Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Yeah, well there goes the podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:02):
Well, let's put it this way. If you ever want
to get married to the Emery song Er show, we've
got the open just for you.
Speaker 1 (00:10):
Pomp and Circumstances graduation. Oh it is, that's the graduation song.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
What do I know?
Speaker 1 (00:16):
When you get married, they play a different song. I mean,
you can basically choose whatever. To be honest, my wife
came down to what is it? What's the one? Something
about the moon?
Speaker 2 (00:25):
Who let the Dogs Out?
Speaker 1 (00:26):
No, they like the moon one.
Speaker 2 (00:29):
The when the moon hits your eye?
Speaker 1 (00:31):
No, not quite that one. It's something moon related. I
don't know. I don't remember. I was standing there looking
at her. I don't know what song it was, the
Here Comes the Bride, That's that's one. Hey, if you
know what the typical wedding song walkout themes are, hit
us up Emory at kfab dot com or you can
call four two five, five, eight eleven ten. Because I
(00:53):
know people are getting a little bit more, Uh, they're
getting a little bit more untraditional with that. Who knows,
maybe Pomping Circumstances become a song and I just missed it.
If there's a chance, right, yeah, you know, I don't
know I'm kind of wearing out. I gotta be honest
with you, Matt. I called you today. I've been at
the Iowa State Fair. I've gone each of the first
this is the ninth day, Saturday and Sunday. Last week
(01:15):
I just kind of hung out and partied and made
a couple of appearances. But today there was a pretty
big announcement that was made. If it'll be on my
social media at some point, I haven't. I don't know
if it's formally been like put on the internet. I
know that the radio station in Des Moines posted it.
But they gave me a job. They gave me a job.
(01:37):
I'm going to be officially the permanent host in Cedar
Rapids and Des Moines from nine to eleven am every weekday. Congratulations, Thanks,
ask me, Ask me what's next for Emory? What's next
for Emory Songer? Nothing? Nothing, nothing. I'm gonna host that
show and I'm gonna host this show. Okay, my life
(01:58):
will officially be just like regular because I've literally been
doing that show for the better part of four and
a half months. Regular as Meta mucal Meta muciles. That's
the is that is that fiber I think so was
that a fiber joke.
Speaker 2 (02:16):
I think it was.
Speaker 1 (02:18):
There was a fiber joke that you made about being regular.
I'm firing on all cylinders, like the bathroom. Yeah, basically
no axe slacks needed. Oh boy, yeah, so hey whatever,
here we go. Yeah, there's a lot going on. I
appreciate uh you listening to us, and thank you for
(02:41):
your preemptive congratulations. I'm sure no one in Omaha actually cares.
I've literally been doing that show for four and a
half months. If you haven't noticed to this point, you're
nobably not going to notice. It's not that big a deal.
Nothing's gonna change. I'm still gonna be here. I'm still
gonna be doing the same type of show for Omaha.
I'm still going to be living in Omaha. I'm still
going to be showing up at Omaha stuff too more.
Speaker 2 (02:58):
Who does care?
Speaker 1 (02:59):
Who?
Speaker 2 (03:00):
Mister crabs? Okay, all right, this is what happens when
it's Friday and your producer is in his own studio
and you can't make me stop.
Speaker 1 (03:11):
You're right, I can't. I'll let you know if some
angry emailers are just like, okay, somebody needs to tell
Matt to lay off the monster energy. Are you still
drinking that those or.
Speaker 2 (03:20):
You're still off? But I do still have my piece
of cake over here, so I am going to be
on a sugar high and probably taking a nap in
the three o'clock hour. So I hope that's interview heavy.
Speaker 1 (03:29):
I don't think so. I thank you. I'm going to
need you to have a pulse, all right. So anyway,
let's go ahead and get into a couple of other
things that you know, are are a little bit more noteworthy.
I don't want to spend a ton of time on
news today, you know, like we don't talk about hard
news a lot on Friday unless something crazy happens. However,
(03:50):
it's the first time we've seen a favorability test or
a preference poll on the two vice presidential candidates, j
Evans on the Trump side of things and Tim Walls
on the Harris side of things. What do you think
Matt guessing game time? What is the uh? What is okay?
(04:11):
So basically, what's the uh? How do how do I?
How do I ask this? This was from Washington Post,
ABC News and IPSOS favorability. So basically one favorability is
every single person that was asked likes you, and if
you were zero one hundred percent of the people dislike you,
what do you think? And you can say no opinion, right,
(04:34):
because both of these guys were fairly unknown to the
rest of America until the last couple of months. So
what do you think, Matt? What is the What is
which one? Walls or Vance will have a has currently
a higher favorability percentage?
Speaker 2 (04:49):
Which one mm probably Walls?
Speaker 1 (04:52):
You are correct? What do you think walls favorability is
above or below fifty percent?
Speaker 2 (04:57):
I would guess above.
Speaker 1 (04:59):
It is not.
Speaker 2 (04:59):
Okay, it is not. I mean, so much of this stuff.
This is one survey, right, it is it is Do
we know the percentage breakdown of how people vote? Who
took this survey? You know what I mean? Like, there's
so many controls here that need to be weighed in.
Speaker 1 (05:12):
Yeah. So, so there's a bunch of numbers in here.
And that's one of the reasons why there's a margin
of error in every single one of these. Yeah, because
it'll tell you what the margin of error is based
on what they expect from the information they have from
the people who did the survey. The margin of ra
and this one's only two percentage points. They the people
(05:35):
that put this on Washington Post, ABC News and IPSOS
feel like it's a little bit more tight between the
two sides in the way that they've done this than
some of the other presidential ones we talked about that
have like four to four and a half percent margin
of ra All these numbers are pretty much it's not
like which one do you prefer, it's what's your favorability?
(05:56):
Does that make sense?
Speaker 2 (05:57):
Mm hmm.
Speaker 1 (05:57):
It's a little bit different in the way because you
can only pick one. If you're picking one, you could
realistically you could one person can say they have a
favorable view of both or an unfavorable view of both,
right sure, Tim Walls thirty nine percent favorability okay, thirty
percent unfavorable, Thirty one percent did not answer. They said
I don't know enough yet about him. Makes sense, okay?
(06:19):
Forty four percent of Americans did say they disapprove of
him as Harris's running mate. I don't know if they
were just like hoping for Shapiro or somebody else, but
that's a pretty bad number. As far as jd vance,
only thirty two percent of the people said that they
have a favorable view of him. Forty two percent have
an unfavorable view, so that's ten percentage points, whereas Waltz
(06:41):
has actually a high like thirty one percent said they
didn't answer the question twenty six percent on the Van's side.
So maybe the extra few weeks that he has been
in the public spotlight has allowed more people to have
allowed more people to understand what he's all about. Apparently
they don't like him that much thirty two per favorable,
forty two percent unfavorable. So among rule voters, of course,
(07:06):
Vance is more popular thirteen percent more prefer over Walls
and Walls ahead for younger people under the age of
forty sixteen points better than Vance, even though Vance is
actually the guy younger than forty. I'm not surprised by
these numbers. To be completely honest with you, Walls does
have this approachability to him. I think he looks pretty fake.
(07:28):
I don't really like the way he carries himself. What
did I say, Well, did I call him a muppet?
Is that the guy called a muppet?
Speaker 2 (07:34):
Yeah, he said he looked like a muppet?
Speaker 1 (07:36):
Was it was Ernie? Right? I said he looked like
a white haired Ernie. That's right. Uh, you know Ernie
with the horizontal stripes. He looks like Ernie. Let's let's
get him an Ernie sweatshirt, throw him up on stage
and get a wig on him, and I bet he
would look like him. I get weird vibes from him.
I don't like his policies when he became the governor.
I think he's constantly chasing trying to be hip and cool,
(07:59):
even though he's six years old. I really think that
that's not what America needs. But he knows how to
run a campaign at this point. They picked him because
he can't appeal to the younger voters. He can make
the twenty five year old who hasn't made a decision
yet feel like, well, I have to vote for those people,
the Democrats, because I don't want to be the person
(08:19):
in my friend group that votes Republican. They're the cool
kids over there on the left and he's and they're
playing that game, and he's being a sidekick and a
cheerleader for Kamala Harris, and that's working at least as
far as the polls look right now. As far as
Jade vance, he hasn't done a darn thing to win
anybody that's not already a Trump supporter. I've been pretty
(08:42):
crass about that too. He's not impressed me at all.
I think he's hurting him badly. To be honest, I
know Trump says he's doing a great job. What is
one thing that jd Vance has actually said that makes
an independent voter or somebody that's not one hundred percent
on Trump make them want to vote for Trump? Absolutely nothing. Okay,
we can agree that the guy is still pretty new
to politics. He's new to the way that he's talking
(09:04):
to people. It was a grand slam swing to have
a person that you could hand Maga's, the MAGA movement,
the make America Great Again movement politically off to him
after four more years of Trump, if he's elected, that's
the game plan. But if you could do it over again,
I don't think you could you could make that move.
I think you need to hit a strong double down
the line. And there were plenty of other legitimate candidates
(09:25):
on the Republican side you could have gone with, that
could have been safer, that could have appealed more to
a broader audience, and jad Vance hasn't done that. And
in fact, a lot of the stuff that's been dug
up that he's actually been on record of saying and
also has doubled down on has alienated people that are
generally independent or people that are of a variety of
different demographics, including the young vote, which is the opposite
(09:46):
of what needs to happen for Republicans that they expect
to win. So I'm not surprised by the results of
this favorability survey, and I guess time is going to
tell on what people are going to think about him
as a viable vice pres and if he does end
up dragging Trump down to a point where Trump loses
enough of those swing states that the Democrats stay in power,
(10:09):
that's still definitely in play. Two twenty, we'll have more
on the way. I got another new storage in pillin
threatening to potentially veto if things aren't being done in
the unicameral and the special session about property taxes. I'll
give you the information we have in the latest next
on news Radio eleven to ten KFAB and.
Speaker 3 (10:24):
Raise songer on news Radio eleven ten KFAB.
Speaker 1 (10:30):
By the way, before I get into this, you sent
me we got a Friday four and this is the
tease for that. We're gonna do that in the three
o'clock hour. It has everything to do with your like
something that you discovered this week and I had something
to do with so I'll take partial credit. But your
discovery of the eighties banned Asia, is that right? Yeah,
the eighties banned Asia. If you want, for the people
(10:52):
who are out there before I get to this pilling thing,
the people that are out there, can you explain how
you discovered Asia and why this has become such an
important part of your life for the last forty eight hours.
Speaker 2 (11:01):
Well, I mean and from the show's standpoint, for sure,
it's a song that I enjoyed, especially like the beginning.
Speaker 1 (11:07):
Only time will tell is the song we're referring to it.
Speaker 2 (11:09):
It's a good song. I like the way it starts, honestly,
if I'm being completely honest, After the first thirty seconds
it kind of drifts into your typical eighties fair But
I really like the way it starts.
Speaker 1 (11:19):
I don't know, the chorus, chorus goes pretty hard.
Speaker 2 (11:22):
You know, it picks up towards the end.
Speaker 1 (11:23):
It has its moments and just like it reminds me
of like I Have the Tiger the baseline, like don't don't,
don't like very like heavy on the down beats. It's
a jam. It's a jam for sure. But the teas
to the Friday four is Matt fell in love with Asia?
Speaker 2 (11:40):
Well, I wouldn't say that Matt fell.
Speaker 1 (11:42):
In love so much with Asia that he's actually going
to move there.
Speaker 2 (11:45):
We are good acquaintances at this point, colleagues, Asia, the
content ants, and we're going to talk about maybe some
musical artists that kind of fall into that category of
just how did I not know about this earlier?
Speaker 1 (12:00):
So just to keep that in mind, start racking the
old noodle for that. However, real quick, I don't want
to spend a ton of time on this, Matt. Do
you know how much property taxes are in America? They're
a lot, Yeah, that's what I've heard. In Nebraska they're
even more than a lot. It's ridiculous how much they are.
But they're trying to take a vote on the property
tax relief in the special session that has been called,
(12:20):
and the state senators spent this morning trying to tweak
up the bill quite a bit. And basically it would
repurpose the property tax credit fund, send it back to
tax paying people in Nebraska. How nice would that be?
And would make budget reduction and place caps on city
and county governments. Now, Governor Pillen said that he held
(12:42):
veto any of the bills that could are a version
of the bill essentially that would water down local government
spending caps as well. And here is the quote. And
I don't know, I can't do a good pilling. I'll
just I'll say it like Emery or should I say
it like Bernie Sanders, because I feel like I have
a pretty decent Bernie. I don't know, Maybe.
Speaker 2 (13:01):
Say it like Jesse Ventura.
Speaker 1 (13:06):
Oh man, I will veto any bill that comes to
my desk with local government property tax collection caps that
are weaker than those included in LB thirty four, the
bill that we're talking about here when it passed general
file consideration on the thirteenth this Tuesday. That bill allowed
for property tax collection growth of zero percent or inflation,
(13:30):
whichever is greater, and included common sense exceptions for law
enforcement and public safety investments necessary to keep our communities secure. Okay,
so there you go. Was that a good Ventura? I
didn't have a left time to prepare there was.
Speaker 2 (13:45):
It wasn't bad. I wanted more references to the documents.
He's always talking about some documents.
Speaker 1 (13:50):
The documents look at the champion, macho man Randy Savage
defeated hold Coogan. Hogan looks to be in great shape
for this main event anyway. Bottom line is Pillin is
very picky about this not impacting communities and the backbone
of their communities by taking away funds that have been
(14:14):
going to them to make sure that these communities are
safe and secure. At the same time, he says, there
should be plenty of ways that we can get the
taxpayers to have a little bit of this property relief.
You think people are going across the border to the
Council Bluffs to live. I've heard a few people that
have done that, that live in Council Bluffs while working
in Omaha, and that's probably one of the things that
(14:34):
you're trying to combat. But you also want to be
attractive for people who are wanting to buy houses in
Omaha and Lincoln and other places around Nebraska. Trying to
battle with these what do they call high property taxes
that we've been dealing with for the last several years.
We'll keep you posted if something does come out in
that legislative session. To twenty eight is our time. Matt
(14:58):
and I are going to continue to have a little
bit of fun here a couple of things that I'm
going to poke around. Matt, I want you to don't
look it up, but I'm going to tell you this,
and I want the people to think about it. Don't
look it up. Think about what was in the asteroid
that killed the dinosaurs, where it came from, and what
it was made of. Think about it. I will tell
you what the latest study might tell you on this
next stick around news Radio eleven ten kfab.
Speaker 3 (15:21):
Em Marie's songer on news radio eleven ten kfab.
Speaker 1 (15:25):
Are you ready to have me back in the studio there, Matt.
Speaker 2 (15:27):
Oh, absolutely, yeah, I'm looking forward to that. And I
can understand that though you've been out at the fair,
you know, this whole time, which is fun, it's kind
of like, you know when when you're doing something different
for that long, you're kind of you kind of miss
your routine in a way.
Speaker 1 (15:40):
Yeah. If it sounds like I'm ynging, I am. I'm
also on my third mountain dew Still. It's just you
know a little bit of wearing down and I don't
see my wife, my dogs. You know, I told you
this last year when I was living away from them,
you know, that kind of takes a toll on me
as well. I like having that support system with me.
But it's been fun. It's just you know, I'm definitely
ready to come home. Yeah, So I don't know they
(16:05):
are there. Happens to be quite a bit going on
in fun news, and I want to talk more about
the fun aspect of this because it's Friday and I
don't want to talk about too much hard news. We
just talked about a couple of news items, and if
you want more news, you can hear the top of
the bottom of the hour. We do newscasts both local
and national, each half hour here on this fine radio station,
(16:26):
eleven tin KFAP. I saw this. I saw this. So dinosaurs,
do you believe they existed? Or are they made up?
Speaker 2 (16:38):
Are being fooled by the scientists. I think there's overwhelming
evidence to suggest that they existed. I would be very
curious about the case laid out for I mean, you know,
it's again, I don't mean to be this guy, but
it reminds me of what Neil de grass Tyson said
about the moon landing. He said, you know what, they
started to fake it, but then they realized how much
(16:58):
effort that was going to take to pull off, so
they just filmed it on location. I just think there's
way too much evidence to ever even entertain the idea
that what this cabal of scientists across the world and
across generations have now been, you know, putting together this
secret plan that the Earth is flat and when there's
you know, and dinosaurs weren't real. I just there's too
much evidence.
Speaker 1 (17:19):
Yeah, I tend to agree, you know, and the fact
that they've been able to put these fossils together and
make them look pretty legitimate based on how it was
how the fossils were found in the ground pretty interesting.
Did you know how many mass extinctions? Do you think
the planet Earth has has had mass extinctions? Who? That's
(17:41):
I would, well, you have the last one in there.
There's one, there's the one right right, at least a couple. Well,
there was five, it sounds like, okay. And the one
that took out the dinosaurs was about sixty six million
years ago, took out three quarters of all life on Earth.
They call these five extinction. It's, however, the Big five,
(18:02):
and that one was not even close to being the
worst one. The new mass extinction event in the fossil
record was one that took place between two hundred and
thirty two million to two hundred and thirty four million
years ago, and it basically, they said, it was the
volcanic eruptions in what is now western Canada in all likelihood,
(18:24):
and it created high volumes of volcanic basalt, which basically
is now what makes up the western coast of the
United States. But the eruptions created a bunch of greenhouse
gases and carbon dioxide, and basically the globe was warming
at a ridiculous amount of speed, like way more than
anybody could say it's warming now, and just took out
(18:45):
a ton of life, which eventually is what led to
the rise of the dinosaurs in the millions of years thereafter.
Does that make sense, Yeah, So anyway, now again that's
they talked the mass extinction event. Those are volcanic eruptions
that created a global warming scenario in a quick form
over you know, several years, and eventually led to mass
(19:08):
extinction of all the organisms. Doesn't really say exactly how
long it took for that to take place. There's a
chance that it was thousands upon thousands upon thousands of
years that eventually that led to a moment there's no
way to know, Like, let's take it back to this
last extinction event, right with a dinosaur sixty six million
years ago. Have you ever thought about like, okay, so
(19:28):
asteroid hits Earth, right, how fast do the dinosaur start
to pass away? Like? How quickly does the entire group
of this these animals that are basically running Earth at
this point where pretty much they all go away and
just become extinct all at about the same time the
(19:49):
ones that are around at the time.
Speaker 2 (19:51):
It didn't have to change the climate.
Speaker 1 (19:53):
It probably takes so many years, right, it would trigger
an event which leads to another event, which leads to
another event, and as that happens, that then the trickle
down effect of essentially ends the species. Yeah, there's a
lot of work that goes into trying to figure this
stuff out. Right, Obviously, no humans were around sixty six
million years ago to witness this. Now there's a study out, however,
(20:16):
that the asteroid that created the chain of events that
eventually would lead to the extinction of the dinosaurs. They
have figured out what they think is what it was
made of and where it came from that landed on
Earth and created this issue. What do you think it
was made of? And where do you think it came from?
The asteroid? What do you think was say it again?
(20:37):
Sorry I was I was on the phone there for
the last thirty seconds. Okay, where do you think the
asteroid came from? And what do you think's made of?
Speaker 2 (20:44):
Oh? I mean it came from space? Where in space?
Speaker 1 (20:47):
I don't know what was the genesis of this particular asteroid? Right?
Was it a piece of something? You know? That's most
asteroids are either in the asteroid belt. They're pieces of
rock from other like planets or something else, right, or
moons or whatever? Right? Right, Well, this one was not.
They think this thing was.
Speaker 2 (21:08):
A mudball, A mudball, a mudball.
Speaker 1 (21:12):
They think it was a mudball that sixty six million
years ago, a giant mudball containing materials which were from
the dawn of the Solar System, the Big Bang, floating
through space made a high velocity collision with the Yucatan
Peninsula around Cheeks Club, Mexico. And essentially that is the
(21:36):
reason they believe this is there's not a lot of
evidence of like a giant crater with like rock involved. Right,
you're trying to figure out what happened in the mudball
basically exploded on impact. Now, how's that for you?
Speaker 2 (21:50):
A mudball.
Speaker 1 (21:51):
They're trying, they're figuring out, they're trying to put the
pieces together as to why it didn't leave as big
of a footprint as a regular asteroid would have, considering
the damage that eventually it would do to the rest
of the world. They sampled a ton of rocks, they
looked at different things. They think the conclusion was it
was a giant mudball from the dawn of the Solar
System that happened to be flying and screaming through and
(22:15):
just happened to collide in that spot on Earth. So
the more you know, Matt, Now, when you're talking to
that class of seven year olds that you're mentoring right now,
because you're still doing that right you're teaching radio for
seven year olds at the local elementary school.
Speaker 2 (22:33):
No, I'm not, but I certainly would love to. Yeah,
that sounds like a fun time. I don't know what
I would teach them, but it is an interesting profession
for sure.
Speaker 1 (22:43):
Yeah, And it's interesting to think about a mudball taking
out the entire planet essentially.
Speaker 2 (22:47):
That is I love that word mudball, like it's a mudball.
It seems so childish, but it had such dastardly consequences.
Speaker 1 (22:54):
It is a peer reviewed piece put together about the
dinosaur kill extinction event sixty six million years ago. And
the term they are using for it is a rare
clay rich mudball. Huh, there you go. Now, where exactly
the mud came from that, I don't know, but I
(23:15):
guess we'll have to stick around for the next episode
of Mudballs, the Earth's Deadliest Killer. Right now it is
two forty seven. Stick around. More Fun on the Way
on news radio eleven ten KFAB.
Speaker 3 (23:28):
And Maurice Sunger on news Radio eleven ten KFAB.
Speaker 1 (23:35):
Doing the same stuff. I've basically been doing this for
the last four months and it's just now, you know,
like popping up here. But a couple of things. First
of all, the station itself made an announcement today about
that and put it on social media. And man, there
are some really nasty people who are just not happy
about it. Not necessarily even what to do with me,
(23:56):
but just stuff about the radio station that's already happened. Man,
When did people become so angry about stuff like this?
Speaker 2 (24:04):
Oh? I know what you mean?
Speaker 1 (24:06):
What did the heck happen? Like what, Oh, that's fine
if you don't want to be happy for me personally,
or that the station has a permanent host in this spot.
I mean, that's fine. I'm not going to pretend like
it's you know, I'm not going to pretend like you
have to like me. But what what are like? What
is the like, no he's an idiot or nope he
(24:27):
said this, or no I don't like the way that
he talks, and just like feeling convicted enough of that
to just like on the announcement that I'm getting this
thing all of a sudden, like just like a horrible thing.
It's somehow, somehow terrible.
Speaker 2 (24:41):
And I have often thought that it is as it's
again the principle of the vocal minority. I don't think
most people are the type who do this, but I
think the people who do are the ones who do
it a lot. And I can speak from experience, because
I'll get people like that who like to flood whatever
device they can. And there's not very many of you,
and and but you are the very vocal minority who
(25:02):
But I've always wondered, like what if we just found
these people who are constantly negatively commenting about things online
and just have them all sit down in a room
together and figure out commonalities, like are you just doing
this to blow off steam? Do you have some things
in your life that are really bothering you right now
and this is your way of escape? Like what's going
on with someone who does this? Because I genuinely don't understand.
Speaker 1 (25:23):
Yeah, I've had a few of those guys that have
called in and I've taken the call, and you know what,
that's fine as long as they're not cursing or they're
not saying stuff that's super duper personal, Like sometimes that
does happen, but you know what, it's just like, does
it make you feel better just being angry at somebody
or being mean at somebody? You know? I took a
little life coaching with a therapist last year when I
(25:44):
made my move, just to kind of help me with
the adjustment from you know, kind of going from a
behind the scenes, back seat kind of person to becoming
a host in Omaha and trying to handle the pressures
and the you know, the ups and the downs of that.
The change, right like, the change in of itself is
what people get more upset about. Than anything, even though
(26:07):
they didn't have a regular host in this slot for
what six months? Was that about? Right? Like? You know,
I I get it, but I just don't understand why
everybody's just always just so overtly negative about something like this.
So for me, it kind of it stings a little
to see that, And I've gotten better at handling that
(26:27):
and understanding that. You know, I have some of those
inclinations to just be angry about stuff that I can't
control as well instead of just trying to be embraceful
or embraceful embrace a lot of it. But I don't know,
it's just something about seeing people be so overtly negative,
not just about you know, like I said, just me,
but about stuff from the last several years that they did.
(26:49):
Oh we're so angry, We'll never you know, support or whatever.
It's just like, maybe you need to get a life,
or or maybe you need to get a therapist to
help you with whatever those suppressed feelings are. And also
they misspelled my name. A couple of the outlets that
reported on this have misspelled my name with an O
and also with an E. They're spelling my name two
(27:10):
different ways. In the press release, that's rough. It didn't
even come from me, Like, what are we What are
we doing here? You can google me, I'm my social
media is public. What are we doing here?
Speaker 2 (27:23):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (27:24):
Uh, anyway, it's okay. It was only a big it's
a big announcement for me in my future. It's no
big deal anyway. I'll try to be as positive as
I can, and hopefully you can be positive with this too.
We're gonna do a Friday for try to have some fun,
and we're also going to talk about whatever you'd like
to talk about as well. Phone lines open four oh two, five, five,
eight to eleven, ten News Radio eleven ten kfab