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July 28, 2025 39 mins

Paulina is convinced the older she gets the less "cool" she is. Plus, do your parents spoil your children? Paulina and the 13 chime in, listen now!

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is the press show.

Speaker 2 (00:01):
Let's get you hotel a trip for tuti see Jennifer
Lopez her brand new Las Vegas residency. Jennifer Lopez Up
All Night Live in Las Vegas March thirteenth, twenty twenty
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(00:24):
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rates may apply.

Speaker 1 (00:31):
All Thanks to Live Nation.

Speaker 2 (00:33):
Tickets are on sale now at ticketmaster dot com for
all shows running December thirtieth through January third, and March
sixth through the twenty eighth.

Speaker 3 (00:42):
Welcome, Wait, Wait, Wait, wait wait, and Kiki, you have
a demographic of fans that I never knew about.

Speaker 2 (00:57):
Really it is fifty plus year old white men today.
Wait come give me here. Every day Fred's Show is on,
It's Monday.

Speaker 1 (01:06):
Good Morning.

Speaker 2 (01:06):
July twenty eighth, The Freend' Show's on. Hi Kles, Good morning, Hi,
Jason bro Hi, Paulina. Kiki is out today Belaha means
here show biz. Shelley is here as well. She has money.
Next hour in the showdown, can you beat the gorilla
and win seven hundred bucks? Five pop culture questions? If
you listen to the entertainer reports, you have the answers
and you can win. That's coming up. Waiting on the phone.
He's new this morning. Why does somebody get ghosted? Judge

(01:29):
Fred and for Judge Kiki today it won't quite be
the same, but we'll do our best. Kiki's course. The
entertainment reports coming up this hour and we'll do headlines
and blogs.

Speaker 1 (01:38):
What are you working on?

Speaker 4 (01:38):
K Someone's skirt fell off while they were performing, which
is not ideal. I don't know if you guys know that,
But you don't want your skirt to fall off mid perf.

Speaker 5 (01:47):
No, you don't.

Speaker 2 (01:48):
All That's where I used to work when I put
myself through through college at Labert when I was the
master blaster, I did want my skirt to fall off.

Speaker 4 (01:56):
Well, I know you're part of the routine. Yeah, you
did it to tweet? Oops, oh my you would. It
was like more of a burlesque situation.

Speaker 6 (02:02):
Is what I heard.

Speaker 1 (02:03):
I don't know. Well, I mean it depended on the night.

Speaker 2 (02:05):
Yeah right, we weren't alive, okay during your stripper career.

Speaker 1 (02:11):
You were alive from my stripper career.

Speaker 5 (02:13):
I couldn't get it.

Speaker 4 (02:14):
No, you wouldn't have been able to get but I
heard heard rumblings.

Speaker 2 (02:18):
Yeah, No, it depended on the night. We had different themes,
we had different outfits, different choreo. You know, it's just dependent.

Speaker 4 (02:23):
I like what I I think I could picture you
more doing the like cat vande burlesque, like in a
champagne glass.

Speaker 2 (02:30):
It just depended on the night, like I said, I mean,
you know, or if it was a private event we had,
it was just different stuff that we did. Yeah, anyway,
mm hmmm, I'm not a transition right on a tradition
from me in a champang glass, but I will. Why
do you think you're not cool anymore, Paulina? Because I've
seen like multiple things that you're You're obviously very insecure
about him, and you're posting multiple things on our sheet

(02:52):
about remember I used to be cool? Now we dinnered four?
Remember where I used to be cool? That was the
other one I just saw in here and I went
to a movie one. Well, first of all, I used
to be cool, and now I'm sitting in a movie
theater at one thirty PM on a Saturday. That's called
a matinee. Like cool people go, cool people and losers

(03:13):
both go to Mattnee.

Speaker 7 (03:14):
I don't think so, no, but it's true. I am
not who I say I am.

Speaker 6 (03:18):
Man.

Speaker 7 (03:19):
Listen, I used to be the coolest girl that I knew. Okay,
I was on the street. If you do say y, yes,
I was, yes, and now I feel like, yeah, I
did her at four pm? Which can I be honest? Though,
I really enjoyed this little life. I'm not even gonna lie.
A soft life is cute for me. I like her
on me, But the four pm dinners which we had
as a show the other day.

Speaker 1 (03:38):
I'm phenomenal. You guys.

Speaker 2 (03:41):
Here's here's what I'm going with this. Eight five five
five three five. You can call and text the same number.
The stuff that you once thought was cool is really
Maybe maybe that wasn't that cool, And maybe the stuff
that you think is uncole or that people think it
is uncool, or you thought was uncool when you were young,
maybe it's very cool going to dinner at four o'clock

(04:02):
is very cool.

Speaker 1 (04:03):
It was amazing.

Speaker 2 (04:05):
You walk in there, no one's there, nobody, no, they
just do what i'd except for the people that worked
there who were like I thought we had another hour, right,
you know, they were open, you know, I mean like
they open it four, but nobody goes at four, so
they probably thought like, ah, we can you know, goo fuck,
I'll take that shift four o'clock. No one's there, and
then here comes at a seven top or a six
top the Fred Show is here. And but it was amazing.

(04:27):
No one's there. You all the attention you can. You
can drink, you know, if you want to have like
five drinks at four o'clock, have had it, because but
you're gonna be out of there by seven and in
bed by eight, and then you know, if you if
you wake up at a reasonable hour, then it's like
it never happened. Yeah.

Speaker 7 (04:42):
No, it was the coolest thing I've thought in a while.
But I just also thought about it back in the day,
the old me. You would never catch me there at
four pm. I don't think I would even get ready
to leave the house and be completely honest until like
maybe eight thirty nine, Like to get out of the
house to go out for the evening. So four o'clock
I was probably napping.

Speaker 5 (05:00):
Maybe I was. I don't know.

Speaker 2 (05:02):
There's another one. Now you're in school, you're young, you're
in elementary school, whatever, they hey, take you take a nap.
It's naptime. Your mom's like naptime. You're like, I don't
want to do that. I don't want to take a nap.
Oh my god. Now if my mom were like, take
a nap, yes please, I may not. You may not
see me again today. I may just stand by the
rest of the day like a nap. It is a

(05:23):
luxury for most adults, especially parents.

Speaker 5 (05:26):
Oh for sure. I try to plan my naps around
my daughter's. If I'm getting one, I'm like, we're going
to book nap right.

Speaker 2 (05:31):
Now, so eating early? Yeah, A nap A sale, I
don't I don't know. I don't know if a sale
is a cool person thing. I don't know if cool
I don't know if you like cool people seek out
a sale versus trying to buy the hotness that's not
on sale. I feel like when I was when I
thought I was cool, and I was never cool. But
when I thought I was cool, I probably wanted to
buy the stuff that was I didn't want the stuff

(05:52):
that was on sale because that maybe was like not
the newest, hottest whatever. The stuff on the mannequin's almost
never on sale, you know you know what I mean?
So so no, now a sale by welcome a sity.
Let me see the sale first. I want to see
what's on sale before I even bother to even look
at what I might have to spend money, like like
full price.

Speaker 5 (06:11):
On Yeah, yeah, m I used to be that girl.

Speaker 1 (06:14):
What else comes to mind for you? Guys?

Speaker 2 (06:15):
Though you didn't think it was cool back in the day,
and now you do. Going to betterly like eating early,
going to betterly that is nice. Quit a bit early
is so cool. It's one of the coolest things you
could do. Cool man, It's not, no, it really is,
though it really is.

Speaker 8 (06:35):
You miss a whole lot.

Speaker 2 (06:37):
But what am I missing when I when I am
out of my bed past like eight thirty nine o'clock,
I'm eating or drinking pretty much, I'm eating or drinking
one of those two things is or I'm up to
some other shenanigan that I don't need to be into.

Speaker 1 (06:54):
And so what happened?

Speaker 2 (06:55):
And so that you're you know your your your pee.
Paul used to say nothing good happens after what was it, midnight?

Speaker 1 (07:01):
Two am?

Speaker 2 (07:01):
What was the time everyone used to say nothing good
happ Oh ten that was ten year. I don't know
what the saying was. Nothing good happens after, you know,
late at night. And honestly, if I'm up at midnight,
something is wrong, like like I'm drinking too much. I'm
probably consuming other things. I don't need to be consuming.
I don't need to be awake. But if I'm in
bed at like eight o'clock, I'm safe. I wake up

(07:22):
the next day, I feel great. True, So I don't
I disagree. I think a lot of the things that
you're saying that make you feel uncol are actually very cool.

Speaker 5 (07:31):
Thank you, Yeah, thank you. Welcome the new era life.

Speaker 6 (07:34):
We're cool.

Speaker 5 (07:34):
Hey, guys, I know I'm kind of cool, but I
just thought about that. I was just like, who am I?

Speaker 7 (07:39):
And even like my best friend because he called me
when I was leaving the theater and he goes, oh,
He's like, you're at the movie theater and a Saturday
in the summer at like two o'clock, and I was like, yeah,
I am what is I don't know, I.

Speaker 1 (07:50):
Don't understand why that's so cool. I don't get them.

Speaker 2 (07:53):
I mean, Jason, would you ever have posted up at
Music in the Park like you did this weekend?

Speaker 1 (07:58):
Yeah?

Speaker 8 (07:58):
No, and I don't. I'm not one hundred percent sure
if that's cool. But I didn't either, but you did, Yeah,
that's fine. I was probably already in bed, so I
don't know. I would say probably, I don't do anything
that's cool.

Speaker 2 (08:11):
There was a listener of ours that kept sending me
pictures of like the various pictures of you at Music
in the Park, saying, is this Chase, is that Jason Brown?
Is that Jason Brown? Pictures of you? But from different angles.
At first I couldn't tell, And then finally there was
just one of you and all your glory, just just
posted up in Music in the Park, listening to Kansas.

Speaker 1 (08:33):
Or whatever you're listening to.

Speaker 5 (08:34):
Yea, Hi please right?

Speaker 2 (08:35):
And I finally said, will you please walk over there
because what you're doing is weird, Like this is weird,
and it's far less She's like, I don't want to
be weird.

Speaker 1 (08:43):
No, this is weird. It would be far less.

Speaker 2 (08:45):
Weird if you would just walk over there and say
hi and I'm sure he'd love it.

Speaker 8 (08:48):
Yeah, and we could take a picture from a good angle.
This doesn't make me look awful. I'm sitting in an
airanduck chair. You know, stylish sneakers are very cool. Someone texted, Yeah,
they are cool.

Speaker 2 (09:01):
Okay, I don't know that that was ever in the
cool enough to rock those closed.

Speaker 1 (09:05):
Shopping at Costco is cool?

Speaker 5 (09:07):
Yes, it is.

Speaker 2 (09:08):
I agree. I agree. Really, every now and again you'll
find right. Every now and then you'll find something. I've
never been to Costco.

Speaker 1 (09:17):
Excuse me.

Speaker 8 (09:17):
Yeah, We're always the Sam's Club family, so I've never
been there.

Speaker 2 (09:21):
I don't have a membership. I think SAMs have the same.
Does Sam do SAMs?

Speaker 6 (09:28):
Slow down? Take a breath?

Speaker 2 (09:29):
Well, no, I'm just conjugation here because I'm basically I'm English.
Is my second lene. I've been listening to I've been
listening to Portuguese all week and I'll tell you why
in a second. But fortune, yeah, English, now that I'm
a Spanish speaker. But no, do Sam's Club versus? Does

(09:55):
SAMs are the closest Sam's Club? Do they hit the same?
Do they have closed at Sam's Club? I've never I'm
bring clothes the same way that that the stuff at
at at Costco hits.

Speaker 7 (10:06):
I feel like Costco is a little more top tier.
But I've purchased clothes from Sam's Club. I mean, yeah,
I've done what is it? They care like old school
stuff too, like DK what is the dcn Y. Yeah,
I've gotten a sweater from them. I've gotten a little
track suit, you know, all my track suits.

Speaker 2 (10:21):
I was going to ask you because I mean I
bought like T shirts and you know the uh, I don't.
I probably bought sweatshirts Engineeric sort of like like Basics.

Speaker 5 (10:29):
It's good socks.

Speaker 4 (10:30):
They honestly have good like sweaters, like even like cashmere.

Speaker 1 (10:34):
That was my question was, like how far.

Speaker 6 (10:36):
They go all over the place, all over the board
basics too nice? They saw engagement rings?

Speaker 5 (10:41):
Are you kidding?

Speaker 1 (10:42):
It's they They sell diamonds, they do jewelry. Oh yeah,
full on. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (10:46):
You could do it all there, and then you could
go get a teketo you know, the sample cart.

Speaker 2 (10:52):
Yeah, you could, or a chicken roll or whatever. It's
cooled chicken bag the pasta. Not having as many friends
is cool. I agree with that too. I agree with
that too, because you spend a lot of time managing
friendships only to find out that a lot of them
weren't worth a jack. And then you figure out the
people who were like the real ones, and you hang
out with them and you're rarely disappointed.

Speaker 1 (11:14):
That's true. Hanging out with your parents, these.

Speaker 2 (11:16):
Are all texts, by the way, Oh super hanging out
with it's cool, like you you didn't want to do
that when you were in high school. No, Now, my
parents were always Everyone liked my parents like they were like,
I wouldn't say they were cool parents because they weren't
like the parents that were like, oh here's you know,
here's an eight ball and a keg, have a great weekend,
you know, because we had some of those parents too, well,
you know, the parents that like did the stuff that

(11:39):
they leaned into, the stuff that you weren't supposed to
be doing, because that made them like it was almost
getting the admiration of a bunch of sixteen year olds
because they let you drink at their house and it's like,
well that you're cool, you know.

Speaker 1 (11:51):
Or I remember I had a.

Speaker 2 (11:53):
There was a guy in college and his dad would
come to the basically he would come to everything like
he yeah, he'd loved to hang out because in Texas,
if you were eighteen, then you could drink at the
bar with your parents. So he'd come to town and
take us all drinking. But it was it was about
him feeling cool.

Speaker 6 (12:09):
Yeah, I was gonna say, And he had.

Speaker 2 (12:11):
A lot of money, so he'd come to town. Bias kid,
you know, like the biggest TV that could possibly get
the dorm room whatever. But I think I had more
to do with him than it did his kid totally.
But yeah, no, but yeah, people like my parents. But
hanging out with my parents. Yeah, hanging out with your parents,
it's cool.

Speaker 8 (12:27):
I love it.

Speaker 2 (12:28):
I agree all day every day. Hold on a second,
what is it, Pauline, What are you talking about? Pre
setting a coffee maker?

Speaker 7 (12:36):
Pre you setting a coffeemaker instead of making your coffee
right when you wake up?

Speaker 2 (12:41):
Oh no, I see, yeah, No, that's actually a neat
little trick if you have. They're not very expensive, but
coffeemakers have little timers on them, especially if you get
it Brially. I don't know why I don't do this.
I used to, and like you'd set it for you know,
four fifteen, and then you'd hear that your wake up
would be run like if the ground the beans even
or like even if it just started making you'd smell

(13:02):
the coffee.

Speaker 1 (13:03):
Oh yeah, and like has it started making it for you? Yeah?

Speaker 2 (13:09):
Yes, Pauline, she's underwater. Is our phone's not going to
work today? Are we gonna have this? Are we gonna
do that again today? If someone recent I don't know,
if someone gets slav on the phone, or where's Gregg?

Speaker 1 (13:18):
Does he still work here? Get him on the thing.

Speaker 5 (13:19):
I have never heard that name in a while.

Speaker 1 (13:20):
Yeah, I get him on the thing. Where's Where's Karen?

Speaker 2 (13:22):
Will absolutely take our phone call the engineer of the
engineer of all engineers our hearts. Yeah, that woman, Yeah,
she answers the phone for us, even when she works
twenty four to seven. She's Chason Brown of engineering. She'll
figure it out. Yeah, let me see here. Ain't nothing,
ain't nothing open past midnight but gas stations and legs.

Speaker 6 (13:41):
Someone texted, Yeah, I have heard that one.

Speaker 1 (13:44):
Both of those things are cool. I mean, so you
know Fred's show is on Fred's Biggest Stories of the Day.

Speaker 2 (13:51):
If I have the clip, because this might be one
of the most brilliant things in PR history. Honestly, like,
someone sat down and really thought about this, like you
do that the Astronomer company. After the CEO and the
hr lead being caught on the kiss cam with the
Coldplay contract, you knew they were going to respond somehow,
and this the co founder and now CEO made a statement,

(14:14):
but like they had to come up with something clever quickly, right,
that would have been cute. Oh when they did that,
they went out and got Gwyneth Paltrow Chris Martin z
X to make a statement and a little video for them.
I have no idea they must have paid her for this,

(14:34):
because if I were her, first of all, I mean,
like it would be one thing to do something cute
and like tongue in cheek about that, but for someone
to go, wait a minute, what if we got do
you think Wyneth Paltrow will do it? Give that person
a raise? Because first of all, no one knows what
Astronomer does or care. I don't even know if you care,
But like, you may as well use this as a
pr opportunity for you because you've already fired the people

(14:54):
and you didn't really do it. I mean, they did
it right, so it's not the company's fault necessarily. But
whoever was like, well, Gwyneth Paltrow do it. And then
if I'm Gwyneth Paltrow's agent and they call me, I'd
be like, oh, she'll do it.

Speaker 1 (15:05):
She'll do it for.

Speaker 2 (15:06):
You know, five million dollars or like stock in your
company or something, because really, like, once you I feel like,
once you have that idea in your head, then it's
got to be her, because then for the pr people
or for like the creatives, anything else wouldn't work.

Speaker 1 (15:21):
So I feel like she had him hooked. But here
she is.

Speaker 9 (15:25):
Thank you for your interest in Astronomer. Hi, I'm Gwyneth Paltrow.
I've been hired on a very temporary basis to speak
on behalf of the three hundred plus employees at Astronomer.

Speaker 5 (15:36):
Astronomer has gotten a lot of.

Speaker 9 (15:38):
Questions over the last few days, and they wanted me
to answer the most common ones.

Speaker 2 (15:44):
I think that this one was what in the actual
f I think was the question or something like that.

Speaker 1 (15:49):
It was like, well, you know what is going on there?

Speaker 9 (15:51):
Yes, Astronomer is the best place to run APACHE airflow
unifying the experience of runs.

Speaker 2 (15:57):
Well, can someone explain to me? She's about to kind
of explain it, but what is a patchy airflow, Like,
I don't exactly know what it. Will you call if
you know what? If you're like one of these network people.
I know she kind of explains in here, but what
is a patchy airflow?

Speaker 8 (16:10):
I can see what Google says, but ikmer is.

Speaker 9 (16:12):
The best place to run Apache airflow, unifying the experience
of running data mL and AI pipelines at scale.

Speaker 2 (16:19):
Sure, I love an AI pipeline. I've been looking for
a place to lay the AI pipeline and now you're
telling me it's astronomer. Thank you, Gwyneth Beendril thrilled.

Speaker 9 (16:28):
So many people have a newfound interest in data workflow automation.

Speaker 5 (16:32):
As for the other questions we received, are.

Speaker 1 (16:35):
Your social media people? Okay is what the question was.

Speaker 9 (16:39):
Yes, there is still room available at our Beyond Analytics
event in September. We will now be returning to what
we do best, delivering game changing results for our customers.

Speaker 5 (16:50):
Thank you for your artist in Astronomer.

Speaker 1 (16:52):
That was so smart.

Speaker 2 (16:54):
God, it is good anyway, That's what everybody was talking
about over the weekend. But yeah, they got Gwyneth Paltrow
to make a video in response. They shared the humors
that on social media featuring Paltrow saying that she was
hired on a very temporary basis.

Speaker 1 (17:06):
You heard the whole thing.

Speaker 2 (17:07):
The video ends with her then plugging the event that
they have coming up, which again, don't know what we're
doing there. We're laying aipipe there, which sounds amazing. I
only wish I understood what that was, but I'm too
dumb to know. Southwest Airlines flight reportedly plunged about five
hundred feet just six minutes after takeoff from Burbank to
dodge a nearby jet, prompting screams as passengers were jolted

(17:31):
in a free fall. Two flight attendants were hurt, but
all of the passengers landed safely in Las Vegas. The
incident stem from onboard collision alerts, and the FAA is
now investigating. So there's the thing on the airplane that
will tell you if you're too close to another airplane.
ATC is supposed to do that for you, but for
some reason they don't. Then this thing tells you what
to do, and so they react to Pilots react, but
they have to do it kind of quickly because you're

(17:53):
going really fast and you're climbing or descending or whatever
you're doing, and so whatever evasive maneuver to avoid the
other airplane is going to see pretty aggressive. But it's
better than the alternative. So that ever happens to you,
they know it's all good. But this is happening a lot.
It happening miy not supposedly with the commercial plane, in
the military plane.

Speaker 1 (18:14):
So I don't know what's going on, guys.

Speaker 2 (18:16):
A, But ATC, I think it may have somebody to
do with the fact that they're dealing with equipment that
was made it like prehistorically, like the dinosaurs invented. They
need to bring in astronomer AI with their pipeline AI
pipeline to figure out a way to make the ATC
stuff Like I feel like the ATC is just looking
out the window at this point and being like, Hey,
this plane and in that plane, don't do that, because yeah, right,

(18:38):
because almost nothing works anymore. A Scott Stail, Arizona woman
says that Living Spaces, which is a furniture company, delivery
workers effectively trapped her in her bedroom until she agreed
to give them a perfect rating. She felt unsafe during
the encounter, shared her experience on TikTok and has sens
filed complaints with the Better Business Bureau and the Arizona
Attorney General's Office. Living Spaces offered an apology via tic

(19:02):
tech TikTok, but hasn't resolved her concerns to her satisfaction.
So you got random people in your house and they
just dropped off all your new furniture and they're like, hey,
five Stars were not leaving. I mean that's aggressive. That
might be reflected in the comment that I make after
my review as well. But I guess if you're standing
there watching me do it, then you wouldn't be able

(19:24):
to do that, So I guess that would be why.

Speaker 1 (19:26):
But so, yeah, that's uncomfortable.

Speaker 2 (19:30):
I'm standing there and you're like, hey, five stars or
I'm not leaving, or I'm taking the couch with me
or something like them and a Baltimore Orioles fan. I
guess all the fans got a surprise twist on the
national anthem on Sunday when four time international whistling champion
Chris Olman whistled the Star spangled banner at Camden Yards.

(19:51):
The unique rendition went viral, with fans calling him the goat.
So I have this here, you guys want to hear
this guy whistling the national anthem. Now I wouldn't say
normally that it is something that would appeal to me,
but okay.

Speaker 8 (20:15):
I mean, why are there other distles?

Speaker 2 (20:19):
I think he's like, I think he's making all of them,
or it's an echo. I don't know what this actually
no disrespect to an agile anthem, but I would not
a lia have liked that. That's not an appealing sound
to the ear. It must be very hard to do,
but that's not an appealing sound to the ear. Why

(20:41):
are people why don't we have to get Willi Naley
with like just sing the song or wiki wiki, just
just just sing a song, like sing the song to
the best of your ability. And I realize that not
every game is going to have Whitney Houston at it,
so you know, have a little and it's I guess
it's for a singer.

Speaker 1 (20:54):
It's a difficult song to sing.

Speaker 2 (20:56):
So you know, if someone could just get the words
right and do the best they can correct, I can
live with that.

Speaker 6 (21:01):
It's not a situation where we should be one upping
each other.

Speaker 5 (21:04):
You know.

Speaker 6 (21:05):
The whole point of it is not for it.

Speaker 8 (21:07):
Just play Whitney everywhere all the time. Yeah, we come
together as an I'd be fine with it. Like, just
play the video of Whitney. It's a super Bowl and
everybody would love it. Yeah, I mean, you know, shout
out to this guy. It's it a unique talent. But
I mean, I've heard the trumpet. I've heard people play
the trump that's very nice. It sounds good.

Speaker 2 (21:25):
You know. I've heard the saxophone that that sounds nice.
But I don't know about whistling. You'd like the saxophone.
National anthem can.

Speaker 1 (21:33):
Be very lax.

Speaker 8 (21:34):
I need to get jazzy with it, you know.

Speaker 2 (21:35):
It can be very lit though, especially if the guy
really like holds the notes and stuff.

Speaker 1 (21:39):
Yeah, it can work. It works for me.

Speaker 2 (21:42):
It's National water Park Day and it's Buffalo Soldier's Day,
commemorates the formation of the first Regular Army Regiments comprising
African American soldiers in eighteen sixty six.

Speaker 1 (21:53):
One's entertainer report is on the Fresh Show.

Speaker 4 (21:56):
Adam Sandler is officially back on the Green after Happy
Gilmour two dropped Friday, and while many actors from the
first movie are back, there were a ton of cameos.
As we know, Travis Kelcey bad Boonie, who my stepdad
texted me and called little Rabbit. He was like, oh,
little rabbits in this thing. I'm like, okay, I wish
you were joking. And Eminem is also in. He played

(22:19):
the son of an iconic character from the first one.
If you didn't know or haven't seen the first one.
In the first movie, there's a comedian named Joe Flaherty
who played this dude who yelled out every time Happy
was about to take a shot, take a swing. And
since he has passed, Eminem took over as his son
in the movie and the spoiler alert dies in a

(22:40):
very funny way. Another nod to the first one was
some of the characters going to their quote happy place
in order to focus on the golf course, which includes
Bad Bunny's character imagining Travis Kelce covered in honey and
he's watching as a bear Molson. So Travis Kelsey gets
slathered in honey.

Speaker 2 (22:57):
Now.

Speaker 4 (22:59):
I tried to the movie Friday, and the keyword is tried.
It was so bad that I had to walk away
and not finish it.

Speaker 6 (23:08):
I'm sorry if you liked it, but that is my take.

Speaker 4 (23:10):
It was not good. It was really not good. And
I cannot believe we waited that long for that. Jennifer
Lopez had a major wardrobe malfunction mid performance during her
concert in Poland on the heels of her fifty sixth birthday.
She was wearing this like silver fringed skirt, a green
glitter brough some tights than goodness gloves, and the skirtch
just unexpectedly fell off, like fell right off her. On stage,

(23:33):
she joked, I'm glad I had underwear on. I don't
usually before tossing the garment onto the ground, she's in
her like little, I'm like naughty.

Speaker 2 (23:40):
If you're on stage not wearing underwear, that's daring. That's
that's daring. I think you're asking for something to happen.
It's not it's desirable. Yeah, and maybe you don't care,
but if you do, because at the angles are such
that you need to be wearing underwear unless you want
everyone to see your stuff.

Speaker 4 (23:54):
No, we should all wear underwear on stage.

Speaker 5 (23:57):
I think I useuse.

Speaker 4 (23:59):
You don't know who's in the audio, you know, like
we don't want the kids to be there, right, so
we're underwear.

Speaker 6 (24:04):
I think that's a good rule.

Speaker 4 (24:06):
Glowrilla is selling T shirts with her mugshot from her
recent arrest. They're priced around forty dollars each, so that's
a pretty good price if you're a fan. This arrest,
of course, stemmed from what we talked about last week,
that burglary at or Georgia home, where officers responded then
discovered a significant amount of excuse me, weed and a
controlled substance in our bedroom. She turned herself in and

(24:27):
was released on bond. But our legal team was like,
why when we called you for help, you then turn
around and start looking through glowrilla stuff and then arrest her.

Speaker 6 (24:36):
So she is now making a profit off of it.
I mean, I feel like that's the move. If you
have a mugshot, you need to sell shirts with it
on there.

Speaker 4 (24:43):
If you missed any part of our show and want
to catch up, by the way, just type the Fred
Show on demand, and if you could set us as
a preset on the free iHeartRadio app, it really helps.

Speaker 2 (24:51):
I'd said it in our new merch story that we're
working on, and this one's new and improved.

Speaker 1 (24:56):
Okay, yeah, I mean we didn't know what we were.

Speaker 2 (24:58):
Doing before in the merch store process, right, and people
were asking for shirts, they were asking for stuff and
that we're very you know, very grateful that you wanted
this stuff, but we didn't know how to make the
store really like we're not we're not necessarily a textiles people, right, No, no, no,
you know, I mean Jayson will offer to to screenprint
himself all the shirts, but we decided to go with

(25:18):
a third party. But we have another, a new provider
now that we're working through this for the holiday season.
It's approaching and I know everybody wants their freend show
merch and the goal this time would be for you
to actually receive it by the holiday season, as opposed
to this holiday season when you ordered it last holiday seats. Right,
But again, you know we're new with this. I think
a mug shot T shirt might be you know, everyone

(25:40):
except that you and I don't have mug shots.

Speaker 8 (25:42):
Right, I don't. I mean, I could, you know, make
what happen if we need to?

Speaker 1 (25:46):
Maybe maybe we.

Speaker 2 (25:47):
Should, Maybe we should get some do some crime and
then we would have mug shots to add to the
shirts just in time for the holidays.

Speaker 1 (25:54):
Yeah, what would you do? What crime would you command?
I don't know.

Speaker 8 (25:57):
I mean, maybe like a lot of these is this
weekend I could like try to break in there, go streaking.

Speaker 1 (26:04):
Have you buried? Have you buried your drugs yet?

Speaker 8 (26:06):
For lalla pala, No, there's not in my bag, but
I can go bury them out with Okay.

Speaker 2 (26:10):
Well that leave them in your bag. That would be
one way to, you know, for the authorities to take it. Look,
that's one fun fact about lat of Pelusa. I just
think it's so creative. I'm not even sure if you
can do it anymore. But a lot of palooza in
Grand Park, huge park in the middle of the city
of Chicago. And years ago I heard that because it's
I get difficult to get your drugs and paraphernalia into
a lot of and I'm not suggesting you should not

(26:31):
do this, do not do this right, but apparently people
would go like two weeks ago and bury this stuff
in the because the park you know, hasn't been sort
of surrounded yet with fences and Corton dof or whatever.
People would go do that and then they would be
there like I guess, drop a pan or whatever if
you couldn't remember which tree you buried it under. And
then you get in, you know, because you bought your

(26:52):
tickets or you won them and then and then there
they are s already inside I mean brilliant or an
air tag, an air tag that is the next level
contraband concealment that is really I honestly, I was pretty
smart when I heard it. But it's too late. Now
those defences are already. Yeah, can't be done. What is

(27:14):
it that your because my sister's having a hard time
with this. I think it has for years, and Pauline
had mentioned it too, But grandparents being grandparents, parents being
parents to your kids, so they raised you right, and
then you have kids and then you say, you know,
Nana and whatever, people come over here and watch my

(27:35):
kids and or go go over to their house. And
then for some reason, even though we were spoiled by
our grandparents, and our grandparents were the ones that brought
us the stuff that you know, that our parents wouldn't
buy us, or let us stay up later, or do
the stuff that our parents wouldn't let us do, or
feed us the food that our parents wouldn't let us. See,
that's what grandparents do, right, except now that it's happening

(27:56):
to us, we don't like it, Like my mom can't.
Sister is like so control focused, big surprise. I wonder
where she got that. They're like, she's I was almost
afraid to leave my mom with these kids because it's
like the mom's gonna be mem She's gonna be Mimi
is what they call her, and do this stuff. And

(28:16):
you're saying, now, your mom is doing this and you're
annoyed by it, Paulina, You're annoyed that your mom is
doing it her own way, even though that's what your
grandparents would have done for you if they weren't in Poland.

Speaker 7 (28:28):
Yes, so, Mom, if you're listening, I'm just playing, please
come watch my kids. But it's becoming a lot, and
I've talked to her about it a little bit, a
little bit because Marta, you have to like kind of
ease your way in to be able to.

Speaker 5 (28:39):
Get this information out to her.

Speaker 7 (28:41):
But she is Bopcha, right, so's she's grandma to Gigi,
and we are just on two different pages to the
point where I'm like, do we need to limit our
time together? Like do we need to have a bigger
conversation because I feel like when Gidi's with Bopcha with
her grandmother, I feel like she is like wild child,
like whatever she wants and this and that, and I'm

(29:01):
trying to discipline her of we clean up, we don't
throw stuff, and my mom just laughs and it's so
funny and you know, she can never do wrong, and oh,
we don't do that, and it's all giggles, and I'm like,
but we're not teaching her structure. And now she's like,
in my opinion, she's on two different timelines. Here with me,
she knows we do this, but with Grandma it's like
a whole different baby.

Speaker 5 (29:20):
So I'm like, we gotta be one here, we gotta
be a team.

Speaker 2 (29:23):
But is she Is she carrying this stuff over from
from bob Cha to like your life or does she
mean you just said like, is she ever? Is she
able to separate the fact that she can act up
and be crazy with her grandmother but not with you.

Speaker 7 (29:36):
I think once Grandma leaves or I pick her up,
it takes about an hour or two for her to
get back into the gig that I'm raising, Like the
gigi that I know, you know what I mean, checks
out of this mode or something, which she does, like
I'm proud of my baby. She knows, you know, Bobcha's
rules and then Mom's rules. But I'm also like, are
we teaching her two different sides? Like I want her

(29:57):
to be the same Gigi. You know what I mean,
that's all be on the same page. And don't even
get me started with the sugar and the and the
feeding her.

Speaker 5 (30:04):
I am not strict.

Speaker 7 (30:06):
Okay, she can have a cookie, she can have bread whatever.
My mom will sit there and like feed her sugar
like like in her mouth. And I'm like, Mom, we
said we're not trying to give her sugar if we
don't have to, Okay, a birthday cake. We're going to
a birthday party. She can have a piece of cake
right a bite. But my mom will go pick up
a cake and bring it home to her, Like, we
don't need to be feeding her sugar on purpose.

Speaker 1 (30:26):
So she's not animal. She can't really ask for it.
She's not old enough yet.

Speaker 2 (30:29):
This is just your mom freestyling this, yes, because she
thinks she'll like it.

Speaker 7 (30:33):
She thinks she'll like it. And Gigi was caught also
collery on her walls at the house, Like there was
some crayons on Bopcha's walls when I did that. Can
I just say that I hadn't seen the day the
light of day for weeks. But when Gigi does it,
it's so cute and it's adorable and everything's okay, everyone's great.

Speaker 1 (30:54):
So how do you moderate that as a parent?

Speaker 2 (30:56):
Eight five five one one of three five So you
get ahold of us she can call it text to
say number because I mean, you're not going to block
access to your your parents, I guess for you for
your kids, right, they're grandkids, and grandparents are going to
be grandparents because that's what they're supposed to do. And
grandparents are also probably don't want to get involved. They

(31:17):
think they want it to be a happy, fun place.
They don't want to be disciplining and yelling at your
kids and telling them whatever. But at the same time,
you don't want your kids to learn to color on
the wall at you know, Bobja's house and then go
back to your house. And because maybe they're too young
to understand the difference between So maybe sugar fine, like
you just don't feed it to her, but then behaviorally,

(31:38):
you know, there's stuff that you probably are trying to
instill in her not to do that. If she goes
over there and does it, then you have a problem. Yeah,
it's going to be on the same page.

Speaker 7 (31:47):
You know, I feel like we're teaching her two different
things that I'm not a strict parent, you know, I'm
TYPEB mom to the court. Like in my house, it
is a fun place. Okay, I'm not prison, but I'm.

Speaker 1 (31:56):
Also like nice.

Speaker 6 (31:57):
Yeah, I love that.

Speaker 7 (31:57):
I'm also just trying to be on the same page
as all the greatmas.

Speaker 2 (32:00):
You know, And how how are you supposed to tell
your parents don't do it your way?

Speaker 5 (32:05):
It doesn't work.

Speaker 2 (32:07):
You can't do that. Then they won't listen if you did. So, Hey, Susie, Hello,
Hi Susie.

Speaker 1 (32:13):
Good morning.

Speaker 2 (32:14):
So there's your mom sort of straightened.

Speaker 1 (32:16):
You out on this.

Speaker 10 (32:18):
They did, because what happens at grandma's stays at grandma's.

Speaker 5 (32:22):
And she told me off. And that's how it was.
I feel that.

Speaker 2 (32:26):
Okay, So what were your complaints, like, what were what
were the issues? Like your kid would come home and
hear she was doing what?

Speaker 5 (32:32):
Oh they she was in his pajamas all day. They
didn't get dressed, they ate what they wanted, nap time
went kind of out the window. I mean, the disrupted
their whole day. And that's what grandmas are supposed to do.

Speaker 2 (32:47):
Yeah, because it's like it's every day. Right, So then
they come back to your house and yeah, there's a
little bit of adjustment, but they look forward to going
to grandma's house, which is what they're That's what the
grandparents are trying to do, right, They're trying to make
their place seem like the place that you want to
be and hangout.

Speaker 10 (33:03):
Right.

Speaker 7 (33:04):
So that's the point that, yeah, that's all right.

Speaker 1 (33:09):
So your mom trained you out. She just said, Hey, look, Susie,
I don't want to hear it exactly. Yeah, don't I
hear that.

Speaker 2 (33:16):
I think, thank you, have a good day.

Speaker 1 (33:20):
I mean, it's it's grandparent. I mean.

Speaker 2 (33:22):
But the second thing is like, this is what your
grandparents did for you, So then why is it that now,
all of a sudden your kid can't have it because
it's inconvenient to you.

Speaker 7 (33:32):
I mean, yeah, okay, I'm so grateful that my mom
is able to do this for Gigi, and that she lives,
you know, five minutes from me, and that we can
go pull up to her house there any second. That's
a blessing. I only ask just let's follow my rules.
I'm not even a rule kind of lady. I just
do believe that babies and little kids in a little
bit of structure, and if we can all be on
the same page, I'd be great.

Speaker 5 (33:52):
But my mom told me off too, and.

Speaker 7 (33:53):
Marta said, I am grandma, and she goes, this is
what we do.

Speaker 2 (33:57):
Well, that's the other thing. It's free. It's you do
what you pay for. Girl, Like the kid is going
to say. The kid's not gonna choke at anything. The
kid's not gonna like nothing Dad's gonna have. But it's
gonna be a little sugar eye and you're not paying
for it. So you don't get to mandate with free.
Free is free?

Speaker 7 (34:11):
Well, grandma is free child care. But I also do
get to call the rules a little bit, don't you think.

Speaker 2 (34:16):
No, I Kylie Hi, you having the same struggle as Paulina.

Speaker 3 (34:22):
Hi.

Speaker 10 (34:22):
Yes, I am Hi, Paulina. I just had a son
last July one, thank you. And it's not my parents'
first grandchild. My older sister has a three year old son,
so they've been navigating this the same thing, but my

(34:43):
sister is definitely much more laid down. The law sets
the boundaries, and I guess it's easier for me because
I'm a little farther away. My parents are in Connecticut
and I live in Raleigh, North Carolina.

Speaker 5 (34:57):
So shout out, you know.

Speaker 10 (34:59):
Yeah, it's a little bit of a distance there, so
I don't like see them all the time. But when
we do see them, or when we face time or
we interact around the holidays, they say a lot of
these terms that I don't really like using around my son.
Like they'll say like, oh, you're such a good boy.
Have you been such a good boy? And it's like

(35:20):
he's a baby, of course he's a good boy. Like
the way they talk to him is just not my favorite.
And I already know that if I was, you know,
not with him and they were watching him, they would
be giving him slices of cake and sugar all the time.

Speaker 3 (35:36):
M m.

Speaker 1 (35:37):
But I guess it's like you can you can fly
back on that. But I don't know.

Speaker 2 (35:42):
This this is this is just what this is what,
This is a relationship, Like, this is a dynamic. This
is what's supposed to And again it's not like it's hey,
come over here and play with scissors, you know, it's
it's like, yeah, come over, come over to Nana's house
and we can have ice cream, because that's what Nana's
gonna do.

Speaker 8 (35:55):
Exactly.

Speaker 10 (35:56):
You know, Yeah, but I've seen the unhealthy habits my
parents have, and I don't have the same unhealthy habits,
like specifically with food. And people talk about how like
addicting sugar is, and I just feel like we don't
need to be introducing like if we're talking about the
food situation specifically, we don't need to be introducing sugar

(36:19):
at such a young age. They'll have their whole life
to go eat all the candy and sugar they want.
But you know, at such a young age when they
don't even know what they're asking for, we don't need
to just be handing them like shoda and sugar and cake.

Speaker 2 (36:34):
You know, wait till they introduce them to heroin. Now
that's wild. That's going to be a wild time. Okay, Hey,
I hear what you're saying, And thank you for calling it,
Thank you for listening, have a great day.

Speaker 10 (36:43):
Thanks God.

Speaker 1 (36:44):
No, I mean, I get it.

Speaker 2 (36:45):
Like it must be frustrating, but at the same time,
it comes from a place of love. It's not like
I don't think it's necessari hopefully, Like when my parents
got divorced and I would go over to my father's
house and it was like basically it was, hey, what
does your mom not want you to do? Like, what
will your mom not let you have? Let's go get
it right now. And that was out of spite. This
is out of love.

Speaker 4 (37:06):
Yeah, Pee, I have to say now that my friends
are having kids of their own, two of my best
friend's moms have come to me and said, hey, you
had a really close relationship with your grandma. Can you
give me some advice on how to have that with
my grandkids? Which honor of a lifetime. But I tell
them it was built on secrets between us, like we
were doing naughty stuff together that eventually turned into drinking buddies.

Speaker 5 (37:28):
But when I was young, it was the sugar.

Speaker 6 (37:30):
It was the taking me shopping the stuff, you know.
And I'm like, it was built on That's a blessing. Yeah,
and I love that.

Speaker 2 (37:35):
I also think it's different generations too, because my grandparents
came from a time. I mean they were like thirties, forties, fifties,
you know, like I'm talking nineteen.

Speaker 6 (37:45):
Yeah, you took it one hundred years ago.

Speaker 1 (37:46):
Basically one hundred years ago.

Speaker 2 (37:48):
Honestly, my grandparents died in you know, five six years ago.
They were ninety two years old ninety one ninety two,
and I think they it might be different now than
it was then because in some ways my grandparents were
more stern, and in in other ways they were more
loving and not loving but loving in a different way.
So it was fun time, like we did fun stuff,
but in other ways you didn't disappoint my grandfather and

(38:10):
you didn't talk back to me my grandmother either. And
I wonder if now it's like the boundaries are looser,
or it's it's just more laid back than it used
to be. So like it was easier maybe for my
mom to say sure because she knew that Nanagi Dad
were gonna like hold it down. You know, there was
a line. But it was fun but like to like, yeah,
maybe a little more ice cream. But then also like
you're gonna be in bed and you're gonna be you

(38:31):
know when I was little older, you're gonna be home by
a certain time, because there was that respect. I wonder
if it's like because in some ways my parents were
more laid back than they were, and I think you're
talking about a generation now where maybe it's like I
don't know, maybe maybe it's gone the other way where
older people are more, are are more laid back.

Speaker 1 (38:50):
She's like, whatever, you know what I mean, I do.

Speaker 5 (38:53):
That's the thing with my mom.

Speaker 7 (38:54):
I love her so much, Ado, but I know that
she's in her grandma era, and Mart's has always been.

Speaker 5 (38:58):
Done doing what she wants it Like, that's never big.

Speaker 8 (39:01):
You're not changing that, You're not changing hearts up.

Speaker 5 (39:03):
So I think Gigi's very lucky to have her.

Speaker 7 (39:05):
But grandparents, if you're listening, if a parent, you know,
if your child is asking you please, let's not give sugar,
you know, a whole box of oreoles.

Speaker 5 (39:12):
Like maybe let's not compromise. Let's compromise.

Speaker 2 (39:15):
Somebody said, Pauline A good luck with that. I had
my rules, my boundaries, and she picked and chose what
she honored. This is a text what she honored. She
also lives five minutes away and it was free. Trust me,
she'll be okay. Minor eighteen plus and now it's all good.
So look, did they make it to eighteen?

Speaker 1 (39:30):
It will be fine. More Fred Show Next

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