Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is the Fread Show. Each time. 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 trip for two to
the December twelfth show at two Night's Day at Park
MGM December twelfth through the fourteenth and round trip airfare.
(00:20):
Text Christmas to five seven, seven three nine right now
for a chance to win. A confirmation text will be
sent standard message and data rates may apply. It's all
thanks to the Live Nation.
Speaker 2 (00:32):
You've got to wait up.
Speaker 1 (00:35):
Fread Show is on Wait Now, Money Show Ourning Everybody
It Ease Thursday, October sixteenth. Frend Show is on Hig
Kalem Hi, Jason Brown, Hi, Paulina Hikiki Shelby Shelley is
here with the showdown. Next hour. Four point fifty is
the prize. Six straight wins for shells. But you can
(00:57):
start your day with that money. A bella means here
the phone and the tax dight five five five nine
one one o three five Waiting by the phone this morning.
Why did somebody get ghosted? Throwback? Throw down, name that tune?
Bad look course we got that gush with Shelley. This
hour headlines the entertainment of port and blogs what are
you working on? K? Hey?
Speaker 3 (01:13):
Some of us are struggling, but others of us just
want to know what a milk carton costs?
Speaker 1 (01:19):
You know? Ay, she meant to look that up. A
lot of factors though, Okay, a lot of factors on
how much a milk card a milk carton would cost,
for sure, there are a lot of how many am
I buying? What material am I buying? Is there buying? You?
Am I buying it? You know? Again in mass is
it not milk? Well? Is she talking about the carton
(01:40):
like that the milk comes in? Or how many?
Speaker 3 (01:42):
She just means like basic how much milkings?
Speaker 1 (01:45):
Yes, I guess I can't remember the last time someone
called it a carton of milk. I was thinking about
a whole case of milk when I heard that analogy,
Yeah it was.
Speaker 3 (01:53):
She was just saying she would really love to understand
more what normal?
Speaker 1 (01:57):
Oh yeah yeah, what kind of milk? Right? Yeah? Yeah? Yeah?
How many? How big?
Speaker 4 (02:03):
We should feel bad because she has a.
Speaker 1 (02:04):
Lot of questions, A lot of questions. You know, where
did we get it at? Aldie? Did we get it
at an airwan Erwan, whatever that place is called. The
place is expensive with the twenty five dollars smoothie. Have
you ever been to one of those? No, I've never
bet they do a credit check before you walk in.
I turn you when I walked.
Speaker 4 (02:22):
I have been to one.
Speaker 1 (02:23):
Is crazy. Yeah, I wouldn't be able to afford to
me at that place. Would you ever think it's a
good idea to track down everyone that you've ever been
with intimately and then interview them. Is there any circumstances
under which you'd want to have that discussion, have that conversation,
that sit down kind of yeah, okay, Well because someone's
(02:45):
doing it in a podcast. Miriam Katz is an actor
and a writer in La launched a podcast called ex Appeal,
where she tracks down and interviews everybody she's ever had
a romantic or sexual relationship with. Her goals curiosity, emotional closure,
and deeper understanding. She wants to ask her exes what
they think went wrong, here are things that she never
got to say or that whenever said to her, and
(03:09):
process her past more fully. She plans to interview about
ten x is a year over the next decade. Well
one hundred xes. I'm not judging. I mean I could
do it too, probably last longer, but covering relationships that
range from childhood crushes to one night stands. The guests
include a sex addict, a rabbi, a comedium, a stripper,
and others with various backgrounds and life stories. She was busy,
(03:34):
I mean, yeah, I got yeah, ten a year for it.
I mean it's one hundred people, so there's one hundred people.
But the crushes, I suppose, you know, she doesn't mean
she got with all of them.
Speaker 3 (03:43):
If we're kind of crushes. Jason would have the longest podcast.
Speaker 4 (03:46):
I could go till the end of time.
Speaker 1 (03:50):
I have crushes on everybody. I guess it could be interesting,
but I think it's.
Speaker 4 (03:53):
Such a cool idea.
Speaker 1 (03:54):
Honestly, wouldn't it be most interesting though? For you? Like,
I mean, I don't know why I would necessarily listen
to that, because I would need to know. No, I'm
not testing her idea. She's like, maybe it would work,
you know, for one of us, because if you listen
every morning and then you have some sense of our personality.
And I guess her fans would like it, But don't
you kind of need to be invested in the person
to hear if they're getting like slammed or complimented or
(04:15):
you know what I mean, Like I don't know. There
are people who would probably love to hear that I'm
terrible in bed or something. And then there are probably
probably people who would be very you know, offended on
my behalf if someone said something mean about me, because
people invest in you know, listening to the show every
morning and us as characters. So but if I if
I'm listening to just some random person talk to their
ex who I don't know, and you know, he's saying
(04:35):
like whatever, I don't know, maybe it's interesting, but.
Speaker 4 (04:39):
I would love for you to do this on so
many levels.
Speaker 1 (04:42):
Well tell me the levels.
Speaker 4 (04:44):
The levels being that unique guy.
Speaker 5 (04:46):
There are a lot of them, so levels to this issue.
And I think with you it starts with a you
need a podcast. But number two, I think everybody's business
this week put me in is this insider again?
Speaker 1 (04:56):
Because I have need another thing. I don't need another
hour of you talking. No one needs to hear that.
Speaker 4 (05:02):
A lot of people literally ask me for it.
Speaker 1 (05:03):
I give you everything I got, I give you the
a stuff right here I'm holding.
Speaker 6 (05:08):
I'm not holding anything back for a side quest? What
would we what would Chad call it? Like, while I'm
visiting the past, it's like a blast from the past.
Oh what did you trained the Blastmaster?
Speaker 1 (05:19):
Right? I was the master blaster? Okay.
Speaker 5 (05:24):
First of all, I kind of love that. I love
this idea for you because you talk about all the time.
We're like, you know, I've been around the block and you.
Speaker 1 (05:32):
I'm all, I'm all the time talking about it.
Speaker 4 (05:35):
You've been different cities around the block.
Speaker 5 (05:37):
Like, that's what I want to hear too, Like, go
back to those cities, Charlotte, take it on tour.
Speaker 1 (05:41):
We've been to don't you dare move? Yeah, we don't
need to hear any of those stories. No. Just understanding
is there's no way to communicate to the state of
North Carolina except except one way, our our radio show.
Out of speakers, that's it, but no one can talk back.
Speaker 3 (05:56):
You would bring your tour to Austin. You would bring
it to Dallas. You would bring its Scots.
Speaker 1 (06:01):
Now, Dallas tour wouldn't take long because I was slate
in the game there, but the Austin tour would take
quite some time.
Speaker 3 (06:07):
You had like crushes and girlfriends and Dallas. No, No, of course,
of course you met like that one girl's family who
you liked more than her.
Speaker 1 (06:13):
Yeah, it's true. I liked your dad more than was her. Yeah.
I did that out to talk.
Speaker 3 (06:17):
To the dad and her be like, I never really
liked you. Your dad was great, though.
Speaker 1 (06:20):
I just don't know how. I don't know how fruitful
it would be or valuable. I mean, I suppose if
everybody were being honest and and there were very few
people that were just saying things to get under your
skin because you broke their heart or something, then I
think you could probably get, you know, useful information from this.
But you'd also have to be self aware, and you'd
have to be able to hear it. And I don't
think a lot of people are willing to really look
(06:41):
themselves in the mirror and hear what other people think
about them. I really don't. I don't think that people
are like, oh, I'd love that. I don't know that
you would, no, because I think people would really get
in you. And then I think if you were, if
you were sensitive or unself aware and you didn't recognize
any of these things about yourself, I think you'd have
a problem.
Speaker 4 (06:58):
That's true, I wouldn't like it. Don't do it to me.
Speaker 1 (07:00):
It's like that, you know these like roast fests, you know,
where it's like supposed to be silly and funny and
then people wind up crying. And I don't mean the
celebrity ones. I mean like roast to me, you know,
I was like, no, you don't want to be No,
you don't you don't want that.
Speaker 4 (07:11):
I don't want that.
Speaker 1 (07:12):
But I would think you could get a lot of
useful information out of it if somebody were able to
be somewhat objective in talking about their relationship with you.
I mean, like what you did well intimately, you know,
what you did well communicatively? You know why they think
it didn't work out? Yeah? Yeah, yeah. I think it
would be interesting if somebody interviewed all my exes and
(07:32):
I got to listen to it. But again I was
present for most of that.
Speaker 3 (07:36):
But people would probably like put themselves into your situations,
because I think a lot of people would like to
do that.
Speaker 4 (07:41):
So, like, you know, if there was the one that got.
Speaker 3 (07:43):
Away, if there was like the best hookup you ever had,
but they were super toxic, like I'm sure people would.
Speaker 4 (07:48):
Just like be able to relate on some level.
Speaker 1 (07:50):
I would be more interested in like a podcast where
I hire a private investigator to find some of the
women that like I, that I whiffed on, or that
like that wanted me and I and I was too
dumb to see it or whatever, and see what became
of them. You can't find them on social I don't
know all their names. Oh you know, okay, well no,
I just there's like, for example, there's just there's this
(08:12):
woman I was in college. I come home from college
and my mom is like, well, I joined a gym
and I was in yoga today and there was this
nice girl and she lives in New York and she's
home for Christmas too, and so I gave her your
phone number, and I'm like, you know how this goes.
I'm like great, great, Like well, because when mom and
grandma get involved, you know, typically in like i'mt a
nice girl for you, it's like normally it's not what
(08:35):
you're looking for. So I find the phone rings and
actually I didn't even know what happened. The girl called
on her own and then there was like a note
on my door from my sister so and so called,
and I'm like, well, who is this, And then my
mom's like, oh yeah, I I gave our number to
this woman that I met at the thing. So then
we meet for coffee and she is a ten. A
ten out of this woman was like we were both.
(08:57):
He was nineteen, I was eighteen, like a ten. And
so we hang out a couple of times, wind up
back at her house. I'd like, I did the thing
where I said I one into the couch and she
said on the other, and like was very clear that
like this it was on. But I don't know. I
didn't have I didn't have this. I didn't have this
magic that I have now, you know. I didn't have
it in me. I didn't have it in me to
be rejected constantly like I do now now you can
(09:19):
just slap me in the face. I just move on
to the next like it's no big deal. I can
handle that now. But I didn't. I didn't have the swag.
I don't have any swag now either. But I didn't
have it him, and so nothing happened, and I think
she was mad about it. She felt rejected. Never heard
from her again. But now every time I drive past
her house which is near my house and where I
grew up. I think of this person, and she hasn't
(09:39):
lived there anymore, needed as her family. It's been twenty
years or something, almost twenty five years, so I don't
know what happened to her. But like I'm always curious,
like what if i'd what if i'd actually like had
some cane and made a move, Like what would that
have been? Right?
Speaker 4 (09:54):
Where is she right?
Speaker 1 (09:56):
Right? Like what became of her? Did she go marry
some you know, hot guy? And I don't know. Friends
don't write a podcast. I don't know how to find
these people, Like I'm not going into real estate records,
like I'm not like I'm not going to dig too deep.
Speaker 3 (10:09):
You just have a producer, you know, for the podcast,
and then they look into these women and then you
find them period.
Speaker 1 (10:15):
And you guys not have stories like that. You know,
there aren't people that you can think of just right
off the top where you're like, man, that was that was?
You know, we missed, we missed, our paths were not
aligned at that moment. But I wonder, I wonder, I mean,
you know, maybe if you're married or engaged, you shouldn't.
Speaker 4 (10:29):
Yeah, I was gonna say, not that anyone would admit
I'm here.
Speaker 5 (10:32):
I'm sure, no, not wonder, but like I don't know,
you wonder too, like if that didn't end, like where.
Speaker 4 (10:37):
You would be? That's what I think about a lot.
Speaker 5 (10:38):
I'm like, ohay, if this situation didn't end, you know,
my little high school boyfriend, this little side hustle on
this on the weekends.
Speaker 4 (10:44):
I'm like, right, my entrepreneur boyfriend at that time, Like
he was.
Speaker 3 (10:47):
A drug dealer, he was a street pharmacist.
Speaker 4 (10:51):
A lot of people in the community. Okay, care he
wasn't here.
Speaker 1 (10:57):
That's what we're calling it now. He was ahead of
his side, was a dispensary before there. That's all it was. Yeah,
this man saw the future that he did, that's it.
Speaker 5 (11:06):
He made no money, though, I don't know how like
that happened, right, I'm like, just his business model.
Speaker 1 (11:12):
It didn't work, the pharmacist math, the mathing, right, So
you just what you wonder what would have been if
you'd stayed with people, not necessarily, what would have happened
if you had been more aligned?
Speaker 4 (11:21):
Right exactly.
Speaker 5 (11:22):
I think I've never fumbled a person like ever like
they fumbled me if anything, period period.
Speaker 1 (11:27):
Okay, Well I can't say that I fumbled many how many?
But many have fumbled me as well. That's right, King,
So I've done the fumbling, and I've been fumbled, and
not in the fun way. The biggest stories of the
day the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show, I guess was last night.
I don't know how I missed this. I think I
(11:48):
was watching Nancy with the Story for then on last night.
Oh well, I was watching it on DVR. Yeah, I
was rewatching it's because I already watched it the first
times I was watching live. Of course, I wanted to
make sure I favored every moment of the dedication dances.
So I can't. I can't do that stuff. I can't
do this stuff where people either like tribute dead people
(12:09):
or old people that helped them, because then I just
think of that's just like, oh god, here we go
straight to my grandfather, you know, straight to my mentors
that aren't here anymore. I can't do it. I can't.
It's very sweet. I'm glad that people were able to
do that. Mister Feenie like you know, ninety eight years
old or something, so with us guess yeah, he's yeah,
thanks for trying to kill him off somebody in here.
Speaker 3 (12:26):
But no, man, it's okay, okay, sorry, you know.
Speaker 1 (12:32):
I guess he made a big impact on daniel Fischel's
life or whatever her name is. So that's very nice.
But I can't watch stuff like that. It always gets me.
Speaker 3 (12:39):
She's also really close with Sabrina Carpenter Danielle Fischal. She
calls her her like one of her daughters, and she
got to dance to one of her songs too, which
is really cool.
Speaker 1 (12:49):
I'm like watching this full season right well, I was watching.
I was watching that, so I was unable to watch
Victorias Secret Fashion. So Angel Reese joined Belle A Gigi
Hadid in a star studied lineup that also featured a
cast of transgender, pregnant, and plus size models. Was it
Missy Elliott there too? Yeah?
Speaker 4 (13:04):
She performed.
Speaker 1 (13:05):
Yeah, she should have been in lingerie performing. I would
love to have watched that. Let's go, let's go, Yes,
let's do that gymnast she was. You're right. Google flights
has revealed the most searched Thanksgiving destinations, and I just
want to give you the list here so that you know,
just in case you're traveling. One of the most popular
places to go for Thanksgiving apparently Number one is Columbia,
(13:26):
South Carolina. Oh. This is according to data from Google Flights,
which says the most searched destination in the US for
Thanksgiving is in fact Columbia, South Carolina. This is believed
that the Paul Meadow Bowl, which takes place the Saturday
after Thanksgiving, is a big contributor to the expected bump
in tourism lovely that time of year. Columbia, South Carolina, Bozeman, Montana, Spokene, Washington. Okay,
(13:48):
those are feeling very fall to me, Like all right, Detroit, Michigan.
Number four, that's where I'm going for Thanksgiving. Well, no,
wonder you and your posse, everyone's going to wonder to
travel slight and on Google.
Speaker 4 (13:59):
Great for Theanksgiving, you laugh, but it's a great time.
Speaker 1 (14:01):
I loved it.
Speaker 4 (14:02):
You pread the Lions game like there's a lot to
do there.
Speaker 1 (14:06):
You go.
Speaker 4 (14:06):
It's a vibe.
Speaker 1 (14:07):
I just I don't know. I guess, like you know,
when I think Thanksgiving travel maybe, but these are people
going home, right, They're doing like down home things and
not going on. It's like summer vacation destinations. Omaha, Nebraska, Pittsburgh,
Panama City, Florida, Little Rock, Arkansas, Knoxville, Tennessee, and Colorado Springs.
Those are the the hotspots. If you're traveling to those
for Thanksgiving and there's gonna be a lot of people
(14:27):
on your flights posting an airport selfie, I guess puts
you at risk. And I've heard this before, but now
there's a big thing about it. Today scammers monitor social
medium and spot people posting from airports. So I guess
it's not even just people robbing your house now. It
used to be that that like robber people would look
at your social media and be like, oh, look, they're
(14:47):
in Columbia, South Carolina. I'm going to go rob their
house because no one's there. I guess this is more
like scammers that will then impersonate the traveler and contact
old people in the family or family members claiming they
need more money. Because in an emergency, if the travelers
mid flight, then their phone would go to voicemail, then
making it hard to confirm if it's a scam. This
is very sophisticated. So you see me in the airport,
(15:10):
Oh look here headed to Detroit, you know, picture of me,
and then and then you like take the time and
then find my family and call them while I'm flying
for forty five minutes in Detroit and then tell them
that I need money. That's crazy. The advice is to
avoid posting airport selfies until after your trip, or at
least be careful sharing updates in real time. Smuckers is
(15:30):
taking Trader Joe's to court, claiming that grocery chains new
crustless peanut butter and jelly sandwiches are a little too familiar.
In a lawsuit Foul in Ohio, the JM. Smucker Company
accused Trader Joe's of trademark infringement, arguing that the retailer's
product is an obvious copycap of their popular Uncrustables. These
Smuckers on crustables with an identical round shape and similar
(15:51):
blue packaging featuring a sandwich missing a bite. This is
pre USA today. Smucker says the Trader Joe's is trying
to catch you on the fame and recognition of the
un Crustable's brand, and even claims that some customers have
been fooled into thinking the two products are connected. Now,
is you know that I've never been to a Trader Joe's.
That's not because I don't want to go to a
Trader Joe's. I think I think that I would thrive
(16:12):
in a Trader Joe's. I feel like, I feel like
I would find so many things that I need to
put in my mouth, and also fresh flowers yea, which
you know what now? But I there are many reasons
I haven't been to Trader Joe's. But one is that
that there's a parking lot next to the one semi
near my house that has three parking spots in it,
three total parking spots. So that doesn't work for me.
(16:34):
I don't even know why you build a parking lot
with three total parking spots. I don't really don't know
what the point of that is. It's not a parking lot,
that's a parking space for three people. But I've never
been to one, and so now, like Star Wars, I'm
just going to stick with it. I'm just not going
to go because I can now I can boast that,
you know, I've never seen a Star Wars movie right now,
I'm not going to see it, so I can say that.
(16:55):
And I feel the same way about Trader Joe's. However,
isn't that Trader Joe's game is to like take the
product that everyone likes and then make a cheaper version
of it, Like all he does the same thing, don't they.
Speaker 3 (17:05):
I was literally about to say, wait till Smuckers finds
out that that's their whole business model. That's just making
their own more affordable version of everything.
Speaker 4 (17:13):
And I don't know.
Speaker 3 (17:13):
I think the Aldi and the Trader Joe's dudes, the
owners were brothers. I think, oh yeah, before yeah, the
same Yeah, yeah, so like that would make sense. But yeah,
like there's like similar to Jurdo's. They're similar to Cheetos,
Like they're trying to make things affordables.
Speaker 1 (17:27):
Like is that Trader Joe they're suing Trader Joe's, Like,
just sue all of Traders Joe, Like, we're all suing you.
Speaker 4 (17:35):
Like their whole aisle.
Speaker 1 (17:37):
So I'm like, okay, good luck. I mean I guess,
you know, maybe you could make it like a little
less circular and maybe make the packaging look a little
less like the one that you're knocking off. I'd maybe dry.
Speaker 4 (17:48):
They think they made peeb and J's.
Speaker 1 (17:51):
Well, the I think they think they made it like
in the self contained, little little stamped out form. Sure,
which if I invented that I'm owning it too, Like
if I'm the guy who came up with the prepackaged
peanut butter and jelly little round thing, then I'm protecting
that's mine, okay, because I'm rich if I did something
like that. Are you ozempic sober? Looking at you? Paulina?
(18:15):
Weight loss. Some meds are making users feel less drunk, apparently.
A small new study suggested GLP one drugs like ozempic
and megovi might lessen how drunk people feel when they
drink alcohol. People on these drugs reach similar blood alcohol levels,
but reported feeling less intoxicated. Their blood alcohol levels rose
more slowly, which may reduce how strongly the alcohol hits
(18:35):
the brain. Researchers say that this could point towards using
GLP one as a tool in treating alcohol use disorder,
though more studies would be needed.
Speaker 5 (18:43):
If you found this, uh yeah for sure, because the
same thing with food, right slows on your food, Like
how fool you get.
Speaker 4 (18:48):
I'm sure it's gonna be the same thing when you drink.
Speaker 5 (18:50):
Although it makes me kind of not want to drink alcohol,
especially when I take it like that day or the
next day, just because of your nauseous like that's the
last thing I really want. So I'm just chugging water
and like, now those electrolytes that we've got, like those
drinks whatever, are supposed to be hydrated.
Speaker 4 (19:04):
But yeah, yeah, I don't know.
Speaker 1 (19:06):
Oh yeah, shout out to the Jelsert people who sent
us whatever it was that stuff called because I asked
for it, because you know, I'm big hydration guy, now, huge,
huge in hydration. Have runner hydration package? Yeah, no, I am,
I'm big. I'm big into it now. But I don't
those were called. I thought i'd give him a free
shout out. But anyway, and then there's a kitten that's
gone viral this morning in headlines. This is actually a
(19:28):
pretty crazy video that goes along with it, but California
foster fail kitten is showing signs of being a chef
because Wendy the kitten noticed a pot of food cooking
on her human family's stove, and she decided to do
She wanted to add something to the recipe, so she
plopped a dead mouse into the boiling whatever it was,
super whatever it was, to cook it. Obviously, we got
(19:51):
to cook it up, you know. Yes, I don't know
if there's salmonella had been there and whatever, but we
got to do them and there's spice and everything. They
posted photos of this, captured by a home se security
camera and the family's home. This went on social media
with viral. Wendy's mom thankfully noticed that the cat was
acting suspicious, checked the footage and said, yeah, we didn't
eat that soup that night, we decided. But literally the
(20:12):
cat just walks up to the little pot, puts a
little mouse in there. We'll just a little contribution to
the to dinner. I think it's very nice. National Bosses, Dave,
National Sports Day, just all sports dation, all sports, it's
your day, get to know your customer's day, and National
Get Smart about Credit Day and Caitlyn put yes, I.
Speaker 4 (20:32):
Just want everyone to do that.
Speaker 1 (20:34):
That's right as a person who doesn't have what you've
paid off all your debt right.
Speaker 3 (20:38):
No, girl, not all of it. But I did pay
off my student loans. Yes, okay, I feel a little lighter,
so that's good. Yeah, but remember I did so because
I learned that your credit jobs real low.
Speaker 4 (20:50):
If you missed just one of those payments.
Speaker 1 (20:52):
It turned down. Yeah, listen to this, Kiki, National Gets
your Credit.
Speaker 4 (20:56):
Day I've been listening. You're not playing with me.
Speaker 1 (21:00):
Allen's Entertainment report. He's on the Fread Show.
Speaker 3 (21:03):
As you now know, Diane Keaton died October eleventh in
la at age seventy nine, but we now have the
cause of death, which her family says was pneumonia. Paramedics
responded and took her to the hospital, but she passed
shortly after. Her family did thank fans for the extraordinary
messages of love and support, and suggested donations in her
memory be made to local food banks or animal shelters,
(21:25):
causes that she cared very deeply about. A friend told
people that her health had declined very suddenly in recent months,
and family chose to keep it private. So that's kind
of why it came as such a shock to everyone.
After Darius McCrary, who you know as Eddie Winslow from
Family Matters, was arrested October fifth by US Border Patrol
(21:46):
near the US Mexico border on a fugitive warrant from Michigan.
The warrant stems from missed court appearances over unpaid child support.
At his first appearance, a judge denied in bail, calling
him a flight risk, which now means he has to
remain in a San Diego jail while he awaits extradition
to Michigan within thirty days.
Speaker 4 (22:06):
Then he's due to appear back in court in November.
Speaker 3 (22:08):
But he's got a big old mug shot and everything
and two stories for today's your poor news. Paris Hilton
says that she spends nine hours every week getting facials.
Nine hours, three sessions a week, about what three hours each.
Speaker 4 (22:24):
But now I'm just shook. That's why she's what is
she in her forties and she looks like she's twelve.
Speaker 1 (22:28):
I think facials, I think your face would be like
a like a blueberry or something like that, you know
what I mean, Like if you're getting poked and scrubbed
and extracted and all the things.
Speaker 4 (22:40):
Yeah, well there's nothing.
Speaker 3 (22:41):
They're not all like rough on your face summer like
hydro facials. Some is like electric current therapy, skin sculpting,
red light therapy, YadA YadA, oxygen facials. She actually has
a spot in her house with all those things. But
she says that she spends the three hours that she's
getting facials each session doing other things, So she's getting
other things done.
Speaker 4 (23:01):
But that is why she looks twelve years old.
Speaker 3 (23:03):
And also speaking of Paris, she was mentioned during Kim
Kardashian's episode of Call Her Daddy, and I'll speak more
about that throughout the morning, but most importantly, Kim admitted
that she doesn't really know what a carton of milk costs,
and yes, it does sound an old timey fred.
Speaker 4 (23:17):
She says she's lost track.
Speaker 3 (23:19):
Of everyday pricing and she really would like to get
back to knowing that, which I thought was funny.
Speaker 4 (23:23):
The kind when's the.
Speaker 1 (23:25):
Last time that she wouldn't bought like paper dolls like
years ago?
Speaker 7 (23:28):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (23:29):
Yeah, I mean she has all kinds of people, but
she This whole thing came up because Alex asked her
Alex Cooper the host, how much she thinks she pays
for glam every year, and she was like, well, I
will say that if I'm filming the show or if
I'm you know, doing a photo shoot, they pay for that.
She's like, but if I'm paying for my own, she said,
(23:50):
probably like a million a year.
Speaker 1 (23:52):
Wow. Yeah, and that's does that include clothing or no?
I know I can't include clothing because she wears like
four hundred thousand dollars bags.
Speaker 4 (23:59):
So much well, yes, she said.
Speaker 3 (24:01):
Her last crash out was over a very rare air
mas bag that her mom. She wanted it, but her
mom gave it to Kylie.
Speaker 1 (24:09):
Oh wow, yeah, so when that happens.
Speaker 4 (24:11):
I hate when that happened.
Speaker 3 (24:12):
There's only five made in the world and they're fighting
over this.
Speaker 1 (24:15):
Gave it to Amanda. It's like, wait, come on, and
I wanted that one. You know, it's terrible, right, But
how much milk is either?
Speaker 8 (24:23):
I mean I just tapped his little phone around town
apple pane everywhere, you know, I.
Speaker 3 (24:28):
Buy fake milk, so it's really expensive because well, I mean,
I don't.
Speaker 1 (24:32):
Buy milk because I don't I don't drink milk.
Speaker 4 (24:36):
But how much is paper towel?
Speaker 1 (24:40):
The thing though, because I amazon that. But the point
is like, there are certain things that it's not that
I have so much money that I don't know I
don't It's just that I if I need paper towels
or toilet paper, like it's they're coming there, it's happening, right,
What are you going to do? Right? Like? I you know,
and if I, for some reason insufficient funds or something,
well then I guess we have to worry about that
later because I can't not have toilet paper, right, so
(25:00):
like or eggs or something like. I mean, I can
give you a general idea what I spend on groceries,
but again I don't. I don't. I guess we're not
at the point anymore where we're like looking and then
how much cash do we have in our pocket? And
you know, like, oh, I have this much so I
can spend this many dollars. Like I feel like we're
to your point. We're just clicking beep whatever.
Speaker 4 (25:19):
I know, it's just like a video game. It's bad.
Speaker 1 (25:22):
No, it's not. I come out of here buying like it.
But I'm talking necessities like I don't. I don't remember
what I paid for my last tube of toothpaste, not
because I got a gazillion dollars, but because I need
a toothpaste. Like, what are you gonna do?
Speaker 4 (25:31):
You just scan that phone?
Speaker 1 (25:33):
I know that's probably that's the issue. The issue is
whether you are conscious of money or not. The issue
is that I don't even know that I saw the
price clearly. Really really, you've never bought anything and been like,
do you know exactly how much every apple comes?
Speaker 4 (25:51):
It's not black or white.
Speaker 3 (25:51):
I'm not saying never, but I know the price of
my toothpaste, my paper towel.
Speaker 4 (25:55):
Oh yeah, and she was able to pay off our student.
Speaker 8 (25:59):
We're doing it because I'm telling you, it's like a
video game with this Apple Pay. I highly don't recommend
Apple pay because I just walk around like meming me.
Speaker 4 (26:08):
That's why.
Speaker 1 (26:09):
That's what I'm talking about. Like this isn't a matter.
I mean, I feel like it's I'm waiting for the text.
Oh you you know, I must be nice. No, No,
it's not. It's not that at all. It said you
can buy something and then Apple pay, either you can
like sing it or whatever, or like I bought something.
The other say they don't even you don't even have
to put your address in anymore or like anything like
at all, Like you don't even have to let an
(26:30):
auto fill, like it'll just go Apple pay, just double
click here. Yeah, and then dangers on the way, it's
in the mail already and I don't even know, like
what did I just buy right, you know? Or like yeah,
so I don't know. Yeah, I guess it's more of
a matter of like what's my exposure to these prices,
especially if you're ordering everything online. Yep, Yeah, anyway, I
(26:52):
wrap her up.
Speaker 3 (26:52):
I will wrap her up. And you're asking what glam
consists of hair and makeup? Is what is in the
million dollars a year? The Frend Show on demand on
the iHeartRadio app if you want to catch up.
Speaker 1 (27:02):
I was listening to this off the air. This is exciting.
Kylie Jenner new music came out yesterday. It's good. Well,
it's auto tuned. I feel like it's like every other
celebrity who's not necessarily a singer. I'm not saying she
can't sing. I don't know. I've never heard her sing.
But this this is giving Lindsay Lohan, Paris Hiltan, it's
giving like high production value. Yeah, it's giving like it's
(27:22):
giving like if someone produced Paulina's music would like that
probably be on key used her work, done that right exactly,
Like it could be anyone.
Speaker 4 (27:39):
Apology.
Speaker 1 (27:41):
I feel like she's kind of talking, yeah, and if
somebody messed with it, like I don't hate this song,
but it could be Suprena Carpenter.
Speaker 7 (27:52):
Thanks, thanks, I am yeah, I hear a jingle ball.
Speaker 1 (28:07):
I'll call our seat if you wants to come. Oh good,
I'll see what's up. Yeah, there are some The fut
ticket is still available. Cause you're interested in attending our
Capital one jingle Ball in Chicago, you can you don't
They have airplanes you can fly here. I know people
are listening to us some other places. Welcome to jump
on Southwest, you know spirit whatever it is, not including
the ticket price, but come on down for wherever whatever
reference you are, and you should come because you're gonna
(28:29):
be Gritnelly's gonna be there. Yes, unbelievable time we're going
to have.
Speaker 3 (28:32):
If anyone travels from somewhere else for jingle Ball, I'll
meet you out by you a shot urging.
Speaker 1 (28:39):
Wow. Okay, well God, some seeds still available if you'd
like to go. You can search for those. Let's do
blogs Waiting by the phone four hundred and fifty bucks,
which she'll be Shelley and more next Bread shows. Yeah,
they talk better than they tell me. These are the
radio blogs on the Fread Show, like we're riding in
our diaries, except we say them a lot. We call
(29:00):
them blogs. Kiki's got one go.
Speaker 4 (29:02):
Yes, dear blog.
Speaker 8 (29:04):
I don't know who can relate to this or who
has been through this, but I am at work today
and I feel out of place. I would like to
go home because I don't have on any ear rings
and I feel the ugliest that I've ever felt in
my life. Yes, Jason, it's that serious.
Speaker 1 (29:22):
Something. You're a vision.
Speaker 4 (29:25):
Thank you friend.
Speaker 1 (29:26):
Thank you. By the way, we can't even see your
ears because the wig.
Speaker 8 (29:28):
Covers it, hiding them purposely because as a woman, I
don't know leaving home without ear rings.
Speaker 4 (29:35):
For me, it makes me feel like a six foot
five man, and I want to go back home.
Speaker 1 (29:39):
I don't like this.
Speaker 4 (29:41):
I feel out of place, and it's just it's not right.
It's not right.
Speaker 1 (29:46):
So can I go somebody?
Speaker 4 (29:51):
Yeah, I don't like it. I don't like the feeling.
Speaker 8 (29:53):
And I don't know if it's something that maybe you
have you ever left home without and you just feel
out of place?
Speaker 4 (30:00):
Some people leave home and don't put the odor in off.
Speaker 1 (30:02):
See that's that's my one for me lately is I
do it?
Speaker 4 (30:05):
Oh wait?
Speaker 1 (30:05):
But like I forget because because the morning, my morning
routine is almost identical from the second I get out
of bed to like almost exactly what I do in order,
and for some reason the order changes because I'm doing
it in my sleep. We all probably are. If waking
up at four in the morning. But every day I
get up, I make my bed. From inside the bed,
I get out, I take my little water cup. I
(30:27):
go in there, I fill the water cup up, I
drink it. Then I fill it up again and put
it in the refrigerator. And then it's the same process.
Take my clothes up, put every day the same order.
And so then what happens if anything gets off, then
I'll like be here now and I'm like smelling myself,
like did I put the other on? Because I physically
don't remember doing it. I did do it. I can
(30:48):
smell it, the Carpe Delicious smell. Everybody wants me but
but but yeah no, I so I can relate to that,
like my whole day is off if I'm not certain
that I did something in the process.
Speaker 2 (31:01):
Yes, it's like if you leave home without your watch
or you know, yeah, that's mine without my Apple watch.
Like I feel weird all day and I'm constantly like
playing with it and like and now, and then I
just look crazy because there's something there and I'm like
trying to dangle it.
Speaker 4 (31:15):
It's very strange feeling for I don't know, do you guys.
Speaker 3 (31:19):
Wearings I'm like, I go through phases like sometimes they
make me feel like, oh, I don't know, and with
the headphones, I don't like it. But I feel that
way if I don't have perfume on, Like if I
don't leave the house of perfume, I'm like disgusted with myself.
Speaker 4 (31:32):
I feel like I'm bare naked. Yeah, it's a weird feeling.
Speaker 1 (31:36):
You feel like Jennival loveewtt. Oh just that song and
how much of a banger it was? Really she did
her big one on that she really did. And if
you don't know, then you need to understand. They maybe
take to take a moment and understand. Oh, yes, that
is such a good that's a that's a ninety two
thousand reference. And so some of you will understand it.
(31:56):
Some of you have no idea who we're talking about. Okay,
so you feel naked?
Speaker 8 (32:01):
No, Amanda says, you put an extra pair in her purse.
That's how serious it is.
Speaker 1 (32:05):
Seeah, I didn't. I didn't realize it was. I mean,
I can't relate.
Speaker 8 (32:10):
But yeah, so you know if I can't, you know,
perform to my normal standard, you know why, because I'll.
Speaker 1 (32:16):
I'll keep it. I'll keep that in mind. I never
would have known, but I'll keep that in mind. Yeah, man,
dear blog, I just want to pat myself on the
back because I was a good person, and I just
want to I want to use this opportunity. No, I
want to use this opportunity to publicize that I was
a good person and and the reaction that I got
for being a good person. But you know, I'm a
runner now, and by run, I mean very slow jog.
(32:38):
Looks like a walk to a lot of people, but
it's running. Trust me. Let me, trust me. My heartbreak
would indicate and my breathing would indicate that it is.
It is, in fact, a run, while it looks more
like a sort of a hobble of some kind. But anyway,
I've lost some weight, so I'm taking some clothes. Humble brag,
pat on the back, I'm taking I've been taking clothes
into the tailor guy, especially now that it's been like
(33:00):
a whole new season since I lost their weage, Like
my coachs are a little too big and whatever, and
so I went into the thing and they like whatever
a few weeks ago, and they did the alterations and
they it's kind of old school and they like write
it down on a little they use it. They're still
using like tickets with they rip half the ticket off
and give it to you. I guess they don't have
a computer at this place. All they have are like
(33:21):
needles and thread I don't know, and so they and
they write the price that you owe them on the
little ticket. Well, last time I went in there, I
didn't have my ticket, but I saw my clothes and
I remembered the number, and they guys like, okay, I
don't know. Let's say it was let's say it was
fifty dollars. Like, okay, here's fifty buck. Okay, great, give's
my clothes. I walk out. Well, then I went home
and I found the ticket and the ticket was seventy dollars.
(33:43):
It wasn't fifty. So I shorted the guy twenty bucks.
Speaker 4 (33:46):
Gamma.
Speaker 1 (33:47):
He didn't seem to care, and I'm like, okay, Well,
I went back with more clothes and then he gives
me the ticket, and I remember when he handed me
the new ticket, like I shorted this guy twenty bucks
last time. So yesterday, when I went to pick up
my clothes again, I paid him an extra twenty dollars
and he said well, this is too much, and he
hands me back twenty I said no, last time I
(34:07):
made the price up, I guess and I was twenty
dollars short, and I owe you twenty bucks. And he
just looked at me like he couldn't believe it. And
I don't know if that's like, dude, we scammed him
last time, like we all like we overcharged you. I
knew that I overcharged you, and so I was letting
it go because like, we didn't charge you properly. But
he just looked at me and he didn't even say anything,
(34:29):
like he didn't know what to say. Because I feel like,
and again, it's not that I'm a good person. It's
that I have a guilty conscience and it would have honestly,
it's not that he gets the twenty bucks. It's that
I was going to live with the thought of the
twenty bucks and that hurts me. I'm just being honest.
It was eating at me inside that I shorted the
guy unintentionally. But it's like he just stared at me
like he didn't know what to do. You did the
(34:51):
right thing, for sure, but we could have moved on
and had a relationship for years with him fixed in
my clothes. I don't think he even knew or remembered
or cared. But I cared because it bothered me. Okay,
So I'd like to tell you that I did it
because it was the right thing to do. I did
it because it was eating at me. Like I was
gonna walk next time I walked by there, I was
gonna take hand a guy twenty because I'm like, I
shorted you, man. But I guess it's just that people
(35:13):
don't do people not do that.
Speaker 4 (35:16):
No, And then also he probably just makes up his price.
Speaker 1 (35:19):
See, That's what I'm thinking.
Speaker 4 (35:20):
I frequent in.
Speaker 8 (35:21):
It's like I go in there and get the same bacon,
egg and cheese soundwhich and today is twelve dollars, tomorrow
it's six dollars, and I say it's seven dollars.
Speaker 4 (35:29):
I'm a girl. You just making these prices of which, hey,
your prerogative, my girl. Whatever.
Speaker 1 (35:34):
No, I think it's more like he throws the price
out and I'm not. You know, there are artists and
it's hard work and I don't know how to do it,
so it seems reasonable. So whatever, But maybe the price
does vary a little bit depending on how he's feeling.
And so he just took the money because it's like
because he didn't remember her care but I did. But
let me ask you this question, and we're late, we
(35:55):
have to go. But on that note, I get the
same Almost every day. I get the same food item.
I'm not going to say where or what, but almost
every day I get it, and sometimes the price is different.
I think it's because they forget to add some people
charge it differently than others. Hmmmm. Is it my responsibility
to point out on the days where it is half
(36:17):
the price that it should be because someone didn't ring
it in correctly. I go almost every day take your blessing,
but let's say it's supposed to be eight, and some
days it's six. On the days that it's six, I
don't say anything. You shouldn't know. You'll make it up
next time. And I go there enough that I think
it's fair. And it's also I kind of think it's
your job to charge what I'm supposed to pay. Don't
want to do it in a timely manner, Like I
(36:39):
kind of think that's your job to do that. I
don't mean to be rude, but you know, if I
guess if we charged our customers in our advertising partners whatever,
we charged it, and we went back six months later
and go, oh my god, I forgot it was a
million dollars more. I think we've tried that. Actually it
doesn't work now, it just heads up. But that would
be on us because we didn't properly, you know, we
didn't we didn't price it appropriately correct. But I do
(37:00):
think about that on Morality Thursday. Every day, I'm like,
am I gonna get Oh? That seems like less today?
Speaker 4 (37:06):
Maybe that looks are cheaper though today, kind of like
market price.
Speaker 1 (37:10):
We're gonna go with that. We're gonna go with that.
Waiting by the phone, Why did somebody get ghosted? Expect
more Fred Show next