Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
We got more wet stuff in theforecast here, Matt, Well, let's
take a look here we do havewe are there is still a chance throughout
this afternoon rain and thunderstorms. Actuallyupdating it as I refresh my page,
looks like it was just recently updated. Rain and thunderstorms are likely between four
(00:21):
and five pm. So we're comingup here on a good chance sunny to
start your afternoon, then gradually becomingcloudy with a high of seventy five and
wins from the south around twenty totwenty five miles. And rain and thunderstorms
are likely sixty percent chance between fourand five PM, and then a forty
(00:42):
percent chance throughout the evening hours anytimebefore nine pm. We're due for that,
though, right it feels like wehaven't had like a ton of good
rain here early in the season.Absolutely, you know in April's kind of
the showers month, didn't it.It's good to get some some April showers
(01:07):
bringing those those May flowers. Andit's good. Had some good thunderstorms last
night. Had some of that touchdownfork lightning off off of the horizon.
Yeah watch that, Yeah, youhear the thunder r rumbling as Garth Brooks
would say, is that is thatwhat he says? I think? So?
Yeah, so uh three oh nine. So there's that. So get
(01:27):
your umbrella out looking at the news. We're trying to figure out, you
know, some some of the You'regonna learn a lot about the You're gonna
learn an awful lot about where peoplesit on a variety of topics and issues
(01:53):
and how fanatical they are going tobe about this election season in the next
like three months. Is the cutoffto like really get serious about this the
conventions, like the party conventions isis that kind of the moment it was
(02:15):
like, Okay, full steam ahead, it is going to be Trump,
it is going to be Biden,and we are going to be doing this
in November. Is that when thingsstart ratcheting up on like an issue to
issue level, Because right now itfeels like the Democrats that are having dissension
are having dissension about the Israel War, the Republicans that are having dissension are
(02:37):
having dissension about foreign aid and toa bit of extent, on what to
do with the southern border. Consideringthis my orchest thing, and I'll get
to that in a second, Butis that kind of the moment where it's
just kind of like, hey,draw your lines in the sand. There's
a lot of stuff that we gotto figure out before November. Is that
how you feel and those aren't I'mjust looking it up. Is this right
(03:00):
that there were The RNC convention isn'tuntil mid July. Yeah, DNC convention
is not until mid August. Thatsounds about right. Yeah. I mean
a casual might be aware of thisstuff, but they're not really thinking about
it until we get closer. Right. We talked about us, you know,
waiting till we get to the wireto put in our taxes. Don't
(03:23):
you think people are like that whenit comes to voting to Oh for sure.
Even with like it's different for us, we expose ourselves to it every
day. I would say more peopledon't do that than do that. Now
I could stand corrected on that.Is anybody out there want to challenge that
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and say, no, I reallythink a majority of people are just following
politics that closely every single day Becausewe talk really about the most important political
thing that's happening almost every day.That gives us a little bit of a
different lens than the person that's kindof trying to catch up or feel what
they feel about the issues that aren'twatching news channels every single day. Hardcore,
(04:08):
you know what I mean. Andthat's why, you know, we
talk about this and we have alot of people so passionately to talk to
us on the phone, and weappreciate that. And by the way,
you can call us four h twofive five eight eleven ten. Four h
two five five eight eleven ten.They're really passionate about why don't people feel
the same way I do? Whydon't people feel the same way that we
(04:30):
feel? And the answer is there'sjust a lot of people that intake politics
differently. They expose themselves to differentchannels. There's a lot of people out
there that think CNN is like theend all, be all news channel.
They remember when CNN wasn't like alot of spin from like twenty five thirty
years ago, and in their head, because they're not a fan of the
news, they don't sit and watchthe news a whole lot. When they
(04:55):
need to know something newsworthy, theythrow CNN on. They're like, Okay,
well that's the news channel, right, even though we know because we
expose ourselves to it, that CNNgives you more of a left leaning spin
than a down the middle centralized versionof the events. Well, who's centralized
these days? That's the thing,right, But I would bet if you
(05:17):
asked a bunch of people they wouldsay they are centralized. Not because they
are, it's because that's what theythink. They don't follow this stuff.
They go to CNN, they're like, Oh, that must be what's going
on. They remain centralized in theirown tribe. Yeah, but they don't
even know that though, because theydon't expose themselves to the news enough.
(05:42):
And I'm not saying that's bad,because for all of the positives and the
negatives that we have in our society, one of the negatives is there's a
lot of people that are not quiteas informed as some others that are going
to vote, and their vote countsthe same as anybody who's really up on
the issues. So that being thecase, immigration is still positioned to be
(06:05):
one of the most important things thatis going to be voted on in our
society, and that's going to betalked about until we get to November.
We got six plus months for thatto remain the case. In the interim,
the House of Representatives voted to impeachAlejandro Maorcis, who is the Homeland
(06:25):
Security Secretary, with the idea thathe is breaking the law by not enforcing
it properly and creating it in anemergency situation at the southern border. Okay,
so they're trying to do this,and again I'm not sure that this
(06:46):
is going to do anything except bewhat we have continued to call political grand
standing. People who voted in favorand it was party lines. People voted
in favor of impeaching my Orcas arethe Republicans. And the people voted against
it were the Democrats. Nobody wantedto be that person that voted against with
(07:11):
the idea that, well, thereare a few that did vote against,
but the idea of voting against thiswas the idea that what is the solution?
How is this helping at all?Is my orcus really the problem?
Because we keep hearing on that JoeBiden has the tools at his fingertips to
make everything right at the southern border. Well, with that being the case,
(07:38):
Senator Mitt Romney, he's still inthe Senate. Did you know that,
Amitt the old Catcher's Mitt? Hesays he's willing to vote to dismiss
the impeachment articles as long as itis debated. And again that's why these
articles of impeachment were not delivered tothe Senate last week. Mike Johnson and
(08:03):
the other leadership in the Senate,they all decided, you know, between
obviously speaking of the House, MikeJohnson he was going to deliver them.
They said, give us some time. We want to make sure everything's oliver.
Ducks are a row. So ifwe don't get to debate this,
the American public knows that we havedone everything we can to try to do
this the right way. Now,Romney about this said, I don't believe
(08:26):
there's a constitutional standard met. Butat the same time, I think the
Senate should give a chance for debate, even if it's limited to two hours.
So if there's a motion to justtable without any discussion, that's something
I would oppose. If there's aprovision that allows debate, it's something i'd
be open to. End quote.And this is why he gets called a
rhino a lot of times, folks. And I'm not saying that this is
(08:48):
bad because he likes to compromise.I think compromise is important in a government
like ours. It's that he compromisesso easily that people are trying to figure
out why on earth he even identifiesas a Republican. He just doesn't like
where the party is going. Hedoesn't identify with a lot of the stuff
that is happening, and they're not. He obviously seems to be more closely
(09:13):
identifying with what many people would callthe uniparty than anything. So we're going
to keep close tabs on what happenshere. A lot of the more right
leaning senators, like the Ted Cruisersof the world, have spoken up and
said, hey, this is important. Our southern border is a mess,
this is a crisis. My Orcisis the one that has blood on his
(09:33):
hands here, and if the President'snot going to do something about it,
we will. Unfortunately, Republicans don'thave the majority in the Senate, so
they would need some help from Democratsto do this. It's certainly not going
to happen. However, if thereis a debate that has had that might
give us a little bit of soundbites, a little bit of juice as
to why this matters, as towhy this is an important factor, and
(09:58):
what can be done out of this, Maybe something positive comes out of it,
besides just removing some guy in office, so another guy probably just gets
thrown in there that nobody likes,and then I'm sure there will be other
people that say, we'll impeach thatguy too. Joe Biden doesn't want to
do anything about this, and you'replaying this game until November, even if
this did happen, if you havethoughts on it, four oh two five
(10:18):
five eight eleven ten is the numberfour oh two five five eight eleven ten.
It's three eighteen. We'll come backwith plenty more about this on the
Way on news Radio eleven ten KFAB. Emery's Songer on news Radio eleven ten
KFAB Europe and the Final Countdown.What an iconic tune? I mean?
(10:39):
Is there a more iconic synthesizer partin the history of music? Dan Lana,
Yeah, it just you know whatit is right away? Maybe jump
Mayban Halen Dent, Dent, Dent, Dent. That's a pretty iconic sens
part. Yeah, something like that. Though. We were talking also about
running Steve's on our phone line offour h two five five fatal Living Steve,
(11:00):
Thanks for the call today. What'son your mind? Hey? Al
right, how you doing just wantto let you know that we've got a
really important walk upcoming the twenty fourthand twenty fifth of August. Unfortunately it's
probably too late for you guys toqualify for it. We just had our
qualifier last weekend. This is thefifty Mile March. We actually leave Lincoln
(11:22):
State Capital on the twenty fourth andarrive in La Vista on the twenty fifth.
We're walking twenty two hours straight.Wow, and you may ask yourself,
why would anyone want to do that? Right? Yeah, we're raising
awareness for homeless veterans and veterans withPTSD. You probably don't know it,
(11:43):
but there was on average twenty twoveterans a day that take their own lives
and to help raise awareness of thatand to raise funds for eventually building a
village of tiny houses for these veterans, a place for them to go to
and get retrained and come back intolife. We're all committed to raising a
minimum of twenty five hundred bucks,so we can use anybody support that will
(12:09):
support us fifty mile March. Lookit up. We started out with five
not take that back, six walkersfive years ago and we've got over one
hundred and fifty qualifiers this year.Wow. Well that's incredible, Steve.
Well, I appreciate that. We'llmake sure that people go check that out.
Fifty mile walk on Google and youcan find the info there. Fifty
mile march on Google. Yes,Steve, fifty mile march awesome. See
(12:31):
you appreciate the information in what youguys do. Appreciate you calling in all
right, everythink man? Yeah?For sure, man, that's that's powerful
stuff. Would you do that evenfor a good cost? Twenty two miles
straight? Twenty two miles straight?It was twenty two hours, twenty two
hours, fifty miles fifty miles yeah, man, h that's a lot.
(12:52):
I wonder how much I could getthrough. I think after about ten miles,
I'd be my legs will be tired, and I'd be hungry for a
taco. I mean, you haveto eat in there somewhere. Yeah.
I don't know about eating a tacothough other rest breaks. Do I get
a rest break fifty miles and twentytwo hours? Probably not? Well,
(13:15):
I mean to go to the bathroomand eat probably, yeah, but you're
not going to sleep, so youprobably just have to go fifty within twenty
two hours, So maybe you couldspace it out, but it's not a
race. You're not gonna like dothe tortoise and the hair thing where the
hair like runs some and then sleepsand then knows that he can just get
(13:35):
back in and get done in thetimeframe. That's half a mile a little
a little faster paced than thirty minutesa half mile about right. Yeah,
And I mean that's no big deal. But you're talking about walking fifty miles.
Yeah. It's a lot different thanjust, you know, going on
a walk and being like, oh, yeah, I could do that.
You can walk a mile pretty easilyin twenty minutes. Vanessa Carlton's like,
(13:56):
I do that in my sleep.Make them away downtown. That's it's not
the line you should have used there. Ah yeah, I don't know.
Come run this five k with meme, Yeah, Maverick, run this
Saturday, come on, it'll befun. It's only three point one miles.
(14:22):
Yeah, And there's no way Icould run that whole thing. I'd
have to walk a little bit,okay, so I might have to walk
a lot of it. I don'teven know. Well, there's a five
k walk. Why don't you justdo that too? Is there an ambulance
nearby. I'm sure they have somebodyyou want to you want to hear.
You want to hear my Jeff Foxworthyjoke. But it's about a triathlon.
Yeah, fire away. If themedical tent was three times the size the
(14:46):
registration tent, you might be ata triathlon. I'd like to do a
triathlon one day, wouldn't you.It'd be fun. You get on a
bike, Like which part of thatis first? It's it's a swimming first,
right, it's a swimming and thenthe bike or is it the bike
and then the swimming. Would makessense that you'd want to do something like
(15:07):
the bike after the swimming, thenyou dry off with the bike. Yeah,
you don't want to get wet inthe middle of that. So the
swimming and then the bike and thenthe running. I think it might be
best if you do swimming, thenrunning, then bike, because you don't
want to be sitting on a soggyseat. Yeah. Now I think the
running's last. I'm pretty sure youcross the finish line running. Ah.
(15:28):
So there there's that those Ironman competitions. There was one of those into one
that I watched. Those guys arecrazy. That's even like longer. It's
like it's like a day of ragbrayon a bike, running an actual marathon
and swimming a couple of miles incold water at like the break of dawn.
Like what There's an adrenaline rush tothe race, and I understand it,
(15:54):
but man, that is hard.Those guys, those guys are insane.
If you are a marathoner or atriathl honor or a person who's done
one of the Iron Man's, I'dlove to talk to you actually, like
we're just talking about doing a fiveK. I mean, come on,
these guys are crazy. You cancall in four two five five eight eleven
(16:15):
ten if you got any of thatexperience, love to chat with you about
it. Four two five five eighteleven ten. We'll also talk about what
Secretary of State Anthony Blinkin had tosay about the Israel and Iran situation and
what the United States kind of thinksabout that on a public relations standpoint.
We'll talk about that later too,and there's going to be trivia later in
(16:36):
the show as well. Stick aroundall sorts of fun on news Radio eleven
ten KFAB. Emery songa on newsRadio eleven ten k FAB. You get
a chance. Yeah, it's thechance part of it. We have to
say legally because if we don't,then we could get sued by people.
Right, you don't necessarily get itautomatically. No, but you don't win
(16:59):
it if you don't play it,you know what I mean. Yeah,
you gotta play to win, youknow what I mean. And if you
don't play, then you can't win, right, Yeah, all right,
Well anyway, put that, Uhyeah, open up your browser choice,
he's go to KFB dot come anddo that. Pop open Netscape type in
(17:22):
kfab dot com. They don't makeNetscape anymore. That's certainly not supported.
Double click on Clippy if you haveany questions. I don't think that's how
Clippy only is available when using Microsoftthings? Was it? What was it?
Was? XP? Microsoft XP?I feel like he was around even
before that maybe maybe XP actually whateverwhatever the one? Yeah, that's probably
(17:48):
right. I was right clicking onClippy and turning him into a puppy dog
right away. Yeah. Yeah,Clippy was the least favorite of my my
friends because they had like six ofthem. Also, when did that go
away? Because Clippy? I don'tthink is there anymore? You know,
you open up your Microsoft word.He's not there anymore. Yeah, I
(18:10):
wonder where he is. Rest inpeace, Clippy. It moved him to
a different department. You know,Clippy the paper clip office assistant. Ah.
If you look it up, it'slike, ah, it had nothing
to do with Windows, did everythingto do with Microsoft's Office two thousand.
I think it looked like Yeah,yeah, rest in peace. I'm glad
(18:37):
that you brought that up and putme into a depressing mood of nostalgia.
Yeah, where's Clippy with a fiveo'clock shadow and it? You know,
he's a paper clip. He can'tgrow beard, I know, but I
want the Clippy to come back witha five o'clock shadow and an attitude.
I don't think that's how that's gonnawork. But have a like spelling error
and he's just like, you didit wrong. Let me fix that for
(19:00):
you. Do I have to doeverything around here? Yeah? Who do
you think you are? I'm Clippyand you think you're better than me?
Yes? I love it. Passive, aggressive, angry at the world.
Clippy. We need this, No, we don't need is a strong word.
Need is not the word that we'relooking more. All right, it's
(19:21):
three forty, So put in theword bank to kfab dot com. And
that's a long winded way of saying, you have a chance to win a
thousand dollars and we want to havewinners on this show. We have done
pretty well in previous contests. Wewant to do well again. So go
ahead and put that word in.You get the money, we get to
celebrate the fact that one of ourlisteners won the money. That's what we
want to do. We talked aboutwhat was going on in the United States.
(19:42):
You have the Majorcis articles of impeachmentthat have been handed over by the
House to the Senate. We willsee if there is a debate that is
being had on that, or ifthe Democrats decide, nah, we're just
gonna table it. We'll And thenyou have you throw in the Donald Trump
(20:07):
circus in New York, which weknow. I still am not convinced.
I want to meet these jurors.They say they have three jurors lined up
that they have been able to select. How many people get drafted for this
thing? By the way, like, if you're trying to find twelve jurors
that you can trust, how manypeople do you have to call to find
(20:33):
twelve good people? That will beunbiased, and you have confidence that they're
going to make a decision that makessense, that you can trust their judgment
and they're not going to be biasedin this How many I'm looking it up,
it's got to be like one hundred. You have to be able to
send the letters out to a tonof people, and then if they select
twelve people, the rest of themcan go home. And this ain't nothing.
(20:57):
This is a presidential candidate. Itin court, A fairly normal jury
pool is around fifty people to getto the twelve or whatever number that they're
looking for. Right now, I'llhold on a second. Yeah, boy,
that was a question answered on thewebsite Quora. Now here's an article
(21:18):
from thirty minutes ago from the NewYork Times. A pool of hundreds will
be will be in the in therunning to whittle it down to twelve jurors.
It will be a pool of hundredsfor this specific trial. Well,
it probably needs to be. Theyonly got three of them so far,
(21:42):
and we need, we need toknow everything. I wish they'd make little
like trading cards with these jurors,you know, like give me some fast
facts I need to know. Ineed specifically to know that what exactly is
happening here, because there's no wayyou can tell me specifically under any circumstance.
(22:03):
There's no way you can tell me. These people are just at like
going like out of nowhere. Justyeah, I have no idea who Donald
Trump is, or I have noidea what this is about, or I
don't have any political opinions about DonaldTrump or any of the policies that he's
put into place. He's a formerpresident. So theoretically, if you were
(22:25):
in the know, would that disqualifyyou under normal circumstances? It has to.
Well, because if this was acase where let's say it's some just
criminal case and you know the defendant, then you're not going to get on
the jury, absolutely not, oryou know of the defendant. I mean
in smaller cases, like cases thatlocally might have gotten a lot of attention.
Let's say something happening in Council Bluffsand they move it out of Potawatamee
(22:48):
County and they move it to likeDennison or something, right, they move
it to Autubon, right, howdifferent? Like you have to you have
to tell You cannot tell me thatthese people that they have selected have no
knowledge of this case or have notbeen in some way guided by the media
(23:11):
to think about something one way orthe other about Donald Trump. There's just
no way do they quiz them aboutlike how often they watch certain news channels,
because if they if they say,yeah, I watch the news all
the time, here's my favorite newschannel, that should disqualify them. You're
over exposed. You already know toomuch, right, Mark's on our phone
(23:34):
line of four two, five,five, eight eleven ten, Mark,
do you have some more info onthis for us? Sure? They go
through one hundred per days show up, They have fourteen days to get the
jury set one day show up.They first ask them are you biased against
(23:55):
this? They literally just ask themthat, and they're allowed to say,
I don't want to be here becauseI can't. I'm not but I am
not independent and I hate Trump orI love Trump. And then once they
get past that, then they havea forty two forty two question questionnaire and
(24:15):
I said that right, And thenafter that then the defense and the prosecution
have the option to ask them questionsdirectly and then kick them off. So
they basically ended up with three percent. So that means to get they have
to get twelve plus six alterners,so they actually have to get eighteen.
(24:37):
So in theory, that's going totake you know, six days. Well
they say they have six. Nowthe news is reporting six have been selected
so far, and that's but theydid this yesterday too, so you're still
on three percent per day for howeverlong they're going to be doing this.
So I just want to know whothese people are because I just have no
idea how you would find like peopleenough, people that have no biases toward
(25:02):
this particular man, this president.This is crazy to me. Yeah,
what's crazy is they're actually allowing themto just say, oh, this is
inconvenient for me, which if youdo that nom on, it doesn't work.
Yeah, well no, that's thepoint. Everybody'd say that, and
then you'd have no jury. AllRight, Mark, appreciate the call,
Thanks for giving me. All Right, we'll get to more calls. We'll
(25:22):
get to more opinions. You gotopinions on this Trump thing? You can
four two five five eight eleven ten. Four oh two five five eight eleven
ten. We'll talk to your nextnews radio eleven ten KFAB and Marie Summon
on NewsRadio eleven ten KFAB four ohtwo five five eight eleven ten. Four
oh two five five eight eleven tenis the number, and you can also
email me I Marie at kfab dotcom. Let's get to the phones.
(25:45):
We got Marvin on the line.Marvin, what's going on with you today?
Well, my brother in law knowspeople high up in the government,
and so they put this camera onme and it goes on the internet and
it just follows me around because ofthe technology that they got, and I'm
sick of it. What do youmean there's a camera following you around?
(26:10):
There's a spy camera following me around, and the government's doing it and everybody
knows it and nobody wants to sayanything. And I just went to Burger
Mercy Hospital and they wouldn't treat me, and that kind of stuff is going
on. Well, okay, Marvin, I guess I would need a lot
(26:30):
more information to know exactly about yourspecific situation. I have to ask,
though, So you're being followed bya camera where I mean, like,
are you seeing it? Do yousee the camera satellite? No, you
can't satellite the satellite camera following youaround? Yes, the government has a
satellite camera and they're following me aroundbecause my bron in law knows a general.
(26:52):
He's dead now, but he knowsa general in the government. And
they put had this on me foryears. But why, like what what
do you know that they want tospy on you for? Like, what
what do you have against them?Well? Because because I pissed my burner
law. But I can't say hisname. But okay is Bob? Okay,
so so you anger? You angeredBob? And uh so the government
(27:17):
wants to spy on you. Whatwere you going to do? They've been
doing it for years? But whatwere you going to do? Marvin?
Were you going to like, doyou have blackmail on this guy or something?
Were you going to report him tothe police or something? The police
won't do nothing. This is thisThey won't do anything. It's kind of
like Trump getting all this stuff.It's from the government and so they're above
the police. The police aren't goingto do anything. Okay, Well,
(27:41):
but how how would they even know? Though you're saying a satellite is spying
on you? How do you know? You can't say? It goes it
goes on the internet. It's recordingwherever I go, and it goes on
the internet. Okay, where doyou find you look onto it if they
find it, okay, but wheredo you find it? It's I don't
know. I wish I knew whereit was. I still don't to this
(28:02):
day. Okay. So but peoplehave told me, but they won't tell
me where it is. Okay,But Marvin, that doesn't make sense.
So if you can't see it,how are you sure that they're they're spying
on you? Because people gave mea lot of trouble because of it.
People are giving you trouble because theyknow that you're being spied on, but
you don't know where to find thevideo. No, they won't tell me
(28:25):
where it is. They just keepharassing me. It's interesting, it's interesting,
Marvin. Well, I wish Icould help you. I'm very curious.
Is to No, you think I'mcrazy? But this is really happening
to me. It's been on mefor years. So okay, Well,
is there something that I can maybedo for you? Marvin? Like somebody
(28:47):
investigate, I guess, but youjust said nope. Like the people who
would investigate don't care. They don'tdo anything about it. The police,
Well, the police don't do anything. No, Okay, So who do
I call then? Marvin, Like, you do you want me to call
to investigate? I mean you wantme to investigate. You can't tell me
where to find the information, soI mean, like, I don't I
don't know how I can help.Well, is it on there? I
(29:11):
just wanted to get it out there. Okay? Well is this like an
awareness? Like maybe maybe? Doyou think I'm getting spied on right now?
Do you think the government is spyingon me? No, I'm not
crazy. It's not on you.Do you think I'm crazy? I'm not
crazy. This is really happening tome, and it's unfortunate. If I
tell the police, still think thesame way and lock me up. So
(29:34):
I'm not crazy, Marvin. JobMarvin. I'm just wondering, how do
you know? How do you knowthat you're being spied on? People have
watched me on this, just likethey watched social media. It's on social
media something. Why would they wantto watch Why would they want to watch
you? Marvin? No disrespect,But what are you doing that they're interested
(29:56):
in watching? What you're doing everyday? A lab of some illegal activities
going on in your basement or something. Oh, I'm not doing anything.
I don't know why they want towatch me. But they've been watching me
and they won't tell me where itis. My neighbors that I live by
and watch me, and they won'ttell me where it is. They have
your neighbors specifically told you that theydo. Have you asked them, Marvin,
(30:18):
how do you know? Marvin?You should? You should ask them,
like, okay, so like writedown all the stuff that you do
on a day and and then andthen like ask them quiz them on what
they watched you do and see ifthey could name the stuff that you do,
because I bet they probably do.They do that all the time.
That's pretty wild, Marvin. Iwish I could have, but it's happening
(30:38):
to me and there's nothing I cando about it because nobody wants to help
me. Well, I don't know, But what can we do to help?
Marvin? I guess I'm I'm whatdo you want me to do?
Investigated? But how I don't evenknow where to stop? I don't know
how. Like you're telling you're tellingme about all the information that I that
(31:00):
you allegedly have, and I'm tryingto figure out, like I'm asking all
the questions I can to try tohelp Investigating Marvin, all you're telling me
is you know, don't know whereto look. You don't know where to
find this stuff. I know it'son media somewhere on social media. So
what do I do search Marvin spicam? Like if I if I search
(31:21):
you, if I go to Marvinspy cam, will that just pop up
for me? Like? I,Oh no, it's not that easy.
I've already tried. I went tothe library and I've tried to find it
and it's impossible to find. Okay. Well, if it's impossible to find
that, I don't know why anybody'syou on how your neighbors are finding it,
because it can't be impossible if they'refinding it and watching you. Okay,
(31:42):
Well, Marvin, if you findout more information about why exactly this
is happening, I'd love to hearmore and maybe I could help you out.
But as far as uh as faras this moment right now, I'm
not sure I can do anything.So try to have a great day,
and I appreciate you listening to ourshow. All right? Thanks? Uh
any you care to comment on this? You want to help me close this
(32:05):
hour out? Is there anything Ican do here? No? I I
don't know. I just we're outof time. He's ready to eleve it
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