Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Before I hit the brake, I talked about, well, it
wasn't even the break. It was like when we were
doing the weather. It's like bad day to having to pay.
And I said, I don't have to worry about that.
That's what you said, right, And you said you don't
have to worry about it. That's that's what I said. Yep.
Can you describe my hair to people because they're going
(00:20):
to need that context before I read this email?
Speaker 2 (00:23):
Turn up your radios it, uh, you know what it
looks like to me? It looks like hair, but not
like body hair, kind of like the hair that goes
on your head.
Speaker 1 (00:35):
Kind of you know. That's good. Yeah, yeah, good. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (00:38):
It's it's longer than I would say some people say hair,
but not as long as others. It's uh, you know,
it's bigger than a piece of toast, but smaller than
a microwave.
Speaker 1 (00:52):
Yeah, I mean, it depends on the size of the microwave.
Speaker 2 (00:55):
I'd call it. I'd call it dark blonde myself. I
think your mom says strawberry very blond. Is She's emailed
into let you know about that a few times. Yeah,
it's strawberry blonde. She's very protective of that, I guess
I don't know. It's blonde during the summer than it
does in the winter. For whatever that's worth relatable. That's
how my hair is too.
Speaker 1 (01:13):
I like I like my hair. I like my hairline,
and I'll be honest with you, I flaunt it by
having a really long hair. I don't know how long,
how long a period of time I'm going to have
this long hair? Are you going to be a roguaine
guy if you need to? Does it look like I
need to? You know? But you may need to someday.
You think I've thought about that one day of my life.
I'm sure you have. I have not.
Speaker 2 (01:34):
It wouldn't a generally normal, enterprising human being who realizes
they're you know, the fact that they're human and they're
all going to turn into dust someday, Like, wouldn't you
think about that?
Speaker 1 (01:43):
My dad, I'll have you know. It's thirty years older
than I am. Okay, and he has the same hairline
that I do currently. How about your grandpa? I don't
know he was dead before I got to know him.
Speaker 2 (01:53):
Okay, Well, you get your hairline from your grandpa, so
you're gonna need to know that.
Speaker 1 (01:58):
Well, how does that work.
Speaker 2 (02:02):
You get your from from what I've been told, You
get your hairlined from the from the grandpa on your
dad's side, and that's it.
Speaker 1 (02:09):
Yeah, well then how does my dad have great hair
like his grandpa? But that would be the dad of
my grandpa. I am my own grandpa. That's a song
has nothing to do with what we're talking about right now,
and you're not actually, because that's messed up and impossible.
You know what.
Speaker 2 (02:27):
You listen to the song, you figure out how that
all came to be. And yeah, I mean it's got
some twists and turns. That family tree looks like a
giant tangled up bush. But you know, let's stay to
the topic on hand here. I'm sorry, I didn't mean
a derailers. So that is a very funny song. I
am my own grandpa. It's good stuff.
Speaker 1 (02:44):
I don't sit around everyone for Christmas. Bust that one out.
You all be laughing, Nie slapping. I don't know.
Speaker 2 (02:50):
I don't know, old angered, bitter broken relationships will be
repaired over.
Speaker 1 (02:54):
I am Anyway. Tracey sent an email and said, you
probably just surprised a lot of your listeners. I think
people assume that young guys with long hair also have
quite a few tattoos. Yeah. Now see that's an interesting
bit because Matt and I also talked about the lack
(03:15):
of tattoos that you know, so I don't know, like
we were talking about you and me being very very
slow on the tattoo game, even though people our age
are getting tats all over the place. I mean, my sister,
who I would have guessed is I mean, can I
say this on the air, maybe the biggest square I've
ever met in my life. I mean, my sister doesn't
(03:38):
do anything like super crazy or super fun, right, Like,
she's not the kind of person you're gonna crack a
beer open with because you're like, oh beer, you know, right? Well,
she's got a forearm tats on both arms. I'm like,
what what she likes tats? She's into tats, right, I
don't know, Like tattoos are very different for this generation
(03:59):
than they were before. But the reason I bring this
up is because I don't have any, even though like
my hair would suggest it. And if you look at
the way I look, people just assume that I'm some
sort of like super left liberal leaning blue haired type person.
But I'm not. I'm really not. I just I like
to throw curveballs at people. You know what I mean? Like,
(04:19):
I don't look like a like a sound And I'm
sure I'm not the only guy with like long hair.
For a man that doesn't have tattoos, it's my age,
although it's kind of unlikely. What's that one guy? And
Michael Bolton? You think he has tattoos? Doubt it? Michael Bolton.
Speaker 2 (04:36):
That's a guy that I was thinking of that has
long hair, doesn't he Isn't he like seventy?
Speaker 3 (04:41):
Now?
Speaker 2 (04:41):
Well he doesn't have long hair? Who am I thinking of?
Michael Bolton? Enya, Enya, that's a girl. Oh man, today's
not my day. That's an Irish woman.
Speaker 1 (04:51):
Yeah, you look like Nya. Has anyone ever told you that? No? No, no, no,
no no. What's the guy? It's just like Enya? But
it's a guy. Se Are you the bald guy?
Speaker 3 (05:01):
Do not?
Speaker 1 (05:02):
Seal? Let's go to the phones at four h two
five to five, eight eleven ten? What the heck is
going on over here? Dan's on the line. Hello, Dan,
what's going on with you today?
Speaker 4 (05:12):
The getting your hairline from your dad's grandfather is absolutely false.
My dad's grandfather had a full head of hair. My
grandmother had to wear wigs and her older age tissue
was like nearly bald, and I'm bald, and both my
grandparents on my mother's side had a full head of hair,
so I got blessed from my grandmother with her black
thereof ah, I'm highly quolically challenged.
Speaker 1 (05:33):
Well, well, Dan, I apologize to the pollics the follic
holes that you have or don't have, and my wishes
with you, sir. I unfortunately cannot pass some of my
jeans onto you for this, so hopefully you look good bald,
That's all I have to say.
Speaker 4 (05:49):
Well, what was upon a time I had a really
damn good mullet.
Speaker 1 (05:51):
Oh okay, so you deserve to lose your hairs what
you're saying, thanks, Dad, appreciate it.
Speaker 3 (06:00):
Hey.
Speaker 1 (06:00):
By the way, Matt, I'm going to ask Chatt GBT
about the hairline thing is like which direction we're gonna
would go? And we'll take more calls on this. We're
being goofy. It's fine. You know, there's not enough hard
hitting news that we haven't already talked about today. If
you want to talk about hairlines and tattoos, you call
us four oh two, five five eight eleven ten on
news radio eleven ten Kfab.
Speaker 5 (06:20):
Em Ry's songer Share It with Someone You Love on
news radio eleven ten Kfab.
Speaker 1 (06:29):
Let's go to Dave. Dave, what's on your mind today?
Speaker 3 (06:33):
Well, I'm reminded this time of year about doing random
acts of kindness. I do it all year long. But
one of the simple things I do I park away
from the stores and then I try to find somebody
needs to return a card, either the shopping center or
one of these big box stores, and I'll take it
back to them to the store. Usually they're elderly, they've
(06:54):
got young kids. Well, yesterday there's a larger man with
a and he had his cart and I'm not Kane
who was heavy, but he probably would have shopped at
the Thornton Melon big and Tall store. Anyway, after, you know,
can I take your card up for it? And he
says sure, that would be awesome. And I might point
(07:16):
out it was one of those electric carts and you
have to write it to take it back. Well, I'm
sixty six. I find I think I'm pretty fit.
Speaker 1 (07:25):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (07:26):
I became very self conscious driving this back up to
the store, and em I had to be the slowest
cart in the city of Omaha. I'm guessing that his
size wore the battery down. I was barely moving, and
that I was trying to across the traffic in front
of the store like I was waiting for me to
go across through the button on the middle of the
(07:48):
steering wheel. I thought maybe that would speed it up.
It was the emergency stop, and I'm thinking, why would
a cart moving this slow lead an emergency Anyway, I
scheduled with that I got it in there, but my goodness,
I was I was afraid I'm not too far from
my house, somebody was gonna see me, totally the wrong idea.
Speaker 1 (08:11):
Well, Dave, Dave, your heart was in the right place
and you know that. And now the rest of them
Omaha knows that if you saw Dave struggling on this
very slow scooter that some you know over you know,
bearing heavier gentleman was trying to utilize. Dave was just
doing a random act of kindness. So he was doing
the best that he could. Dave, you have our blessing.
Speaker 3 (08:32):
The most embarrassing part I had to ask him how
to drive it. It's a simple forward and backward button.
I felt kind of foolish, but I wanted to make
sure do it right. Anyway, Merry Christmas, everybody. Don't forget
to do stiffs, something nice for somebody to day and enjoy.
Speaker 1 (08:47):
Alady you as well, Dave, really appreciate you calling in.
Thank you so much for listening. It's good. It's a
good lesson. It's good lesson. I haven't I haven't done
that before. I if you go to res West Roads Mall,
they have those like little scooter animal things that you
(09:08):
can like rent for a few minutes and like ride
around in that area of the mall. Have you seen those?
We've been in the West Roads, we have I was
there last night. You see those those little guys, those
little animals that you can buzz around the mall in Yeah, sure,
very fun. I wouldn't know personally, but they look like
they're very fun.
Speaker 2 (09:25):
Okay, not a full grown man riding around the mall
and those those animals are there are some growing in
that do that with their children, you know, like good.
Speaker 1 (09:32):
I don't know. Oh yeah, I'm not here to judge, sure,
not here to judge. Yeah, but yeah, I would have
fun doing that. I see people that are out there
and they're scooters and they're buzzing around like I like
the State Fair, Like we go to the State Fair
and you have people like that and you're in like
these tight confined areas. Like all I'm thinking is like,
if this guy wanted to mow me down, he absolutely could.
(09:54):
He's got wheels. You could absolutely mow me down. We're
in a tight space. I'm just standing here. This guy
could just like run me over if you wanted to.
And he used to say he couldn't, like he wouldn't. Like,
we don't know what people would do these days.
Speaker 2 (10:07):
I would think that the Iowa State Fair and the
amount of scooters, it's, you know, probably one of the
more heavily tracked scooter areas that you'll find in the country.
Speaker 1 (10:16):
Yeah, if you if you want, if you want to
know how scooters are going, Like I'm guessing, uh, what
was that it was?
Speaker 2 (10:30):
It was the music bed wasn't done yet. I brought
it up too soon. Anyways, you were saying, if if,
if you want to.
Speaker 1 (10:36):
Know you want to know how with the if you're
a scooter guy, yeah, and you want to you want
to see scooters in action, or you want to test
scooters yourself or you want to like market scooters if
you're if you're in those scooter business, that's the place
you want to be there, because I would bet at
any one point there's probably a couple of thousand scooters
just around the fair grounds at any one time. Just
(11:00):
throwing that out there. It's not the judgment frame zone here.
I'm just saying, sure, you're just stay in facts, Satan facts.
Gina said, I got my first tattoo in October and
I don't want another one. This one was remember my
daughter in law that took her own life. I don't
get the addiction part of this though. Well, Gina, this
is interesting, right, A lot of people if there's something
this is the other thing with tattoos. It's got to
(11:20):
mean something to you, right, It's got to mean something
to you. Is there anything in your life right now?
If I'm just like, hey, Matt, I could give you
I got this great tattoo artist. You could get that
Oakland Raiders. We remember the Oakland Raiders tattoo that you
can put, like right on the middle of your belly. No,
nothing sports related. I enjoy sports, but goodness, get a
(11:42):
Nebraska Cornhusker right on your chest. No, like like a
corn cob.
Speaker 2 (11:46):
I have just as much pass and as passion as
the next person. I just show it in different ways.
Tattoos is just not something that, at this point in
my life and I'm compelled to do. But I understand
and respect. I have very close friends who have done
the exact same and they have closely held reasons to
(12:07):
do so, and that's great, but it's it's just not
something that I do.
Speaker 1 (12:11):
Reeve says, just so you know, every time you say tats,
a tattoo artist gets enraged. So I've been told I'm
not a tattoo artist, so it doesn't bother me, but
I have friends that are, and I get yelled at
when I say the word tats. Why it's just a
shortened version of the full word. You are to call
them tattoos? Well, maybe it's a disrespect to their art.
I don't know. You know, there's some musical artists that
if you call their music an incorrect genre, they get
(12:32):
very upset set with you. You know what I mean? You
seen people like that? I know what are you talking about.
I don't do rock. We aren't a rock band. We
play pop music. Get out of Here Sunshine and their
fancy band of misfits. I'll call you what I want
to call you, just like this, Hey, tattoos, tats, tattoo?
(12:56):
If I say tats people, Do people know that I'm
talking about tattoos? I feel like they would. Yeah. At
the same time, I can respect if a tattoo artist
walks up to me, and this is why you should
call them tattoos. Do not call them tats. It's like, okay,
like if if, if that's that big of a deal,
if somebody came up to me and said that, I'd
have the respect to add the extra syllable. There are
(13:18):
some people people could call you Matthew or Matt. What
if you were a Matthew guy and you didn't want
to be Matt anymore?
Speaker 2 (13:24):
You want to know the truth, Uh, I tried to
be once people didn't follow through with it. You were
pure pressured into being Matt, back into being Matt, but
you wanted to be Matthew.
Speaker 1 (13:35):
I tried it out. Matthew, Matt Matthew Case, I'll be honest,
doesn't quite roll off the tongue quite as well as
Matt Kase Matt Case. It's it's good for radio because
it's so quick and it's just it's you remember it?
Speaker 3 (13:47):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (13:47):
No, but I tell you it's a real quick story.
I started working at the high ve and Grand Island
shout out, yep, great place to work. Loved working there.
Uh and I they gave me my name tag, like
what do you want on the name tag?
Speaker 1 (13:59):
Matt or Matthew?
Speaker 2 (14:00):
And then you know that meme where the guy's like
doing all these math equations in his mind. All of
a sudden, I was like, this is my moment. You
could be a matter of Matthew. I could do the
switch right now and people can start calling me Matthew.
It's it's more formal, you know.
Speaker 3 (14:12):
Is it.
Speaker 1 (14:14):
Yeah? I mean yeah, it probably is.
Speaker 2 (14:16):
So I had him put Matthew on the name tag.
You know what happened, Well, everybody still called me matt Dang.
These people who didn't know me, they just saw me,
and they're like, I'm not calling him Matthew.
Speaker 1 (14:25):
I don't know why.
Speaker 2 (14:26):
Maybe you just look like a matt I guess whatever.
You know, Hey, you know what, call me whatever you want.
Just not late for dinner, preferably nice.
Speaker 1 (14:33):
Nice. That's on you. If you are though, that's a
youth thing. If I'm late for dinner. Yeah, the dinner
that I'm cooking or buying. Probably it's on you. I
do you know what sometimes I do?
Speaker 2 (14:44):
Uh, I do make myself dinner and then get distracted,
goes cold.
Speaker 1 (14:48):
That's not good. I've called myself late for dinner many times. Yeah,
that's not good. If you got tattoo thoughts, or if
you're a tattoo artist, I'd be interested in learning more
about your uh, your art in your industry. You can
call us a four oh two five five eight eleven
ten four O two five five eight eleven ten. You
can email me Emory at kfab dot com and we'll
just keep having fun here because that's what we do.
(15:10):
On news radio eleven ten KFA.
Speaker 5 (15:11):
B Emory's songer on news radio eleven ten KFAB.
Speaker 1 (15:17):
What is the line I'd love to talk to? I
want to get it right because I've talked like Bobby
Bouche a lot in my life. Uh water boy, Alaskan
water quote. When I get this, how often does he
bust those voices out for his wife? Oh? I got
I got it all the time. I bet that's water
(15:38):
formal Glacier, Alaska. It was blathed Bileeskimon benthing man and
then like it's cold like is She notices it's still
cold multiple times in the film, and then eventually gives
it to him to resuscitate him after he takes an
illegal hit in the Bourbon Bawl. How was that, Bobby Bouchet?
(16:01):
Though it's pretty good.
Speaker 2 (16:02):
Yeah, I feel like they could have used smelling salts
when I had the same effect.
Speaker 1 (16:06):
Yeah, ruined his wat of from a glaiza in Alaska.
It was blessed by an ethkam O medicine. Man, it's
a quote from a movie. Ladies and gentlemen, I'm not
making this stuff up, Bobby Bouche, What a movie? What
a film? I'm drinking this coffee concoction my wife makes
for me in my Silver Dollar City mug that I
(16:28):
bought when I was there for Christmas time Christmas last year,
remember that. I remember I was gone like this week
for a week long vacation in twenty twenty three and
we did the Christmas in Branson thing. Fy. It was fun.
Silver Dollar City. Yeah, it was a good time. Underrated
spot for amusement park enthusiasts. I liked it a lot.
(16:49):
How was it for Christmas great, a lot of trees,
a lot of lights. They do a big tree lighting
in there. I mean it's far enough south of that,
you know, the temperature is just a little bit warmer
than you would anticipate it being here, which is nice.
And everything's operational, right, Like how many roller coasters in
the Midwest do you even get to go to when
(17:09):
it's you know, winter time? And I don't know if
there's like a temperature threshold that they have to meet,
like if it gets like below freezing or something, do
they shut some of that stuff off? I don't know,
but everything's basically was open when we went there, and
we got to ride pretty much every ride we wanted to.
We rode a couple of them multiple times because like
that was fun. That was fun. There's a couple of
ones like in the dark, like there's no lights on it,
(17:33):
so you don't really know what the next thing is
going to be when you're on it, which is kind
of fun, right, Like you kind of you can't really
see where the drops are because it's like dark intentionally
when it's dark outside. If you did it during the day,
I'm sure it's still be fun. But you know, I
don't know, man, it was pretty cool. It's pretty cool.
They still have that fire in the Hole ride out there. Yeah,
that's one in the dark, right, that's one inside. Yeah
(17:55):
it's inside, but that's done, never happening again. Oh they
closed it to build a new one. Oh I got you. Yeah, okay,
So if you went on that right when you were
a kid, that that's getting like we wrote it before
it closed forever. Ah, and they're building a new one.
So it's gonna be replaced with like a better one essentially,
is what they're saying. You know.
Speaker 2 (18:16):
It'll be cool though, is if the last ride they
gave people real dynamite to throw because they're blowing it
up anyways, why not that would have been a cool
way to go out, you have to admitute. Ah, yeah,
I had a lot of paperwork to sign beforehand, but
it would have been a cool way to go out.
Speaker 1 (18:34):
Yeah. No, that's how you get people hurt right there.
Not that you would care, but you know what, Connie
actually from the other day has something to say about that.
I think we.
Speaker 4 (18:47):
Should get out our grenade launches and blow them up.
Speaker 2 (18:53):
I've been begging for a chance to play though I
loved that call so good.
Speaker 1 (18:58):
Oh hey, Athletes of the nineties. Athletes of the nineties
number one, number one, Michael Jordan, number two.
Speaker 2 (19:09):
Oh, Shaquille O'Neill. That's the first one that I thought of. No,
Wayne Gretzky maybe, but he kind of straddles eighties nineties,
doesn't he. Yeah, yeah, Mark McGuire, maybe he's up there.
Speaker 1 (19:21):
If Mark maguire's up there.
Speaker 2 (19:22):
Sammy Sosa, they have to be they're kind of one
and one.
Speaker 1 (19:27):
Yeah, one A, one B. They have to kind of
be together as far as baseball's concerned, right, Yeah. I
think a Ken Griffy Junior as well. Yeah, yeah, they
were great. I mean, Barry Bonds was getting the nineties too.
Speaker 2 (19:36):
From what I understand, Ken Griffy Junior never suspected of Royd's.
Speaker 1 (19:41):
Well, that's funny that you bring that up, because something
has happened this afternoon. If you are a fan of baseball,
one thing, you haven't seen much of Sammy Sosis since
he retired, have you? No at all? Ever? I've seen
him in some really weird headlines, but that's about it today.
This was released the Timber nineteenth, twenty twenty four. I
(20:05):
left it all in the field for the Cubs and
Cubs fans because I wanted to win and make the
fans happy. I loved to see the fans at Wrigley
in the right field bleachers every home game. I understand
why some players in my era don't always get the
recognition our stats deserve. There were times I did whatever
I could to recover from injuries in an effort to
(20:27):
keep my strength up to perform over one hundred and
sixty two games. I never broke any laws, but in hindsight,
I made mistakes and I apologize. We accomplished great things
as a team, and I worked extremely hard in the
batting cage to become a great hitter. Cubs fans are
the best in the world, and I hope that fans,
the Cubs, and I can all come together again and
(20:48):
move forward. We can't change the past, but the future
is bright. In my heart, I have always been a
Cub and I can't wait to see Cubs fans again. Sincerely,
Sammy Sosa, how about that? Well, what do you think
the Cubs had to say about this? Immediately following, Tom
(21:09):
Ricketts of the esteemed Nebraskan Ricketts Family said this end
of quote. We appreciate Sammy releasing his statement and for
reaching out. No one played harder or wanted to win more.
Nobody's perfect, but we never doubted his passion for the
game and the Cubs. It is an understatement to say
(21:31):
that Sammy is a fan favorite. We plan on inviting
him to the twenty twenty five Cubs convention, and while
it is short notice, we hope that he can attend.
We are all ready to move forward together. End quote.
Speaker 2 (21:47):
Best reunion since Frank Solich. Huh, making it local to
us when Frank Solich came back to Memorial that was
very special.
Speaker 1 (21:57):
There you go. I just mean in general, right, like,
how good is it going to be to have Sammy
Sosa back in the good graces of America again?
Speaker 3 (22:06):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (22:06):
One hundred percent? You know, like it's just weird. You know,
he's got the skin coloration thing, that's you know, kind
of working. People are saying he looks weird these days.
He's in hiding. There's, like you said, there's a lot
of weird headlines that have popped out with him in
him living, you know, in the Kirk Caribbean, you know,
stuff like that. And here he is releasing a statement
basically it's almost a joint statement as fast as he's
(22:29):
came with each other. Basically, at one o'clock this afternoon
of him saying I can't wait to get back in
reunite with Cub fans in the Cubs, and the Cubs
coming out and saying we can't wait to reunite with Sammy.
That's good for baseball. It's good for sports, it's good
for healing, and it's good for anybody who watched baseball
(22:49):
in the nineties especially. You know what, I'm not a
Cubs fan. In fact, I'm more of a Cub hater
than I am a Cub fan, because I'm a White
Sox fan, right, A lot of jealousy that runs through
my veins whenever the Cubs get anything good. I gotta
be honest with you, this makes me smile. I can't
wait to see Samy so so wearing a Cubs shirt
again and talking to fans and pose in and getting
to reminisce about some of the great moments that he had.
Speaker 2 (23:11):
Right who didn't do the thing he did when he
would score when he touched the plate and then do the.
Speaker 1 (23:17):
Celebration, yeah, and the kiss and all that stuff. I
tried to get that. I tried to perfect that as
a kid, getting you know what everybody else did when
you're playing with the ball in the backyard and you
got a hold of one. He did that little hop
that he would do after he got a hold of one. Yes,
every time. Yep, those were the days, my man iconic.
Now he doesn't in his statement, doesn't explicitly say that
(23:38):
he did steroids. But I did whatever I could do
to recover from injuries in an effort to keep my
strength up and perform over one hundred and sixty two games.
This is not uncommon for a lot of these roids
guys who said it helped me recover and be ready
to play every day, right, you know, And then we
gripe that these guys don't play every day anymore. Well,
(24:00):
it's a different time right now. It's like, hey, if
we want these guys to be good for longer, we
can't wear them down over one hundred and sixty two
game schedule.
Speaker 2 (24:08):
And when you're in that climate, everybody it's baseball, it's
very much it's a very much prisoner's dilemma.
Speaker 1 (24:14):
You have to do what everybody else is doing. You
either keep up or you fall behind who And I mean, like,
is anybody gonna feel sorry for you if you cry
out and say I'm not using roids? Look at me.
It's like you also are irrelevant because of that. So yeah,
get out of the way, pal, This is gonna be
a weird tangent. But I remember reading an article on
the Reader's Digest years ago. He was this triple A
(24:35):
baseball player who was lamenting never trying steroids because he
felt like if he would have, he would have made
it to the majors. And he's like, I stayed principled
for what I made Jack Squidly, you know, throughout the
miners all these years, and watched all my friends go
on to hit homers on the big stage.
Speaker 2 (24:49):
That could have been me. I wish I could go back,
which is an interesting thing. And I don't know if
that's the right thing for him to feel. I don't know,
but it's just it was just a very interesting article. Yeah,
that is pretty interesting.
Speaker 1 (25:01):
Well, if you got thoughts on Sammy so so, steroids
in general, pretty interesting. Call us four h two, five, five, eight, eleven, ten,
News Radio eleven ten, KFA
Speaker 5 (25:09):
B and Maurice Sonner on news radio eleven ten kfab