Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is a podcast from woar from Everywhere USA. It's
Fox Across America with Jimmy Faylo. Oh girl back in
action for a big hour of Fox Across America, your
home for top shelf radio in a bottom feeding political world.
Jimmy Faylo, the host of the show. Jenny Fylo, wife
of the husband, is coming by in this hour to
(00:22):
have a grown up talk about a new report. I
don't want to say it's shocking. I want to say
it's a good thing. There's a new report out that
says the number of children in America who identify as
transgender has fallen from an all time high of nine
percent down to three percent. And as a parent, I
will explain why I believe that is a good thing.
(00:43):
Now you might disagree with me, and that's fine, just
the same. This is a talk show, good old fashioned
talk show. I have an opinion you might have when
just the same. It doesn't matter if they line up
or not. Be a Republican, I say this every day.
Be a Democrat. Just don't be a bag. There we go,
hour number two on a Friday, the trans Study. I'll
(01:03):
get to this with Jenny, but it's pretty straightforward from me,
and if you've heard the story before, forgive me. But
the reason I think this is a good thing is
because little kids go through phases and a lot of
times their preferences change dramatically. So yes, if you have
a adult, kids trust the adult authority figures in their life.
If they do right by that authority, you trust them implicitly.
(01:26):
And if you have an adult in your life, a
trusted teacher or parent who has a social agenda of
we need more trans peipal, which is literally a manufactured
civil rights movement, really think about that. Okay, ten years ago,
this was not like a thing in our country. And
it's not saying you don't have the right to go,
do it and be it. If you're a transperson listening
right now? Amen, man, good luck, have a good day.
(01:48):
We don't wish any it will. I'm just telling you.
It is my belief that this became like sort of
a fashion trend where there's a lot of celebrities in
Hollywood who suddenly have like two or three trans kids
in their family four A five, which is bananas. But
why do I specifically reference trans people and Hollywood. It's
because you have to be really, really wealthy. If you're
(02:12):
going to have a transgender kid, ah, you have a
good man. I mean, I mean, listen. Okay, I grew
up in a middle class family. My mom's sold real estate,
still does does a great job. You need a house,
reach out to Marianne. Okay. My dad was a Nassau
County cop. No law's retired. Still walks around with this gun, though,
so be careful. But the point is I was once
(02:35):
really nervous. It took me a week to ask them
for a new pair of roller skates. In seventh grade,
we were going to United Skates in Massive Peak. What
they have something called the Skatosaurus. It's a dinosaur on
roller skates. Sounds like the kind of thing you dream
up when you're stoned in middle school. But we were
just going on a roller skating trip and I was
scared to ask for a new pair of roller skates.
Can you imagine a little boy having to ask your
(02:57):
parents for a new pair of boobs. That's awkward. And
don't get me wrong, when I was in seventh grade,
I was trying to get my hands on as many
boobs as I could. I'm not gonna lie. I mean,
any pair out there was fine by me, but I
didn't want to put them on my body like it
was mister potato head. But think about that, we're giving
(03:18):
little kids the right to cosmetically alter their bodies, knowing
that little kids go from I like this band too,
I'll never listen to them again. I like this show too,
I'll never watch it again. Why. Because you grow, you evolve,
your tastes change. That's why I believe it to be
barbaric when wealthy people convince their children and they're trapped
(03:39):
in the wrong body so they can go out and
get gender reassignment surgery because it conforms with their parents'
ideot political ideology, you understand. You know, there's a lot
of people who decide their kid's going to be a
pro ball player because they wanted to be a pro
ball player, so they, you know, hit them ground balls
from the age of two, and it's just because they're
really trying to vicariously fulfill their on fantasy. Like, we
(04:00):
know that's a thing, and sometimes it works out. Look
at Mickey Mandel and Mutt Mantle. Mutt Mantle came home
from the mines every day three sheets to the wind,
and it hit Mickey Mantle ground balls in Commerce, Oklahoma
till all hours of the night and beat them up
and used all kinds of fun language. But he did
grow up to be Mickey Mantle. I mean, there's you know,
maybe there's an argument to be made. Joe Jackson wanted
to be a star, so he beat up the Jackson's
(04:21):
and taught him out a dance and then beat him
up and did god knows what. But they did grow
up to be the Jackson's. Okay, so maybe there's an
argument I'm not saying there is. Don't beat up your kids, Okay.
You could teach them right or wrong and discipline them,
do not like, physically abuse them, obviously, Okay, But the
point is just the same as some people try to
vicariously fulfill their own fantasies through their children. People do
(04:43):
that with political ideology. You want to raise a kid
that grows up to be like you, You're like, well,
I think I'm right about everything. If you're that type
of person, I'm not. Do you want to know one
of the funniest, most real and raw moments of my life.
I'm not even making this up. When Lincoln was five
years old and I was U I was like three
years old, because I was a cab driver still, and
(05:04):
I was driving him up our old street, our old street,
like when you left our house, you went up like
a quick wat like a winding hill, not a big hill.
We didn't live in a fancy area, obviously, but we
went up like a little winding hill, you know. So
you're going down the road and it would kind of
curve left and you'd go uphill, and it was a
heck of a blind spot actually, because there were cars
double parks on either side of the street, and somebody
might come whizzing by at you. But anyway, I was, Uh,
(05:26):
I had like a seven day lease at the time meeting.
I was driving a cab. We had rented for seven
days at a pop. So you didn't have to work
a straight fifteen hour shift or a twelve hour shift.
You could just pay for it for the week and
use it when you felt like it. You did because
I had like comedy stuff going on everything like that.
So probably was probably like three years old, and I
was driving him down my block, my old block. And
(05:48):
what might sound sweet to you, uh at the time,
but understand, I was driving a cab eighty ninety hours
a week doing stand up at night, don't have had
any money, didn't have any health, and chairs a mess. Okay,
But Lincoln was three years old and he goes, He goes, Dad,
when I grew up, I want to be just like you,
and I legitimately slammed on the brakes, turned around. I
looked at a little child in the face and I go, listen,
(06:11):
you stupid. I was like, you don't want to be
doing this with your life. You do not want to
be doing this when you're thirty three years old. I'm like,
you hear me, aim higher? Okay for real? And it
was like it was so raw and it was so real,
but I really meant it because I was like, dude,
you don't want to know God, no, you don't want
to do this. Do you have many hobbits I've had
to fight? I mean, you know, you know how many
(06:32):
people I've had to listen to have sex in the
back seat, and like ninety nine percent of them are alone.
I know, Well, it's it either way, believe me, because
the people having sex in the back seat aren't the
ones you want to see. But the point is there
are people out there that channel their own ambitions through
their kids. That's why you always got to ask yourself
as a parent, you know, when you're giving you kid advice,
(06:52):
Is this what I want? Or is this just what
I think would legitimately be best for the kid? You
know what I'm saying. So when it so like, you know,
kind of giving my own kid direction, like I'm always
trying to ask myself that I don't have to force
him into broadcasting. If he wants to do that, that'd
be great, but I wouldn't be doing it because like
I didn't get to make it like I made it.
You know, if it blows up tomorrow, they might drag
(07:13):
me out of here but my ears, but on the
back of my baseball card, it'll be like, oh no,
he did the thing, the TV show, radio show. Who knows,
maybe they'll get another TV show. You never know what
this place. But the point is, okay, when you see
parents imposing their own ideology on kids to the point
that they're on board with cosmetically altering their bodies, that's
a runaway train of self righteousness that has nothing to
(07:36):
do with the kid. What did make it fashionable to
kids who might not have had rich parents, Because I
don't doubt there's a percentage of them out They are
just the same. Okay, is that it did give you
a different type of status in twenty twenty, twenty twenty one,
twenty twenty two, twenty twenty three was the year it
hit its highest nine point three percent of transgender youth
(07:58):
identified as such. Okay, so how did we go from
nine percent to three percent? Because we were told if
you don't affirm their gender and give them the surgery,
they're all going to kill themselves immediately. That's been the argument.
They will die and it'll be your fault. So let
grown men into the women's room because if you don't,
you're not affirming transgenderism, and everybody will kill themselves.
Speaker 2 (08:19):
You know.
Speaker 1 (08:19):
That's the story down in Virginia with Abigail Spenberger should
out male sex offender who's literally bald on top of
his head, has the panels of long hair on the sides.
He's a convicted sex offender, and they're fighting for his
right to use the women's room. Okay, I'm telling you
this because I care ten years ago, whether you were
a Republican or a Democrat, if that guy walked into
(08:39):
a women's room. Every girl is trained to get out
of there and call an authority figure immediately, and any
nearby guy that might have witnessed that, Okay, straight up,
they're going to beat him up. I'm not wishing that.
I'm I don't want that to be the case. But
what I'm saying is that's where societal attitudes were, And
it's not because we're intolerant towards trans people. It's because
(09:01):
they use that agenda politically to force people into agreement
with a lot of their policies. Hey, if you don't
do the trans thing, people will die. Climate change supported
or people will die. They literally told us, remember this
story is funny. John Kerry two thousand and nine, two
thousand and nine, We're gonna have no more Arctic ice
(09:27):
in five years. He said that in two thousand and nine.
Do you know that since two thousand and nine the
amount of Arctic ice has increased increased dramatically. But here
he is an nine saying you're gonna die.
Speaker 3 (09:39):
Sea ice, which is melting at a rate that the
Arctic Ocean now increasingly is exposed. In five years, scientists
predict we will have the first ice free Arctic summer.
Speaker 1 (09:51):
Ice free Arctic summer is what he said. I mean,
such an idiot. Seriously, Napoleon in Dynamite. This is pretty
much the worst video I've ever made. It is, But
why do they do it? You gottavoe for your people
are gonna die. And that's how they got their way.
So they exploited kids. They exploited kids to get that
(10:14):
agenda enacted to get people behind their agenda. But lo
and behold, we've heard all the stories about the people
d transitioning, and you know, you've seen all of these
sad stories of these kids who realized it was a
phase that they took permanent action on, which is psychotic
to me. I think it's psychotic. I mean, think about that. Guys,
we're living in America, where if a five year old
(10:35):
girl said, Mom, I want a boob job, you can't.
I can't legally get you a boob job till you're eighteen.
I want a tattoo, You can't cannot legally get a
tattoo until you're eighteen. Well, can I think it over
with a pack of cigarettes? No, you cannot smoke cigarettes
legally until you're eighteen. Okay, Well can I get like
my lips injected? No, you cannot as a young girl
in this country, get your lips injected until you're eighteen. Okay,
(10:57):
Well what if I just want to call myself a
boy and get a and they go, yeah, here you go,
come on down. Can you be here Tuesday at eight
o'clock in the morning. We'll do the surgery right now. Okay.
And that's the point of trying to make it's Looney Tunes.
And when you see that number going backwards, it at
least gives you hope as someone who wants to give
people an opportunity to grow into their adult body and
(11:18):
then make this decision, you at least get the hope
that this Looney Tunes edition of child Manipulation is ending.
Fire up the car, We got six minutes to make
it down. Producer Mikey's headline Highway Max back in the
co host chair. Job a lots, Mike, Mikey. I'll tell
you this, Josh, Mikey cooked up some good ones this week.
(11:40):
Yeah we get we give him a six stuff. Yeah,
we give Mikey a hard time, but Mikey actually think
you did a good job. And some of these are
sports related, which always is fun on a Friday. Love
it across the country, Mike, you feel good? All right?
Here we go Bill Belichick. Number five. Bill Belichick and
Jordan Hudson. They met on the dating site plenty of
daddy issues, you know, Hey, oh there it is. So
(12:02):
apparently they were in the in the process of possibly
having a reality show about him coaching the University of
North Carolina. He nixed it because they wanted to get
into his personal life and apparently, Josh, is this true,
he didn't want them filming her while she did her homework.
Speaker 4 (12:18):
Yeah, it's definitely that. And also the fact that they've
just been tanking this season, so there's no other good storyline,
so that's literally all they can focus on. Yeah, it's
a relationship. They're not going to focus on the season
or how good he's doing.
Speaker 1 (12:30):
That's true, Vikey, Does anybody want to do like a
Hard Knocks while the team's going four and nine? No,
that sounds like a mid season New York Jets. That
being said, if they beg six episodes and they got
Jordan Hudson in a sleeveless T shirt, are you watching, Mike?
He still got it, Max, he still got it? All right?
Here we go. Story Number four. Hilario Baldwin is blaming
(12:54):
mean girls for her early exit on Dancing with the Stars.
Obviously with her span action, they're called means Senorita. I
believe this is what she said. Do you actually let
me ask you this? Max? You know, women can be caddy.
Do you think it actually is held against her that
she's married Alec Bowden because he's super famous?
Speaker 2 (13:12):
I mean, or maybe it was earlier this week or
last week she said, Alec Baldwin is my husband, and
he doesn't you know, he had nothing to do. He
had nothing to do with this, like I'm not a
NEPO wife or said wife.
Speaker 1 (13:24):
Yeah, so this is my take on this. Thanks for
this because it's important that you introduced that to the
conversation because josh I would actually argue that being married
to a celebrity is probably a much bigger deal on
Dancing with the Stars because most of these people aren't stars.
Speaker 4 (13:37):
You need that extra connection. Yeah, that's the entire way
you get booked. Yeah, some sort of splash in the
pan and.
Speaker 1 (13:44):
If anything, they want to befriend her to maybe wind
up in another production.
Speaker 2 (13:48):
But would she be a star without Alec Baldwin? Is
she even a star?
Speaker 3 (13:51):
No?
Speaker 4 (13:53):
No, she wouldn't even be on the name of Star Registry.
I mean, she's not on the show anymore because America
voted her.
Speaker 1 (14:00):
It's not her co stars. It was in the Mean Girls.
They didn't make you do a bad shot show, Mikey.
If Jordan Hudson and Hilario Paul would do a six
week episode, are you watching?
Speaker 2 (14:09):
Well, yeah, Mikey, there we go.
Speaker 3 (14:12):
All right.
Speaker 1 (14:13):
Well, here's where it gets interesting, Mikey, because the La
Dodgers sponsored an event that honors athletes like Leah Thomas. Okay,
which is a little controversial, but I guess we gotta
do it. Mikey. If Hilarious bal Twin Paul and Jordan
Hudson and Leah Thomas they're walking around in the shirts,
(14:35):
you don't have to answer that, Mikey. We know the answers, Yes,
but the Dodgers don't need to do this anymore. Is
this California trolling, Josh?
Speaker 4 (14:43):
I think so. I mean they had a thing last
year where they broughng the Satanic people. I mean, they
just can't get out of their own way, and yet
they're still winning.
Speaker 1 (14:51):
God damn it, They're still winning. You know what I'm saying?
Max and I can never bring myself to hate the
Dodgers because I've been there a bunch. Lincoln likes to
go there, and they're responsible for something that didn't exist
in my life before I went there. In San Diego,
it's called women in bikinis at baseball games. You go
to a Dodger game, there's chicks and jean shorts, Yes, bikinis,
hops and jean shorts at a major league game.
Speaker 2 (15:13):
And already bought tickets on our way to lay.
Speaker 1 (15:18):
And I think is if you stick around and go
to West Hollywood, you can see men in jean shorts
with bikini top bob something for everybody, all right, number two,
Stay focused, guys, we only got two minutes. Uh, this
is a great one. Mikey pop Star. That's the headline,
and it's even on Fox news dot com Popstar Records
Anti Ice Track. Okay. I am of the mind that
(15:41):
we are a little too generous with the term star
in this instance. It's almost like pop stars, like you,
don't they always say porn star. You only know the
names of three porn stars, which is crazy considering how
many times you have seen their work with the point
is the pop stars name is Renee Wrap Mikey, Yeah,
Josh got fair or foul? As the segment we're doing later,
(16:04):
let's preempt it is this? Is that a fair description
of a woman named Renee Rap? No, and you know
I'm above the age of forty, so I have no
idea who this person is. I had no idea. Yeah,
you could tell me Renee Rap was an actual flavor
of popped heart, and I would be more likely. I
have no idea. You know Rene Rap, I never heard
of that version. Renee Rap actually sounds like something Josh
(16:25):
that would happen on Saturday Morning cartoons. They bring on
a character called Renee Rap who tell you to eat
carrots and do your homework.
Speaker 4 (16:32):
Now totally named, that would be made up and saved
by the bell.
Speaker 1 (16:34):
Yeah. One more story to good. Haley Baldwin and Selena Gomez. So,
Haley Baldwin is married to Justin Bieber. Yes, Selena Gomez
is his ex. Okay, they don't like each other. She
has a line of cosmetics being sold at Sephora. Okay.
They asked how she felt being in the same shelves
(16:55):
as Selena Gomez. She said there's space for everybody, but
then took it a step further says, I don't feel
competitive with people that I'm not inspired by. Does that
sound like Selena Gomez is getting an invite to the
Gender Revealed party?
Speaker 2 (17:10):
That stinks? That's like that that burns the soul. Like
that's not just like you know, you're you're ugly or
you're fat. That's like, I'm not the deep cut herd.
Good Lord, you.
Speaker 1 (17:20):
Made me wonder why I got into this business to
begin with. Josh, that's not friendly. Fire is no. That
is a tremendous put down.
Speaker 2 (17:29):
A tremendous poked out.
Speaker 1 (17:30):
All right, Grand finale, Mikey, Jordan Hudson, Hilario Baldwin, Leah Thomas,
Rene Rapp, and Haley Bieber are hanging out? Are you going?
Leah Thomas? Is this I don't know? Yes, maybe you
asked Leo to worked the camquarder and you get it.
We made it across the highway. Everybody there. It is
(17:56):
Fox Across America with Jimmy Fla. If you listened to
the show yesterday, you know. Louisiana Senator John Kennedy said
he might be able to get me Malania Trump's phone number,
which means, if you're listening to the show today, this
next guest may or may not still be married to me.
I don't know how she's gonna take that one. But
Jenny Fayala is here nonetheless, Hey girl, Hey hey, this
is exciting John Kennedy, as you know, I love him
(18:18):
with his uh you know, Jimmy so funny. He's the
funniest dude in the world.
Speaker 5 (18:25):
And he comes up with the funniest lines of words
that they don't think have ever been strung together, but
they so make sense, like but they don't, but they
do like they're great.
Speaker 1 (18:35):
Well, he said yesterday, AOC is so dumb. She thinks
you can land on the moon on the sun if
you go at night. It's is just so it's really funny.
Like that one really got me. But he was fantastic.
He said he could get me Trump's phone number, and
he's working on Malania as he doesn't quite know. But
at this point, I write, and I've made so many
(18:57):
gratuitous jokes about me and Malania Trump, I wouldn't even
imagine you care at this point.
Speaker 5 (19:01):
No, And honestly, the order of protection that she must
have on you at this point is going to keep
you from her anyway, So I'm not worried.
Speaker 1 (19:09):
Not getting near Millennia.
Speaker 5 (19:11):
I'm not even gonna jump in when like a little
red dot like it CERTs light just lights up on you.
Speaker 1 (19:16):
No, I'm gonna tell you anymore, Jenny, let me tell
you something. You are of course on Fox New Saturday
Night This Weekend with Kennedy Brian brenn Berg, Sergeant Slaughter
is booked on the show. They're working out travel logistics.
You know, you got to get here. There's hotels, there's cars,
there's planes involved in stuff like that. Yeah, So if
he doesn't make it for some reason, we might do
(19:38):
I don't know what that Marky Mark movie was where
the guy was a fan of the band that he
wound up singing for them. Oh yeah, like rock Star
or something weird. Yeah, yeah, yeah, we may just pull
a Rando out of the crowd, like the DP Block,
do anything that's funnier than just bringing in another comic
or somebody we all know, Like I think it's every
band segment, Yeah, I think so.
Speaker 5 (19:58):
But I think you've got to have like your team
like secretly be watching people in the room beforehand, uh huh,
to see, like, you know, whether it would be a
good idea.
Speaker 1 (20:08):
Or colossal mistakes. So you're saying, yeah, you don't want
one of those female comics who stalk me on Instagram.
The crow got some whoa You think Melaia has orders
or protection? Try being a chubby TV host for a
few hours a week. Good god, Jenny fail Well, the
eaton's good. Yeah, the eaton's all right. Give us that
we're doing all right, Jenny Failer. By the way, I
(20:28):
should mention this to everybody listening around the country, since
every time you come on the show, everybody says they
like you better than me and haha all that funny stick.
You're going to be at some of my stand up gigs,
That's true, especially the ones over the Thanksgiving break. We're
going to be in San Louis Abyspo that's November twenty eighth,
and I we're going to be in Vegas at Durango
November twenty ninth. Yeah, two shows Saturday night, one show
(20:50):
Friday night. Hooray, will be there, bloated from a West
Coast Thanksgiving. Oh yeah, we've never done this before. It's
a now in Lincoln Thanksgiving and somehow we're going to
be in San Francisco. I'm really excited about it.
Speaker 5 (21:02):
As the person that hosts it is like, I am
kind of excited about it because right now I would
be starting my menu prep like I would be getting
things together and starting to organize and just you know,
not buying any food yet obviously it's way too early
for that, but just kind of getting everything under control.
Speaker 1 (21:19):
And you know there's a method to the madness. Well
you do? You are you of the mistake in mind
that you're not going to be hosting when we get
the San Francisco because me and Lincoln aren't lowering our
standards of holiday expectation. I'm going to start mailing boxes
of stuff in to the hotel on nob Hill in
San Francisco.
Speaker 5 (21:40):
Looks like I got to start googling restaurants who do
an actual thanksgiving?
Speaker 1 (21:44):
Me a one Thanksgiving?
Speaker 3 (21:45):
Ah?
Speaker 1 (21:46):
What was the name?
Speaker 3 (21:48):
Was it?
Speaker 1 (21:48):
The Paramount? What was the name of the hotel we
stayed at with the Tony Bennett statue outside in knob Hill?
Isn't that Fairmont? The Fairmont? Good job, Jenny, thank you?
What a gorgeous regal place. The three of us didn't
belong ass I.
Speaker 5 (22:01):
Know, I know, and you know what's so funny? I
would say, like, my memory is great, but I really
can't take credit for that. But I was cleaning out
one of my bags. The room keys, do you remember
The room keys were wooden, yes, like thin wooden, and
I mean obviously they had the magnetic strip like embedded
in it. But I was showing my parents when they
were here this weekend because I was cleaning out my person.
I saw it and I was like, oh, look at this,
(22:22):
that's just been sitting on the coffee table.
Speaker 1 (22:24):
Since that's how I came up with the name so
fast the Fairmont. Yeah, what a what alan? I mean
really like, oh, we so did not belong there.
Speaker 5 (22:33):
It was hilarious, like it's really like a lot of
places we go now we laugh about it, but I
think that was the most everybody there.
Speaker 1 (22:42):
Is pulling up in like a Rolls Royce and we
show up in like a suit and we showed up
in like shorts and a convertible Mustang. Yeah, rental twisted
sister in a rental car and it was cold and
we had the top down like losers. Like the valet.
Like I got out to the valet, He's like, sorry,
So the restrooms are for customers hoping you're like, I'm
(23:05):
just here to buy a cup of coffee. I'll buy
the courtesy cup of coffee. Let me ahead. I'm staying
five days. But it was nice. It was such a
great place.
Speaker 5 (23:15):
It was really cool. It had a lot of history
and you could tell that that was really cool. But
as you'd imagine, we're not staying there. Ok, pictures are
up behind the desk.
Speaker 1 (23:26):
Never let these people in again. We may ride by
there on a scooter with any luck. You don't know, No,
you don't not thos can we get Can we give
San Francisco credit for one thing? It is not collectively
as bad as everyone's been saying for as long as
they have, including me, Because what they did is they
took that what looks like the collapse of civilization and
(23:47):
just put it on one block.
Speaker 5 (23:49):
Oh yeah, it's just not scattered around anymore. But they're
make no mistake. There was a lot of it and
it's just really concentrated and condensed into one little area.
Speaker 1 (23:56):
Yeah, there's one area cleaned up the touristy areas. That's
I mean, for the most part, they did, you know, like, yeah,
I mean you have a random person throwing a bottle
at you. Yeah, once in a while there was. Yeah,
there was a guy who called us like white devils
when we were riding scooters by the pier and yeah, yeah,
threw a bottle of something at us. So, yeah, that happened.
And there was a man in traffic who cursed me out,
(24:17):
but was so new to America he didn't know how
to curse yet.
Speaker 5 (24:20):
However, he was getting yes, because I was on the
phone with my brother who had my nephew on speaker,
and I said, oh, good thing.
Speaker 1 (24:27):
You didn't hear that right to my brother and you
go to repeat it and I'm like, no, no, no, no.
The point was I didn't want my little nephew to
hear it. It was really funny, but it was wildly,
wildly entertaining stuff. We're talking to Jenny Fala about our
West Coast trip. The tickets, if you want to go,
the tickets are at Fox across America dot com. Every
(24:50):
Jenny I go back on the road once this Lincoln
football season wraps up. He's the closing guest today. Yeah,
they're four and one. They're riding pretty high right now,
they really are. They're playing so well as a team.
I just have to. It's really this group of kids.
Speaker 5 (25:04):
I'm going to be so sad when this season is over, because,
I mean, one their seniors, and you've known most of
these kids. They had two schools that combined, but I've
known most of them since kindergarten, and it's just so
amazing to watch them grow up and just be such
nice young men and so respectful, so nice, just like
good buddies, good teammates. It's just it's been fun to watch.
(25:25):
I'm really I'm really enjoying it.
Speaker 1 (25:26):
Yeah, it's been. It's been really sweet for them. He
was he was calling them what did he call them
the Ramley because they're the rams Oh, the Ramilly Yeah, yeah,
yeah that's what. Yeah, it's a thing at the school.
Like is that really a thing? Yeah yeah, I didn't
know that. That's how much of a deadbeat parent I am.
That's how involved you are in all things. I show
up to the games, fist bump a couple of drunk people,
and then talk to nobody because I want to watch
(25:47):
the game. Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 5 (25:49):
Well I'm kind of the same way you and I
like kind of sneak off into like, you know, our
own little like section because I don't want to talk either.
Speaker 1 (25:56):
Just watch so you want to watch the game. It's
not that we're not friendly, because we are super friendly.
In fact, like friendly with the away fans because a
lot of them watch Fox and know who we are,
so we are friendly. Well, when the game's on, it's
like watching the game with somebody you locked in. Yeah,
you don't want to You want someone to move over
to watch the game that's going to talk through every
inch of the game.
Speaker 5 (26:13):
Yeah, unless you're talking plays and actually saying what's going
on in the field, I don't.
Speaker 1 (26:17):
Want to hear it.
Speaker 3 (26:18):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (26:19):
Yeah, game watching etiquette. Everyone should consider that this weekend. Well,
give me this as a as a parent. This was
the study. I think this is so interesting. We covered
this on Wednesday show. I don't know if you saw this.
The number of kids we're parents who identify as transgender
has fallen in half in half in the last two years.
(26:39):
Do you think on some level that it was just
a like a fashion. It was almost like a fad
in a weird way.
Speaker 5 (26:46):
Of course it was because it raised by like five
hundred percent over like five years. And that's that's an
insane amount. Like if anything else were to raise five
hundred percent over the course of five years, it would
be like the only thing people were talking about, because
that's such a like crazy rise in whatever you would
(27:06):
be talking about. So obviously it's not an organic thing.
It's so now it's just starting to come back to
earth a little bit because it's a little less of that,
you know, social currency. Yeah, you know, it's it's not
the new thing. It's not And I'm not I'm not denying.
I don't care what people identify as. I really don't
like it's everybody's you know, I want.
Speaker 1 (27:26):
To but I'm yeah, yeah, Jenny, We're talking to Jenny
Failer and I'm just cutting her off like we're home.
It's like we're just in the house. It's like they
don't even know there's microphones and cameras and everything else
that goes into the show. But I just wanted to
give you that number. It's nine point two percent was
the high water mark in twenty twenty three, and it's
(27:48):
at three percent now. So it fell from nine point
two to three. So this is why I brought this
up with you. It's because my next question becomes a
lot of the kids who went down this road, went
down this road because of the political ideology of their
parents or their teachers. Oh yeah, do you think there
are a lot of people out there who know that
they kind of sent these kids down this kind of
(28:10):
treacherous path where you really can't reconfigure your body and
now you've got a lifetime of surgeries and meds. Do
you think there's a lot of people out there that
are never going to admit it, but must know they're wrong.
Speaker 5 (28:21):
They absolutely can't admit that, because how could you come
out and say, yeah, I messed with my kids so
much that I really put these ideas and instead of
just saying, hey, let's let's talk this through. Hey, let's
figure this out before we just do anything drastic, I'm
just going to go on a women just be like, yeah, yeah, yeah,
let's change your body.
Speaker 1 (28:42):
It's okay, it's cool that.
Speaker 5 (28:43):
I don't think they're ever going to want to actually
internalize what they actually did.
Speaker 1 (28:50):
It's heavy, and we're saying it really is. And we're
saying that as people who kind of transitioned Lincoln because
when he was ten, he had the body of a
fat girl, and that like a six foot five pro athlete.
As a guy. You know what I mean, you could
argue heat transitioned exactly he kept his gender. Yeah. Yeah, Well,
I mean that's the point.
Speaker 5 (29:10):
And I think you make it a lot that, especially
with kids, they go through so many phases. And it's
not to say your gender is the same as liking
sports or being into sports, but it is to say
that what you're thinking changes so drastically. Yeah, when you're
that age and all the way through, I mean even
I mean the way they say the brain isn't fully
developed until they're twenty five. So even though you're technically
(29:33):
an adult at eighteen, there's still so much that.
Speaker 1 (29:36):
You're just not.
Speaker 5 (29:37):
I mean, I'm forty four and I don't think mine's
fully there. I was going to make the Jenny before
you did, and.
Speaker 1 (29:43):
You know, you want to laugh really hard. So you're
comment about the brain not full of full of developing
till you're twenty five. Yeh. Dagan McDowell stopped me in
the hallway last week to make sure I understood that
kids Lincoln's age can't smoke weed because if you smoke
weed a lot when you're you develop schizophrenia. Okay, but
she was doing that classic thing. It's like a Colin
(30:06):
Quinn bit where he's like, if you ever had somebody
re enact in argument, and now everyone around thanks, you're
the guy who did the bad thing. Yes, So Dagan
is literally poking me in the chest, going, you can't
sit around and smoke weed all day, and everyone getting
off the elevator thinks I came on her show stoned,
and she's mad about it the entire landing on the
(30:28):
twentieth floor, and she's like, and I don't care what
you're saying. It might feel good, but it ain't good
in the long run. Can't be smoking weed day and
day out. You'd be schizophrenic. And I'm like, Dagon, she's
not talking about me, And as everybody leaves, she goes, now,
tell that to Lincoln. It was, but nobody's suck around
(30:51):
for that part. Nobody cares. Nobody cares more with Jenny Phila.
When we come back there, it is Fox Across America
with Jimmy Philo. They bumped me in on Tom Petty,
perhaps not remembering that I was nearly sued by Tom Petty.
Jenny Fail is here. It's Friday, Big family affair. Lincoln
Fail is going to be here later on his mom
(31:11):
is here to chaperone in the meantime, Tom Petty, if
you guys don't know the story, around the country, we
had done a song parody of free Falling free Falling
by Tom Petty, and it was about Joe Biden. So
it was called keeps Falling. Okay, so okay, So my
man will cuts a dope video. We tweet it within
(31:32):
like a minute, Trump retweets it. My phone blows up.
A minute later, It's like, oh my god. Trump retruity
videos got like ten million views. A third minute, I
get a cease and desist from Tom Petty's estate lawyers,
saying you're going to freeze your Twitter account and get
sued if you don't take it out, And unlike Tom Petty,
I will back down. I backed all the way down.
(31:54):
It's over and now you got no more video. But
shout out to Tom Petty and whoever's policing his estate rights.
I mean, they're on top of it.
Speaker 3 (32:03):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (32:03):
You gotta police your content or they'll all still your stuff.
Speaker 3 (32:06):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (32:06):
So one thing I can tell you local crime is
rampants where I work. And I'm not going to name names.
I'll get in trouble let's you don't pee in the
tenth as they say, yep, that's how did they use
that phrase in San Francisco though, when you're in that
neighbor whore, everybody lives in the town, you know, yeah where?
And I bring that up last night we had a
(32:27):
New York City mayor's debate, Mom Donnie, Curtis Sleewa, Andrew Cuomo.
A lot of people ask who the big winner was.
I would say it was the people who didn't watch. Yeah,
but there was quite a food fight, nonetheless. And the
problem with Mom Donnie, and you know, if you think
he did good, he did bad, or anything in between,
is his factory settings. He came of age as a
(32:48):
politician in the cops are anti queer and racist, defund
the police. And now you know, even last night he
tried to pretend like that's not me. I've evolved. It
was an emotional time, but we all know this your
factory settings or your factory settings. So it doesn't mean
he's going to defund the police. He can't, but he's
going to gravitate towards those pro criminal policies that we
(33:09):
had to drive past in San Francisco. And as compassionate,
halfway decent people. Is there even a way to articulate
how horrifying it was to drive down Mission Street in
a convertible, no less where, but thankfully, like sadly, no
one was in a condition to come after us. But
you know, that is the end result of what I
call It's called misguided empathy.
Speaker 5 (33:31):
You know what I'm saying, Yeah, absolutely, because you can
you can feel bad. I mean, obviously we feel bad
for this, but when you have policies that just keep
encouraging and enabling this instead of getting people to help
they need to get off the street, It's like, okay,
you can, you can claim to be the side of compassion,
but you're not actually doing anything to help.
Speaker 1 (33:52):
So and it really it was a sad sight. But
that's also where the drug thing is so bad, because
they're like, well, if we decriminalize this and we legalize prostitution,
and it's the same thing with free buses, mom. Donnie's
quote is that if you make the buses free, attacks
on drivers will go down, because he's claiming people beat
up the driver because they get in an argument about
the fair But you know who else beats up the driver?
(34:15):
Zombies zombies who are strung out on drugs who can
now just wander on to the bus and he has
to stop for them because it's free. Yeah, I'm saying,
think about that.
Speaker 5 (34:25):
That's just going to because you know how like the
poor authority bathroom just turns into like a hotel.
Speaker 1 (34:30):
Yeah, yeah, that's going to be the buses.
Speaker 5 (34:32):
So all the hard working people who end up needing
to take public transportation in cities to get to their jobs.
Now what now you're going on that you take your
kids on the bus to go to school, now what
you know? And those poor drivers that have to deal
with it too. It's a sad situation all around. But
that's not going to be the answer because imagine this.
Speaker 1 (34:49):
It's like, think of all the crazies when you get
on the subway and there's a guy like literally barking
like a dog in someone's face, and everyone on the
subway is doing the old please don't come to me,
Please don't come to me. Yep. Okay, on the bus,
he's always gonna come to you. Okay, that much closer.
Speaker 5 (35:06):
You can't just walk in between cars to get you know,
into another car like you can on the subway.
Speaker 1 (35:11):
And yeah, that's a problem. And I can't do what
you do and give the guy my phone number. He
doesn't want it. To listen, Jenny, you know I've had
a pretty good track record to stop at Jenny. Do
you think I got you? Hell? Bang?
Speaker 4 (35:22):
Jenny?
Speaker 1 (35:23):
How dare you? How did you know what Jenny Fayler
that was? I mean, get around Happy Friday Friday. I
will see you on the TV set tomorrow night. Yeah, yeah,
go go jog or something. I'm kidding. I love you. Jenny,
looks great. I owe you. You're dead there it is
the great Jenny Failer. Lincoln joining us in the next
hour on Fox across America. This has been a podcast
(35:48):
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