Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is the press show. Let's get you Hotel, a
trip for Tunisie, 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 Vegas.
He's seven three three seven right now for a chance
to win two tickets to the March thirteenth show at
(00:20):
two night hotels day March twelve through the fourteenth at
the Flamingo Hotel and Casino, Las Vegas and roun Trepair Fair.
A confirmation text will be sent Stannard message and data
rates may apply. All Thanks to Live Nation. 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. Wait wait, wait, and Kiki, you have
(00:52):
a demographic of fans that I never knew about. Really,
it is fifty plus year old white men.
Speaker 2 (00:58):
What today?
Speaker 1 (00:59):
Wait? Come here? Every day Fred's show is on. I
want to everybody at his Wednesday July sixteed The Fred
Show's Nott Hi Kalin, good morning, Hi Jason Brown, Hi,
Paulino Hi, Kiki Martin, Shelvin Shelley is here, three hundred
bucks in the showdown a tie break here a little
bit later on, we'll do that job. Behamina's here on
the phone in the text say five to five five
(01:20):
nine one one o three five. We'll get to the
entertainment report. This hour headlines the biggest stories of the day,
end blogs. What are you got, Kay? Lots of stuff.
Speaker 3 (01:27):
So NICKI minaj Versuza for some reason, Fred a movie
that you specifically are going to be very excited about,
the most stream show and I will tell you which.
Husband posted a naked photo of his wife to celebrate
her Emmy nomination.
Speaker 1 (01:42):
Some of the most exciting news of the week was debunked.
It's not even true. I heard that Uno was going
to become a casino game. Was that not true? It's
not true. They issued a statement themselves, fake news. They
had to come out Uno that Uno people had to
come out and say, guys, it's not true. But I
guess they're opening UNO clubs, like not dance clubs, but
like you know, like I guess you could go play.
(02:03):
You know, I'm one hundred percent in. I will be
there too now as you know, but I love It's
the best, literally the best thing ever. It's one of
the best things ever. My favorite app on my phone
is there really? Oh yeah, I did download the app
while back, and it was a problem. I had to
kind of you know, I've had it for years. I
had to kind of like stop because it's addicting. Really yeah,
(02:25):
And you'll learn the real rules that way. I've said
this before, but like I will judge a person on
what you believe the rules to be, and you know,
like there are real rules and we have to be
on the same page with what they are because otherwise
it's no fun to play, right. If the game lets
you do it, that means it's a real rule, right right.
But I think some people think that certain things are
(02:47):
like that you can stack if you're playing one on one.
I think people think that you can stack a whole
bunch of these, like reverse plus two. I've done that,
and it just and then just like a barrage, just
boom boom boom, and then it doesn't work that way.
There are like certain cards that you like, if I
put it draw two down, then you draw too, and
then I think you go. But I think people think
(03:07):
that that's drawing is your ur I don't know what.
I don't know if the top of my head what
these rules are. I have to look at them again.
But there are certain rules that I think I always
thought to be true and they're not. And now that
I play the game, I know what the real rules are.
And then if I play against you and you don't
think we got a problem, yeah we got a problem.
You ever played a game called skip Bo?
Speaker 4 (03:27):
No?
Speaker 1 (03:27):
But I keep getting the pop up that's like, try
this one. I'm like, I don't need to deviate from Ouno.
I dated some girl who that was like the family
game that they played on vacation skip Bow. I don't
remember what. I don't remember the premise of it. Is
it worth it? I don't know. That was a dark
time in my life. I don't I don't like to
think too much about it. But back, well, you know
who I'm talking about. But I uh, it's like you guys, guys,
(03:50):
I'll know which era just skip Bow era? Right?
Speaker 3 (03:53):
But I even say one word and we know which
era you were in in your life Mexico, I know
exactly what era that was?
Speaker 1 (03:59):
The era? Oh but I right, that's how well we
know each other. But I got to where I was
better at the game than she was, and we couldn't
play anymore. She liked it because she could beat me
and I didn't know how to play. And then when
I started winning, she started getting mad. We couldn't play
it anymore. We had to play a different game. Yeah,
oh no, yeah, I mean, you know, it was her game,
(04:19):
so I wasn't allowed to win. I guess. I guess
in the relationship, some people like they lose on purpose,
and I'm not one of those relationship that I don't
do that. So you guys either, And I'm asking you know,
obviously everyone in the room, everyone at home, eight five, five, five, nine,
one one three five, you can call in text the
same number. But either as a parent or as a kid,
(04:41):
did you did your parents ever? Was there ever a
moment with your parents that was like the we're going
to overcome this fear moment where they like way overcorrected
on something like almost scared you, Like like I almost
wonder if in today's generation it wouldn't even be considered abuse,
which it probably it shouldn't be. But like, for example,
(05:01):
this is a story today there's a parenting stump that's
gone viral. A guy named Garrett G is a travel
influencer known as the bucket List Dad, and he's under
fire after posting a video of himself throwing his seven
year old son off a cliff into a lake to
teach him courage. The boy screened on the way down
but appeared fine afterwards. He says the jump was safe
and consensual, but critics call it reckless and dangerous. The
(05:24):
video has over three and a half million views, so
I can see how this went down. Hey kid, you
know you want to jump off that cliff? You know, Like,
I'm sure it was one of those that is I
feel like a lot of lakes to have him where
it's I was just that one recently where it's like, oh,
people jump off that. You want to jump off that?
You know? There's like boats around it, so okay, we
know it's deep enough and relatively safe, all right, And
the kid's probably like, no, I don't want to, And
(05:46):
then Dad's like, oh no, no, come on, come on,
come on, you can do it. And then finally it
becomes this debate where they will just come up there
and look and then he throws them off, right, And
then you could argue, well, he did it, and I
bet you my guess would be after he did it
that one time, he ran right back up there and
did it again because he knew he could do it.
And I don't know that for effect, he could be
traumatized for life. I potentially asking to emancipated from his family.
(06:11):
But you know, it could have also been the thing
that the kid. And I'm not suggesting this was a
good idea, but it could have been the thing that
the kid needed to get over the fear. Again, not
saying this is excellent parenting, but you know, if you've
been listening for a while, then you know the story
about my parents got divorced. I was pretty young and
my mom met I dated one guy, married him, and
(06:34):
I was probably ten, and he introduced me to so
much stuff, and he's adopted me, adopted my sister who's
seven and a half years younger. I mean, he's my dad,
and you know, but he was he was the outdoorsman.
He was the hunter and the fisher and the you
know when skiing and and and airplanes, you know, aviation,
that was him too. So so one of our first
(06:55):
trip together that the first time I had ever been
away from mom. With him. We went skiing and I
had never skied before, and so, you know, I took
some lessons and I was, I don't know, I was
kind of like scared of stuff. I was kind of
like meek and codependent. I don't know, my parents just
get divorces, but you know whatever. This is the same
era where the guy sent me a summer camp and
(07:15):
I hated it, and and you know, in retrospect it
was probably should have been the greatest time of my
entire life. But nonetheless not that I, you know, lament
on that every day, but the luxury short I just
I wasn't really like doing that great at it. And
so in his brilliant wisdom, he decides, and he's a
great skier, grew up in Vermont. He goes, Okay, well
(07:36):
I'm gonna take you. We're gonna go up to top
of the mount We're gonna go on on a You're
gonna be You're gonna love this. It's gonna be great.
He takes me to a double Black Diamond, which is
at that mountain the hardest run there is. I kid
you not when I say it was so steep that
if I had stood up if you could have and
stuck my finger out, I would have been touching the mountain.
It was that steep and there's moguls and you know,
(07:57):
the whole thing. And he's like, all right, sorry, we
made wrong turn. We gotta go down. And he and
I stood on that mountain for probably an hour and
a half and went through every range of emotion. First
I laughed at him, then I screamed at him, then
I cried, and then he's like, you know, you know, Christopher,
you can take your skis off. We can walk down
this thing if you want, but I think you can
do it. And I'll tell you what. We eventually got down,
(08:19):
and then everything else seemed easy to me after that,
all the greens and all the blues and everything. I
was like, oh, this is great because it can't nearly
be as hard as that. So it kind of worked.
Now I hated him, and I called my mom, and
my mom was like going to divorce him over it,
because she's like, what are you doing? And he didn't
he didn't have kids, you know, he didn't know how
to parent, so this was his This was you know what,
(08:39):
We're gonna get over this, like we're gonna toughen you up,
which is which is what I needed. But have any
of your parents ever tried something like this? You nodded
your head. Keep Yeah.
Speaker 5 (08:47):
My mom she put me in every activity to just
keep me busy. But swimming, what's her thing?
Speaker 6 (08:52):
Like?
Speaker 5 (08:52):
She was like, you're gonna know how to swim, and
so I was fine with swimming, But the diving board,
I'm like, do I really need to know how to die?
Like in the grand scheme of like right, you Like,
I don't really think that's a necessity. But she was adming,
like you're gonna get on the diving board and you're
gonna dive. And at first it was like a little,
you know, short diving board into the little pool, and
(09:13):
then it got taller and tall, and she was like, yes,
go and then like I was, I would just get
up there and cry. I was screaming, crying, and then
you have the line of other kids that are waiting
to get on the diving board, and so she was like,
you know, they would take me off and like put
me at the back of the line and watch all
the other kids go. And then my mom's just sitting
there like you're gonna let all these kids show you up.
Speaker 2 (09:32):
Are you gonna dive and make me proud?
Speaker 4 (09:34):
And so.
Speaker 2 (09:36):
So basically she had to push me in there. And
once I didn't drown, you know, I was like, no,
I'm not so scared. So then I started.
Speaker 1 (09:43):
So you overcame the fear.
Speaker 2 (09:45):
I overcame the fear. Do I recommend that style of parenting?
Speaker 4 (09:48):
No?
Speaker 2 (09:48):
No, that's abuse.
Speaker 1 (09:49):
Okay, no I don't either, but I have to tell
you it worked, like in that instance, it worked. And
then you know, for the rest of the trip. You know,
well I was skiing, you really late.
Speaker 6 (10:00):
How to come off a cliff? You're diving your skiing? Yeah, like, yeah,
I don't know. I've seen the opposite side of this.
My mom grew up with five brothers and this is
also like you know, rural the Poland, so like this
is a whole different country. She was thrown into the
river or whatever it was, like the button a lake
river and she almost round. So now as an adult,
she thinks she'll drop in a four foot pool, which
(10:21):
she has like she's on the float or whatever and
she's flipped over, and she in her head still thinks that.
Speaker 1 (10:25):
Like I'm going to job trauma, like traumatized.
Speaker 6 (10:29):
So she threw us in swimming too, like, not physically
threw us in the water, but she made us go
to swimming because she didn't want.
Speaker 1 (10:34):
Us to be like her. So it's the opposite side,
I think with my mom. Like, so it could go
either way, right, he could traumatize you for life, and
now she's like bodies of water. No, Kenny, Kenny g
that's your name, Kenny G.
Speaker 7 (10:47):
Hey bred, how you doing.
Speaker 1 (10:48):
My man, It's Kenny G. So this is something like
this happened to you when it came to swimming.
Speaker 7 (10:54):
Yeah, my dad toss me in the water to teach
me how to swim when I was about like four
five years old.
Speaker 1 (11:00):
So that was his infinite wisdom was I'll tell you what,
I'm just gonna throw the kid in and he's sink
or swim literally literally.
Speaker 7 (11:08):
Luckily it was a it was a family sized pool,
so it wasn't like too deep and he was standing
right there so it didn't toss me off a cliff
or anything. But uh, yeah, it was like, you're gonna
learn how to swim here and take the floaties off here,
learn and then to learn how to swim.
Speaker 2 (11:22):
Doggy battle, Doggy battle figure It out, come on.
Speaker 1 (11:25):
You'll be all right, and I guess you did. And
then from that point forward it was like, well I
did it, and so you were probably good.
Speaker 7 (11:32):
Yeah, because at that point when you're four floaties on,
those are kind of like your safety net.
Speaker 2 (11:37):
And then it's like, well, no, you need you're old enough,
you need to learn how to swim.
Speaker 7 (11:41):
So here you go.
Speaker 1 (11:42):
Yeah, all right, Well it worked all right, Kenny g
thank you, have a good day, take care, love your
work for my money. You want a saxophone? Is you
know as good as it cans? Yeah? Well then there's
like kind of you were commenting on this sort of
but it's like that, it's like the almost bullying. Oh
so you Oh so you're not the tough then, right, Also,
you're just gonna let all the other kids do it
(12:03):
a little.
Speaker 2 (12:04):
Susie, Yeah, little Bryant. They are pretty jumped.
Speaker 1 (12:06):
Yeah you okay? That so you're not like them? Oh okay,
you know, And I understand the psychology of it, but
in retrospect it's really mean.
Speaker 5 (12:15):
You know, I mean, but it worked same with right
riding a bike, like I don't know, you guys, they
just have to push you and one day take they
take the training wheels off, push you down the road,
and just let you.
Speaker 1 (12:26):
Falls started because you know you're gonna fall. Yeah, because
you're gonna stop peddling, you know, And you got and
then you fall and then yeah, right, So that's that's
what happened to you, is your your parents push you
on the bike and that was the end of it. Well,
my trust is never trust anyone.
Speaker 3 (12:42):
My mom said she didn't like go, and I look
back and she let go. I vividly remember that scene
because she just wanted me to learn how to ride. However,
you know on roller coasters, how there's a height limit.
Oh yeah, my dad would stuff my shoe. I wasn't
big enough to ride the roller coaster. I didn't want
you either, and he said, are you going to go
back to school and tell all the kids that you
were too scared to write this?
Speaker 1 (12:59):
I was like no, Like, legally I'm not allowed to
ride this. But anyways, I can hear this conversation between
Kaylin like the law says yeah. I was like no, Dad,
like I'm not.
Speaker 3 (13:06):
So he would and he would also grab the back
of my pants to lift me up so I would
hit the height limit. So I have a photo of
me too small and the roller coaster going like this.
But I did it and now I love roller coaster.
But I'll never forget.
Speaker 1 (13:18):
So it didn't work, Jason, your parents never try anything
like this. Ah.
Speaker 8 (13:21):
Yeah, mine was the bike riding. There was like a
construction area that my dad decided to take.
Speaker 2 (13:26):
Me, like down the nails.
Speaker 8 (13:29):
It makes perfect sense. It's like, wow, that was a
great location choice. But yeah, he let go and I
like went face first into a fire hydrant. I like
vividly remember like eating this fire hydrant so hard. And
then he was like, nope, you're not crying. You're getting
right back up back on the bike. And then all
of a sudden I could ride. It's like a knock
something in my head that was like now you can
balance ride or fall?
Speaker 1 (13:49):
Right? Do you want to get hurt again? Right? And
I can only imagine as a parent, like if one's
maybe a little more certain than the other, that happens.
You're like, I'm gonna have to explain this to my husband.
I'm gonna have to explain this to my wife. Killed him, right,
that's what. Oh, now I have to go home and
my kids faces busted. I have to explain why so.
Speaker 3 (14:07):
Like conversely, my friend who is a millennial, grew up
with her Sarah has two little boys and they're learning
to ride bikes right now, and the little brother learned
to ride before the big brother, and she's like, we
had to figure out how to not bully the big
brother and go, well, you're gonna let your little brother,
but we wanted him to do it so they could
ride bikes together.
Speaker 1 (14:25):
So they're trying to find the balance of like what
our parents did to us.
Speaker 3 (14:28):
And she said, like, you know, we still celebrated the
little brother just the same amount as we would and
the older brother was getting all mad, but they said,
you know, we tried not to.
Speaker 1 (14:37):
Bully him like our parents bullied us. Parenting is funny,
Like my sister and my brother are great parents. I
was watching them Saturday morning at breakfast, and you know,
Polly's coloring and then May spills a little water on
the on the thing, and then Polly wants to cry
because her little painting and she'd a bit of a
perfectionist and her little painting now has water on it,
and then she starts to color on the water or
(14:59):
she's it was cramped over the little wet spot starts
to rip. You know, she's trying to show like, look
now I can't color on this. And my sister's like, well, Polly,
you've made the choice to color on that wet spot
and you you have all this other paper, so you're
you're choosing the wet spot over the over the dry spot,
and look, it's ruining your painting. But you could also
(15:19):
make another choice. And this is exactly how it happened.
And Polly's looking at her like nodding her head like okay,
and then she chose to go over to the other
spot on the paper. And I was like, is not
how that would have happened. Either I would have down
a fit, they would have got me another paper, or
they would have been like shut up, shut up. But hey, Polly,
you're choosing. It works though, Laura, how you doing, I'm
(15:45):
doing fine. How are you hy? Lauren? So same with Kaylin.
Then you you were forced to ride roller coasters? As
it good?
Speaker 4 (15:52):
Well I have two actually yes. The roller coaster was
one at Great America, and it actually turned out that
I love roller coasters. The second one is the Ocean,
and I'm terrified to go in the ocean. I saw
the movie Jaws at way too young of an age,
and I know it's all fake and the shark is
big and huge and fake, but it scared the crap
(16:14):
out of me.
Speaker 1 (16:14):
So I won't even wade in the ocean.
Speaker 4 (16:17):
That's how terrified of the ocean I am.
Speaker 1 (16:20):
And your parents weren't able to, I don't know, find
a shark somewhere and be like, look at one, ain't
you see Actually.
Speaker 4 (16:26):
No, but no, but you never know, you know, And
now you see all those sharks coming closer and biting kids,
arms practically off, And I say to my son, Now,
that's why I.
Speaker 1 (16:37):
Don't go in the ocean. Yeah, yeah, Laura, thank you.
Have a good day. Yeah, you guys are great.
Speaker 2 (16:43):
I love all of you.
Speaker 1 (16:44):
Thank you, thank you so much. Have a good one.
It's hard to say some of this doesn't work, though,
because most of the cases that we the examples that
we've given, like today's parents would say, I think some
not old parents. Some people would say it's abuse or
it's like terrible treatment of your child. But in ninety
of the case that we've heard so far, it was effective.
Oh yeah, like oh well, after that, everything was easy,
(17:04):
like I needed the push. But people that get too aggressive.
Hey Nicole, Hi, Hi Nicole. So you were scared of dogs,
and so your parents decided the thing to do was
bye me a dog, of course, one that would never leave.
Speaker 4 (17:20):
Yes, of course.
Speaker 6 (17:21):
No it was a little three pound Yorky.
Speaker 1 (17:23):
But three year old me was terrified of that little Yorky.
Speaker 2 (17:27):
But now I love them.
Speaker 1 (17:28):
So how long was it before you warmed up to
the idea.
Speaker 6 (17:32):
Uh, it was probably a.
Speaker 1 (17:33):
Good solid month that I just would not move from
the couch. And then finally you were like, okay, and
then little Yorki comes over and you know, wants to
be pat and the whole thing, and then before long
you're like, this isn't so bad.
Speaker 2 (17:44):
Yeah, it became my best friend.
Speaker 1 (17:46):
I soppose your treatment. See so so it sounds mean,
but it worked, It really did. It worked.
Speaker 7 (17:52):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (17:53):
I don't know if i'd recommend it, but okay, wow,
I loved it. Well, thank you, Nicole, have a good day.
Speaker 7 (17:58):
Thank you. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (17:59):
I don't know. I don't know if I wouldn't maybe
do the same, I don't know.
Speaker 5 (18:02):
We need to do it, though, the parents, they need
to do it because it made us tough, It made
us strong, you know, and I think.
Speaker 3 (18:09):
It translated into like life in the workplace. I think
I think it helped us. I agree we may have
over corrected a little too much.
Speaker 1 (18:17):
Yeah, I mean we talked about it before, like the
threats that like, like bullying and things that we grew
up with that were at one level, and now it's
at another level, not only in the level of meanness
and cruelty, but in the accessibility and in the anonymity
of it, you know, with the Internet and social media
and all the rest of it. So I know it's different,
but you know, I argue, at some point, at some level,
(18:41):
you've got to be exposed to that as a kid,
like as a young person, you've got to be able
to manage. You're going to manage that in some way,
because it's not going to stop. Trust me, I get
bullied here every day. So like if I don't know,
if my parents had pulled me out of school, and
again I'm not saying it's the same as it was
when we were growing up. It's different now. But if
my parents had pulled me out of schoo every day time,
you know, Jamie was was a jerk to me, you know,
(19:03):
the big stud athlete told me, you know whatever that
he was more I was an idiot or whatever. If
my parents had pulled me out of school and homeschooled me,
then I'd show up here to hear that I'm an
idiot every day and friend's biggest stories of the day, guys.
The Fire Festival brand has been sold for two hundred
and forty three hundred dollars. The weekend long auction threw
(19:24):
one hundred and seventy five bitch from forty two hopeful
for wrapping up on Tuesday. According to NBCP for grabs
with a brand's intellectual property trademarks, social media handles remnants
of a festival that was famously promoted as a luxury
of music experience but ended up disorganized. Was a nightmare
for many people, composed of shabby accommodations, absent performers, and
(19:44):
limp cheese sandwiches and a guy who had to go
find some amvy on water at the airport. That man's
a hero. He was gonna do whatever it took. And
if you haven't seen the documentary then you don't know
what I'm talking about. But Evyon Man's very famous. And
then a homeboy tried to bring it back. Recently, and
shockingly that wasn't put together well either.
Speaker 2 (20:03):
Nope.
Speaker 1 (20:03):
I mean you would think like if I'm gonna if
I'm gonna try it round two of this and I
went to jail for it. I went to prison, okay
for scamming people. If I'm gonna do this again, we're
gonna get it right and it's gonna be great. Maybe
we get like a promoter involved, like a legitimate promoter,
and maybe we do like a parody on it and
we like it's legitimate behind the scenes, but we play
(20:24):
on the fact that could have worked. Honestly, jail for something,
I'm not trying again. I'm gonna switch my path. But
imagine if they had made Fire Festival into something somewhat
legitimate with a couple of good acts that were making
fun of what happened. But it was like shabby chic okay,
you know what I mean. Like it was like it
could have been done and the merged and everything. People
(20:44):
I think would have gone because it's like, oh, you
went to that and I went to the you know
what I mean? Like Aha, it's kind of like a
lot of Pellouca now, a lot of pellouser now is
a is a shiny version of what it originally was,
you know, in Woodstock, Vermont or whatever. The whole differing.
So it's a play on it. I mean it's not.
No one was being scammed in either case, but you
know there's not I don't think there's as much LSD
(21:07):
at the current Lallapalooza as there was back then. Maybe vapes, yeah,
maybe so, But I'm not sure what they're gonna do
with this. Maybe they're gonna do exactly what I'm talking about,
but someone paid quarter million dollars for it. A guy
was arrested for placing a human skin teddy bear outside
of a store. So this has been a store for
the last couple of days. A guy's behind bars on
suspicion of leaving a human skin teddy bear outside of
(21:30):
a southern California convenience store. Hector Villanueva was arrested in
Victorville on Monday, one day after the discovery was made.
This guy's accused of causing a report a report of
an emergency while knowing it to be false, and intentionally
and wrongfully planting evidence to falsely present age real That's
quite a charge. The teddy bear was actually made of Latex.
It's a prop created by a horror special effects artist
(21:53):
who sells them in his store. The San Bernardino County
Corners Office confirms it didn't contain any kind of human
rooms were skin. But I guess you bought this thing
and just set it out there and knew that people
would think that and didn't really care. The Superman dog
Crypto is driving dog adoptions. The new Superman movie is
driving a pictures and dog adoptions. Yeah, so the Man
(22:16):
of Steel has a little dog. I get, I haven't
seen a movie yet. Good? Yeah, do you love it?
Is the dog a big star? The dogs a star?
I'm also a DC girl? Now I love Superman.
Speaker 6 (22:26):
I'm into all this, okay, Yeah, because Dirty Marvel, I'm
a DC girl.
Speaker 1 (22:32):
Yeah, I love the movie.
Speaker 6 (22:33):
Like I don't care for like all these action figure people, like,
I don't care to see them live on my big screen,
but this one.
Speaker 1 (22:38):
Was really good. Actually, I don't care to see them
live on my big screen.
Speaker 2 (22:42):
I don't care about that.
Speaker 1 (22:44):
But you saw that on your big screen. You should
see the theater. The theater room is unbelievable. It's it's crazy.
It's an actual Imax theater. She has in her house
and maybe yeah, yeah, it's nuts. It really is superhero stuff. Now. Yes,
I clapped at the end of the movie like I yes,
it was so good. It was your white size one
(23:06):
of those people. Wow, oh my god, you are.
Speaker 2 (23:14):
Lands. I'd wanted to clasp.
Speaker 1 (23:16):
That was so American thing. I noticed that the people
clap with the landing. Yeah, but like a lot of people,
like every now and again, you'll hear like one or
two people, you know whatever. No, there was like a
it was a rousing response to the plane coming to
the ground.
Speaker 2 (23:32):
You should do I think you should do that. I agree,
you need to bring that back.
Speaker 1 (23:36):
Well, the only one of you except actually flown with
me is Kailin and she never one time clapped at
my landing, not one. I was busy saluting you.
Speaker 5 (23:43):
I did.
Speaker 1 (23:43):
I didn't make you do that, Yeah I did. I did.
I made you call me captain the whole time I did.
You're right, have both hands. So yes, it's true. Never mind,
it makes perfect sense. The dog is based on writer
and director James Gunn's Old Old Own not Old Oh
current rescue dog ow Zoo. Since the movie open last weekend,
(24:03):
Google searches for adopted dog near me have spiked more
than five hundred percent. Searches for rescue dog adoption near
me are up by more than one hundred and sixty percent,
and adopted Snouzer searches are up two hundred and ninety
nine percent. Would you and Pauline? I know the answer
because you're on the cutting edge of health trends. You
know me, I mean, bbl. You've had productions, You've had
(24:24):
stuff injected your face like a lot of people have.
You've done many different stems of certain areas, and.
Speaker 7 (24:34):
Me too. But he didn't you know.
Speaker 1 (24:39):
By inspiring you. I didn't. I'm just laughing that we
both forgot. And you remember that she seemed her kuchie well.
I was being vague, but that's what she seemed. Yeah,
in case you're it wasn't her left ear, but wellness
influences on TikTok and Instagram are promoting coffee enemas for detoks,
energy boosts, and even cancer prevention. I've heard this. I
(24:59):
want to try it, I think, Oh boy. Medical Jason
medical experts saying there's no reliable evidence supporting health benefits
and the practice comes with real risks. Rectal burns, infections, colitis,
electrolyte imbalances, and even death. Oh I don't need no burns.
Maybe maybe check the temperature of the coffee, Like if
(25:20):
you get it from Starbucks, they serve it an eight
hundred degrees. Maybe we don't shoot that up there freshly
brewing up there exactly. I would certainly check the temperature
of something before I You know, traditional enemas have clear
medical uses like prepping for surgery or constipation relief, but
coffee animas go beyond that and cause serious harm. Skip
(25:41):
the coffee enema for digestive relief. For detax Doctors recommend
safer options like hydrated fiber rich diets and regular enemas
under medical advice, not social media fads. So I'm sorry.
I hate to ruin it for you, Jason. And also
in What's Trending Today, this is actually kind of smart,
but a new and is seeing people buying non refundable
(26:02):
trips like hotel stays, cruise cabins, or vacation packages that
other people can't use. Sites like sparefare rumor plans, change
and Transfer travel act like Ebavor vacations offering steep discounts.
For example, somebody got a thirty one hundred dollars, Virgin
Voyages cruise for twenty six hundred dollars or some other
(26:23):
hotel state it was supposed to be seven hundred and
fifty three dollars for fifty bucks. Now you got to
read the fine print, make sure that you're able to
change the name on the package, change the name on
the ticket, and some discounts aren't worth it at the
airline's charge hefty fees just swap the names. But this
is actually pretty smart if you think about it, because
have you ever had a trip before where you know,
(26:43):
you book the trip and then I don't know, Like,
for example, I've been in a relationship where somebody booked
a trip with their X for six months down the road.
Now we meet trips coming up, and it's like, well,
do we go on this because I paid for the hotel,
so do we go on this trip? Or you know,
but the airfare he paid for, so we got to
buy a new ticket now because whatever, I guess you
could just sell the whole thing to somebody and then
(27:03):
you don't lose all the money. Because I've heard of
people buying like honeymoons that are non refundable and then
being like, well, I guess let's go like one last hurrah.
But this is a person who you're not going to
marry now, so how much fun is that going to be?
I don't know it. Your money's worth, right? Does it
ever happen? Heil No.
Speaker 5 (27:21):
But I tend to go on trips, and that is
the moment I decide that I'm done with the relationship.
Speaker 2 (27:26):
Oh yeah, So.
Speaker 5 (27:27):
We're like out of town having a great time in
Vegas to be specific one time.
Speaker 1 (27:33):
So you do know about this then?
Speaker 5 (27:34):
But you went, I went, and I was like, wow,
I'm never speaking to you again when we land. But
we had a great time there.
Speaker 1 (27:40):
Well, then why did you want If you had a
great time while you were there, then why did you
not want to be with them?
Speaker 5 (27:44):
Because it was just like it was like I get
clarity when I go out of town, like I'm going,
I'm going on a trip soon.
Speaker 2 (27:49):
Who knows what may happen when I come back?
Speaker 7 (27:51):
Yeah?
Speaker 8 (27:51):
No, Yeah, that's what I'm afraid of. Mike and I
have never traveled before, and we're going on our trip
in February. That's the trip that you that you won
anywhere in the world you want to turch and Cakos.
Speaker 1 (28:03):
Yes, what if he decides, what if he gets clarity
that I'm homeless? Yes? Wait what Yeah? Yeah, this is
not your honey, hold on, hold on. You're going on
a romantic vacation that you won from work to Turks
and Caicos and somehow his parents are a company you.
Speaker 8 (28:21):
He wanted his parents to come, But I'm totally fine
with that because I don't want to do anything, and
so like Tam and his dad can like go up
and do things.
Speaker 1 (28:28):
Oh I seem yeah, and that's by the pool smart
fifteen years, you've never gone on vacation together.
Speaker 8 (28:34):
No, we've never traveled together, like, we've never flown together there,
We've never been in the airport together like that ain't itself?
Speaker 1 (28:39):
Is like a stressful situation. Now, that's amazing because I
know you're a guy who likes to get there like
now for your trip in February. Yes, yeah, I will
be controlling that, and I don't know that he wants
to do that. That's usually something that you work out early, yeah,
because it's usually one camp or the other. Right, Like
I've dated people who I'm the guy. I don't need
to be there three hours early. But I don't know
if they're I don't know, maybe maybe a nice hour
(29:01):
and a half because worst case, worst case, we get
security lines along, we're not that stressed, and we get
to the gate, we leave, or we wind up there
a little forty five minutes early. We inspect the gate
to see that it's there. We arrive at the gate,
there it is B twelve. It's here. It hasn't gone anywhere, right,
and then maybe we go have a nice drink or something,
(29:23):
and like it's it's a relaxing process. The worst is
when you're in traffic on the highway and your plane
is boarding. Now, why would you want to start a
trip that way to trim that way? Absolutely not, that
could never be me. But if I've getting people who
are of the opposite mindset and I got to tell
you something, it was never going to work.
Speaker 8 (29:42):
No, He'll go with early with me, I know that, Yeah,
And I'll control our transportation, like how we get there,
so I'll be like, okay, you know, like we need
to be ready at this time.
Speaker 1 (29:50):
But I don't know. It's an interesting idea. You could
buy someone's trip and then I'm hoping no clarity. You're
right about time and then finally I got one more
and this is for actually another one for Paulina. There's
a dating app called Single Riders that aims to connect
Disney loving adults with each other. Huh, so are them?
I guess there's a guy, a TikToker, Joe the Bearded nerd.
(30:14):
He's been stood up, I guess many times trying to
plan dates to Disneyland. So it at The app target
singles and friends who love theme parks inspired by Disney
single rider ride lines. It helps users find park dates
or pals which shared Disney passion. I know you're a
Disney adult now, yes, in addition to a Marvel fan
or DC girl. Excuse me. The app is now seeking
(30:35):
beta testers with the US launch plan later this year.
So yeah, Disney adults now can match with each other
and go do Disney things together.
Speaker 6 (30:44):
They need this app though, because he's planning trips for
Disney and not everyone's going to be into it. Like
if he was to plan date with Kiki or Kaylin,
I'm sure they would turn him down too, Like you
have to be specific, so they need apps for that.
I believe you wouldn't take a free Disney trip. It's expensive.
Speaker 2 (30:57):
I love a Disney trip.
Speaker 5 (30:58):
But once I'm there and I've adding on a ride
or two, and I've got something to eat and clarity.
Speaker 2 (31:02):
To go, Yeah, I got I'm talking clarity.
Speaker 5 (31:04):
I don't want to be walking around this hot park
all day with everybody screaming keyds.
Speaker 1 (31:08):
That's true, you know.
Speaker 2 (31:10):
I'm taking my pictures on Instagram.
Speaker 1 (31:13):
We saw the castles right now. I'm with you. I
need to know we're going to Disney. What time of
year are we going? Are we going in December and January? February?
Are we going? Are you trying to take me there
in August?
Speaker 2 (31:23):
Oh when it's hot?
Speaker 1 (31:24):
Because I I you don't know about that. I'm all
set on it all the time. I don't know. Yeah,
I don't know. But now you've got grown up money,
so you could do the thing like where you you know,
get a little better access than everybody else. You little
bigger tickets, little bigger tickets, you know. But even if
I had big time money, like I know, people who
have done the thing were like, you pay a lot
(31:45):
of money and an actual Disney employee walks you around
and takes you to the very front of every line.
I'm saving embarrassed. It's very but I have to be
honest with you. It would make me, even if I
had the money, would make me uncomfortable because everyone's looking
at you like I waited two hours and because you
have more money than me. No, you can to the front.
(32:05):
Trust me. Inside, I'm going this is amazing. I'd love
to do it, but the outside of me doesn't have
the swag to be like, yes, that's right, I am
better than you. Know, right, you get out of sea.
I have no money than you. Like, No, I don't know.
I don't know that. I don't know that.
Speaker 2 (32:25):
I can't wait to do it.
Speaker 1 (32:27):
Good for you. I mean, if you're comfortable with that, fine,
But me I would just I think I would feel
bad like I just ruined some kids dream. If you
finally got to the front of the line, then here
comes my gray haired ass, Here comes Daddy Warbucks over here,
money falling out of my pocket. You know, kid, it's
National AI Day and I agree with your your notation
(32:50):
here no National Personal Chef Day. Also something I wish
I had money for a National hot Dog Day. Hot
Dog Hot the Raw hot Dogs Caitlin's Entertainment Report. He's
on The Fresh Show.
Speaker 3 (33:05):
Nicki Minaje was conducting her daily Rock Nation roast yesterday
and somehow Sizza got looped in in a new beef.
Speaker 1 (33:12):
I guess has been born now.
Speaker 3 (33:13):
This all started when Nicki called out Rock Nation CEO
for allegedly being abusive to her daughter, according to her daughter,
and this was going back and forth on X with
Nicki saying that Sizza sounds like a dead dog when
she sings. In response to says a tweeting Mercury retrograde.
Don't take the bait, lol, silly goose. That's really all
(33:33):
I have to say about that. She had time yesterday
and she was going on and on and on, and
poor says it was just like, what are we doing?
She was She was politely clapping back, but she was like,
I'm not paying attention to this. This is crazy, Fred.
Speaker 2 (33:45):
This one is just for you.
Speaker 3 (33:47):
Ariana Grande and Josh Dad will lead the voice cast
for the upcoming animated adaptation.
Speaker 1 (33:52):
Of the Doctor Seuss book Oh the Places You'll Go?
Speaker 4 (33:55):
Now?
Speaker 1 (33:56):
How was I was not included? Oh? My favorite you
cut you very much could be in this.
Speaker 3 (34:03):
I mean maybe it's not completely cast yet, but the
script is based on, of course, the very famous children's book.
And you may not love this part Fred, but the
musical film is set forth whatever day that is.
Speaker 1 (34:15):
I'm busy already. I'm just not you know.
Speaker 3 (34:17):
That's that really my So you're busy March seventeen, Yes,
and you know, yeah, really into that twenty twenty eight?
Speaker 1 (34:23):
You know right? I have a thing that it's funny?
Was it again? March seventeenth of twenty March seventeenth of
what you said of twenty twenty eight?
Speaker 2 (34:29):
Yeah, I got a thing yep, Okay, there's a thing
there too.
Speaker 1 (34:32):
Yeah, Kicky and I it's funny that we were booked
out already for this three years from now. You have
to go. It's your favorite children's book.
Speaker 3 (34:39):
And lastly, actor and podcaster Dak Shepherd posted a Instagram
photo of his naked wife Kristen Bell on a boat
with a very sweet caption to celebrate her Emmy nomination
for Outstanding Lead Actress in the Netflix show Nobody Wants
This with Adam Brody. If you have not watched it,
it's adorable. It's a great show. I think they got
renewed for a season two. Kristin responded, joking, Usban is
(35:00):
flirting with me again. Of course the photo was censored,
but she was very much naked and that's how they
decided to celebrate. And she was on a boat, so
that must feel really airy and freeing. I guess it
was the middle of the day, so naked Kristen Bell.
Nobody's mad at that cool rock on Kristin. If you
want to elevate your listening experience and you want to
do more than just hear us, I don't know why
(35:20):
you would, but go to YouTube and type Fredshow Radio.
Speaker 1 (35:24):
We're alive throughout the show right, Blogs, audio journals will
get to them. Next. Waiting by the phone is new.
What does somebody get ghosted? Three hundred bucks? Which show
be Shelley in the showdown and we're commercial free? Next day?
I got more Fred Show. Next