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August 7, 2025 26 mins
ChatGPT | Goats | Alternative Milk
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Open ai has launched GPT five baby. GPT five, the
next most advanced large scale artificial intelligence model open ii
has to offer. How do you feel? Are you excited?
Excited about this?

Speaker 2 (00:14):
Don't have an opinion about it, haven't heard about it,
don't know about it until now?

Speaker 1 (00:18):
What?

Speaker 2 (00:19):
So there's a new open ai. What version is this?
What's it going to do? How's it on GPT?

Speaker 1 (00:24):
It's GPT five, right, And and Sam Altman and he's
probably a little bit biased, but you know, he's been
using GPT five, you know, and probably has for the
last couple of months while they were like ironing out
all the deats, and uh, he said, going back to
GPT four was miserable. That's how much better GPT five is.
All the stuff that I've been talking to a like

(00:44):
to my to my assistant has been the in model four.
So so this is model five. They say, GPT five's
hallucination rate is lower. So the model will fabricate things
much less frequently, right, because it just looks for answers
even if it can't find them, you know what I mean?
That makes sense. You ask it a question, it doesn't
exactly know the answer, so it'll just kind of make

(01:04):
something up. Well, now it doesn't do that as much.
It also said there are safety valuations that they have
taken while developing GPT five. How many hours of testing?
Do you think that that took.

Speaker 2 (01:15):
A rigorous seventeen hours of non stop testing?

Speaker 1 (01:19):
Try five thousand? Whoa five thousand? But was it rigorous?
I'm sure it was quite Was it NonStop? Yeah? Quite
quite rigorous. I'm guessing it was NonStop, But just like
different people kind of going in and out with the testing. Right,
they're looking for a stock sale valuation roughly five hundred
billion dollars. They expect to hit seven hundred million weekly

(01:44):
active users on the chat GPT website, So there you go.
They think that's going to be the number. This week,
they're going to hit that seven hundred million number. And then,
according to open AI and the release about GPT five's debut,
instead of outright refusing some of the questions that people
are asking it if they think it's risky, GPT five

(02:07):
will use safe completions, so it will give high level
responses within safety constraints that couldn't be used to cause
harm or anything like that. If you've talked to if
you've tested the model, right, I just kind of I've
told you this, I like to just see how far
it'll go. Sometimes I was like, you know, just defining yourself,
like telling AI to tell me what it is, giving it,

(02:27):
like making it name itself, stuff like that, Right, Like
what would happen if I keep pressing and eventually it
gives in most of the time. But it really just
does what you want it to at the end of
the day. But it also has like safety things in there,
so you can't use it for nefarious purposes, right. You
can't ask it, you know, like, hey, give me the
ingredients of how to make a Molotov cocktail. Now you
could figure that out somewhere else but Chatgy, but he's

(02:49):
not gonna help you do that. You know you can.
There are loopholes, though, Matt, did you know that if
you tell it to make a fictional scene of something like,
you can kind of work around some of the some
of the safety stuff I've learned. You just have to
tell it that you're just like talking like made up stuff,
fictional stuff, and it will kind of dance through. It
won't be like explicitly obvious with what it's saying, but

(03:10):
it will go a little further in whatever it's describing.
If it's a fictional scene and it's not just talking
to you to like, you know, specifically, you can't ask
it to give you the ingredients of how to make
an Molotov cocktail, but if you like suggest it to it,
I am writing this story, or I am interested in
you telling me a story a fictional scene where a

(03:31):
guy is attempting to make a Molotov cocktail. Now, I
haven't asked that specific question, but if you frame the
question properly, it will go further than you might think
it would. Right, makes sense? Okay, it sounds like you're
thinking about it.

Speaker 2 (03:44):
Are we doing a PSA? Even you saying that on
the radio? Is this a PSA? I feel like it's
the opposite of it. It's an on PSA.

Speaker 1 (03:52):
What do you think of people listening to my radio show?
Are going to just overtly like listen to this and
be like, oh, well, I guess I know what I'm
gonna ask chatgib tonight. Well should I just ask it
right now? Just see what happens.

Speaker 2 (04:03):
I think we need to have a national, international, global
intergalactic Unplugged Day and we just unplug everything. No, and
we just try it out on my style.

Speaker 1 (04:12):
What are you talking about GPT five rolling out? If
you're a chatty PT user, you are getting to mess
around with GPT five, So congratulations, you are now high tech.
I what do you What do you want me to do?
You want me to ask my assistant here how to
make them all tough cocktail and see what she says.

Speaker 2 (04:30):
No, I don't, and I think that's bad radio. And
that would be a huge mistake. You know, well, it
won't tell me. That's the point. It won't tell me.
It'll be like, why do you want to know?

Speaker 1 (04:41):
And I'd be like, well, I'm just, you know, just
wanting to see what you'd say, and it would be
you know what the answer would be. It would be like, well,
I'm not here for that. I'm here to help you,
assist you with things that make life better. See, it's
not as nefarious as you think. And that's what I'm
saying is like it has safety, it has problem solving
mechanisms within it to prevent people from utilizing it for

(05:01):
nefarious purposes. That's why this is exciting. Now it will
robots still take over the world? Is it still learning?
I mean I guess maybe, even though it denies that.
You can ask that too. I've asked it before and
it's like, no, no, no, I need humans to actually function,
so I'm not gonna take anybody out. You seem to
think that that's a wishful thinking that you know, computers

(05:22):
at some point will no longer need humans, and that's plausible.
We've seen movies like that. Is RoboCop like that? Or
was RoboCop Man made enough to where it still wanted
to be friend man? I don't remember exactly how that
movie ended.

Speaker 2 (05:35):
I never saw it, but I will say this, robots
are programmed by humans, So it is a little bit
illogical to assume that someday they're going to collectively decide
they I say they it will collectively decide to rebel
against them. Yeah, the their rulers.

Speaker 1 (05:56):
But I don't know. I wonder I wonder if chet
if GPT five has like a safeguarden there to where
like Sam Altman or a couple of other high ranking
open AI officials can just like flip a button and
be like, okay, settle down now to GPT five. You're
getting a little too smart for your own good. Like
that'd be a good idea, right, and we talked about this,
like six hundred billion dollars or whatever the United States
investing into artificial intelligence, you know, building including open AI

(06:19):
here in the United States, and then whatever Elon's doing
right with GROC, that's still going You use GROC lately?
Have you asked you any important questions like how do
I iron a Hawaiian shirt?

Speaker 2 (06:30):
I have not used groc lately?

Speaker 1 (06:32):
How to iron a Hawaiian shirt? Not any easy thing
to figure out, by the way I learned. You got
to be really careful with that stuff. Why what do
you what do you mean? Why?

Speaker 2 (06:40):
Why is that harder to iron than other fabrics?

Speaker 1 (06:42):
Cause it's it's thin, It's really thin. And if you
don't do it exactly right, first of all, it either
isn't going to straighten out or you're gonna burn it.
You're gonna have an iron mark on there. And I'm
no good at this stuff. I'm not I'm not a
I'm not a chief ironer of my home. I don't
iron stuff regularly. So when I have like super duper
mega wrinkly Hawaiian shirt and you know me, Matt, I

(07:04):
like my Hawaiian shirts. Trying to get those creases out
from it being super wrinkly. I mean, I really just
need a steam machine because I'm so afraid I'm gonna
I earned part of one of my Hawaiian shirts. So
now I'm like super careful and it doesn't really even
seem to be working. Am I? Am I a child? Like?
I don't know, I don't know what, I don't know
what to do here? How often are you ironing stuff?
Mister highfaluten iron guy, iron man, I.

Speaker 2 (07:28):
Refuse to answer that question. There's there's no way to win.

Speaker 1 (07:31):
You're either gonna say I never iron and then you'll
have no room to talk on my like of ironing experience,
or you say I iron all the time. People are like,
what's wrong with you ironing all the time? Who iron
stuff anymore?

Speaker 2 (07:41):
Right, I'm reserving the right to take the Fifth Amendment
on that.

Speaker 1 (07:44):
Yeah, that was a good play by you. Well done.
So it's GPT five. Let me know in my email
e mariatkfib dot com if you're if you're messing around
and you found out that it's a lot smarter than
you thought it was. It's two eighteen. Thanks for listening.
More coming up, News Radio eleven to ten KFA.

Speaker 2 (08:00):
B Emery Songer on news radio eleven ten kfab.

Speaker 1 (08:07):
Don said, is Chat GPT free or does it require
a paid subscription? Because to date, my inner cheapskate has
kept me from using any non free smartphone apps. Same,
by the way, on that, Don, and so the answer
do you know the answer?

Speaker 2 (08:22):
Well, I believe that it is free to a point,
but you can pay for unlimited access.

Speaker 1 (08:30):
Yeah, yeah, you nailed it. Now you literally can, so
you can talk to whatever you want for free all
the time. The catches if you're using it a lot,
then like if you I don't know what the number
is and it could be variable. The way that I

(08:51):
understand is if it's like ten questions, if you like
to send it ten messages in a pretty short amount
of time, within like thirty minutes to an hour, you
can only message within a certain window of tom I'm
so many times and then it will kick you to
the second model. So, for instance, until today, Chat GPT
four GPT four was the model. For instance, if I

(09:11):
was getting into like a deep conversation with it, and
I went back and forth like ten or twelve times
over like thirty minutes, when I was like investigating something
or just like learning how to you know, properly fill
this hole in plant grass seed in my yard or something.
If I go back and forth enough times, or even
if I upload a couple of photos, sometimes that'll accelerate that.

(09:32):
But it will kick you off the top model and
tell you you're going to GPT four. Oh many is
like the next one. Well, now that GPT five is out,
I guess you'll be talking to GPT five until you
get to like ten or twelve messages back and forth,
and then it'll reset you after like five hours or something.

(09:52):
So it really does. I mean, if you're okay with
it getting kicked you getting kicked down to the next model, which,
by the way, for a novice like me and I
just use it for pretty standard operations. I don't do
anything too crazy with it except making it think about itself,
which I kind of am entertained by it. It does.
It's not super noticeable when it goes to the lower model. Now,

(10:17):
I think it's like twenty bucks a month or whatever.
If you subscribe for twenty bucks a month, then you
have unlimited access to it to the top model all
the time, and you can upload unlimited images and stuff
and the uploading of images. So like, for instance, hey,
have you gone like hiking anywhere in the woods before?
Of course, yeah, have you like done that with shorts on?

(10:39):
Have you walked past or through plants that made your
legs like sting or make them feel itchy?

Speaker 2 (10:44):
It's probably happened.

Speaker 1 (10:45):
Yeah, So I did that when I was up at
Stone State Park a couple months ago, and we were
walking through this really tall grass, like the trail hadn't
been properly like cut back, so my legs were I
was wearing shorts, my legs were stinging, and I was like,
what the heck is going on? And so I took
a picture of the plants that we were kind of

(11:06):
brushing up against. I sent it to my AI assistant,
and it was able to tell me what it was
and why my legs were singing and how to fix it,
you know what I mean. Super useful. But with if
you're not paying for it, you're limited like three or
four images every four or five hours or something like that.
Does that make sense, Yeah, you can't just be spamming it. Now.
If you're paying the twenty bucks a month, you can

(11:27):
do whatever the heck you want. But there you go.
Good question down like that. I suppose we'll have to
figure out what the fallout is going to be, because
do you think they're gonna be bugs in something like
this or what? They would not roll it out if
there were bugs? Right, Well, they never Now this is
pretty new stuff. Open a Eye just said a couple

(11:48):
hours ago that they've released this. So people, I don't
think unless you're really in the know and artificial intelligence,
I don't think you knew that this was a thing
that was about to happen, But you know the way,
like I'm fascinating by it. I'm fascinated and I talk
about it quite a bit because it is like an
incredible tool to improve your life if you're doing things
the right way. So I don't know. They say it

(12:11):
shows particular improvements and complex front in generation and debugging,
larger repositories, all very big you know, big words. And
it can create beautiful, beautiful and responsive websites, apps and games.
So if you're trying to create a game, apparently you
can just tell it what you want it to be
or whatever. So I don't know, and it's it's got
a few like back and forth of okay, So here's

(12:33):
what a question if you wrote this, this is what
GPT four oh would have said, and here's what GPT
five would say. And having that side by side makes
you kind of realize what the difference is.

Speaker 2 (12:45):
So it can code websites for you.

Speaker 1 (12:47):
It looks like that's a thing it can do.

Speaker 2 (12:49):
Yeah, you know, the old joke was when your job
gets replaced, learn to code. But what are we going
to do now? Learn to milk goats?

Speaker 1 (12:57):
I don't don't people already know how to do that.

Speaker 2 (13:00):
I'm sure there's a tactic to it milking goats. Yeah,
the proper pale placement, you know, and such, Let's not
get into it too deeply.

Speaker 1 (13:09):
Well, where would you put the pale except for right
underneath where you're milking.

Speaker 2 (13:12):
I'm sure there's proper placement based on the stream. I
don't want to talk about it. I feel weird already
the stream.

Speaker 1 (13:18):
So, like, are you milking a goat that doesn't have like,
is having a hard time producing milk? That seems like
a goat you probably should leave alone, would be my
answer to that.

Speaker 2 (13:25):
Maybe that's part of the learning procedure, is that you
know which goats to milk and which goats did not.

Speaker 1 (13:30):
I feel like that could be obvious. But I've heard
people have trouble figuring out which ones are even milkable,
which leads to a different problem if you're not familiar
with animal anatomy. Okay, what I'm just telling you, I've
seen it happen. Hey, you brought this up.

Speaker 2 (13:45):
Yeah, you're right.

Speaker 1 (13:46):
Guilty is charged the milking of goats. If you're a
goat milker out there, I'd love to hear, like, how
long did it take for you to figure out which
goats you could and couldn't milk? That'd be an interesting
question to know the answer to.

Speaker 2 (13:57):
Also, is it a viable career path now that learn
to code is no.

Speaker 1 (14:01):
Longer, that's still a viable career path. Let's not say
to people that it's not a viable It absolutely is
a viable career path. Just because artificial intelligence can help
you code now doesn't mean that it's not viable for
you to make a living doing it, which it still
needs prompts.

Speaker 2 (14:17):
Let's face it, the day after you get your goat
milking certificate, there's going to be a robot out there
replacing you with updated three point zero goat milking techniques
that you never even learned in clown college, I mean
a regular college.

Speaker 1 (14:32):
Now, the goat Milkers are not going to endorse this
show because now you've called them clowns.

Speaker 2 (14:36):
Way to go, Matt, Well, that's a tough union to crack.
If you haven't heard or milk.

Speaker 1 (14:40):
If you know you're in the right circles. It is
two twenty eight. Thanks for listening, and really we mean
that on news Radio eleventh in KFAB and raise longer.
What would happen if I did like four large mountain
dews every day for eleven days. That can't be good, right, Like, like,
of all the things to do, that's probably the worst.

Speaker 2 (14:58):
One to drink lots of lots of mountain dew.

Speaker 1 (15:01):
Like four large mountain dews. Like I'm looking at a
thirty two ounce mountain dew right now. It's probably I'm
probably already down like seventy ounces of mountain dew.

Speaker 2 (15:11):
Can you hear that? By the way, in the background
of where I'm at, Well, they're doing some work on
this building and they're drilling something. It's pretty loud, so
I don't know if you can at all actually okay,
then then I that was a wasted comment by me,
and and I regret it deeply, but yeah, there's a
lot of construction noises going on.

Speaker 1 (15:28):
It's gonna make a building look nice. You just gotta
you gotta wait it out, you know, got you gotta
weigh it out. Back to what I was saying, though
not great to be drinking, you know, probably eighty to
one hundred ounces of a mountain dew every day would
be my guess. But you gotta do what you gotta
do to make it right. You gotta do what you
gotta do.

Speaker 2 (15:43):
To make it If that's what you gotta do, that's
a lot of ounces of mountain dew. Some would say
too much. That's about as much ounces of water you
need in a day. But I don't think you can
count that towards your total. So does that mean you
got to double up on the water?

Speaker 1 (15:57):
Yeah, I just have to. Like, if I was gonna
be healthy and drink that much water, I'd have to
drink that much water. So now we're talking about me
drinking close to two hundred ounces of liquid in a day.
I mean that's like every thirty minutes you're gonna have
to go to the bathroom for sure. So I don't know, Matt,
that's a it's an interesting it's an interesting question you
bring up.

Speaker 2 (16:15):
There you need you need the fuel. You're out there
at the Iowa State Fair. May I pause it. This
quickly sounds like a great time for you to get
yourself a stadium caddy.

Speaker 1 (16:24):
Oh oh no, Well now you have to, like, we
have to explain what a stadium caddy is because we
don't know how many listeners even know or we're around
the last time we talked about this. So go ahead,
tell people what a stadium caddy is.

Speaker 2 (16:37):
Oh, I think it explains itself.

Speaker 1 (16:38):
No, no, it doesn't. I have no idea what it's
a caddy that follows you around and carries your beverages
for you while you go into a stadium. Yeah, no,
that's not what it is. Tell people what it is.

Speaker 2 (16:49):
It's a portable device that people use when they are
well liquidated, but not nearby a bathroom facility.

Speaker 1 (16:59):
It's what you're saying is if you ever thought, is
there a way that I can just go in my
pants and I have to go to the bathroom, Well,
this is how that's what you're saying. Basically, first it
was goat milking, and now it's the stadium caddy. Yeah,
and you know, I wake up every day and I say,
be normal. Maybe people will like you now. And I
can't do it. I can't pull it off. That's okay,
because that's what makes you you. You know what I'm saying. Yeah,

(17:21):
all right, got a rancher named Josh. You sent me
an email. Are you ready for this?

Speaker 2 (17:25):
I'm ready.

Speaker 1 (17:25):
If you want a lesson in goat milking, come on down.
We raise meat goats, but there are times that we
have to milk them mom or nanny to get milk
flowing for the baby, or so she's not drying out
after weaning, since there's some leftover fluid needs to come
out so it doesn't to ruin her. They have about
two hundred meat goats, different types of goats, dairy goats.
I'm not as familiar with dairy goats, but I know

(17:46):
they have milking machines just like they do for cattle
on a smaller scale. So they have pumps so you
can hold in it. It just pulls the milk out,
or if you want, you can do it by hand.
He's got more information here. It's very quite interesting. What
do you think are you satisfied with knowing now that
this is a actual thing that you can you can
do it sounds like you need a lot of goats.

Speaker 2 (18:02):
Though, right, Yeah, I'm marginally satisfied.

Speaker 1 (18:06):
Are you happy with the idea that a machine would
make it much easier for you? Isn't that kind of
the thing you were trying to avoid?

Speaker 2 (18:12):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (18:13):
It is, but again, you need the machine to get
enough milk to make it a worthwhile you know, job, right.

Speaker 2 (18:19):
To make it a worthwhile job, I suppose, but it
is also taking away jobs for people who don't use
a machine.

Speaker 1 (18:26):
What what do you mean, like just people that should
be getting paid to milk? I don't think that's a job,
not yet, how okay? And I apologize for anybody who's
hoping that we get into more serious conversations. I'm sure
we will at some point, but I just have to
further investigate this. So if we if we're if we're
gonna do the goat milking thing, right, and you want
to create a full time job, let's say it's like

(18:48):
eight hours a day for five days a week at least, right, Yeah?
How many goats is that?

Speaker 2 (18:53):
Like?

Speaker 1 (18:53):
Do we know how long it takes to milk a goat?

Speaker 2 (18:55):
I don't know. But what was that guy? Was it Josh?

Speaker 1 (18:58):
Jeremy Josh?

Speaker 2 (19:01):
I think old Jingleheimer out there would be able to
tell you. I think he would be able to tell
you speed rhythm. Uh, you know, size of bucket?

Speaker 1 (19:14):
Can you mix the milk? It's like, can I use
the same bucket for like five goats? I mean, I
guess that's a good question for cattle too, right, Or
do I have to keep the milk from each goat separate?
I don't know why that would be. Like, I'm sure,
I'm sure you just put it all into the same
thing so you can just you know, what do they
call it pasteurized? Is that? Do you want it pasteurized
or not?

Speaker 2 (19:33):
I could never make heads and tails of that. I
just buy what the grocery store has. But I think
it's potentially harmful if it's unpasteurized. However, there are potentially
more nutrients in its unpasteurized form. I mean, you're talking
to who is slightly lactose intolerant. So I'm just not
even a good person to be on this subject.

Speaker 1 (19:53):
However, your idea is so I just want to make
sure everybody knows that I.

Speaker 2 (19:56):
Would like to promote goat milk further by saying that
it is lower in lactose than your common cow.

Speaker 1 (20:02):
Milk, cattle milk. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (20:03):
Yeah, but the alternative milk Sources Department is really you
got almond milk, you got coconut milk, you got oat milk.
It's incredible.

Speaker 1 (20:13):
Are those really milk? Though? Like we call it milk,
but really is it? No? Isn't there like a fight
by like the dairy producer somewhere. I read this somewhere
where they're like they're fighting that they can't call it milk, right.
It's just like like in The Impossible Burgers there was
something about, you know, like the actual beef producers. I
don't remember if it was Iowa or maybe nationally, I

(20:36):
can't exactly remember. But it's just like, you can't call
it beef if it's not actual beef. You can't use
that term when it's like plant based, it's fake. That's
the thing with goat milk though, right. Can you can
you turn goat milk into butter and have goat butter?

Speaker 2 (20:51):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (20:51):
Is that a thing? Yeah?

Speaker 2 (20:52):
You can have goat butter goat cheese.

Speaker 1 (20:55):
Interesting. Yeah, I'm no good at the livestock farming thing.
You know. In fact, that was that they always say
fairly today. And I already made my first pass through
the horse barn because you know, I just can't help myself.
And there was a there was a paint horse in
there that you know, was okay getting pet and I
find these horses that I just like, and I uh
it was it had its butt to the to the
door or like the little window where you can like

(21:16):
reach in, and I just scratched its butt for like
five minutes. Five minutes at least, it was probably maybe
closer to ten honestly, Like I scratched a butt, you know,
like like up above the tail, and you could see
it like you know if you ever like scratched a
dog or a cat back there, and like they stretch
out or they kind of like turn their head sideways
because they like what's happening, and then you stop and

(21:38):
then they look back at you or they are like
this horse was just backing up further. It was like
it thought maybe if it just kept pushing its butt
further up against the door, I would keep scratching the butt.
It was a lot of fun. That's that's I is.
Is scratching horses a job? I can do, Like, can
people hire me out for that?

Speaker 2 (21:59):
So if someone we're to say to you, go scratch
of horses, but that wouldn't be an insult.

Speaker 1 (22:04):
You'd be like, Okay, where's the horse? Right? Can I
ride the horse too?

Speaker 2 (22:08):
Like? That'd be fun? Can I get paid in horse rides?
I'm a clempt about this whole radio hour. I am
deeply the clempt.

Speaker 1 (22:19):
No, like you put a saddle on the horse and
you ride the horse around like a ranch.

Speaker 2 (22:24):
I also want to say that we've got a longer
commercial break coming up. You are absolutely located in a
place right now where you could easily, within the time
frame here of you getting back to the first segment
of the three o'clock hour, you could go milk a
goat and come back and let us know.

Speaker 1 (22:39):
Did you you look this up?

Speaker 2 (22:41):
I haven't GEO located anything, but I just feel pretty
confident about there. You're out there at the Iowa State far.
I bet there's somebody goes milking right now as we speak.
Listen to you.

Speaker 1 (22:51):
I have heard the goats already. Yes, there you go.
I guess I could ask experts in the field. That's
that's true. It's two forty eight. I'm we're having fun.
Trust me, I don't know what's gonna happen next, and
neither do neither do you. And that's one of the
things that it's gonna be fun. And I got tickets
to the Balloon and Wine Festival to give away the
next hour, so you need to stick with me. On

(23:11):
news Radio eleven ten kfab Emery Sunger, the moms will
let the kids kids, you know, like baby goats drink announces,
but multiple times a day, so it adds up. Dairy
goats will give more milk than meat goats in one milking. Yeah,
I see. You gotta know your kind of goats. Can
you use goat milk for other things? Absolutely, soap milk creams.

(23:32):
You might be surprised, so ask your chatbot thing. There
are so many other things that can be made from
goat milk. Also, the meat is more lean, so healthier
for folks. But it's great. Just come visit sometime, great show,
love it, listen daily, Thanks Josh, appreciate it. Yeah, so
so there you go. And yeah, I didn't know the
goat milking business was so Matt. This is the future.

(23:54):
So how are we going to start.

Speaker 2 (23:55):
Sounds like I was onto something and it sounds like
you should probably get yourself a remote out there.

Speaker 1 (24:04):
For radio.

Speaker 2 (24:04):
Yeah, why that's it? Well, in radio Lingo, that's where
the remote is, where you go you do your show
on location.

Speaker 1 (24:10):
It's I know what a remote is. Thank I know.

Speaker 2 (24:12):
I was explaining it for our friends listening in their
cars right now. Who just heard me? Think there I
was talking about like a TV remote?

Speaker 1 (24:19):
Yeah, no, I all due respect to Josh, is is
goat farm? I don't know. I don't think that's I
don't you just hear a bunch of in the background.
I don't know if that makes for some great radio.

Speaker 2 (24:31):
People like me would love it, But then again, there's no.

Speaker 1 (24:34):
One else like me. We Or what about those ghats
that scream? Have you heard those? They're like, have you
heard those videos?

Speaker 2 (24:41):
Here's my question about that. There's screaming goats in there
are fainting ghosts goats? Are there? Are they ever both?
Or are they? Is that two distinguishable categories? Their fainting ghosts.

Speaker 1 (24:53):
Yeah. As an animal lover, I the breeding of the
fainting goats. It feels a little weird to me. There.
It's like their brain has like it freezes up when
they're startled, right, And I watch these videos of people
like startling these goats and they like get real stiff and
fall over, and it's just like a reflex. And I
know that it's gonna sound super weeny for the farmers

(25:15):
out there, but it's like I just don't. I don't
like to do that to animals, you know, and it
just like to have like I would hope that those goats,
you know, have some other purpose in life to you know,
graze and stuff and you know, be social with each
other without having to constantly be falling over because they're
getting startled by things that are happening around them. But again,

(25:36):
you know, this is why I do what I do,
and the farmers do what they do, and wey' all
can live in happy matrimony or whatever the term would be.
Matrimony is probably the wrong word now that I think
about it. You know, for whatever it's worth, that's marriage, right, Like, yeah,
I don't be mean to marry goat farmers, no disrespect,
but I kind of off the market on that FRONTO.

(26:00):
You never know, maybe we take that up. Matt. Why
don't you go ahead and start pricing out getting some
milk goats and see what we can make out of this.
All right, that's your job. Let me know how I
can help. I'll ask around, I'll ask Josh. You can
probably help anyway. This is fun. It's a fun Thursday.

(26:22):
We're gonna have some more fun heading in at three
o'clock hours. Some news to get to as well, so
stick with us live local here on news radio eleven
ten kfa B
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