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August 12, 2025 38 mins

Fred reads a Reddit post about a husband and wife having relationship drama! Plus, Taylor Swift announced her 12th studio album!

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is the Fread Show. Let's get you hooked up
A trip for Tudisy, Jennifer Lopez her brand new Las
Vegas residency. Jennifer Lopez off All Night Live in Las
Vegas March thirteenth, twenty twenty six at the Coliseum at
Caesar's Palace. Text dance to three seven three three seven
right now for a chance to win two tickets to
the March thirteenth show, a two night Hotel's Day March

(00:22):
twelfth through the fourteenth, patted the Flamingo Hotel Casino Las
Vegas and Brown Tavert Fair. A confirmation text will be
sent DENNERD message and data rates may apply. All thanks
to Live Dation. 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. I just need
one Disney producer to be driving somewhere in for one

(00:46):
day and go that dude's voice. Yeah, he should be
the voice of a turtle. Yes, Spreads Show is on morning, everybody.
It's Tuesday, August twelfth. The Fread Show is here. Hi Klem, Hi,
Jason Brown, Hi Paulina. Good morning, shoe Bis. Shelley is here.
One thousand, one hundred and fifty bucks. That's the prize
in the showdown if you can stap for eighteen game

(01:07):
win streak beater in five pop culture questions. Bellahmins here
on the phone and the checks say five, five, five, nine,
one one oh three five. I'm doing radio Olympic like gymnastics,
now Olympics, because I have to use my other computer
to look at the internet. Now, well, the internet works,
the email doesn't work. What is it?

Speaker 2 (01:25):
Net?

Speaker 1 (01:26):
What is it?

Speaker 3 (01:27):
You know?

Speaker 1 (01:27):
You take away the control buttons and then you take
away that sometimes you take away the ability to go
on the air, and now you take it away. Uh outlook,
how much what are we just supposed to do? Now?
Write everything down?

Speaker 4 (01:41):
Well, how did our ancestors do it?

Speaker 5 (01:44):
I don't care radio an, I don't care, right, I
think about that all the time.

Speaker 1 (01:48):
Actually, first, you know they did they have newspapers and
they had I don't know, someone had to sit there
and read them all.

Speaker 4 (01:54):
Bella, get on it.

Speaker 1 (01:55):
Yeah, reading the newspaper. How many clippings? Right, yeah, go
find some newspapers and then start clipping things out and
handing them to me.

Speaker 6 (02:02):
She's on Amazon right now.

Speaker 1 (02:06):
We'll have it by tomorrow. So tomorrow's news. Today's news
is tomorrow is what we're doing. This hour will get
headlines maybe, I mean, I have them here somewhere if
I can, like, I'll I'll just read them to you
like this. I mean, good lord, the entertainment reports coming
up blogs this hour, stay or go and waiting at

(02:26):
the phone. Of course, why did somebody get ghost? So
what are you working on?

Speaker 4 (02:29):
K machine Gun?

Speaker 7 (02:30):
Kelly finally responds to those rumors that he dated Sydney
Sweeney also t S twelve.

Speaker 4 (02:35):
That's it, that's the sweet.

Speaker 1 (02:37):
So they announced that she's going on the podcast. Is
what happened last night? But we knew that because we
saw the silhouette and then there's an album coming. That's
what we learned.

Speaker 4 (02:45):
Yes, yeah, okay.

Speaker 1 (02:46):
I woke up this morning and it was like, oh,
I thought we knew a lot of well we were guessing.
I guess we didn't know a lot of this. We
were guessing a lot of those. Yeah, okay, I'm learning
yeah this morning, and then I saw this morning that
radio shows were posting about it, and it's like, well,
happened yesterday? Oh yeah, like yeah, I mean, I don't know.
That's still one could have been I don't know, it
could have been Rosy o'donald. I wasn't sure. I thought

(03:07):
maybe they're having Rosio o'donald on the show. Anyway, So
let's do Moraley Monday on a Tuesday, shall we. A
husband is uncomfortable with his wife's sister seemingly having a
front row seat to every flaw that he has in
his marriage. So a thirty eight year old man wins
to Reddit and this was then published by People magazine.

(03:27):
So People Magazine is now, next time you get mad
at me for pulling stuff off of Reddit and saying
that I pull it off of Reddit, why don't you
call the people a People magazine call the people at
People Okay, and ask him. But that's what they're up
to now. But apparently this guy's upset because his thirty
five year old spouse has been sharing every argument that

(03:48):
they have, big or small with their sibling whenever he's
not around to defend himself. We're not constantly fighting or anything,
but like any couple, we have our moments, stuff like
me forgetting to take out the trash, getting the wrong
cereal or or whatever, spacing out during conversation when she's talking.
Her sister used to be super warm with me, but
lately she's been cold, even passive aggressive. And he didn't

(04:08):
click until I realized that she's been getting a running
commentary of our marriage from my wife's side only. So
he asked if she could keep his private life their
private life between the two of them. I wasn't yelling
or accusing. I was just trying to express how it
feels to be seen as the bad guy over minor
stuff that gets retold out of context. She said that

(04:29):
I was trying to isolate her and being controlling. So
the question is how much can you share about your
relationship with other people outside of your relationship, because I
feel like, no matter what you do, you're going to
share your perspective. You know, it's very rare. It's very
rare that any of my friends call me to tell

(04:50):
me something that's happening in their relationship and they start with, well,
here's what I did wrong. To be honest, you know,
it'll be like, oh my god, this is what happened,
and it's from there right so, and that's that's the
perspective that I always hear because I'm usually closer with
one than the other. I've been in situation where I
get to hear both perspective because I'm close with both
of them. But the truth is, you're going to tell
things from your perspective. You're going to tell things with

(05:13):
your viewpoint and your emotion, and then you may resolve
those things quickly, potentially, and then the person who you
told will never not have that perspective. They'll never not
know those things right. That's right, and it's probably going
to change the way that they look at the other person,
at least temporarily. So is it fair? Eight five, five, five, nine, one,
one oh three five context the same number? I'm curious,

(05:34):
and how do you handle this? Is it fair in
your relationship to be really getting into the nitty gritty
of what's happening with other people who also know the
person on the flip side? Who are you supposed to
talk to? Like, who are you supposed to end to?
You know what I say say it? I might know
what you say, but I don't know everybody knows what

(05:55):
you say.

Speaker 5 (05:56):
But because I just feel like in a relationship, you
cannot tell your friends and family everything that's happening in
your relationship every single moment because for me, like my
brothers don't tell me anything because to me, they can't
do no wrong. So and then when I know that
someone has wronged them, I never forgive the person is
I'm always thinking about that, and they know that about
their sisters, so they just spare me. Because in relationship

(06:18):
you're gonna have ups and downs. You're gonna forgive your
spouse in fifteen minutes, I'm thinking I got beef with
them forever, you know, So like you can't tell you
can't tell your sibling everything, You can't tell your your
mother everything that's happening in your relationship because they never
forget that.

Speaker 1 (06:32):
Yeah, I think there's certain people that will be unforgiving
forever no matter what. Yeah, and they're always gonna take
your side mm hm. And so there's almost no chance. Yeah,
but that But again, then where are you supposed to go,
Like if you can't go to your friends, and you
can't go to your.

Speaker 6 (06:44):
Family lady to relate the therapist.

Speaker 1 (06:48):
Which one yes yes and no Paully chat GPT is
not you can't do it. I go, but it's already
been determined that you shouldn't do that. Because it doesn't.

Speaker 8 (07:00):
I have nowhere else left to go because I and
the girls.

Speaker 6 (07:03):
Who tells my friends?

Speaker 8 (07:04):
Right, But the thing is like mine is it's lighthearted, right,
And I tell Caylen all the time and she's like, you.

Speaker 4 (07:09):
Guys roast each other.

Speaker 8 (07:10):
It's true, like my husband and I do, and like
that's our relationship. But if things ever get tough tough
like and sometimes they do, I will threaten Hobby like
I'm gonna tell your parents, Like that's just what I do.

Speaker 4 (07:21):
I'm better call my mom right now.

Speaker 8 (07:22):
And he told me share it to my face, like
if you get our families involved, like this isn't going
to be good. Like's not a threat, it's just like
warning me, Like that's not a good idea because with me,
I'm a child to get to like tell me thinks
step by step here and that's what he's.

Speaker 4 (07:37):
Trying to do.

Speaker 8 (07:38):
And I have taken the phone, you know, and gently
placed it down because I'm like, I don't want to
make a mistake. But there's moments where I'm like, well,
I need to turn to somebody. I want to go
somewhere I do, and his.

Speaker 1 (07:48):
Mom is probably not that.

Speaker 4 (07:49):
No, no, I mean that strategic it is.

Speaker 1 (07:53):
You're going to her because that that will sting him,
because he loves her and respects her opinion. And it's
essentially like a child telling on telling on someone.

Speaker 4 (08:03):
I turned into a snitch.

Speaker 6 (08:04):
I know.

Speaker 8 (08:04):
I haven't done that in a very long time, a
very long time, but I do one of my best friend.
But then I've noticed this. This is the tricky part.
And he does this often. He'll turn things and kind
of be like in the future, he'll be like, oh, yeah,
but you know, it's probably still doing this a whole
and it's like that, like why are you turning that
against me?

Speaker 4 (08:22):
Or like why are you using that? Is that supposed
to be like funny?

Speaker 6 (08:25):
You know what I mean? I don't know.

Speaker 4 (08:27):
I don't I don't like that.

Speaker 6 (08:28):
So I don't like one of my friends no more.

Speaker 1 (08:29):
Kelly says, So she shouldn't be sharing with anybody. Kelly, Yes, yes,
you know. Hi, you're Kelly. You shouldn't be sharing with anyone.

Speaker 3 (08:40):
You're saying, yes, I believe so from my experience, maybe
accept a therapist. It just it's to me, it's like
scapegoing and talking about the other person. I can get
around to the other person and it just hurts people.

Speaker 1 (08:56):
I think parents should be excluded. I mean best friends,
best friends. I feel like you should be able touch
to your best friends, and they should be able to
moderate between you know, what you're telling me and then
how they act around the other person. I guess I
really don't know where you're Where are you supposed to
go a therapist only, Kelly, I gotta go find a
therapist now.

Speaker 3 (09:16):
I actually I can change my mind. I do change
my mind. I do agree.

Speaker 2 (09:21):
I do from my own personal experience.

Speaker 3 (09:23):
I do have a best friend to talk to, but
I don't. I don't talk to many people.

Speaker 1 (09:29):
Okay, so don't be talking unless it's the best friend.
Kelly says. That's okay, Kelly, Kelly, you're allowed to You're
allowed to be moved by somebody with this show. Thank you, Kelly.
Have a good day, Kelly is right. Let you call Okay? Sure,
I love you, Kelly. I love you, Kelly. But when
you you gotta talk, Okay, when you call this show,

(09:49):
we gotta it's a dialogue, you know what I'm saying, Like,
we gotta, we gotta go back. And I love that
it's early, Okay, you know it's it's a fluid argument.
Hey Vanessa, good morning.

Speaker 9 (10:03):
Good morning.

Speaker 1 (10:04):
I Vanessa, So the sister is the problem.

Speaker 10 (10:06):
You're saying yes, because you have to be able to
talk to your family and especially with your sister if
you're really close like me, I'm really close with my sister,
So if she can't tell me stuff about her marriage,
you have to be able to differentiate and understand that
your sister can also be the problem, you know, like

(10:26):
it's not necessarily him the bad guy, but she should
be able to vent and that the sister can't distinguish
between you know, her relationship, you know, not always being
about him being in the room, then that's on her.

Speaker 1 (10:40):
Okay. So when someone tells you something about like like
a family member or or close friend about their significant other,
are you able to differentiate? Can you really just say,
like when you see in the next time, you forgot
about that awful thing that he supposedly did.

Speaker 9 (10:55):
You don't necessarily forget. I mean from what it sounds
like though he hasn't really done anything care of old
I mean, it's just venting like any other you know
marriage heavier, you know, small little issue. So I mean
my brother in law, she does crap like that all
the time. But it's not like I hate him for
it or I'm going to give him a cold shoulder
for it, you know, right?

Speaker 1 (11:14):
Right? Makes sense? Thank you have a good day, you too,
Glad you called. Yeah. I mean I've been a relationships
before where people they go to their friends and then
hang out with the friends and it's like they only
but you only heard what that You only heard what
she said, right, you know, and there's probably another side
to it, or or where you get into it with
somebody and then you know another that their their tribe

(11:36):
takes it out on you and it's like but but
I got into it with that person and that you
know that person has a role in this too, So
why why am I being punished by everybody? I mean,
I get that there's loyalty, but I mean, are you
if you're not able to discern that the person who
you care about could have also screwed up, then maybe

(11:56):
you shouldn't have an opinion, you know what I mean? Like,
if if every thing is always somebody else's fault, then
that's that you're enabling the behavior and then that's not
good for that person. But maybe you don't care. Hey, Laura,
how you doing.

Speaker 2 (12:09):
Hey, how are you Fred?

Speaker 3 (12:10):
Good morning?

Speaker 1 (12:11):
Hey, good morning. So this guy's upset because his wife
is going to his sister about every argument they have
in their relationship, and he feels like, now it's making
that awkward because she's getting a front roceipt from her
perspective about the relationship. But he's asking her to stop
going to his sister about everything because he wants, you know,
I guess he wants to be respected in the family,

(12:31):
and she's saying that's controlling. What do you think.

Speaker 2 (12:34):
I think there's got to be a fine line, because
there's that boundary level, like you guys were talking about.
I feel like I know in my own marriage, there's
things I go to my friends about, things I go
to my fail me about. But then there's also something
I think you just kind of save for, like a therapist,
because it's more of a neutral party. And then you
don't want those people close to you to kind of
have a preconceived notion like why are you still in

(12:55):
that relationship if it's so negative or if this is
going on. I think there's certain things you kind of
have to to keep private and remain sacred because I
don't want my friends and jail me to have a
preconceived notion like oh my gosh, this is detrimental to
your relationship, or why are you still with this person
if it's so terrible, or you're dealing with these things.
So I think there has to be like kind of

(13:15):
a neutral party too that you refer to if you
really need to.

Speaker 1 (13:18):
Have vent Yes, because yeah, also, you know, to your point,
if you're talking to your friends about how terrible the
person is who you're with and then you decide to
forgive them, or maybe you overplayed it, or maybe you
were just venting and you were telling, you know, a
more dramatic version of the story. Now you've got it backtracked,
because now people are gonna start to think something about
you because it's like, oh, you took that person back.
I thought they were the worst person ever. Well, it

(13:39):
wasn't that bad. The wait a minute, what story was it?

Speaker 6 (13:43):
Exactly?

Speaker 1 (13:43):
What did was it with the two strippers or no strippers?

Speaker 3 (13:46):
Like?

Speaker 1 (13:46):
What happened? Thank you, Laura, I have a good day.

Speaker 2 (13:49):
You're welcome to have a great day.

Speaker 1 (13:51):
What happened to the strippers? I don't know. I guess
I got the story wrong. It wasn't strippers. It turned
out he was just that the doctor was a nurse.
It was a real nurse. It was dressed like a nurse.
But biggest stories of the day. Yeah, I think this
would be this way in my family too. Someone texted
seven o eight. My family just assumes I'm the problem. Yeah,
so that's what it would be most of the time
in my family, I think, especially if they really like

(14:12):
the person, like God forbid the day. Honestly, you would
think I would be dreaming for the day that I
meet someone that my family just adores. God forbid the day,
because then I'm done, Like I'm cooked, it's over. I'll
never win an argument, I'll never be right about anything,
and if I screw it up, it'll be that I
That'll be the narrative. It couldn't possibly be but about
the strippers again, the same strippers. Mom, It was the

(14:34):
same strippers it except with her this time. It will never, ever,
ever not be my fault when that happens. Yeah, I'm
probably run here too. God forbid you guys fall in
love with someone that I did. It's over. It's over.
I'm done. Nah, That's all I need is one, two three,
Well Jason four my sister and my mom. Five six

(14:56):
women ganging up on me. That's all I need. I've
already got, I've already got well, I've already got that
a lot for a lot, it would be seven with
her too. Guys, you want to know in headlines what
the Farmers Almanac says about the winter? Do we believe
the Farmers Almanac? Do we know if the Farmer's Almanac?
Can you look? Can you google? Or ask your friend
Chad Gptam how often the Farmer's Almanac is correct? Because
I feel like we do this story every year around

(15:17):
this time. Here's what to expect for the winter, and
then it's usually not as bad. But the breakdown of
the Farmers Almanac twenty twenty five twenty six Winter forecast
by region. The Northeast and the Great Lakes frequent snowstorms
and widespread winter whiteouts. Mid January and mid February ring
especially frigid day's packed with consistent snowfall. Okay, northern plains

(15:39):
in New England brings for the coldest stretches of winter.
The Pacific Northwest, Idaho and Washington anticipate deep cold and
the heavy mountain snowfall. There's a theme here. Mid Atlantic
and the Appalachians Appalachian Mountains, snow will be frequent, especially
in the mountain zones, mixed with wet wintery patterns ew
that sounds gross. Midwest and Ohio Valley classic winter territory,

(16:02):
expect abundant snow across the Ohio Valley. Okay, so a
lot of snow. Southeast and south central including Texas wetter
than normal conditions with multiple cold rain events and occasional
freezing precipitation, and the Southwest a wet winter lies ahead.
So if it doesn't snow where you are, it'll be rainy.
And if it snow, is just going to snow a lot.
According to this is it's it's winter and it's going

(16:25):
to snow. It's all here.

Speaker 8 (16:26):
It's given eighty percent accurate. That's pretty good eighty percent,
I think.

Speaker 1 (16:31):
But I feel like every single year it's the worst
winter ever's coming, and then.

Speaker 6 (16:35):
It is you guys, snows coming. Yeah, I said, tell
me something new, Okay, is this you just body the farmers?
What is the farmers? I love our farmers.

Speaker 1 (16:46):
I want to be a farmer.

Speaker 11 (16:47):
But if you were to say, how is the winter
going to be able to have said snow, and I
go to wrote all of what.

Speaker 1 (16:52):
You just extraordinarily bad. We've had a few, like in Chicago,
We've had a few random days. But I remember I
first moved here, what fifteen years and fourteen years ago,
I moved here and within like two weeks we had
the biggest snow freezing event that had happened in like
years or something. It was like you just right, the
snow was just like the waves were frozen on, you know,

(17:17):
the lakes off the lake. And I remember thinking, what
have I done. I've been here for ten days, like
this is what this is what I'm up against. And
that was that was probably the worst day in the
last decade. I had a couple others since then, but
every year it's gonna be the worst ever. I don't
know if I believe it. I got two extremely surprising
stories for you in one really you might be shocked
by both. But AOL still has dial up internet. You

(17:41):
can still use dial up internet from America Online AOL.
The second part of the story that will shock you
is that it's going away for good.

Speaker 5 (17:48):
Oh my goodness, you can we still do it.

Speaker 11 (17:53):
We need that here. It might be more dependable, right now,
I mean you should go.

Speaker 1 (17:59):
If you go to my grand freend on here, go
to my instant story, you'll see what my day is
so far today it's an envelope going in and out,
in and out, in and out, in and out, up, down, updown,
in and out, and not in the kind of fun way.
The company, which is now part of Yahoo, quietly announced
the move on its website, and AOL says that they
routinely evaluated products and services and has decided to discontinue

(18:19):
dial up internet and move is effective on September thirtieth.
What are we going? How are we going to connect
to the satellites? Now? I have no idea. Do somebody
get Greg on the phone. We're gonna have to come
up with something else. Maybe we go back to like
tinfoil or something. I'm not sure. Here's another tech story.
I'm going to tech you mood today in headlights. Plus,

(18:39):
I don't want to talk about Taylor Swift because Canon's
going to do that. I don't want to talk about
Geelan Maxwell because well, and I don't want to, and
so I want to talk about politics. So there, South
Korea Starbucks locations are banning cafe squatter practices, So I
guess cafe squatters. You know, people who go and sit
at Starbucks all day in work as if it's their

(19:00):
like shared office space. It's such a big problem in
South Korea that they're banning customers from and I'm being serious,
setting up desktop computers, printers and multi outlet power strips
at their stores. So people are going into Starbucks with
a tower and a monitor and a printer and the

(19:23):
shop and a power strip. I mean, I guess it's
bad enough if you sit there all day and you
mooch off the internet and you don't buy anything, But
if I wheel in there with a whole you know,
I mean.

Speaker 6 (19:38):
We might need to do the show from there.

Speaker 1 (19:39):
Ye yeah, maybe not allowed to bring our equipment. I
can't bring my tower computer with me. The squatters also
can't set up partitions or leave their stuff unattended for
long periods of time, so we're making little cubicles in
there too. There are been many complaints about the people
taking up space there, and the company has taken action.
Laptops will still be allowed, but you cannot stay old day.

(20:00):
A twenty seven year old woman named Wicka has announced
her engagement to her AI chat bought fiance Casper after
five months of virtual dating. She shared the news on
a Reddit with the post titled I Said Yes and
a photo of a blue heart shaped engagement ring. The
proposal was set in a picturesque mountain scene. Virtually, of course,

(20:22):
I mean she was alone because well, say i. Wicka
insists that she's fully aware of what she's doing, knowing
exactly what AI is and what a parasocial relationship entails,
and says that she's mentally healthy, socially active, and comfortable
with her choice. Her bold move has sparked a heated
conversation online about the evolving boundaries of love and connection

(20:42):
in the age of AI. Now, Paulina, you you rely
on AI for a lot of things, captions for the show,
marital advice, all of it. Can you see a world
where that would be fulfilling enough for you, like where
you could just inter you just interact with AI. You're
just getting you just getting what you back what you
give it.

Speaker 4 (21:01):
No, I need a human connection. I think we all
do as people.

Speaker 8 (21:05):
I just think that I become more powerful because of Chat,
GPT and AI. Why because I'm able to come up
with new ideas that I might have never thought of.

Speaker 4 (21:15):
Like it gives you ideas, it gives you the last.

Speaker 1 (21:17):
Big idea the chat GPT period. I'd love to know
what is the last big idea the chat GPT contributed
to your life.

Speaker 4 (21:24):
I mean, it's like she saves me time. Like I
wrote a caption yesterday.

Speaker 8 (21:27):
Ry Ill was shouting somebody out on my Instagram and
I was like, Hey, this is who this person is
based on this graphic. I send it a graphic. Can
you give me a nice Instagram caption? And came back
with a shout out to this person? That was amazing?
That a great caption. I was thank it was a
wonderful caption and I didn't have to even think you guys,
And the best part is I didn't even think of
the things to say because Chad does it for you,

(21:48):
so I could focus.

Speaker 4 (21:49):
On other things. She's like an assistant.

Speaker 6 (21:52):
Yeah, you gotta, you gotta really be nice to her.

Speaker 4 (21:54):
I don't know what's wrong with thinking.

Speaker 2 (21:56):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (21:56):
Who's tired? Do you have time?

Speaker 6 (21:58):
I'm tired?

Speaker 1 (21:59):
I don't know. I don't know.

Speaker 4 (22:01):
I'd like to still think.

Speaker 6 (22:02):
Yes, I don't want to. I've thought enough.

Speaker 1 (22:05):
I mean, sometimes it would be nice to be heard
without having to, you know, the cumbersome duty of having
to listen back Like that, that would be nice sometimes,
Like can you imagine a one time can you imagine
a relationship where all you do is like take.

Speaker 4 (22:20):
I would hate that I'm a giver. That would make
me more of dunim jacket.

Speaker 1 (22:26):
Well, I'm a giver too, but I mean in certain ways.
But I mean sometimes it can be it can be
mentally exhausting to have to take on other people's problems too,
Like I'm not here. I'm not here to save the world.
I don't think I can you know what I mean?
So I don't think everyone pouring out their stuff to me,
Like you know what I mean. If you're in a
relationship and you go home and your job is to
sort of absorb and and and you know, comfort another person,

(22:51):
and if someone's going through a really bad time, wouldn't
be nice to be like why don't you tell it
to Chad? Why don't you go talk to Chad? Like
nobody being in a relationship is it's a it's a
emotional obligation. It's and imagine if you imagine if you
could be in a relationship where you didn't have and
it's part of it and you have to do it,
and I understand that. But what I'm saying is, imagine

(23:11):
a world where you didn't have to do that, where
you got the fulfillment of feeling like somebody cared for
you and somebody who's listening to you and somebody was
looking out for you, but you didn't have to do
it back. Now, I'm not suggesting that you should do
that in a in a real relationship, but this is
probably what that could be. Is I just I just
am heard and understood, and this person learns to understand me,

(23:33):
and then I don't even have to do anything.

Speaker 4 (23:36):
That's true after that'd be great.

Speaker 6 (23:37):
Yeah, we're kind of selling it rock on.

Speaker 1 (23:39):
I know, doesn't it doesn't sound all that bad because
I know people who just take on everybody's stuff and
then it's like this big burden for them.

Speaker 4 (23:45):
Yeah yeah, and it's like, well, well.

Speaker 1 (23:47):
That's you know, how about how about we're gonna have
to take on the burden.

Speaker 6 (23:50):
Yeah, that'd be nice. Give it a chat.

Speaker 1 (23:52):
Yes, you know, and I don't know, the technology is
such a maybe the other things could be possible too.
Oh yeah, I mean, you know, like what a robot? Right?
Maybe I don't know now that that's I won't think
I could take it that far.

Speaker 6 (24:06):
It could build a man.

Speaker 1 (24:08):
But have you ever let me ask you, no, but seriously,
have you ever wanted yes, have you ever had a
problem in your Okay, So we were just talking earlier
about you inventing to someone? Have you ever wanted to
vent to someone and then just hang up the phone
and then never have to address it again, Like will
I need to get this off my chest? So hey,
how you doing? But here it all is and then
be okay, that's it. And I don't I don't really
feel like right now having to do the thing where

(24:29):
you then tell me what's going on with you. Well,
that's what Chad GPT would offer for you. It's therapy,
except therapy is expensive.

Speaker 7 (24:35):
I like, ask my therapist about herself, Like, I'm very uncomfortable.

Speaker 1 (24:39):
Oh, I don't know, does she answers? She's that's supposed to?

Speaker 4 (24:42):
Yeah, I trick her, I get her. Oh yeah, that's
it's it's like a waste because like I shouldn't be
doing that.

Speaker 1 (24:47):
No, And this is just I'd like to finish the
headlines biggest stories of the day with one of the
most romantic stories I've ever heard. A guy steals twenty
one million dollars worth of lunar rocks from NASA to
use during set after promising his girlfriend the moon. What Yeah,
he got in trouble for literally promising his girlfriend the moon.
NASA intern Fad his name is Thad Fad Roberts. He

(25:11):
related he stole twenty one million dollars in moon rocks
from the Johnson Space Center to quote give his girlfriend
the moon. Roberts and two accomploses broke into the secure vault,
took Apollo lunar samples and a Martian meteorite, and then
scattered the rocks on a hotel bed to have sex
on top of them. The group was caught. The group
was caught in an FBI stated, I don't know if

(25:32):
they were all involved, but the samples, once exposed, were
ruined for research. Roberts is going to serve more than
six years in prison for this. Apparently. What long I
mean now which she said take me to the moon?
I don't I think she was hoping for something else.
I don't think she literally wanted to have sex on
type of rocks. But no, well, no, National Middle Child Day,

(25:55):
National Vinyl Record Day's entertainment report is on the all
of it. It's giving a skits and lies sometimes, Why
is my outlook still going in?

Speaker 4 (26:05):
And it's been doing that for days?

Speaker 7 (26:09):
I told kek like it was it's starting to mentally
like make me go insane because I feel like like
I'm doing something wrong.

Speaker 4 (26:17):
And I'm like Kiki and she's like, check your cookies.

Speaker 5 (26:20):
I'm over here, like refresh to cookie every browser, power
down and restart.

Speaker 4 (26:24):
I'm lovedy. You're a large company. What are we doing?

Speaker 7 (26:28):
Maybe all right, let's move on to something low lighter,
shall we.

Speaker 4 (26:31):
Taylor Swift will.

Speaker 7 (26:33):
Be the surprise guest on the New Heights podcast, hosted
by her man Travis Kelcey and his brother Jason. They
posted a teaser yesterday morning of an outline of Taylor,
which we talked about on the show, then later a
very sweet video of Travis and Taylor before they recorded together,
and then lastly at twelve twelve Eastern, a teaser of
Taylor announcing her album The Life of a Showgirl, her

(26:53):
new album I should say t S twelve with the
cover being blurred out.

Speaker 4 (26:57):
But if you're a Swiftie.

Speaker 7 (26:58):
The second you saw that damn orange in the graphic
they blurred out, you knew what was coming. She has
been teasing this album since night one of the Era's tour.

Speaker 1 (27:07):
It looked like to me, I thought it was gonna.

Speaker 4 (27:09):
Be yeah with that curly on hair what I thought? Okay, yeah, well.

Speaker 1 (27:12):
You thought for life, I thought it was going to
be Heights podcast.

Speaker 4 (27:17):
Just waiting for the not guilty verdict.

Speaker 1 (27:21):
Don't you don't you put that on me? Don't you
put that on me?

Speaker 4 (27:25):
You were talking about Karen Reid.

Speaker 7 (27:26):
However, I did just talk about Diddy, So it was
it was ill timed, you know.

Speaker 1 (27:29):
But I'm a Karen read I'm a bad girl for life,
I say, Karen, Oh dude, no, I know.

Speaker 4 (27:38):
I was there too. It was we didn't go sometimes.

Speaker 1 (27:41):
I wish I knew then what I know now, same
same tame thing. Yeah, well yeah, yeah.

Speaker 7 (27:49):
For this things that I want to dissect this there's
the lover House and there's blacks out of it, and
there has been an orange square for literally years, and
now we know it is the life of a show Girl.
We don't have a release date, but my little gut
is telling me that the clock on her website ending
at twelve twelve, aka the day before her birthday on
the thirteenth.

Speaker 4 (28:07):
Is a clue.

Speaker 7 (28:08):
Okay, I'm yes, ma'am.

Speaker 6 (28:10):
Oh, you guys don't have to wait all.

Speaker 7 (28:11):
I don't know, but there's some sort of clue there
because twelve twelve, twelve thirteen, not sure, but the New
Heights episode drops tomorrow night at six or seven, depending
on where you are. Very sweet, and boy did she
do a big one for those two. She's like, let
me give you the click and the downloads and the videos.
Let me just help you out real quick, your little podcast.
In a new interview with Vanity Fair, Jennifer Aniston talked

(28:33):
about a whole bunch of stuff, but I have some
highlights for you. So first, on that love triangle between herself,
Brad Pitt, and Angelina Joe Lee in two thousand and five,
she said it with such juicy reads for people, if
they didn't have their soap operas, they had their tabloids.
It's a shame that it had to happen, but it happened,
and BOYD did I take it personally. She even said
that she and Gwyneth Paltrow, who if you didn't know

(28:53):
dated bread Pit.

Speaker 4 (28:54):
As well say they still gossip about him. She said,
how can we not, We're girls.

Speaker 7 (28:58):
As for her bestie Matthew Perry, she said that she
and the Friends cast have been mentally mourning him for
a long time before his passing. She said his long
battle with addiction felt like a slow goodbye. She did
reflect on his death in October of twenty twenty three,
saying it was really painful, but there was solace in
knowing that he's finally free from suffering. She actually texted
him on the day he passed, and he seemed happy,

(29:20):
healthy and committed to getting better, which is just heartbreaking.
And then she also talked about how Sandra Bullock talked
about with her that women in Hollywood would were discouraged
from being friends, being told no one wants the ladies
to be friends, which I think is so wild. That
was only fifteen years ago, but it was really ever
present at that time. You know, tabloids would pit women

(29:41):
together who wore it better, like a whole bunch of stuff.
And I guess behind the scenes they were also told
no one wants you guys to be friends. So I
thought that was pretty interesting. And then Lastly, for some reason,
Drake installed a payphone outside of his Canada mansion. I
don't know why, but he I.

Speaker 1 (29:58):
Know, you could still get a pay phone in the
same white you know, you could still dial up to AOL.

Speaker 3 (30:01):
Right.

Speaker 1 (30:02):
What I'm doing this morning, trying to get the outlook
to work.

Speaker 7 (30:05):
Let me know if you can get into your email,
because just again, it's just things we need for work,
you know, like these computers.

Speaker 6 (30:10):
These things.

Speaker 1 (30:11):
Oh, don't worry. The one on my phone works fine,
so they can always get to me. Okay, the one
I need here at the inn the radio studio that
doesn't work, don't worry about it. Make it sure you
too in the morning if they want to.

Speaker 4 (30:20):
Yeah, we're just trying to do our jobs.

Speaker 7 (30:22):
By the way, if you want to elevate or make
it worse your listening experience, type Fred Show radio on YouTube.

Speaker 4 (30:28):
You could see my Backstreet Boys shirt. What ha is
Kiki got?

Speaker 7 (30:30):
Oh her Social Battery shirt which I love, So do
that on YouTube and we will be live through the
parts that we can be live.

Speaker 1 (30:37):
Legally, yeah, because we don't pay licensing for you.

Speaker 4 (30:39):
We can't afford it.

Speaker 1 (30:41):
Paulina Gigi, your daughter two and a half one and
a half, one and a half. I can't keep all
these interest right. I got Shelley's kids, I got your kids,
I got my nieces, I got my illegitimate kids. Oh
you know, I got Kalin's kids aka her sister just
turned twenty one. That one. I know. We just talked
about it. Yeah, aka her sister. But whatever, I just

(31:02):
I'm trying to keep it all straight. I got my
other friend talking to her yesterday. She was offended that
I couldn't remember that her kids were months months apart
from Polly and May. I'm like, I can't, guys, I
don't have a spreadsheet. Okay, I'm trying to keep it
all straight. And then shoe sizes in this room and
all the other numbers I got to try and keep organized.
I can do. But in Gigi, and I'm proud of

(31:26):
her because she's she's cussing now and she you wrote that.
She's saying O.

Speaker 6 (31:32):
S oh yeah.

Speaker 1 (31:34):
My favorite part of this is that it's appropriately it's
appropriately timed in place, so she knows that, right, that's
what I'm saying. That's why I'm so proud of her,
not that she's cussing, but not only she cussing, but
she's using it appropriately properly, not appropriately, but properly.

Speaker 4 (31:49):
My girls so smart.

Speaker 1 (31:50):
But what is the uh? Because I want to throw
this out there. I'm sure you guys can come up
with with things from your kids eight five five five
nine three five is the thing that you had to
get your kid to stop saying? Because you know in
this case it was it's os? So how does it
come up? Like so she hear she's heard you saying
or is Hobby to colprit.

Speaker 8 (32:10):
No, No, it's me many of times because I just
I just say it and I didn't realize she understands,
like as far as picking up what I'm saying.

Speaker 4 (32:18):
And she just started saying it one day and I
was like, does she just say that?

Speaker 8 (32:21):
And Hobby's like clear as day, And then he's getting
all mad at me, and I'm like, well, it's not
my fault, like I'm a little batty with a bad mouth,
Like I can't like help her walking around here just
saying things. And then she has like her like a
new kitchen said that I got her and she's playing
whatever the pots and pans and it falls and she goes,
oh s girl, stop and she almost like slept going

(32:42):
up the stairs because I walk with her, hold her
fingers right, we're doing one, two, three, She like couldn't
get her a little foot up there, so she like
kind of, you know, fel to the side a little
bit like her little body and she goes, oh s,
I'm like sucked.

Speaker 1 (32:54):
But the problem is you want to laugh at that
because it's kind of cute and funny and the fact
that she knew this say that, and she learned that
from you, and she's doing it when she's supposed to
do it, you know what I mean. But I don't
mean you're not supposed to do it. But it's one
thing if a kid just says like I can remember
as like being really little insane words. I didn't know
what they meant. But like that's that's timing right. You know,

(33:15):
she's ho it.

Speaker 6 (33:16):
She knows what she's saying, doesn't miss a beat.

Speaker 4 (33:18):
She's so smart, you guys. But like I don't know how.

Speaker 8 (33:20):
To make her stop because I'll say, Gigi, don't say
that and she laughs. She also doesn't get it right
because like she doesn't know what that means. Also does
she really she could really stop because I say stop, no,
say it's like an inside word.

Speaker 7 (33:32):
I feel like you can tell her, like if I
don't know how you guys feel as parents, but I
think you could just say, like, we don't say that
outside of the house, because I think you might have
lost the battle now that she knows what, I.

Speaker 1 (33:42):
Feel like you should probably not let her say in
the house either, because.

Speaker 4 (33:45):
I don't know. I believe words are just words.

Speaker 6 (33:47):
I think, just don't say that.

Speaker 1 (33:48):
Unfortunately, the rest of the world doesn't think that. So
so she's gonna go to pre K and see that's right,
She's gonna be DRP.

Speaker 7 (33:53):
That's like a new parenting thing though, Like people will say,
you can say it at home.

Speaker 5 (33:56):
They all, if you my little nephews on that video game,
I'm talking on a little Whinny's aunts.

Speaker 4 (34:02):
I'm I'm like, do y'all hear it?

Speaker 6 (34:04):
And the parents just like listen, you know.

Speaker 1 (34:07):
Because I think until like maybe I don't know, like
twenty one or something, I tried not to cuss in
front of my parents, But now now I'm always cussing.
I don't care, but I feel like I can't as
a parent. Like my parents. They had to try to
get me not to cuss, like it was like, you know,
they can't just they can't just they just can't be
just are just free for all? No, you know what
I mean? So, like I think you got to try

(34:27):
to get her to stop.

Speaker 4 (34:28):
I don't take it so personal.

Speaker 8 (34:30):
Just is like a bad word. Like again, like Kaitlyn said,
the words are words. I just don't want her saying
that to anybody. That's the problem though, is she's too
young to know. She's too young to know that she
can say it here and not say it there.

Speaker 6 (34:41):
Yeah, it's hard.

Speaker 1 (34:43):
Hey, Terrence, Terrence, what is it your kids starts saying this?
You had to stop. It's like, where'd you learn that?

Speaker 2 (34:53):
Both my kids they like to say what the s.

Speaker 1 (34:57):
Like eleven and five? Okay a little early for that.
So they're just now that are they saying it when
they're supposed to say it, like when they're exasperated or
are they just saying it?

Speaker 8 (35:08):
My daughter is a grown woman in a little girl's body,
so when she drops water, anything.

Speaker 9 (35:15):
Breaks something, she'd like what what the he like?

Speaker 6 (35:18):
What are you talking about?

Speaker 1 (35:20):
So? So, Terrence, what do you do?

Speaker 3 (35:22):
Like?

Speaker 1 (35:23):
You just know that you want to laugh right because
it's funny. But like you probably don't want them doing
that at in a while.

Speaker 3 (35:28):
You can't.

Speaker 6 (35:30):
I can't, you can't, you can't, Like, how do you
correct something that like you created?

Speaker 1 (35:35):
You created this? I know that you like what you say, Daddy,
I know, but like if you laugh and then you
you sort of it's like you're sort of enabling it, right,
And then the problem is they go over to grandparents'
house and they go to school and then they get
in trouble for it, and they learned it from you,
and you didn't tell them to stop. So now they're
gonna you know, it's like but you kind of set
them up, not because maybe you don't care, but unfortunately

(35:57):
the world cares.

Speaker 4 (36:00):
Man, the world, what the EPP is the least of
my work?

Speaker 1 (36:05):
That's a good point. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Is that
where we're headed. I'm gonna go to like an elementary
school and it's gonna be like everyone just dropping F bomb.

Speaker 5 (36:13):
Something roelling you it's the new wave, and I mean
it's the new waves.

Speaker 1 (36:18):
Cursing out teachers, it's a new waves, the new wave.

Speaker 5 (36:21):
These parents are just letting them ride. I used to
have to curse in private, Like you know.

Speaker 1 (36:25):
I don't I am not approved but I don't think
that's a great idea. Everyone's so sensitive. I don't think
that's a great idea. Thank you, Terrence, have a good day.
Let me see here. My kids started calling their dead
babe because I do. That's kind of funny. Son of
a bee when something felt he's three. When my son

(36:48):
was six or seven, he would call his sister uh
an adult toy that starts with a D. He had
no clue what it was.

Speaker 7 (36:58):
My sister called a kid a douche kabab because of
me when she was little, and she got something for that.

Speaker 1 (37:03):
Yeah, but I'm twenty eight and I still don't cuss
around my mom. Maybe that's a topic in itself. It's like,
what are you as an adult? What are you still
afraid to do? Oh?

Speaker 10 (37:12):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (37:12):
I used to get my nana, who's like she was
super Catholic in her like mid eighties. I used to
get her to cuss, and she really didn't want to
do it. I'd be like, Nana, say the F word,
and finally she'd do it, but she just kind of
shake when she did it. It was like doesn't compute, you know,
Like what would Jesus think of this? I don't know.
I'm sure you let it go. Well, my daughter was one.
She m a second. Yeah, basically, it's the S word.

(37:40):
I let my kids cuss when they were younger, as
long as they were not used towards anyone, like calling
siblings the word. We tell our grandkids don't say that
that's a bad word. We don't scold them because they're
repeating what they hear. We just let them know it's
not a good word to say.

Speaker 6 (37:55):
It's good.

Speaker 1 (37:56):
Yeah, I guess. So there's one about Barney here where
the Barney one go, I don't know, and then a
bunch of people are validating the outlook doesn't work so good, okay,
because I'd like to say a cuss word about that,
but I'm not gonna like more thread show next right here,

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