouTube. Also, if
you want to catch up on anything you missed after
the show from today or any other day, type the
(30:26):
Fred Shoe on demand on the free iHeartRadio app