Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
You've got to wait.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
Fred's show is on now, Honest Morning Show, Kidding, Good
morning everybody. Monday, June second, The Fred Show's on. Hi Kaylin,
good morning, Hi Jason Brown, Hilina, Hi Kiki, Good morning.
Bebla Hamina is here on the phone in the text
eight five five nine one three five and you can
hit us up anytime, same number. The Entertainment Report this
(00:25):
hour blogs and headlines the biggest stories at the day.
What are you working?
Speaker 3 (00:29):
Okay, we are talking very big news for Taylor Swift,
Ariana Grande moving over to another acting role, and Cardi
b shares how much it takes to raise our kids
for some reason.
Speaker 1 (00:39):
But we got to unpack that.
Speaker 2 (00:40):
A new waiting by the phone this morning. Why does
somebody get ghosted? Kinky's Court butt on.
Speaker 1 (00:44):
Bump Girl Stealing is a crime?
Speaker 2 (00:49):
Case closed and we don't have to do it now? Okay?
Speaker 1 (00:54):
I feel differently.
Speaker 2 (00:55):
Twitter Bucks New Player, Final Week, Final Week, Billy one
week from today, and that's what it's told Twitter Bucks.
Is the price thirty nine and five is your record?
If you can beat Kiki in five questions, that money
is yours. What would you do in this situation? Probably
(01:16):
what this woman did. If you're gonna want a date, okay,
and you're gonna drop off your date and you're gonna
be upset about how the date went or about how
the date is ending. I don't recommend that you say
anything once the door is closed in front of your
date's house. Why well, because there's such a thing as
a rain camera and people are watching and recording you here.
Speaker 1 (01:39):
Listen to this for dropping me off and stuff?
Speaker 2 (01:41):
Sure, sure, sure you don't want me to come inside?
There a drink? I'm an excellent partender. First of all,
it's so cringey, so cringey. I you don't want me
to come in and drink? I'm an excellent bartender. No,
it's like if I had any inclination to do so,
then I I I just lost my boner, but.
Speaker 4 (02:02):
A lot of fun.
Speaker 1 (02:03):
No, me too, Thanks again for dropping me off and stuff.
Speaker 2 (02:05):
Sure, sure, sure you don't want me to come inside?
There a drink? I'm an excellent bartender. Glance I bt some.
Speaker 1 (02:15):
New girl very nick from New Girl Coded. I've been
told tempting.
Speaker 2 (02:20):
I'm just kind of tired. Maybe next time tired, Okay,
it's worse next time. Okay, Yeah, he chooses to just
stand there. Oh, oh, and thanks for paying for dinner,
by the way. By the way, Oh but you can't
come inside? Why not? Why not? I can't side because
(02:41):
you were nice to be all day.
Speaker 3 (02:44):
I see he's got something going on, something like there's.
Speaker 2 (02:49):
A screw in the ring camera. I mean, what are
you doing?
Speaker 1 (02:55):
Like?
Speaker 2 (02:55):
First of all, First of all, I think the game
is and and that's coming from my guy that doesn't
have much game. But I mean, if I'm like dropping
you off and I'm getting all the hands that you
don't want me to come in unless you say to me,
like would you like to come in, I'm not gonna
ask you if you're sure, Like I'm gonna drop you off,
(03:16):
I'm gonna walk you to the door, and I'm gonna
leave because I'm not I'm not going to beg anyone
let me in their home. Second of all, like he
doesn't even take no for an answer, Like he keeps.
Speaker 1 (03:26):
Going telling himself, I'm very nick from new girl coded.
Speaker 2 (03:29):
I think good with my hands, it's just so cringey.
And then and then the whole little little uh uh
you know routine when she closes the door, and then
this expectation that because you were nice or something that
and because you paid that you should be invited into
someone's home.
Speaker 1 (03:50):
This is why we'd rather be with a bear in
the woods. Do you see that? I'm like, you're still
a girl, codd.
Speaker 2 (03:56):
We're still of that mindset that if I pay for
a day that I should get to come in like.
That's still the mindset greatly. That should be the expectation
if I asked you on a date, as in this case,
I'm a dude asking him. It doesn't even matter. It
doesn't even matter. Well, when can get into genial gender
roles and all this whatever. My point is I if
I ask you out, whoever I am to you romantically,
(04:18):
if I ask you out, then I should be expected
to pay, in my opinion, because I extended the invitation. Yes,
that's it. That's that, and I should have no expectation.
Now I realized that that's not that. There are a
lot of people out there who have that expectation that
if they're dumb enough to believe that somehow they're owed
something if they treat you well. Now, is there anything
(04:38):
to the nice guy thing? Is there anything to the
nice guy being too nice versus the edgy dude maybe
getting some advantages because he's more exciting. Is there anything
to that?
Speaker 1 (04:51):
No, I think being.
Speaker 4 (04:52):
Nice as the bare man a moment I'm in a
human being, but I think the bar is just so low.
But I do think that the whole edgy bad boy
thing that was never a like my thing. Maybe when
I was eight with my drug you other boyfriend for like
an hour that was that was cool, But I don't
know as an adult, like being nice to be expected,
like you said, the expectation like I'm nice to you
guys are my coworkers.
Speaker 1 (05:10):
I want to I want to be nice everybody.
Speaker 2 (05:13):
But I think I think you're I think you're healed. Yeah,
well that could be. I also think you I think
that's what you're supposed to say. But I do think
there's something to being unavailable for sure and edgy. And
I'm not saying rude or disrespectful, certainly not lecherous or whatever,
but I mean, but like, I think there's something to
(05:34):
be to being unavailable that that does lend itself to
having people believe they're attracted to you in ways that they're.
Speaker 4 (05:43):
Not totally okay, I can see that, or like the
nice guy finishes last, right, So like if you're a pushover,
where I can see that not going well in your
dating life, right, and nobody should be a pushover or
be pushed over. But you're right, maybe I am semi healed,
right because like, yeah, I used to go for like
the one thing you are too, you're with a great
many Yeah, so like I think we're getting they're just
supporting you and your healing, supporting women. I love it
(06:06):
go to June, but like, I don't know, I just
think it's like it's they got me, not like just
goes with maturity.
Speaker 5 (06:12):
I feel like when you're immature and young and like
I don't know, I think you get caught up in
like a chase or trying to make someone like you
that doesn't like you, and then on the converse side,
they're like, oh, I'm gonna make her like me because
I'm going to preturn like I'm not interested. Like it's
an immature way to look at it, but I feel
like at some point you grow out of it. You
have to eat too, or else you're just going to
treat like crap your entire life, or you're gonna treat
people like.
Speaker 2 (06:31):
Crap you're entire it's hard to know though it's a guy.
It's hard to know who wants what because like, there
are times when I've tried to be like the proactive, nice,
patient guy that's, you know, engaging in conversation all the time,
and and I don't know, doing doing all the things
that are traditionally good guy stuff, and then that backfires.
(06:56):
And then there are times when I've you know, completely
ignored people or whatever. And then I do think the
ignoring I hate to say this, not for the right reasons,
but the ignoring has a higher probability of working in
the short term than being the nice guy overall over
the course of like if you look to it like
one hundred different situations, because it's I think psychological. Why
(07:18):
doesn't this person like me? How do I get them
to like me? Why am I you know what I mean?
Like people I think are for whatever reason, you're praying
on a part of them that it's not good. You
may not wind up with anything long term going about
it that way, like somebody that's unhealthy to begin with.
But yeah, I think if you go out with someone
and it's like, huh, it's a whole waiting about the
(07:40):
phone theory it's like, why is this person not calling me?
And it starts to bug you, and then it's somehow
they have like an they living rent free in your head,
and they have a little bit of an edge as
opposed to the person that you know you can get.
I think the truth is it's true the other way
around too. I think that women who are a little
bit mysterious will have guys chasing them as opposed to
(08:00):
the one who's and this isn't right, probably shouldn't be
this way. But the person who's just straight up, hey,
I'm here, I'm available. What's going on? It's almost like, oh,
I don't know, Like why is this well, why does
this seem so easy? I see your saying, but it's
not necessarily easy. It's healthy. People confuse the two things though.
Speaker 4 (08:19):
Well that's fair, Like maybe there's just it's it's getting older,
it's it's healing. Maybe there's just parts to it, because yeah,
if you're talking to me, you know, ten years ago,
I'm sure it's to be a whole different conversation. And
I was probably going for the wrong guys one hundred percent.
I know that I was. I was missed too available.
I feel like I you know, let my guard down alive.
I feel like I let people treat me like crap,
like men that I was dating or seeing or whatever.
(08:41):
But now I'm married. But if I ever was not
not married, first I wouldn't date again. But number two,
you were not married, that would make you married. If
you were not not married, then you're still married. So
you want to be not married to this example.
Speaker 1 (08:54):
In this example, I was not married.
Speaker 2 (08:56):
I know what you mean, right, but I stop for
a second. I'm like, wait, minute, I were not not
that I am married? Not right? Just got it?
Speaker 1 (09:04):
Got it? I don't know.
Speaker 4 (09:05):
I just feel like I don't know i'd be a
different person in this dating world because I've been got
married or been with the same person for five years.
I think today i'd be different. I'm thirty three years old.
Tomorrow like it's gonna be different. Like I can't keep
the same you know what I mean, the same patterns
like I just wouldn't work with it.
Speaker 2 (09:20):
Hopefully the patterns have been over for some time now,
I hope since you're not not married, let's do headlines
the biggest stories to today after Shopper Road Next in
three minutes, frend Show It's not Welcome to Monday.
Speaker 4 (09:33):
Fread's show is on Fred's Biggest Stories of the Day.
Speaker 2 (09:37):
Nate Texi said, being an actual nice guy's is something
you try, it's something you are. I don't know about that,
because I think there are men that are capable of
being nice, people who have become conditioned to believe that
if they're not that nice, then they have a better
success rate. And then I think there's such a thing
as being a decent person who tries really hard and
(09:59):
puts a lot of for fourth and then it backfires.
And so the problem is you do that once in
the wrong situation, and then you start to begin or
once or twice, and you start to begin like to
feel that that's not what people want because you've had
more success being a loof. And then there you go,
it's picking your spot. But I say, god, I'm just
not sure if guys always pick their spot. They'll try
one time, you know, bring flowers and open doors and
(10:21):
pick people up, and then that happens to be not
the right person, and then it's like, see, it doesn't work,
and then I'll just be aloof, you know, with more people,
and then that tends to work, but again, not for
the right reasons, because the people are like, well, why
doesn't he like me more? Why is he doing this
and that? And then I don't know, it's like this
false sense of all they're really trying to do is
make sure that they wind up with the upper hand
(10:43):
or vice versa. It's a game. It's a game, and
so I think you find the right person and then
it all clicks and that's great, But how long does
that take a long time? I guess yeah, hit a
lot of drug dealers to find a hobby. That's what
they say. It's a hallmark card. Guys. It's June, which
means lots of exciting things. It's Pride month, guys. It's
(11:05):
Father's Day month, It's Flag Day month Juneteenth, and Summer Solstice,
which is the day with the most sunlight of the year.
We have all of that to look forward to this month,
you guys. The NBA Playoffs, the Indiana Pacers had defeated
the New York Knicks. Where's Stephen A. Smith? Is he? Okay?
He's on a fifty fifty watch right down to advance
(11:27):
to the NBA Finals taking on the Oklahoma City Thunder.
Talk about two cities that are exciting Indianapolis versus Oklahoma City.
It could have been what could it have been? It
could have been Boston, The Knicks could have been in
this thing. The big market teams, it could have been
in this thing. And the NBA is probably ecstatic. Two
(11:48):
of our smallest markets battling it out. But both teams
are really good. It's gonna be exciting. So Thursday, the
NBA Finals began. Police rescued a two year old child
who got on a check that conveyor belt system at
Terminal A at Newark Liberty Airport. The boy's mother was
talking to an agent behind the Jet Blue counter when
the child walked behind the counter and got on the
(12:08):
conveyor belt. The belt leads into a shoot and then
into the terminal's luggage screening system, which is exactly where
the titdler plunged. Two officers sprung into action immediately and
went to eat this side of the shoot. One of
the officers able to grab the child off the belt
and pull them to safety before reaching the X ray machine.
The child wasn't injured in the incident. Don't say you've
never thought about that at the airport, jumping on that
conveyor belt riding around? See what's behind those like plastic
(12:32):
sheets that stick down? You know what I mean? Like
you know the ones who like their wavy split sheet
car wash? Like, what's back there? What's going on back there?
Watch your kid at the airport though, playing around like
it's some kind of jungle jym. Have you ever considered
what happens to all of the stuff on your phone,
all of the stuff on your computer when you die?
Speaker 1 (12:54):
Hmm? No, I haven't thought about it.
Speaker 2 (12:56):
You've never considered this, all your TikTok content? Who owns that?
Any music, anything else on your phone? You've never thought
about them?
Speaker 1 (13:03):
Are masters? Well?
Speaker 2 (13:05):
Yeah, who owns your masters? Yeah? Have you ever thought
about what happens to your online life after you log
off for good aka you're dead? A recent study of
highlights that most of us will leave behind a massive
digital legacy when we passed away. We're talking about thousands
of photos, social media posts, emails, even digital currency. In fact,
the average person shares over a third of their life online,
(13:26):
leaving behind nearly ten thousand photos and ten thousand social
media posts. Without a plan, all that content could be
lost or inaccessible to your loved ones. Experts are recommending
today that you set up digital wills, designated legacy contacts
on platforms like Facebook and Google, or you should designate
them and using password managers to ensure that your digital
(13:48):
assets are handled according to your wishes. No, it's okay.
You don't need my passwords. Like, is something happens to me?
I go bye bye, Like, we don't need it. You
don't need to get in my computer. You don't need
to be looking at Wait this is it's not necessary?
What's in it?
Speaker 4 (14:02):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (14:03):
Well I don't know. Do you want someone? Can I
go through your computer right now?
Speaker 1 (14:06):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (14:07):
I can look at your search history. Oh, I can
look at I can look all through your photos.
Speaker 1 (14:11):
Yes, you know, I tell you everything, like literally, good
have little.
Speaker 2 (14:14):
Nudy dudies in there and stuff you don't want people
to see.
Speaker 3 (14:16):
Just keep those first of all, and not you don't
store them anywhere?
Speaker 1 (14:20):
No?
Speaker 2 (14:20):
Hell no, Oh, I think you're in the minority. I
think people store the good ones and receive you know
how I feel about this, and they recycle that.
Speaker 3 (14:27):
I don't like keeping that stuff on my technology, so no,
go for it.
Speaker 2 (14:30):
Wow. Yeah, yeah, I mean I think I'm the same way,
but I at the same time. I just we don't
need to. We don't. I'm not around to provide context,
especially with this job. The stuff that I've googled. Anytime
I have any question in my mind, I google it,
which is not always a good thing. So like if
I were if you were to look at some of
my Google searches, you might be like, well, why was
(14:51):
he googling that? Maybe I was watching a TV show
I didn't know, maybe, but but you're not there to
be like, why did you google that? You know? And
the for me to be able to tell you so
I'm gone to context is loss. So no, you do
not need to see what's going Looking at my phone
in my computer is almost like looking at my brain,
And no one needs to be able to see that
movie love me.
Speaker 1 (15:12):
Yeah, we know you.
Speaker 4 (15:12):
I think enough to think like, okay, well he was
watching this movie or maybe he's like free in the morning,
he had a random thought. Caln knows that I google
the weirdest things that for you in the morning is
Jesus a carpenter. Look, that was the thought that I
had one time. What did your friends she had to
tell you? I want to say he was was he?
I think his father was Joseph as well. Joseph was
so I got the too confused and a family business.
Speaker 1 (15:33):
I wasn't really sure. So I how to dissect that
family business?
Speaker 4 (15:37):
Yeah, Jesus God and sons and sons.
Speaker 2 (15:40):
Carpentry, Yeah, zero jack money back guaranteed. Jason, would you
want anyone going through your stuff once you're gone? You're that?
What is that thing over to that that? I think
Pat the company gave great men.
Speaker 5 (15:53):
Yeah, I mean honestly yeah, I mean, if you could
even figure out how to, you know, work this thing,
then I think coming good.
Speaker 2 (16:00):
Whatever you want, I think I'm good. It's just whatever
I put up there, I approved. It would be like
it's like if you're an artist, like when Prince died.
Prince died and then they went into Paisley Park and
they found the safe full of all this work, all
this stuff that he never released because he had a
studio in his house. It was constantly recording stuff. And
then you know, his family's like, oh good, we're gonna
(16:21):
inventory this and we're gonna release all which I don't
even know if they've done it yet, but for a
while that was they hired someone to archive it all
and manage it. And look at what it all was.
They were going to release him, and you know what,
if he wanted it released, he might have released it,
but he didn't, and so he died, and I think
it sadly, I think it dies with him because maybe
whatever that stuff is doesn't represent him, or who knows,
(16:43):
he doesn't want it out there, so I don't. I'm gone,
and you can just throw my stuff away. It's over.
You don't need to go through it now. I guess
what do you do though, if you die and then
you need to get into someone's like bank account. I
guess that's you have to like provide birth certificates and
or death certificates, and you have to be able to
prove the person's I would assume if there's a will,
then if you're the beneficiary or you're the executor, then
(17:04):
you would have access to all of that. So you
don't need my password. You can go to the bank
and you can file paperwork and then they'll give you
what little money I have.
Speaker 4 (17:11):
I'll make sure there's money in there. My sister had that.
That was a fun time. She went in there. There
wasn't a dollar less.
Speaker 2 (17:18):
Yeah, well yeah, her dad and she was like ah, yes,
college loans erased, you would.
Speaker 4 (17:25):
Think at least a little something to take care of me,
and well, take care of my sister. She's going to
college at that time, exactly Pennsylvania, you know, expenses, plane tickets.
Speaker 2 (17:33):
But that's another thing. Let's say you win into someone's
uh phone or computer or into their like secret folder
on their on their computer, and then you realize you
learned things about them that they were into or that
they had done that you never knew and never would
have known, and then it changes the way you think
about them. So can't people's private computer be private forever?
Speaker 6 (17:53):
I feel like it's all up to the person, But
I do think we need to start thinking about a
digital plan after you die, because I've seen people die
and then the last post on their Facebook was like
shout out to Big Booty Keisha, you know, like we
turned out, and it's like.
Speaker 2 (18:06):
Well, I want that to be the last thing that
he was happy or she was happy on the way
with Big Booty Keisha.
Speaker 6 (18:12):
Let me rest you no, like, give me a I
think I'm gonna prepare like a final post. So when
I go, Jason gonna going there, make just hit post
on this final post Richard Simons.
Speaker 3 (18:22):
Did that, didn't he? Like, I think his family released
something that he wrote or somebody did, you know? I
think that's fine, like hit sund when I'm ready.
Speaker 2 (18:29):
Right, yeah, I guess.
Speaker 1 (18:30):
Just don't put me in clouds. We won't go through years.
Don't worry again.
Speaker 2 (18:34):
I mean, I'm dead, so I mean who cares.
Speaker 3 (18:36):
But we're not like judging. We know you, so we're
not really judging what you're searching. Unless it was like
how do I kill my coworkers? You know, Other than that,
I'm like, well.
Speaker 2 (18:43):
Well I haven't. I haven't searched that in several days,
so you'd have a hard time fighting it. No, I
don't think. I don't think i'm a good example because
I mean you're right, like I don't have secrets, like
I just I just say everything.
Speaker 1 (18:55):
But don't you want to know?
Speaker 6 (18:56):
To my detriment sometimes like what's up y'all? This friend
so I'm doing it? Yeah, ideas ahead and died. That's crazy.
Speaker 2 (19:02):
I did go ahead and die? Yeah, and then what
else would it since you're being mean? Now, what's something y'all?
It's fred? What else would he say?
Speaker 6 (19:09):
Like I'm dead? That's crazy? But you know, shout out
to the dogs. You know, I'm up here with a
lot of dogs that I rescue and stuff.
Speaker 2 (19:14):
I'd better be Yeah, and every one of them, damn
dogs better meet me in heaven. Right. They might be
the only ones, but every one of them better beat
me in heaven.
Speaker 1 (19:22):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (19:22):
You could, you know, do one last, you know is
waiting by the phone. You could do whatever you want.
Speaker 2 (19:26):
You could do it last waiting, But that because that's
what my legacy is going. It probably is. Honestly, Remember
that guy that used to do that thing with the dates.
Remember him, what was his name?
Speaker 1 (19:35):
Bob ed the whole intro off the dome.
Speaker 2 (19:40):
Oh yeah, I trust me if this company has anything
to do with it, if I were to die that
you'd probably never stop hearing waiting by the phone. They
would just use a little AI machine to make it
sound like me. It might even be better. Oh and
I remember back in the day. Remember this is what
so many decades ago, maybe a decade ago, when you
used to have to download the music that you wanted
(20:01):
off iTunes and then you technically owned it. I remember
there were conversations about that. It was if I have
a hard drive full of music, because back in the day.
I know this is gonna be hard people to believe.
Back in the day, you didn't stream the song. You
had to spend ninety nine cents to buy the song
you wanted, unless you had the illegal stuff the LimeWire
or the napster or whatever, and then it was on
(20:22):
your hard drive and so you had to like transfer
it from device to device, as opposed to now you
can just stream it online. So there was a big
conversation about, well who owns that? Like if I die
and I spent ten thousand dollars on songs, then should
I get to pass that on to somebody? Well, it
turned out, if you look very carefully, all you did
was lease the song for your life. So then when
(20:44):
your dad, technically no one owns it anymore. That's how
it used to be. Now you don't have to worry
about it anymore. But yeah, back in the day, because
that was a whole conversation was like, well, if I
spent twenty five grand collecting every Beatles song and every
this and that and whatever, and I bought all that,
well then who gets it? Nobody? Nobody gets it, I guess.
And are you ready for the latest? At work? Trend.
(21:07):
It's called ghost working. I mean, how many, how many weeks?
How many different versions of not working? But making people
believe that I mean, and then people want to know
why they get fired. It's like, well, because you pridefully
have been telling everyone about this thing that you're doing
called ghost working. Move over quiet quitting. Now we have
(21:29):
ghost working. That's the practice of looking busy in the
office by carrying around prop notebook, scheduling fake meetings, or
just typing random words. According to a new survey from
Resume Now Whatever, that is, fifty eight percent of employees
admit to the practice regularly, perhaps an outgrowth of anxiety
over job security, the rise of AI and recession fears.
(21:50):
One expert says the workforce is currently under immense pressure
to appear productive. How about just be productive, sees I mean,
if you're worried about AI taking your job, then wouldn't
now be the time to make it look like you
can do better than AI? As opposed to pretending to work.
I think a lot of people around here do that.
Speaker 1 (22:08):
By the way, I was gonna say, that's not new.
Speaker 4 (22:09):
I feel like I've seen notebooks in people's hands and
iPads and.
Speaker 2 (22:12):
A lot of ghost working, A lot of ghost working.
Speaker 1 (22:15):
Open it now.
Speaker 4 (22:17):
Let But the way that I'm picking that story up,
or that I'm thinking of it, is that, like I
don't know, maybe they're trying to look more busy, like
they're working, but they're trying to be like no, like hey, I.
Speaker 1 (22:31):
Can't do this. They can't pull off the notebook and
schedule a meeting with us today.
Speaker 2 (22:34):
This is exactly not no, This is exactly the opposite.
This is not working but making it look like you are.
Speaker 1 (22:41):
Because I'm out. Look, if you want to do ghost working,
do your thing. I'm not I'm not a hater, but
don't involve me.
Speaker 6 (22:47):
I hate the person who is ghost working, and it
involves everybody else. So like I got to come to
your fake meeting or I have to. You're sending me
random emails about nothing, like why do why do I
have to play this game with you? Just ghost work
on your own, Like, don't involve me, Ray, I don't
want to go.
Speaker 2 (23:03):
It's okay you, but you don't really hate it. You
don't really like a ghost worker. You are you? You
would hate on a ghost worker because you work really hard.
Speaker 1 (23:10):
That's what I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (23:11):
And so it's like you said, I don't hate on
a ghost worker, but you do though, because it's like
you're not doing anything, like you're not you want us
all to believe that your life is so hard, and
you know what else, you know, you know where I
find this happens. This tends to happen when everybody around
you is actually working their asses off, and then it's
like it's opposed to just working your ass off. You
(23:32):
just tell everybody how hard you're working and how difficult
your life is, and then you will become resentful of
You could happen absolutely say oh, I got an idea.
Why don't you just make yourself actually is what? Why
don't you produce as much as everybody else? And then
you don't have.
Speaker 3 (23:45):
To You shouldn't have to say you work hard ever,
like it should just be a parent like but oh,
come on.
Speaker 2 (23:51):
People do it. And everybody driving to work right now
in every workplace can think of the person you're like, oh,
I'm just so exhaust It's like if you know you're
right and the person that's talking is like, like I've
never once heard Jason brown say that, And Jason Browner's
seventeen hours a day never once hear him say that.
Speaker 1 (24:09):
Twenty three hour ghost working.
Speaker 2 (24:12):
But then I think maybe you should consider it.
Speaker 1 (24:16):
I'm want to send you all a bunch of emails
that make no sense.
Speaker 2 (24:19):
It's a national Rotisserie chicken day, Rosari, national Bubba Day,
Bubba day. Hey, that's me a national leave the office
early day, which is about to be me. Because it's
hard to ghost work when you have to talk like
I can't. I wish I could. Well, I shouldn't wish
too much because they're probably working on the ai a's
(24:39):
Entertainer Report. He is on the Fread Show.
Speaker 3 (24:41):
Miss Taylor Allison Swift now owns the masters to her
first six albums, sharing the news on Instagram, like right
after we got off the air, I think Friday, She wrote,
you belong with Me, alongside photos of her sitting with
like all of her albums surrounding.
Speaker 1 (24:58):
Her on the floor. Remember this all art.
Speaker 3 (25:00):
In twenty nineteen, afters she made it known that she
would like to buy her masters, then her old label
went behind her back, selling them to Scooter Braun. Less
than two years later, he could not take the heat
and sold his private equity company to Shamrock Holdings for
three hundred million, which worked directly with Taylor to sell
her everything, including videos, concert films, album art, photography, and
(25:22):
unreleased songs, along with her master recordings. As for those
two albums that she has yet to release re recordings of,
Taylor says that her debut album, Taylor Swift Is Down,
sounds great, but she did share that she had a
really hard time re recording reputation because it was a
very specific time in her life where she was desperate
for other people's approval and she's just not there anymore.
(25:44):
Remember that's the album that she sort of the whole
thing with Kim and Kanye happened. They lied on her,
she went into hiding, and then she re emerged and
she was like, yep, I'm the villain. She also said
that there's not much that she would change on that album,
but yes, we will get the vault tracks if we
want them, and we do the way. The next night,
she hit up the restaurant The Monkey Bar in New
York with Selena Gomez to celebrate They've been friends forever.
Speaker 1 (26:07):
I wonder who got the bill though, because like she's
spent a lot of money, you know on those.
Speaker 2 (26:10):
You better pay for everything all the time you think, like,
I'm sorry.
Speaker 1 (26:14):
Isn't Selena a billionaire?
Speaker 3 (26:15):
Or no?
Speaker 1 (26:16):
Did she get She's close close?
Speaker 4 (26:18):
Maybe that's true your big day, like Kayling she got
her master's.
Speaker 1 (26:24):
Like I'm taking her out. We're going to red Lobster or.
Speaker 2 (26:28):
Billion. Okay, it's a hold on. Let's see what Taylor's
is a billion?
Speaker 1 (26:33):
All the billion?
Speaker 2 (26:34):
Well, I mean she probably just spend close to half
a billion. So yeah, it's just one point six. It's
got to be higher than that. It's got to be
higher than that. Maybe not. I don't know, because because
deep well because you got the consumer products that that's
one thing. Yeah, Taylor doesn't really Most of this is
tied to her music, isn't it.
Speaker 3 (26:54):
Yeah, she's the only one who did it, like just
through music, like other musicians have done it with makeup
companies like Rare Beauty and Fancy.
Speaker 1 (27:01):
But yeah, so I don't know.
Speaker 2 (27:02):
I still want to hear the re release of the
first album, Yes.
Speaker 1 (27:08):
Yes, I want to hear it.
Speaker 3 (27:09):
I want to hear the re recording because it's all
about the vault tracks. So like the tracks that she
give us, gives us that never made the album, those
are new to us and I'd like to hear her
grown up voice singing her first ever album, because remember
how different her voice was. That's like Tim McGraw tear
dropped on my guitar. So yes, I would like to
hear it. But I'll take anything she'll give me. So
(27:30):
looks like Ariana Grande has lined up another acting role.
This time it'll be and Meet the Parents four, alongside
Ben Stiller and Robert de Niro, Paulina's friend Bobby as
she calls him. The plot of the fourth movie is
set to revolve around the son of Ben Stiller's character,
who gets engaged to a woman that's wrong.
Speaker 1 (27:46):
For him, which I think is who Ari is playing.
Speaker 3 (27:49):
Meet the Parents four is do in theaters November twenty
fifth of next year, by the way, so I'm sure
it'll be funny.
Speaker 1 (27:55):
She's very funny.
Speaker 3 (27:55):
And lastly, Cardi b was on spaces on Twitter or x,
which I feel like that's her favorite place to hang out.
Speaker 1 (28:01):
She's always on there.
Speaker 3 (28:03):
But after it was found out that a strange husband
offset was asking for full custody and spousal support from her,
she shared the amount of money it takes to raise
her three kids and those are offsets kids. By the way,
Cartie said that she has a driver on retainer for
her kids that cost ten thousand a month. She said
her oldest Culture takes piano lessons. Those run her three
(28:23):
hundred an hour and she takes those three times a week.
Both Culture and Wave take gymnastics and boxing glasses too.
Claimed Offset isn't paying for anything, including Culture's private school tuition,
which costs forty five thousand a year for private school.
She also said she wants Offset to die slowly, So
I think she's mad about it.
Speaker 1 (28:41):
Oh she's yeah, he made her real mad. Yeah, so
I think that's going on.
Speaker 3 (28:46):
But then on the other hand, she just went Instagram
official was stafun. So she's having fun, but she's mad
about her ex and you know, doesn't want to pay him.
Speaker 1 (28:55):
So there you go.
Speaker 3 (28:55):
By the way, if you miss any part of our show,
to type the frend Show on demand and said this
is a preset on the free iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 2 (29:01):
Kayla's wearing a lobster clab band today, so I think
she's been through the main airport. I can't be certain.
We'll do blogs. We'll find out about it in two minutes.
French job, they talk better than they excited. Tell me
these are the radio blogs on the Fred Show, like
we're writing in our diaries, except we say them loud.
We call them blogs. Kaylin is back from the the Bachelrette.
Speaker 1 (29:24):
Party, the bachelorette party of the Sentry. It finally happened.
Speaker 3 (29:29):
I planned successfully my first ever bachelorette party. I'm a
professional attender, but I've never had to plan one. I
am a maid of honor to my best friend Laurie,
and it has been a little bit of a stressful situation,
so I'm very proud of myself. Things came together very well.
We went to a small town in Maine called Kenny Bunkport.
Speaker 1 (29:51):
It's like an ocean town.
Speaker 3 (29:53):
It's about forty minutes from Portland, which is what I
would say is the biggest city nearby.
Speaker 1 (29:58):
It's beautiful there.
Speaker 3 (30:00):
The people are like the nicest people I've ever met,
Like they really want people from out of town to
come there, which I feel like I'm.
Speaker 1 (30:06):
Not very used to.
Speaker 3 (30:07):
They have like free street parking, Their public restrooms are nice,
like very nice. I don't know, it's just like a
little quaint ocean town. As for the schedule, I think
I did a good job. Because both the bride and
I don't love when things are like planned, packed to
the brim, you know, you gotta be up at six
am and you got to do you know, sunrise. So
(30:28):
we did have shirts matching, they were not matching. They
were her theme that she picked was like Lori's final tour,
farewell tour, like a band tour.
Speaker 1 (30:37):
So we all got to pick our own band tees
and our own like colors.
Speaker 3 (30:40):
So it wasn't as like and we didn't go outside
with them like we were not the group that was like,
you know, charging at you with the matching stuff on.
But I liked it, like we had built in time
to chill. People could do what they want. Some people
want on a bike ride, some people did do yoga.
I was not some of those people. But yeah, we
had some dinners. We went on a boat, which is
(31:00):
crazy because I don't know, like when we went out
in Portland, like the original Cobblestone is there, and I'm
a history nerd like Paulina, and I just like got
drunk and I kept being like bro like Sam Adams
like in his little clogs, was like at this bar,
like at this bar stool, like I thought about it all.
Speaker 2 (31:17):
Weekend like Sam Adams, like Sam.
Speaker 3 (31:19):
Like Paul Buyan was just like he probably broke this
glass that's broken, you know, I don't know. It was
like I was in really old stuff and it was
freaking me out.
Speaker 2 (31:28):
It's so old.
Speaker 3 (31:29):
Everything so old there. Well honestly I have a lot
to say about that too, but yeah, so it was
fun in the last night. This is a move. Let
me tell you when you're all hungover and tired. I
actually had a chef come to the house and make
Italian food so.
Speaker 2 (31:46):
That it's called door dead. I do the thing. It's crazy,
so I could cook's amazing.
Speaker 3 (31:53):
You can order whatever you want. But that's when we
wore our shirt. So I'm I'm happy. It was like
success and uh, wouldn't recommend it if you're not into
working very hard at something that isn't your job.
Speaker 1 (32:04):
But planning, yeah, planning a Bacheloretta is.
Speaker 2 (32:08):
Did the one lady who would never pay you pay
She did.
Speaker 1 (32:10):
End up paying me.
Speaker 3 (32:11):
But now the fun part begins, like you have all
it's all fun and games on your trip because someone
picks up aka me picks up every bill. So when
you when you're hung over the next day and the
Venmo requests start coming, you know.
Speaker 1 (32:23):
That's got to be scary for them.
Speaker 2 (32:25):
But yeah, yeah, my friend was smart. On the the
bachelor party, I went to the famous one to Key West,
which is where a bunch of straight guys should go.
And I think the bride made him go there because
she thought it was less threatening than Vegas or some
other places like that was the word on the street
was that they actually she sent us to the gay
(32:45):
domestic Well, no, I think I think P Town is
that is Providence, Rhode Island, the gay It is the
gay capital of the United States, the domestic gay capital.
It's called P Town.
Speaker 1 (32:54):
We almost went there. That's the only reason I know
that that was in the running.
Speaker 2 (32:57):
And then Keith West would be I think a close second,
so of course that's where we would go. But this
guy was smart. He he put everyone's hotel on his
credit card and he was like a Hilton member or whatever.
So that dude's like lifetime titanium now because you know,
seven men, grown ass adults, all with hotel rooms that
were expensive in this place, that's how you do it.
(33:18):
And then we all paid him back and he got
all of his money because well he made sure that
he did. But that was smart though. I mean, I
can't imagine what the hotel bill was. Four days, eight rooms,
you know, and.
Speaker 1 (33:29):
He's got free staying like mawi' something.
Speaker 2 (33:31):
All of a sudden he lives in a Hilton. Now
I'm like, what's going on?
Speaker 4 (33:34):
Man?
Speaker 2 (33:34):
Like, what about more fresh show next