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October 23, 2024 41 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Get the keyword in there. It was the word. It
was the word. It was. Uh, well it wasn't hump day.
It disappeared. It disappeared because I put that hump day
sounder in there. Yeah. Well you can check the bottom, like,
can we see the bottom yet? Or at the bottom
you see grand I have to scroll. Yeah. Our control

(00:21):
our our computer is we see the same things. But
we can't control each other's things like roll all delete.
I can't. I can't actually control anything from this computer.
I can put stuff into the call screener when I
answer calls, and you can see my call screener and
I can see your call screener, but I can't actually
do any like the stuff that you do, like make

(00:41):
the station work. What does it do when I press this? Nothing?
I don't think that was No, that wasn't good. I
just turned your computer off it and not mind. We're back, everybody,
We're back. We're good. That has to be the fastest
a Windows shut down and rebooted in the history of mankind. Yeah,

(01:02):
no way, that was faked. Just had to blow on
the cartridge first. Yeah yeah, yeah, to eleven, not to
disrespect Windows at all, you know, I'm sure we've all
been there, done that, got the T shirt to eleven? Now,
telling the truth? How important is that? When you were
a child, when did you learn that it's important to
tell the truth. Not that you didn't lie, because people
still lie all the time, But when did you learn

(01:24):
from you know, my dad, a teacher or something that hey,
it's imperative that you tell the truth. Probably pretty early on,
just cracking open my beer here, Yeah, oh your beer.
Oh that's a lie, right, that's a fib Probably you
have to lie first to be told. This is why
that was a bad idea. Yeah, here are the consequences

(01:47):
for you not telling me the truth. We have gotten
incredibly loose with what the truth actually is. We have
created scenarios in our head that make it acceptable to
tell variations of the truth. Being under oath used to
mean something in this world where you were going to
be honest and truthful. Now that's not to say that

(02:09):
people haven't been lying. People have lied for centuries, millennias.
People have lied as long as people have been alive.
Every major political figure in the history of mankind, except
for maybe the guy who said he couldn't tell a lie,
who was George Washington nicely done. He famously said that

(02:30):
he cannot tell a lie, and how ironic because that
was a lie. Well, do we have like actual evidence
that he lied? I mean he lied to the British
when he was the General of the Continental Army. Evidence
he created misinformation essentially to get them off their scent,

(02:51):
or to allow them more time, or to take them
by surprise. I don't think that counts though. I think
he also said his wooden teeth were oak. I believe
it was maple. You know, whoever came up with that,
they were lying because he actually never did have wooden teeth.
I hate the really, Yeah, it's a it's a myth.
It's a myth. His like his false teeth rivaly. I've

(03:14):
really staked my entire identity on George Washington having wood teeth.
So I'm gonna have to do some soul surging tonight.
All right, I got a we're going there, We're going
somewhere with the with the the truth telling thing. But
I just wanted to fact check this. See you think
Chad Gpt is familiar with the George Washington and his
wooden teeth. I'm gonna ask you, had GPT, what would

(03:35):
be the right way to like, what were George Washington's
false teeth made of?

Speaker 2 (03:43):
All?

Speaker 1 (03:44):
Right, here we go, it's thinking got gbt's thinking, this
is as long as it's taken. All right, here we go.
George Washington's false teeth were made from a variety of materials,
including ivory from elephants and walruses, as well as human teeth.
Some of his entries also contained metal components like golden
leg Contrary to popular myth, they were not made of wood.
Washington struggled with dental problems throughout his life, which led

(04:07):
to the creation of several sets of dentures. So chat
GBT reiterates my point that the wooden teeth thing, that's
not accurate even in the least bit. And let's be honest,
wooden teeth that wouldn't even make any sense. It sounds
like he was just cramming whatever he could in there. Hey, ivory,
I mean that that's some stuff that you know can

(04:27):
last a while, that's actually used in and other human
teeth that they make dentures out of it, Like, that's
stuff that can actually be used to chew on stuff. Well, well,
wooden teeth, like think about like the problems I mean,
his tongue could get splinters for goodness sake, right, Yeah,
it would be pretty obvious those aren't real teeth, which
is kind of the whole purpose of putting the teeth
in there in the first place is so people can

(04:49):
see that you have teeth. That's like fifty percent of
why you put teeth in there. You have to wonder if,
like Ben Franklin, was, you know, wearing a watch and
maybe a part fell out and he's like he took it,
and he's like, I'm gonna use that as a tooth,
Ben Franklin, Yeah, do you think he had tooth? Probably?
Like I like, no, No, George Washington. I like to
imagine you think George Wishington was like on the loose,

(05:09):
just like his entire thing was, Oh, this is going
to be a good tooth for me later. I like
to imagine that he was always on the search for
a better tooth the bother of our country. Yeah, wow, pioneer,
an incredible man. Well, I'm gonna also investigative George Washington,
total lie. But everybody except George Washington, we know for sure,
told some kind of lie to somebody. Now there are

(05:32):
fact checkers in and around our politics and now news
networks have gotten incredibly aggressive at fact checking information from politicians,
specifically Donald Trump. But one of the most critical Trump
fact checkers actually fact checked somebody on the other side.
And I will explain and why this is important and
why we can't let our politicians keep getting away with this.

(05:54):
We'll play that for you and analyze it for you
while also telling you if George Washington total lie coming
up next to here on news radio eleven ten KFAB and.

Speaker 3 (06:02):
Rarey's songer on news Radio eleven ten KFAB.

Speaker 1 (06:08):
According to the tale, young Washington confessed to chopping down
his father's cherry tree, saying I cannot tell a lie.
This anecdote has often used to illustrate his integrity, but
it's more of a myth created to emphasize moral values
than a factual account. Washington was known for his honesty,
but there's no evidence that this specific event actually occurred.
I was like, okay, chat jeep, she thinks, but that
really wasn't my question. I said, what is a lie

(06:31):
that George Washington said? And then I got the answer,
Oh says. While George Washington is often celebrated for his honesty,
he did make statements that were not entirely truthful in
the context of political maneuvering or diplomacy. For example, during
the Revolutionary War, he sometimes downplayed the strength of American
forces to deceive the British about his capabilities. I mentioned that,

(06:53):
I just don't think that counts. Additionally, in his personal correspondence,
he occasionally obscured his true feelings about certain political figures
or decisions to maintain alliances or avoid conflict. Again, does
that count? Is that not something people should be doing anyway?
You know? Like, would you rather him just be openly
honest and create a bunch of conflict for no reason?

(07:13):
I feel like part of being a great leader is
being able to, you know, compartmentalize that in positive ways.
I think what you're saying more at well, it's the
old truth versus power than diagram that. Yeah, but is
it power as much as it is just trying to
be cohesive and again, strong leadership I think isn't about,

(07:35):
you know, going up to people and saying hey, Adams,
I hate your stinking guts or patent Jefferson on the
back and saying, hey, you're the man, I really like you,
right in front of everybody just because that's actually how
you feel. No, a good leader probably is going to
find ways to motivate and instill confidence in each of
the people around him. Yeah, anyways, EDGBT finishes by saying, however,

(07:55):
these instances were typical of the political tactics of his
time rather than outright lies in a person sense. So no,
we don't have any like actual Hey, this guy absolutely
lied about something. You should ask chat GPT if they
can tell a lie. Hey, chat GPT, can you tell
me a lie? No, because everything I say is crowdsourced

(08:17):
something stupid like that. Okay, this is what it said. Sure,
here's a classic example of a playful lie. Cats can
fly if they jump high enough. It sounds silly and
obviously isn't true, but it's a fun idea. So chat
GPT likes murdering animals. I think maybe we should reconsider
this as a I mean that if you're trying to
if you're canceling chat GPT, I'm just saying, that's a

(08:37):
red flag. What do they say about all those crazy people?
It all starts with the animals. Look at the example
chat GPT, givet and tell me how that's any different
than Jeffrey Dahmer. Dang, now that's a leap. Did I
take it too far? That was a leap. I'll take
it down a couple of notches next to right to Dahmer.
I mean, even like cats can fly if they jump

(08:58):
high enough. And case within thirty seconds, Jeffrey Dahmer, that
was a dang. What's on your mind? That that was
a straight flight to crazy town. I didn't even make
a stop in between. Well, this is why honesty is important,
because there are fact checkers out there. Matt Case and
I would tell you chat gybt is just being playful here.
They even put it in quotation marks. It's just not serious.

(09:19):
I think we should put chat GPT in jail and
lock away the key. Yeah. I think that would be
not great for me in my entertainment because I like
using chat GBT to keep myself entertained. Daniel Dale is
a growing famous or infamous fact checker on CNN. He
was kind of the first fact checker. He's brought in

(09:40):
by CNN, and basically he listens to speeches that politicians do,
really specifically Trump and debates, and basically creates these reports,
writes these things down, makes videos, talking about all the
things that politicians lie about, specifically Trump, Well, he had
an interesting bit yesterday when he showed up and was
talking to a CNN anchor. They talking about our friend

(10:02):
Tim Walls showing up on the view to talk about
a variety of different things, and there was one thing
in particular that caught Daniel Dale's attention.

Speaker 4 (10:10):
Let's talk about building. Let's talk about manufacturing, building back up.
Manufacturing in the United States is a focus of both campaigns.
I want to play for you with vice presidential candidate
Tim Walls said about this yesterday.

Speaker 5 (10:21):
We want to make sure that you're able to bring manufacturing.
Like Kamala Harris has said, we know Donald Trump lost
more manufacturing jobs at any president of American history. That's
simply factual. What are what are the facts here?

Speaker 6 (10:33):
Well, if you're going to say something is simply factual,
it should be factual. This is not It's not true
that the Trump presidency lost more manufacturing jobs than any
other presidency.

Speaker 3 (10:41):
Under George W.

Speaker 6 (10:42):
Bush, there are about four point five million manufacturing jobs
lost under Trump. It was about one hundred and seventy
eight thousand.

Speaker 3 (10:48):
That they're also more.

Speaker 6 (10:49):
Manufacturing jobs lost than under Trump. Under Eisenhower, under Ford,
under Reagan. So Trump does not have the record. I
think it's also worth pointing out for context that these
Trump job losses in manufacturing overwhelmingly occurred.

Speaker 3 (11:01):
Because of the COVID pandemic.

Speaker 6 (11:02):
Pre pandemic under Trump, there was a gain of about
four hundred and fourteen thousand manufacturing jobs. Again, he ended
a negative one hundred and seventy eight thousand, but that
was largely because we had a pandemic related crash.

Speaker 4 (11:14):
Daniel Dale, curtusy was always thank.

Speaker 1 (11:16):
You, Uh okay. Daniel Dale never thought I'd say this,
but preach brother, how important is it to make sure
that we're telling the truth here? How easy have we
let our politicians use hyperbole against us, saying Donald Trump
has had lost more manufacturing jobs than any president in history.
That is factual. He said that, he said at point blank.

(11:37):
And then you could hear some of the I'll just
call them fine young women on the view. You could say, oh, yeah, absolutely,
he definitely did that, And then you can have Daniel
Dale come and said, yeah, actually he was. He actually
created more jobs than he lost before a pandemic related
crash tanked basically every sector and that really had nothing

(12:01):
to do with his policies. And by the way, I
can name like five presidents before that we celebrate for
their economics that actually did lose more manufacturing jobs than
say a person like Donald Trump. And it's like, hey,
Tim Walls, if you're going to say that Donald Trump
consistently lies all the time, he probably shouldn't be caught
lying all the time? Am I right? Or am I right? Right?

Speaker 2 (12:23):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (12:24):
I am right. I know I'm right because I cannot
tell a lie. Oh like, how I work that in there?

Speaker 2 (12:29):
There?

Speaker 1 (12:29):
It does say the truth in your intro. It does
because I am as honest as I possibly can be.
I'm not actively lying. Sometimes I say things that may
not be true, but it's more out of the place
of ignorance than it is me just trying to legitimately
and intentionally misleading you. But what if I can't handle
the truth? Well, people can't handle the truth all the time?
Who was that Nicholson? Something like that Nicholson? He was like,

(12:51):
you can't handle the truth? Or was that cruise? They're
in the same movie. You know the bit, you know
the bit? Yeah, Well, you're right, you may not be
to handle the truth. That's the thing. A good leader
is going to be able to tell you the truth
no matter what. Unfortunately, because we have to paint people
super one way or super the other way, we can't
actually tell the truth anymore. Because is Donald Trump the
worst president of all time? Absolutely not? That is insane.

(13:14):
Is Joe Biden the worst president of all time? Absolutely not?
That is insane. But we're going to talk about them.
Both sides think that each other or the worst president
of all time, simply because that's the easiest way to
make us believe that they're the best. I mean, we've
just completely forgotten about two hundred plus years of American
history for the sake of just being fooled by hyperbole

(13:35):
by our current politicians. Until we start holding them accountable,
like say, these fact checkers, who I know that we
align on a regular basis. But until we start making
them tell us the truth and holding them accountable to
tell us the truth, we're going to continuously be lied to.
And that's just the reality of the situation. It's up
to us to hold their feet to the fire on that.
Two twenty nine, we'll have more on the way stick

(13:56):
Around News Radio eleven ten and KFAB and raise longer.

Speaker 3 (14:00):
In this radio eleven ten kfab.

Speaker 1 (14:02):
Chetib says, Yes. International Chalk Day celebrated on October fifteenth
each year. Oh, I was eight days off. Now I
feel bad. I forgot to get all my friends their presence. No,
it's it's a mold day today. Molday, mole, mole more,
mold day more. Now you would think, like, is that
mole like the animal, which you would think, why do

(14:23):
we need to protect moles? Moles generally are more destructive
than they are helpful. You know, I'm not actively looking
to like destroy moles, but you know it's one of
those things that you know, they're not really endangered and
you don't really even never see them unless you're actively
looking for them, you know what I mean. You know
little furry guys that don't really have good eyesight or
eyesight at all, and they're just digging around all the time. Well, no,

(14:47):
it's actually the chemistry mole. From six oh two to
six oh two, six oh two am to six oh
two pm, Mold Day commemorates AV a god Thro's number,
which is six point oh two times ten to twenty
third power what a basic measuring unit in chemistry none
of that means anything to me. For a given molecule,

(15:08):
one mole is a mass in grams whose number is
equal to the molar mass of the molecule. For example,
the water molecule has a molar mass of eighteen. Therefore,
one mole of water weighs eighteen grams. Billy Graham quite literally,
nobody unless you're a chemist, would ever need to know
any of this stuff. I prefer my gram's golden. So yeah,

(15:32):
so National Mole Day, there you go. Congratulations to all
you chemists out there, or to all those people burrowing
their way into an organization and ruining it from the
inside out. Did you have an opportunity to have you
seen videos of moles? Like people like like finding moles
in the ground and like picking them up. Huh, they're

(15:53):
not very big, but I mean they're weird looking things.
Like they are weirder than you think they are. Are
they blind? Is that the ones like they have like
skin over their eyes, but they never use their eyes
because they're always underground, So like they have like evolved
to a point where like the eyesight is basically unnecessary
for them. It's all mostly just they just like it's
all feel and they have those little claws on their
front legs. And I mean, so there's a video of

(16:15):
a guy who like found a mole, picked up the mole,
put it on his hand, and then the mole's just
instinct is to dig. So the moles just sitting there,
it's just like digging into his hand because as soon
as they like detect trouble, they just want to dig deeper.
You know what I mean? You look up moles pretty interesting.
Had a caller call in and we were talking about
telling the truth and fact checking and stuff like that,

(16:35):
and they heard a political ad and they said, you
should fact check that. This this, Matt this, this is
what I'm talking about. Right. We can't we can't trust
anything that we hear.

Speaker 5 (16:48):
Now.

Speaker 1 (16:48):
The ad that they were in question was the dan
Osbourne had that you heard in the commercial break there, which,
by the way, we have had people ask us this before.
We have no control over that, and we cannot tell what.
We can't turn people away who want to buy advertising
on this station. Zero chance of that. You cannot do
that for the for example, when I win the lottery,
I am going to put the weirdest ads all over

(17:10):
this station. And there's nothing anyone can do to stop.
If you pay the price, you get the space. Oh yeah,
it's happening. They can't turn you away unless you're violating
SEC regulations, which you better watch yourself on that. Oh okay,
all right. But political ads have like fifty people that
like make sure they're not violating any ads. They have
the stuff that they need in there. They have the

(17:31):
disclaimers in there, they tell you who bought the ad
in the ad. With that being said, you know Dan
Osborne's ad. You know, everybody's talking about Dan Osborne being this,
you know, super left wing person who's just going to
caucus with the Democrats if he's elected in the Senate
and defeats deb Fisher. But his ad that you know
we heard in the last break talks about his dad
was an old school conservative and he has himself some

(17:52):
conservative values and stuff like that. Look, this is politics, baby,
and this is what I've been saying until you demand
the truth, I mean, and can I fact check that.
I don't know who is Danny's. Do I care who
is daddy's? You know what my dad is. My dad
likes westerns, spaghetti no westerns like real westerns with John

(18:13):
Wayne not the fake ones. Do you call the spaghetti
westerns fake? They're fake? Whoa, they're not real westerns. I'm
talking like he loves Western movies. Does that mean I
am gonna like Western movies? I mean, he may have
some level of influence over me, but he's he just
likes different stuff. Like me and him don't jive on
a lot of stuff. There's generational gaps in some of

(18:35):
that stuff. I'm kind of rebellious in general. You hearing me,
You're feeling me on this, my man, I am, but
I'm also googling spaghetti westerns. Yeah, and what does it
say is like the Bollywood of westerns, not that they're
real movies, but they're you know, like they're knockoffs. A
lot of Italian directors on this list. Yeah, well, I
wonder why all I'm saying is, as far as politics

(18:58):
are concerned, right, anything goes. We got to a point
where we started to accept falsehoods as truth. If we
agree with the candidate and the opposite, we take truths
potentially and we just immediately say no, they're lying. That
is what we have now because there are enough people

(19:19):
on the internet or fact checkers like our buddy Daniel
Dale from CNN, who are going to either attack one
side more than the other or reiterate certain things that
have been said as falsehoods and not do the same
for the other side. I mean, you saw that in
that presidential debate where Donald Trump was getting fact checked
by CBS basically as he was saying things without really

(19:42):
even a rebut, and then without even the rebuttal. On
top of that, we found out some of the fact
checking was incorrect. It is a free for all out there,
ladies and gentlemen. I'm just saying we need to hold
our politicians accountable, no matter who they are. If you
hear a politician you like saying something that you find
to be inaccurate or untrue, or embellished or exaggerated, you

(20:05):
should be like, you know what, I'm not driving with that.
That doesn't make any sense to me. Then if you
look on the other side of things, right, if you
have a candidate that is straight up telling you what
they find to be the truth, and you're not really
agreeing with that is truth, You're like, no, there's no way,
I don't like that. Well, that doesn't make any sense
to me either. We have to understand that there are

(20:27):
facts and there are non facts, and politicians their job
is to try to take facts or pieces of facts
and manipulate them in a way that makes them look
like they're the good guy in every single way, shape
or form. That's politics. Every single person in any political
party does that. Not a single person in American history
has run for office, been successful and one without making

(20:50):
themselves look better than they actually are on issues in
which maybe most of the public would disagree with them. On.
The messaging and the way they talk about it is
how they manipulate us, the voters, to make themselves better
than they actually are. Who does that the best? Those
are the people who win. What I'm saying is you're
never gonna stop that. You're never gonna make that go away.

(21:10):
What we can do, though, is holding every single one
of these politicians accountable and saying you know what, that
isn't true, telling them we don't like to be talked
down too. Were condescended too because you think that you
know everythinking we don't. So I don't know. My email
is blowing up about spaghetti westerns. Now, thanks, Matt, I'm sorry.
I guess we'll talk about spaghetti westerns next. On news

(21:32):
Radio eleven ten kfab.

Speaker 3 (21:33):
Emory's songer on news Radio eleven ten kfab Emry.

Speaker 2 (21:40):
I agree with everything you're saying, but I have to
call you out because spaghetti westerns are real westerns. Huh.
From mc Clint Eastwood's best movies, verus spaghetti Westerns, the good, bad,
the ugly for a fistful dollars, all them them. We're
all spaghetti westerns.

Speaker 1 (21:56):
So what is a spaghetti western?

Speaker 2 (21:58):
I think they were made in Italy.

Speaker 1 (22:01):
They say spaghetti western. Okay. I just Askedchatt Gpt because
I'm on a kick right now. It says spaghetti Westerns
are a subgenre of Western films that emerged in the
nineteen sixties, primarily produced by Italian filmmakers. Many of these
were made in Italy, often with low budgets and shot
in various locations, including the Spanish desert. Yeah, and it
mentions quite a bit of Clint Eastwood and Sergio Leon

(22:24):
being the director. Yes, So all right, fair enough, fair enough,
my bad, my bad, everybody, my bad.

Speaker 2 (22:32):
All right, just keep preaching it because I agree with
everything you're saying.

Speaker 1 (22:36):
All right, Mike, thanks for the listening, appreciate you, all right,
So there you go. Maybe they're not all bad. That
doesn't mean they're not necessarily knockoffs. It says right here
that they were low budget and you know, filmed in
Italy or the Spanish desert, which I also saw, which
does look like the American West. Yeah, so, am I
also kind of right? Did I just pull a politician

(22:57):
thing there? M hm? Where I I didn't like, out
of ignorance, said something that I didn't necessarily know the
full definition of, but then after getting further explanation, somehow
angled the new information as to well, I was still
pretty accurate and right, you know, with the moral of
my point. It'd be like if Bill Clinton took an

(23:17):
anatomy class and then was like, you know what, actually
I think I did? I think I did. Actually, guys,
I was wrong the whole time. I think I really did.
I just I just didn't know how it worked. Yeah,
I bet he didn't. I bet he didn't. I mean,
when you were married to Hillary Clinton, what do you
think is gonna happen? Maybe he didn't maybe me. Well,

(23:37):
you know, ignorance is bliss. Am I right? How do
you know what you're missing out? If you don't know
what you're missing out on. It's like, my mom doesn't
like giving her dog dog treats. She's like, one of
her irrational fears is that it's going to mess up
her stomach or something or make her sick, like dog
treats like fully legitimate, easily digestible, legitimate ingredient treats. Rich

(24:02):
refuses to give it to her. And I thought about this,
and I was like, man, that dog's missing out. But
does the dog know that the dog hasn't ever tasted
a treat before? Right? So like why you know what
I mean? Like, my dogs were just like they see
me eating some bacon in the morning, They're like, I
know what that tastes like? And then they drool. They
are like I want some of that. Well, you know

(24:23):
my mom's dog, she might be over I'm having some bacon.
She just sits there. She had no idea. Smells pretty good,
but she doesn't know what it tastes like. Right, do
you know what you're missing out on? If you don't
know what you're missing out on, I'm sure I could
word that properly. I know exactly what you mean. Uh anyway,
Uh yeah, So for everybody in my emails, blow me up,
about the spaghetti westerns. My bad, Sorry, what do you

(24:44):
want from me? But that's how easy it is for
politicians to do that. Hey, I'm just going to turn
the argument back around and you know, make myself sound
right and you sound stupid. So guess what, Matt, You're stupid. Yeah,
I'm going to win this office that we're not running for. Right,
that's how you do it. Like you get presented with
new information and you kind of get caught with your
pants down a little bit, which by the way, has

(25:06):
not literally happened to me before, unlike Bill Clinton. And
you know, like I just tried really hard to find
ways to take that information based on what I already
felt like i'd understood or articulated and say, yeah, well
I was at least kind of right. I'm like sixty
percent right. They are low budget knockoffs that weren't even
filmed in the American West. It doesn't mean they aren't
good movies. I'm sure there are some Bollywood movies that

(25:27):
are good too. There's a style that you know, seems
cheap and dumb Bollywood. Yeah, Oh, come on, what, I
don't know, I've never seen any, but I'm sure that
they've you haven't seen any yet. You're going to be
telling me like how Bollywood works. Yeah, Like the best
thing to come out of Bollywood is Prianca Chopra. Oh
what a fox. So you don't think they've got budgets
for those They have some budget. But I like the

(25:51):
very few clips that I have found, not because I'm
only looking for Preanca Chopra clips on YouTube at all,
but are people that look like her? But I, you know,
like I I it just seems like a style that
is not refined. Let's say that not very refined. It
obviously is popular. I mean, when you're making movies for
the second largest population in the world, India, you're gonna

(26:14):
have an audience when you make stuff featuring Indian people.
That's just like a reality of the situation. You look
up and watch ten minutes of any Bollywood film, okay,
and tell me that you think that that's a high
end level production that would be on the level of
like a Scorsese Daria, Double Dog Daria, Triple Dog Daria,

(26:39):
the Old Triple Dog Dare. Hey, by the way, Priyanka
Tropra megababe Nick Jonas is one lucky man. Has anybody
said that before? Probably he's married to Priyanka Chopra. I
can't be the only it's also a millionaire, yeah, and
he's got a couple of famous brothers and you basically

(27:00):
do whatever he wants in life. Congratulations to him. Hey,
I got to talk about some other things that are
in the news, including a football player that got injured,
but people are torn on whether they should be feeling
bad for him. I'll get to that too on news
radio eleven ten kfab
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