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July 11, 2025 36 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
We'll go up in the city. I think it's gonna
be okay. I feel good about him. Well, yeah, last
you did say that, Las, Okay, what I'm gonna say,
you only say it's gonna be terrible. I don't know
what to do. I'm I'm trying to be positive. In
twenty twenty five, Fred's show is on. Because the show starts,
you run out, Paul, You know what happened.

Speaker 2 (00:18):
I'm sorry, I forgot my laptop.

Speaker 3 (00:19):
Oh, it's such an important part of the of the function, right,
what we got going on here?

Speaker 1 (00:24):
This is I had no idea at the flux cabassador.
Is that the thing?

Speaker 2 (00:28):
No, I was on the roof earlier though it was
raining on you? What it was rain on me? Lady God?

Speaker 1 (00:33):
Yeah, wow, wow.

Speaker 3 (00:35):
Yeah, okay, I got my laptop up there.

Speaker 1 (00:37):
Oh my, you shouldn't take the laptop into the water.
That might be part of the reason why we're off
the air at the time. Yeah, then we got the
laptop of the water. Yep O, got it all right,
never okay, Hi, Klee, good morning, good morning, Hi Jason, Ray,
Pauline is here, Kiki, good morning. Bellamine is on vacation
and show by said he will be here with money.
It's just a little bit of this Friday, July eleventh morning, everybody,

(00:58):
The Fred Show is on the biggest stories of the day.
We'll get to blogs and the Entertainment Report this hour.
What are you working on?

Speaker 4 (01:04):
K Justin Bieber drops a big old bomb on I
se yesterday and for some reason his wife is like angry.

Speaker 2 (01:09):
I don't know. They're always yelling at us. I don't
understand that.

Speaker 4 (01:12):
Also a big cheating scandal from vander Pump, but another one.

Speaker 1 (01:16):
Waiting by the phone. Why didn't somebody get ghosted? Brand
new this morning, the Friday Throwback dance Party. Dej Neerrodic
will be here to start the weekend. We are glad
you are here. On the radio and the iHeart app
live at anytime. Search for The Fred Show on demand
and on YouTube. Search for Fred Show Radio. You can
watch portions of the of the of the broadcast are
available for you to watch us talk and well.

Speaker 2 (01:37):
Yes, YouTube, Facebook, right now?

Speaker 1 (01:40):
Oh god, okay, good, more places for people to tell
us that we suck. I love that, Yes, I love it.
You guys want to know the new the newest dating
trend and this one's really kind of complicated. It's called
bank seeing. Oh, we've really developed, We've really gone a
long way from ghosting, you know, ghosting and and bread crumbing.

(02:02):
What are some of the other one. Bread crumbing, that's
the one where you like kind of just give people enough,
just some tiny morsels of yourself long enough until you
decide that you do or don't want to be with them.
But you don't want you want them to stay interested,
so you kind of keep them looming, or you're the
one looming, I guess, but you just sort of keep
them around, like just give them just enough so they
don't go anywhere else, but you haven't decided what you

(02:22):
want to do with them yet. Bank seeing is a
new toxic trend, and it's been getting attention recently. Apparently.
It involves one partner deliberately letting a relationship with or
away emotionally withdrawing and reducing contact over time, before suddenly
then ending it without warning or explanation. The term draws
from the artist Banksies self destroying artwork, symbolizing the slow,

(02:45):
silent death of a romance. That's a that's that's that's
hard to articulate, like, that's that's a complicated one. Like that.
That requires a lot of steps. So I slowly sort
of fade away from you. Away. Now that's a dating
term already, right, So we're taking from the fading away
and then I just dump you. But if someone's fading

(03:07):
away from me long enough, I guess, I assume I'm
getting dumped soon.

Speaker 2 (03:11):
Yeah, right, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (03:12):
You're basically quite quitting the relationship, right right, yeah, I mean,
let's call it what it is exactly.

Speaker 2 (03:17):
But then you quit yourself, I guess.

Speaker 1 (03:19):
Okay, yeah, But psychologists apparently have waited on this. The
key characteristics of bank seeing are emotional fade out. The
connection shifts from romantic to distance to fraternal, with dwindling
communication and intimacy, avoidance of confrontation. Bank seeing often stems
from difficult difficulty managing conflict or fear of breakup conversations

(03:41):
extended duration. It may quietly unfold over months, even years,
making the eventual breakup feel abrupt and confusing emotional fallout.
The partner left behind often experiences anxiety, low self esteem,
and distress due to the lack of closure. Experts warn
this trend could be more psychologically harmful than a straightforward
break because it trips away clarity and leaves the left

(04:02):
behind partner dealing with self doubt and emotional turmoil. In essence,
banksying is a prolonged, passive, aggressive way to end a relationship.

Speaker 2 (04:12):
Okay, I've done this before.

Speaker 1 (04:13):
You have what do you start being mean to somebody?

Speaker 5 (04:16):
No?

Speaker 2 (04:16):
No, no, I'm a very peaceful lever.

Speaker 6 (04:18):
So like when you mentioned avoids conflict, just stops talking
to you one day and never you can never reach
me again.

Speaker 2 (04:25):
Party trick, Yeah, okay, but it should a lot.

Speaker 1 (04:32):
But for no reason, like you do this just to
hurt people like you, just like the relationships going fine,
and Kiki, you're like, well it's fine, but I don't
really want to do this anymore. So supposed to just
having a conversation, I'm just gonna kind of pretend like
I'm not.

Speaker 2 (04:46):
I do that with jobs, but no, it's like job.

Speaker 1 (04:54):
Right when you stop responding to me, When I'm like, Kiky,
what are you thinking, You're like, I don't know. I know,
I'll know that it's coming. Okay, good, they'll be signs
you're saying.

Speaker 6 (05:02):
Okay, But I always feel like women leave a relationship
mentally before we actually leave physically. A lot of times,
so like we can be together and then over the
like the last year of the relationship, I'm just mentally
checking out, so like I'm like, okay, slowly slowly.

Speaker 4 (05:17):
Backing up thoutful about things, like we we really are,
like do we really want to end this?

Speaker 2 (05:23):
Like we take a long time to consider whether or
not we.

Speaker 1 (05:25):
Do so a gender base, though I think men do
that too, where it's like experience, well you just get dumped.

Speaker 4 (05:32):
No, I just I mean I've dated men, and like,
I just think men and women handle things very differently,
and I think they can't hold water for as long
as we can, Like we can very much be uncomfortable
for years.

Speaker 1 (05:42):
Yep. Well, I've definitely been in relationships where I knew
that I didn't want to be in it anymore, but
I didn't do anything about it right away, which is me.
It's mean, like if you if you've made the decision,
then you should just break up with someone, if you
if you're certain about it. If you're not certain, then
maybe you see if you can work through it. But
if you've made the choice, in my mind, like I
do not want to do this anymore. I'm thinking about

(06:04):
somebody else. I've already moved on in my mind of
imagine what life looks like without this person. You should
just dump them because because this whole thing where you
just sort of fade away and then dump somebody, I mean, yep,
I don't know why that's more painful though, because if
you're already fading away, that's painful. I know you don't
want to be there anymore. And then you dump me.
I guess I'd be less surprised.

Speaker 4 (06:22):
Because you're like wondering, like, why are they treating me differently?

Speaker 2 (06:25):
Why are they talking to me differently?

Speaker 4 (06:27):
And you're like kind of having like psychological warfare and
wondering and second guessing, and then you get broken up.

Speaker 2 (06:32):
With like because if someone stays with you exactly.

Speaker 4 (06:35):
You're like, why, well you're not bringing up with me,
but you're not treating me the same.

Speaker 2 (06:38):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (06:39):
I also don't know how people can go ahead.

Speaker 2 (06:41):
Oh no, I was just say yeah, I think Caylen
is gonna say something.

Speaker 1 (06:44):
Oh yeah, I heard I heard someone and it wasn't Kiky,
so it was one of you exactly.

Speaker 2 (06:49):
Me and Kaylen. Yeah, make one person.

Speaker 4 (06:51):
I just one thing I've learned in my thirty three
years is people just hate a conversation, like people do
not want to talk and communicate. I like, you know,
I mean, and I get it, like it's not uncommon,
but like, let's just talk right away.

Speaker 6 (07:04):
Uncomfortable conversations bring like resolve, right, nobody likes to have
an uncomfortable conversation because it's uncomfortable.

Speaker 2 (07:10):
So I'd rather just.

Speaker 6 (07:11):
Keep going out with you mentally planning my I'm already
lining up my next girl summer. That's I'm always in
a relationship because like I'm already I'm like, Okay, you
can't be alone, Well I can't, but I had been
alone before and I can't be alone.

Speaker 1 (07:25):
How long your mom was there?

Speaker 2 (07:32):
They lined up?

Speaker 1 (07:33):
I look, I can outside right now? What can you do?

Speaker 2 (07:43):
You know, listen, nobody's in. I don't have that line.
She got a line.

Speaker 3 (07:48):
But see, I always say this, like if me and
my husband want to separate, breakup or we do this
little what is it called like managing.

Speaker 2 (07:55):
All of it?

Speaker 3 (07:56):
Like I don't I want to be alone, like leave
me alone. I'm not doing this again. Like yes, maybe
you'll catch me on a date here and there, right,
you'll see me in the streets, but I'm not doing
this again.

Speaker 1 (08:06):
Everybody says that, I do it again, he thinks, so
everybody says it.

Speaker 3 (08:09):
My mom didn't she I've never seen her live her
best life until now.

Speaker 2 (08:13):
Like it's crazy. Those women live longer.

Speaker 1 (08:16):
I think your mom has boyfriends. You just don't know
about it.

Speaker 2 (08:18):
That's actually true, that's very true. She would not tell me.

Speaker 3 (08:20):
Your mom's Your mom's on here somewhere to stay, always
going place to get bust out, flown out person.

Speaker 1 (08:27):
If your mom is If your mom is dating a
man who's busting her anywhere, then that's we're done with that.
Mama Martin deserves much better than that dump, at least
premium economy. If your mom, I need to call her,
We need to raise the bar. If Mama Martina is
getting greyhounded out somewhere.

Speaker 2 (08:50):
A bus one time, yeah.

Speaker 1 (08:52):
No, I'm sorry, she deserves better. I agree spirit the
big scene in the front, I mean, come on, classes wild,
my god, bust out. I mean this really happened.

Speaker 3 (09:04):
And I think she's smart though, like like lay long,
just do your thing, dayton silence, moving, silence, like I
love that life for her.

Speaker 1 (09:12):
I don't know how people can can continue to sleep
with someone that they don't want to be with anymore.
That one is amazing.

Speaker 2 (09:17):
I can't can't do I'm like.

Speaker 1 (09:19):
Like, once I'm disconnected to me, Yeah no, but like
people can do this. They can fight, they can be
in a bad and they can not like each other
currently they can, but then they still do that.

Speaker 2 (09:27):
Oh fighting is different. I don't mind that.

Speaker 1 (09:29):
But if I'm mad, if I'm mad at you, I'm
not trying to do that. I don't know's that's as
close as I can possibly get to you. And i'm
mad at you, I'm trying to get far away from you.
So no, I'm not trying to do even if it
benefits me, I'm not trying to do that. I know
a lot of people are not that way. But if
I get a relationship and like I'm disconnected from the relationship,
like I can have casual whatever I can do casual,
it doesn't matter. But if I'm dis if there was

(09:52):
a connection and now we are disconnected, then I don't
want to get with you. And it bothers people because
it's like, well we can at least do that. No
we can't. I'm sorry, we can't.

Speaker 2 (10:02):
I'm holding out on you.

Speaker 1 (10:03):
Get back on the bus and turn around.

Speaker 2 (10:04):
And go home.

Speaker 1 (10:06):
Not on the march, but.

Speaker 2 (10:07):
Someone else have this nose square.

Speaker 6 (10:09):
No, no, you can't have this, okay, so and now
and they go crazy because they're like, I want it.

Speaker 1 (10:15):
Well they up.

Speaker 5 (10:17):
You know, Fred's show is on Fred's Biggest Stories of
the Day.

Speaker 1 (10:31):
We talk about that in this the second too, we
talk about location. Remind me of talking about location. Yell
are obsessed with sharing location. I don't think it's necessary.
Viggy and I are aligned on this too.

Speaker 2 (10:41):
Yeah, why though, what are you hiding? Where you gotta go?
Where are you going to?

Speaker 1 (10:47):
Guys? Your suitcase it's fifty eight Just mind your business.
They line it up. Your suitcase is fifty eight times
dirtier than a public toilet seats. Think about that for
a minute. I don't really remember. I'm not too sure
I've ever like disinfected my suitcase, honestly. A RESA study
found that the suitcase wheels carry nearly fifty eight times

(11:09):
more bacteria than public toilet seeds. These wheels and the
suitcase base were found to harbor harmful microbes, including E.
Coli and black mold. Soft sided luggage was particularly germ prone,
with thirty eight percent of travelers placing suitcases on beds
or tables. The risk of contamination is high. That's another one.
I don't give who, like who comes home and is like, honey,

(11:33):
I'm home, and then just you put the suitcase on
the bed actually the couch, but yeah.

Speaker 2 (11:39):
Oh I thought it was the bad. But either way
is where everything lands.

Speaker 1 (11:43):
So one researcher says that you should use practical hygiene,
you know, methods. I guess avoid rolling bags through unsanitary
areas with like the poop farm. Don't right, like, maybe
no roll through there. I guess the dog park. Maybe
don't use the wheels. I don't know, use hotel luggage
racks or cover wheels with shower caps. Just infect wheels

(12:05):
and bases after trips, and wash your hands after handling
your luggage to reduce exposure. I believe that. I believe
that luggage is nasty. And then it goes in the
little underneath thing of the airplane with everybody else's bag,
so it's touching everyone else. Is nasty. And then the
cards I'm sure they don't clean nose. I mean, if
you've seen them, they're like rusted out.

Speaker 2 (12:25):
I mean take it into the bathroom.

Speaker 1 (12:27):
Yeah, yeah, this is disgusting. I saw a crisis the
other day. This was actually a couple of months ago
in Salt Lake City. But I was sitting there, like
waiting for the plane to take off, and I'm just,
you know, mine of my business, drinking my little Star
but my little starby's you know whatever. Actually that's not true.
I was drinking a michelada, but which they were just
serving them up at the Salt Lake City airport, of

(12:48):
all places, to try and get me hammered. In the airport,
they were trying to do this to me, and there
was a man making michelas if you're not familiar, it's
like a bloody marry with beer essentially. So and it
was nine o'clock in the morning and while I was
in deltallowed, so why not let's go, you know, And
the credit card got me in and he was just
serving them up. But I'm sitting there and I'm, you know,
just pondering to myself and a luggage cart goes by,

(13:09):
you know, I think a little tractor thing on the
front of it, and then like a bunch of cars
and the bags are on him and one falls off
and it's on wheels and it just starts rolling down
the taxiway, just rolling down, just down, down, down, and
I'm like, hmm, this is gonna be a problem because well,
first of all, one person's chones are rolling down the
taxiway and they're trying to get to you know, El Paso,

(13:31):
and they just want their chonies when they get there.
That was a new new city unlocked or Toledo for
some reason, I don't know, as it comes to mindy
but El Paso now. And then I'm thinking, like what
if an engine sucks this thing? And then we got
a problem with the as So I'm thinking, do I
need to call it the authorities. I'm very serious about this,
like I'm watching this happen before my very eyes, and
I could either save someone's day or save the airline

(13:54):
a lot of money, you know, or or worse. And
then finally there was like a meeting of like, I
don't know, some other luggage guy was driving down the
same thing, and he sees it, and then he turns
around and then grabs it, and then the other guy
comes back. It was the whole thing. But I thought
this could be a real problem for somebody if this
bag just winds up. I don't need a bush somewhere
at the airport and like no one's gonna find it.

Speaker 2 (14:14):
Somebody should have did that for your bag.

Speaker 1 (14:16):
Someone should have, you know, But they didn't. They didn't
do that at all. But I'm sure bags are really nasty.
So McDonald's. Millions of McDonald's job seekers had their personal
information exposed after hackers cracked the fast food giants AI
a hiring bod with the password what would you guess
McDonald's was using as their internal password to get to

(14:38):
everybody's job information big mec one two three four five six.

Speaker 2 (14:44):
That's two on my laptop. Don't try anything, I'm watching.

Speaker 1 (14:49):
You mean, the one that controls all the radio stations.

Speaker 3 (14:53):
No, no, no, my personal all better than that, even okay,
good by much?

Speaker 1 (14:56):
Okay. So their area hiring platform is called a Living
and it's used by many McDonald's franchisees. Uses a chatbot
to screen candidates. So I guess somehow the hackers I
have somehow they were able to I mean, but miraculously
they were able to guess the password is one two
three four five six as the user name and password,

(15:18):
and they were able to get in. Once in, they
say they could see up to sixty four million chat
records containing applicants names, email addresses, and phone numbers. The
flaw also let them access records simply by adjusting applicant
ID numbers. This is the whole thing. But don't use
that as your password. Everyone knows one, two, three, four five.
Once you have the six, you're extremely vulnerable. Vacation renters

(15:40):
in the US waste up to two point three billion
dollars in uneaten food each year, according to a new study.
On average, twelve dollars per night in groceries and leftovers
goes uneaten in airbnbs and similar rentals, about five percent
of the nightly state costs, kind of like an extra tax.
Most of the food ends up in the trash, especially
produced in pantry staples. Research or state travelers would welcome

(16:02):
help from hosts on how to donate or compost the leftovers.
You haven't seen these guys on there's at least one
guy on TikTok who has airbnbs, and that's that's the
content is he'll go in the airbnb after someone has left, oh,
to see what condition it's in and what they left behind.
And you know, you figure you go to you know,

(16:22):
san Diego or whatever for your vacation, and you rent
a house, so you maybe go to the liquor store
and you buy some booze and you buy some stuff
for the fridge, and then you buy some you know,
Snacky's or whatever. And then when it's time to go,
you're probably not packing the you know, Las barbecue chips
because it takes up too much space, or the teitos
because you can't carry the liquid on the plane or

(16:43):
it's gonna break in your what you leave it, you know,
the excess you just leave. So these guys wind up
cashing in a lot of times it's like, oh cool,
I'll take you know, I'll take the extra liquor and
oh wow, unopened you know this and that and the
other thing. I guess I'll take that too. But yeah,
it should there should be an easy way to donate
that stuff. For sure.

Speaker 4 (16:58):
I always hope, like the cleaning will just take it
because we left a bunch of food in Maine and
booze too, But I mean it's like, what are we
going to do?

Speaker 2 (17:04):
We can't fly home with it.

Speaker 1 (17:05):
And then that content series is why I will never
airbnb anything I own, because some people are very respectful
and then some people they leave the place like it's like,
are you like an animal? Yeah, because it's not yours.
Then I guess you think you can just I don't know,
terrorize it or something. I don't know, Like people don't
treat other people in general. They don't treat other people

(17:26):
stuff the way they treat their own stuff. Yeh. And
I also know what and I've not disrespected an airbnb
or a hotel room, but you know, you know, and
inhibitions go out the window. Well, I've disrespected it, but
I haven't like I haven't left any sort of remnants behind,
but I've disrespected it.

Speaker 2 (17:43):
But your self respect, your dignity.

Speaker 1 (17:45):
Yeah, when the hanton incomes over and there's a rocket,
don't come a knock in. You know, you know, we've
left some self respect and dignity behind, but you can't
collect that, I guess. But but I know what I've
done on vacation in other people's beds, so I'm not
I don't want it done in my bed. So I'm
I you know, not that I'm in a position to
own a bunch of Airbnbs, but I just I'm not

(18:06):
like my aunt, for examples, has her house in South
America and she lives in it full time, but in
the season, which we explained earlier in the week is
December through March, where it's their summer and our winter
the South America, so those seasons are opposite. She could
make a ton of money if she moved out and
let somebody move in. In fact, realtors will knock on
the door of the house and be like, hey, because

(18:28):
it used to be a rental property, so hey, can
we rent this thing for a month? And it's a
lot of money because it's a very you know, uh,
desirable place to be. And she's like, no, it's my house,
you know. So she can make a lot of money.
But like she moves that's where she lives every day.
This is that like Shenanigans. So she moves out and
then you know, clicking clack movie or whatever, and then

(18:50):
god knows what they're doing and they're on their tropical
vacation and then they move out, you know, and there's
no way you're ever going to get the DNA out
of the place.

Speaker 2 (18:58):
Yeah, not okay with that.

Speaker 3 (19:00):
You're not moving into my bedroom and living there whatever
half the year.

Speaker 2 (19:04):
Where did she go?

Speaker 1 (19:05):
Then? Like, well, I don't know. I guess you'd. I
guess she'd back to the stage. I mean, there's a
lot of places you could go. Yeah, but I'm not
renting my house. I don't I don't think I would do.

Speaker 2 (19:13):
That primary residence.

Speaker 1 (19:15):
No, let me see if I have the audio for
you here, because there's a national anthem singer that's making
all kinds of news this morning because of his special rendition.
It's not loading fast enough. I'll play it for you
in just a second when I find it. Thousands of excited,
excited fans have flocked to it ties you to celebrate
the first birthday of Moodang. Remember Moodang, the adorable baby

(19:38):
pigmy pygmy Hippo. It's become a social media sensation. The
zoo was overrun with fans of Moodang on the first
four days of activities marketing Hippo's birthday. So you could
go to the zoo you can see a little mood
Dang and there he is. And the unique and original
Burken Bag. Now we most of us. I think I've
heard of the burken bag. I'm not sure I've ever

(20:00):
I think I've seen one in person before. But they
go anywhere from one six thousand for like a little
tiny miniature like Barbie size one.

Speaker 2 (20:08):
Yeah, but yeah, very tiny and something to.

Speaker 1 (20:11):
Like millions and millions and millions of dollars. And if
you're not familiar to Maze, it's a very high end brand.
Don't worry if you go in there unless you buy Burkins.
They'll pretend like you are. They are more inconvenience than
ever I was. I walked by the other day. They are.
They are even if you want to go in there
and look at it. They are so inconvenience to have
you there, but they don't know. They don't know they you.

(20:33):
You can't be that way in a rich person store
because you never know. I know a lot of rich
people who don't dress like rich people, So be careful
with that people.

Speaker 4 (20:41):
And they treated us through when we got your guys,
your Gucci hats, like they were following us around. They
wouldn't let us out of their set. I'm like, you
guys were not gonna like take anything. I know, we're
in sweats.

Speaker 1 (20:52):
Right in my crocks walking through Coach. But they've done
it really well. They've done a really good job with
the Those are nice crocks. Those are. This is a
nice brand new crush we talked about we're talking about it.
Yeah like that. But these bags, you know, they've done
a very nice job with the allure of you know,
not anybody can buy one. You got to. You gotta

(21:14):
have a spending history, you got to, you know, you
gotta know somebody to get one of these bags. And
for ten thousand dollars, I mean, you know, it's a
lot of money for a handbag, but the original Burkein
just sold for ten million dollars, including fees and an
auction in Paris. The huge amount blew past the I
guess whatever they thought they were going to make it

(21:34):
souther Bees and it broke the previous record for a
handbag according to the AP. I don't know what that
number is, but yeah, this thing was designed for Jane Burkin,
the original Burken bag. It was commissioned in nineteen eighty
four and it has her initials JB on the front
flap below the lock, and delivered the finished, one of

(21:55):
a kind bag to her the following year, so eighty five.
She got it. The subsequent when commercialized version of the
Birkin bag went on to become one of the world's
most exclusive luxury items, and it's very high priced and
years long wait list if you can even get one
ten million dollars and.

Speaker 4 (22:11):
Shout out to Jane the muse. I didn't know it
was after a lady, but a lot of people.

Speaker 2 (22:15):
It's interesting.

Speaker 4 (22:16):
There's a lot of these businesses popping up now where
you can rent these luxury bags. So a lot of
rich people are getting pissed because now anyone can rent
a bag for a certain amount of time and it's
not like a status symbol anymore. Really, the Burgen, I
doubt you can rent anywhere, but like these Chanel's or whatever,
anybody can just rent them.

Speaker 1 (22:32):
Now, how much money do you have to have to
carry around a million dollar bag? A five hundred thousand no, no,
I mean this. Whoever bought this is obviously very rich,
but they're buying it because they're probably gonna, you know,
either display it or put in the museum or or
or just have it and make money on it and
sell it someday for fifteen million or whatever. I'm sure
the price of this kind of thing, you know, it appreciates,

(22:54):
But I mean, how much money do you have to
have to carry around a twenty five thousand dollars handbag,
a fifty thousand dollars handbag, Like I would be so
afraid of anything. Someone's gonna look at it wrong, someone's
gonna breathe on it. Then I'm gonna set it somewhere,
someone's gonna steal it. Then I'm gonna damage it somehow.
Like how much money do you have to have before
that is just like h whatever, I mean Bezos money,

(23:18):
less in Bezos money.

Speaker 2 (23:20):
I mean less in Bezos money. But I'd just be scared.

Speaker 4 (23:22):
I'm scared to carry things now that I have and
they're nowhere near that expensive.

Speaker 6 (23:26):
You know.

Speaker 1 (23:26):
The other thing is there's so many fakes of these.
This is kind of how I feel about different kinds
of diamonds. Like, you know, it used to be that
if somebody had a five carret diamond ring, that they
were gazillionaires, right that they that they spent you know,
a million dollars on that thing or whatever it was
wow side of it. But now there are fake rings
and then the I know the lab grown is not fake,
but you've got different versions now where you can get

(23:49):
the same look for a significantly less amount of money,
which makes me wonder why, if I had the money,
would I go buy the big, huge, real one when
somebody else is in next to me could have one.
If I'm looking for status, someone next to me could
have one for a tenth of the price. It's the
same size, it might even be better, prettier, but it's
not real, per se or the same. So you know,

(24:12):
with all these fake or maze bags, like, yeah, you
feel like a poser walking around with a bag that's
really fifty thousand dollars, but you bought it a you know,
in an alley way for you know, two hundred and
fifty bucks. But I'd feel a lot better walking around
with that if it's good. Yeah, because at least if
someone takes it off you that you know you didn't
lose well, you know what I mean. So that would

(24:32):
be my argument for fake stuff. You're faking, Yeah, you
know you're posing. I guess it would be also the intense,
like why am I carrying this thing? Am I carrying
a fake bag because I like the way it looks
that I don't care if it gets stolen or damaged,
or am I carrying it around because I want you
to believe that I have all that money, and I
think the latter is mostly true.

Speaker 6 (24:51):
Yeah, for some reason, I'm always scared that somebody's gonna
run up on me with a diamond tester.

Speaker 2 (24:55):
Or like a bag authetic counter.

Speaker 4 (24:57):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (24:57):
Yeah, Like I don't know why, right, I.

Speaker 2 (25:00):
Always think somebody's gonna run up like.

Speaker 1 (25:03):
You're a soldier wearing a fake uniform, Like, oh, you're
actually brokey.

Speaker 2 (25:08):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (25:09):
If I can't afford it, I'm not going to buy.
I don't want to do the fake stuff, like it
just feels icky to me. Like I'm like, I want
this so bad that I'm willing to get one that
looks like it, but it's not it.

Speaker 1 (25:18):
I don't know, And I'm not a Jordan expert by
any means, but I've I've seen Jordan's that are so
bad that I know they're fakes. And that's that's kind
of embarrassing because it's like you're trying to hype beast
but you yeah, but like right, but like he's dunking
the wrong way.

Speaker 2 (25:34):
He's doing a split.

Speaker 1 (25:36):
He's like the baskets over here, buddy, Like, I don't
know why you're dunk in that way because it's yeah,
so and you see that you're like, you know, and
it's like a very limited release or you know, something
that was really coveted. And in that case, I don't
think you're wearing it because you like the way it looks.
You're wearing it because you want people to believe that
you have it, in which case I feel bad for
you a little bit. If it's all you can afford, man,

(25:57):
do you Yeah, that's what I mean though, That's what
I mean. Like, if you like the way it looks
or it's all you, then then by all means. But
if you're wearing a fake thing because you want me
to believe that you act, are that connected or that rich,
or that cool or what, then then that really defeats
the purpose. Yeah, when you know, when the Jordan logo
is is a white man, when it looks like me,

(26:20):
when it's a gummy looking dude. The entertainer before Canens
got that in two minutes on the Fread Show. It's Friday. Yeah,
Calon's entertainer report is on the Fread Show.

Speaker 4 (26:32):
Justin Bieber announced he's dropping a new album yesterday, did
a whole rollout with billboards and a photoshoot of Heat
and his family. Actually, if you guys are Kendrick Lamar fans,
and you remember the black and white photos of Key
and his family for if.

Speaker 2 (26:45):
You remember what album that was. It wasn't the most
recent one. I think it was the one before it.

Speaker 4 (26:49):
But there were beautiful photos that photographer did the Bieber's
photo shoot.

Speaker 2 (26:54):
I think it was mister Morale.

Speaker 4 (26:55):
Yeah okay, and it looked like a similar set they
were on, like a couch in the middle of a fall.
But his wife, Hayley, shared one of the billboards and
she could have congratulated her husband, but instead she wrote,
is it finally clocking to U?

Speaker 2 (27:09):
Fing loser?

Speaker 1 (27:10):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (27:10):
I mean speaking to us?

Speaker 4 (27:12):
Obviously there's been a lot of rumors of issues in
their marriage. I'm not sure how the album proves anything,
but I just don't know why they're always yelling at us,
like the Beabers.

Speaker 7 (27:21):
Are always mad at us. They don't like each other us,
like they're always so angry at us. But you do
talk a lot of stuff though we do for sure.
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (27:33):
It just seems like an album is a weird time
to yell at us about.

Speaker 1 (27:36):
Like and what okay, so it'd be nice to us
now you want us to buy something and so what.

Speaker 2 (27:42):
Like there's no issues in their marriage or I think
that was a big thing.

Speaker 6 (27:45):
Like he's saying about her on the album, which I
was like, oh, okay, you guys are happy. And then
you know, we we did talk about him crashing out
in front of the paparazzi.

Speaker 2 (27:53):
He put that on the album. He put the SoundBite
on the album.

Speaker 6 (27:55):
So I first they're like, look at us, like, you know,
you guys talked all that stuff.

Speaker 2 (27:59):
We're still here right.

Speaker 1 (28:00):
Well, no track eleven called I Hate My Wife.

Speaker 4 (28:02):
I thought it was pretty us, you know, I mean,
I'm a broke Compared like Instagram captions.

Speaker 2 (28:08):
It can be long and you can write a song.
But I don't know if I believe there's no issues. Okay,
there's a lot.

Speaker 4 (28:13):
Going on, but the album Keegy listened to some of it.
Fred and I listened to some of it. It's like,
sounds very old school. He's back to kind of his
R and B roots, which I love. I love when
he slows it down. So it's a good album. Moving
on to vander Pump's Rule rander Pump Rules star Sheena
she There we Go. She revealed that her husband Brock
Davies had an affair in twenty twenty one while she

(28:34):
was pregnant with their daughter.

Speaker 2 (28:36):
It's crazy.

Speaker 4 (28:37):
He was cheating during COVID and she had his location
and he still.

Speaker 2 (28:42):
Got away with it. He still found ways to cheat
and have this whole affair.

Speaker 4 (28:46):
Obviously, scanned of all was a big thing on vander
Pump's and I really think they all just like cheat
on each other.

Speaker 2 (28:51):
She of course, was.

Speaker 4 (28:52):
Promoting her new memoir My Good Side, which she shares
the full story of the cheoting. But I know that
was kind of a big.

Speaker 2 (28:57):
Shock yesterday because I thought he was a good HU husband.
But there you go, and Larry David is back. BROD.
Did you see this?

Speaker 1 (29:04):
I did see this.

Speaker 2 (29:04):
I'm so excited. So it's not Curb, but.

Speaker 4 (29:07):
HBO announced yesterday that it has ordered an untitled American
history sketch comedy executive produced by Larry and then the
Obama is their higher ground company. During the six episode series,
Larry will play characters who didn't change history, but were
in fact ignored by history. I don't know any other
cast or anything, but some Curb regulars are going to

(29:29):
be on that show. So yeah, so we'll see some
familiar faces and if y'all want to, and Fred says,
it doesn't elevate your experience. It might not, but if
you want to be tickled in your ears and your eyes,
you can go on YouTube and parts of our show
are live and you can see what we're wearing today.

Speaker 1 (29:45):
I have parts that are licensed. Yeah, the parts that
they that they paid for. Right, it turns out there's
a lot of stuff we don't pay for, so right, right,
here's a national anthem I was talking about. This was
in Baltimore. I don't know this guy. Apparently he was
trying to honor the Orioles, which is the team there
that he was seeing the national anthem for. But people
are calling this disrespectful. I'm not sure if this is

(30:07):
the worst rendition of the anthem ever. We've heard some
really really bad ones. But I mean, I guess this

(30:29):
guy's name, wild Bill Haggy, No, No, this guy's name
is something else. The look on people's faces like, what's
going on. Orioles fans famously shout out a drawn out
oh during the anthem's word oh, a custom rooted in

(30:51):
playful Baltimore Pride thing led by super fan wild Bill
Hagey in the late nineteen seventy. Supporters say it honors
about the Orioles and Francis Key, Scott Key's local legacy
reinforcing community spirit. Deacon used auto tune technology to create
that sound. This guy, Dan Deacon is his name. Critics
say that it's disrespectful to the anthem, calling it unpatriotic,

(31:13):
but longtime Orioles Nation, even a veteran, is defending the
tradition as heartfelt. Okay, so that's what that part's about.
But what about the auto tune? I didn't I didn't
know we needed that, But okay, I mean it's not
the worst one of gosh, what are some of the
really bad Onesie Bergie was really bad? Roseanne Barr was

(31:34):
really Roseanne Barr was like downright disrespectful.

Speaker 4 (31:37):
Most recently remember it was ingrid andress but she ended
up going to rehab after she was real drunk during it.

Speaker 2 (31:42):
Do you remember that bad one?

Speaker 1 (31:43):
So we can't make fun of that one, No, we can't.

Speaker 4 (31:45):
It was bad at the time though we didn't know
she was struggling, but she was super drunk. Gosh, who else, Well,
it was take me out to ballgame? But Alex Cooper.
That was sabriligious for Cubs fans.

Speaker 1 (31:56):
Yes, they should never have left her sing the national
anthem too. It was strange to them. You get the
whole package. French show is ho. Good morning everyone, Friday.
We'll get to blogs. And just a second waiting by
the phone, he's knew why did somebody get ghostede Jo
bis Shelley Next Hour, which is in five minutes. One
hundred and fifty bucks is the price one game wins
streak for the Shelley. She did not, in fact, lose

(32:18):
two in a row. The entertainer report next hour as well,
and I got a wedding story that I want to
get to Next hour too. I talk about next hour
like it's just so far away. But of course I
said the word wedding, and then Kaylen shuddered because at
you know, ten o'clock when the when the program is over,
then she departs for the wedding that she's still planning. Right,

(32:38):
somehow you begin you're like Jason, somehow you became the
de facto wedding planner for a wedding that you weren't
even supposed to plan.

Speaker 2 (32:44):
Yeah, I'm starting to see why I feel so comfortable Jason,
it's giving like week are similar on.

Speaker 4 (32:49):
Yeah, I'm planning wedding.

Speaker 1 (32:52):
It's tomorrow, tomorrow. So you were telling me yesterday and
I know we'll get to it, but you were telling
me yesterday when we were shopping stuff for the for
the Texas flood victims that were taken out there. Today
we're all at home depot together. It was. It was
a field trip that everybody from the show went, and
we all walked around home deeopo like we knew what
we were doing, and we don't. We don't. We don't

(33:13):
know where anything is. We met Courtney the managerty Courney,
and Richard the manager is Richard you were I knew
you were a Richard fan. I was a Courtey fan
and you were a Richard fan. The face, the hair,
the oh my god, yes, yeah, you were fans. I
tried to get Courtey to give me an apron. But
apparently if you if the apron gives you access to

(33:34):
parts of the store that you'd like because you work there,
if you get to work there, well yeah I know,
I know. But like I thought, like, ha, give me
a give me give me a home people apron. I'm
gonna wear it to work. It'll be funny. Ha ha,
I'm so funny, you know. And then but she would
have give me one because she was like, well, you're
gonna get me fired, because if you wear that, I
guess like morons on TikTok or stealing aprons and then
walking in and and either pranking or like you know,

(33:58):
or stealing stuff, you know, carry stuff out of the
store because they have an apron. So it's like, oh,
you must work here, I think. Anyway, you were saying
that the wedding is tomorrow. You were looking for someone
to do hair and makeup.

Speaker 2 (34:10):
We have secure to makeup person, so we're.

Speaker 1 (34:12):
Good there for the wedding that's tomorrow.

Speaker 2 (34:14):
At the wedding that's tomorrow.

Speaker 4 (34:15):
Yes And I was calling hair people yesterday in Michigan
because thank you, someone reached out and had someone locally
in Chicago. But with the travel and stuff, it makes
it hard, especially because it's tomorrow. But anyway, so I
was calling hair people yesterday and like they were in disbelief,
Like I had to start the conversation with Hi, this

(34:35):
is going to sound absolutely insane, and I recognize that. However,
I am looking for someone to do about five people,
including the bride for.

Speaker 2 (34:44):
A wedding that's on Saturday. And they were like, oh,
what what happened to the last hair person? There never
was one because.

Speaker 1 (34:53):
We never booked. It's like, what are we doing? That
gives me anxiety? And I'm not a wedding guy or
a plant I mean, I'm a planning guy, but I'm
not I could.

Speaker 6 (35:01):
Women have like a trial with their hairstylist before, like
months before the wedding, like you figured.

Speaker 1 (35:06):
That's what I'm saying, Like there was my sister got
married a couple of years ago, and there was a
mad dad today before and nothing was wrong, like they'd
already triple checked everything fifty times and there was a
planner involved, and people were still freaking out. But all
that stuff was secured and deposits were paid and everybody
was hired and there hair ready.

Speaker 3 (35:24):
Hair and makeup are the two things that I didn't
even play about. And you guys know I'm trying to
be and like, yes, Jason was planning my wedding the
day of as well.

Speaker 1 (35:31):
He should have seen jameson he had a near piece
I no time, Like, yeah, he had his combat right
in the Yeah he was ready.

Speaker 2 (35:39):
I was.

Speaker 3 (35:39):
I had to cry. I have my hair done, makeup
done like a populster the altar. At least my hair
is done makeup.

Speaker 1 (35:45):
Yeah, we kind of told him about the wedding. That
would have been somehow. I don't know why we didn't
tell him the memo about attending, but yeah.

Speaker 2 (35:51):
That's all I cared about. I gotta look good.

Speaker 1 (35:53):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (35:53):
I woke up in the middle of the night last night.
I'm not kidding.

Speaker 4 (35:55):
My heart started beating out of my chest and I
was sweating because.

Speaker 2 (35:58):
I'm like so stressed about this.

Speaker 4 (36:00):
I don't know why I surround myself with with these
kinds of people.

Speaker 2 (36:04):
I just do. I'm gravitated towards them.

Speaker 4 (36:06):
Paulina said, the devil couldn't get to so they sent
uh type B messy like unorganized people, And I'm.

Speaker 1 (36:11):
Like, oh, interesting, take all right? Yeah, well, uh uh if.

Speaker 2 (36:15):
You do hair in Michigan, having a cater or do
we have anyone to cook?

Speaker 1 (36:20):
Are we gonna have like factor meals on the table
or something.

Speaker 4 (36:23):
I never selected a meal, so I know that I'm
getting Jimmy John's for lunch as we get our makeup done,
So

Speaker 1 (36:27):
At least I'll have something to They thought of the
Jimmy Johns I didn't more pread show Next

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