Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is the Fred Show. Each time.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
Celebrate the holiday season with Mariah Carey's Christmas Time in
Las Vegas this November twenty eight through December thirteenth, Adobe
Live at Park MGM, and you could be going a
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Night's Day at Park MGM December twelfth through to fourteenth
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(00:24):
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confirmation text will be sent standard message and data rates
may apply. It's all thanks to Live Nation.
Speaker 1 (00:33):
The Fresh Show is on.
Speaker 2 (00:37):
Hey morning, everybody, It's Thursday. Joe's second The French Show
is here almost the weekend. We're so close I can
almost taste him, but not quite but kind of but
sort of. Hi, Kaylen, Hi, Jason Brown, Hi, Paulina, Hi,
k K Shelby Shelley, is he here? Five fifty in this
showdown next hour you could win that money they get
(00:58):
snap for nine Game Win Streak five Pod culture questions.
Bebahamin's here on the phone in the text eight five five,
five nine one one o three five This morning Throwback
throw Down named that tune battle will do that waiting
by the phone why does somebody get ghosted? Of course
money with Shelley This Hour the Entertainmer of for biggest
stories of the day and blogs all coming up? What
are you working on?
Speaker 1 (01:17):
Ka a very big reunion, as well as one of
the Kardashians saying that someone put a hit out on them,
which is just not what I had in my Bengo
card for this year.
Speaker 2 (01:26):
Oh yeah, so I didn't have it on my Bengo
card either. But you know it's all good. This time
tomorrow all shall be revealed. All of the swifties will
be satiated. You all will know, you all will know
what's on this CD that she wants you to buy
thirteen times because it's different colors.
Speaker 3 (01:44):
Yeah, I can't wait?
Speaker 2 (01:46):
Are you so excited?
Speaker 4 (01:47):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (01:47):
I'm like trying to plan out, like how I'm gonna
do this, like because you really have to like pre
plan Like am I just gonna stay up all night?
Speaker 2 (01:55):
So at midnight at five the iHeartRadio appen wherever you
could listen at mid.
Speaker 3 (02:00):
Right here, we're going to play the album in full.
Speaker 2 (02:02):
Oh so just listen to the radio then, or the
I Heard Radio Web. I don't know there are other places,
But why would you do that. There's no need for that. Yeah, okay,
so it just appears and then you just get play
and just sit back and just let it happen.
Speaker 3 (02:14):
Yeah, and it frustrates me.
Speaker 5 (02:16):
I don't know if you feel this way, Kaylin, But
like I want to know the lyrics, like from Jump
sometimes I can't understand what she's saying or like I
need to like read it, you know, but no one
knows the lyrics, Like they're not on the web anywhere,
Like you can't look them up.
Speaker 3 (02:30):
It's like everyone's all figuring it out at the same time.
Speaker 1 (02:32):
Well, she wrote some of them on a mirror and lipstick,
and I'm trying to decode that, right, you know.
Speaker 2 (02:37):
So now even if you like start one of the
songs and then you don't think you like it, will
you skip or will you not? So you'll sit through
even a song that you may not think is your favorite.
Speaker 1 (02:48):
We're on the track, we're listening to it.
Speaker 2 (02:50):
Yeah, I can learn every word or noise I heard
that's actually track seven. Track seven. She does it in
like different octaves. Is crazy. I don't know how she's
able to do.
Speaker 1 (02:57):
That, and then we wouldn't know what it sounds like.
In full. Well, I'm just you know, I mean, okay,
I like it.
Speaker 2 (03:03):
I don't understand I like a lot of musicians, and
I don't necessarily like every song on every album they've
ever made. So but I'm just wondering if you just
you just sit through it because it's like, well, it's
part of the art, so I have to hear it all.
Speaker 5 (03:14):
Even the Taylor songs that like I I guess aret
my favorites, I still probably sat there.
Speaker 3 (03:19):
And learned everywhere to it. So and then i'd be.
Speaker 5 (03:21):
Like little swifty yeah rings, okay, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2 (03:26):
Well yeah, I mean usually there are ninety seven of them,
so like this time, only thirteen though, right, yes, thirteen.
Speaker 6 (03:32):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (03:32):
She was very clear that there's no more songs on
this album. But I really do think we're getting reputation
vault tracks. I don't know if that means anything to you,
but you asked, oh, we're getting a vault. Hear that,
Kiki open the vault. We'll getting the vault.
Speaker 7 (03:45):
I can't wait.
Speaker 2 (03:46):
Yeah, we get in the vault tracks. Man, what are
you going to be doing at midnight? Because I know
what I'm going to be doing. I'm going to be listening.
Oh no, No, I'm not a liar like you are.
I'm going to be sound asleep. I'm going to be
sound asleep and then I'm gonna wake up, and I'm
gonna let you guys tell me all about it and
then tell me where I need to start and how
I need to You.
Speaker 1 (04:03):
Know, this is your era.
Speaker 2 (04:04):
No, I'm excited. I'm excited to hear it. I am,
but I'm not I probably will sleep instead of needing
to be the first in the world to hear it,
because I have this sneaky suspicion I'm going to be
hearing a lot of it.
Speaker 1 (04:16):
Yeah, for a long time to come. So yeah, that's good.
Speaker 2 (04:20):
All right. So I guess more schools are cracking down
on cell phones, which is not surprising because they're distracting
and I can't imagine having gone to school and everybody
had a phone and a texting and looking at you know,
whatever you're looking at, and not to mention all the
social media distraction and TikTok and everything else. I feel
for the teachers, I really do. And a lot of
you listen to us, I know, because it's like as
(04:41):
if it's not hard enough to get them. I kid
to pay attention. Now you've get all these other things
computers and iPads and it's like an old fart now,
but like, honestly, we didn't have that. I mean, it
was like you had to either not pay attention or
pay attention those what your choice is. And then sometimes
we get to the computer lab. Oh yeah, the computer lab,
which was a room with all the computer in it.
And for those who don't know what that is, but
(05:02):
then then that would you were supposed to use a
computer then.
Speaker 1 (05:04):
But then when you left, no, I forgot it was because.
Speaker 2 (05:07):
It was a laboratory. That's why. However, a lot of
schools have cell phone bands in place, I guess during
school hours, at least eighteen states to The goal is simple,
keep kids focused, but gen Z has found a clever
way around the rules. Instead of texting on their phones,
students are flocking to Google Docs, turning what was once
a boring writing tool into a digital chat room. Well
(05:30):
that's like Paulinis diary. We use Google Docs for Paulina diary.
She just writes down every single thing she did every day.
Speaker 1 (05:37):
Today's thought is I leveled maybe pants?
Speaker 7 (05:39):
But I did write that down yet?
Speaker 2 (05:41):
No? Yeah, okay, Well if you could get that on
there immediately.
Speaker 1 (05:43):
She had her bowel movements for us. You know it's tomorrow.
Speaker 2 (05:47):
No, no, it's amazing. Hopefully only on Friday.
Speaker 1 (05:53):
No, I don't know every day, so come on, so
we do know.
Speaker 2 (05:56):
Yeah, just as a matter of fact, they do. That's
not even a joke. During class, groups of teams will
open a shared document and type back and forth, erasing
and editing in real time, much like AOL instant messenger
chat rooms that their parents once used in the two thousands.
How old are we? The workarounds spread quickly on TikTok,
where students show off their secret group chats hidden in
(06:17):
plain sight on school laptops. For them, it's not just rebellion,
it's a revival of Y two K era internet culture.
Speaker 1 (06:24):
And not everyone is amused.
Speaker 2 (06:25):
Teachers and parents worry that the hack could lead to
cheating and bullying and more distraction. This is dangerous to
me because now you've got multiple people's thoughts in the
dock as if you know before. Now this is going
to sound really old timing, but like in the nineties,
you would write on paper and pass the note on paper,
and then a teacher might grab it and read it
(06:45):
and sometimes read it out loud, but that would be
between two people, and it was only as much as
you could put on a small, little, tiny little corner
of paper that you ripped. Now we're going to have
the whole narrative is going to be in there.
Speaker 1 (06:56):
We were writing lists of our crushes and the teachers
got ahold of them. It was sole embarrassing. But we
were ranking the boys, boy like that we had crushes
on yeah, and they run them and oh no, it
has to.
Speaker 7 (07:08):
Be so fun.
Speaker 1 (07:09):
We used to rank the teachers, you know, like cuteness.
Why was the Spanish teacher always hot? Like I don't
know that's true?
Speaker 8 (07:16):
And hot?
Speaker 2 (07:16):
We had hot Spanish teachers? We had no, Yeah we did,
and you're right.
Speaker 1 (07:19):
Yeah we did.
Speaker 2 (07:20):
Actually but a five, five, five, nine, one one or
three five. I asked the question before some of you
guys got here, but it was what do you remember
a rule being in school that you had to work
around for? And I was thinking about this because I
don't I don't think we got away with much in school,
but there were there just weren't many of us. That
was the problem is I graduated with forty two people.
(07:41):
They were like, what does that mean they were one
hundred and twenty kids in the high school, Like they
knew if you weren't there because they could physically see,
like they where's Christopher? Where is he?
Speaker 1 (07:50):
You know?
Speaker 2 (07:51):
Because they were like ten people in every class. I mean,
so if you weren't there, you know you didn't Now
college was different. I mean the professor would really have
no idea if you were were not attending at all.
But what comes to Mike, because you said you knew
you thought of some right away.
Speaker 7 (08:05):
Oh yeah, I was great in high school.
Speaker 1 (08:07):
So what was it?
Speaker 2 (08:07):
What were the work runs? And I want to know
from you guys, so you can call intact the same number. Yeah.
Speaker 9 (08:11):
When I got a car, I used to drive myself
to school, but I was stopping get a little breakfast
from McDonald's first, and I would always be late. So
what I would do is call ahead as my parent
and say, hey, Kiki is going to be late today?
Speaker 2 (08:23):
No can I can? I ask an insensitive question, do
they know your parent was dead? Well?
Speaker 7 (08:27):
No, they have a guardian.
Speaker 2 (08:29):
Okay, I wasn't just that. I I didn't know if
they didn't get the message, you know, they didn't get
the message on the street so you were able to
use your mom's name and sadly.
Speaker 1 (08:38):
She was calling to let you know she's going to
be late.
Speaker 2 (08:41):
No, hold on a second note, now, Kiki, that that
would have been kind of a hack, because like, if
the school hadn't known, you could have signed everything, and
you could have you could have gotten away with this.
How come she never comes to any of her activities?
Speaker 7 (08:54):
No, I was using my sister's name, but I would
call it, so.
Speaker 2 (08:57):
You were doing the same thing. You were just using
a person who was That's funny.
Speaker 9 (09:01):
And then you know I would sign myself in every time.
And kids, this is going to sound really old, but
when we first got cell phones, they were really thin
raizor phones and I used to hide it in between
my textbook. The textbook is a really big book we
had to carry around, right.
Speaker 2 (09:17):
I love that we have to explain it. Do they
even And I know this is going to make me
sound even more old timey? I don't mean to, but
I don't have kids, so I have no reference. Do
they even have books anymore? Is everything on the iPad
or computer?
Speaker 6 (09:27):
Like?
Speaker 1 (09:27):
Do you?
Speaker 2 (09:27):
Because I remember we had to go and this was
in the two thousands. We had to go to the
bookstore and we had to. There was there was you'd
go there like on the week before school started and
they're the teachers. There was like a list of all
the books you needed for every class. And I was
probably like five hundred dollars. I have no idea how much.
And my mom had to buy all the books and
(09:49):
we'd carry out just boxes and books from the bookstore.
You know. It was like, my God, And then you
could sell the books back at the end of the day.
I want that part, and then you could, you know whatever.
Speaker 1 (10:01):
Little you didn't give your mom the money, did you No?
Speaker 10 (10:04):
I also paved my own books, me and my fast
flood check. But then at the end of the year whatever,
I'm over here standing like.
Speaker 1 (10:09):
Who wants a book? I got it for cheaper, Yeah.
Speaker 2 (10:12):
But then does everybody? Then everyone can afford an iPad then,
because I mean those are expensive, so I mean if
you can't, but I realized the iPad could gets you through,
you know, potentially all of high school or all of whatever.
But but you know that's a thousand plus dollars one time,
and then you did you just download all the books?
Is that how it worked?
Speaker 8 (10:29):
I think?
Speaker 9 (10:29):
So they're given the kids think pads and iPads now.
Speaker 2 (10:33):
Oh, oh think they give us think yeah, we're just
like school. So hey Carrie, hi, hi, carry So that
you used to pass notes in school, Well, we.
Speaker 4 (10:44):
Would have a notebook and it would just go pretty
much from girl to girl and then you would just
pass it around during the day or during the week
and it was all there.
Speaker 1 (10:55):
And then oh god, that sounds get caught.
Speaker 2 (10:57):
Yeah, that sounds really dangerous, Like you've you've got volumes
of people's thoughts in there.
Speaker 5 (11:03):
Yes, yes, it.
Speaker 4 (11:05):
Got pretty bad for a while there, but.
Speaker 2 (11:07):
It was fun. Do you still have any of those notebooks?
Because that would be really interesting, I think to go back,
like if you I found a note or a yearbook
from high school at my house last time I was there,
and I read the things that people wrote in there,
and most of it was like, you know, have a
great summer, so you know, you know, I need this
teazy stuff. Yeah whatever, But it was like, oh, man,
you know, I think Becky wrote a heart on it.
(11:28):
I could never get Becky never get with me though,
So why did you write a heart in there? But
I mean, that would be funny to go back and
read it.
Speaker 4 (11:35):
Oh yeah, yeah, one of my friends has them, so
we've gone back and watched or read them.
Speaker 2 (11:40):
But yeah, okay, it was wild, okay, fair enough, thank you, Carrie,
having good day, Okay. So you would sign yourself in
and out, absolutely, and then what else would come to mind?
Speaker 7 (11:49):
I have my phone in my textbook.
Speaker 9 (11:50):
And then I was a class president, so I abuse
that tremendously. So every time I would be in the
hallway roaming, They're like, what class are you supposed to
be and I'm like, oh, I'm doing center for student
council and I would just walk past, like oh.
Speaker 2 (12:05):
We used to that with basketball because we'd have to
leave early to go to like away games, and so
we but apparently we had to leave like two hours
before the early right because we had to you know,
and we were terrible. But it was like, oh yeah,
we gotta we gotta film study, Yeah, we gotta go
stretch out or whatever. It's like, no, you don't. The
teachers are like, it doesn't matter what you do, you're
not gonna win, but okay, go ahead. It's like we
were so bad. We were, Yeah, but we used to
(12:27):
do stuff like that, Oh yeah, yeah, we gotta hey, yeah,
but it's noon. The game is at seven o'clock time. Yeah,
I know, but we got to get going because we
got to get on the bus and it's at least
forty five minutes away, which is that's gonna take it
forty five minutes?
Speaker 1 (12:40):
Hey Jenna, Hey, good morning.
Speaker 6 (12:43):
Hi.
Speaker 2 (12:43):
So how did you get around the rules at school?
Speaker 8 (12:46):
So?
Speaker 11 (12:47):
I would pretend that I was sick, and I would
go to the bathroom and put my head onto the
hand dryer for a little bit, and then I would
go to the nurse's office and tell her that I
don't feel good. She would always put her hand on
our heads first before she touched that temperature, and then
she would have a plate out and then she'd call home.
Speaker 1 (13:08):
That is brilliant.
Speaker 2 (13:09):
I would always just put my hand on my head
and try and make my head warm, thinking that somehow
that would make my temperature grow up. But like, but
usually they would feel your head and then they'd stick
at their mammady in your mouth, you know, to see,
and then you would be like normal because that thing
didn't work what you just did to your head.
Speaker 7 (13:24):
That's smart. The dryer, the lady, the nurse.
Speaker 2 (13:27):
Yeah, oh my gosh, she's so hot. And then the
problem is like like, oh my gosh, she's so hot,
Like we're going to hospital. I just stuck my head
in anything. Never mind, that's smart.
Speaker 1 (13:36):
Yet you always no.
Speaker 11 (13:37):
For filling I head first, and I have five siblings.
I'd like you guys want to get out of school.
Speaker 2 (13:42):
I like it. I like it. Thank you, Jenna. I
have a good day for having me. Uh you got it.
My kindergartener, someone text it has a chrome book. It
weighs half as much as he does, and he has
to bring it home every day. O, your kindergartener has
a chromebook?
Speaker 1 (13:57):
What do you what do you like?
Speaker 7 (13:59):
They come out the womb knowing how to use the phones.
Speaker 1 (14:02):
Yeah, they're creepy, like yeah, no one.
Speaker 7 (14:04):
Has talked them. They just know that's true.
Speaker 2 (14:07):
All the books are digital, and so is the syllabus
and study peck. You have to pay for all of it.
It's still very expensive. Well, yeah, you know they didn't
get around that. You know, they didn't get around making
money on this, Like, even though they don't have to
print it anymore, you know, they didn't get around that
they're still making money on this stuff. I went back
to college at the age of twenty seven. Now, and
everything is online six e books. I don't like it.
Speaker 1 (14:29):
Wow, it's so interesting because when my sister broke her wrist,
she was kind of screwed because she still wrote a
lot of stuff down, So I wonder what she was writing.
Speaker 10 (14:37):
Then.
Speaker 2 (14:38):
What the kids must not know is that most teachers
have access to what the students are doing. I can
see what every student's doing on their chromebook. I can
close out of tabs, I can look at their open
docs and track the history of everything that they've typed.
This heck is not so sneaky or effective. So you
had crazy You went to Catholic school, so you had
crazy rules. Jason.
Speaker 5 (14:56):
Yeah, it was more like how you get around, like
the uniform rules, because like your hair, like for guys
couldn't be touching your ears, like they had to be
shorter than that. So we would like tuck our hair
like behind our ears so that when it would always
be the lunch line. So when everyone was lining up
for lunchline, they would check to make sure that every
piece of your uniform like like was according to code,
(15:17):
Like you'd have a belt on every day.
Speaker 1 (15:18):
So like thank goodness, I.
Speaker 3 (15:20):
Know, thank god.
Speaker 5 (15:21):
So I would like untuck my shirt a lot, so
it would sort of like fold over so you couldn't
see my but I wanted to wear slide so I
made sure that, like my pants were long enough so
that you couldn't see that. I didn't have a back
of my shoe because that was part of the uniform.
Speaker 3 (15:34):
Like it was crazy.
Speaker 8 (15:36):
Wow, Yeah, you were so sneaky, like you were slides
right and everything, according to Jason, But it turns out
you were a miscreant.
Speaker 2 (15:51):
It turns out that you were just constantly breaking the rules.
Speaker 3 (15:53):
We have the guilt somehow still got in, you know,
that's sure.
Speaker 2 (15:57):
And my mom went togetheric school like to what I
guess would have been the sick Uh. Yeah, I guess
it was the six and they were nuns were like
mean to her. It was nuns and they were mean
to her. They were very mean. I think they had
rulers and you know, all kinds. It was a different time. Yeah, yeah,
it was a whole different time. Now. Yeah, everyone's got
a chromebook.
Speaker 1 (16:15):
I guess you're right.
Speaker 2 (16:17):
You would think that that would make everything less expensive,
but apparently no, No, they got to work around for
that too. The biggest stories of the day is it
because it's like still hot. The transmitter is like it's hot.
Why is the transmitter just like the rest of us
saying it's October? Why is it still hot or is
it humid or something?
Speaker 1 (16:34):
Because I don't know.
Speaker 2 (16:35):
People that sit there having a hard time hearing us
in certain places this morning, they get on the iHeart
app that that's the case.
Speaker 1 (16:40):
We think that works. I don't know. We checked it does,
Oh it doesn't.
Speaker 2 (16:44):
Yeah, okay, it's good.
Speaker 1 (16:45):
Yeah, I've been on it. Yeah, I'm behind the scenes.
Speaker 2 (16:48):
Over here, behind the se time up on a tower.
Speaker 1 (16:50):
I did, and you blew the cartridge. I blew the
cartridge you did? Yeah it should be good. Now, okay,
you know did.
Speaker 7 (16:57):
What I could?
Speaker 1 (16:58):
Okay, just like Nintendo sixty, you know I do.
Speaker 2 (17:03):
Jane Goodall, the famous scientists who studied chimpanzees, has died
at the age of ninety one. She passed Wayne California
during a speaking to Roy she was still at it, I.
Speaker 1 (17:11):
Guess very much, still at it.
Speaker 2 (17:13):
A Goodall changed science by studying wild chimpanzees instead of
ones in captivity, and she showed that chimps used tools,
have personalities and acted ways similar to humans, sometimes kind
and loving, sometimes aggressive, Her work started in nineteen sixty
in Tanzania and continues to influence primatology today. She also
spent her life protecting nature, speaking around the world about
(17:34):
wildlife and environmental issues, even traveling so nearly or nearly
three hundred days a year into her eighties. In twenty
twenty five, she was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom
for her lifelong work. In short, Jane Goodall was a
groundbreaking scientist and passionate conservationalist who inspired generations. I always
thought it was cool growing up watching her, and she
was like, she was one with the wild animals.
Speaker 1 (17:54):
Man, Yeah, and you know that.
Speaker 2 (17:56):
I believe I can reason with the wild animal and
this woman could.
Speaker 1 (17:59):
She was so selfless that took me out yesterday. Also
remember most recently she was on call her daddy and
everybody was like, what ye But if you can go
back and listen to that she was kind of recently
on that podcast.
Speaker 2 (18:11):
I know that accidents have them, but I would feel
kind of silly if I were part of this one.
I hate to say. Two Delta Regional jets collided while
taxiing on the ground at LaGuardia. The wing of the
departing plane hit the body of the one arriving. Now,
these I mean, these are big airplanes and wings are
way back there and you can't really see them. But man,
if I'm gonna if I'm gonna have to go to
the pilot chief pilot's office to talk about something, it's
(18:32):
not gonna be that I hate a plane on the ground.
I need more than that. I need something more cessational.
You need a top gun moment where it's like, hey, pilot, Fred,
you were going so fast you know what I mean,
like suspeed it sound or were you doing in that thing?
Both planes passengers were taken back to the terminal, given
food and lodging, and rebooked. The airlines at the operations
(18:53):
at the airport weren't disrupted. No passengers were hurt. It's
just kind of a kind of a bummer way to
get investigative by the FAA. Right, you know, he hits
something on the ground, like they when they suck in
a cart or something, which isn't their fault either because
you know, they don't know what's behind them or I
don't know when they back into another plane. I'd be like, dude,
you got one job is to hold that stick up
and make sure I don't hit another play shuck the review.
Speaker 3 (19:14):
Mirror bro Yes, exactly.
Speaker 7 (19:16):
Cameras the review cameras.
Speaker 2 (19:18):
Some of them do, actually, But I don't think it's,
you know, deep completely helpful. So why you see those
guys that stand there like with the stick at the
end of the thing, the little wand or whatever it is.
Speaker 7 (19:27):
I thought they were like cheerleaders.
Speaker 2 (19:29):
Yeah, well they are. They're cheering on the file. It's
like you too, good job. This is craziest. Skydiver and
his instructor survived after both of their parachutes failed to
open during a tandem jump in the Nevada Desert. So
neither parachute open and they're alive. They plummeted from eleven
thousand feet to the ground at thirty five to forty
five miles an hour after neither parachute worked as well
(19:50):
as they were supposed to, according to one of the
other instructors, the skydiver, one of them, came from the
UK to celebrate his twenty fifth birthday last month. He
fractured his pelvis, broke several ribs, had several fractures in
his back, and suffered a perforated lung and lacerated kidney.
That all sounds really bad, his mother said. As of
a week ago, he was walking with the help of
(20:11):
a walker. The instructor remains in critical condition, but his
injuries are not known. The Las Vegas Police and the
United States Parachute Association are looking into the incident.
Speaker 1 (20:20):
Yeah, I should say, so that is wild.
Speaker 2 (20:24):
That is crazy. You found him eleven thousand feet and you're.
Speaker 7 (20:28):
Alive to talk about it a miracle.
Speaker 2 (20:31):
Meta plans to use data from users chats with its
AI products like Meta AI this is for you, ray
Ban smart glasses and image video tools to show more
targeted ads on Facebook and Instagram. Sensitive topics health, religion,
politics won't be used, so they say, but there's no
opt out option. The change takes effect on December sixteenth.
So everything you're typing in that the phone's listening to you.
Speaker 1 (20:53):
We all know that.
Speaker 2 (20:54):
So you're not really saved. You never really have been
saved from any of this. But you know, be careful
what you tell an old jed GPT over there, because
now it's going to start selling you, like, you know,
anti de presents or you know, handcuffs or something. I
don't know. For all the fights that you get it
with hobby that you type in there.
Speaker 1 (21:09):
Yeah, that's that's true. I don't know you guys. I
feel like I'm kind of going to have to back
off from auch.
Speaker 2 (21:14):
Anger management books and stuff like.
Speaker 10 (21:16):
That's the one like, I feel like I need to
back off because I feel like uh che, which isn't
as trained I like her to be when it comes
to just like personal issues. You're arguing with Chad, not arguing,
but I'm not really feeling what she's putting down, which is.
Speaker 1 (21:28):
Crazy because it's not a person.
Speaker 2 (21:29):
So it's Weld's it's not a human being and it's
it's a computer.
Speaker 1 (21:33):
It. Sorry about the breakup, Yeah, it's terrible.
Speaker 7 (21:37):
Still use our brother stuff.
Speaker 10 (21:38):
We'll make some money together, but we're not We're definitely
not this partners only keep as far as far as
the free therapy is concerned, we're.
Speaker 1 (21:46):
Moving on from I tried it and you learned. Yeah,
I experienced it.
Speaker 2 (21:50):
Yeah, if only somebody had told you that wasn't going
to work. Connecticut woman made game show history on Tuesday night,
becoming the biggest winner in Wheel of Fortune's forty nine
year history. This woman named Christina. She took home a
record one million, thirty five thousand, one hundred and fifteen dollars.
After strong performances that included thirty five grand in the
(22:11):
standard round, she advanced a bonus round, chose a living
things category, and accurately solved the puzzle pack of coyotes
in like a second. She knew it like immediately to
claim what turned out to be the million dollar grand prize.
She's only the fourth contestant to secure Wheel of Fortunes
million dollar grand prize and the first in over a decade,
and the winningest ever one thousand and thirty five dollars
(22:33):
of one hundred and fifteen dollars. I guess her boss
maybe was in the audience. I saw part of the
clip and it was like, what do you say to
your boss? It's like, ah, that I don't have it
if I win a million dollars, that I don't want
to work there anymore.
Speaker 1 (22:45):
Tid to think. It's like, you know, it's a lot.
Speaker 2 (22:49):
Of money and A Florida woman won a video game
tournament and went viral while holding her daughter just five
days after giving birth. The woman answered the Mortal Kombat
Excel tournament this weekend and defeated three other players, including
her own husband, all while holding the five day old baby.
She won the grand prize of twenty eight dollars and
won a trip to a gaming festival in Atlanta at
(23:10):
the end of the month. I love a woman, but all, yeah,
I want to talk about that prize.
Speaker 1 (23:16):
Oh yeah, I want to talk about that.
Speaker 2 (23:18):
Right, that's all. That's all you could come up with
twenty eight dollars.
Speaker 1 (23:21):
She deserves like a medal of freedom. I don't know,
that's crazy.
Speaker 2 (23:25):
She gets like influencer deals now or whatever. But there
she was playing the video game holding the baby lore Combat.
Speaker 1 (23:31):
Probably breastfeeding or pumping, doing everything right. Good for her.
Speaker 2 (23:34):
It's National Custodial Workers Recognition Day and National Name your
Card Day today. Do you guys have names for your cars? Yeah?
What is it?
Speaker 7 (23:45):
Midnight?
Speaker 1 (23:46):
Midnight?
Speaker 8 (23:47):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (23:48):
Like is at midnight? They're going to come take it
because you didn't pay the bill.
Speaker 7 (23:51):
I pay that deal picket, but I will pay.
Speaker 2 (23:54):
My CA's entertainment report is on the press show.
Speaker 1 (23:58):
Big Day tomorrow. Sean did He Combs is set to
be sentenced after being convicted in July on two counts
of transporting individuals for prostitution. Each count carries a maximum
sentence of ten years totally up to twenty in prison possible.
Prosecutors have recommended a sentence of at least eleven years
and three months, highlighting the severity of the crimes and
(24:20):
the impact on the victims. His defense is seeking a
fourteen month since total, emphasizing his time already served and
requesting credit for good behavior, which would see him out
by the end of this year. As you know, he's
been detained since his arrest in September of twenty twenty
four and remains incarcerated at the detention center in Brooklyn.
(24:41):
But he was detained because they thought he was too
dangerous to be sent home. So I don't know if
they're going to consider that time served, but legal experts
are anticipating somewhere between four to five years, considering things
like lack of his criminal history, So maybe somewhere in
between what they both are asking for. People like Cassie
have written to the judge head of this sentencing expressing
(25:02):
their trauma and fear over him possibly getting out. In
a teaser for Season seven of The Kardashians, Kim shared
that someone has put a hit out on her life.
The trailer shows her taking a call from investigators who
reveal to her that someone extremely close to her is
what they said, ordered her to be killed, which is
a crazy thing to be saying. Of course, we don't
(25:23):
know who or what happened, in true Kardashian fashion, I'm
sure we'll find out when season seven premieres on Hulu
on October twenty third. Speaking of Kim and Ditty and
all things, she and her mom, Chris Jenner, are suing
Kim's ex singer ray Ja for defamation, five months after
he linked their family to Ditty. In May, TMZ released
(25:44):
a documentary where ray J, who dated Kim for three
years until splitting in two thousand and six, they made
a popular movie. I don't know if you guys saw it,
but they said, if you told me the Kardashians.
Speaker 2 (25:53):
Yeah, that was a blockbuster hand yeah. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (25:56):
Some people may not know for years. Yeah, people may
not know. Google it on your own time.
Speaker 2 (26:01):
Production value is high on that too, very much.
Speaker 7 (26:06):
The camera.
Speaker 1 (26:06):
They do say that. I refuse to believe that, but
they do say that. They do say she was saying
Archer back, but ray J, I love you. Ray J said,
if you told me that the Kardashians were being charged
for racketeering. I might believe it. The Kardashians lawyer says
the comments were false and a serious allegation. It alleges
that the loss or the comment was designed to plant
(26:28):
the seed, which he then escalated in a live stream
where he said he was helping the Feds bring a
rico case against them worse than Diddy. So there's a
lot going on at the moment. The lawsuit alleges that
Raj is unable to accept the end of his fleeting
relationship with miss Kardashian over twenty years ago, which is
lawyers speak for like get over it, which is very
funny to me. So a lot going on with that.
(26:51):
In Sync is considering an arena tour for their thirtieth anniversary.
Thirtieth anniversary, Oh my god, I gotta go put I
cream on, even if Justin Timberl does not participate. So
they might be like, Okay, we got it, figure this out.
Speaker 2 (27:03):
It's not gonna work. It's not gonna work. And by
the way, have you seen ninety eight degrees lately? He
used to shut them down. They need to stop them.
They're doing they're doing covers of like genuine pony and
they're doing like these weird like off casino concerts and
they're covering songs and I'm sorry, I'm sorry, Nick Lache,
You're not that good of a singer. Oh you're like
(27:25):
he's like an okay sing he pulls it off for
than the songs that we know, but like he doesn't
have the range should be doing some of the songs.
Speaker 1 (27:32):
I'm sorry, Nick, like I'm.
Speaker 2 (27:33):
Saying, but remember we played a video like last year
where he was just a cappella like in his living room.
Speaker 1 (27:38):
Oh yeah, he was.
Speaker 2 (27:39):
Giving it everything he had, man, and God bless him,
but it was.
Speaker 1 (27:42):
He's a performer.
Speaker 2 (27:42):
It wasn't great.
Speaker 1 (27:44):
You know, I'm looking at to what we know.
Speaker 2 (27:45):
You got hits, man, Like, play the hits when you're
playing the Aucchin casino in you know, outside of Phoenix
somewhere or whatever. You know, when you're at the horseshoe,
play the hicks, man.
Speaker 1 (27:56):
We want to see the hits, right they're straight up
on tour right now. I had no idea. That's why
you gotta be nice to everyone because you might be
up here, but then at some point you're playing casinos
and the same person might be like you're playing Cain.
Speaker 2 (28:07):
It's bad.
Speaker 1 (28:09):
They're like, you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (28:11):
Look, people paid to see them be ninety eight degrees.
Plenty of people paid. This other stuff is just not
it's not good. And the very people who paid to
be there are the ones filming this and posting it
to posting it, posting it to TikTok and saying it sucks.
Speaker 1 (28:24):
So like, just stick to what you know. It's cool, right, Well,
I don't know. The boys may do it Lance, Joey,
JC and Chris.
Speaker 9 (28:30):
I think they should in fact, for JC to shine,
like show them you never needed justin anyway, put.
Speaker 1 (28:35):
Them up front, yes, put them up front. They are
talking to promoters who think that they could still sell
major venues. A previous offer I guess for a stadium
tour was made last year. JT of course said no,
but if he joins later, like if they start and
he joins later, then maybe they could expand to stadiums.
I don't know. They have been at the VMAs together,
(28:56):
remember in twenty twenty three, but they they released that
song for the Try movie. Remember they were teasing it
like a reunion, So we will see also, bye bye
bye gained popularity again, which is funny after being in
the Deadpool movie last year. So we will see justin
come on, just knock it off and come on.
Speaker 7 (29:14):
We don't need him, you really don't.
Speaker 1 (29:16):
I mean, someone do it, man, someone are you managing
him right now? I need to know. He's very talented.
Speaker 6 (29:23):
J is very talented.
Speaker 2 (29:25):
I'm a little surprised that things didn't go further for
him with his solo career. Like he was good. He
is good. He still left many of us would see
in Sync without JT.
Speaker 1 (29:34):
People are saying, okay, the incursor, Okay, I think they
need him for the for the full.
Speaker 2 (29:41):
Splash, because otherwise I think it looks like the kind
of sad stuff that's happening at like you know, Disney,
Orlando or whatever on the weekend.
Speaker 1 (29:49):
Yeah, that Broadway play.
Speaker 2 (29:51):
It makes me sad to see the Mighty kind of
kind of minimize to you know, they eat with the beat,
you know, like Tiffany from the eighties open for you
know a mix like part LFO, part in Sync, part
you know whatever.
Speaker 1 (30:08):
Like it's like a like a super group.
Speaker 2 (30:11):
Yeah, and then they're out there doing each other's songs
and it's just like in a couple of backs. The
backshit boys are too big now for that. But like
you know what I'm talking about. You see it on
the internet sometimes where it's like I certainly see it
on Sundays in Orlando and you can have like a
sandwich and watch these guys, like you know, and who's
the guy Joey fatone?
Speaker 1 (30:27):
And then who's the other one?
Speaker 2 (30:28):
They were a little he's a little bigger, the in
sync guy, he got kind of big. Let me look
him up, Joey right, Chris kat Chris Kirkpatrick, He's in
all this, he's at the he's front and center at
all and it just doesn't have the same cachet that
it did and it makes me sad. But people are
digging it and they're paying for it, so good for them.
Speaker 1 (30:47):
Yeah, I forgot Joey was in my big fat Greek wedding.
I just looked that up. Yeah, people are digging it.
But I would say be kind, invest your money so
you don't have to work these state fairs when you
know the mighty fall. But if you enjoy performing, you
rock on girl at that fair. And if you want
to cut him on anything, you miss type the frenchwond demand.
I'm the free I heard radio, and.
Speaker 2 (31:05):
You know, I'm not the biggest JT fan, but I
will say, in fact, I really don't like him at
all these days, mainly because of his behavior and the
fact that he's like doing concerts where he stands there
and makes the audience sing and then you have to pay,
you know, to go. Oh, Justin Justin read that said
jay Z, I probably did know. JT is what I
that's the biggest Justin Timberlake.
Speaker 1 (31:24):
Fans of his line. That's what he says.
Speaker 8 (31:27):
So well.
Speaker 1 (31:28):
I hope he gets healthy.
Speaker 2 (31:28):
I do.
Speaker 6 (31:29):
I should say that, but but it's just like, hey,
I have thoughts. I think I think it could be
so big. Honestly, I'd be very unfiltered here. I think
it should maybe a little ozampicker. We go be for
you know, some of them, and then and then I
think you get over and then you get them all
back together, and then I think I think that they
could sell out like big Arenas. Sure, but I do
(31:49):
think it needs to be there. And it's not that
I think they need Justin. It just needs to be the.
Speaker 2 (31:54):
Whole band together in order for the full effect. I
do think. Then we're talking about Advent calendars last week
and I just saw this like monster list of all
the different Advent calendars you can get in if you're
not a Catholic person. It's a Catholic thing, isn't it.
Maybe it's where it started from. It's like, you know,
twenty eight days until Christmas and then they have these
(32:14):
things and you open one every day. And when I
was a kid, we'd open one. There was like a
little chocolate inside of it. There was a little tiny thing,
you know. But now that these are they've gotten very elaborate,
and so you can get one, Bonnie my man. It's
a it's a jam filled Advent calendar with many jars
(32:34):
in it. I love twenty four limited edition Preserves spreads
fig with cardamom milk caramel with Madagascar vanilla as a
favorite to a post any other kind of a It's
not a Madagascar. I'm not interested inside this little thing.
You can get a Wicked Premium Advent Calendar. It's available
(32:57):
for pre order. I don't know what. You get collectibles
like a metal bookmark, a keychain, and a notebook for
one hundred and twenty five bucks. You can get Benefits
Cosmetics slam Cube twenty four day Makeup Advent Calendar. That's
one hundred and fifty bucks. And you get it's like
it's kind of cool looking like a Rubik's cube, and
(33:18):
you get a bunch of stuff in there. The Glasshouse
Fragrance is twenty four days of Christmas Advent Calendar. That's
three hundred dollars. But you get a different twenty four
different fragrances. The Smartbones Furry Christmas Advent Calendar. This is
for dogs. Fine, I'll buy it. I'll take two, that's fine.
The Anthropology twenty four days of Beauty Advent Calendar. That's
(33:41):
one hundred bucks. Lego Minecraft, I don't know. I don't
know anything about Minecraft Advent Calendar. That's only thirty eight bucks.
It goes on and on. You can get all kinds
of different stuff. We're like the fun ones. It's got
to be a thhc one for yeah, sure, like the
twenty eight days of Getting High, the Booze one there.
I know, there's whiskey, there's wine.
Speaker 1 (34:02):
The wine one before see.
Speaker 2 (34:05):
What this is? Spicy ketchup Okay Advent Calendar. Oh, the
Williams Sonoma Peppermint Bark Advent Calendar. Ok.
Speaker 3 (34:15):
I Love An Advent calendar.
Speaker 2 (34:17):
Oh, here we go, straight away Cocktails Twelve Nights of
Cocktails Advent Calendar. Now we're getting good. Let's get to
the good stuff here. Uh, beauty wine. I don't know,
that's get boring again once or this thing short bread?
Come on, short bread, that's a specific right, come on now,
a Lego Star Wars Advent calendar. There's gotta be more
(34:41):
like adult ones, like you know, for fun time. Maybe
that's not maybe that's sacrilegious for like, you know, the purpose.
But I don't know, you know, different sorts of uh
you know what I mean, activity supplies