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April 8, 2025 • 29 mins
Blue Dot or No Blue Dot?
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
So to join us is a negative three percent stock
market expert, a guy who's good at reading the stocks
as they are printed on a website, but not any
good at telling you what to do with it that information.
That's right, And we have to say that actually legally
out loud, that we are not financial advisors. So if

(00:21):
you didn't know, we're not financial advisors. Yeah, so if
you tank, anything that we're saying is advice of some kind,
it's not. We're talking about the biggest story in America
right now, which is the volatility for lack of a
better term, for the stock market and all of the
indexes and all of the holdings that you may or

(00:42):
may not have. And today, whoa. We got off to
a great start. We were up over fourteen hundred points
in the Dow. Things were we were over four percent
up in NASDAC. And as the day went on, things changed. So, Matt,
where did we land?

Speaker 2 (00:57):
The Dow Jones landed at three hundred and twenty down,
which is not as far down as it had been
just a bit earlier, but that's still minus point eight
four percent. To finish off the day at thirty seven thousand,
six hundred and forty five. The S and P five
hundred was down seventy nine and a half or minus

(01:17):
one point five to seven percent, to finish off the
week at four thousand, nine hundred and eighty three, and
the Nasdaq was down three hundred and thirty five or
minus two point one five percent, to finish off the
week at fifteen thousand, two hundred and sixty eight. But
on the good news, the volatility index is up about
ten and a half percent overall.

Speaker 1 (01:38):
I don't think people invest in that. I think that's
just a thing that measures what's going on.

Speaker 2 (01:42):
Oh, so there's more volatility in the marketplace. Oh, actually
that's a bad thing. But they made it green.

Speaker 1 (01:48):
I see green. I think good. Okay, see you trick me.
It's kind of designed to where everything will never be
red or green at the same time. But if you're colorblind,
what does this look like to you? It's probably hurts
your brain, I'm guessing trying to figure out what the
heck's going on.

Speaker 2 (02:02):
Today's a good day to be colorblind. You see the
stock market, you don't know if it's red or it's green.
It's all gravy to you. Hold on, have a sandwich
and don't worry about.

Speaker 1 (02:09):
Well, we see the stock market and we see the colors,
and we still have no idea what it is like.

Speaker 2 (02:15):
Yeah, I mean, yet we're out here worrying about it
and scaring the grandparents.

Speaker 1 (02:20):
No, we're not. Grandparents may be getting scared because they
can't quite understand what we're talking about, which is not
what I'm telling you is going on. I'm just straight
up telling you that I did receive an email. Whether
it was true or not, I don't know. But if
Scott's grandma is listening, please do not be selling off
your fortune on the stock market. You only lose money

(02:43):
if you sell Grandma Scott. So there you go. I
what to do with this information? Asking experts. I just
know that people are talking about it, So we're talking
about it. Seems like a reasonable thing for a talk
show to do. Don't you think I file that underreasonable? Yeah,
that's what I had to say. The United States gonna
be imposing a one hundred and four percent tariff on

(03:04):
Chinese goods that was announced a little bit earlier today.
Maybe that had something to do with it, Maybe has
something to do with it at all. Donald Trump, speaking
right now with a bunch of energy workers, and he's
talking about boosting the United States energy. I'll be interested.
Maybe this is something that's plausible for you know. I again,
this is not something that I want to just pretend

(03:24):
like I know everything about, but that seems to be
something that could help kickstart some positivity in the stock market,
if that makes sense. He's just like, Yeah, that's good.
It's nice to hear that. I'm gonna invest that direction. Also,
Scott Bessant, who is the Secretary of the Treasury, over
under how many nations have come to the United States

(03:45):
to negotiate down their tariffs since April the second, a
week ago tomorrow, I'll say nine, He says, seventy. Wow,
seventy nations have come forward to renegotiate their tariffs, which
again is the quickest of this fix, right, as if
all the nations that we are having this reciprocal conversation about,
we can narrow this thing down a bit, and that

(04:08):
should that should help. Mister Beasts, are you familiar.

Speaker 3 (04:13):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (04:13):
I heard about that guy. Yeah, so his real name
Jimmy Donaldson. Did you know that? I did not? Mister
Beast's the real name is Jimmy Donaldson. But he makes
uh he makes chocolate bars. Have you had one of
the chocolate bars?

Speaker 3 (04:26):
No?

Speaker 1 (04:27):
Is it good? I don't know. Have you had Prime,
Logan Paul's drink?

Speaker 2 (04:31):
No?

Speaker 1 (04:31):
All the kids really love this.

Speaker 3 (04:32):
Wait.

Speaker 1 (04:32):
Prime is his drink? Yeah?

Speaker 2 (04:34):
Prime is a Logan Paul thing. Oh, I feel silly.
Why I thought? I? Okay, I made a weird assumption.
I thought it was Deon Sanders' drink because it's called Prime.

Speaker 1 (04:43):
No.

Speaker 2 (04:43):
At some point I internalized that falsehood, and I've been
living my life that way ever since. That's coach Prime.
I guess I have bought a Logan Paul drink. I
wouldn't have if I'd have known better. Dang it, stupid
Logan Paul. Yeah, make me drink his semi delicious sports drink.
I was a man with principles once.

Speaker 1 (05:02):
I feel like you need to just google some things
before you start making radical assumptions about them. I don't
do that, mister B said, ironically, because of all the
new tariffs, it is now way cheaper to make our
chocolate bars. We sell globally, not in America, because other
countries don't have a twenty plus percent tariff on our cogs. Well,
think about this, do you think he feels like he

(05:23):
can sell his candy bars to everywhere else but America
and he can build. I don't know, like it's an
interesting observation by him, But if you're an America company
and you're reading that, you're just like, eh, how I
guess maybe there are some cracks in the sectors. But
maybe his tweet, which has already been liked by one
hundred and one thousand people, how did he get famous? Well,

(05:45):
he exploits people. Well, yeah, he was also showed up
in an Ashton Hall video recently because of course he did.
You know, he had to put his face in the
ice water next to Ashton Hall to farm off of
his engagement. And also he did the same thing with
the Minecraft movie, which we're gonna have to talk about
at some point. There's a Craft movie. Yeah, it just
came out like last week. It's all the rage. It
opened up with like one hundred and seventy million dollars

(06:07):
in the box office. Wow, it beat Barbie. Remember when
Barbie dropped. Yeah, we're gonna talk about that. But anyway,
he rented out like an entire theater and people were
just dressed up the same and you know, real mister
b stuff that would make you and I and anybody
older than us cringe.

Speaker 2 (06:22):
I bet when the camera turns off, that guy has
a big old scowl on his face.

Speaker 1 (06:25):
I don't know about that. I see he.

Speaker 2 (06:28):
Delives his life and puts it online. He's obsessed with
his image. But when that camera comes off, his face
turns into a frown.

Speaker 1 (06:35):
I don't think so. And he goes to a sad,
little giant house. He's got thirty two million followers on
X oh, so that equates to happiness thirty two million
on just X. I got two followers on X and
I am the happiest man you've ever met. I know
that is not true. You do. I do know that
that is not true. You just lied? How'd you know?

Speaker 3 (06:59):
No?

Speaker 1 (06:59):
You want to know what I think? I think that
when a guy he is he's kind of like Elon?
Isn't he like twenty five year old Elon? I hope not? No,
he's not like inventing stuff?

Speaker 3 (07:09):
Is he not?

Speaker 2 (07:09):
He's?

Speaker 1 (07:10):
Is he not? What?

Speaker 2 (07:12):
He just?

Speaker 1 (07:12):
He just he's twenty he'll he's turning twenty seven a
month from now, and he has three hundred and eighty
three million YouTube followers or subscribers he gets. He's had
over seventy seven billion views. Anything that he does is
making millions of dollars. He can blow up Lamborghini's in
his videos. He rents out private jets and helicopters. I mean,

(07:33):
the guy is absolutely loaded. And he says he doesn't
keep most of the money because he just puts it
into the next video because he doesn't need all that cash.
But it's just like, well, if you're trying to take
a peek at like who the next Elon Musk is,
I think it's him. Couldn't you absolutely see thirty five
year old mister beast who's done everything you possibly can
on social media saying, you know what, I want to
get into politics?

Speaker 2 (07:54):
I okay, I I could see that. Sure, I do influenced.
I think that influencer politics is coming. I think that
is something that is going to happen, and it is
not going to be good. It's gonna make politics even
more disgusting and even more of a a beauty contest
than it already is.

Speaker 1 (08:13):
Popularity contest. Yeah, yeah, that's a better way to put it,
A lot better way to put it. Yeah, a popularity contest.
I wouldn't call Jimmy Donaldson attractive. No, I mean I
wouldn't see the swimsuit edition.

Speaker 2 (08:23):
I don't think I would either. Or we're talking about
mister Beast here, right, Yeah, I mean.

Speaker 1 (08:27):
He's not the ugliest guy I've ever seen, now that
you mention it, you he kind of looks like you me, Yeah,
now that I look at him, me without the money.
So yeah, he's pretty ugly. You just need you need
if you lose the glasses and grow a pretty disheveled
go tea looking thing that's kind of his look. You
kind of look like like the face shape and the
hair color is pretty pretty similar. Work on. That'd be

(08:48):
a good Halloween costume for you, mister Beast. Yeah. And
then and then I can go around filming you doing
crazy stuff and maybe people will throw money at you.
That'd be cool.

Speaker 2 (08:56):
Yeah, I'm I'd be glad to spend other people's money.
I don't have money of my own to do this with.

Speaker 1 (09:02):
Well, we'll see. Mister bees already kind of getting his
name into politics in a very indirect way with the
way that he's talking about these tariffs and how it's
affecting of all of the things that he has his
chocolate Bars three eighteen. When we come back, we'll talk
more about what's going on in the news, as we
always do on news radio eleven to ten KFAB and

(09:23):
were Songer. It was shut down today. The Keystone oil
pipeline had a rupture in North Dakota and the spill
went into a singular agricultural field. We're not sure exactly
what caused that, and we're not sure how much crude
oil was spilled there, but a employee there said that

(09:43):
they heard a mechanical bang and shut down the pipeline
within two minutes. A mechanical bang, How would you what
would sound like a mechanical bang?

Speaker 2 (09:54):
Maybe somebody's got a big old wrench and they smack
it against a hollow metal tube.

Speaker 1 (10:00):
Oh, no, mechanical bang. Mechanical bang? Would that be?

Speaker 3 (10:04):
Like?

Speaker 1 (10:04):
Is a mechanical bang like when you shut the hood
of your car, like you know, you'll let it go
and it makes that pretty loud noise like, but I
think it needs to be echoy so like, so like
what would that be like? Does it have to be
like super loud, like a firecracker loud? Or is it
just kind of like a like somebody smacks something with
a wrench.

Speaker 2 (10:21):
It's got to sound metallic and echoey. That's what I
think of when I hear a mechanical bang.

Speaker 1 (10:27):
Mechanical bang. Well, we'll let you decide what a mechanical
bang is either way. They did report that they found
oil surfacing three hundred yards south of the pump station.
No people, structures affected by the spill. It was blocked
off the area. So they don't think it's that big
of a deal. But of course the Keystone pipeline which

(10:49):
comes through pop Quiz what states does it come through? Nebraska? Yeah,
good job. It comes through the Dakota's Nebraska, Kansas, Missouri,
and it goes to refineries in Illinois and Oklahoma. So
it kind of crawls across there. And yeah, yeah, there
you go. This is what the This is what the
old angry folks that don't like the oil companies they

(11:10):
complain about the pipelines for whatever reason, whether it's the
environment or something else. Well, this is not going to
be good for the environment. No, but they can find it.
They said, it's not that big of a deal, and
I tend to believe that it's not that big a deal.
But it's always news when something like this happens, because
you're constantly on the defense and you want to be
efficient and you don't want to lose oil, you know,

(11:32):
So we got to just be smart here about this stuff.
And I suppose the the answer back to the to
the greater point of this is, did you see those
protests that were happening in and around metropolitan areas around
the country, the hands off protests. You may not have
been on social media in the right circles, but I

(11:52):
saw some of this, and it's it's the same type
of people that you would think they are. They're holding
tambourines and signs saying, you know, Elon and Trump are
two hands on with the government. They're dancing around and
drum circles and jumping up and down, trying to get
any sort of attention that they can get. And I
just just wonder how many people have changed their minds

(12:12):
because of those little protests. Sounds like a waste of
a Saturday to me. But you know, I told you
about the Collegor World series with a pro Palestinian or
anti Israel protesters, Like we're marching around the downtown area
with all the people in town, and it's just like
you should have seen the faces of the people just
watching them march. It's like, are you supposed to intimidate us? Like,
what what do you want? You want us to join you?
Is that what you're trying to do? You want us

(12:34):
to don a mask so nobody knows who we who
we look like, and then we just follow you while
you yell all this anti Israel stuff. Well, that's the
thing with this, these protests over the weekend. It's just like,
so you want us to support you protesting that the
executive branch is doing too much? Like what are we
talking about here?

Speaker 2 (12:54):
Thinking critically about maybe what the motive could be, and
in your circumstance, I would think that they're there for
a couple reasons. One, I'm sure people were recording it
and putting it online.

Speaker 1 (13:04):
They were I'm sure they were so in local news like, oh,
something's happening, which happen all right?

Speaker 2 (13:11):
That's why you do this, You get on the news.
It's a certain it's an absolute way to spread but
also to silently grow your numbers. How is that holding
well from people who are maybe standing on your side
of things and are thinking, oh, I support that, cause
I'm not going to go join it, but look at
all those people who do. Sometimes you don't know how
many people share your opinion until people take to the

(13:33):
streets about it kind of thing. So I think that
that would be another strategy, right, I would think that they.
I mean, there's right, it's there's obviously a reason to
do it. So you grow your numbers by exposure through
the local news, through online outlets. But also, why are
they Why are they picking an event like this where
there's lots of people. It's the same reason why people
stand on seventy second of Dodge because they want to

(13:54):
be exposed to as many eyes as possible. They're not
looking for the people who disagree with them, for the
people who maybe are next to the people who disagree
with them in the car and they feel like they
can't say anything about it, so they just kind of
sit there silently and maybe not along.

Speaker 1 (14:07):
Yeah, but what are you achieving? Is I guess my thing, right?
Like you're protesting for what to change? Like what is
going to change from this? Like, yeah, we're gonna just
keep protesting. Okay, what are you protesting? All that they
were doing is saying hands off. It's the same. It's
just like a different it's a different way to state

(14:27):
the same things they were saying in the campaign leading
up to president and lost, and now it's just the
same people who are feeling like, Oh, I hate Donald Trump.
I need to protest what he's doing. I need to
protest what doge is doing. I need to protest what
Congress is doing. I want to protest the Israel war
still and employee layoffs in the federal government and deportation

(14:47):
policies and DEI being slashed, Like, I need to protest
this stuff. So I'm going to make a sign and
I'm going to join. You know, a few dozen of
my friends are in places like Washington, DC, or Los
Angeles or New York. There were probably a lot more
than that, and people were just going to be marching
together and hanging out together and achieving what is my thing.

(15:10):
But I, of course protests work throughout history. They do.
Protests work. I don't think every protest works. Again, I
also want to know how effective the guys who are
walking in front of people on the highway and blocking
the roads because they're trying to get a point across, like,

(15:30):
are you winning people or are you losing people? Because
they're just they hate you.

Speaker 2 (15:36):
Yeah, they're just they're ticking people off, and they're making
people feel like, Okay, well we better do something about
this because they're making our lives suffer. Now, I mean,
that's why you do that. Right, Let's go out there
and let's keep them from getting back to their houses,
because they're going after the working stiffs. They're going after
the people who are out there. They got to get
a paycheck, They get home, they have their light beer,
they kiss their wipe, they go to bed. They're going

(15:57):
after those people who don't care about the global sphere,
who don't care about the deeper problems in the world
because they're too darn busy to even think about it.
But when you lay in front of their car when
they're trying to get home and you keep messing up
their commute home over time, does that really tick them off?

Speaker 1 (16:14):
Sure?

Speaker 2 (16:15):
But also it makes the world aware that, hey, there's
there's something going on here, and we're not going to
stop messing up your day to day life until you
fix it. Okay, Yeah, college kid, sounds great. You go
get that working stiff job, you go start working yourself
to the bone and see how you feel about it later.
That'll happen later in their life, but right now they're
feeling very idealistic about things.

Speaker 1 (16:35):
I don't know. That's well done. I don't know if
that makes any sense. It does, and it was a
good point. Thank you for sharing. Three thirty. We'll come
back with moral on News Radio eleven ten Kfab and
Maurice Stunner, Matt Case. How you doing good? Give me?
Give me all right? How do it? Yeah? Give me
something something to be happy about. Oh?

Speaker 2 (16:57):
Well, you know what I'm happy about these days? What
those pesky Nebraska corn Huskers. Oh okay, took the crown.
They didn't just take the crown. They ripped the crown
right out of the hands of whoever is holding it
in Vegas nobody, because nobody ever wanted before. But sure,
it's cool to be the first. It's something, the first
to do it, the best to do it. There will
never be a more firstest and bestest of the college

(17:21):
basketball crownest.

Speaker 1 (17:22):
And we did it. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (17:24):
After the year we had. As an nebrasktball fan, I
am ironically and unironically super stoked right now.

Speaker 1 (17:31):
It's good to be happy about that. I agree I
think it's important that we have that in the proper
context of how the season could have ended if the
Crown didn't exist and been a real ugly way for
the careers of some important guys like Juwan Gary and
Bryce Williams to end. Yeah, so I'm with you there.
I don't know how happy we can be that this

(17:52):
happened and the dregs of all of the major conferences
were the ones that were invited and accepted invitations to
play in it.

Speaker 2 (17:58):
But you know, if you guys to be hey, look,
if you're stuck in the slop, you might as well
be on the top top of the slop. That's right,
Nebraska Cornhuskers basketball team. My favorite thing right now in
the world is hopping on social media and seeing all
those salty Hawkeye fans and Creighton fans who just they're
trying to diminish how important the Crown is. It's kind

(18:20):
of like, yeah, I get it. You guys are feeling
feeling salty right now.

Speaker 1 (18:24):
And I would be too.

Speaker 2 (18:25):
Only two teams got to finish the season on a win.

Speaker 1 (18:28):
That's not true. There are four.

Speaker 2 (18:30):
Oh okay, only four teams got to finish this season,
So there should be Really there should be a final four,
one more final four.

Speaker 1 (18:36):
You want to play a tournament amongst the champions of
the Actually there were. Yeah, so Illinois State won the CBI,
so let's call them up. Okay, they should they're still around, right, Yeah.
The Chattanooga Mox won the n I t and then
the Huskers won the Crown, and then Florida of course
won the tournament. In that game last night, I didn't

(18:59):
eve want to tak a grass to them. It's don't
I don't care who Florida. Oh I felt bad for Houston.
What a terrible way in that game. Yeah, what would
it take to beat Florida? Like? Or would Florida just
play their backups and win all of the games? Nebraska
could could hang with their their backups. Nebraska is one
of those teams you just never know. But Chattanooga and
Illinois State. Yeah, all right. So there's one thing. How

(19:22):
about how about the sand Hill Cranes. Anybody out there
seeing the sand Hill Cranes.

Speaker 2 (19:27):
Oh yeah, they're they're doing their thing out there in
central Nebraska, out there by Carney or migrating that's what
it's called.

Speaker 1 (19:34):
Yeah, you get to see all the big, big cranes migrating.
You know, there's a.

Speaker 2 (19:38):
Lot of states who let you eat those sand hill cranes.

Speaker 1 (19:41):
Not this one, though, are there.

Speaker 2 (19:43):
Yeah, they just they just recently legalized it up in Wisconsin,
and there's a whole bunch of others that let you
but we don't hear because it'd be way too easy.
They kind of congregate really close together right there on
the platte. Elmer Fudd couldn't miss.

Speaker 3 (20:00):
Heard.

Speaker 1 (20:00):
It's kind of tasty. No no, no, no, no, no, no,
don't do it. Do it? No, do it? No, do it? No,
don't listen to him. Bad bad, Look, I'm not I'm
not a hunter, so I don't want to tell anybody
not to hunt. I just did. I like to observe
the beauty of these wild animals, which is why I
wasn't that upset to hear about the dire wolf making

(20:24):
a comeback. You know, they're not releasing that thing into
the wild. They're not releasing those in the wilds. It's
just kind of cool to have another animal species out there.
Although many people just think that this is a genetically
altered gray wolf that happens to be a little larger
and have white fur, not necessarily a direct correlation to
exactly what a dire wolf was. Sam's on a phone
line of four row two five five eight eleven tens. Sam,

(20:46):
what are you thinking about today?

Speaker 3 (20:49):
Well, you guys are talking about cranes. And I have
a granddaughter who's in Baraboo, Wisconsin at the International Crane
Foundation facility. She's working there paid in turn. And when
you start talking about eating cranes, I want to know,
my granddaughter is gonna be very upset with you guys.

Speaker 1 (21:06):
Hey, I'm not advocating for that's him, that's the other guy.

Speaker 3 (21:10):
Hey, I'm good. Well you need to down.

Speaker 1 (21:14):
Yeah, Sam, I mean, I mean Matt, Matt. Listen to Sam.

Speaker 2 (21:18):
Okay, Sam, when your granddaughter's going on and on about
the cranes, and we love them, we love them, Okay,
But what she's going on and on about them? Has
it there been a moment in your mind when you thought,
I wonder if they're tasty?

Speaker 1 (21:27):
There hasn't been a moment.

Speaker 3 (21:28):
No, Yeah, nope, nope, I know better. I love my granddaughter.

Speaker 1 (21:33):
Hey, Sam, I'm with you. I'm all about looking at
the nature and I'm not gonna hunt any of these
birds because I'm just not the hunting type. I'll get
this guy in line. I'll put him in a put
him in a cross faced chicken wing, and see how.

Speaker 3 (21:45):
You do if he ever wants to see a bunch
of cranes. They have one of every species in the
world up.

Speaker 1 (21:52):
There there, I go, How cool is that? I'll have
to make a road trip. That sounds like fun. I'd
like that, Sam, Sam, appreciate the call man. Thanks for
the sent it to us. You have a break, Yep,
you too, Yeah, Matt Man, Oh, eating cranes, I'd try it? No?
Why no, why why I did such a big deal
Because they're birds, they're living beings, They're just birds. So

(22:15):
it's chicken. Yes, we farm chicken. I know a lot
of people. This is I got the backwards thing right.
People are just like you should harvest your own food.
You really get to having a relationship with the work
you've put in, and there's something instinctive and something visceral
about that in the species, and it's good for you

(22:37):
to feel that way. And I get that. I have
no desire. I'm sorry, I am sorry. That's not me
saying you shouldn't hunt. That's not me saying that you
shouldn't eat meat, because I do eat meat. I'm just
telling you I'm not the kind of guy that's going
to be doing that. I just can't do it. I
have no interest in doing it. I like to do

(22:58):
more of the Steve Irwin type of like I'm going out,
I'm observing, I'm learning as I watched that kind of thing.
Phone lines are open. You've seen the cranes. You like
the cranes. Hit me up. I'd love to talk cranes
because we need some good news today. I just need
to wash my pals so many bad news stuff that
we've had to talk about and cover all this rigament role.
I need a mood uplifter. Let's talk birds, cranes, whatever's

(23:21):
on your mind. Four oh two five five eight eleven ten.
Four oh two, five five eight eleven ten, and we'll
talk to you next on news radio eleven ten KFA,
B and R.

Speaker 2 (23:30):
He's here.

Speaker 1 (23:31):
We talked about the sock market. We talked about uh,
what was the other thing? Talked about the blue dot,
talked about mister Beasty Keystone pipeline and the sand Hill
crane in sand Hill cranes. What there is best with
no come on, geesh I had Trey email in and

(23:51):
say sand hills are known as the Ribbi of the sky,
illegal in sand in South Dakota and yummy. And then
I had Kurt who called in. Didn't want to stay
on the air, but he said the same. They're known
as the Rabbi of the sky. I'm not eating a
sandhill crane. I'm sorry, well, I'm not gonna. Hey, look

(24:12):
if I was out in South Dakota and someone said, yeah,
I mean I try it, sure, why not? But I
don't Other than that, I'm not going to go down
there to Carney and you know, well, it's not legal
in the Nebraska, right And I'm a very illegal man. No,
you're not.

Speaker 2 (24:26):
No, No, what do I do that's illegal? I'm sure
there's something. Don't say it then, well, but you keep
it to yourself. I'm sure there's something WEIRDO. No, you
can't just say that. Leave it hanging out there.

Speaker 1 (24:38):
I don't know. What do you do? You speed on
your way to work? That is that what you do? Sometimes? Yeah?
Now see, I told you illegal, bad boy trying to
eat sand hill cranes. Get out of here.

Speaker 2 (24:51):
Most of the time, I go too slow to be honest,
I do just.

Speaker 1 (24:54):
To answer the phone nobody even worse, even worse, I'd
rather break the rules we're talking about. The talking about
the stan Hull Cranes because I've seen a lot of
social media videos as they're going into their migration. It
reminds me that there are some other birds that I'm
trying to attract, like the Baltimore Oriole, and my aim

(25:17):
in my hope last year to get a Baltimore Oriole
on my property failed miserably. I know people in my
neighborhood said they were getting them and they were seeing them.
I was not, and I am very, very very ambitious
this year to attempt to get them as well. So
we're going to do our best. We're going to do
the best that we can. It doesn't help that like

(25:40):
in the middle of when the Orioles could very well
end up making their way through, because they comment about
the same time you're supposed to put your jelly out
for the Orioles at like tax day, That's what they said.
It's like a week from today and then it could
be any point from then on to early May that
they could be making their way through on migration, and
they have to see if they miss the If they

(26:01):
miss you on their way in, you're probably toast. I
mean it, good luck getting them. So you have to
get the feeder. You have to have it ready to go.
And the unfortunate thing is I'm gonna be gone for
over a week. Right in that window. You want to
come to over my house and make sure that the
jelly keeps getting refreshed.

Speaker 2 (26:18):
I suppose I could. I could try to make it
fit in my schedule. What's in it for me? Do
I get some of the jelly?

Speaker 1 (26:23):
Yeah? Yeah, but if I run out, then you'll have
to just go buy more. I'll make sure it's stocked
up that way, you have enough, but just don't abuse it, right,
Like like two peanut butter and jelly sandwiches a day.
That's it. I like a peanut butter and jelly sandwich.
And then and then you take a tablespoon of jelly
and put it in the cups in the oriole feeder
and just make sure that you put a fresh one

(26:43):
every day out there so it'll attract them. Can you
do that for me?

Speaker 3 (26:47):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (26:48):
I guess I could. But you know what I'm worried about.
It's that one guy who broke out your window, coming
back and trying to get me. Well, I going to disguise.

Speaker 1 (26:55):
No, I mean, what does that have to do with anything.
I don't know. Is your car big enough for somebody
who want to break into and sleep in when it's
seventy degrees out, because that's what I think happened. It
was zero degrees. Guy saw my vehicle, thought it would
be a good place to crawl into and sleep, and
then realized when he broke all the glass in the
window to try to get in. He put a ton

(27:16):
of glass on the dog beds in the back. That
would have been a nice bed for him. But I
wasn't a good it was a bad It was a
bad move by that guy. Yeah, we did see the
footprints because it was snowy still out, but I mean
that's really all we had. Well, they look like shoes.
What kind of shoes? I don't know, big, small, average,
they're a little bigger than mine. Probably shoes, snow shoes, sandals,

(27:36):
they were tennis shoes. Okay, now we're getting somewhere. Yeah,
they definitely looked like tennis shoes. I don't know kind though,
would you call them sneakers? M yeah? Maybe like like
you know, those like dad shoes, those new balanced dad shoes. Aha,
so it was a Dad Well I don't think it's those,
but it kind of looked like an off brand, kind
of like they weren't basketball.

Speaker 2 (27:58):
Shoes, off brand new balance shoes. Now we're cooking, No,
we're not. There's literally no way to know. You would
have had to like go find a bunch of homeless
people and see if they are wearing those shoes to
find the right one. Honestly, do I want to prosecute
somebody who's probably homeless and just trying to find a

(28:19):
place to sleep. Like, sure, what they did was illegal,
and if I saw them face to face or I
saw them do what they did, I'd protect my property.
But is it really worth all that effort, all the rigamarole.
I told the Omaha police that this happened in my neighborhood.
I was one of a couple of different places I
knew had gotten their window blasted out.

Speaker 1 (28:40):
I told them what I saw. They were like, We're
not gonna be able to do a whole lot. There's
not a lot there if we don't have like video evidence.
And I have since resolved that problem for whatever it's worth.
So now if somebody tried something like that, oh, we'd
have them.

Speaker 3 (28:53):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (28:54):
And I've heard there's a turret too. What I don't know,
is that a word? What I was trying to pretend
to get a mounted machine gun up there?

Speaker 1 (29:02):
As a joke, No, as a joke. Its gotta be illegal. Yeah,
take that as a joke. No, don't bring it up that. No,
I didn't want No, that's bad. I didn't. I didn't
do that. Nobody did that. Yeah, I just don't. Don't
point it towards the Orioles. Yeah. Well, I don't know. Anyway,
we're gonna come back. We'll have plenty more for you,
so stick around on news radio eleven ten KF A

(29:22):
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