Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
I gotta get glasses.
Speaker 2 (00:01):
Yeah, you've got I've seen you wear glasses, haven't I.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
Yeah, I'm supposed to, but you don't normally usually.
Speaker 3 (00:08):
No, I'm supposed to wear them for what originally for reading? Yeah,
but if I let's just say, tomorrow I wake up,
I'm gonna wear my glasses today, I get massive headaches
and then, like they say, it'll go away if you
get used to wearing them for a bit, but it's
it's incredibly difficult. I don't want to go through it.
Speaker 2 (00:29):
I can't see squad anymore. I don't know if you
noticed me. I'm over here squinting all the time, leaning
up to the computer to try to see something sometimes
and it's just uh, but I just I can't wear contacts.
I'm not doing the needles in my eyes things anymore.
These glasses are probably too between two and three years old,
(00:51):
so I probably need a new prescription as I'm getting older. Yeah,
but I i'd like to do that Lee's or stuff,
Lasik surgery, but I don't know if it would work
on my eyes or not. And I'm kind of half
scared of a laser anyway.
Speaker 3 (01:06):
I don't know any I don't know enough about it
to give you any advice.
Speaker 2 (01:09):
I just got to do something I can't. I can't
keep can't keep squinting like this because it's making me
a little nuts. Plus I look a lot like Gilbert
Gottfried when I do that.
Speaker 3 (01:20):
I mean, how many people have had Lacey A lot?
So yeah, I know, I mean, the chances of something
happen have to be pretty love. I've never heard of
anybody like oh, unless they went to a doctor that's
like buy one, get one free.
Speaker 2 (01:32):
Well, yeah, in the early days, in the early days,
there were places out there, you know, Lasik surgery just
ninety nine dollars, and you you heard of people getting
their retinas fried and all kinds of stuff. I don't
know what it costs these days. I have no idea.
I haven't looked into it. But I just I gotta
do something so I can see and like I say,
the Gilbert Godfreed face, I'm going to start sounding like
(01:53):
him if I if I keep looking like him.
Speaker 3 (01:56):
The average cost of LACEYK is fifteen to three thousand per.
Speaker 1 (02:00):
You ain' b c six first warning, No at.
Speaker 3 (02:04):
It's so dirty. Sometimes yeah, it's how much. It's how
muche thousand.
Speaker 1 (02:11):
Can you float me on?
Speaker 2 (02:12):
It?
Speaker 1 (02:13):
Is that?
Speaker 3 (02:14):
Per i, per i?
Speaker 1 (02:15):
Holy smokes. Okay, so maybe I'll just get glasses.
Speaker 3 (02:19):
Give one eye.
Speaker 2 (02:21):
I don't want that. Then I'd be like the six
million dollar man, the one eye that but I could
see with the one eye and that with the other.
Speaker 3 (02:27):
You could put a patch over your one r I.
Speaker 1 (02:33):
Get to talk like that all the time. Are this
is pirate radio? Man?
Speaker 2 (02:37):
It's been a long pirate radio that's that's back to
the eighties. That is you don't remember pirate radio day?
Speaker 3 (02:44):
Oh not at all.
Speaker 2 (02:45):
That was a Scott Shannon invention, the guy who was
the announcer. Yeah, when I was when I first started
in radio. He was a legend. He was such a legend.
And you know how you put a career objective on
your resume when you're trying to get jobs. My career
objective actually this is what it's said to scare Scott Shannon.
To scare Scott Shannon, Yeah, I wanted to I wanted
(03:07):
everything he had done. I wanted to accomplish that and more.
And uh and here I sit in Columbus, Ohio. So
see how that worked out for me. In case you
missed it, In the news there. We just we just
got told. Chuck Schumer passes with unanimous consent on behalf
of the United States Senate this bill to release the
(03:29):
Epstein files. Are you excited about this?
Speaker 3 (03:32):
Uh? I have mixed feelings on it.
Speaker 2 (03:36):
I still don't even know what I look if it's
if it's just a bunch of uh. You know, these
people were seen with him, these people had their pictures
taken with him, these people had lunch with him. I
that's meaningless to me. That is nothing. Now, if there
is any evidence in any paperwork anywhere that laws were broken,
(03:56):
that women and girls and boys, I guess we're abused, misused,
and that kind of thing. I want people to fry.
I'll buy the wess and oil. I want people to
And I don't care who they are. I don't care
what their political affiliations are. I don't care what color
their skin is, what their religion is, don't care if
(04:20):
they were part of some massive conspiracy to misuse other
human beings, especially young human beings. I have no sympathy
for them at all at all. And yes, that does
include the President. I don't believe that he is in
any danger. I just don't believe he's that kind of man.
(04:42):
That's my feeling about him.
Speaker 1 (04:46):
But if if I turn out to be wrong, Fry
and like fish.
Speaker 3 (04:52):
That's the same. Because some people are so part of it,
you know, in social media, because it's toxic people. Well
what if Bill Clinton's on it, We'll put who cares.
It doesn't matter who it is. It shouldn't be a
political issue in terms of right versus left. This is
a human issue. And if anybody's guilty of whatever, then
just like you said, fr yes, So that's pretty simple.
Speaker 2 (05:14):
So now that you know, this doesn't even have to
go through a Senate vote. Now the House is past it.
Schumer does gives unanimous consent on behalf of the Senate,
which I didn't even know you could do, but apparently
you can. So so now goes to the President's desk,
and President Trump said, yeah, but it gets to my desk,
I'll sign it. So let's get it out there. If
it exists. I still don't even know what exists, right,
(05:36):
because if you will recall, before he epsteined himself, he
was put in prison and they said that there were
video tapes, he had cameras all over the place, that
there were video tapes that have yet to be talked about, discovered,
or admitted to. Then there was the Epstein list of
(05:58):
all of the people who had come to his island
in search of their their gratifications. But so far they
say there's no list. There's just there's emails, there's PaperWorks,
people like this is.
Speaker 3 (06:12):
The list, and it would be like a public list
of people that might have flown on his plane.
Speaker 2 (06:17):
And I believe there is a list, and I believe
there are videos because this is the kind of guy.
This is what he did. This is what he did.
He shook hands, smiled, collected names, collected evidence, and then
used his influence, well, you know, to be a shame
of that gut out used his influence to influence other things,
on behalf of other people so that he could influence
(06:39):
them to get other things. This is how he became
wealthy because people paid him money to make things happen,
and he made things happen by knowing who's chained Yank
in the appropriate circumstance. So I absolutely absolutely believe that
there's a list of culprits and actions, and I would
(07:02):
not be surprised to find that there is video evidence
and uh, and as far as Gislaine, Gizlaine, whatever her
name is, I call her Jizzle Jisel Maxwell, Yeah, Gisel
Maxwell's concern if it is, if it is provable that
she was a co conspirator in all of this stuff,
(07:24):
fry her too, Yep, fry her too. Don't even think
about a pardon. And she's in jail. What were the
actual conviction? She was charged, convicted and put in prison,
But what was the actual conviction for?
Speaker 1 (07:40):
What was it charged? Do you know?
Speaker 3 (07:41):
Uh, she was charged conspiracy. I know that off the
top of my head, you know what.
Speaker 2 (07:52):
I just remember thinking, how are they doing that? Because
how do you charge somebody with conspiracy of something you
can't prove happen?
Speaker 3 (07:58):
Okay, yes, convictions sex trafficking of a minor, transporting a
minor with the intent to engage in criminal sexual activity,
and conspiracy three counts of conspiracy.
Speaker 2 (08:09):
And a conspiracy means that you have something that happened
that you can prove it happened.
Speaker 3 (08:14):
I get Yeah, I'm not I'm not too.
Speaker 1 (08:18):
So.
Speaker 3 (08:18):
I don't say anything incorrect.
Speaker 2 (08:19):
Yeah, I'm just I don't understand really that that I
worry that that can be overturned as well. But I
don't know that she wants it overturned because I don't
know what she wants out. Sure, she's probably much more
comfortable and much safer in custody than she is out
on the streets, because you know, she could put a
couple of bullets in the back of her head.
Speaker 3 (08:41):
And she came from wealth too.
Speaker 1 (08:44):
Yeah, so it's just.
Speaker 2 (08:46):
It's, well, you know, the richer you are, the more
entitled you think you are. Sometimes and those people who
think that they can they can have their way with uh,
with humanity simply because they're wealthy.
Speaker 3 (08:58):
I mean, how long how long were they Epstein and her?
Speaker 2 (09:02):
I mean allegedly, it's all aged. Yeah, it's all allegedly
until you prove something. So anyway, past the House, past
the Senate, and headed for the president's desk. And I
don't know if I were Donald Trump, seriously, after all
of the hype and publicity and coverage and everything wherever
(09:22):
he is right now, I would I would just come
to my office and sit there and wait for it.
Call a press conference and say I'm sitting at my
desk waiting for it. Let's get this done. When he
was elected, didn't he say something too about releasing classified
information about Area fifty one.
Speaker 3 (09:42):
He mentioned something about it.
Speaker 2 (09:44):
We have him signed that while we're doing this, I mean,
I would like to because that is remember people forget,
We all forget stuff so quickly. But you remember the drones, right,
and how everybody was freaking out over the the drones
up around New Jersey. And then the story was just gone.
(10:06):
Nobody really confirmed or denied anything. We believe this is
what it was. And then it was gone. And at
that point I thought, Okay, the Area fifty one thing's
going to come up again. But if I seriously, if
I were in the position of president of the United States,
and if I were Donald Trump, having campaigned and been
(10:26):
elected with his platform, his rhetoric, his speeches, I would
just I would force so much transparency on people at
this point that they just couldn't handle it. Remember Barack
Obama promised to be the most transparent administration in the
history of the United States, and they spent eight years
(10:48):
hiding everything.
Speaker 1 (10:52):
Seventy two hours.
Speaker 2 (10:53):
No legislation will be passed unless it's posted online for
seventy two hours in advance of being brought to the floor,
so the American people can see what we're voting on.
Speaker 1 (11:05):
Do you remember that?
Speaker 3 (11:06):
I do remember.
Speaker 1 (11:07):
Yeah, it didn't happen.
Speaker 3 (11:09):
It's hard to it's hard to do that because it's
seventy two hours. How are you gonna like read everything
in the bill? You can't really read it to you.
Speaker 2 (11:17):
So pictures of Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein. Donald Trump
was a young man, free of wrinkles in these pictures
that they keep putting up there. And yet it was
the Clinton administration that brought us move on dot org.
Donald Trump is paranoid. He said they're bugging the offices
at Trump Tower, which they turned.
Speaker 1 (11:37):
Out to be doing.
Speaker 2 (11:38):
But but but Barack Obama brought us a tackwatch dot com.
If you hear someone say something threatening against the president,
reported to attack watch dot com. And I finally hilarious.
What everybody wants to compare him to, uh to, you know,
a fascist or whatever? They or he's Hitler, he's a Nazi,
(12:01):
he's hit Ler. I'm like, get back in your volkswagon
and shut up A two eight sixever eight two IU WUTV.
Let's try to get in a couple here before we
go to our first break. John, you were on six
ten DOUBLEUTV at Hi.
Speaker 4 (12:17):
Hey, how's it.
Speaker 1 (12:18):
Going fine, sir? How are you so?
Speaker 4 (12:20):
I'll going well, Hey, I've been enjoying the conversation. Just
listen to you on iHeart driving back from the Love
and Clumbus tonight. I was sharing with your other individual
that maybe have some good news for you. Not an
eye doctor or anything, but what I can tell you
from experiences. I went from about two twenty to if
you take twenty eighty pounds about six years ago, and
(12:42):
I'm keeping hit there. And the good news is when
you do that, it actually can improve your vision at
the same time, So you might be off on what
you're seeing, you know, a need the sweat at the
screen and everything. But I bet if you get yourself
to an eye doctor, you'll find your prescription actually be
improved rather than got worse. Just taking the guests. Just
let you know, that's one man's experience.
Speaker 1 (13:03):
Wouldn't that be something else?
Speaker 2 (13:04):
If the reason my glasses aren't effective anymore is because
my vision got better, Yeah, it could be too strong.
Speaker 4 (13:11):
I mean, you know you got to find that sweet
spot right where. I mean I went from like you know,
the minus six and a half rage when my vision
was that it's worse, you know, being dearsighted. I'm right
now around the minus three and a quarter or something
like that, So I just wanted to I wanted to
share that with It might be good, Nixon.
Speaker 2 (13:29):
I appreciate it. John, Thank you. Put a smile on
my face, especially if I don't have to get needles
in my eyes or or laser beams. The whole needles
thing just was too much and it wasn't doing anything, honestly,
I I I just didn't feel like I was seeing
any better. So I don't want to do that again.
(13:50):
I'm not going to bother with it again, and and
so be it. We'll try new new prescription first, see
if we get see the glasses