Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
You can't be the president or the vice president, but
you get to work in the administration. What is your
job court jester? No, it's not a job. Why you
can't be making stuff up? I want to be the
court jester. There is no court jester. They will not
pay you American taxpayer dollars to be a court jester.
Speaker 2 (00:15):
Make it, bring it back. I'll be really good, I promise. No, no,
you know no. People who don't like we can throw tomatoes.
The people who do can give me laughs.
Speaker 1 (00:24):
What would what would even be? What would even be like?
Speaker 3 (00:26):
What?
Speaker 1 (00:27):
Like? Would you be entertaining? Like? The reason that guy
existed was because there was no entertainment back in the day.
Like that was entertainment. There were no stand up comics.
They barely had music then, right, Like this was just
the They needed a guy who was gonna show up
and basically be the TV for the day. Yeah, we
don't need that guy anymore. And those people are really busy.
(00:48):
The court gester was literally there not for people like us.
It was there for the people who are running the country.
It would be I'd be a court gester in disguise.
It would like I'd pretend like I was a normal congressman,
and then I would just do a pratfall at the
funniest time. Now see that'd be funny. Yeah, see, now
you're with me, but a slapstick. But you have to
you have to get election. You have to get elected
(01:09):
to do that, though, So would you run for office?
I mean I'm talking about an appointed position in the
cabinet here? Who, like, what would you be? I already
picked mine. No, that's not a real job. You can't
just do not real jobs. What are the options if
I have to play this game, We'll look it up
the American cabinet. I will be.
Speaker 2 (01:33):
Well, what do you usually find in a cabinet? I
think I would like to be the tea cup.
Speaker 1 (01:38):
Hmmm, yeah, you seem like a tea cup to me.
I am short and stout. What are you gonna do
about it?
Speaker 3 (01:44):
Now?
Speaker 1 (01:45):
The teapots short and stout. Oh, the tea cup is
just really weak and easily breakable. That's true. You get
the Secretary of State, Secretary of the Treasury, the Secretary
of Defense, the Attorney General, Secretary of the Interiors, Secretary
of Agriculture, Secretary of Commerce, Secretary of Labor, Secretary of
Health and Human Services, Secretary of Housing and Urban Development,
(02:07):
Secretary of Transportation, Secretary of Energy, Secretary of Education, Secretary
of Foreign Affairs, Secretary of Homeland Security. Excuse me, I
think I have a lot of those. What's that? There's
a lot of those.
Speaker 2 (02:19):
There is, But I've chosen, mind, what is it, Secretary
of the Interior, because then at least I'd get to
stay indoors.
Speaker 1 (02:26):
Is that what that's about. I don't think that's what
that's about. I think the Secretary of the Interior has
a different job than that. What does it do?
Speaker 4 (02:32):
Now?
Speaker 1 (02:32):
The Secretary of the Department of the Interior are responsible
for the management and conservation of federal land along with
natural resources, leading to agencies such as the Bureau of
Land Management, to the United States Geological Survey, Bureau of
Indian Affairs, and the National Park Service. Basically, you'd be
in charge of, you know, making sure that the federal
lands in the United States are being utilized properly. It's real.
(02:55):
It's a real uh Teddy Roosevelt thing to be in
charge of. Okay, well, I'll choose that one. That's a
good one. It's a good one. You could be like
a park ranger and elevate yourself up to the Secretary
of the Interior. One day I get to ride a horse,
Yeah you could. You could. There's a lot of horse
riding areas that you'd be in charge of out there. Yeah. Yeah,
I think I would personally like to be the Secretary
(03:17):
of Transportation, mostly because the Secretary of transportation getting arounds
important and I feel like I have a lot of
good ideas after I went and spent plenty of time
out there in Spain, right, so how they did it?
I'd like to implement some of my ideas. Pete Bootage
it seems to be you know, he had some job
(03:39):
security even though he wasn't super great at the job.
So you know, like, why couldn't I I could learn
on the job? Tag me in. Well, the reason I'm
saying all this is because Donald Trump is starting to
name as people or or here's another thing. You could
be the ambassador to a country. Would you rather live
in a different country?
Speaker 3 (03:55):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (03:55):
Can I be the ambassador to Italy? Yeah? Okay, that's
a job one I want. Why is that you just
want to live there? Yeah? I love Italy, It's beautiful.
You could could you you could talk to people of
Italy and their cohorts trying to understand, you know, like
how we can help them, and feels like a pretty
low stress job. I mean, like, what would the Ambassador
to Italy really even need to do?
Speaker 2 (04:16):
I would eat pasta and enjoy my time with the locals.
Speaker 1 (04:22):
The US investor in Italy right now is Jack Markel.
Have you heard of him? No? Yeah, I don't know
Jack Markel, though, that's that's the guy. You could be
that guy. There you go. Yeah, so Secretary to Israel
seems to be or Ambassador of Israel seems to be
a pretty big deal. And we just heard a word
moments ago that guess who iHeart Huckebees has returned. Oh
(04:45):
that's a movie. That's not the real guy. It's a
weird movie. I don't even know what they were going
for in that movie, to be honest with you. Who's
that Dustin Hoffman? Dustin Hoffman, that's the guy, right, Jude
Laws in it? Oh Jude Law? What happened to him?
I think he does stuff? They had some people there.
Wahlberg's in it. Yeah, I don't know. I don't have
to rewatch it. But anyway, Mike Huckabee, former governor of Arkansas.
(05:06):
He's the new US ambassador to Israel. Good idea, you
feel good about the return of the Huckabee. I don't know.
I mean, why don't even what does that job even
entail except just keep maintaining like a good stream of
communication from the United States government to Israel. Especially considering
what's going on right now, it seems like I don't
know how to feel about it. It seems out of
(05:26):
left field. It needed to be somebody important, even though
I have no idea who's currently doing it.
Speaker 2 (05:34):
So when Netanyahu visits America, is you going to take
him to Cracker Barrel?
Speaker 1 (05:38):
I don't know. Jacob Blue has been Jacob Blue.
Speaker 4 (05:42):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (05:43):
Jacob Blue was also the Secretary of the Treasury from
twenty thirteen to twenty seventeen until Trump took office, and
then when Biden took over, he was appointed to be
the ambassador to Israel. I. Maybe it's just me not
being in the loop, but how do we not know
this person's name considering what's going on, It just must
not be that big of a deal because the government's
(06:05):
talking to each other, like why do we need the ambassador?
He's just there like he's the errand boy. He's the
errand boy in Israel. He's like he's talking to the
other erin boys for Nettan Yahoo. It's like the middleman,
you know, old Jacob Blue. Well, Jacob Blue, congratulations. You
know you know who else got a job today? We
found out who the selection for Secretary of the Homeland
(06:30):
Security is going to be. We found out who the
likely Secretary of State is going to be. And holy moley,
these are some shakeups. These are some real people here.
Let's go ahead and take a break. Come back. I'll
tell you all about it. Next. On news radio eleven
ten KFA, b Emrie Sunger Jimmy emails in and says,
Matt can't be the court gesture. We just had four
(06:51):
years of a total joke in the White House, and
we don't need another one. Matt.
Speaker 2 (06:56):
I think that you, once you see it in action,
you'll change your tune. I would give me an example,
Give me an example. I'm first off, pratfalls. Okay, who
doesn't love a good pratfall or like a weirdly timed okay,
sorry if this isn't your humor, but plenty of people
laugh at this kind of stuff. Imagine when people are
(07:16):
really trying to get down to business in Washington, and
somebody lets one.
Speaker 1 (07:20):
Fly m that kind of stuff. Worst person, that guy,
or George Santos a whoope cushion right underneath like the
speaker of the house sits down, order order, whoope cushion. Yeah, exactly.
Speaker 2 (07:35):
Wow, I'm talking gags, goofs, Pies in the face, pies
in the face, pies in the face.
Speaker 1 (07:41):
What's your shoe budget. You're gonna have to wear one
of those, that's true.
Speaker 2 (07:45):
I'm going classic gesture like that that like one side
is green, the other side is purple, buttons down the front,
and then that goofy hat that's got like bells on it.
You know, that's obnoxious.
Speaker 1 (07:55):
I'm gonna go ahead and guess if they had their
choice between Santos and you, they would have kept Santos.
That's the level that we're at right now.
Speaker 2 (08:02):
I just feel like you're turning away a good idea.
It's like hockey on a battleship, now where you really
try it. The hockey in the battleship's a better idea
than this one. This is a bad one. This one
should have stayed in the think tank.
Speaker 1 (08:15):
Jimmy also says, isn't it ironic the person in charge
of everything outdoors, it's called the Secretary of the Interior.
It's pretty good. Yeah, that's pretty good. Yeah, Okay, let's
go ahead, and let's go ahead and talk about this.
When I say Marco, you say Rubio, Marco Rubio, Marco Rubio,
he may be the new secretary of State. How about that?
(08:36):
You like Marco? Litl Marco. I've never met him personally,
I actually have. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm a big Marco guy.
Twenty sixteen. He made the most sense to me. I mean,
I was a twenty five year old trying to learn
how to vote for president still, but like when he
was running, I was like, man, this guy every time
he talks just feels like he knows what he's talking about.
And the more I dug in, I was like, man,
(08:58):
under the Obama administration, we got we got pretty we
got pretty loose with the way that people viewed us
in the world foreign policy. We didn't have that same
kind of strength that you know American needs to have,
And I felt like that was a huge thing for
Marco Rubio's like, man, this guy gets foreign policy. How
old do you think Marko Rubia is now eight years
(09:19):
after all of that, where he's been pretty under the
radar on a national level while continuing to serve his
state as an elected senator.
Speaker 2 (09:27):
I'll say he's fifty three. You know this because you
looked it up already. No, that's the age of Dana Holgerson.
That's why I guessed that.
Speaker 1 (09:33):
No, it's not it is older than that. No, he's
fifty three. I looked it up. Yes, Dana Holgerson's fifty three.
He is fifty three. Oh, he just looks older than that.
Speaker 2 (09:42):
I think the mullet doesn't do him anything. He's gotta
address that. Yeah, Marco's fifty three.
Speaker 1 (09:47):
Good job. How did you do that? I just do
that sometimes. Yeah, sometimes you're terribly off and sometimes you're great.
All right, Well, Marco could be the secretary of State.
Guess what, I think this is a genius pick. I
think this could be the pick of all picks. Jd.
Vance is kind of growing into what the vice president's
going to be. You know what, as vice president, he's
(10:09):
not going to have to do a whole lot all right.
We talked about this with Kamala Harris. The vice president
doesn't have a lot of direct responsibility to much of anything.
And Trump's got his borders are figured out. When we
talked about that with Tom Homan, you got all the
other cabinet positions are going to be pretty powerful people.
You would figure JD is going to be able to
learn things for the next four years sitting there behind Trump.
(10:33):
You want to know what else? You want to know
what else? Marco Rubio is going to be a star
as the Secretary of State. You want to talk about
elevating a guy to a point where he potentially could
be the next president. I know that Vance could end
up being the guy that they're trying to make the
handoff to. I think it may make more sense to Rubio.
I really do you know? Trump and Rubio? Obviously in
the twenty sixteen election cycle, they Marco late lasted longer
(10:56):
than everybody else did except for Ted Cruz, and he
couldn't really played Trump's game with the whole you know,
making fun of stuff and you know, trying to be
you know, humorous and things like. I think Marco's just
kind of naturally pretty charismatic and funny, but he's not
funny in the way that Trump's just like Trump knows
how to rile the people up get a reaction out
of him. Marco is kind of a little bit more forced,
but he is definitely super presidential in the way that
(11:18):
he carries himself. And he listened to this. I found this.
This is posted as he was about to go into
a meeting, and this is a person, you know, with
a camera, like somebody is recording this and he's just
walking through a hallway and a random person just calls
out to Marco as he's, you know, walking into this
meeting in regards to the person's going to bring up
(11:41):
in the Israel topic. Here is Marco Rubio dealing with
this random person who has a filmographer that he is
unfamiliar with. Oh, I will not as the contrary. I
want you guys to get this.
Speaker 5 (11:54):
I want them to destroy every element of from As
they can get their hands on. These people are vicious
animals who did horrifying crimes.
Speaker 1 (12:01):
And I hope you guys post that what about the civilians?
Speaker 5 (12:04):
Every day Mamasa stopped hiding behind civilians, putting civilians in
the way. Hamas you that this was gonna lead to this.
Hamas has stopped building their military installations underneath hospital.
Speaker 1 (12:14):
So you don't fifteen thousand die. You don't care about
the babies that are getting every day.
Speaker 5 (12:19):
I think it's terrible and I think Hamas is one
hundred percent of lame. That's what I think. Make sure
you post that.
Speaker 1 (12:23):
Please, this is a random person he's talking to. Give
me this. I want this in the White House. You're
not gonna have to guess anymore. Matt Case America. You
don't have to guess anymore what people in the White
House are thinking. A guy like this is just gonna
tell you, and he's gonna tell you in a way
that's not disrespectful. Give me some of that. Give me
ten giant, heaping piles of that from this administration about everything.
(12:48):
Would you like to to like it to go? Yeah, sure,
I'll take some to go. I'm not gonna be able
to eat ten right here and helping's here. I mean
I'm not. I'm pretty slim. Actually, look, I'm telling you
if I can get this level of transparency in the
way that the White House is thinking about things and
not the coach speak that Joe Biden tried to give
us before he stopped being able to know how to read, Like,
(13:10):
give me, give me some of that that's how you
handle an issue like this. I can tell you after
watching a thirty second clip of Marko Rubio talk to
a random person who's trying to grill him on Israel.
I can tell you right now how the administration feels.
If he's the Secretary of State. I don't have to think.
I don't have to guess. There's not this ring of
a rule of like, oh, we gotta predict the civilians,
(13:31):
but oh, you know we have Oh you know, Israel's
a right to defend hisself. Well, you know, we know
that people are really concerned about this and just dancing
around it over and over again. He said, Hamas needs
to pay. Israel should be the ones that are paying them.
And guess what Hamas is to blame. I care about
the civilian deaths, but it's Hamas who has done it.
Blame them, it's not Israel's fault. In thirty seconds, boom boom.
(13:56):
But of course there are going to be some people
out there that are going to be you know, like, hey,
I got some reservations about this. Just had a guy
emailing and said no to him as secretary of state.
He's a warhawk, Like I don't think so I don't
think that that's necessarily what he's going to be planning
to do. He's a guy with legitimate beliefs. He's a
guy that's super strong in the way that he thinks
(14:18):
about things, and he has been a foremost expert on
foreign policy from a senator's position for the better part
of the last decade. I don't know. I'm willing to
give I think he's I think he's great, I really do.
And if somebody wants to challenge me on that, that's
totally okay, because everybody has the right to their own opinion.
(14:40):
You know, who else got a job? Who else? The
old dog shooter? She Christino. Christino, most notably in the
last month or so, hosted the Donald Trump rally that lost.
A couple of people passed out at and they ended
up doing a dance party for an hour and a half.
She was supposed to be asking him questions as like
(15:02):
the moderator for that event, but once the people passed out,
Trump said no more questions, and then it was just
Christy Trump and his people just dancing the songs for
the next hour and a half. Pretty wild stuff. It worked,
I don't know. And then of course before that, as
Christy wrote a book terrible timing on the book and
basically said, hey, guess what, I shot my dog and
(15:23):
a goat on my property, and yeah, it was a
really difficult decision for me. I can be a leader.
Look how difficult of a decision I can be like.
I can make all the tough decisions. And everybody's like, Christie,
that's not a tough decision. You just sound like you're
a lunatic. You sound like your heartless lunatic, is what
he sounds like. Well, Christy got a job. You know
what she is? Hmmm, Secretary of Homeland Security taking over
(15:45):
for all Alejandro majorcis. Yeah. Boy. Now, I'm not to
say that she's not going to do a good job
at that, but she needed to be appointed to whatever
job she was about to get because, yeah, and the public,
the public eye. She was not going to win any
nationals being a part of a ticket. But I do
think this actually is a good fit for her because
she has been outspoken about what the border has been
(16:06):
and she is certainly going to implement whatever Donald Trump
in his administration as a team want to accomplish. And
working with Tom Homan, who's the guy who's going to
be in charge of, you know, how the border operates.
She's going to be in charge of that. I think,
with the help of the rest of the administration. I
have a lot of confidence she is going to be
actually pretty good in that role. That's not a bad
(16:26):
role for her. The only problem is with some of
these you got least sephonic. Somebody's gonna have to take
that seat. Marco Rubio gets ell of it. It's actually say,
somebody's gonna have to take that seat. And we know
how delicate the Senate is. Right now, now we have
a governor who's been at least for the last five
years at least decently regarded among Republican circles in South Dakota.
(16:47):
She's going to be replaced, and obviously it's going to
come from within their parties, but you know, special elections
will need to be had, and then the Republicans is
going to have to really do a good job to
make sure that they are able to hold on all
those seats, probably likely but not necessarily a given. And
then finally, on top of that, right who's next who
hasn't been named, who also is currently you know, has
(17:10):
a role you know, Doug Bergham's still technically the governor
of North Dakota. Could he be a guy and maybe
that gets you know, elevated into the cabinet position. Now
you have the other Dakota that needs a new governor.
These are all things that you have to keep in mind.
Not to say that a Democrat will ever win those states,
but it's just you know, an idea of you want
to make sure that a good leaders end up following
good leaders. Who's next? That's the big question to twenty nine.
(17:33):
We'll talk more on news radio eleven ten kfab and
Marie's songer the oldest political DAP of all time. Yeah,
you got to get that real good clap of adapt
you know, like they can go and do one of
those rooms that has great acoustics. They got them there.
Oh yeah, the Oval Office is good for that, right,
you know, but you're gonna hear all the cameras, you know,
clicking and all that stuff, which, by the way, why
do we have cameras that still click? Have we not
(17:54):
like gotten ourselves to the point of technology where you
don't have to have camera like the camera doesn't need
the clar like.
Speaker 2 (18:00):
I can I can turn that off my iPhone, But
I kind of like it. It's kind of quaint.
Speaker 1 (18:06):
No, it's dumb. It's dumb. You know how many people
are gonna be taking pictures and the entire time that
those guys are together is gonna be click the whole time,
because there's gonna be like ten twelve people in there
just constantly just taking shots. I hate it.
Speaker 2 (18:20):
What if they did adapt to dap and then they
took some water bottles and flipped them. No, no, no,
come on, and they like dapped again.
Speaker 1 (18:30):
No, and then they like skateboard Joe Biden can really
even hold a bottle of water, and you think he's
gonna be able to do that successfully. Give me a break. Now,
for those who don't know what adap is, when you
dap somebody up, it's just it's, you know, like you
slap pants, like like it's it's not a high five,
but it's like a side five, like like your your
hand's like parallel to the to the ground. Yeah, and
(18:52):
then you slap pants and then and then you just
kind of like hug, like a quick like hug. Right.
It's like the best way to describe it, like like
it's not like an embrace. It's more just like a
like a hug, like a bro hug. You're only really
like hugged for like a second. It's a quick, like
backslap hug. Yeah, exactly.
Speaker 2 (19:09):
You gotta be tough about it, right, you know none
of this like sentimental stuff.
Speaker 1 (19:13):
No, No, it's literally like a touch. It's like you
touch the back and your chests touch, like a chest
bump almost, so you slap, you slap the hands and
like a quick quick man bro quick yeah, one second
long hug thing, and then you squeeze each other's man buns.
Speaker 2 (19:32):
Isn't that a part of it? I thought it was no,
you don't touch other people's hair. Oh, Donald Trump works
hard on that hair. I rewatched the bit when he
was running in sixteen. He was on Fallon and Falon's like,
can I mess up your hair? And he let him.
You got to rewatch that. It's great Trumps just sitting
there smiling while Falon's basically giving him a nuggie and
(19:52):
his hair's going everywhere. I mean, how can you not
like Trump give me a break?
Speaker 1 (19:58):
Anyway? I'm guessing Joe Biden's not going to do that.
Although Donald Trump and a man bun dang. Would like
to see that, would like to see that. The technology exists,
we should be able to do that. We can't. Yeah,
I mean like hair plugs, right, No, I mean there's
I put an image on your podcast the other day.
Oh yeah, the guy who the trump and a man bun. Yeah,
(20:20):
that's Ai though I'm talking about real life, about real
life like him just walking around and he's got his
hair pulled back. I don't want to wait long enough
for him to grow it. Just like put some hair
plugs or extensions on there, so you can do that.
I think it'd be hilarious. Anyway, you were talking to
me before the break or during the break, I should say,
And it has everything to do with Wheel of Fortune
(20:41):
last night, completely unrelated to what we were talking about.
And Matt, I have to ask. I saw this. I
watched the viral clip that's going around. Just go ahead,
and I'm not even gonna give context to this is
on Wheel of Fortune last night. Play it, just go ahead,
treat yourself a round of sausage. I'm sorry, that's not it.
(21:05):
It was a round of applause, was the I don't
know how he got sausage out of it. Give yourself
a round of applause. I don't know how he got
give yourself a round of sausage. That the letter A
was clearly at the front of that word around of sausage.
Speaker 2 (21:23):
You can hear if you listen back, you can hear
him right after he says it. He's like, no, like
he knows.
Speaker 1 (21:28):
Treat yourself a round of sausage. I'm sorry, that's not it.
Treat yourself. It's four letters at the top. Treat it's
five letters, and the letter E is even in the
wrong place. Even if it had the right number of letters.
You got yourself a round of correct but a sausage.
(21:49):
I mean, there's no I don't know, man, like that
was a tough one. That's a tough one. But I'll
give him a live studio audience. You know, you're on
national television. You get it, Like, this is a very
weird thing to be experiencing. I can understand, like, just
there are people out there that have choked in worse situations.
I'll say that, and this guy, I did look it up.
(22:11):
He had a pretty historically bad round. I mean, this
was the most notable of his misses, but he had
multiple misses here And this goes back to begging the question,
what are the point of any of these game shows? Still, Like,
I hate to be that guy, but I could literally
just like do trivia on my own. Why would I
watch other people doing it? Well, what's the point of anything?
Say that again, what's the point? I mean, what's the
(22:33):
point of game shows? What's the point of anything? You
want to get existential? Why not have a game show?
Let them meet cake? Emory? You know what happened. Person
took the circus away in Rome. The person that said
let them meet cake died very shortly after that. I believe,
Well they cut her head off. It happens. Well, if
(22:53):
that's the case, then I guess you're right. What is
the point of anything? She got very famous for getting
her head cut off, so I guess there's that she
didn't gives Marie Antoinette, Yeah, she said let the meat cake.
She didn't actually probably say that. People say she said that.
Speaker 2 (23:07):
What's the context, Like, if they want cake, let them
meat cake?
Speaker 1 (23:10):
No? No, seriously, like people were about to come raid
them in the French Revolution and she was like, oh
well let them meet the cake.
Speaker 2 (23:16):
Well they were starving, and she was like, let them
have some cake. No, that wasn't what happened. They were
they were already very angry at her, and she just
like nonchalantly told the person, Hey, you're going to have
all these people showing up to you know, try to
like rip you out of this place and you know,
cut your head off. And she was like, let the
meat cake.
Speaker 1 (23:35):
She was like, everything's fine, My life is good. Why
are you complaining? That's she She would have said it
in French, I think, But yeah, anyway, I think the
point being I don't need cake. Look, these game shows
are just a ploy to Yeah, they entertain some people
who you know, don't have other means of entertainment in
this day and age, which to me, I'm sorry if
(23:55):
you can't find something to entertain yourself, it's better for
your brain to play the game. It's in a while.
Other people play the game. It's funny. Yeah, this is funny.
This is just a ploy to embarrass people in front
of the American public. That's my thing. Nobody remembers the winners.
I mean, how many winners of Jeopardy can you remember?
Like three total? Ever, people love playing along. Yeah, you
can play yourself. There are ways that you can go
(24:18):
on the internet on a computer game, and you can
play games yourself. I'm not trying to get Van a
White out of a job. Ryan Seacres has like fifteen jobs.
I'm sure he can live without this one. He's an
employee of iHeart, so you better be careful. That's what
I'm saying. He's got his own He's got a job
here too. Like I'm just saying, I find it to
be pretty interesting that we're still doing these game shows
(24:40):
when I could literally just play the game at home.
There's there, you know, there's a website called sporkle dot com. Sparkle.
Sparkle is s p O r c l E Sporkle okay,
as p O r c l E, yes right, and
Sporkle is literally just quizzes of anything. You can just say.
I sit there there very often and just do quizzes
about different things. You want to know how I know
(25:02):
who won the nineteen thirty six World Series. It's sport
because I've done the Sporkle quiz to name every single
World Series winner. Okay. I quized myself on all sorts
of stuff that I don't even know the answers to
and try to do better. Than I think I can,
just because it works my brain. Okay, I don't need
to sit here and watch a loser, say, treat yourself
to a round of sausage on national television to get
(25:23):
some laughs. I don't know what's the point of anything.
I don't know. I don't know that there is one.
But we're here. We're going to make the best of it.
To forty eight More on the Way on news Radio
eleven ten kfab. Em Marie's Sunger on news radio eleven
ten kfab. All right, welcome back. It is two fifty two.
(25:45):
Thanks for listening. We mentioned Marie Antoinette. Somehow you put
Mary Antoinette in the thing. Her name's Marie Antoinette. Matt oh,
they clearly have no and in the commercial break he
was talking as if she was Italian in life, like
I gentrified in my bag. Hey, I get offended when
people spell my name. I couldn't imagine just getting the
wrong name. And I'm a famous Like more people know
(26:07):
about Marie Antoinette than anybody else in this room. So
you know, there's that anyway that somehow popped up somehow.
But Sarah is on the phone line to explain more
to us. Hey, Sarah, what's on your mind?
Speaker 3 (26:18):
He's here. Her emory, Well, Marie Antournette was out of
touch with the people, the poor people, the people that
were revolting. They had no bread, they were poor, they
were hungry, and that's one of the reasons they were revolting. Well,
if she's heard they had no bread, she said, West,
they have no bread. Then let the meat cake, and
it showed how out of touch she was with them.
(26:39):
She said, will just get them some cakes? You know,
she figured they would have that, and that showed how
out of touch she was with the normal people. And then,
of course, as you said, not too much longer, she
lost her head in the French transpolution.
Speaker 1 (26:51):
So there we go. Now see what a heartless you
know what? Gosh you know.
Speaker 3 (26:57):
Well, well, you know, maybe that's just how she was
raised and that's how she knew, but that that was
the reference for her saying all right, Sarah, it's pretty cold.
Speaker 1 (27:07):
Yeah, now that makes that makes a lot more sense, Say, Sarah,
thanks for the call. I really appreciate you. Listen.
Speaker 3 (27:12):
Welcome, You're welcome.
Speaker 1 (27:13):
Have good day, Yeah you as well. Hey, So here's
the other thing here, right, monarchies, Right, that isn't that
really what the inherent problem was in France and that's
why they revolted. It was like, we don't want this
for we didn't elect these people. They also watched America
do the same thing, and they were like, wait a second,
if those that ragtag Continental Army can somehow defeat the British,
(27:38):
I'm sure we can revolt against our own government and
take them down. Because this happens right in the wake
of the American Revolution.
Speaker 2 (27:45):
I bet they were pretty haughty about it, you know,
because I mean we took some of the ideas from
some of their old philosophers like Voltaire.
Speaker 4 (27:51):
You know, Oh you took our ideas. We wie, mademoiselle,
I'm gonna do from us? Fuck Bogget. Yeah, No, seriously,
monarchies was really the problem. You're you're basically just being
asked to and get revolted against.
Speaker 1 (28:11):
Don't you kind of miss it? Though?
Speaker 3 (28:12):
No?
Speaker 1 (28:13):
I don't. No one misses it. No, Dad Goresters they no,
you know what, Core Gesters. That was bad. That's one
of the problems we got. Technology now got a couple
of people. Chris says uh I asked why people watch
game shows still like it's just really an exploitation of
(28:34):
the stupidity of Americans. And Chris says, we watched them
because they're funny, hmory, especially when you have gaffs like that, like, yeah,
I love watching a guy make a complete you know
what out of himself, a complete butt out of himself
on national television because he's choking live on air right
like he's having like a meltdown on the air of like,
oh man, I can't play this game right now. There's
too many lights. The lights they're too bright. Shut them
(28:56):
off off the Trump thing. That's a great meme, by
the way, And then Leslie says, so antisocial playing games
on a computer. There are many game shows on TV
that are educational. Have the live contestants and watch the
games with your family. Just my two cents. Okay, fine,
you can do that. I'm not saying you can't do that.
I'd rather play the quiz game myself and keep score myself.
That was me.
Speaker 2 (29:17):
You can treat yourself to a round of sausage. Emery Conger, Hey,
you can take that back.
Speaker 1 (29:22):
Three o'clock hour coming up, Depth Fisial join us this
hour too on news radio eleventh in KFAB