All Episodes

June 26, 2024 81 mins
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
Matt Case is back in our lawstudios. I'm actually doing the show from
a different location, de Moin goingkind of a little back and forth.
Today did a De Moin show inthe Moin, which is weird because usually
I do the De Moin Show inOmaha and now I flip flopped. Hey
Matt, you're there? Can youcan you read me? Are you in
the Yeah? How you doing today? Hey? I'm doing pretty good,

(00:22):
you know, just keeping track ofthis weather with that severe storm possibility.
Yeah, can you tell me alittle bit more about that, because you
know, the biggest fear that Ihave is that we're going to have to
talk about the weather a whole lotwhen I'm like, not even in the
studio. I don't think. Well, the biggest possibility for severe storms starts
around six pm and goes to aboutmidnight. So what you're saying is I

(00:45):
should be in the clear. Youshould be, no, because I'm going
back to Omaha tonight, so youknow, like I shouldn't have to worry
about, you know, doing onair all that, you know, just
telling everybody all the stuff that's goingdown. Yeah, I mean I wouldn't
anticipate it. We'll see what weget it's right now. My maya handy
handy dandy weather list out here saysa fifty percent chance of rain and thunderstorms,

(01:07):
and some of those could be severe. The biggest window here is six
pm to midnight could bring hail.Wind Tornadoes are possible as well. And
because this is all due to acold front that's moving through, it's gonna
be moving south southeast, don't weDo you feel like you've learned a lot
more about fronts and all that stuffthis year. Yeah, you know,

(01:27):
it's it's interesting. It makes sense. Of course it's moving south southeast because
that cooler air from the north iscoming in and cooling things down. It's
just interesting. Yesterday we got intothe hundreds. Today the heat index is
in the hundreds. Again. Wesaw a heat index of one hundred and
fourteen, I think is where ittopped out yesterday. Today we are in
a heat advisory with a heat indexthat could top out at at about one

(01:51):
oh six. However, if youlook a couple days from now, Thursday,
the high on Thursday at this pointis seventy eight. Rainy and seventy
eight. It's gonna almost feel likea fall day, you know. What
this is. Gosh, if youwant to know something about Nebraska and Omaha
and Iowa this time of the yearweatherwise, if you have somebody that has

(02:15):
lived here before, I mean,this spring summer is just like show them,
like on a weekly basis, what'sthe craziest weather thing that we had
going on? And it would beanything from insane winds to tornado activity and
severe weather to potential flooding everywhere becauseof a lot of heavy rain, not
even necessarily severe storage. There's alot of heavy rain. And then you

(02:38):
throw in Gosha, what was itone hundred and fourteen yesterday eat index.
So yeah, I mean there yougo. That tells you all you need
to know and not to be remisshere. Today also is a day of
super deals as well. Now,Matt Case, I have been told and
I have looked at this website,the super deals is happening and it is
not to be messed with. Thisis like, this is no joke.

(03:00):
This is a legitimate thing. You'retalking super deals. These are like super
duper deals. I mean, ifI name this, it would have been
super duper duper deals. But thatwas too many. There was just too
many syllables. For these people.But have you looked at this thing?
Is there a couple of things thatyou've been excited about, like purchasing yourself
for telling your friends like, hey, you need to load up on this
stuff. I'm looking at it now, and there is and you're talking about

(03:21):
deals that are up to eighty percentoff, So no, that's you know,
that's just a dollar short of free. Basically, Hey, yeah,
so I'm looking at this. Thereis a you know, five days,
four nights at a luxury resort inCancun for travel. And again you look
at the deal and it shows likethe actual full price, and they're they're

(03:43):
like, the deal is like fiftynine bucks a night with limited quantity,
and obviously that's not going to helpyou fly down there. But fifty nine
dollars fifty nine dollars which includes yourmeals and drinks for four nights and five
days. I mean, just gothere, investigate this. You might be
like, you know what, theflight, I'm saving enough money on this
thing that I have on the superdeals site that I don't even need to

(04:05):
worry about that, you know whatI'm saying, right, I mean,
what are we talking about here?Right? Anyway? So How can they
find it? Matt? You tellthe people, Well, you just go
to kfab dot com and then you'llsee if you scroll a little bit there,
you'll see the little tab that sayssuper Day of super Deals. Get
up to eighty percent off on someincredible deals. Just click that right there.
It'll take you right to the siteand then from there you can just

(04:27):
peruse everything. I mean, it'sthese are the kind of deals that span
the gamut. Here you can dealson trips, deals on local restaurants and
bars, deals for your car.And they're running out of quantities in some
of these, So you need toget moving if you want to make sure
that you can secure one of these. You know what I'm saying. Yep,
So there you go, Matt.Also, something that we've talked about.

(04:51):
Do you know what I'm about totell you? You know what I'm
about to say? Did you seethat baseball game last night? Oh?
Yeah, I gotta buy something,don't I? You gotta buy something?
What do you gotta buy? Igotta buy a box of oatmeal cream pies.
Uh? Yeah, that's right,you do, don't you? Ah?
Yeah? Okay, Well that's becauseTennessee pulled it off. And got

(05:14):
the victory last night. Uh,first ever national championship for the school.
It was fun to see the celebrationand most importantly for me, oatmeal cream
pie. I'm gonna get a boxowmens cream pies. This is a great
day. And now it's like theEuros right like like now we're like loaned
up on the Euros and we're payingattention to that. I lost Croatia yesterday.
There's no way they make it through. Yeah, uh, have you

(05:39):
been paying attention today? I haven't, but I can't. I can check
in. Yeah, I'm gonna.I'm gonna check in real quick. I
had France, right, yeah,France and Poland tied at one, and
then Austria actually beat the Netherlands threeto two. Did either of us have
the Netherlands? I did? Ihad the Netherlands. Yeah, Okay,
I think they're still through. Ithink they've already clinched going through. But
you know, pretty interesting those friendsshoes they play with, you know,

(06:00):
yeah, they come on, that'snot legal. They need the studs there.
But yeah, anyway, I thinkbut that's that was a bad result
for Croatia for their last chance toget in. So but yeah, so
there's another box about milk cream pieson the line for that too, So
time is gonna tell on that.Speaking of which, we're going to talk
about a bunch of different stuff todaythroughout I have, you know, like

(06:25):
a couple of things on the docket. Most importantly, though, I want
to get to first, is thegag order on former President Trump because janmer
Sewan he was asked to lift thegag order. Because we're still in the
procedural phase of this, we'll tellyou about the details of exactly what did
happen and what it's going to looklike, especially two days away from a

(06:46):
debate that's coming up on news Radioeleven ten KFAB. On news Radio eleven
ten kfab. If you want tocall in, I'm not actually in Omaha.
I'm doing the show from Des Moines, and so I can't see the
phone lines lighten up, Matt,can you can you affirm to me and
the listeners that there's still a chancefor them to get onto the show through

(07:08):
your doubly hard work now that I'mnot in the studio today, Yes,
I press the button that on XESout the phones or whatever you would call
it, puts x's on my screen. So that's what I call it.
You can call, I will answeryour call, I will say hello,
we will discuss what you want totalk about. Well, well okay,
yeah, yeah, okay, Solet's tell people, because I'm always telling

(07:28):
people more and more people who've nevercalled in to call in, what do
they expect and what do they needto have ready when they call in?
Well, you just need to havesomething you want to talk about. Sometimes
people just want to talk to me, and that's fine, we can talk
all day. But well you can't. I can't have you super distracted it
right there, you know. Right, And for as long as you're on
the phone with people that don't wantto talk to me on the air,

(07:49):
there could be other people on thephone lines that are just ringing and ringing
and ringing because you know, theywant to talk to you. Yeah,
so let's let's do a practice run. Let's sup, Can we do that?
Yeah? All right? All right? So ring ring, ring,
ring, ring ring? Hello?Is that how you answer the phone?
Hello? Who's this? Oh it'syou? Huh yeah, yeah, that's
not how this is gonna work.I told you I have it by Friday.

(08:11):
Hey, don't you get lippy withme? I said Friday. Uh,
the Exciting Life of Matt Cave's No. But seriously, you're not one
of the creditors that are. No, I am not. I'm a listener.
I'm a KFAB listener. Okay,my bad, We'll try again,
Ring Ring, Ring, Ring,Kfab. Could I get your first name
please? Yeah, Emory Emory up. Coincidentally, the host of the show's

(08:33):
name is Emory. Would you liketo talk to Emory Emery? Uh?
Yes, I would, and Iwould like to talk to him about Judge
one mer Shaun in this gag order. Ah. Perfect, I'll put that
in your comment line and save yourfire for when you go on air,
sir. Please hold and that's howthat's done. And then you'll hear me
say, hey, Emory, you'reon the air with Emory's anger, and
then buy a boom. By thebang we're talking because Matti hit the button

(08:54):
that puts it on on the show, right, Matt, Yeah, I'll
do it. Yeah, there yougo. All right, So we speaking
of gag order, I would Bythe way, I should give the phone
number after I do all that,right, Like that's kind of like the
whole the whole thing. Four htwo five five eight eleven ten four h
two five five eight eleven ten isthe phone number you want to call in.
We can do that. I loveto talk to you, Judge Wan

(09:16):
Vershan by the way, and thisTrump versus New York or New York versus
Trump, or however you want tocall it. It was. The gag
order was a pretty big deal throughoutthis thing because what was the gag order.
The gag order was imposed with theidea that he couldn't speak specifically about
certain potential witnesses, he couldn't speakabout the case in certain ways, and

(09:39):
every time he violated the gag order, either to the media, on his
campaign website or on truth Social whichdid happen, he would be fined one
thousand dollars. The idea was oncehe was penalized one thousand dollars for each
time that happened, which eventually Ithink became a total of like nine or
ten thousand dollars, I mean,complete peanuts to Donald Trump. But the
idea was, Okay, now he'sofficially been warned if he were to do

(10:00):
that again, then the option becomeswe could throw him in jail. Now
we talked like this is kind ofa weird little out that they could have.
Obviously they didn't do this, atleast to this point. But if
Donald Trump decided he was going topush the boundaries on that a little bit
further even after that, then hewould be potentially thrown in jail. And
more and more people, I think, and again correct me if I'm wrong,

(10:24):
more and more people probably would havesupported Trump if they saw the DOJ
in some way throwing him in jail. They don't even care what it's for.
That would have been an interesting strategyplay. It's kind of like scoring
an own goal, if you will, if the tiebreaker scenarios in soccer,
like allowed you to guarantee advancing versusyou know, vice versa. It's pretty

(10:48):
pretty radical, pretty wild, right. So from the standpoint of you know,
me, as a again, justa guy in the cheap seats like
the rest of y'all, I waswondering if the geygoder would stay on for
the debate on Thursday and to seeif Donald Trump actually was going to push

(11:09):
the envelope when asked, and howCNN handled that, remember Jake Tapper especially,
but also Dana Bash. I mean, CNN is a very left leaning
news organization. These days, youdon't need to watch for very long to
understand that. You can try ifyou feel like you're a moderate, you
can try to frame it as thembeing pretty moderate. But from all angles,

(11:30):
at least in the analysis of thebiases that these networks have, they
fall left. I mean they're definitelyleft. They may not be as left
as like an n MSNBC or someof those other public type scenarios that are
trying to service a very select andsmall group of people that love to be
angry about things that the Republicans do, even if they're just trying to exist.

(11:54):
But to me, there is likethis this idea that they would set
him up up to try to baithim into saying things that could violate the
gag order because moderators have the abilityto do that right and there's no crowd.
There's not going to be a crowdthere to like boo the moderator when
they ask a question, which Ithink, you know, like I think
there is some merit to the factthat not having a live audience. I

(12:16):
don't mind, Like generally speaking,I don't mind, but there is something
that you want the people to beheld accountable on the stage, whether it's
the candidates or the moderator. Ifall of a sudden there's a lot of
booing, which is pretty unusual.Usually it's just one side cheering or the
other side cheering, depending on howbig the crowd is for which candidate.

(12:37):
But if somebody's booing, like wesaw with Vivike Ramaswami and Nicki Haley,
when Viveke brought Nicki's family and herdaughter into like the debate by talking about
her TikTok account, everybody started booing. I mean that, I mean Vivike
basically as soon as that happened,he had to address what the people are
saying. You know, if JakeTapper starts asking questions about gag orders and

(12:58):
his New York trial, that's totallyyou could say that it's an attempt to
get Donald Trump baited to violate thegag order, which he would still be
under. Now. I say allthis now that there is a little bit
of a lift on the gag orderahead of Thursday's debate from Judge Jan Mersham,
and the idea of the gagoder initiallywas he couldn't make or direct others

(13:20):
to make public statements about the witnessesin the case with regard to their participation
or potential participation, or about thecouncil in the case other than Alvin Bragg,
or about the court staff, thea staff or family members of staff.
But according to Judge Wan Mershon,he says the gagolder is partially lifted
now and he is able to speakabout the witnesses and the jurors. So

(13:43):
this I think is important because hecan't talk about an individual prosecutors, any
of the court staff, are theirfamily members, and that's still in place.
But I think the big problem wouldhave been trying to talk about either
witnesses or with the jury he said, or all this stuff in this debate,
because it's going to come up,it is going to be asked by

(14:05):
the CNN moderators. He is goingto have to address it in some way,
and this is going to at leastbe a little bit of a leniency
on the gag order. So ifhe does have to talk about it,
or he elects to bring it uphimself and try to kind of take it
on head on, then he's gotthe ability to speak about it in a

(14:26):
little bit more freer way, ifthat makes sense, without having to come
back before his sentencing on July eleventh, and all of a sudden be like,
yeah, this that the other thingright and the sentencing, then there's
going to be an appeal. There'sa long process left. I wouldn't imagine
that the guygoer's going to be fullylifted for a while. But ahead of
the first debate, I think itwas important that Judge one Mershon finally was

(14:46):
like, you know what, ifthis debate is going to be anything for
the American public to pay attention to, we can't be having one of the
candidates basically have handcuffs when talking aboutone of the certain subjects that is going
to come up to that person andthat good. The same time, we'll
see exactly how Ce and N handlesit and what you know, Donald Trump
has to say about it, becauseobviously that is going to be a talking

(15:07):
point that the Left is going touse for the rest of the campaign,
is that Donald Trump is convicted felon. He was charged thirty four counts of
false fying business records. He isguilty of every last, single one of
them. They're going to say thatover and over and over again, because
that's the angle to get Joe Bidenreelected is well, at least he's not
a criminal, and that because wecan't talk about the economy, we can't
talk about immigration, we can't talkabout foreign policy, we can't talk about

(15:28):
peace through strength, we can't talkabout energy prices, we can't talk about
energy plans. There's nothing we cantalk about that Joe Biden has done in
the last five years that's important tothe United States that he can lean on.
All he's got to do is say, well, be afraid that America
will never will cease to exist asyou know it if Donald Trump's reelected.
That that's the campaign slogan, beafraid of Donald Trump. Vote Democrat,

(15:48):
don't even pay no attention to thelast four years. And this is the
ammunition they're going to have, andthey're going to try to bury that into
the skulls of every single possible voterthat might not have made up their mind.
And yet it is right now totwenty seven. We are going to
come back and just a little bit. If you want to call in with
your thoughts, you can't four ltwo, five to five, eight,
eleven, ten, It's news radioeleven ten. Kfab Emery Sunger on news

(16:15):
Radio eleven ten kfab A couple peoplecalling in. One listener wanted to Uh,
she didn't want to go on theair, but she wanted to talk
about how frustrated she was about thecrossroads. Mall. Oh that in me
area. It's it's not an openphone line Friday. But that's an interesting

(16:36):
conversation. We had it a littlebit a few months ago, didn't we
We talked about they're not doing anythingwith it, right, Yeah, they're
just kind of She was frustrated atthe at the lack of progress, and
she just can't believe that they wereall just standing around letting it happen.
You know, what can we do? We'll protest to Yeah, so what
does she suggest? I don't know. She might send you an email about

(16:56):
it. I tried to get herto go on the air, but she
didn't want to. All right,well, what do you want to do
with it? Oh? That's right. We talked about this, and what
did I say at the time?Do you say, like I said,
a living history farm? Oh?Yeah, that's right, that's right.
Yeah, another galaxy brain idea.I don't hate that one though, it's

(17:17):
just too close to the highway.I don't hate it's too close to Dodge.
I think it'ld be fun, andI think that it would be the
whole time, dude, the entiretime, if this was a legitimate living
history farm and you're gonna put itthere where Crossroads is. Yeah, and
it's sitting there on Dodge and whatis that seventy second yep, it's just
like sitting right there. Realistically,every single person that's in there working or

(17:37):
doing something would just be staring atthe cars in the airplanes going by.
See. But that's where you builda really big wall, you know,
like the Truman Show. Build awall. Oh yeah, build a Now
we have to talk about the buildingof a wall. Build a build a
giant wall. Paint trees along thewall, make it look like it fits
right into like the background of theWizard of Oz, yes, or like
or like the Truman Show, orlike the Village for a spoiler alert apologies,

(18:00):
but and you know what it couldbe is it could be a living
history farm but also a place forwayward boys and girls. Wayward boys and
girls? Are you exiling troublemakers inour society? No? Live in this
new found occupation zone that used tobe called the Crossroads Mall. That you
have turned into a siphoned off,sequestered living history farm thing that is living

(18:25):
in the eighteen seventies. Yeah,go back to the eighteen seventies and live
like they did, no gadgets,no social media, just you know,
churn and butter and feeding the cowsand I don't know, petting the squirrels.
Whatever you do back then in theeighteen hundreds to have fun and rehabilitate
yourself. And every time that aparent drives by there and they've got a

(18:47):
child in their car that is youknow, asking for this and that and
not listening, and they can justsay, well, look at that,
we're by the living history farm again. You know, they've got some occupancies.
So it's not a place to goto be fun. It's literally like
an encampment of juvenile delinquents that arealso sequestered from the rest of society while
being in a very public intersection atseventy second in dog Yeah, and maybe

(19:11):
the kids run the place, youknow, like it's only kids now.
Now it sounds like it's the firstAnglo Saxon settlement in America in Jamestown.
It's like, yeah, just sendover the dregs of society. They'll figure
it out. If they die,it's no big deal. It's it would
be Omaha's little we'll call it LittleAustralia. That's what we'll call it,
Little Australia. Yeah, it's perfectLittle Australia in the middle of Omaha.

(19:37):
We'll check in from time to time. All looks like dysentery is rampant Australia.
Oh oh, it's just getting worseand worse and worse. Yikes,
that is that? That's rough?Oh man? Okay, so what we
do know is that you are notgoing to be in charge of what happens
over there at crossroads. Mall.All right, it's this city's lost.

(19:57):
But if that's the way it is. It started out as an idea that
I could like, Okay, sohow are we going to make a living
history farm near a busy intersection withautomobiles and somehow make it seem legitimate?
And then it just got further andfurther into the idea of basically in encampment
of juvenile delinquents who are now selfgoverning, with the idea that more than

(20:21):
Lincolns could just be dropped off ifthey're misbehaving and nobody ever see them again.
And it's an incredibly public area,right, Like, I mean,
everybody would see that this is goingon and nobody would care. God make
for great reality TV too. Sothere's your plug for how to make it
a financial stream? What's the termfor the city, you know, a
money maker for the city. Okay, okay, Now all of a sudden,

(20:42):
I'm interested again. Yeah, okay, okay. So so we get
a camera crew though, and there'sa chance maybe to do the TV would
be decent. This is like likeHunger Games. Rob emails it and says,
Lord of the Flies at Crossroads.I mean that's what it is,

(21:03):
right, Yeah, basically you justrecycled the plot of Lord of the Flies.
You just put it at crossroads.Tim emails in and says they should
put Las Vegas type casino at crossroads. Well with a movement that's coming up
here, I mean, like,is that a bad idea? Isn't that
like the perfect spot for one?Am I wrong for thinking that's like a
great spot for a casino centrally located? For sure? Joe says regarding leaving

(21:29):
History. Did producer boy say petthey're squirrels? Squirrel petting was outlawed in
the eighteen seventies. I had noidea. Come on, producer boy,
come on, everybody knew squirrel pettingwas outlawed in the eighteen seventies. People
were catching what was the thing?They were catching tuberculosis from the squirrels.
Oh really, yeah? I thowtthat was transmitted, wasn't it. I'd

(21:51):
left have fallen asleep that day inschool when we it was like the plague,
except you know, several hundred yearslater and instead of you know,
rats and mice carrying it around squirrels, and instead of it being like a
like an infectious disease, it wasjust something that was already in your lungs.
Yeah, that's how that's how thatworks, right, that's how tuberculosis
works. I think. So justmakes you cough a lot. Do people
still get that? Sometimes? Whenwas the last recorded like tuberculosis death?

(22:17):
Because it felt like that happened allthe time, didn't Edgar Allen Poe's entire
life, like everybody he was closeto died of tuberculosis. That's that's rough,
if true. I think I thinkthat's what happened, Like what,
no, no wonder. He wassuch a dark figure in literature, American
literature. Is it weird that EdgarAllan Poe was an American? I also
want to know this. He seemsmore British to me. Yeah he does,
doesn't He He sees like that's anhe feels like. And you can

(22:41):
read his stuff. It's it's somereal creepy stuff. I mean, this
guy's real creepy stuff. But atthe same time, like you're kind of
like, man, there's just anair of European into what he's talking about,
right, Like this is like aclassic European short story guy and the
stuff just takes weird, scary horrortype turns. But no, he's just
a dude from Boston, you knowwhat I mean. Yeah, he's just

(23:03):
an American guy. And we gota Sean online one who wants to talk
about radar. O'Reilly by the way, Oh okay, Sean open phone line
Tuesday, Sean, welcome to theshow. Tell me about Radar. What
do you got on your mind?Well, I didn't get a time.
I didn't get a chance to callin yesterday when you were discussing him.
But Gary Berghoff, maybe he haddepression, which is why he didn't want

(23:27):
to come out to Tumwa. Yeah, So I looked at this and the
more we kind of had evidence,and I showed Matt a picture. You
told Matt found that he had Polandsyndrome, which we've never heard of before.
But then I saw a photo andhe has the Poland syndrome is like
a deformity of his hands, sohis fingers didn't fully develop in one of

(23:51):
his hands, and there are veryfew photos of that. And the more
I was looking into it, andit still kind of upsets me because nobody
in a tumble would have cared.I know, I'm self conscious about some
of the physical characteristics that I have. I don't have any choice but to
kind of be out in front ofpeople. But at the same time,
it's like he had an ability withacting to hide the deformity. And a

(24:14):
lot of people were suggesting in myemail, especially that he didn't like to
make public appearances anywhere because he wasself conscious about his deformed hand and he
didn't want people to see it.So that I can believe I could believe
that. Okay, I just Ijust throw that out there because it was
I don't remember you going into indetails or what I didn't I actually did
a lot of this after the conversation, So I'm glad you brought it back

(24:36):
up, you know, I Ibut yeah, I mean, it's one
of those things where nobody in atumbel would have cared about that. But
it definitely probably would have provided someunwanted distraction and if that made if that
would have made him feel uncomfortable.I totally understand even though all a tumbel
wanted was to have this guy whoportrayed the most famous person from a tumnel,
even though it's not a real guy, uh, to come and hang

(24:57):
out. But you make a goodpoint, Sean. We never know what
people are going through, and it'swrong of us, even if they're a
high falut and celebrity, to assumeit's something superficial and not something a little
bit deeper that we can all relateto. So I appreciate the call in
the reminder today you take care.Yeah, if you want to call it,
you can' four O two five fiveeight eleven ten it's two forty eight
more on the way. Who knowswhat we're gonna talk about next? On

(25:18):
news Radio eleven ten kfab Emery's songershare it with someone you on news radio
eleven ten kfab How good is thatsong that you have in there with the
saxophone that we're hearing and all thatstuff, like, how good is that?
Let's get it one to ten?It's good. Yeah, that is
when that saxophone comes in. Youknow. It's just I love the the

(25:41):
eight eighties revival and a lot ofelements that you can find them in a
lot of a lot of pop musicright now. There's a lot of elements
that pop music samples. And thenthere's just so much music out there.
I always say, you know,you hear this. Sometimes people say,
hey, you know, music todayis so generic and un interesting. It's
keep looking, is what I say. Keep looking. There's so much out

(26:03):
there. Yeah, maybe you're justmaybe you're just listening to the top of
the top that does tend to getreally you know, repetitive, and they've
got it down to such a finescience of right, they know what it
will be a hit, they knowwhat they know what a hit looks like
and sounds like, and they canjust they can manufacture that however they'd like.
Right, But there there is somereally good stuff out there if you
know where to look. Yeah,it's That song is by a band called

(26:26):
The Midnight. We have other elementsof some of their other songs throughout the
show. I just love them.They are newer in the last you know,
like seven or eight years. They'vebeen releasing albums and everything, and
it's very eighties vibey, a lotof saxophone and stuff. It's just every
time you play that open, it'sjust like, ah, yeah, gosh,
it gets me going. Yeah.Speaking of music, Uh, most
underrated nineties artists go underrated nineties artist. Yeah, Well I'm biased, but

(26:52):
I'm gonna say beck uh, whenlet's let's stick to women. Oh women,
I should have, I should have. I should have just done that
immediate. Oh man, Now,I got to think about it. Most
the most underrated, probably forgotten aboutby some people as like maybe one of
the most important nineties artists. Mwhat do you think do you think,

(27:15):
come on, spit it out femaleartists? Well, I don't think she's
underrated, but I would say AlanisMorsett was great. She had a lot
of big hits in the nineties.She's number one, right, she's it.
That's the answer. She is.That's she's number one. There's no
doubt about it. Okay, shehas like many songs everybody knows the words
to, right, and uh Iactually saw her at the Iowa State Fair

(27:37):
two years ago. I think itwas She's incredible live still. I mean
it's so good. I mean she'sreally not that old. You know how
old she is? I was askingyou for real. Oh, I'm googling
it. Okay, let me know. I don't think she's too old.
Oh she's fifty. Okay, Soshe did. She did the anthems at
the game seven last night, likethe hockey anthems. Oh cool. She
did the O Canada because she's Canadian. Did you know that? I didn't

(27:59):
know that she's Canadian Atlantismore said,is Canadian. But she's also like an
American citizen. Also, she hasdual citizenship because obviously, you know,
she'd be geme huge here, youknow, and where would you rather live,
Matt? I mean, come onright, I mean, what are
we talking about here? But shewas at the Florida Panthers game Edmonton Oilers.
It's Canada and the United States.They do both anthems when a Canadian
team is playing an American team,and uh yeah, I mean she did

(28:22):
both anthems and she sounded great,like, could we play the Canadian and
American national anthem on the radio andbeat? Like everybody be cool with that?
Like I'd love to just play itbecause it was awesome her singing it.
Yeah, want me to find it? Well, yeah, I mean
find it. I don't know ifit's a good idea to play it.
I mean it's three and a halfminutes of her singing anthems, but it's
good. And then the crowd issinging with her, right, So,
like there are a ton of oilerfans, as you can imagine, big,

(28:45):
big Canadian cockey fans are coming downfrom three to zero in the Stanley
Cup Finals, they weren't gonna missGame seven wherever it was. If their
team was the first since nineteen fortytwo to pull that off, you know
what I mean. So there werea ton of Edmonton fans infiltrated the Florida
Arena, but there were still aton of Florida fans there too, And
because the Canadian fans always singing OhCanada as loud as they can all the

(29:08):
time, there were I mean everybodywas singing the American national anthem too in
response. When she sang that andand she sounded like Atlantis. It was
so good. So let me downan Atlanta's rabbit hole today when I was
getting my show together, because Ijust love Alanis Mori set, I really
do. Is it weird that Ilike her that's this much? I mean,
she's she's not like in her primeobviously like making songs, I mean

(29:30):
mid nineties right, like, she'llnever be better than that. The first
album Jaggie Little Pill Like people aretalking about that, like as one of
the most defining albums of all time, right and it's all thanks to Joey
Gladstone. Oh here we go,meant they're cut it out. I mean,
come on, but gosh, man, I like that album is incredible

(29:52):
and obviously hit after hit after hit. You know the name to one of
the big songs. I've got acouple of things here. I we got
a point to why we're talking aboutAtlanta's here because I got I'm down the
rabbit hole. Well, yesterday wasMonday, right, Well, Sunday,
she was in Nashville and she wasdoing a show. Okay, Alanis is
doing a show and one of herbiggest songs is called Ironic You familiar with

(30:14):
that song, I am familiar.It's like rain on your wedding day.
It's like bag there you go.Now more people are gonna understand what I
was saying because I wasn't willing todo that. Is that Kermit the Frog
at Atlantis the more set I thinkit was. Yeah, I bet it
was so Now I don't know exactlyhow it worked, and I'm guessing she

(30:36):
did a full version of this inreal time. Okay, but her daughter
joined her for her eighth birthday onstage on Sunday night in Nashville, and
she helped her sing ironic. Theylike went back and forth and her eight
year old daughter, I mean,she she, I mean, it's the
cutest thing ever. Right, ButI imagine, like she had to do

(30:56):
a real version of this, right, She's not gonna not do a real
version of this, right, right? But what if she didn't? Like
you get this sweet moment where sheshares the microphone with her eight year old
daughter singing this incredibly famous song.But you are getting to see Atlantis Moore
set for the first time in yourentire life in Nashville, and she spends
one of the most important songs inthe entire set and she's singing with her

(31:18):
eight year old daughter, and hereight year old daughter singing with her,
What do you think? Yeah,that's a special moment, so you be
okay with it? I'm sorry,say it one more time. Well,
I'm just like, is is thatokay? Is what okay? If I
pay tickets to go see Alanti's andI'm not saying you have to pay like
six thousand dollars like you do fora Taylor Swift concert to see Alani's Moore
set, I mean you're paying probablyforty to fifty bucks. I'm guessing I
don't know. I did not.I didn't even pay for my ticket to

(31:41):
go see her because I worked foran awesome company and I got hooked up.
But I wanted to see her,and I saw her and it was
awesome. I would have paid fiftysixty bucks to see her live in person.
One of the most important songs thatshe sings is Ironic. She had
an incredible family moment with her daughteron the stage, which I'm sure way
more to her than her performing itagain for everybody else. But if I

(32:01):
paid sixty bucks to go see AtlantisMori set and she didn't play a real
version of ironic and instead brought outher eight year old daughter to share the
mic with her, And it soundedlike a weird eight year old version of
karaoke ironic. And she didn't doa real version of that, I'd feel
ripped off. I'd have a sourtaste in my mouth. Yeah, you
know, that's kind of like goingto see The Lion King on Broadway and

(32:22):
the lead character being some famous person'schild who has no acting abilities. You
feel a little ripped off too.Talking about Northwest, by the way,
did you hear about that? Isthat? What? Yeah? Nor Northwest?
Yeah? It was Kanye and Kim'skid. Yeah, yeah, the
child of Kim Kardashian and Kanye West. She played Simba. Well she has

(32:44):
she has no she has no actingchops at all. So if you watch
any videos online, it's it's justlike Simba aware at like a school production,
well like legitimately with like a legitimateproduction, legitimate production. I believe
it was on Broadway. If itwasn't on Broadway, it was a major
it was a major thing. Yeahno, yeah, Neo nepo baby Yeah

(33:05):
yeah. Well I will say thisin all due respect, I love what
omaha performing arts does, and TheLion King is an incredible show. It's
hard when you employ children like youjust never know what you're gonna get with
them, no matter how good theyare, right, I mean, how
many takes you to take Nikolay Kulkand then actually nail home alone. We'll
never know, right, you knowwhat I mean? Yeah, And he's
one that had a knack for it. You know, he kind of had
a knack for it, but welearned he really didn't have a knack for

(33:25):
it because he got no jobs afterhe was like fourteen years old. So
like, no, he was cute, all right, nobody's gonna give him
an Oscar for the Best Actor Award. What I'm saying here is on a
live production, the kid's gotta beon every night, right, Like,
like I've paid money to go seeThe Lion King. I need that kid
to be good, Like Little Simbais an important part of the first act

(33:45):
of that movie. Yeah, theytry to protect little simb but little Simba
is very rarely out there by himselfor herself, I guess. And I'll
be honest, I've seen it twice. The first time I saw it,
it was incredible. Little sim Iwas like, write that name down.
That kid is going places. Okay, second time I saw it, I
think it was the same kid.I can't confirm that, but I think

(34:07):
it was the same kid. Sawit somewhere else. Kid was having like
he would packed it in, packedit in. It was like the rest
of the show was awesome, andall of the adults are incredible as they
always are. The music like itmakes shivers up your spine right litl Simba
was not into it that night,and you could tell it was like eleven
year old kid totally checked out,was waiting to go get his gunna bears

(34:28):
in the back. I mean it'sjust like no emotion, just reading lines
that he had memorized. I meanit felt like there might be a shot
that he forgot his lines at onepoint, you know, because he was
just so not into what was goingon. What do you do? How
do you get like a little kidto do this? I don't know anyway
point being would you be upset ifyou saw like this? This was what
happened? Now at least there,Little Simba's really only performing like one song.

(34:51):
Lil Simba like I just can't waitto be King is like his song
every other major song, somebody elseis singing, you know what I mean.
Yeah, so it's really just theone song. And he's don't even
say by himself. Zazu's in there, Nala's in there. The band obviously
is killing it as always. Imean, the music of the Lion King
live, I mean, just it'sincredible. You have to see it.
But little Simba can be hid inthe song. I'm talking to Atlantis freaking

(35:13):
more set. And I have tohear her eight year old daughter singing like
her most famous song or one ofher most famous songs. I paid sixty
bucks to sit here, man,like happy Birthday, I guess. Oh,
and you know what her kid's nameis? And you have to tell
like, okay, so Northwest,that's a pretty rough name. Yeah,
that's tough. How about Onyx?Onyx? Onyx? Was that like a
brand of a vacuum or something?Onyx? Okay, there is, It's

(35:37):
O n y X and that's hereight year old daughter's name. Now,
when I think of Onyx, there'sa Pokemon, a big rock Pokemon.
It looks like a rock snake.His name's Onyx. So whenever time I
hear Onyx, it's like Oh,it's that giant rock snake guy from Pokemon.
No, No, it's Alanis MoriSet's kid who sang ironic instead of
Atlantis singing ironic in front of thisNashville audience. She had to have done

(35:59):
a real version. I can't confirmit she did or did not, but
I just know that if that washappening, I'd be like, Alanis,
I paid to see you, Like, I don't care about your eight year
old kid, even though Alanis islike, this is a great moment for
me. My eight year old kidis sharing the stage with me, you
know what I mean? Yeah,so where are we at? Like grade?
The name that's a tough name minusright, Yeah, and it's a

(36:20):
girl. It's not even a boy. That sounds like a decent boy's name
maybe, but a girl named Onyxonyx on ITX with an ex at the
end, Oh n y X andOnyx Onyx hooked on PHONICX. Like,
I'm just I'm trying to I'm tryingto think as a kid would think.
You know, what are they goingto say on the playground? Exactly?
That's what I'm saying, right,it's got it's a D minus. The
only reason it's not an f isbecause it's not like the symbol like Elon

(36:43):
was trying to do with grimes right, or like northwest northwest is a bad
one, Like come on, likewhat are we doing here? Nobody will
even know what your kid is,like you're talking about when you're referring to
your kid. Yeah, let mego get north real quick. East and
West are hanging out over there.No, okay, so uh we'll come
back. If you got thoughts onnaming a kid onyx or whether or not
you'd be kind of peeved at AlanisMorrissett or any famous artists would punt on

(37:07):
one of their famous songs to havea moment with their kid that you don't
care about. Go ahead and callus four h two, five five eight,
eleven ten News Radio eleven ten,kfab Emery Sunger on news Radio eleven
ten kfab. I think Belink BelindaCarlysle is to eighties music what Alanis Morsett
is to the nineties music? AmI wrong? Hmmkay? Am I wrong?
Because she was in the Go Gosas well? Right? Yeah,

(37:28):
she was in the Go Gos andlet's be honest, to Go Gos goats.
I mean they changed the entire game. All female band play their own
instruments, you know what I'm saying, Yeah, for sure. And Belinda
just such a lovable, a lovablefemale artist. Now, obviously she had
a ton of demons that she wasworking through all the time throughout her her
popularity for a lot of different things. But she's just like her voice is

(37:52):
just quint essential eighties music, isn'tit? I mean, man, And
then I hear Alanis and I'm like, quint essential nineties music. Give me?
Is there a way we can getBelinda Carlisle and Alanis Morissett to like
do a like a duet album,like a combined album with them like singing
great tunes from their eras and othereras, just like a cover record like
twenty songs. Let's just give himsome sixties, seventies, eighties, nineties,

(38:15):
two thousand stuff. Let him singand cover it however they want,
and put a good band together tohelp them, and like boom, like
we're in right, Like who's notpaying for that? Who's not listening to
that? They can still go?I mean, Belinda probably a little less
in Atlanta's Lena sounded awesome last night. I haven't heard Belinda live lately,
and I'm guessing there's a reason forthat. But like, you know what

(38:36):
I mean, come on, Matt, help me out here. Co sign
co Sign, Yeah, why notdo a joint album. Everybody's doing that
exactly. Fans of both people aregonna be interested in paying for that,
you know what I'm saying. Yeah, the Go Gos actually they came back
in twenty twenty one. Yeah,but I don't care about the Go Gos
as much as just Belinda. Ijust want Belinda. Is that okay?

(38:59):
That weird? It's not weird likeBelinda, Just Belinda. I want Belinda.
Just give me Belinda in Alanis andwe'll call it Blandis and call it
like. It'll be great introducing Landis. Who's out? Who says no?
I don't say no. It doesn'tsound like you say yes either. You're
very skeptical of the idea. Well, i'd have to hear their music first.

(39:20):
Well, I don't know, likeyou have a clash of styles a
little bit. I think here it'sa little clash. Yeah, you've got
the you've got a little bit ofthe kind of the the the angsty alt
rock of Alanis more set and thenyou've got the little bit softer and poppier.
Yeah, although alanis if you goback and when Alantis was a teenager,
she was like kind of a miniatureBelinda Carlile in the late eighties.

(39:40):
But then she kind of like fellout of public life in Canada. It
was like some Canada teen search orwhatever that she wont I think, yeah,
and they were just calling her alaniswhat she we get away with back
then. And then she like nobodypaid attention to her for a little bit.
She disappeared and then resurfaced with jaggedLittle Pill and the rest was history.
Now she dated Joey Gladstone. Yeah, is that what happened? That's

(40:00):
what happened. Oh, come on, man, if there was anybody that
she should have been not dating,that was probably the guy. Right,
I'm just throw that out there too. What a weird guy to be connected
to for somebody. So and ifyou had your pick of the full house,
you know characters, I mean,well, would you have Saggot over
over Gladstone? I would believe probably, not, right, I do know

(40:22):
one had a better career than theother. Well, Saga got on America's
Funniest Home videos after that? Yeah, and then what did Gladstone ever do?
Uh uh? He had to waittwenty more years for them to reboot
Full House. I mean he hadnothing. He did nothing right. Saggitt
was at least like he had reinvigoratedhis career as being like a dirty stand

(40:43):
up comedian, you know what Imean, like Sag Sagit was a real
guy like that. You want totalk about a guy, Bob Saggot.
That was a weird day too,when when I discovered how dark his comedy
was. Oh yeah, the guyfrom America's Funniest Home Videos, the guy
who was hanging around with a bunchof kids and winning like the Hearts of
America. Yeah yeah, that guy. Yeah crazy huh oh Saggot, May

(41:07):
he rest in peace. Also,obviously, Stamos tops the list of the
power rankings. I mean it goesthat goes without staying saying hello, I'm
on the phone. Sorry, Ohokay, yes, Stamos if you want
to call in. Who knows what'sgoing on. I'm not in the in
the building. Obviously, I cannotsee him. I cannot see Matt case

(41:28):
I. This is the first timeI've done a show like this, so
help me out. If you wantto talk about Stamos or full House or
Atlantis, Morisset or naming kids,Onyx or something, you can call it
in a four h two five fiveeight eleven ten. I'm willing to go
anywhere at this point, Ladies andgentlemen, It's just one of those days.
Four h two five five eight eleventen. It's news Radio eleven ten
kfab Emery Suner on news Radio eleventen, kfab Cindy, Welcome to the

(41:53):
show. Appreciate you for being onWhat's on your mind here mind Sindy.
Hey, so, well, firstof all, I didn't really think Onyx
is that bad of a name becauseit is a gemstone. Oh is that
what that is? Yeah, Onyxis a gym stone. Yeah. Why
have I never heard of this?I don't know. And then yeah,
it's odd, it's odd for sure. But I was like, no,

(42:15):
there it is. Yeah, it'slike it's a bad name. There's a
plenty of bad names. Blanket,that's a bad name. Uh yeah,
you know, well what do youwhat do you think about? What do
you think about? Northwest? That'sbad? That's just dumb. Actually right,
well what about Uh? I wasreminded in email. I had somebody
remind us that there was a BlueIvy, which is Beyonce's kid, Blue

(42:38):
Ivy. Oh yeah, yeah,I don't really get doing really weird things
that are words. Hey, thekid's going to get bullied at some point.
Yeah, but what's on your mind, Cindy, appreciate you calling in.
What are you thinking about? Well, mainly, I just I wish
I could get concert tickets for sixtydollars. Oh time, Yeah, answers

(43:00):
I go to. I don't know, maybe I'm just spoiled or or something
that I don't know. I feellike I just wanted to make sure you
knew that concerts can be hundreds ofdollars. Yeah. Okay, So who
you going to see, Cindy WellsNovember? I'm into Omaha in November.

(43:20):
I can't remember, like huge,who is it? Sorry? Aerosmith Aerosmith?
Okay, yeah, what does thatlook a lot? I don't know.
I haven't gotten maybe tickets yet because, like I said, it's a
big commitment. Yeah, so okay, let me let me just I'll do
I'll do some homework here, okay. Aerosmith Aerosmith Okay. So Aerosmith's old,
right, like I mean, sorry, sorry, I didn't mean it,

(43:44):
mean it that way. Aerosmith islike, uh, you know their
seventies band. I would say,there's seventies band. I got like six
websites that I go to a lotfor tickets. Let me go to this
one, let me see scroll down, scroll down, or Omaha, Nebraska
farewell to her Aerosmith with the BlackCrows. Oh yeah, the cheapest tickets

(44:04):
nose bleeds seventy dollars and that's beforefees. Yeah, right right, that's
not that's not bad though to getinto the door, so bad to go
I see a bunch of old guys. Oh sorry, sorry, I didn't
mean it that way. I meanyou could sing along to every song,
just like Alan Moosett, who ismy favorite, by the way, but
I have never seen her live.I highly recommend, highly recommend. Well,

(44:27):
let me let me see. Okay, So I saw Alanis Morissette at
the Iowa State Fair. The IowaState Fair is a it's kind of a
weird place to see somebody because it'ssuper duper different. Okay, So she's
in Charlotte June twenty sixth. That'sthat's tomorrow. Forty dollars is the cheapest
one for her, but yeah,it's forty, like forty to fifty dollars.
Most of these shows, I don'tknow what these venues are. They

(44:51):
look like basketball arenas, kind oflike chi so I'm guessing it's similar to
that. But yeah, I meanhers are going for a lot cheaper.
At least looks like right now thatis a good deal because we've been to
the Steelhouse a couple of times inOmaha, and that places they're over one
hundred dollars. Yeah. The problemwith the Steelhouse, it looks like we

(45:13):
lost the connection there with Emory inDes Moines. We're gonna go ahead and
take a break and see if wecan re establish here on news radio eleven
ten kfab We will be back ina moment. Emory's songer on news radio
eleven ten kfabrus friends. Yea,all right, Emory's back. Can you

(45:36):
hear me now, Matt Case Ican hear you now. Hey, So
guess what are you trying to censorme? You know what, I don't
know what happened there, if itwas if it was on my end or
yours. I'm curious what people heardbecause both you and Cindy cut out at
the same time. So it mayhave been an issue from what we call
the com rex over here on myend, I'm not sure. Yeah,

(45:58):
so so as you trying to sendfor me, it could have been.
Yeah, you were saying something inappropriate, so I cut to break. Yeah,
you just cut me off. Youcut me off like like like Zuckerberg.
You know what, We're gonna takeanother break, Emory, Hey,
you can't do that to me.No, No, it's funny, it's
cool. I was talking about ticketprices when I was so rudely interrupted,

(46:22):
and Cindy was talking to me aboutAtlantis Morrissett and the forty dollars tickets that
I'm seeing available. Here's how theyget you. They get you with the
fees. Have you ever bought tickets? Have you bought tickets recently for an
event somewhere it's been a few months. They get you with the fees.
Man, Yeah, like you Okay, So you want to go to Aerosmith
like she wants to go to inNovember and Aerosmith's playing Chi and it's the

(46:45):
farewell to her. Are you anAerosmith person? You're gonna want to see
Aerosmith when they come through one lasttime. Right, that's just how it
works. If I was an Aerosmithperson, Yeah, I'd absolutely feel that
way. How much is too much? Well, I will substitute Aerosmith for
maybe like a band that would bethat for me, I would how much
is too much? If this ismy only shot and I've never seen them,
it's the farewell to her? Yeah, and I'm a person of means.

(47:06):
What does that mean? I'm like, no, you don't have to
worry about money, right, Well, that changes the conversation drastically, doesn't
it. Okay, then if you'retalking to me, I don't know.
I'm pretty tight with it. Iif it gets I mean, if it
gets more than if it gets intothe triple digits, that I'm out.
But you'd pay like ninety bucks.I'd grumble the whole time, But would
you? It's your last chance.It's farewell to her. And if they

(47:29):
brought their eight year old child outto sing some of the songs, am
I right? I'd have an audiblegroan? Yeah? Right, there would
be an audible groan from me inthe audience. Well, they would definitely.
And again I'm not saying Alanis didn'tdo that. She had Onyx out
to sing with her one big song, Ironic, and then I'm guessing she
did her own version of ironic atsome point. Okay, it was it

(47:49):
was Onyx's birthday. Onyx, bythe way, is a gemstone, for
whatever it's worth. I didn't knowthat. That's a new one for me.
It's not my gemstone, but gladto know that. So I don't
feel like you is being named indirectlyover about a Pokemon, you know what
I mean. So I'm looking.I got like six different Aerosmith ticket up
ticket ticket resale, because that's howyou have to get these tickets down unless

(48:13):
you're a maniac and you're able toget on. You're you're able to you
know, get the pre sales,or you're willing to like sit there as
soon as things open and hope thatthe site doesn't crash and get in as
one of the first people in lineto get one of these tickets. It's
so difficult to do. It's sohard to do. But I'm looking.
There's a ton of tickets available,the cheapest of the tickets available. And

(48:36):
this is the weird part, rightbecause they have a stage and I'm guessing
it's an open ended stage because they'reseeing people behind the stage. My guess
is that the stage faces the direction, but you can see everything from behind
the stage. It's not like oneof those stages that there's giant, you
know, video screens that you cannotsee like exactly what they're doing over there.
The cheapest ticket that I'm seeing isliterally behind up in the If you've

(48:59):
been at CA, they have thetwo hundred level, the second level,
and they're in the in the corner, right up in the corners, and
those are sixty eight dollars. Ithink we got Cindy. Is this a
different Cindy. It's a different Cindy. All right, hold on to Cindy.
I'll get to Sydney and say,I thought it was Cindy, Aerosmith
Cindy. If it's not Aerosmith Cindy, I'll hold on to Cindy for a
second. I'll bring it on ina second. Sixty eight dollars, okay,

(49:21):
So if you wanted to buy this, and these are not the cheapest
ones I've seen. I see acouple like on different like stub hubs and
vivid seats that you can find andthey're like fifty seven. So it's not
absurdly different in resale price, butit is a little bit different. You're
gonna be paying probably half of thatin fees as well, So you're gonna
pay your seventy bucks, but there'sgoing to be in like twenty five to

(49:44):
thirty dollars at least in random fees. And it's just insane to think that
that's the way that we're doing thingsnow. Okay, so not only are
you paying for the sixty eight dollarsticket, but now you're paying another thirty
dollars in fees. So really yoursixty eight dollars ticket is more like ninety
eight. You're close to one hundreddollars plus tax. Now pay for two
or four or six of those,and now all of a sudden, you

(50:07):
have to take out a small mortgagejust to go see a ban for three
hours. This is why I don'tgo do stuff unless I really really want
to, or the prices are absurdlycheap. I went to a College World
Series game. I bought tickets lastminute. It was a low demand game.
I got in thirteen bucks a pop. Okay, but that was after
fees, right, I about fourtickets thirteen dollars each. I said,
fifty two dollars for four tickets,had a great time. There's got to

(50:30):
be an answer to solving this.And I know the Biden administration, for
all their faults, have actually gonethrough with some legislation here. They're pushing
through to try to get this stufffixed so people see exactly what the price
is, including fees. But that'sthe thing that once, you know,
back in the old days, whenyou were hawking tickets on the corner,
you don't have to worry about fees. You might got gouged, you might
have been you know, up soldquite a bit if you were dealing with

(50:52):
the wrong person, but at leastyou didn't have extra fees you were negotiating
over and have absolutely no control over. And that's really just concerts these days,
or you know, any type ofshow. But that doesn't mean you
shouldn't go to show. It's just, you know, try to get tickets
at face value before they end upon the secondary market. Call if you

(51:12):
want to call four or two,five, five, eight, eleven,
ten, and Cindy is on thephone line. Cindy, welcome to the
show. It's on your mind.Hi, I was telling them actually that
I've been listening since you got ontoday, and when you guys started talking
about Lord of the Flies, Ifelt okay with calling about this. I
don't want to seem cookie, butI've been thinking all day about the debate
and Joe's state of mind. SoI work in a medical facility which I

(51:36):
won't name, and I know everybodywith dimension dementia has different reactions, but
think about them, think about us. In Your normal reaction when you're put
on a world stage of any kindis to be a little defensive about something
you're passionate about or something that youknow about. So I think the real

(51:57):
Joe that we knew with Obama hada little more awareness to him. I
think the real Joe is the onethat gets up on stage, that talks,
that fumbles his words really fast,that gets angry. That you see
the angry Joe talking and spitting wordsout. I think they don't want that
Joe to come out. So Ithink I was saying earlier, I don't

(52:17):
want to say trance. I don'twant to stay hypnotized or but I think
there's some kind of a syop thinggoing on where they can almost like robotically
control him his answers. I thinkhis time right now at Camp David for
a whole week has something to dowith a syop where Okay, you're on
stage, they say a certain topic, I can click something in your ear

(52:40):
a certain sound, and you're goingto give a certain answer because we have
said that to you through this diyop, and we know that happens. We
know that's happening government for many differentthings, and I think it goes beyond.
I think the one that stumbles aroundand loses his place and doesn't know
where he's going and stops and stairsis the one being controlled because he's not

(53:00):
in control of his own body.Because what I see medically a lot is
if people are lost like that,they still keep going. They might go
to a wall, or they mightgo, but they have a mission and
they don't stop and stare like hedoes. So I think at that point
he's the one being controlled. AndI think the Joe that we knew that's

(53:21):
more aware is when he starts fumblingand talking real fast and getting kind of
angry, and I just I hadto throw that out there because I don't
hear anybody talking. Yeah, heprobably is given meds and things that might
drive him up. But I thinkit's a little more control than that on
a syap type of level. WHOA. I don't want to sound crazy saying
that, but it's been on mymind all day. WHOA Okay, Well,

(53:45):
Cidy is okay? Can you callback on Friday after we've seen the
debate and we can kind of rehashyour theory here, because that way we
can kind of see it and breakit down a little bit. But to
look at it gives you, sorry, it gives you something to look at
during the bait to see, youknow, at what point these ask questions
and if Trump throws them off,is there a controlled answer to that?
Is there a pause? And theother thing I want to throw into that

(54:07):
is people have been talking about whyhe doesn't blink. Well, that answers
that question as well. WHOA Okay, Yeah, Well, I mean I
guess I don't know, but Iwell, let's keep call back on Friday
and I'll let you kind of tellme what you saw and we can see
we can figure out if if somethingwas weird, was up because that would

(54:28):
explain also the lack of variables.There's no interrupting each other because the mics
are muted. There's no studio audiencethat he has to worry about reacting to,
Like it's all completely controlled, especiallyif you know, like they're prepared
for the answers for questions that I'msure they both know are coming, like
they both know what questions are goingto ask. So yeah, okay,
Cindy, this is very interesting.Thank you for calling in. Okay,

(54:51):
all right, wow, gosh,do we have enough time to get to
Paul here? We've got one minuteleft here? All right, Paul,
you got thirty seconds. What's up? Okay, last jud last Tuesday on
the radio, there's a morning showand they have a friend of showing to
the Celtics final NBA game last week. Yeah, on Tuesday, if they

(55:12):
interviewed them. They got their ticketsthrough Red Zone Ticket here in Omaha,
Okay. And for the two ticketsit was thirty thousand dollars, but the
fees the handling for the sub theycan push a button and send them to
your phone, so you have thetickets on your phone. Except so they
ended up paying thirty seven thousand forthe two tickets. I might bars,

(55:35):
but they went to the NBA FinalCeltic game. Well, congrats to them
for that. I guess, man, it must be nice to have that
much money. Gee whiz, youwant to talk about this? Anything else?
You can call in four O two, five, five, eight eleven
tent. Appreciate it, Paul forcalling in. We'll have more on the
way after this on news radio eleventen. Kathy, what else is new
in the Midwestern weatherfront? You knowwhat I mean? It's just like you

(55:57):
just never know what's going to comenext. What's your guests? Are we
gonna hurt hurricane next? I don'tknow if hurricanes tsunami. I wouldn't see
hurricanes or tsunami's hitting the Midwest,but know tornadoes are always possible this time
of year. Well, this iswhat I will say. I will say
that this is it makes our jobsinteresting and makes us important. Fair enough.

(56:20):
Yeah, I'm very important, man, I'm so important. That's a
meme somewhere. Okay, was thatBurgundy? No, Ron Burgundy said I'm
kind of a big deal. That'swhat he said, right, I'm kind
of a big deal. It's atfour eleven. Okay, So we've been
talking about just a slew of things. We'll keep you posted the debate thing
that we're doing over at Buffalo Wingsand Rings. That is happening eight o'clock

(56:46):
for the start of the debate,even either before that, I'm planning on
being there. I'm not sure whoelse. I don't want to speak for
anybody else. Are you going there? Am I going to see you there?
Or like I won't see me therethat night, unfortunately, But I'm
sure it's going to be a reallyfun time. You and me are gonna
do a debate on Thursday, Yeah, just during the show. Okay,
what should we debate about? Well, I'm gonna need at least a couple

(57:07):
of weeks to to get in abunker, maybe do some sy op drills.
I'm gonna need a team of researchers. We're gonna get an ear piece
that fits into like inside your earwhile you have your headphones on. And
I was still trying to digest thatcall with Cindy last hour. That was
amazing. I was gonna tell youto queue up the X Files thing.

(57:30):
But I'm not gonna rule anything out. Matt. Yeah, we don't know
what. We don't know what's goingto happen, Like what if he does
seem like he's a robot. Right, People get hypnotized all the time.
You see you see you've seen guys, did you have you go and see
a hypnotist, like like the entertainingtype ones, not the ones that stop

(57:50):
smoking, the guys who do that, and then the people are like trying
to get with the microphone stand onstage. Yeah, Like have you seen
those guys I've set in? Imean it's not really my kind of like
entertainment, but a lot of peoplelove watching that stuff, and I mean
it's kind of funny, but likeI kind of believe that these people are
completely entranced. It's kind of weirdbecause I think that there are some a

(58:14):
few of them that are kind offaking it for the show. But I
do think that some people are ina trance, like they just they can't
break it right, Like, Yeah, I went to a hypnotism show,
a show with a hypnotist. Therewas a guy at my table he got
got you know what I mean?Oh so he wasn't even up there,
but he still got got. Yeah. Well, the hypnotist did the thing
where like he tried to get peoplefrom the audience, you know, and

(58:35):
it worked for that guy. Likethere was a moment for me when I
was kind of sitting there doing thething. I was looking at my fingers
and I was like thinking these things, and I don't know what he was
doing. And then the guy atmy table, I mean, you pull
him out of Nebraska, a smalltown, Nebraska, Central casting. The
guy had a Husker hat that wasalso Camo. It was a Camo Husker
hat. Oh hardcore. So ifyou're telling me that this guy was a

(58:58):
plant, they did a good job. I ever saw it coming. But
he got got He ended up onthe stage doing all kinds of weird stuff.
Was he the only one in thecrowd? Nah, he was,
He was among a few. Okay, I was gonna say, if it
was just him, then planned right. But if it was multiple people,
then I mean, you have towant to get hypnotized at those things.
You don't just accidentally get hypnotized.But if you are buying into it,

(59:19):
which I'm sure Joe is cognitive enoughaware enough to be like, I'm in
right, Like you can buy intoit, and as soon as you are
hypnotized, then all of a suddenthey can like put stuff in there.
I can't rule this out. Mattas crazy as I cannot rule it out.
Well, I'm sure how far backdo you want to go? I
mean, think about how the wholething transpired with the DNC. You know,

(59:40):
they circled the wagons around him.Maybe that was the first moment that
he had a meeting with somebody withdark classes, you know what I'm saying.
So what you're saying is he reallydidn't want to run for president of
twenty twenty. He's basically just beenhypnotized this entire time, and when we
see him short circuit and it lookslike he's just standing still or freezing up
or tripping upstairs or falling off hisbicycle, it's really just him like having

(01:00:05):
a computer shutdown essentially in his brainbecause he's been hypnotized and he doesn't have
the proper commands. Yeah, inall seriousness, I can't rule it out.
I'm sorry. I'm not a conspiracyguy, even though like I apparently
have some conspiracy takes. Like Ijust to me, to me, there
is like that thing where I thinkthere is a way to have a word,

(01:00:27):
a specific word, or maybe astring of words, trigger a response
from a human, whether it's physical, like you were talking about the guy
walked up on the stage or whatever, like he was prompted to do that,
and the hypnotizing was working. Itdoes work for people, like the
stop smoking guy that you're hearing inthe commercials, Like that really does help
people. So you can't tell meit's impossible to like have certain commands put

(01:00:52):
the guy in a trance or likea hypnotism thing. He would pass any
drug tests. I mean, Iknow Trump said he wanted them both to
be drug tested. That's never happen. They didn't agree to that ahead of
time. And who cares right asmuch as like, what are they gonna
test him positive for koke? Youknow what I mean? Like five hour
energy like and who even cares right? It's like, oh, wow,
he spoke coherently during the debate,Wow, he must be on drugs.

(01:01:15):
Like is anybody gonna vote differently basedon what happens there? I'm just curious
to see what happens. Honestly,it wouldn't like throw me completely for a
loop if nothing important happened. Itwouldn't because he's gonna be so well practiced,
And that's my thing. I thinkhe's gonna be practiced now for ninety
minutes without getting a chance to talkto anybody else or taking a you know,
a pee break or anything like that. I'm not so sure that he's

(01:01:37):
gonna be able to finish the waythat he started. But at the same
time, I also feel like it'simportant to note that, you know,
like, uh, there's there's justa chance that he's incredibly well rehearsed,
and there's no variables here. There'sno crowd, there's no live audience,
there's no I know that was aredundant statement, there's no interrupting, so
Donald Trump can't jump in and interrupthis his answers. And there's a chance

(01:02:00):
that you know, CNN is goingto be super kind in the way that
they ask questions to Biden, andthey could be trying to trap Donald Trump
into saying things that he doesn't wantto say. Now, like I said,
they have adjusted Judge one Mershawn hasadjusted the you know, gag order
a bit, so it's at morelenient than it was before, so he

(01:02:20):
doesn't get himself into trouble. ButI totally could see Jake Tapper and Dana
Bash kind of baiting him into sayingsomething that the Democrats can use in their
political ads for the next three weeks. You know what I'm saying. George
is on our phone line four htwo, five, five, eight to
eleven ten, George, what's onyour mind? Brother? I'd just like
to give a shout out to theguys unloading the semi trailers today. Right
now, they're averaging about one hundredand thirty two degrees in the back and

(01:02:43):
they're in there for an hour tofive hours each Oh what today would have
been a day I would have calledin sick. I think, right,
you guys have a brother. ThanksGeorge, appreciate the call. Not that
I care that much, but Matt, are we going to get a call
that's at all? Really, it'swhat we're talking about, you know,
I think it's really I think it'san interesting topic. I mean, any

(01:03:06):
you put the word syop into theconversation and my ears are glued, Like
that's all I care about. WhatI was watching that night, Like like
I like the idea that this isa thing that might happen. Yeah,
you know what if everybody's just like, this would be a cold, cold
day in America. If that's somethinglike that. In fact, I'd welcome
a little cold, not a lotof cold, but a little cold.
But the idea of him doing that, I mean, it's just like who

(01:03:28):
cares? Man like, It's gonnamake for great entertainment, and then we
can talk about psyop stuff. Let'sgo. Hey. The OSS, which
was the first version of the CIA, Harry Truman warned us. It was
created during World War Two, andPresident Harry Truman tried to shut the whole
thing down after World War Two becausehe thought it was too dangerous to have
in our society. But it justmorphed into the CIA. And a lot

(01:03:51):
of the people who worked in theCIA back then, during the Cuban Missile
Crisis and around then as well,they all lived in the same block of
housing is in Georgetown. They wereall buddies. So you're saying, Harry
S. Truman, the guy whodropped two atomic bombs on top of Japanese
cities, said the CIA was toodangerous. I see your point. I

(01:04:16):
mean, I'm just asking a question. I mean, he might be he
might be right. It's six sorryfour, it's sixteen twenty if you like
military time. It is for twentyif you're a regular person like me.
And we'll have more on the wayon news Radio eleven ten KFAB. Emrie
Sunger on News Radio eleven ten KFAB. Hello, my producers, Matt Case,

(01:04:43):
Matt, how you doing over there? Doing good? Do you like
cars? I do like cars.Do you like really fast cars? I
think fast cars are pretty cool.Do you like cars that look cool?
I like good looking cars that gofast. Yeah, but what if it
goes slow? What if it's agood looking car that goes slow. That's
okay too. Tanks are pretty cool, yeah, like a tank, yeah,

(01:05:05):
but not really a tank. I'mjust talking to like an old nineteen
sixties sweet looking car, Oh forsure. Yeah, no, I I
uh yeah. There's all kinds ofthere's all kinds of cool cars, you
know. Yeah, yeah, Imean there's there's so many different types of
things that you can do. Butwhat I'm wanting to do basically here is

(01:05:25):
I have a four pack of generaladmission tickets to the thirty third Speedway Motors
Heartland Nationals presented by Bass. Now, if you're wondering, this is the
good Guy's car show. Guys,this is an insane deal, right because
it's a price value of one hundreddollars and you get to see some of
the best cars you possibly will eversee in person in your life. If

(01:05:47):
you are a car guy or galor kid, or granny or grandpa,
I'm telling you the Good Guys CarShow, which happens over there at the
Iowa State Fairgrounds in Des Moines,happening July fifth through the seventh. This
year, it's an annual Old traditionsto the thirty third Heartland Nationals, presented
by BASF and my friends a GoodGuys. They want to send one of
you with a four pack of ticketsto enjoy the festivities. Matt, give

(01:06:12):
me a gosh, what's a goodyear for a car right? Like,
like you know, you know,years of cars? Yeah, Like like
what was like the best Camaro?Oh, the best Camaro? I'd have
to google that? Hold on,Like, like is the old school Camaro?
Like was that like a sixty seven? Was that like the first one?
Sixty six, sixty seven something likethat? I'm seeing sixty eight,

(01:06:36):
sixty eight Camaro Z twenty eight,all right, the Z twenty eight,
sixty eight Camaro. Yeah, you'reprobably gonna see good Camaros in a lot
of places, but you're not goingto see as many awesome cars that can
stack up with like a sixty eightCamaro, except at the Good Guy's Car
Show with Heartland Nationals happening over atthe Iowa State Fairground. So I need
you to call in in honor ofthe Camaro. The sixty eighth caller is

(01:07:00):
getting a four pack of tickets tothis awesome car show. Call us now
four oh two, five five eighteleven ten. Four oh two, five
five eight eleven ten is a numberagain, four oh two, five five
eight to eleven ten. Sixty eighthcaller getting a chance to get four tickets
to the Good Guys Car Show atthe Iowa State Fairgrounds July fifth through the
seventh. You'll get one day generaladmission and you'll be seeing some awesome cars

(01:07:23):
with the entire family. Call usnow four oh two, five to five,
eight to eleven ten. More onthe Way, News Radio eleven ten
kfab. Emery Songer on news Radioeleven ten Kfab. I'm not in Omaha
today, I'm in Des Moines,so I can't see Matt Matter. Are
you still alive? Are you stillthere? I'm still alive. I do
still exist. Unless this is areally weird dream, kind of a boring

(01:07:45):
dream. Honestly, Oh come on. Well, I mean, as dreams
go, right, this is thiswould be a very normal dream. So
yeah, you're right. You don'twant to if you're dreaming, you need
to be like Skydivan or something.Yeah. I'll let you know if I
see any glitches in the matrix.But otherwise I think I'm I'm living in
real life right now. Yeah,fully alive. Okay, so we get
a winner for the Good Guys CarShow? We did? Ben from Omaha

(01:08:05):
is gonna go to the Good Guy'sCar Show next weekend? Ben aybye?
What wait? Is July fifth throughthe seventh? Next weekend? Already?
Let me make sure that's right?Is that right? It is right?
Yeah, it is Right's right?Next week is fourth of July. How
that happened? What? Wait asecond? Yeah, that's the like July
first is like mid year, Likeyou're in the middle, like you literally

(01:08:26):
are halfway done with twenty twenty four. Now, well, and you know
what today is? Right? What'sthat? We're halfway to Christmas? Oh
man, happy half Christmas? Emory. What'd you get me? You're getting
me a box of boatmeal cream?Hie ah jeez, because you lost to
bet? Thank you? Tennessee volunteers. Man, that's crazy though, Gee
whiz crime and Nitley. All right, so that is what it is.

(01:08:50):
I'm scrolling through here. But beforewe do this, I'm gonna get a
little animated here in a second,matt we need to tell the people where
they can take advantage of some superdeals today. I don't want people who
are you driving home around the Omahaarea. I don't want them to think
that we don't look out for them. So you're gonna get a chance to

(01:09:10):
save a ton of money because todayis our super day for super deals,
and it's very easy. You cantell them how they can access these super
deals. Matt Case, Well,all you got to do is go to
your browser of choice, type inkfab dot com and just scroll a little
bit and there in the middle ofyour screen, you're gonna see a link
to the Omaha Super Day of superDeals that's going to take you right right

(01:09:32):
there. It's right. It literallysays it right there, click on it.
I mean, what are some ofthese deals that you're looking at there,
Mattie boy, I'm looking at somereally good stuff. You got stuff
for your car, stuff for yourbelly, stuff that you can do on
vacation you could do for your fingernails. That's true, that too. How
about a five hundred dollars hotel savingscar that's reloadable. How about four days

(01:09:58):
and three nights in Last Vegas,Nevada at Stratosphere. Yeah, that sounds
fancy. Like the deal here,I mean, it's crazy, right,
So it says twenty five dollars.Yeah, if you go on the website,
say's twenty five bucks, that's aseven hundred dollars value. You click
on view deal and it tells youall this stuff, and it gives you
all the information that you need toknow so you can fact check it,

(01:10:19):
double check it, and make surethat you can get what you need.
Obviously, it's not like it doesn'tinclude like your flight there, but I
mean, gosh, i'd investigate it. How about this one too. We
just heard in the local news updatethere that we got our very first West
Nile virus report of the summer season. How about a flying insect trap plug

(01:10:40):
in mosquito killer included with free shipping. Usually priced at thirty three dollars.
You can get this thing for acool thirteen dollars and forty nine cents.
Now see you're gonna want that,especially if you're one of those crazy people
who've chased away your bat population somehow, and it's all be honest, it's
not been good for them out there. It's not been good all. Some
people posting that they are seeing someof the bats not like laying on the

(01:11:02):
ground because they are overheated. Ohyou know what I mean. So if
you see that, they will goback up in the trees if you help
them, So just or call somebodywith animal wildlife, you know, like
they can help you. You needthose guys around to help. But if
you don't know, if you've gotgood bats around and you're not sure that

(01:11:23):
they're gobbling up your skeeters, goahead and buy this bad boy right to
trap plug. It's an indoor trapplug. You're not gonna to worry about
a mosquito getting in the house ever, Yeah, straight up, those things.
As much as I love animals,I love nature, I'm not gonna
kill bugs for no reason. Mosquitosare open seasoned baby all day, every
day. The only reason I wantmosquitos to live is so the bats can

(01:11:43):
eat. That's literally the only reason. Is that fair fair to say?
That's fair to me. There yougo, all sorts of different stuff.
Once again, Matt, tell themhow they can find this stuff. All
you gotta do is go to kfabdot com and find the place to click
there right in the middle of yourpage. You might have to scroll down
just a little bit past some ofthe daily news stories and you'll see a
little box there you can click thatsays Omaha, super day of super deals.

(01:12:05):
Bingo, bingo, bingo. I'mlooking at this. I'm gonna get
animated now, Is that okay?Yeah, all sorts of stuff. You
can call in anytime. Matt willtext me. Hopefully I see the text
message that you're on the line.If not, please be patient. I'm
not there. I can't see thecall screener, I am. I'm scrolling

(01:12:26):
my Facebook page. I get somenews through Facebook. It's nice to have.
It's like an additional thing. Alot of the stuff I talk about
I see on social media first.So you know, as much as I
get mad at social media and whatit brings, it's got some redeeming values,
right right. And I was like, you know, social media,
but I scroll here in one way, Matt, Matt, you're not a

(01:12:46):
social media guy, but I'm sureeven a non social media guy like you
could answer this question. Are youready? M h a little trivia Tuesday
for you? Here? What isthe method that people make money on Facebook?
Like? How does the Facebook peoplemake money? Like the people in
Facebook? How do they make money? Well, from what I understand,
you as the user are their product, so they they sell your information to

(01:13:10):
third parties that learn your habits sothat they figure out how to market to
you. And what how do theymarket to you? Matt? Well,
if you make a post about howsad you are that the that the Las
Vegas Raiders lost last night, thenyou might see some of their gear in
your in your ads the next day. Buda boom. I mean you don't

(01:13:31):
even have to do it through Facebookeither. You could be going on Google
and the browser itself has cookies thatare gonna like notice what your habits are.
And then all of a sudden whateveryou looked up because there was this
one thing that I tell you whatwas the thing there was like the the
weird pants that had like the wiresin it that like act basically as adjustable

(01:13:51):
like joint supports and like braces forlike your knees and stuff. It's kind
of like pulling new like ones upand stuff like like sleeves or braces and
tie fastening them to your knee oryour hip or your ankle or whatever like
these these like pants or whatever.I saw it. Commercial bottom line is
I was kind of curious, soI googled to see how much they cost.

(01:14:14):
And obviously they were insanely expensive,but I just I didn't have any
interest in buying them. I don'tneed that right now my life. But
I just kind of wanted to seewhat something like that cost somebody, because
it was kind of an interesting idea. It's really expensive, hundreds of dollars,
I kid you not. I sawon my Facebook for like two full
weeks that was I had to muteit. I had to mute the page
because that page kept popping up asa thing that was being sent to me

(01:14:39):
as targeted advertising. I didn't tellFacebook I liked that. I didn't want
to follow their page. Yet herethey are trying to market to me because
I went on Google one time.Right well, I didn't ask for any
political advertising in my Facebook feed,none of it. I try to keep
away from that stuff. Yet hereI have a Joe Biden Facebook page pay

(01:15:00):
by Biden for President Political at andit says it's just a big picture of
Donald Trump and he's in the middleof like yelling or something and pointing and
all. The ad says it's abig picture, of course, perfectly in
line with the parameters of pictures onFacebook, so it's cropped properly, and
it says Donald Trump is a dangerto our democracy. Paid for by Biden
for President, and the caption isJanuary sixth is a stark reminder of the

(01:15:25):
threat that Donald Trump poses to ournation's democracy. He tried to overturn the
twenty twenty election and claims there willbe a bloodbath if he loses this year.
That's it. That's the entire ad. I'm being marketed to this.
I don't know when they posted this. It's not getting a ton of engagements,
obviously more as many people are makingfun of it, as are liking
it. But at the end ofthe day, I'm sitting here mind of

(01:15:45):
my own business. I have notlooked up Joe Biden one time through Facebook
or my social media accounts. I'venot done it on Google. I don't
need to, all right, Isee this stuff naturally pop up. Yet
somehow, some way, a JoeBiden ad has worked its way into my
feet. And it's the same thingI told you about. The reason that
the most important thing for people headinginto this debate on Thursday is which guy

(01:16:08):
is a bigger threat to democracy?Because both guys have effectively made it about
the other guy being a threat todemocracy more than they've made it about any
issue that actually matters to us.You might say, you might be one
of those people that are out theresaying, well, they both like,
if you're a Trump guy, you'regonna be like, well, Buden news
a threat to our democracy or constitutionalrepublic. Please don't call and tell me

(01:16:30):
that this was incorrectly spoken. Idon't care. I'm sorry, I don't
care. This is what it says. I'm just copying and quoting what the
ad says. But yeah, So, like the surveys are asking, like
what's most important and what's the mostthing what is most important in this election
to you? And more people thanever before, and more people than any
other topic are saying it is extremelyimportant about the future of American democracy.

(01:16:56):
And the Democrats are literally running theircampaign not on the issues, not on
the economy, not on inflation,not on immigration, not on abortion,
not on gun control. They're goingto be pounding home the fact that Donald
Trump is going to overturn the entiregovernmental system that we know today. He's
going to be the big, baddictator that's going to change the way that
America is viewed forever. And please, if you really want to make sure

(01:17:17):
that doesn't happen, you got tovote for Joe Biden. Now he's gonna
have ninety minutes. He's going tohave to talk about something that he's done
in the last four years, andI'm sure he's going to say some of
that stuff, and I'm sure someof it is going to be like us
reacting, oh no, boo whatever. But does the independent voter really care
about anything more than this democracy stuff? Because that's all I'm seeing here.
And then the other one is like, Donald Trump's a convicted felon. Those

(01:17:40):
those are the two ads he's running. Donald Trump's a danger toward democracy and
Donald Trump's convicted felon. Well,congratulations. I can't imagine why you would
not say anything about the stuff thatyou think you have or have not accomplished
in the last four years, becausethere is nothing If there was ever an
indictment legitimately, not like a legalindictment, but an indictment on the character
of the Democratic Party. It's thatliteral fear mongering is the only reason or

(01:18:03):
the only way they think they canwin this election. And this is case
in point. I don't even likethe guy, and they're advertising to me
incredible be on the lookout. Ohand by the way, if you want
that to stop, you can justhit the X button and it'll go away
and you'll never see it again.At least there's that option. It is
four forty eight more on the way. Let's give away an F. Let's

(01:18:24):
do you get a n F comingup? Because we need to do more
of that. On news radio eleventen kfab Emory's songer on news radio eleven
ten kfab. You bully it,you bow it, you blew it.
Have you ever done something really stupid? Yeah? Me, neither, but

(01:18:46):
these people did, and that meansit's time for you get an F.
All right, Emory Songer here withyou. Time to give an F.
Matt Case, what do you gotfor me today? Know? What I
got for you today is something ridiculousthat happened down in Arizona Arizona firefighters had
to rescue a toddler who was trappedin a Tesla because the tesla had a

(01:19:13):
dead battery and apparently you can't unlockthe doors and open the car if it's
locked to the electric vehicle of debatecoming up gee with Yeah, and you
know what this it shouts out tomy dad because he was recently talking to
me about how frustrating it is.Something that grinds his gears is how new
cars aren't made with physical keys,right, so when your key fob goes

(01:19:38):
out on you, you gotta goreplace it if you want to get back
into your car. You don't.You don't have like a like it's not
hitting and him, it's not hiddenin the fob. I have a key
to you know, the car ondry. Let me look. Yeah,
there's just like a little hidden buttonhere that a real key like can pop
out. Well that's how mine is. But but the newer cars are not
made that way. And newer carsyou just press a button to start the

(01:19:59):
car, don't even need it.You don't even need a key. Yeah,
that that feels like it feels likea lack of foresight to what potentially
could could happen, you'd have tobreak into your own car if the fob
goes out. Yeah, so sowho gets the f? Well? I
you know what, I just conveniencethat has made things more inconvenient. I
suppose maybe it's more what do wealright? All right, a lawn musk,

(01:20:23):
you get the f You have tosay his name right if he's gonna
like officially get the f right someElon musk somewhere in the middle of South
Africa. She's like, what theheck did I do? Elon Musk?
You get an f there you go. I'll save mine. I'll do mine
in the next hour, next hour, five o'clock out. We're gonna have

(01:20:44):
a lot of fun, as wealways do. I have no idea what's
gonna come up on the show,because it's just been one of those weird
days. You can call in afour two five five eight eleven ten four
o two five five eight to eleventen More of it on the Way with
Emory Songer Matt Case alongside. You'relistening to us on news radio eleven ten KFA eight
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Special Summer Offer: Exclusively on Apple Podcasts, try our Dateline Premium subscription completely free for one month! With Dateline Premium, you get every episode ad-free plus exclusive bonus content.

24/7 News: The Latest

24/7 News: The Latest

The latest news in 4 minutes updated every hour, every day.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.