Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
She's got you wa wait, Fred Show is on now, Hottest.
Speaker 2 (00:06):
Morning Show, Good Morning Everyone's Tuesday, October eighth, The Pread
Show is on. Hi, Caitlin, Good morning. Hi, Jason Brown, Hi, Roofie, Hello, Hi,
Good morning Show by Shelley Monday, next hour. In the showdown,
if you can beat her in five questions, Hella, how
many is here as well? In her four niners sweatshirt?
(00:27):
Because she's right or die? She is four niners, right, Jason,
the same four night Ers of four nine ers somewhere
in California.
Speaker 3 (00:38):
But that's good.
Speaker 2 (00:38):
No, that's good. That's exactly what they called him, actually,
the four night Ers of subwhere in California. Yeah, it's exciting,
the California four niners. Yeah, that is then shim Fernando, No,
that's fantastic this Sam Fernando four niners, Yeah yeah, Fernando
Valley four nine ers. No, it's it's exactly right. Excellent work. Well,
(00:59):
you're getting closer, yeah, four nine Coopertino, you're getting closer.
Let's see, guys, it's Tuesday. I mean stayir Goo will
debate some relationship drama waiting by the phone from the vault.
This morning money was showed by Shelley the Entertainment Reports
coming up to what's in there?
Speaker 4 (01:15):
Okay, Rihanna is dethroned as the richest woman in music,
and Lady Gaga reacts to the very very poor joker.
Speaker 2 (01:24):
Reviews Lady Gaga, I'm trying to see what do I
search here? Oh? What is the longest word in English?
To episode yesterday? And it keeps my searches up there?
But okay, you guys want to do ai? Am I
the a hole slash morality Monday on a Tuesday?
Speaker 5 (01:39):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (01:39):
Are you ready? Okay, let's tet the show out with this,
all right? So it says, here, here's the deal. I'm
twenty nine years old. This is perspective of a woman,
twenty nine year old female, So I'm I am playing
a twenty nine year old female right now. Okay, I'm there.
My wedding was supposed to be the best day of
my life. You know, the drill, months of planning, stress, money,
all that stuff. My sister, who's a twenty five year
(02:01):
old woman, of course, was my maid of honor, and
she's always had a flare for drama, but I figured
she would keep it together for one day. Spoiler alert
she did not. Fast forward to the big day, Everything's
going smoothly until the reception. My sister gets wasted, like
falling over, crying, causing a scene. Wasted. She starts ranting
about how I always get everything and how my wedding
(02:23):
is just another example of me being a golden child
in front of all my guests, including her new in laws.
But it gets worse. She actually grabs the mic during
the speeches and starts going off about her struggles and
how it's not fair that I'm happily married while she's single.
At my wedding, the whole vibe turned offward and my
husband's family was just shocked. People started leaving early, and
(02:46):
I spent the rest of the night trying to put
out fires instead of enjoying what was supposed to be
our special day. Now weeks later, my parents say my
sister is struggling with her mental health and they want
me to pay for her therapy. The reasoning is that
I'm the successful one. I should help out and it
would show that I'm a good sister. But she ruined
(03:07):
my wedding. I don't think I should have to foot
the bill for her meltdown. I'm still angry about the
whole thing, and honestly, I feel like she owes me
an apology. But my parents think I'm being cold hearted
and it's my responsibility to support her. They're pressuring me hard,
but I don't think it's fair to ask me for
pay something that she needs to take accountability for. Am
I the a hole? Now? I would argue this is
(03:31):
a complicated one because if you're more success well, listen, listen,
hear me, hear me out. If you're more If in fact,
she's way more successful than her sister, has a lot
more money than her whole family, and clearly, clearly her
sister is struggling, then it might be a nice thing
to do to maybe get her started in therapy, or
(03:52):
help her try and figure out how she is going
to pay for it, or help work through the insurance
if she has it, or whatever, try and figure something out,
because obviously this person has problems. That said she ruined
your wedding, So I would say, first and foremost, she
needs to apologize first and foremost. Second of a why
are the parents handling this right? I feel like the
(04:14):
parents should be figuring out how to pay for therapy
for their almost cussed messed up kids, right, yes, right,
I mean unless she's like a I don't know, she's
twenty five, Well, unless she's a millionaire or something, or
she's like a tech I don't know if she's worth
one hundred million dollars or something like that. Her rest
(04:34):
of her family's not I mean, I'm making this up,
but like, let's say she's wildly successful, Well, then it
would be no sweat off for Back to break off
a few bucks to help her sister get her act together.
But I would imagine that the relationship needs to be
mended first, and she still needs to apologize for what
she did, even if she is mentally disturbed in some
way or in suffering from some form of mental illness.
Speaker 6 (04:55):
Right if I'm the parent, though, you knew your child
was mentally ill before my wedding, so that should have
been already checked. It's not my responsibility to coddle to
her when she's ruined my big the biggest day of
my life.
Speaker 2 (05:09):
She's ruined it. I can't get that back.
Speaker 6 (05:12):
So she needs to absolutely apologize, and it is not
my responsibility to pay for her therapy. She's a grown, working,
able body adult that can find a way to pay
for her own therapy. And furthermore, if you feel so inclined,
then parents, you can pay for your child's therapy. I'm
not paying for a damn thing. Actually, I would like
some money back from my wedding that you ruin.
Speaker 2 (05:32):
Yeah, that's a good point. I mean, here's the thing.
I don't think that a sibling should ever be responsible
responsible for paying for another for their sibling, for you know,
for their well being. I think that's the parents' job. Now.
I think if you can do it and everything's on
good terms and everyone's cooperating and being playing nice, I
think it might be a nice thing to do. But
(05:52):
I don't think that you were obligated because that's not
your kid, that's your sibling. I don't know why the
parents of all people are pressing her. I mean, it
might be one thing if she called her sister and
was like, I don't have any money. I clearly need
to go to therapy. Can you help me out. I'm
sorry I screwed up, but I'm sorry screwed up. Your
wedding would be a nice way to start. That's a
great way to start. But the fact that the parents
are the ones pressuring her. It's like, now, why aren't
(06:13):
you trying to fix this? And where were you when
all of this was going on? I mean, you obviously
were at the wedding, so where is the melt Where
were you to protect me from this meltdown? Where were
you when she grabbed the mic? So I would be mad.
I think i'd be mad at my parents too, for
the whole thing. I mean, if your sister needed therapy,
would you pay for it? If I had the funds,
I would, even if she screwed up your wedding. I'm
(06:34):
a pushover, so yeah, see that's kind of where I'm at.
Like I'm not a pushover per se, but like I
guess there's part of me that says I wouldn't want
my sister to have. By the way, if any if
anyone's having if anyone needs mental help, it's me, not her.
I want to be clear about it. She should be
paying for my therapy, Not really, I think we both
probably need it equally. But I guess if I could,
(06:56):
I would. And That's where I'm coming from. Like, from
a standpoint and bless my sister, I would like to help,
but we got to get over the first part. Of this,
which was you screwing up my whole day first.
Speaker 1 (07:05):
Yeah, like this is where I'm having the issue, and
I'm trying to articulate the best way that I can.
To me, it seemed like the meltdown obviously stems from
like a place of I don't know, sadness or just
I don't know, jealous jealousy. To me, that's that's what
I see more than a potential like mental illness breakdown.
Like I'm not trying to classify it for what it is.
I'm not a doctor, I don't know, But what I'm
just trying to say is that seems just like a
(07:27):
petty kind of like I don't know, like I'm single still,
Like you know what I'm saying, It's only she had
like an episode of like something that she might not
be diagnosed with, you know what I mean. To me,
it screams more like she's just a jealous, bitter sister,
and that's making me more mad more than anything.
Speaker 2 (07:41):
Because she was like there was something actually going on,
then I would.
Speaker 1 (07:43):
Have more sympathy for her, and I would I would understand, Okay,
this sucks, that's happened, and you ruined my wedding.
Speaker 2 (07:48):
It's a time and for it though, right, But if that's.
Speaker 1 (07:50):
The meltdown of you being single, you know what I mean.
But again, I'm not trying to like classify what it
is because I don't know. It's overlap, you know what
I mean. I'm not trying to do that.
Speaker 2 (07:57):
I'm not trying to make excuses for her. But she
sounds like maybe she's in narcissist or maybe or she
has some form like bipolarity or something. Again, I don't
know this person. I'm not making this stuff up. But
like my thing is, I mean, there's clearly no self
awareness here, you know what I mean. Like it's one thing.
It's one thing to say, oh my gosh, you know,
you get everything and maybe you're prettier and you got
(08:18):
a husband now and a wedding and you know, everything
goes well for you and nothing goes well for me.
Like that's just a pity party. But then to grab
the mic, you know, and take over the wedding, you
know what I mean? Like that to me speaks to
something way deeper. You're also only hearing the one side
of the story. You don't know the sister's side. You
don't know how could you possibly you know the relationship.
Speaker 7 (08:39):
You don't know if that older sister just throws it
in her face that I'm more successful than you, I'm
in a relationship, I'm getting married, I have my future
planned out, and you're just doing nothing.
Speaker 2 (08:50):
You don't ruin somebody's wedding because not only does that
embarrass you, that embarrasses the entire family, it also ruins
that person's day. Like, no one in their right mind
is gonna that big of a scene, right, and then
she was drunk. But I mean, how'd she get so drunk?
Why was nobody watching? I don't know, Like, why why
is this wild card allowed to do that? It could
have all built up.
Speaker 7 (09:10):
Yes, it's not the time and place for But like
I said, you don't know the sister's relationship with each other,
and she could have just been this is it? Like
weddings are stressful, Like it's stressful with everyone. She's a
maid of honor too. That's a lot of pressure on
her plate as well because she has to plan everything
for the bride.
Speaker 2 (09:26):
Well, good than this, and then you can pay for
her therapy? Are there free program? She can find the
free program out there. That's true, there are a free program.
I like to know what the free program every single week.
I just got a bill yesterday. So I don't know,
work some world therapy than almost any other thing in
my life. You kidding me? Yeah?
Speaker 1 (09:46):
Whatever happened to? Like good old sibling, just like as
open like you, just like to you.
Speaker 2 (09:51):
Know what I mean? On the couch, poort there, you
know what I mean. Scratch a little bit and then
we're done. We're good, We're done after that. No, I don't.
I mean I think. I think jealousy is one thing.
I think throwing a temper tantrum is another thing. I
think getting hammered and starting to make speeches at weddings,
grabbing a microphone, making a gigantic scene Jason, is make
(10:12):
you glad you don't have a sibling.
Speaker 8 (10:13):
Yeah, it does, because I guess I don't have to
deal with anything like that.
Speaker 2 (10:17):
But also, I mean, I don't know. Like you said,
I don't have a sibling, so I don't know.
Speaker 8 (10:21):
But I feel like no matter what, like your wedding
is just a day, and I look at it as
more just the materialistic day versus like you, your sister's
actual mental health. So I probably looked past what she
would do if she actually herew more mental illness.
Speaker 2 (10:34):
Gosh, you're so much more generous than I am. I
couldn't look past it. I mean, I guess in some
way I would try to help, but it's it's the
day that's not the Come on, Jason, if you plan
jingle Ball, If I go on stage and throw a
temper tantrum on this stage and I make it all
about me and and do some crazy thing, you would
tackle me.
Speaker 8 (10:54):
That would be the most entertaining thing that's happened for years,
such dingle fall.
Speaker 2 (10:59):
It's definitely well, well, everyone buy your tickets because I
just might do it this year. Chasing your ten steps
ahead of a fit about my stage announcement, you're sweating bulletin,
like shaking and going crazy. I can't imagine if I
went and ruined that whole thing by doing something stupid,
you would be so mad at me. I mean, I
would be mad in the moment.
Speaker 8 (11:17):
But I think when you step back and look at
the situation, like if your sister your blood is actually
having like a mental health episode, you should forget anything
that happened for the good of like your family.
Speaker 2 (11:29):
But it also sounds like this isn't the first time,
and I really want to know why the parents aren't
taking over here. They made the kid, you didn't It.
Speaker 7 (11:37):
Could be another issue too, like they could have been
like this, like she said, this is the golden child,
like she's the best and the sister's second fiddle, you
know what I'm saying.
Speaker 6 (11:45):
Sometimes parents tend to coddle the kid that is a
little more messed up, you know, the kid that is
successful and doing what they're supposed to do a lot
of times they get overshadowed by the shenanigans of the
bad siblings.
Speaker 2 (11:58):
So so you know, that's that's actually a very interesting
point because I won't get too specific, but there is
an example of this in my family. And my mom
is the most successful in every way. You know, she
had the kids, she had the successful marriage, she grew,
built a successful business, and actually it all kind of
crumbled when we were kids and she got divorced and
she built it all back up again. So she really
(12:20):
kind of did it twice. So did my dad. But
but my grandparents spent the most amount of time on
someone else, and yet that person was still bitter and
angry towards my mom. That's a very good point. So
it's like you might look at my mom's life and go,
that's the charm life. But she earned every minute of that.
(12:40):
And my grandparents didn't necessarily. I mean, they acknowledged it,
and they were grateful for it, and there are incredible
people and I love them, but they were too busy
scurrying to try and cover up for the other issue
that they had. Right, that's a really good point. So
this so the parents might be clueless too, They might
be well they.
Speaker 6 (12:55):
Enablers, yes, yeah, instead of holding her accountable for her
issues because in like somebody in this room said, if
it was a my sister has mental health issues, we
know that, we know that, you know, it's known throughout
our life, Yes, then you could extend that grace.
Speaker 2 (13:09):
But if she just cut up at my wedding you
know what.
Speaker 6 (13:11):
I'm saying, and then said and then called it mental illness,
then it's a problem, you know, Like.
Speaker 2 (13:16):
Yeah, first of all, why are the parents addressing this themselves?
Second of oh, why is there no apology if in fact,
somehow this wildly successful sister and we don't even know
you know what that really means? I mean, does wildly
successful mean that she has a you know, I don't
know that she makes ten thousand dollars more a year
than the other. I don't know what that means even
I have no idea, but yeah, an apology would be
(13:37):
nice in here somewhere if you expect me to help you.
In related news, since Jason Brown's okay with all this,
I'm gonna throw a fit one jiggle bo and you
could buy your tickets now at Ticketmaster. Dot's so exciting.
It's like, I am, you don't want to miss this.
It's gonna be me and and then Jason tackling me,
(13:58):
and then Jason panky. It's the fresh sell. This is
what's trending. All right, guys, this hurricane. We just did
a hurricane story, a bunch of hurricane stories last week.
Now we're doing it again. This is very serious again.
The mayor of Tampa Bay issued a warning to Florida
residents who don't heat calls to evacuate ahead of Hurricane Milton.
(14:19):
The mayor there, Jane Caster, Well here, I'll let you
listen to what she had to say.
Speaker 3 (14:23):
It was.
Speaker 2 (14:25):
Very direct. What would you say to people tonight who
were saying, you know what, I'm going to ride this
out I've written others out.
Speaker 5 (14:32):
What would you say to people who aren't hating those
evacuation orders.
Speaker 9 (14:36):
Well, I can tell you right now that they may
have done that in others. There's never been one like this,
and this Helene was a wake up call. This is
literally catastrophic. And I can say, without any dramatization whatsoever,
if you choose to stay in one of those evacuation areas,
(14:58):
you're going to die.
Speaker 3 (15:00):
Well.
Speaker 2 (15:00):
Wow, we were talking about this a couple of weeks ago,
because none of us are from Florida, but I mean
every year around this time, you know, we have all
these hurricanes and all these warnings, and it's you know,
sometimes it misdirects or whatever, whatever the proper terminology is.
It sort of doesn't end up hitting, and it's not
as strong as it's supposed to be, and all these things,
(15:20):
and they're clearly getting more frequent and more intense, it seems,
at least as the years go on. I mean, of course,
you know me, I'm a scientist. I'm constantly studying, you know,
in the lab, these sorts of things. I don't know
what the hell I'm talking about. I'm just an observer,
but it certainly seems like they're getting more and more serious.
And you know, at what point, if you've been doing
this for thirty years living in Florida, do you go, Okay,
(15:41):
now this one, I'm really going to listen to them
this time, because I have never listened to them before,
But this time I'm gonna listen. I got to think
at some point, you become kind of conditioned to hearing
this kind of news, and now this one you gotta go.
You gotta go, And people are going, and I hope
a lot of people go, but you know, there are
people who will stay, and you know, I wish them
the best, of course, it's but this puts so many
people in danger. I mean, it puts the rescue personnel
(16:03):
and danger. Of course, it puts them in danger. There's
a lot of issues here. So I hope that people
that they take heed and they listen to this. The
powerful storm could hit Florida as early as tomorrow, and
maybe more destructive and deadly than Hurricane Helene, which ripped
through parts of the Sunshine State last week. Of course,
into the Carolinas as well. This woman emphasized the mayor
(16:24):
that attempting to write up the storm would not could
prove fatal. The time to flee is now. Some of
the forecasts predict a title surge of ten to twelve feet,
and Helene's title surge was only six feet. I say
only and look at all the damage that it did.
Milton is already the second strongest golf hurricane in recorded history,
(16:45):
and experts believe it will only grow stronger as it
approaches Florida. The storm's winds are already one hundred and
eighty miles an hour, with heavy downpours also expected, and
already a long line of cars on the road last night,
and shelves and supermarkets across the area were bare and
from panic buying as well.
Speaker 7 (17:02):
So this is really serious. I have a question, how
do they name the hurricanes? Like, I know, it's like
alphabetical everything, and.
Speaker 2 (17:08):
It's I think the names are predetermined girl, guy, right,
isn't it.
Speaker 7 (17:11):
I don't know a good question if they should like
like they should be like mean, like Milton's not.
Speaker 2 (17:20):
Time to like, yeah, make me want to leave? You
know what I'm saying something what your name? Will you
tell me? I might die? I was gonna say that
I'm really not concerned about the meanness of the name.
By the way, what's a mean name like Chad Chad
than Helen. I'm not really worried about that.
Speaker 4 (17:38):
I mean, we just saw an awful one, So if
you don't leave now, I mean, Lord Jesus.
Speaker 2 (17:43):
Meteorologists follow in alphabetical system, starting with an a name
for the first hurricane and the season. The Hurricane Committee
at the World Meteorological Organization so likes common names that
are familiar to people in the affected regions, short distinctive
names that shows into streamline messaging and communications. The names
come on a six year rotation, with certain names permanently
retired after severe storms, so he wouldn't have another Katrina
(18:06):
or something like that.
Speaker 3 (18:07):
Got it.
Speaker 2 (18:07):
Yeah, So there you go. That's how you do it.
The cost of buying a Mega Millions ticket, it's gonna
go up. It's going to more than double. Actually, A
lottery officials said that they're confident that players won't mind
paying more after changes that will lead to larger prizes
and more frequent winners. The lottery officials announced on Monday
that it will cost five dollars to play the Mega
Millions beginning in April, up from the current two dollars
(18:28):
per ticket. The price increase will be one of many
changes to Mega Millions that officials will say will result
in the improved jackpot odds, more frequent giant prizes, and
even larger payouts. So they have no plans to change
the game's odds or I guess the two dollars or
power I'm sorry, this is Mega Millions. I always get
(18:49):
them confused. So power Ball is not going to change
their price at all. Let me see, I need a
theme song for the Mega Millions here, I don't know,
let me see here, see if I have this song
here that I want?
Speaker 10 (19:02):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (19:02):
I do? Hey, Kaylin, I have a question for you.
So the Magamillions now is going to be five dollars.
It's going to go up in price. I'm just curious
what I need. If I would buy one today for
five dollars, how would I go about doing that? Okay,
I'll be honest. Right there, I confuse Maga Millions and Powerable,
so I don't even know that I would know how
(19:23):
to do it now, But how would you do it?
Speaker 11 (19:26):
All? Right?
Speaker 12 (19:26):
Hey, Fred, you're working at the Bordego.
Speaker 2 (19:29):
Right, No, I understood the role play that we're doing now, Yes, Hi, ma'am,
How may I help you?
Speaker 12 (19:34):
Oh, ma'am Jesus, yeah, I look rough today.
Speaker 2 (19:37):
I've never seen a hotter patron in my life. By
the way, well thank you. Why are you buying blue choo?
You know that's for later? But bluetoo and gatorade is
and Plan B? What's this about?
Speaker 3 (19:50):
Okay?
Speaker 2 (19:50):
All preemptive? Plan B is crazy break glass in case
of emergency. There you go. And I want to frozen
coke as well.
Speaker 4 (19:58):
But can I please get one ticket to the Magma
millions to the Mega millions with the multiplier and I
want the computers to pick for me?
Speaker 2 (20:09):
Is that kind of right? Here's your losing ticket, ma'am? Off,
I always like the computer. I do the what do
they call it? Quick pick? I do that, Yes, I
do that. I don't I mean what I don't? Does
it really matter, like if I pick the numbers or
that they pick the numbers. No, the odds are the same, right, well,
some people do believe they play the same numbers, and
I think if you play the same numbers all the time,
(20:30):
then your the odds get better. But yes, I always
look at the numbers that win and go. I never
would have picked any of those numbers anyway, like there's
no birthdays in there, or no none of my favorite
numbers or whatever else. So like, yeah, I think that
was pretty good. Wasn't it that getting better? Yeah?
Speaker 4 (20:44):
Maybe I'm finally ready to actually buy one, because I'm
too nervous now that they cost money.
Speaker 2 (20:48):
You like your you guys.
Speaker 4 (20:49):
My best friend drove up started to grab the door
and then ran out because she got too nervous, Like
this is a thing, we don't.
Speaker 2 (20:55):
Know how to order it. I'm the same way. But
here's the exciting part is, as we've mentioned before, like
when they're the jackpot's really big, if you just walk
in and just kind of stand there, they already and
hand the money. They already know what to do, like
they're just doing it all day, so you don't really
have to say anything.
Speaker 7 (21:09):
Then they do they have the machine that then they
have those big kiosks that spit out the lott of tickets,
you know, the scratch off ones. You could buy a
mega millions or powerball ticket on that machine to just
put your money in the press. Yes, you know what
a scratch off is, right.
Speaker 4 (21:23):
But I didn't know I could get the big ones
with the scratch off the big winnings.
Speaker 7 (21:27):
No, like they sell they sell Mega million. They sell
a lot of tickets in that machine.
Speaker 2 (21:31):
You're really trying to confuse helpful and someone just I
don't need the mega millions when I have Jason's NFL picks. No,
just go the opposite and you'll be fine. Yea, you go.
That's good money. Did you guys want to know where
the worst drivers are? Because I can tell you consumer affair,
you're left calculated right on my right. Well, I don't know,
(21:53):
but I can assure you maybe right and left. They
calculated a crash score for each city by analyzing data
from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. The data included
the number of fatalities related to crashes per one hundred
thousand people, the number of fatal crashes due to bad driving,
fatalities involving positive blood alcohol content, blah blah blah blah
it bad. For the second year in a row, Memphis,
(22:15):
Tennessee ranked as a city with the worst drivers. Montana
was the state with the worst drivers. Hey, it's just
open road open. There aren't even that many people there.
How are you running into people? There aren't that many
people there horses Missouri the first Midwestern state on the list,
(22:38):
Maine at number twenty five the first from the northeast.
So the top five worst cities for driving Memphis, Victorville, California, Macon, Georgia,
San Bernardino, California, and Jackson, Mississippi. And along the same lines.
Different thing, but I saw today the most haunted roads
in America. If you're looking to do that. Car Rental
Company sixth says that it's a winding ten stretch in
(23:00):
West Milford, New Jersey. There are tales of a paranormal
of numerous paranormal activities on the Clinton Road, including phantom
headlights and a ghost boy who throws coins at drivers
from dead Man's Curve. They're four in Florida, one in Wisconsin,
Ray Road in Wisconsin, and then aug Road in Kansas
(23:21):
and Blood Alley in Arizona. Oh. If you want to
if you believe in that haunted kind of stuff and
you want to go do all that, then there's Blood Alley.
Compared to where you're from, I don't know where blood alleys.
Let's see. Let me look that up. Blood Alley, where
is it? Ruf you lookup where blood Alliens, I'm hosting
a show Blood Alley, Arizona. Okay us nine Blood Alley Road.
(23:42):
Oh may, oh that's the road. Yeah, blood Only room.
And guys, have you ever you see videos like this
on on TikTok all the time? Like people who they
start feeding the baby deer and then the baby deer
gets grown up, and the baby deer still comes back
and then brings its babies and the whole thing. Because
I have you ever been like this? Have you ever fed?
Do you believe a consistent like one animal all the time?
(24:05):
Is there a wild animal in your life that you
just have to feed? Here, so you have a pet squirrel?
Speaker 3 (24:09):
I did?
Speaker 2 (24:09):
Okay, this story is for you when you were younger,
when you were grown up. Oh no, this was recent though.
And do you know what happened to the pet squirrel? No,
he just went away one day. He went away one day. Well,
this is why he went away. He went away to
get his friends. Because a woman living in Washington State
was recently invaded by over one hundred raccoons, raccoons, raccoons,
(24:30):
a bison. The woman said that she had been feeding
raccoons in the area for almost four decades, and last
week she was surrounded by the animals and so scared
she contacted authorities for help, so deputies eventually came to
her rescue after she was forced to run away in
her car and escape the raccoons. The woman told deputies
that she's been feeding nearby raccoons for about thirty five
years and didn't experience the inundation until about six weeks ago.
(24:53):
The raccoons surrounded her day and night, demanding food. Deputy
said they referred to her as the wash and State
referred her to to the Washington State Department of Fish
and Wildlife to help find a solution. But she became
so prolific in the raccoon community that they all decided
to show up for six weeks and they wouldn't leave
until they were all fed raccoons. They demanded food from
(25:15):
this woman and she ran away. So maybe this is why,
because they become conditioned or they become dependent upon you
feeding them, which is maybe why you shouldn't do it.
And then you got to do all that, You got
to call the people, they got to Oh my gosh,
you get to flee the scene. One hundred raccoons. It's
national perogi day to day. Oh, national fluffer. Not our Day,
which we look up every year out of do we
determine what that is? It's isn't it marshmallow fluff? Marshmallo fusher?
(25:38):
If marshmallow fluff? And National Hero Day? Where is Blood Alley?
By the way, Blood Alley? I have it it? No,
I have it. It's Highway eighty nine.
Speaker 4 (25:46):
It cuts through the desert hills of Arizona, and I
guess because it's sharp corners, through canyons and over quickly
a Sunday.
Speaker 2 (25:52):
We're going to do a new thing on the show, Rufio.
When you have a question that you ask out loud,
google it first, then ask the question, and then give
us the answer. Now, oh, why why did I do that?
Because that's that way I don't have to do it. Well,
I'm reading and Especial Hero Day honors the real life
heroes to inspire us to be the best person we
can be. That's what you do for me every day, Rufio.
(26:13):
Oh I do that. Yeah, I'm your hero. Aim Higher girl,
name aim Higher?
Speaker 3 (26:18):
You know what?
Speaker 2 (26:18):
You're my hero? You can be my hero baby? Oh nice,
I can take away the pain my Filipino brother. You okay,
you the Entertainer Report is working. Calon's Entertainer Report is
on the Fresh Show. Miss Taylor Ellison with one L.
Speaker 4 (26:37):
Swift is officially the wealthiest woman in music, with a
net worth of something like one point six billion dollars.
The thirty four year old pop star, Yeah, who's counting
and she's thirty four. Damn, I got to accomplish more.
Is now richer than Madonna, Beyonce and Celine Dio. Rihanna
used to hold the spot for the richest female musician,
with a net worth of about one point four billion,
(26:59):
but her fortune was built largely from her fenty beauty
and clothing. Forbes wrote, Swift is the first musician to
make the billionaire ranking primarily based on her songs and performances.
Speaker 2 (27:10):
Her fortune includes.
Speaker 4 (27:11):
Nearly six hundred million a mass from royalties and touring,
plus a music catalog worth an estimated six hundred million,
and some one hundred and twenty five million in real estate.
And yes, Miss Taylor was at Arrowhead Stadium last night
to watch boyfriend Travis Kelcey and the Chiefs take on
the Saints.
Speaker 2 (27:27):
Of New Orleans. I don't need to brag and make
this about me. I happen to be the fourth richest
man in the radio business with one point four thousand dollars. Okay, yeah,
I have one point four thousand dollars. Yeah, it goes
it goes Howard huh, and then it goes Seacrest. Yeah,
and then it goes Elvis Duran and then me okay,
(27:47):
and it's a steep, steep decline. But then after me
it's side on. I think we're talking in the tens.
Radio people are not known to save their money.
Speaker 7 (27:55):
No, if you're number four, yeah, I would hate to
see where the rest of us are.
Speaker 2 (28:00):
Yeah, well, one point four thousand dollars, so you know
that's fourteen hundred dollars in gas you were, and it's
still going to be about twenty years to say that,
so it's exciting. Yeah, that's my retirement fund actually, and
the company doesn't match it anymore. So that's really a shame.
I was I was really counting on that best. But no,
he said, we're not. What was your question. I'm sorry, Oh,
that's okay. You wanted to know more.
Speaker 12 (28:20):
I wanted to know what's in your real estate portfolio?
Speaker 2 (28:23):
Oh, my real estate portfolio? Yeah, yes, that's well, Holmes
we talking. Wow. I mean, it's hard for me to
think of them right now because there aren't any so's yeah,
it's really I'm drawing a blank mainly because there's nothing there.
Speaker 12 (28:37):
Okay, yeah, all right, well you'll get there.
Speaker 2 (28:40):
I'm don't want to stand out in front of Seacrest House,
and that's for money, because that count is real estate.
Portfolio checks a.
Speaker 12 (28:45):
Quarter at me one time at the festival. So it's fine.
Speaker 2 (28:47):
Oh that's cool yeaheah, all right, well then in that case,
he said, you're Brookie that two dollars bill guy one time,
the famous rapper guy two dollars Bill guy. I have
two two dollars bills from him, so there's four I
can end. Yeah, bill yees? Was it? He's like Drake's
lawyer or something. Isn't that real? That's what I thought.
Speaker 1 (29:05):
I met him in LA when I was working out
there for iHeart, and I thought it was like his
lawyer or something.
Speaker 12 (29:09):
But like, why would d slawyer be like, I don't
choose in everything.
Speaker 2 (29:12):
And there's a documentary or he did a documentary that I mean,
there's a there's a lure, the lure of the two
dollars bill man, but he goes to all these concerts
and he walks around any hands at two dollars bills,
and I think, and I take them from him to
my frame of mine because I thought it was a
Drake's lawyer. Yeah, I use mine as a bookmark, and
that I put the other one in my well, you
know what I lied? Then I have one point for
two thousand dollars, I do I have that.
Speaker 12 (29:35):
Taylor was at the game.
Speaker 4 (29:37):
She pulled up in a high pony plaid top matching miniskirts.
She looks real cute with yes, those knee high platform boots.
She brought her dad and a whole bunch of security.
She missed the last two games, which were on the road,
and yes, everyone thought they were breaking up. But you
don't have to go to every single game if you're
a wag. I'm hearing and Lady Gaga is really disappointed
at the flood of negative reactions to Joker flet Ad,
(29:59):
and now she focus on quickly pushing out some other projects.
Speaker 12 (30:02):
That helped distract from everything going on with that boy.
Speaker 4 (30:05):
I mean, the tiktoks are tiktoking, like so many people
have bad stuff to say. I'm still gonna see it,
but she's pretty shocked that people don't love it after
the response that she got, I guess from critics critics
before it premiered. She put a ton of heart into
the movie, has a lot of respect for the DC
fan base. But her team is now in damage control mode,
(30:26):
hearing she wants to work with Quentin Tarantino. That would
be a dream for her, and she's hoping to get
a meeting with him after all of this dies down.
I think a lot of people didn't remember that it
was a musical, but she's a great actress, and I
think she was also hoping to get either an Oscar
win or nomination because the last one was a huge
success in Joaquin won an Oscar for it.
Speaker 2 (30:48):
So I don't know.
Speaker 12 (30:49):
I have to see it before I talk, but I'm
bummed that it's getting negative.
Speaker 2 (30:52):
Read here we come. I know it's just people expected
you here superhero movie, You expect blockbuster, you know.
Speaker 7 (30:58):
Like, yeah, well, I mean the first one was in
a superhero movie, but it was just a great telling
of the story of Joker in a different perspective, and
then they just flipped the script with a musical. I'm like, yo,
that's not I don't know if the DC has been
taking a lot of missus, you know, uh, with their
with their superhero movies.
Speaker 2 (31:17):
So it's it's sad to see it a new creative director, Kevin,
So he's gonna take over.
Speaker 12 (31:22):
Yeah, get in there, mix it up, Kevin.
Speaker 4 (31:25):
If you miss anything from our show, you can download
the free iHeartRadio app and search the Fred Show on demand.
Speaker 2 (31:31):
Is it Uriel? Is it how you say your name?
Speaker 3 (31:34):
All right?
Speaker 2 (31:35):
Yeah? So you you really I want to hear about this.
You have a raccoon friend named Chunks? You sure do? So?
Speaker 13 (31:45):
Uh.
Speaker 11 (31:46):
We purchased the house last February, and about a year ago,
I saw this raccoon just wandering outside of my front lawn.
Speaker 3 (31:54):
And I threw my hot though and he ate it.
Speaker 2 (31:58):
He throw me a hot dog. You're ill, I'm gonna
eat it. Yeah, they have ketchup on it though. It
is a big question. I got asked. I hope, I
hope not.
Speaker 3 (32:07):
No ketchup, No bond is just straight hot though.
Speaker 2 (32:10):
Okay, so you see the raccoon, you throw the hot dog,
he eats it. Okay, then what happens?
Speaker 11 (32:15):
So I realized they kept coming back and I realized
it's the same one because they had a little scar
on his chuck.
Speaker 3 (32:21):
So, uh, he keeps coming back.
Speaker 14 (32:24):
I leave it in bagels and ship or whatever I have,
and he just comes by and gets it. And sometimes
I'll go out there and and when I see him alone,
because sometimes they'll come with someone else, I'll go out
there and.
Speaker 3 (32:38):
Just hand feed them whatever I have loved.
Speaker 2 (32:40):
Yeah, because you know he's telling his boys like, dude,
this dude throws out the best stuff. Man, He's got
hot dogs, bagel chips. This dude is not playing like
you guys are digging through trash cans. I go over
to my man Uriol's house and look what he does
for me. So his name is Chunks.
Speaker 3 (32:55):
Because he is one thick boy.
Speaker 2 (32:57):
Why wonder why? Because we got a seven eleven over
here for Chunks. You're just throwing out of whatever that
you got. Now, do you worry after you heard this
story that we did a minute ago on trending, do
you do you worry that he's going to bring all
of his friends and invade your home?
Speaker 3 (33:12):
You got it all.
Speaker 11 (33:13):
I hope he brings all of them. You know, I
would love to start a little raccoon set in the.
Speaker 2 (33:17):
Back, Yo, man, I may come by and see what
you're throw at me, you know, like a t bone
or something, you know what I mean, Maybe some nice KFC.
I don't know. Whatever taco you got, tackle bell, I'll
take that. Oh you've come over, you name it, I'll
throw it at you. Okay, I'll keep that in mind.
Thank you, Yuriel. I'll have a nice day. Appreciate you.
O quell them. Yeah, they talk better than they excited.
(33:39):
Tell me about it. These are the radio blogs on
the Fred Show. All right, Paulina, you got one from me? Yes,
I like writing in our diaries, except we save it
a loud. We call them blogs. Go thank you so much,
dear blog.
Speaker 1 (33:50):
So I was doing some thinking and shout out our
girl Kiki, because she put this in my head, and
she plants a seed, and when a seed is planted,
I think about it for a while. So my new
obsession is trying to figure out what my friends I'll
do for a living. I know we've all thought about
it before, right and okay, you mentioned this too, but
I just look at it, and I look at my friends.
(34:11):
My best friend, for example, Jonathan, this man works in marketing.
But then somebody asked me, like, well, what does he do?
And I couldn't say what he does.
Speaker 2 (34:19):
I don't know what he does.
Speaker 1 (34:21):
I don't know what marketing means. Like maybe like aren't
we all in marketing? We're all promoting ourselves.
Speaker 13 (34:25):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (34:26):
Isn't that marketing?
Speaker 11 (34:27):
No?
Speaker 2 (34:27):
No, no, there's like actual marketing jobs. Like people would
come to Jonathan and say, hey, I want you to
help me come up with a brand for my business
and figure out how people can learn about it and
then market my business. Okay, so my three towels for
the business. We got to like you would have to
Jonathan to help you with the three towels for your
spray tanning business. Yeah, got it? So all this time,
(34:48):
here is his resource under your fingertips. Want to tell
what he does?
Speaker 13 (34:52):
Right?
Speaker 2 (34:53):
I got have a fourth towel. Boy, I'm just I'm slacking.
Speaker 15 (34:56):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (34:56):
I just thought about it a lot too, because growing
up to a lot of jobs, we're like traditional in
my opinion, like teacher, lawyer, doctor, I can pretty much
assume what.
Speaker 2 (35:04):
Your day looks like, or at least like what your
job is like.
Speaker 1 (35:06):
You're teaching children, right, like you're a doctor, so if
I'm sicky, I'm gonna go to you. That's what I
look at, or I thought of it that way. But
then I have other friends too, like even my own sister,
another marketing girly.
Speaker 2 (35:17):
I still don't know what she does.
Speaker 1 (35:18):
But it's different when you're in like pharma versus Jonathan's
in real estate. So now we're unpacking different layers of marketing, cool.
Speaker 2 (35:25):
Different different industries. You know. What's funny about doctors too,
is growing up Like when I was a kid, I
just figured if you were a doctor that you could
solve any problem. Yes, Like I thought every doctor knew
about everything, and I had to date one before. I
was like, what do you mean you don't know why?
I'm sniffling, like what do you mean? And she's like,
because I'm a gynecologist or whatever, you know, it's like
I deal with the nether region. I'm like, well, what
(35:45):
do you mean you don't know? Which good? Didn't you
learn this? She's like, I don't know. We did like
a week on that, and then we moved on to
you know whatever we moved on to. Oh, but I
thought every doctor knew how to solve every problem. And
it turns out that's why they have right and that
See it's layers. There's layers to this. And then I
have friends too, Like I have one friend who I know.
(36:06):
His family owns a store.
Speaker 1 (36:07):
It's called Dusilandia's a bunch ofomen in the Chicagoland area.
But he does other things, so he's a little entrepreneur.
Now I'm patty entrepreneur. Now, yeah, home, they got me.
Speaker 2 (36:17):
Now you have a friend who is an entrepreneur. You
don't have to know what all their side projects are.
But I'm doing home brewing and I you know, I'm
I'm making you know, place mats, and I have an
Etsy store. You don't. You don't have to know all that.
You got to know their primary job, which I don't
know besides the family business.
Speaker 1 (36:34):
I don't even know what he does for them because
he has an office here and I know he's there.
He's got meetings someone about hanging out with the Alderman,
and then he's got to go here and do real estate.
I'm like, I don't know, Like like I'm kind of
connect the docs. I can't tell you what he does.
Speaker 2 (36:46):
How about this, do all of you in the room
have a clear understanding of what your parents did for
a living, because I knew people who really couldn't quite
articulate what their own parents did for a living. Oh yeah, yeah,
that was easy. But I went to work with her.
Like I've been to her job. I've seen it. So
you know, my parents have no idea what I do.
That's right, and guess I do marketing, different marketing for
(37:11):
the business. Get out of here. Let's see what there's
layers and levels of marketing that I'm trying to unpack.
Speaker 1 (37:18):
Yeah, yeah, there's that one size, one size fits all there.
Speaker 2 (37:21):
It just doesn't exist. It's nothing. That's a good point.
I think there are a lot of people who don't
understand how this is a job. No, my parents have
no idea. No, they think we just talky talking the
thing is so fun. Yeah, yeah, they don't know. They
clearly have no idea. Yeah, but by the way, all
we are doing is talkie talkie. It's clearly if you listen,
you realize it's not a lot of skiller preparation that
(37:42):
goes in de man. Just show up and be with
my friends and go home. That's exactly what myke things
I do every day. Yeah. Better, that's even better when
you're in a relationship with somebody who does it. I've
been there when you're in a relationship with somebody who thinks, well,
I listen and it sounds like you all do bs
and so like you're not working that hard. Sounds about right, Yeah,
(38:04):
and it's like, let's compare W two's I have one
point four thousand dollars in the bank. The frend Show
is on Good Morning Everyone Tuesday. I shall right, the
French Show's not Kaylin hid Hi, Jason Brown, Hi, rufe Yallo, Hi, Paulina.
Good Morning RB is eight hundred bucks, eats the prize
(38:26):
new player to day ten straight wins. Can you beat
the gorilla? You can get eight hundred bucks. We'll play
in just a few minutes. Good News stories this hour,
Stay or Goo will debate some relationship drama. Bethany is
on with us and the entertainer of Wort too this hour.
What are you working on?
Speaker 4 (38:42):
K We lost a music legend and also someone called
their old teacher a beat on stage.
Speaker 12 (38:48):
During their concert. Yeah, so they chose violence.
Speaker 2 (38:52):
Old teacher though, right, can't get detention for that or
what do they call it in Catholic jug? Jug? That's sup?
Why this shred show is on its stay or go?
All right, Bethany is here? I always hit us up
fred Show Radio on Instagram, fredshowradio dot com on maybe
(39:13):
you could have the honor of being on stairgo, Bethany?
Do you feel like it's an honor? I wish I
didn't have to be here, I say, I don't know
if it's an honor, but yeah, anyway, So what's going
on in your relationship? Obviously, the first thing you would
do is call a radio program, but more specifically this one,
(39:34):
because we have the most esteemed group of panelists representing
all demographics. There's no way that your problem can't be
solved right now. Please take it away, Let's solve it.
Speaker 3 (39:45):
I hope.
Speaker 15 (39:45):
So this is my last resort. So I was looking
for a photo on my husband's phone and a text
came through from his coworker that it takes a lot
to shock me, but I was absolutely done. His female
coworker sent him a nude and I could not could not, sorry,
(40:08):
I did. I confronted him and he said he was
shocked too, and then he looked. He let me look
through his entire phone in the entire text thread with
her and there was nothing suspicious, but like, I trust him,
I really want to believe him, But I just don't
understand why a coworker would feel so comfortable sending something
(40:30):
like that.
Speaker 2 (40:31):
I just got a text from Kiki Hold. I would
say that you brought up an excellent point because he
can't necessarily control what he receives, right, But the fact
(40:52):
that she felt so comfortable to send that means that
there was more than likely some form of setup. That's
where my brain goes, because when I first heard about
this story in our pre show meeting, because that was
the funniest thing I've said all day, because there is
no presearch meeting now. When I heard this was coming
on this morning, I thought about this. I'm like, well,
(41:13):
I can't be responsible for what I received. If I
opened my phone and there's a picture there that I
didn't ask for, that would be surprising. And I don't
know why my partner could get mad at me if
I had one. That being said, why would ninety nine
percent of people send me that picture because they either
have sent me that before, or because there's been some
form of pre picture sending communication, or because there's a
(41:35):
level of comfort there that might be beyond that of
a normal coworker relationship. So that's where my head goes immediately.
Speaker 15 (41:42):
Bethany, Yeah, I mean I don't understand how, Like I
want to let it go, but I'm having a really
hard time.
Speaker 3 (41:51):
I just don't know what else I can do.
Speaker 15 (41:53):
Like I didn't find anything else in their text, and
he's never done anything shady, but this is just really
weird and I can't let it go.
Speaker 2 (42:04):
So I need I need advice. Girl, did you call her? No?
Speaker 6 (42:09):
No? Right, that's the mistake number one. He would have
been a first time right then, Okay, all three of
us and talk to me drive because how did you?
I mean, because he can lie and say, you know,
this was a mistake. Maybe she meant to send it
to Ted and she actually said it's a fraid.
Speaker 15 (42:30):
I don't know right, think about that, Like I trust
him so much that I can't even think about her.
It was like, what is your deal, buddy?
Speaker 11 (42:41):
Si?
Speaker 7 (42:43):
Plus we've learned, we've learned in previous uh in things
that you got to check the other sources like the
iPad check you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (42:52):
There there's check the computer, there's there's monopoly app. Yes, yes, yes,
wordle Yes, I'd like to take seven on eight for that,
because the thing, the fact of the matter is you
got to look at you got to look at all
the sources. I can't tell you how many times the
iPad gets people because they forget that that's connected to
(43:13):
the Apple idea or whatever it is. So everything unless
you've turned that off, everything that goes to your phone
goes to your iPad, and so people think they're being slick,
you know, and they're like, well, I raise it from
my iPhone, but then there's a family iPad and then whoops.
The other thing you got to do is go look
in his camera roll because unless you turn that off,
every picture that comes to his text goes automatically to
(43:33):
the camera roll. Now that one surprised me at time
or two. Hey look at this picture of my niece.
Oh I forgot about this one, not that picture.
Speaker 4 (43:41):
So there's no world where she just shot or shot
for the first time. I mean, dude, do it all
the time.
Speaker 2 (43:46):
Yes, I've amazed that a number of guys that just
send pictures. I can honestly tell you, I'll go to
jug if it's not true. I've never I've never sent
a nude because I'm not going out like that. Plus
I don't think that it's photogenic. But nonetheless, I'm amazed
at the number of people who have told me just
that that man will lead with the most disgusting things,
and the amount of crap I've gotten for some of
(44:07):
the stuff I've said on dating apps or whatever. And
then I see the stuff that you guys get and
when you were on the dating apps prior, and I'm
just and my other friends and I'm like.
Speaker 4 (44:15):
Men are ruthless, right, And I've gotten drunk texts from
dudes I know, And if my boyfriend were I'll be
holding my phone.
Speaker 2 (44:22):
He could easily be like, what the hell is this?
Speaker 6 (44:23):
And I did nothing wrong, that's true, but I would
also have to say, what kind of vibe are you giving.
Speaker 2 (44:29):
Off that man like that? I don't like that, road
I don't like that.
Speaker 6 (44:36):
Road workers know I'm in a relationship and technically single,
so like we all know each other's relationship status. So
there's no world where I'm going to accidentally send Rufio
or a Jason nude.
Speaker 2 (44:46):
And I wish you would, right, it doesn't that doesn't
stop some people. Some people, how many clueless damp people
that we had on this show over the years, waiting
by the phone at all. No, people are not self aware.
They're not and they're not thinking of other people. Co
workers should know your relationships statuses, do them. But that
doesn't necessarily mean that they don't think they're above that. Now,
(45:07):
I'm gonna I'm gonna say that much. I agree with
a lot of things that you say, but I think
there are people out there that just think they're above
all that.
Speaker 6 (45:15):
Well, my man, co workers, I wish you would send
my man a photo. I'm coming to the job on
my way. Well, if it's your co workers, then it'd be.
Speaker 2 (45:25):
Your gut work.
Speaker 6 (45:28):
Yes, I'm showing up at the next meeting at work
and I would like to address everybody.
Speaker 2 (45:32):
Look, there is a possibility that the person was just
shooting their shot. There's also the possibility that this person
felt very comfortable. And I'm not saying it means that
there's other pictures. I'm not saying that that means it's
person evens anything wrong, But there's a there's it could
be either way. It could be it was them shooting
their shot and they're clueless and they are not self
aware and they're not paying attention, or they're not taking
(45:54):
the hint. It could also very well be that there's
other communication going on that led to this, that that
Bethany should know about. The thing is, we don't know.
Speaker 4 (46:03):
I mean our Christmas party gets weird? Do it in
sales hit on me last year? Like and I didn't
ask for that. I'm not putting vibes out there. I
was just trying to get drawnk.
Speaker 2 (46:11):
How dare you? How dare you show up? Let me
start drinking at a holiday party? And how you think
you are? Everybody knows his number, everybody knows the sales
department runs this place. They do whatever they want. I
feel so comfortable because they won't waste it. You understand,
this was trying to sell himself to her right, right
(46:34):
right for the amazessy. Do let me take some phone calls.
At least they're marketing to somebody. Let me take some
phone calls. Okay, I want you to have the radio on,
please with the I heart have Unlet's see what happens.
You need to investigation, but I ask one more question you. Honestly, though,
without this, without seeing this, you would have had no
reason to doubt your partner in any way.
Speaker 15 (46:56):
None, literally none.
Speaker 2 (46:57):
I feel like my gut tells me you have to
lean on that. You have to lean on the confidence
you have in your partner, because if you have no
evidence of anything else and you trust him and he's
never given you any indication, if you lean into this,
then I think that that's going to break the trust,
because it's very possible this guy didn't do anything. It's
(47:18):
very possible to someone just did something, tried it, and
it didn't work. That's, of course, assuming that you look
at the entire tenure of your relationship and and think
about the fact that you've never had any reason to
doubt it before. Now, if this dude's shady and you've
had you've had trust issues and this has happened before,
or there's a pattern, then I think, you know, it
(47:38):
really does require you to to look a little bit deep,
but more more, more deeper, deeper, more deeper. But I
don't I don't know. I hate it when like something
happens one time, one thing it's possible to out of
his control, and then now you're making him pay for it,
and it's possible he did nothing. Now also, I want
to know how did he handle it. What did he
do did he send them, did he send there something
(47:58):
back like hey, don't send me that, or like that's
not appropriate, or did he do anything about it?
Speaker 15 (48:05):
He said that he wanted to talk to her and
meet at the same time about what happened.
Speaker 2 (48:12):
Because he's not he's never.
Speaker 10 (48:15):
I like that.
Speaker 15 (48:16):
I like that idea to do it somewhere else.
Speaker 2 (48:20):
I like the idea that he's willing to talk to
her with you. I like that idea, Bethany. I Actually
they get their story exactly, show up at that next
marketing meeting. He can go come with you. Have a
(48:42):
good day, Bethany. Thank you. It takes some phone calls.
Let me see here. Someone said, girl, no, you can't
lead on the trust that Fred's talking about. Been they're
done that trash. It's always the first time again though,
like what if I didn't Okay? So like, for example,
I've I've been dating for basically, I've been single for
(49:03):
twenty years. Basically I've had like six months or eight
months here and there. But the thing is, like when
I get in a new relationship, when anyone gets in
a new relationship, especially early on. For example, this is
just one example. I'm thinking of you don't send a
mass text out to everybody you've talked to in the
last two years or three years or ever, and go,
I'm in a relationship now, nobody reach out to me.
And so what happens is maybe one month, two month, three,
(49:25):
you were out here in these streets at one point, Paul,
I read when you first when you first got with Hobby,
you were still getting hit up, probably by strays. Yes,
strays were hitting you up out of nowhere, guys from
a year ago.
Speaker 3 (49:36):
Going, you know, hang you up.
Speaker 2 (49:38):
But you but you tell them, man, but you say
that like, hey, I'm in a relationship now, Like I
can't talk to you, you know, like whatever, you shut
it down, right. But I've gotten in trouble for text
messages I've received that have nothing to do with the
way that I've conducted myself within an early relationship, for example.
And I'm getting in trouble for this. But I didn't.
(49:59):
I didn't do it. I didn't the ding at two
in the morning. Hey you up. Well that was acceptable
a couple of months ago. That's no longer acceptable because
you know, hypothetically, I'm in a relationship, so I need
to either ignore it or shut it down. But you
don't need to yell at me because I didn't do
it right. That's a similar example.
Speaker 6 (50:17):
No, that's why when you get in a relationship, you
need to change your Facebook status.
Speaker 2 (50:21):
Okay, in a relationship that I'm so last place, I'm
let me change my LinkedIn too.
Speaker 6 (50:29):
Yes, this is a message out to everybody I am
in a relationship, do not text my phone.
Speaker 2 (50:34):
Two am.
Speaker 15 (50:34):
You say it all the time.
Speaker 2 (50:35):
When you get in a serious relationship, you gonna change
your number. Because when I get married, I was just
telling Giddy and my getting in the torture or my
trainer the other day. There is no doubt when I
finally get married someday, the entire phones being just the
phone is being destroyed, the Apple ID, the phone number.
We're changing everything, different area code, We're changing everything. You
will not be able. The only people who will know
(50:56):
how to find me are you guys in this room
and my mom.
Speaker 11 (50:59):
I mean this.
Speaker 4 (50:59):
That's one who says I'm waiting to meet my husband
while I'm dating someone and I'm single.
Speaker 2 (51:05):
Lord Jesus help me accord in your Facebook. There's no
you don't get me sets on there right now? Mary,
you know what I got a photo almost send you
at two in the morning, So my left pinky.
Speaker 6 (51:18):
Everybody knows, everybody, I'm very clear, everybody knows where it.
Speaker 2 (51:22):
Yeah, everyone knows that you're in a relationship with single.
It's very clear, clear out of your mind. Hey, Michelle,
good morning, Welcome, Good morning Michelle. What are we gonna do?
Stay or go? Just to recap here, this woman, her
boyfriend received a random photograph from a cowork A nude
photograph from a coworker. It popped up. He immediately showed
(51:45):
it to her, gave her his phone. She went through it,
couldn't find any evidence of anything else, and he was
as surprised as she was.
Speaker 5 (51:52):
He says, what say you, I guarantee you that she
deleted a huge thread between him and the cowork How.
Speaker 2 (52:01):
Can you guarantee that, Michelle and they've been messing around?
How can you automatically go there?
Speaker 5 (52:07):
Well, you can go under your text messages and you
could go under at it and then it shows recently
deleted text messages, and I guarantee you there's gonna be
a huge thread a text messages between the two of
them that.
Speaker 16 (52:20):
Faith that she he deleted.
Speaker 2 (52:22):
Now you don't know that you're it's just your paranoia
lead you there.
Speaker 16 (52:27):
Well, she needs to get out of that relationship, but
we don't even know.
Speaker 2 (52:35):
We don't know for sure if there's context here.
Speaker 5 (52:38):
What are a random coworkers sign him a new picture
of her?
Speaker 2 (52:43):
Jason does it all the time on accident, Yes, I
all the time, and I don't want them all right, Michelle,
you have a good day. Your status has been noted.
(53:04):
Hold on guys Antonia, Hi, Hi, good morning, Hi Antonia.
I just I don't I love you?
Speaker 3 (53:10):
So I just wanted to start by saying that.
Speaker 2 (53:12):
We'll say I love you too. But this room is
crazy today, and Kiki is she is unhinged.
Speaker 3 (53:17):
Well, I totally agree with everything you're saying, Fred, but
you but thank you, and.
Speaker 2 (53:26):
I do have a crazy sight.
Speaker 15 (53:28):
So I would have immediately called the girl and see
how she responded to a callback.
Speaker 2 (53:32):
And I don't think that that woman wouldn't have had
a right to do that. I think she'd had every
right to make that phone call and go, hey, that's
what boyfriend, what are you doing? And then where she
was by her.
Speaker 4 (53:40):
Husband or boyfriend, I would have went up to him
and said, call this number back right now.
Speaker 2 (53:44):
Let me see how she's going to respond to you. Yeah, yeah,
that is my thanks Antonia, thank you, have a good day.
Speaker 10 (53:54):
You too, boy.
Speaker 2 (53:55):
It is a rare day when someone texts the only
reasonable person in the room is Fred. Oh my god,
take a picture of it. I will congrats. I'm more
reasonable than I get credit for it. Very sound of
a very sound mind.
Speaker 11 (54:08):
You.
Speaker 2 (54:09):
I'm just so easy sometimes, Andre, Hi. Actually no one's
ever described me as of sound mind. Andre. Hey, hey friend,
are you doing?
Speaker 9 (54:17):
Hey?
Speaker 2 (54:17):
Welcome man? What do you think?
Speaker 3 (54:19):
Well, I'm going to tell you something. One of the
thirteen love you guys, thank you for years. And Kiki,
you're tripping?
Speaker 2 (54:28):
Oh what how?
Speaker 3 (54:30):
I'm telling you you're right though, I will.
Speaker 2 (54:32):
Agree with you.
Speaker 11 (54:33):
Okay, she made the call, Andre, he should have grabbed
the phone and made the call.
Speaker 4 (54:40):
But listen to this.
Speaker 3 (54:42):
The girl has Tim and Timothy next to each other.
His name is Tim. She sent the picture to the
wrong person.
Speaker 2 (54:48):
Is that how it happened? And perfectly reasonable explanation from Andre,
right right, right, understanding. Accidentally sexted the wrong person before?
Speaker 11 (55:04):
I have to Many people have, Yeah, many people have
just just like send them an email and you shouldn't
reply to all I.
Speaker 12 (55:12):
Do sex over email.
Speaker 2 (55:13):
Yes, you're right. I'm constantly email sex thing. It's in
the world crazy. Sometimes I do it likes too. It's
getting expensive though, A dollar of sex.
Speaker 3 (55:26):
A good day.
Speaker 2 (55:29):
I mean, hey, Gene, Gene makes it an interesting point.
Go ahead, Hey, how were all doing this morning?
Speaker 11 (55:36):
Hi?
Speaker 2 (55:36):
Doing well? Great? I'm a little confused. Kiki's all over
the place.
Speaker 16 (55:41):
What a little confussed? Yeah, But I think personally he
shouldn't have any problem going to HR. I mean, report
it and you know, let them do the investigation. There's
your neutral party. And if he's like, oh no, I can't,
then that's like that's another you know, you know, they
al on his coffin. But I mean, if he's like, well, hey, yeah,
(56:03):
that's a great idea, let's shot at HR and let
them figure out what it is, because they need to
know why she's sent in her nudi.
Speaker 3 (56:09):
Pictures out.
Speaker 2 (56:12):
Her nudy pictures. Yeah, I think that's what That would
be an interesting conversation at HR. So tell me about
these nudy pictures that.
Speaker 16 (56:22):
Thank you have a good day, You're welcome you to.
Speaker 2 (56:25):
My former boss is a text My former boss accidentally
sent me a nude video over breast. I deleted it
right away. What you want, Rufio just sent me. It's
his arm. He's flexing, but it's like the crease in
his arms Jackson's arm as this looks nothing like the
(56:46):
pictures you normally sent me. What I normally get from
you were totally different. I'm gonna saved your camera. The
entertainer report is next Friend Show. His entertainer report is
on the Fresh Show.
Speaker 4 (57:00):
Miss Sissy Houston, Grammy Award winning singer and mama to
the late Whitney Houston, died in her Jersey home yesterday.
Speaker 12 (57:07):
The age of ninety one.
Speaker 4 (57:08):
If you didn't know, she rose to fame in the
sixties as one third of the R and B girl
group The Sweet Inspirations. The trio worked as backup singers
for artists like Otis Redding, Dion Warwick, Van Morrison, and Elvis.
Also had a solo career of her own, Like I said,
won a couple Grammys. She was under hospice care for Alzheimer's,
so rest in peace. Now she's with her daughter. Some
(57:29):
big name celebrities are quietly paying off victims to avoid
being publicly named in lawsuits related to the Ditty sex
assault case. So attorney Tony Busby, and we've been hearing
his name a lot because he's representing more than one
hundred and twenty of Ditty's alleged victims, says that really
big stars are about to be sued by his firm,
and he's giving them a chance to settle up.
Speaker 2 (57:51):
Before the claims hit public core.
Speaker 4 (57:54):
And he says some celebrities that we've heard of have
already opted to settle. So he said, in every single
especially cases like this, because it's in the best interests
of the victim, we attempt to resolve these matters without.
Speaker 12 (58:06):
The filing of a public lawsuit.
Speaker 4 (58:08):
And we've done that already with a handful of individuals,
many of which you've heard of before. So again, it
sounds like this might be a situation where we don't
hear some of these names.
Speaker 11 (58:19):
I want.
Speaker 2 (58:20):
I want names because because if you're involved in this,
you would crap.
Speaker 4 (58:25):
Right, bad, bad, bad bad, So don't I don't know
if it's gonna be like the ebscene thing, of course did.
He was arrested in this criminal criminal sex trafficking case
last month.
Speaker 12 (58:35):
He has plied not guilty.
Speaker 4 (58:37):
But this lawyer is going to be separately going through
all these lawsuits, so I don't know. Twenty five of
them are minors, which is scary. He's going through it,
and he says he'll be aggressively going after anyone who
saw the abuse occurring and failed to act to protect
these victims, which I love. So rock on girl chapelone. God,
(59:00):
she's at it again. She called out a former teacher
calling her a bee on stage. So she was introducing
my favorite song of hers, my kink is My is Karma,
at the ACL Festival that's in Austin, and she yiled
into the mic. I usually dedicate this song to my ex,
but I dedicate this song to my effing theater teacher
who kicked me out.
Speaker 2 (59:20):
B I'm here. I don't know why she would have
been kicked out. She seems like such a lovely person. Girl.
She seems really easy to be around.
Speaker 4 (59:29):
I mean, I don't know, like, you're so talented, honey,
like like's just stop it, back it off.
Speaker 14 (59:36):
You made it.
Speaker 4 (59:37):
And if you were a fan of vander Pump Rules
or The Valley the spinoff, you'll know this and you'll
love this. So and for those of you who don't
watch Britney Carr Wright. She was this sweet southern girl.
She met Jack Taylor at a pool in Vegas.
Speaker 2 (59:50):
They ended up dating.
Speaker 4 (59:51):
He has put her through hell and back, and I
am now hearing that after she filed for divorce. Shortly
after their separation, she started banging his friend. And you
know what, we kind of love this for her.
Speaker 2 (01:00:03):
Yeah, I know, I know. So they announced their split in.
Speaker 4 (01:00:06):
February, and I guess she began began a casual physical
relationship with a basketball player turned actor Julian Sensley, who
used to work the door at vander Pump Rules at
the bar Tom Tom souh Tom and Tom from the
show opened up a separate bar.
Speaker 2 (01:00:25):
Yes, good job, you've been listening.
Speaker 4 (01:00:28):
Yes, but I guess he was friends with Jax and
Brittany said, I want to bang you, and we're happy
for her.
Speaker 12 (01:00:35):
Honestly, he has cheated on her many times.
Speaker 2 (01:00:39):
So there you go. Girlfriend. My favorite quote of.
Speaker 4 (01:00:42):
Her is she's so southern, she goes raw in hal
ji X. So yeah, we're happy for her. Get a girl,
and Jason. What is on our website?
Speaker 2 (01:00:50):
Oh you guys?
Speaker 8 (01:00:51):
I think ESPN just leaked the album cover for reputation
Taylor's Fridshit Radio dot Com PN did Yeah, what's she's
the Queen well Media.
Speaker 2 (01:01:04):
Okay, by the way, on the chaperone story, maybe it's
just me. But don't we all keep a little inventory
in our head of all the people who didn't believe
in us, Oh, so that we can, at the most
opportune time let everybody know. Because oh, you know, I've
been known to do it at a time or two
right here on this program. Yeah, you're good at that.
I've got that bird book at home. Oh my god
do I Yeah? And I don't forget. And you know,
(01:01:26):
there might be people out there who say that it's
unhealthy that you should forgive. I've had people give me
this speech before, like, what does it matter if and
so says something bad about you or mean to you,
or she didn't believe in you, or you know whatever,
what does it matter? You should forgive? Like, look, everything
worked out? Okay, I'm like, yeah, but I haven't. I
have not forgotten, and uh, I will never forget. And
I wake up every single day and honestly, I'm at
(01:01:49):
least once a day there are several people who pop
into my head and I'm reminded why I work so hard, yes,
because they will not be right and I will never
forget them. I'm scared. But don't you think those people
kind of helped you in a way, you know, like
they motivated most Now we're giving them credit for being
a holes. I mean, it's part of your journey, right,
I don't.
Speaker 7 (01:02:09):
Give them credit for being an Everyone's gonna say, yes,
you know you're not gonna be successful in every aspect.
Speaker 2 (01:02:14):
But no, there's a difference between someone correcting you. There's
difference between someone coaching you and telling you know or
rejecting you. There's a difference between you not being good
enough at a certain point and people telling you that
you suck because they suck. You know what I'm saying.
There's a difference between being abusive and being constructive. I
don't hold anybody who's been constructive towards me in uh
in bad regard. It's just the people who were vindictive
(01:02:37):
about it. And boy, will I never forget should show? Yeah,
never forgot? Eight three five Who want to take on
show biz? Shelley? Call now show do you have what
it takes to battle show biz? Shelley in the show
Biz Showdown. Good morning, Hi, showbiz. Hi, Hello, do you
(01:03:06):
keep do you remember? Do you have a burn book? Like?
Do you remember people who said, like, show bis, Shelley,
one go be SHOWBI Shelley. I don't have burn book.
Speaker 17 (01:03:12):
I mean I certainly have people who like, we're very
not nice to be like coming up the ranks, and
I've just found, uh, just I'm glad I don't have
to deal with them anymore, and so I just kind
of leave it at that.
Speaker 2 (01:03:25):
But do I like have a burn book? No, nobody
like who are they? Though? Tell me who they are? No,
let's just like if we need the shortlist, right, we
were competitors at one point. We're good. We're good now.
By the way, the only person who was downright rudy
you here was Rufio, So, oh my god, insanely rude.
Speaker 3 (01:03:44):
But it doesn't matter.
Speaker 2 (01:03:46):
It doesn't matter. Let's play the game. We're so good,
you know what. I just want you to know, Shelley,
We're so glad you're here. No, I'm very happy to
be here. It all worked out, That's what I say.
It all worked out. You're done, right? It did? You
don't right?
Speaker 3 (01:03:57):
It did?
Speaker 2 (01:03:58):
Hey Jessica, Hey, Hey, good morning. Hi Jessica, welcome, tell
us about you.
Speaker 16 (01:04:03):
Hi, I'm on my way to work.
Speaker 15 (01:04:06):
I'm married, I have a kid.
Speaker 3 (01:04:07):
I'm a Sagittarius.
Speaker 2 (01:04:09):
I have a shout out to the fellow, said Tiki Rubo,
Me sad. Yeah. What do you do for a living?
Speaker 15 (01:04:18):
I'm a school social worker?
Speaker 2 (01:04:19):
Oh wow, Well, thank you for doing that, and thank
you for listening. And you could win eight hundred dollars
right now. Shelley's record nine fifty two and sixty four.
She's one ten s trade. Let's play the game, all right,
good luck, good luck, all right, with all due respects, Shelley,
get the hell out. Question number one, Jessica, Which father
son duo made history on Sunday by playing in an
NBA preseason game together Lebron James and Brownie James. Which
(01:04:45):
actressy is reprising her role as Mia Hermopolis in a
third Princess Diaries movie, Anne Hathaway, you assume I haven't
seen Princess Diaries. I didn't, but you you appropriately assume
I haven't seen him? Which singer just became the rich
female Musician, a title previously held by Rihanna. Vice president
(01:05:05):
Kamala Harris made an appearance on the latest episode of
Alex Cooper's podcast What is that podcast.
Speaker 15 (01:05:10):
Called Her Daddy?
Speaker 2 (01:05:12):
And which goodwill hunting actor and best friend at ben
Affleck is fifty four today? Matt Demons, that's a five.
Let's go. I don't know what's about to happen right here.
Let's see Shelley's coming back. She got a five and
without hesitation, I mean just boom boom boom. Are you ready?
Speaker 14 (01:05:32):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (01:05:32):
Wait one more time? Was that noise again? Which father
son duo made history Sunday by playing in an NBA
preseason game together Oh Lebron and Brownie Jane? That is correct?
Which actress is reprising her role as Mia Thermopolis in
a third Princess Diaries movie, Anne Hathaway?
Speaker 13 (01:05:54):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (01:05:55):
Which singer just became the richest female musician, a title
previously held by Rihannaayler.
Speaker 7 (01:06:00):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:06:00):
Vice president Kavla Harris made an appearance on the latest
episode of Alex Cooper's podcast What is that podcast Called
Call Her Daddy? Yes? And which goodwill hunting actor and
best friend at bed Affleck is fifty four today? Matt
David that's fun.
Speaker 4 (01:06:14):
That's a tie.
Speaker 2 (01:06:17):
Jessica, Hang on one second, we got to have you
back tomorrow, so stay right there, okay, and you may
have earn yourself an extra fifty bucks, So eight point
fifty is a prize. Tomorrow we're stalled out here nine
fifty two and sixty four to ten straight. Uh, and
we'll do it again tomorrow, miss Showbis Shelley, all right,
that sounds good. Okay, good, have a good day. Okay,
you too, by glad you're here? Bye? Okay, good Waiting
(01:06:38):
by the phone from the vault? Why does somebody get ghosted?
Speaker 3 (01:06:40):
Girl?
Speaker 2 (01:06:41):
Are you working right now? I mean I think I
was present for it is really remember fun fact the
entertainer of forts trending stories All more Fred Show? Next, Well,
go business?
Speaker 3 (01:07:01):
Am I the a hole?
Speaker 2 (01:07:03):
Finally I'm never working inside the station? And then make
it up already know I love how people are like man,
I'm impressed with your advice. For once Fred Bread's show
is on. That's fancy. That was fancy. That only took
six weeks. Get that on the air. This is uh
my confession. This is Craig David. Did Craig David make
(01:07:27):
us in the intro? Wow? It's amazing. Waiting by the phone.
Why did somebody get ghosted from the vault. We'll do
it next. Trending stories this Hour, The Fun Fact and
the Entertainer Report. What are you working on?
Speaker 12 (01:07:37):
K I don't believe in love anymore? There's a couple
breaking up.
Speaker 4 (01:07:41):
Also that Alec Baldwin Rust movie is being released and obviously,
oh wow, causing some issues.
Speaker 2 (01:07:48):
Oh wow, that story is coming up. Let's see if
somebody got ghosted and why Next after Benson Boone ever
been left waiting by the phone, It's the Fred Show. Kennedy,
Good morning, Hi, good morning, Welcome to the show. Waiting
by the phone. So let's hear about Brian. Tell us
(01:08:09):
how you met, about any days that you've been on,
and what's happening right now and how we can help.
Speaker 18 (01:08:14):
I met Brian on Hinge, and you know, he really
stood out from my other matches because I felt like
we really had a connection, Like first of all, a
connection through the profile, like we had similar interests and
just like you know, also the conversation that we had
on the app, you know, through messaging. Yeah, I felt
(01:08:37):
like we really had something.
Speaker 15 (01:08:39):
And so you know, I got really excited when.
Speaker 18 (01:08:42):
He eventually asked me out, you know, to go out
for drink, and so we did.
Speaker 2 (01:08:48):
We went out and we had a really great time, and.
Speaker 19 (01:08:53):
Well, at least I did, and I thought that he
did as well.
Speaker 20 (01:08:58):
But I guess I was wrong in thinking that she
enjoyed it because he hasn't. He hasn't you know, texted
or called me at all since.
Speaker 2 (01:09:09):
Okay, all right, now here's the question. Do you I mean,
obviously you do, or at least you'd like to know more.
But when you go out with somebody one time, do
you expect that they're gonna call you and say, hey,
I'm not interested in seeing you anymore.
Speaker 19 (01:09:24):
Yeah, if they don't want to see me again, I
think that the things to do would be it doesn't
have to be a phone call. It could be a
text message to say that, you know, like they don't
think it's gonna work out, or they're just not interested,
or they didn't feel a connection. I mean, I've done
(01:09:45):
that too to people in the past.
Speaker 13 (01:09:47):
Because I don't think ghosting is just not it's not
good because it doesn't provide any closure, and like it's
so quick just to send a text message and be like, hey,
you know, I appreciate your time, Like you know, it
was nice that we went out, but it's just not
gonna work.
Speaker 2 (01:10:06):
Up a lot of time and energy. Yeah, adult, mature
thing to do. Except in this case though, you look
back on this date and the pre conversation and all that,
and you're like this, this was great. Like you left
thinking he's gonna call me, We're gonna go out again.
We're really getting somewhere here, Yeah, exactly. Okay, all right, Well,
let's see if we can get Brian on the phone,
and we'll ask questions. You'll be on the phone as
(01:10:29):
well at some point. You're welcome to jumping on the call,
but let's try and get some info for you first,
and hopefully whatever's going on, we could straighten out and
set you guys up on another date and pay for that. Okay, okay, yeah,
that would be great. All right, gonna play one song.
We'll be right back. Hang on, stay here, let's find
out what's going on. In part two of Waiting at
a Phone, we're back in two minutes after Miguel Fred's show.
(01:10:49):
Miguel the Fred Show is on the radio and the
iHeart app anytime search but a Fred's Show on demand. Hey, Kennedy, Yeah, okay,
let's call Brian. You guys meant on Hinge, you felt
an instant can over all the other matches, and you
guys chatted and that went well, and then you met
and had drinks and you thought that was great. Except
now this guy is not reaching out to you, not
(01:11:11):
responding to you. He's ghosting you. You want to know why?
Speaker 15 (01:11:14):
Yeah, I definitely want to know why.
Speaker 2 (01:11:16):
Okay, let's call him now. Good luck, Kennedy?
Speaker 3 (01:11:19):
Thanks? Hello? Hi?
Speaker 2 (01:11:31):
Is this Brian? Yeah, this is Brian, Brian, good morning.
It's Fred from the French show. The whole crew is
here started bothering, but I do have to tell you
that we are on the radio right now and I
would need your permission to continue with the call. Is
that okay if we chat for just a little bit, Yeah, okay, sure,
thank you very much. I won't take up too much
of your time. But we're actually calling on behalf of
a woman named Kennedy who says that she met you
(01:11:53):
one Hinge and you guys went went out for drinks.
Do you remember her? Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:11:58):
I do remember that.
Speaker 2 (01:11:59):
Unfortunately, unfortunately you remember that we talked to Kennedy and
she said she liked you and felt connection with you
and chemistry and was hoping to see you again for
another date, you're saying, unfortunately, So what happened? What is
she not telling us?
Speaker 11 (01:12:13):
Uh?
Speaker 10 (01:12:13):
You know we were when we talked on Hinge, everything
seemed really cool.
Speaker 3 (01:12:17):
She does seem nice, but it's like she was very,
very rude.
Speaker 10 (01:12:20):
She answered, like a zoom call in the middle of
our date. I mean, like the first date. That's kind
of crazy to me.
Speaker 2 (01:12:27):
What do you mean a zoom call? Like like she
like a FaceTime or she actually conducted a zoom meeting
on your She did like a.
Speaker 10 (01:12:35):
Whole work meeting right in front of me and during
our date for like fifteen minutes. I was like, wow,
that's crazy.
Speaker 2 (01:12:41):
So well over here like drink and James, the laptop
comes out of the bag and opens and she's like it,
puts in the air pods, hold on one second, and
takes an entire meeting. Yeah, it's crazy.
Speaker 3 (01:12:51):
I was like, Okay, that's that's just insane.
Speaker 2 (01:12:54):
Well, what's the problem. I mean, I guess that I
know sounds like something she would do. That is absolutely
something I do. But let me okay, let me bring
Kennedy in here. Kennedy, why are we taking I forgot too? Menuch,
of the Kennedy's here. I'm sorry I always forget that part. Kennedy,
why are we taking zoom meetings in the middle of
a date?
Speaker 18 (01:13:13):
Well, I'm just a very.
Speaker 21 (01:13:14):
Busy woman, like and you know, I have to work,
and I mean it was five pm when we met,
and so what what did you expect Brian when you
scheduled drinks.
Speaker 18 (01:13:26):
At that time?
Speaker 2 (01:13:27):
That sounds like you run on a date with me. Actually,
so at five o'clock day, why'd you have to go
at five? I mean, why couldn't you have said I
got a meeting at whatever time and then it's later.
I mean, why wasn't there better communication?
Speaker 10 (01:13:40):
That's why I would have asked. I mean that's why
I thought it was rude, because nobody told me.
Speaker 2 (01:13:45):
Yeah, but you said five o'clock. Why did you say?
Why are we having you know? I mean unless you're
me and you get up at and your grandpa and
you get up at three thirty, why are we going
out at five o'clock row? I thought she'd be done,
would work by then. Why didn't you know?
Speaker 18 (01:13:57):
Because I'm really busy, and I also becide I work,
I have a social life too, so I was gonna
already had planned to meet with my friends later in
the day, like later in the evening, so and yeah,
I had a zoom meeting that I had to do
for work at five.
Speaker 2 (01:14:16):
So okay, So you were trying to go on a
date and see your friends that night, so you had
to pack all that in. So it's kind of your
fault then. So I mean, you're saying he scheduled at
five o'clock, but you scheduled at five o'clock.
Speaker 11 (01:14:27):
Yeah, I agree.
Speaker 18 (01:14:28):
He offered five pm, and I agreed to it because,
you know, I was really excited to meet him. I
really wanted to meet him. And like I said, I'm
just really busy. I mean just throughout the whole week.
It wasn't just this one day. So I had to really,
you know, fit him into my schedule. But like I
(01:14:48):
wanted to, you know, I wanted to spend time with him.
Speaker 2 (01:14:51):
And that's what you did. You spend time with him,
but you also handled business. I said, She's a hustler.
That's what hustler is doing.
Speaker 3 (01:14:58):
You work in sale.
Speaker 10 (01:15:00):
I'm not out here saving line.
Speaker 3 (01:15:01):
It's not that important.
Speaker 2 (01:15:04):
People are done at like one o'clock around here. Anyway,
She's trying to be efficient over here. Look if I
if I'm dating you, if we're together and I know
you better, and I'm not trying to make a first impression,
it's a first date. If I got to take a
work call, my boss calls someone that then I answered
the phone, I might excuse myself. But like on a
(01:15:26):
first date, I mean, this is the this is the
part that people like. Clearly when they call this segment,
they don't think about you're making a first impression, like
this is the first time you're going to meet somebody,
and it's like, yo, I don't Oh, whatever story that was,
I don't care. I don't want to hear about your niece.
I'm going to take a zoom call now. It's not
a good look.
Speaker 3 (01:15:43):
That's exactly what I would have said.
Speaker 15 (01:15:45):
I have a job and I have to work.
Speaker 18 (01:15:47):
You know, it's important to me.
Speaker 3 (01:15:49):
I have to make money, you.
Speaker 2 (01:15:52):
Know, don't accept the date. Then they come up with
another time, you know, like go after or go another day,
or don't commit to seeing your I don't think it's
that unreasonable to give somebody an hour, hour and a
half at minimum of your undivided attention on a first meeting.
I don't think that's too much to ask.
Speaker 10 (01:16:11):
Yeah, because it was almost like a median. I mean
I felt like I felt like a dummy sitting there,
sits in my drink. What are you taking this room call?
Speaker 2 (01:16:20):
Yeah, I don't blame you. Look, is there any chance
that if Kennedy reconsiders this, you know, maybe realizes that
this was not this is pretty rude. And if we
pay for another date and she leaves the laptop at home,
would you consider another date with her?
Speaker 13 (01:16:32):
Or No?
Speaker 2 (01:16:33):
It was just poor judgment, you know.
Speaker 3 (01:16:35):
I mean, at this point, it's exactly like you said.
Speaker 10 (01:16:37):
I felt like it was very bad first impression, and
I think it's just going to be something else every time.
Speaker 2 (01:16:42):
So no, I'm not interested, all right, Kennedy. I mean
I understand you're a busy person, but if the meetings
have five thirty, just once you meet at six.
Speaker 18 (01:16:51):
Yeah, I mean, like I said, I just my schedule
is extremely busy and there's just like a lot going on,
so there's a limited amount of time.
Speaker 2 (01:17:00):
This whole date should have been over zoom. Maybe you're
too busy to day, you know, maybe you need to
focus on your career right now. I don't know. I
mean maybe maybe you don't have enough time. You're a
very important salesperson.
Speaker 15 (01:17:10):
I mean I have a lot on my plate.
Speaker 2 (01:17:12):
Okay, yeah, I don't know. It sounds like you're on
a zoom call with us right now. We're sorry, Are
you doing your online trainings for something right now at
the same time that we know all about that? All right? Look, Brian,
thanks for your time, Kennedy, best of luck to you
out there. Thank you. Okay. The entertainment report with Kaylen.
(01:17:35):
It's up next to two minutes after Sabrina Carpenter Trending Stories,
fun Fact all coming up. Fread shows up. One's entertainment
report is on the Fread Show.
Speaker 4 (01:17:44):
Alec Baldwin's movie Rust is gearing up for its world
premiere at a film festival in Poland next month, but
it's of course being slammed as tone deaf by industry
peers of the late Helena Hutchins.
Speaker 12 (01:17:55):
So here's the deal.
Speaker 4 (01:17:57):
Many are raising concerns about whether it's appropriate to showcase
this controversial Western movie at an event that Helena, who
is from Ukraine, which is of course near Poland, regularly attended,
of course, and she died on the set of russ
three years ago after being hit by a bullet fired
from a loaded gun. And you know, Alex is still
going through legal issues regarding that. I mean, people are like,
(01:18:20):
is this something that we should be doing. The festival,
which will host a special panel to honor Helena's life,
promoted the upcoming premiere on Instagram with a bunch of
stills from the movie, but the comment section is obviously brutal.
Oscar nominated cinematographer Rachel Morrison chimed in saying, I'm all
for memorializing Helena and her beautiful work, but not by
screening and thereby promoting a film that killed her. So
(01:18:42):
when also in the industry wrote promoting a film that
shot with unsafe practices leading to the death of its cinematographer,
please reconsider. And of course those got a ton of likes.
I don't know, I mean, what do you guys think,
should we just scrap the whole movie? I'm surprised they're eating.
Speaker 2 (01:18:59):
Yeah, I'm surprised, come at it all. I guess I
would have thought they just would scrap the project.
Speaker 7 (01:19:03):
Alec Baldwin, he's like one of the produced He's a
he's like behind the whole thing. He didn't just start
in it, but he financed the whole thing, and I would.
Speaker 2 (01:19:09):
Think that's one more reason why he would just want
the thing to go away because it comes out and yeah,
maybe he makes his money back, but it's just one
big reminder of what, yeah, what happened. And he's not
going to this premiere by the way, So yeah, so
you lose some money on it. You didn't go to jail,
bro like, no. Well, and even if he should or
shouldn't have, someone.
Speaker 4 (01:19:26):
Died for sure, you know, it just seems eerie to me.
The director is going to be there, but Alec is not,
so I don't know. It seems crazy, man, I don't.
I don't know if that means it'll be released in
the US either, I'm not sure. So jeez, just hitting, yeah,
you know, more past shutting energy. Some forty one front
man Derek Whibley says that he was sexually abused by
(01:19:48):
his former manager. In his memoir Walking Disaster, My Life
Through Heaven and Hell, Derek details sexual harassment allegations against
Some forty one's former manager Greek I don't know, g
r E I I don't know, or Greg Nori. He
writes that he's never told anyone, including any of his bandmates.
The manager allegedly verbally and sexually abused him and discouraged
(01:20:09):
him from keeping in touch with his parents and when
Derek started dating Avril Levine in two thousand and four, Yes,
the two were married from six to nine. He writes
in the book that he eventually confided in her, prompting
Avril to tell.
Speaker 2 (01:20:21):
Him that's abuse. He sexually abused you.
Speaker 4 (01:20:23):
Derek also told his current wife of ten years, Ariana Cooper,
who reacted the exact same way. In the book, he
writes that this manager ultimately stopped with all of these
encounters or abuse when a mutual friend learned what happened.
Speaker 12 (01:20:37):
So I'm sure there's a lot of stuff in the book.
And he had a notorious.
Speaker 2 (01:20:41):
Alcohol problem, so I mean, I'm sure some of that
was just dealing.
Speaker 12 (01:20:43):
With the trauma.
Speaker 4 (01:20:44):
And you guys, love is a lie because Kanye West
and Bianca Sensory are allegedly headed towards divorced.
Speaker 2 (01:20:52):
See, people don't know why I'm not married, why I
don't really have it. I'm in a big herd to
get married. This is why they can't. If his relationship
can't stand the test of time. I've been forget about it.
Speaker 4 (01:21:02):
They were my shining light, which exactly I'm pretty sure
he's still legally married to Kim, which is why he
couldn't legally marry Bianca.
Speaker 12 (01:21:08):
I don't think he's signing the papers.
Speaker 4 (01:21:09):
I don't know, correct me if I'm wrong, but I
guess they've been telling people around them they split up.
He has been telling people that he plans to live
in Tokyo and divorce her. I don't know how he
can divorce someone he never legally married. Another person points out, though,
that he changes his mind all the time. It's very
possible that they could reconcile. Her family's been vocal about this.
Kim has been trying to be vocal about like, hey,
(01:21:31):
don't be naked around my kids.
Speaker 2 (01:21:33):
Yes, Kevin with your finger.
Speaker 7 (01:21:35):
The divorce between Kim and Kanye was finalized in twenty
twenty two. It was it took two years, but they finalized.
They Nomber ninth, twenty twenty.
Speaker 2 (01:21:43):
Okay, I thought they were still working some stuff out,
but he did drag that one out. I don't know.
Speaker 4 (01:21:47):
So they just did this religious ceremony. I don't think
they were ever legally married. Married, he and Bianca, but
they shoes back. I want her shoes on, I want
her clothes on, as Rufio says, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (01:21:59):
I worry about her like I think about her often. Yeah,
and I feel worried.
Speaker 4 (01:22:03):
But they were last seen together on September twentieth, and
maybe he's moving to Tokyo.
Speaker 2 (01:22:08):
I don't know.
Speaker 12 (01:22:08):
He's always up to something, Jason, what did you say?
Speaker 2 (01:22:11):
Was on o ESPN?
Speaker 4 (01:22:13):
Is somehow getting involved with a Taylor Swift re release? Okay,
that seems wild. Fetcher Radio dot.
Speaker 2 (01:22:20):
Com and g Man on the text and I have
in fact checked this says that Helena's husband is a producer,
and if that's the case, then he probably would have
had some saying where this movie comes at or not.
So I suppose if he the widow of you know,
of the deceased cinematographer, if he sanctioned it, then I
guess I'm okay with that.
Speaker 12 (01:22:39):
Okay, me too, Yeah, God, that's.
Speaker 2 (01:22:40):
Another thing, ask for my permission. A lot of times
when it comes to major motion pictures, they call me
and they're like, what do you think I told him?
With this joker thing? I told him you did? I
said this is this is this is false marketing, this
is this, this is mad and switch. People are expecting
one thing, you're giving him something else. Lady, stop it
right now, you know. And they didn't listen to me,
(01:23:03):
and then look what's happening.
Speaker 12 (01:23:04):
They should have listened to you, the people.
Speaker 2 (01:23:06):
More people should listen to what I'm saying. That's true, Caln.
I want to talk to you about something. You said
that your perspective on something really fundamental has changed. You
shared it yesterday and we didn't get to it. But
you went to a wedding over the weekend in Detois,
in the Detroit, Michigan, your hometown, and did you stay
at a friend's home. I certainly did. You did, and
(01:23:27):
you said that your perspective on something really, really fundamental
has changed. And I think in light of what's going
on politically and in the world right now, I think
it's important that we are transparent with our audience about
how your position on a sort of a fundamental, the
really pillar of life has changed, and that is whether
or not to have adult relations when you are a
(01:23:52):
guest in someone else's home. Where were you and where
are you now on this, Diane Sawyer, I grew up
middle class, right, right, right. I want to answer the
question like, well, I grew up middle class.
Speaker 12 (01:24:05):
That's an interesting question.
Speaker 2 (01:24:07):
And I grew up middle class.
Speaker 4 (01:24:08):
Yes, I used to work about John. I used to
think that it wasn't so bad to bang at your
friend's house. But now I think it's kind of bad
and you shouldn't do it, and why?
Speaker 2 (01:24:20):
And I agree with you. I don't think. I don't
think it's a good idea. Why is it, though, that
you feel this way? What changed? I don't know.
Speaker 4 (01:24:27):
It just felt weird and I could hear them, you know,
my my best friend Ali and her husband downstairs in
the kitchen.
Speaker 2 (01:24:32):
You know you went ahead and did it. No, I didn't.
Speaker 14 (01:24:35):
I did not.
Speaker 4 (01:24:35):
I see there might have been some attempts made, you know,
an initiation attempts.
Speaker 2 (01:24:42):
Who started these attempts?
Speaker 11 (01:24:44):
Not me?
Speaker 20 (01:24:50):
Not me?
Speaker 2 (01:24:52):
Yeah, no, it certainly wasn't me. Whoever may or may
not have any room with me. Yeah, I don't know.
Speaker 4 (01:25:00):
It's just something about it, And I was like, wow,
did I just become an adult before my own eyes?
Speaker 2 (01:25:05):
I just I don't know. I think it's kind of rude.
I think it's like if you're in a hotel obviously.
I mean, if you're in a hotel, it is a
moral imperative right, that's your duty. But I just think
in someone's home, it's like there's just a lot of
there's a lot of variables. I think it's a good idea,
just typically not to eight five, five, five, nine, one
one oh three five. I want to take a survey,
(01:25:27):
a little social survey, and there's important social topic, whether
or not to get it on when you are a
guest in someone's home, Kiki, what is yours? What say you?
What is your position?
Speaker 20 (01:25:38):
No?
Speaker 2 (01:25:38):
Absolutely not, you can't do that. I'm waiting for the punchline.
That is no punchline. You can't do that. I don't
think you should. I don't think you should. What if you?
I mean, I'm trying to be above board here because
it's early, But what if you? I mean, like a
cleanup on our right? There's that? Why should somebody else
have to that you know intimately? Well I'm not that intimately,
(01:26:01):
but why should what close friend of yours have to
clean up after you? After you did that? Even if
there's no obvious evidence, Come on, what if they hear you?
That's awkward? It's in their home. They can't get away
from that. By the way, she has heard me doing that.
Speaker 4 (01:26:14):
We went to college together. We've heard each other. I
lived in a nine person house and you know it
was a big ten university. So we've heard each other, so.
Speaker 2 (01:26:21):
We know that we Can't's position has changed, Jason, what
is your position?
Speaker 8 (01:26:25):
I don't see like how you could do it and
like be into it because like if I'm like saying,
at like Mike's parents house or whatever, right, I'm just
gonna think about them and like where are they?
Speaker 2 (01:26:34):
Can they hear this? Like and then that automatically is
not gonna That's all part of the like, oh you
gotta be quiet. I was going to say it's a stranger,
then maybe that could be hot, but like not his mom. Yeah,
your position on this important topic? Oh do it?
Speaker 11 (01:26:51):
You know?
Speaker 19 (01:26:52):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (01:26:53):
Allowed in my house? Yeah? If I stay in your house,
they're they're fielmigating Mike. Yeah, I come over there with
my girlfriend. I got you friend.
Speaker 4 (01:27:04):
Wow, same for me. You can do it in my
house though. Really, Yeah, I'm totally cool with that. I
think everybody should get it when they need to get it.
I'm happy with that, and I don't care.
Speaker 2 (01:27:13):
I'm just believe it or not, it's a six foot five,
two hundred and forty pounds man, I'm kind of like
a mouse, Like I just I want to like be
I wanted, I want to come. If I'm going to
stay in your home, you already know I'm uncomfortable. I
much got to be in a hotel. But even when
I'm like, even when I'm in your home, like, I
don't want to make a mess. I don't want to
disturb anything. I want to leave everything the way I
found it. I kind of just I don't I want
to be like unintrusive, you know what I mean, paul
(01:27:35):
In at your position on this topic.
Speaker 1 (01:27:36):
I mean, it's always been a no for me, like
I'm not doing it. No for you doing no no,
not other people's houses. And when it comes to my house,
I guess you could do it, but just like keep
it like low, like BB like is it be quiet? Yeah, okay,
I'll buy there on Saturday. Sorry, thank you for the email.
You are coming Saturday?
Speaker 11 (01:27:53):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (01:27:53):
Coming over on Saturday? Oh used to Oh are you
staying there? They might you don't know? Ye, the drinks
are flowing. Can you tell the man to behave himself.
I can try. I mean, lord, now, what if they're
not home? Is it okay? I still don't know why
we're doing the other thing. You got to be aware
of that. Maybe here's something you got to think about
(01:28:15):
in twenty twenty four, you guys, is that if you're
staying in someone's home and they're not there, you better
be aware of where all the cameras are. So there
are cameras everywhere, and there are cameras in ways. Like,
for example, my mom has a camera in like a
treat dispenser for the dogs that she can in the
living room. She can throw treats at the dogs from
this little thing. It's hooked up to the Wi Fi.
And there's a camera in there, and she spies on
(01:28:36):
my dad with it to see what he's doing when
she's gone, which is nothing. He's not doing a damn thing,
but she she spies on him. I think it is
to see if he's drinking. But but my point is,
I forget about that camera. So what if I'm staying
in the house my parents are, you know, they're traveling,
and I'm like, well, here I am, I'm in a
living room. We're having a good time. No one's around,
so I may go ahead after it. And they have
(01:28:58):
cameras outside now for secure. I didn't know that. I
don't have access to those. So again I can't really
be in the pool, you know, I don't know. I
just I think you. I think you should just not.
I think we're not. Now we see why your parents
got all the cameras. You're in the pool over here.
I've been known to use the pool. You know, it's
the pool, it's Arizona. It's people get in the pool,
(01:29:19):
and sometimes they get in with their friends, and sometimes
sometimes they don't have this swimsuit, and sometimes you have
to rescue them remind. Okay, okay, life saving maneuver. I
gotta go more Fread Show. Next, the Fread Show is
(01:29:44):
on Friend's Fun Fact Fred's Fun so much. Did you
guys know there's an animal that is immortal. It can
actually rewind its life. And if you could do that,
(01:30:05):
would you It is another question I have if you
could rewind your life and go back to certain points
in your life, would you do it? And if you could,
would you really want the outcome to change?
Speaker 3 (01:30:16):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (01:30:17):
Really?
Speaker 3 (01:30:17):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (01:30:18):
Same? Yeah. I think everyone's made mistakes that they'd rather
go back and change, right, But I mean if you're
happy with where you are today, then imagine if you know,
you change those things, then maybe you wouldn't be sitting here.
I mean you could be happier, but you could also
be sadder. Yeah.
Speaker 8 (01:30:32):
Well yeah, I'm thinking more of like mistakes that maybe
have like hurt people, or like maybe I need to
be like drama or if I could avoid that, I
probably would go back and do that.
Speaker 2 (01:30:41):
But even then you probably learned something from those things hopefully. Yeah,
you know. But there's a type of jellyfish. It's immortal.
Speaker 3 (01:30:47):
It's the.
Speaker 2 (01:30:49):
Keretopsis journey.
Speaker 12 (01:30:51):
That's correct.
Speaker 2 (01:30:52):
Yeah, that's how you say, obviously.
Speaker 3 (01:30:55):
Come on.
Speaker 2 (01:30:56):
It's also known as the immortal jellyfish. It can transform
its body into younger state through a process called trans differentiation,
essentially making it immoral. Try and say that three times fast,
trans differentiation, immoral or immortal? Did I say immoral? Oh?
They also are into some bad stuff. Can well tell
(01:31:17):
you something about these turatopsis. You need to watch out
because they they are wild? Yeah yeah, yeah, I mean
you know what the last night they're out with somebody,
tonight with somebody, two people. You gotta watch more Thread Show. Next,
you know, the Fread Show is on the Hottest Morning show,
(01:31:39):
Good Morning Everyone. Suesday, Celeber eighth, It's the Fred Show.
Hi Kalin, Hi, Jason Brown, Hi Rufio, Good Morning Show.
Me is Bella, Everybody's here blogs and just the second
Kiki's got one the Entertainment Report. After that, what's in there?
Speaker 4 (01:31:53):
The celebrities that have settled outside of court before their
involvement in all this diddy mess becomes.
Speaker 2 (01:32:01):
And the Chicago Friends. Tickets to are one O three
five Kiss FM. Jingle Ball percented by Capita one December ninth,
All State. It's the biggest holiday party in Chicagoland. Jack Harlow,
Teddy Swims, Jason Derulo, Benson Boone, Madison, Beer, Sweety, NCD
Dream n ct Dream had to be confused with nct
D Dream. I love both of them though, and one
(01:32:24):
oh one oh one oh one. Oh you hear that
Kiggy one o yes, oh that's that way. That's who
go be there. Tickets on sale now one O three
five kiss fm dot com. They will sell out, they
always do, and they're going fast, So get on there,
get your tickets. I don't want to hear your son
I love you all. I love you all, but I
just can't with the SOB stories, like on December seventh,
(01:32:47):
when it's like, oh my god, my goldfish died ten
years ago, but I'm still really sad about it, and
one O is the only person can make me feel
better about it. Now, I'm gonna say to you, I'm sorry,
I don't have any tickets left, but you can buy
them now. You can win them from us tomorrow morning.
It's seven to fifty five to Yeah. They talk better
than they These are the radio blogs on The Fresh
(01:33:08):
Show by do I love how personal friends of mine
are calling now and if I haven't talked to them
in a couple of weeks. They lead with I've had
more than one person, lead with, hey, I'm not asking
for Sabrina Carpenter tickets, and then go on with whatever
they want, because I've had other people for whom I'm
like the fifth person they've asked, but they don't realize
that I'm connected to the other four. And by the way,
(01:33:28):
we're all connected to the one plug, which is Jason Brown.
So I go, hey, someone was asking for Sabrina Carpenter tickets,
and it's like, that's the fourth time I've heard about it,
I'm aware, and so not only do I feel used,
but I also realized I was also the bottom of
the list of people. Do ask not unique? Yeah, I know,
I know I'm not unique, So thank you by the
time they ask you, right, that's what I mean.
Speaker 3 (01:33:49):
I'm like you.
Speaker 2 (01:33:50):
Honestly, I was the last person who you thought had
the ability to pull this off. Thank you. Like writing
in our diaries, except we say them aloud. We call
them blogs, Kiki, dear blog.
Speaker 6 (01:34:01):
I know I give this man a very hard time
most days. I talk a lot of smack. But guys,
I think I'm in love.
Speaker 2 (01:34:08):
I think just now, yeh, after how many years? Seven
years in now and living together? Yeah, yeah, yeah love.
Speaker 6 (01:34:16):
Because yesterday we went grocery shopping, and we don't usually
go grocery shopping together. That was a that was an
adventure in itself, like we were both at the same
grocery store at the same time, in the same car.
Speaker 2 (01:34:26):
It was wild.
Speaker 6 (01:34:27):
And so when we pulled up and where I shopping.
You know, I love an off brand store. You need
a quarter to get a cart, okay, And so we
got out of the car.
Speaker 2 (01:34:36):
This nice little old shop. You shout out to all
d Okay, wait, so it's cheaper food, but you have
to buy a cart. You rent it.
Speaker 7 (01:34:47):
You put the quarter in the car releases, but then
you get your quarterback when you turn okay.
Speaker 2 (01:34:53):
You have to put the card back. Okay, okay, Like
wait a minute. So this is like spirit, I'm supposed
to save money, but I get on the plane, I
spent the same amount of money. It's a great business model.
Safe that's actually pretty smart.
Speaker 11 (01:35:04):
Yes.
Speaker 2 (01:35:05):
So we I love to shop there.
Speaker 6 (01:35:07):
And we were going to the grocery store and when
we got out of the car, this old little lady,
God bless her, she walked up to us and she said, hey, babies,
I have this cart. You know, someone gave it to me,
So no need to give me a carter. You just
take this cart and go shopping.
Speaker 2 (01:35:21):
And so I'm like, oh my god, thank you so much.
And he's and she took her.
Speaker 6 (01:35:24):
A little bag out of the cart to you know,
go to her car. And then Timothy goes, oh, ma'am,
let me get the bag for you. At least don't
carry the bag to your car. And he grabbed her
bag and he walked with her to the car and
put it in there and for some reason that was
come on, Now, that was the moment I said this
might be the one.
Speaker 2 (01:35:42):
Did you take your clothes off right then?
Speaker 3 (01:35:43):
And there?
Speaker 6 (01:35:44):
No, not in the ald parking lot but home, yes,
And I just thought that was the sweetest thing. And
I'm like, I know you guys are in relationships in
some long term, like Jason and I. What was the
moment like maybe where you refell in love?
Speaker 2 (01:35:59):
You know, like, oh, oh, that's a good question. I
can't answer it. I'd have to have another person for that.
Speaker 4 (01:36:05):
I bought groceries for someone at Jewel the other day
and I was like, let's go to the.
Speaker 2 (01:36:11):
Bathroom right now, and then I had to come get
them both out of jail. And that's what And that's
when she fell in love with me. Yeah, I wasn't
going to tell anybody about that.
Speaker 12 (01:36:21):
I fell in love.
Speaker 2 (01:36:21):
Yes, exactly what about you, Jason?
Speaker 8 (01:36:24):
Probably when he's like here's a car, or here's right,
here is a home, you can put your clothes here,
you can charge your phone for free, right right right
right right, here's the cable bill that I'm paying, Like,
you know, like those that.
Speaker 2 (01:36:46):
Love all that, I give Rufi a hard time. He
gives me a hard time. We're like brothers. But I
have to say, I've watched you with your wife and kids,
and you were you're You're a different guy. Yeah, you're
a different guy. You're not the Annoyer brother me. I've
also seen your child roast you. Yes, I wonder where
he gets that from. But anyway, I just want to say,
(01:37:07):
in Rufio's defense, I've seen him away from this place,
and she's very attentive to his wife and kids, as
you should be.
Speaker 3 (01:37:15):
Thank you.
Speaker 2 (01:37:16):
I appreciate that. But when when do you fall back
in love with them?
Speaker 20 (01:37:19):
Oh?
Speaker 7 (01:37:19):
Especially when obviously when Jess gave birth to both our children.
You know, she the C section and going through all
that stuff, and to see her like all about it
the next day, you don't say, like nothing happens, looking insane, Yeah,
getting a.
Speaker 2 (01:37:35):
Little that's amazing, right. Yeah? And how about you, Yeah,
you would.
Speaker 3 (01:37:43):
Be next.
Speaker 2 (01:37:45):
The house for seventy two hours. I love you. Anniversary.
Yes it is their anniversary today, but one year definitely.
So it was one year ago today that I was
propping up Kaitlyn's friend like we ken it Bernies all weekend.
We had a great time. We did Jason and I
shared a room together. Nothing happened tried, I know, But
(01:38:13):
when is it? When do you when you fall back
in love with him? I mean obviously seeing him with
our daughter, because you know, he was so scared to
be a girl dad, and like he admitted he was,
you know, are we gonna bond? Like is she gonna
like me? Like you know what do I do? Type thing?
Speaker 1 (01:38:24):
And he is the best girl dad I know. And
then it's so cute. And I hope that you know,
they grew up and have that special.
Speaker 2 (01:38:30):
Bond I didn't have. Now you have a boy. I
have a boy. Yeah that picture you sent yesterday, Oh yeah,
maybe it was a special blue mom. Yeah. The haircut,
we had a haircut fail. There wasn't well. I mean,
I'll be honest with you. That kid is so beautiful.
It's hard to have any kind of failed. But but
the haircut's bad. It is bad. It's a bad haircut,
bowl haircut. It's a Mexican bowl haircut. Like we put
(01:38:52):
a ball in her hand. You have a Mexican boy dad.
It definitely looked like when I saw and I was
getting my haircut, when I and my hairstylist goes, I
need to see that again. She was like, you know,
there's a way that we don't have to do it,
Like I have out what I was drinking. Why she
is so beautiful? But I was like, what did we
do to my knee? Yeah? That haircut we posted? Yeah,
(01:39:15):
I got a boy.
Speaker 3 (01:39:16):
Wow.
Speaker 2 (01:39:16):
Yeah, I'll post it. I'll share it a Pestel Pluma
west Loop comtext and Fred will never understand how us
poor shop. No, I shop at Aldi too. I just
have it delivered, which I think defeats the purpose. Doesn't
if you if you instacart and you're old, Why is
everything so damn expensive? I thought this was supposed to
be cheap. And Tom, you live in the west Loop.
(01:39:36):
I was gonna say West Yeah, the poors. And I
don't think he's had a job in like five years.