Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is like an observation. It's an observance, observation of
a bad event. It's just kind of something in general.
It's an ongoing thing. Oh, not a person, not a
specific thing Nash happens.
Speaker 2 (00:12):
Maybe it's from the United Nations. Oh okay, sure, all right,
worldwide Dan Driff day.
Speaker 1 (00:19):
That would be unlikely. And it is not that the
shoulders of people you know got that dark hair. You
don't have Dandris getting snowy shoulders over there. No, I
don't have Dandriff, never have. We don't have the right
color hair.
Speaker 2 (00:30):
I think. Do you have to have dark hair to
have dander? I think so.
Speaker 1 (00:32):
I only noticed dandriff on my black greyhound when I
had her. I was like, ugh, But it got me
into the fish oil business. And actually that stuff makes
their coats so soft. If you have a dog and
you're trying to like get their coat nice and healthy,
dandriff or not fish oil in their food every meal,
Like it's like they it feels like they just got
done with the bath all the time, like how soft
(00:53):
their fur is. But you don't actually ever have to
give them a bath. I mean, I'm not saying you
don't have to bathe your dog. If your dog gets dirty,
you should bathe your dog. But dogs don't get dirty
because they hate getting wet and all that stuff. So
for the most part, it feels like they're just really
soft fish oil.
Speaker 2 (01:07):
How did I get to that?
Speaker 1 (01:08):
I don't know, Oh, Dan Drift, Well, No, it's International
Migrants Day, Okay. I was reading this thing about Paris.
Have you been in Paris? No either, I was the Spain.
I don't know how many people are actually migrants or
immigrants from Spain or in Spain. I don't know how
much of an immigration thing that Spain has, but apparently
Paris has had a really big influx of immigrants and
(01:28):
a lot of people who are local.
Speaker 2 (01:30):
And this isn't even illegal immigrants I'm talking about.
Speaker 1 (01:32):
I'm talking about just immigration in general, and a lot
of people who are locals are saying it is really
hurt Paris in a lot of ways. It's it's not
just hurt kind of like the culture of it, but
it has created kind of this air of a lack
of cleanliness and over populous in certain you know, areas,
(01:53):
in pockets of areas.
Speaker 2 (01:55):
Pockets areas it's redundant.
Speaker 1 (01:57):
An overpopulation in slices of town and its creating issues
for the people who have been there for a long time.
Speaker 2 (02:05):
Now.
Speaker 1 (02:05):
Again, I'm not here to say that people shouldn't be
out there looking for better lives or anything. But I
don't remember a time ever where we've talked about immigration
as a whole, as this thing that actually is quite
bad for a lot of the people who are welcoming
in the immigrants and having economic factors that are really
detrimental to the places the migrants are moving towards. And
(02:28):
I don't know what the answer is because I don't want,
I surely don't want to tell anybody who wants to
legally come into a country and tell them they shouldn't
be able to do that. But at a certain point
there has to be an understanding of, okay, so what
can we do to allow our societies to have the
right amount of resources to make this a beneficial thing
(02:49):
for everyone involved and not the other way around where
it's just like, Hey, if you're an immigrant and you're
a migrant, you're a victim of something, and we want
to help you. We're going to harbor you, We're going
to give you every last resource that you can have
handle to come here and enjoy what our country has
to offer. Unfortunately, most countries, like the United States, like France, apparently,
like many other European nations that do have a welcoming
(03:11):
attitude towards immigrants in general, they are dealing with the
negative parts of that and not a lot of the
positives on an economic level. So it is International Migrants Day,
it's an observation from the United Nations. I'm just not
sure that this is the kind of I don't think
this is the time that a lot of people are saying, Yeah,
we could use more migrants in the world. We need
to help resolve some of these people's homes would be
(03:34):
my best bet. And I don't know who's in charge
of any of that. Obviously we know in the Middle
East it's a free for all in a lot of
these countries.
Speaker 2 (03:42):
I don't know what to do.
Speaker 1 (03:43):
I am incredibly blessed to be born and raised in
America and not feel like there's a better place out
there that I want to get to for a better life.
Speaker 2 (03:50):
I don't feel that way.
Speaker 1 (03:51):
There are a lot of people in America that even
during the election, we're threatening to go to other countries
if the election didn't go the way they wanted to.
I must be nice to just threatened to go somewhere
because you can, and not because you need to threaten
to go live in a different country because you don't
like who America elected to be president of the United States. Okay, fine,
go see how much better life is for you over there.
If you're famous, I'm sure you'll be fine. If you're
(04:13):
not famous, good luck to you. It's reading this thing
on Reddit. I'm on Reddit.
Speaker 2 (04:17):
You on Reddit? You like Reddit? I peruse it on
occasion just to kind of get a general feel of
what a generality of a subset of people feel about things.
I mostly use Reddit for okay.
Speaker 1 (04:30):
I like Marble racing, okay, and there's like a whole
community on Reddit where people will talk about Marble racing.
I'm on a Home Star Runner Reddit. Sure, people like
to talk about Home Star Runner.
Speaker 2 (04:40):
That's the cool thing about Reddit is just that the
very communities that you can find there that are very
specific and very niche to a certain topic. Generally, though,
like if you just go to the front page, as
they call it, a reddit, it's a very very like
politically one way kind of experience, and so it's almost
interesting to just keep tabs on that in a sort
(05:00):
of way. What's the community conversation going on on the
front page of Reddit. But there are lots of layers
to that website, for sure, Yeah, and I just don't
see a lot of that. I understand, Like politically, a
lot of people are like rerd it's super duper left
leaning and all that stuff. Most of the stuff I
look at, there's just not politics being talked about really
at all. Right, as soon as you get past the
front pages of that website, just going to the to
the actual communities that exist around like niche topics. I mean,
(05:23):
there's one for Omaha on Reddit. I was going to say,
there's one for Australia. Travel.
Speaker 1 (05:27):
It's like traveling to Australia. And somebody asked, does anybody
did any anybody move from the United States to Australia
and what was your experience because it sounds like something
I like to do, and not that it was something
like I was going to do, but that's what the
poster said. But I was kind of curious because I
always kind of I have a fascination with Australia because
of how different of a world it seems.
Speaker 2 (05:46):
Down there.
Speaker 1 (05:47):
It seems beautiful in its own ways, and there are
some large cities, but you know, a lot of frontier
and desert. There's just a lot of different things there.
So I was reading and this person said, I actually
did this, and I got to tell you that the
United States is really the land of opportunity because there's
so much that you just can't do here. Not because
(06:07):
they're restrictive of freedom, it's just less opportunities to do things,
like if you have a job, or have a job
in mind of what you want to do, you can't
just pick and choose that stuff down there. It's really
not as easy to chase the dream anywhere other than
the United States of America. We take it for granted
because humans, by nature, are the grass is always greener
on the other side. We always are. And then you
(06:28):
get to the other side, and then you start to
have the realization maybe I didn't have it so bad before.
Some people are always looking for change. Some people really
hate change. All I know is from everything that I've read,
all the understanding that I have for people who've actually
gone through this stuff, the United States is still the
best country in the United States or the United States
is the best country in the world by far and away,
and I, for one, regardless of who's in charge, I'm
(06:49):
going to be touting the United States as such. But
one thing that could bring the United States to its
knees is us not getting a handle or control of
what and who are coming across our borders legally and illegally,
and trying to figure out what the right balance is
for that. And we have to have some control over it.
You can't just say everyone in the world, come pack
it in the United States is here for you.
Speaker 2 (07:10):
That's just not a realistic thing.
Speaker 1 (07:12):
And I'm not saying that we shouldn't be welcoming other
cultures in because I think one of the great things
about America is we are such an eclectic mix of
cultures around the country, in different areas, in different regions.
But in a very broad sense, our enjoyment can only
go so far based on the change of the things
around us. And the freedoms that we have are great.
(07:33):
But we've talked about some places that have a lot
of Haitian migrants that have moved in after many factories left.
Speaking about Ohio, of course, right the Haitian migrants that
kind of moved into Springfield, Ohio, a town that was
basically losing its population rapidly because there was less and
less opportunities for work, and the Haitian migrants came in
and took a lot.
Speaker 2 (07:53):
Of those jobs.
Speaker 1 (07:54):
It's a different conversation than the one that maybe the
media would like to portray. There are a lot of changes.
So Michigan is a good example of where there are
a lot of Arab Americans right There are areas where
there's just a lot of people with Arabic backgrounds. It
doesn't mean anything bad is happening. That just means that
they have a different culture. There's big areas where there
(08:14):
are Asian Americans, or Mexican Americans, or Hispanics, Latinos. People
from all over the world have different spots. You know,
Irish Americans, you know, a lot of European backgrounds came
earlier and aren't coming necessarily a lot right now. But
there are a lot of immigrants from Spain and from
Italy a long time ago when the United States was
just getting started. What's the right balance? Are we getting
(08:37):
to a spot where we really have to start asking
ourselves the questions of whether or not immigration is an
issue that we need to tackle on a larger front
and not just worry about the illegal part. Certainly that's
the first thing we need to tackle. But are we
doing things a little bit too loosely even in our
legal immigration system.
Speaker 2 (08:53):
Time will tell on that four nineteen, we'll have more
for you. You stay right there on news radio eleven
ten KFAB. And were you songer on news radio eleven
ten kfab?
Speaker 1 (09:05):
Every day we're supposed to work with you a mere
here and it's like, no big deal? Am I just
talking too much? Do you think that's what it is?
So I just need to talk less. It might not
work very well for your day job. Yeah, that's right,
you know, just put it into you know you gotta
do put it into chat GPT. Oh yeah, and then
like you can just do my show for me.
Speaker 2 (09:26):
You think it would just say I need four hours
of radio.
Speaker 1 (09:29):
I'm gonna let me let me see what it says.
I'm not sure this would be a good idea.
Speaker 2 (09:32):
Because they got a new hotline now you can just
call them and then hold up the phone to the microphone.
Is that is that true? Yeah, Chat gbt's got a
new micro one hundred Chat GPT. Well, what does it
do for you at that point? Is it like a
customer service? I have no idea. I just saw that
on Twitter. I think if you call it, it just
says this over and over, everything is going to be okay.
(09:53):
That's not great. That's not great.
Speaker 1 (09:55):
I asked chat GBT if it could help me do
a four hour radio show, and you know what it said, huh,
I'd love to help you organize and plan out a
four hour radio show. And then Jake gave me a
thousand words just now of tips on how to do
a four hour radio show. That's how it's going to
help me. Thanks, Tad Jeep, appreciate it. It's okay, everything's okay, okay.
Before we move on here a little sports thing tonight,
(10:19):
by the way, good luck to Iowa Western seven thirty.
They take on Hutchinson Community College in the JUCO National
Championship for football Wednesday game.
Speaker 2 (10:27):
Good luck. That's not a lot. There was a bowl
game last night. Their bowl games tonight. I haven't looked
at Iowa Western trying to do what the Chiefs are
trying to do this year, right, they're trying to do
three in a row.
Speaker 1 (10:37):
Three oh yeah, yeah, three championships in a row. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
there is. There's actually two bowl games tonight. Did you
know that nice four thirty that's about to start right now. Yeah,
Western Kentucky and James Madison in the Boca Ratone Bowl.
Speaker 2 (10:50):
Boca Ratone Bowl.
Speaker 1 (10:52):
They James Madison didn't even know Florida was a thing
when he was alive, and now he's in Florida at
in boker Ton Fau Stadium, which I've been to. By
the way, I watched a Florida Atlantic game and you
know who played against Florida Atlantic in that game.
Speaker 2 (11:06):
Western Kentucky. How about it?
Speaker 1 (11:09):
So there's a there's this thing that Western Kentucky. If
you're Western Kentucky, is that lame? You just go to
Fau Stadium where you play like every other year anyway,
and you get to play a bowl game there.
Speaker 2 (11:20):
Kind of but I don't know, you're sad about the location.
Speaker 1 (11:23):
Yeah, it's like, hey, Western Kentucky, go play football over
in in Arizona and they'd be like, oh heck yeah.
Or go to the Holiday Bowl in San Diego, Oh
heck yeah. By the way, a PM tonight, The Art
of Sport LA Bowl, The Art of Sport in so
far California versus un lv U and lv's coaching staff
just got gutted. So their their coach went to Purdue.
(11:44):
Did did you hear that UNLV's coaches a new prere coach.
Speaker 2 (11:46):
The new Purdue head coach, so prdue fired their head coach. Yeah.
I didn't know about this. They were terrible, dude, Well
they were terrible. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (11:53):
Yeah, So this guy's taken over. But youn LV, who's
who's who knows what that? He probably isn't there tonight, right,
Like he's he's gone, Like somebody else is coaching that
team today.
Speaker 2 (12:03):
If it was Scott Frost, he'd still be there. Please
remember that. Yeah, yeah, they beat Auburn, you know. Yeah,
but that was like for an unbeaten season. That's a
little bit of a different thing. They won the Natty
that year.
Speaker 1 (12:14):
Anyway, congratulations on a great season Iowa Western, and hopefully
tonight you bring home the Natty. So I was just
looking that up just to say in case there weren't
other football games. But there are other football games, all right,
four twenty nine, Well you have more for you, including uh,
I don't know news sports, anybody, I don't who knows
I don't know, call us four, Roal two, five to five,
(12:35):
eight eleven ten, news Radio eleven ten KFAB.
Speaker 2 (12:37):
And Reem on news Radio eleven ten KFAB.
Speaker 1 (12:43):
There was a public town hall earlier this week that
Ron Hugg, counselman for South Omaha, went ahead and decided
to hold, and a lot of people coming out there
and saying this is not great, this is not great.
They put some beta out there trying to like get
this whole situation under control. Of course, the context that
(13:04):
it came up on my shell was the fact that
I myself, I am having some sort of mouse problems, which,
by the way, update I caught about a handful and
they haven't returned. The problem is a lot less, right, However,
I'm still setting the trap than a bucket, and I
put some peanuts in there, so like when they fall
(13:25):
into the bucket, like they're reaching for something, right, and
they fall into the bucket, and it's like, oh, I'm stuck, right,
it's usually does the trick. Well, I guess what. The
peanuts have started disappearing. They're out of the bucket, there's
no shells left behind, and there's no mouths in the bucket.
So I don't know what's going on here. Either they're
working together to get themselves in and out, there's a
(13:45):
bigger thing in there, like a rat like what they're
talking about here in South Omaha. Or is there maybe
just a malfunction in the way that I'm setting up
the bucket that they're like using the peanut butter that
I've put there as like a springboard or like a
sticky thing that they can hold on to to then
reach out and get out.
Speaker 2 (14:03):
I like to imagine they're doing some sort of mission
impossible game, you know.
Speaker 1 (14:07):
They If you've ever watched videos, you can train a
rat really easily, like you could, Like have you ever
had a pet rat?
Speaker 2 (14:12):
Probably not?
Speaker 3 (14:13):
No?
Speaker 2 (14:13):
Would you be interested?
Speaker 3 (14:14):
No?
Speaker 2 (14:14):
Or not? Not for me? Have you? Have you seen
the videos?
Speaker 1 (14:18):
Look up videos people have made little obstacle courses, and
these in rats can figure this thing out and do
it exactly how you want them to so fast. Like
I watched one where there were two pet rats together
and they played basketball against each other. One rat is
trying to put the basketball in one hoop and the
other rat is trying to put the basketball in the
other hoop, and they're basically just trying to take the
(14:39):
ball from each other until somebody puts it in the hoop,
and then whoever gets it in the hoop gets a treat,
and then you know, they keep playing like it's like
they can be trained to do so they're very smart.
If you can train a rat like that. Don't you
think they can problem solve on their own quite a bit?
They definitely can't. And I figure mice are about the same.
They're just smaller, like they can try to figure out
exactly So something still in my house? All right, it's
(15:00):
certainly not as noticeable because we're noticing very small amounts
of remnants, if you will, which is the easiest way
to tell that they've been somewhere. Right, they're leaving remnants
for you little many Easter eggs.
Speaker 2 (15:12):
But you want to know what else? Right, Maybe they're
just getting better at hiding. I don't know.
Speaker 1 (15:16):
They don't want to be outside, and I'm guessing they
figured it out that this bucket is there to trap them.
Speaker 2 (15:21):
So I don't know what say you? What's say you
about this problem down here?
Speaker 3 (15:24):
Well?
Speaker 2 (15:25):
First off, pet rats, pet rats, Yeah, much love to
anybody and all their hobbies out there. Quite frankly, rats
off to you, it's not for me.
Speaker 1 (15:32):
Okay, can you give me one good reason why not
that you're wrong, because they're not for me either, but
probably for different reasons.
Speaker 2 (15:39):
I find them to be a little bit creepy Crawley.
You know, Oh they're big. Yeah, it's the problem. Yeah,
how are they creepy Crawley?
Speaker 1 (15:46):
If they're like you can hold them in your hand,
like creepy Crawley's like a spider. Do you know how
many communicable diseases have come from rats historically? Yes, But
if they're in your house and not exposed to outside
stuff zero zero, they're actually known for being a lot
cleaner than you think they are if they are domestic rats.
You know, I'm not suggesting going to this spot on
(16:10):
thirty ninth and d finding a rat and taking it
home with you. That's not what I'm That's not what
I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (16:16):
I tend to be a cup half full kind of guy, though,
And honestly, I hear this news and uh, you know what,
I think, Wow, we're really coming up in the world.
This is a big city problem. So look at us, Omaha,
We're a big city. Now we got rats.
Speaker 1 (16:29):
Can I believe you just said that live on the radio.
That's not right, boo on you. I'd just like to
be a cup half full kind of guy. And there
it is. You know, it's not a good thing.
Speaker 2 (16:40):
But at the same time, there are things that go
along with, you know, getting a little bit bigger in life.
And I feel like that omaha's going to come on.
How do you solve that problem?
Speaker 1 (16:48):
Well, you probably how do you solve that problem because
there's people that are living in that residential area.
Speaker 2 (16:53):
You can't just like nuke it. Going to have to
find the right decide.
Speaker 1 (16:57):
Yeah, but how you're going to like go to Elmwood
and find some of those wolves or coyotes that are
living in there or whatever. Yeah, take a couple of
those and say, please eat these rats as if they're
gonna stay there. They don't want to be in there.
That's a residential area and you got a coyote problem, Well, yeah,
you're gonna have the wrong kind of person that's going
to go outside their door not know that the coyotes
are there to try to help the rat problem. And
then all of a sudden, I got a coyote out
(17:18):
such you know what I mean. Yeah, gotta protect the
little doggies.
Speaker 2 (17:22):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (17:22):
You want to help us figure this out? Call us
four h two five five eight eleven ten. Four h
two five five eight eleven ten. What can we do
to solve the big rat problem? On thirty ninth and
D love to chat with you right here on news
radio eleven ten. Okayfabe, this person didn't want to go
on the air, but just wanted to say he was
in past control and he's noticing a rat uptick around
the entire area. It isn't just specific to this where
(17:45):
this recycling plant or recycling facility is, and it doesn't
necessarily mean that it's entirely related to that.
Speaker 2 (17:51):
So I did want to mention that.
Speaker 1 (17:52):
So I don't want anybody to think that, hey I
got rats too, or hey I've noticed rats over here,
or hey, our our city isn't completely uh you know.
Speaker 2 (18:00):
Filled with it.
Speaker 1 (18:01):
You know, it sounds like there's an uptick in the
generally from this man who called in and didn't want
to go in the air, but is in the pest
control industry. Now, let's go ahead and take phone calls
here four two five five eight eleven ten. Sarah is
on the line. Welcome Sarah, to the show. What's uh
you're thinking about on this? H?
Speaker 3 (18:18):
Yeah, Hi Anne, how are you? Ian?
Speaker 2 (18:26):
And I are friends? It's okay, no.
Speaker 3 (18:27):
Hard feelings, Yeah, I just want to like, you know. Yeah,
we we actually had one of those rats in our
house and we at first thought it was a huge
mouth when we first saw it, and it was not.
Are actually our small uh Morky killed it one morning
and this thing was absolutely humongous and it was it
(18:50):
was a looting blue traps. We had glue traps down.
This thing would step on the blue traps and basically
walk with them, and then it would be in a
different part of the house. I mean it we had
a pet control come in and the only thing that
killed it was our little dog. So I don't know
what can be done about them because they are absolutely huge.
Speaker 1 (19:10):
Yeah yeah, So can you describe about how big it
would be, like, like, can you compare it size wise
to something?
Speaker 3 (19:18):
I would say, Oh goodness, it was as big as
probably an eight by eleven piece of paper. I mean
not like wet side.
Speaker 2 (19:25):
Right right right, but the length of it from from
nose to tail.
Speaker 3 (19:27):
Yes, and it was it was humongous and it was big,
I mean and That's what our thing was too, is
we always had we had blue trapped out with stuffed
up was disappearing off of those. It it just was
this thing was huge. I've never seen one of these
in our house before, and it was kind of like,
oh my goodness.
Speaker 1 (19:44):
Right, So yeah, the guy who called in that was
the pest control guy. He said, you know, from his experience,
rats are much smarter than mice are. Mice are not
going to be able, like you're going to get to
fool mice with your traps pretty easily, but rat can
figure some of that stuff out a lot faster and
kind of be able to problem solve, which kind of
(20:06):
elevates our level of Hey, we need we're out of
we don't have control over this situation because these rats
are actually a lot smarter than we thought they were.
Speaker 2 (20:14):
So I'm glad they go ahead.
Speaker 3 (20:17):
And they chew through your dry wall too. We had
a huge hole in our in our wall also that
this thing caused. Yeah, and we would keep patching it
up and it would chew right back through again.
Speaker 2 (20:27):
So yeah, that would annoy the crap out of me.
I tell you what.
Speaker 3 (20:31):
Well, thankfully we had our little dog.
Speaker 1 (20:33):
And of it I had a mouse in my house.
I have two greyhounds. They like, they love chasing rabbits
and stuff like that. They had no interest in this mouse.
I don't know what it was. They they sniffed it.
It was right there. I watched with my own eyes.
I was like, are they going to eat this thing? Nope,
they just let it go and I had to take
care of it.
Speaker 2 (20:50):
So, you know, I don't know.
Speaker 3 (20:52):
And that's how our mouse, that's how our cat was.
Our cat just sat there and watched the dog take
care of it.
Speaker 2 (20:57):
So ridiculous, Sarah, And thanks for calling in. I really
appreciate it.
Speaker 3 (21:02):
Thank you.
Speaker 1 (21:02):
Let's go to Sam. Sam, Welcome to our show today.
What do you got on your mind?
Speaker 4 (21:07):
Hey, Emory? Uh yeah, so uh we built a house
out in Greta. Out here in Gretna. I know you're
new to gotcha, but so we we built a five
bedroom house out here in Greta about three years ago.
And we have two kids. And my wife is a
(21:31):
VP at a company, local big company here in Omahem. Anyway,
she had her original office was down in the basement
and one day she called me when I was in
my office freaking out because we have an egress window
(21:52):
right behind where her desk was. This the whole reason
why we she relocated up. We had to switch up
the whole because she's like, there's a mouth and it
was crawl It was like using its uh claws to
crawl up the uh what do you call it? The
(22:12):
meshed whatever, And and she was freaking out and she
actually went and got old towels and found them together
in hopes that this thing would crawl up it did
it to get out of our egress because it was
it was right when we moved in, so we didn't
have like egress covers right right, So and I was like, no,
(22:38):
it was like, this is cool.
Speaker 2 (22:39):
I want to be in here. This is where I
want to be.
Speaker 4 (22:41):
Guess what I did. What I did poison, that's all.
I just threw some poison down there and had to
had to go down myself and extract the dead body.
Speaker 2 (22:51):
And yeah, that was Have you seen any other sense?
Speaker 4 (22:54):
No, Well, we we had toads, but but.
Speaker 2 (22:58):
That's a different problem.
Speaker 4 (22:59):
Once we got once we got to cover over the egresses,
it all stopped. So that's it traumatized her so much
that we moved her up to one of our upstairs.
I home off.
Speaker 2 (23:13):
I get it.
Speaker 1 (23:14):
I could understand, uh not wanting that to happen in
the middle of my workday. I gotta be honest. I
appreciate the call, say thanks for listening to us. Yeah,
we'll take more calls if you want. Four two, five, five,
eight to eleven ten is the phone numbers. We talk
rats and mice. Apparently there are a lot of rats
in Omaha. Matt says, Hey, that just means we're a
big city.
Speaker 2 (23:34):
Now, that's what I think. Hey, that's the bright side
of it, right.
Speaker 1 (23:37):
Isn't one of those guys the father figure of the
teenage mutant Ninja Turtles Splinter?
Speaker 2 (23:43):
Yeah? I don't want to take that guy out, do we.
Speaker 3 (23:45):
No?
Speaker 2 (23:46):
Isn't he were in a robe though?
Speaker 3 (23:48):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (23:48):
And he could do some pretty cool karate moves too. Yeah. Yeah,
gotta be careful about these things.
Speaker 1 (23:52):
Well, we'll talk about this coming back and call us
four two, five to five, eight to eleven ten and more
is gonna come on the way here on news Radio
eleven ten.
Speaker 2 (24:01):
Can't Babe