Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's a Friday, and we have fun on Fridays. That's
what we do. And one of the things that we
do every single Friday that I'm here at least is
what we call Friday four. Premise of the Friday four
is you are talking about a Mount Rushmore argument, essentially
the best of whatever, regardless of what that actually ends
(00:21):
up being. We discuss, you know, what a good idea
may be for a topic or a category, and then
we give it to you and we talk about things.
And Scott Bories is alongside. We were kind of brainstorming
this one today and you made a pretty interesting observation
that a certain film celebrating fifty years of being in
(00:43):
the zeitgeist of American.
Speaker 2 (00:45):
Cinema fifty years ago today Two Notes and and a Creature,
a villain, and a movie that you'd barely even see
until the very end, was one of the scariest movies
of all time. It was the highest grossing movie of
all time when it was released after this date, fifty
(01:07):
years ago, and it launched the name Steven Spielberg into
the public consciousness. I'm talking of course about alf Now,
that was a TV show with an alien Jaws came
out on this date fifty years ago.
Speaker 1 (01:22):
It was Steven Spielberg directing, and obviously this would launch
him in the superstardom. John Williams on the music, by
the way it is, I think if we ever did
like composers he in, like Hans Zemmer, Danny Elfman, Danny Elfman,
like these are going to be like the guys that
are probably gonna pretty easily make up that list. But yeah,
(01:44):
and so you would were kicking around like how we
could incorporate Jaws into a Friday four and eventually we
get to a point where it's not just you know,
like we don't want like villains or monsters or anything
like that, because you know, we want to save that
for maybe more spooky time of the year. But you
(02:04):
had a good one. It's four scariest animals because a shark,
I think for a lot of people, thanks in part
to Jaws, a shark. If anybody says, look, there's a
shark in the water, I mean, everybody's running out of there,
regardless of like what the likelihood is of a shark
wanting to come and try to eat you Jaw style.
(02:26):
Pretty interesting.
Speaker 2 (02:28):
I've had my kids in the ocean a couple of times.
One of them was up in New Hampshire that was
not going to be too much of a shark concern,
but a couple of years ago down in Florida it was.
And so I'm watching that water like a hawk and
my son is there playing, and a wave kind of
comes up, and in the wave I see the shadow
(02:48):
of a big, round creature and I said, get out
of the water. I mean, I'm I told them. If
I say get out of the water, don't go huh
why get out? And they can. I'm running out of
the water and I'm looking it was a big sea.
Speaker 1 (03:03):
Turtle, and a sea turtle.
Speaker 2 (03:04):
Yeah, all I could see was the shadow. I didn't
know what it was. I just knew it was a
creature and it was really close to my kid.
Speaker 1 (03:11):
Did you get to see the sea turtle?
Speaker 2 (03:13):
Yeah, a little bit.
Speaker 1 (03:14):
That's cool.
Speaker 2 (03:14):
Oh yeah it was. Sea turtles are great. But but
I you know, I was just really watching carefully. And
is it because you watch Jaws at some point in
my life. Yeah, well, I will say this. You're right.
Speaker 1 (03:28):
You were better safe than sorry on that front. I've
never I've been in the ocean a few times. I
never thought about it. I mean, I've thought about other animals,
and that's a preview of my list. Okay, so I'll
go ahead and I'll give you my list. All right,
here's my Friday for my scariest animals. And I'm a
big animal guy. I educate myself on animals to go
to the zoo. I watch a lot of videos about animals.
There's not a lot that actually scares me.
Speaker 2 (03:50):
You let mice live in your home, I don't let them.
I just like doctor Chevago, I just don't don't. I
don't kill them, Doctor Doolittle.
Speaker 1 (03:57):
Sorry, the other one it was like Shivago's or doctor
like doctor j oh Am. I wow, thanks seriously. The
this is kind of tough for somebody like me who
just generally understands animal behavior a little bit more than
just kind of I don't see an animal, I'm like,
h right, I see a garter snake in my my grass,
(04:20):
and I'm like sweet, and let's pull my camera out,
and I'm just like, we're going to film it. Number
one for me, unequivocally and will never be topped. The
giant centipede, all right, but it doesn't matter whether they
can actually do any harm to you right, it's just
what you look at and go, I don't like that animal.
(04:41):
Look up a giant centipede.
Speaker 2 (04:43):
How giant is it?
Speaker 1 (04:44):
It's big enough that it can bite you, and it
has venom. It looks crazy. Oh yeah, so that thing
has venom and it can actually inflict a ton of
damage to you if it were bite you. So not
only does it look crazy, it's got like a hard
(05:05):
outer exoskeleton shell. The Amazonian giant centipede, I think is
the most venomous of all giant centipedes. And we don't
really have to worry about them in North America, but
if you were ever in a spot that that was
a thing that you'd have to worry about. Nightmare fuel
ladies and gentlemen. The exoskeleton is weird. They're little legs,
they're at hundreds of legs, dozens of legs or however
(05:26):
many legs. They're hard too, and they could like kind
of grip onto stuff. And it's got jaws that can
actually like bite you. And there's a guy named Coyote
Peterson which does some great nature stuff. He let one
bite him once to see what would happen. And I
mean he said, it is like one of the worst
bites he's ever Yeah, he's still alive, but it's real
(05:47):
Steve Irwin level stuff. Right, at some point he's probably
gonna get got by something that is was a self
inflicted wound he had no business doing. But there is
a video and I watched it. The little giant it's
not it's a giant centipede, but it's small compared to
his arm, and it like kind of wraps its front
claws and jaws because he's like holding it next to
(06:08):
his skin, grabs his skin and then gives him a
bite and he's like, immediately you could feel the venom.
So the giant centipede, it says, because also, you're not
gonna even see it until it's like on you or something.
Could you imagine like being somewhere and that's just on you.
Giant centipede kind of in that same family as the scorpion. Yeah,
I'm not really Yeah they are, but I'm not really
(06:32):
exposed to them. If I saw them around, like if
I was living in like Arizona or something, and they
were just kind of around regularly, kind of like spiders
are here, maybe I'd be a little different and I'd
be like ah, you know, it's not that big of
a deal. But the idea that this thing has eight
legs and it's got this stinger that just kind of
like hangs out above it and can kind of strike
(06:52):
from any direction, even if it's not like gonna kill
you with that kind of thing. I mean, just the
idea of that being a thing freaks me out. You know,
like you see a hornet or a wasp. I am
exposed to those. It's not unlike what they try to
do when they sting you. But the idea of this
(07:15):
thing with eight legs just kind of wandering around with
the stinger that I can see and it's like can
point in different directions. I'm just I can't do it.
Not into it. This one is a bit unfair because
if you see them in a zooither actually really cool animals.
But if I saw them in a wild it would
be a real bad situation for me. The castawaary, the castlewary.
Speaker 2 (07:38):
I should know what that is. We have them at
our zoo.
Speaker 1 (07:40):
We do, We do have castle castlewary at the zoo.
Speaker 2 (07:46):
Bird.
Speaker 1 (07:47):
Yeah, it's giant bird. It's not as fast as an ostrich,
it's not as big as an Ostrich. I don't think
it's pretty large, but it is like built to fight.
Its feet like it's like the deadliest bird in the
world because if it were to try to protect itself
against you or to try to attack you because you're
(08:08):
near like a nest or something. This thing is fast
and the feet are deadly. I mean they can have
an amazing grip. It's kind of like a could you
imagine a giant hawk or something, and the kind of
feet that they have. And then it also has like
this rock hard thing on its head.
Speaker 2 (08:25):
Like a punk rock or mohawk.
Speaker 1 (08:27):
Yeah, and that thing it doesn't use necessarily for offensive purposes,
but it's great for its own self defense. And it
can do some pecking at you if it wants to
as well. And it's hard to defend something like this,
so it's a flightless bird. It's gigantic. It can do
a lot of damage. The castawary. Lastly, I was scarred
for life when I watched the movie Seven Pounds when
(08:48):
I was a teenager. I don't know if you've seen
that movie. It's a Will Smith movie. Do not recommend it.
It was panned by critics. It wasn't a good movie,
but spoiler alert, spoiler alert, spoiler alert. He is carrying
around a boxellyfish. We learn about the deadliness of a
box jellyfish as part of this movie, and I was like, wow,
that is weird, and then you see the box jellyfish
(09:08):
moving around. It's just so it's a weird looking thing.
It's not like a traditional looking jellyfish. But if I
was into water and I accidentally ran into a box jellyfish,
knowing what it could potentially do to a human, but
they're pretty, they are most jellyfish are, but a box
jellyfish can inflict insane amount of damage to a human.
So the idea of just accidentally running into one of
(09:29):
those certain areas of the world freaks me out. So
there's my four giant centipede, torpion, cassowary, box jellyfish.
Speaker 2 (09:38):
It's a really good list.
Speaker 1 (09:39):
It's a bit under the radar animals, I think for
the most part. But for me, I legitimately if I
saw any of these four in the wild, I would
be incredibly uncomfortable. I'm going to take a break. Scott
Vories will give his four and then we'll take phone calls.
Stick around on news radio eleven to ten kfab. My
guy Scott Voris is with me. Got a few minutes here, Scott,
you want to give me your Friday for the scariest animals.
Speaker 2 (10:01):
All right? Number one is the giant dill spider. These
are a giant, creepy looking like crustacean period spiders that
our soldiers pose with constantly when they're serving in the desert.
These things are like four feet long in some instances. Yeah,
(10:23):
are soldiers over in like Iraq and so forth. They
pick these things up or they shoot them, and then
they pick them up and pose with them all the time.
They're just about the creepiest thing ever. On that same line,
camel crickets, Now, these are more of an annoyance than
anything that's too particularly scary or deadly. But they're just
(10:45):
the creepiest little bugs. And they jump sideways like spiders
in Legend of Zelda. They just get yeah, thank you.
They're just these creepy little things and they look at
you and they is that about to jump on me?
And it could it could jump up at you, could
jump to the left or right. They're just so weird,
(11:07):
creepy looking.
Speaker 1 (11:08):
Those back legs they have some power in them.
Speaker 2 (11:10):
Yeah, they're awful. We had an infestation of them in
the basement of our home in Kansas City, our first home.
I go down there every night with a flamethrower die.
So that would be another one on the list. The
alligator snapping turtle.
Speaker 1 (11:28):
Yeah, those things can pack a punch.
Speaker 2 (11:30):
They're huge. Snapping turtles alone are are, you know, kind
of creepy, but they're kind of cool and you don't
have to worry about one jumping at you. But if
you're on the water with one, watch out, and an
alligator snapping turtle is like three times at size and
just huge. Now the fourth one on Friday Friday four
of I think scariest creepiest animals. This is gonna be
(11:52):
one that I'm gonna get laughed at. But you hear
me out, okay. The possum, Oh no, I hate them.
They just creepy little razor rows of teeth. I understand
they're useful and they're not dangerous, but creepy little razor
rows of teeth, those little beaty, little red eyes. They
(12:13):
can play dead. You don't know if it's alive or dead.
It can jump up get you at any time. They're
not gonna get you though they trying to do that.
They hiss at you, yeah, make noise. I just hate them.
I just hate them.
Speaker 1 (12:28):
Such a good list.
Speaker 2 (12:29):
They're so awful. You ruin your.
Speaker 1 (12:32):
List with a perfectly amazing animal. The unfortunate thing is
you are not gonna be the only person that has
them on your list, honestly, because people do find the tail.
The tail freaks people out, just because like it is
like skin rat tail. Yeah, and it's long and they
can use it to grab onto stuff, yeah, and then
their feet and stuff. All I'm saying is fine videos
(12:52):
of possums and rescues that are eating cat food and
are just kind of trying to just like exist while
they heal from injuries. Those will give you an entirely
new perspective on what these animals are. They're way more
like a cat than you think they are.
Speaker 2 (13:11):
Look, I'm not saying go out there and shoot them.
Speaker 1 (13:14):
Don't be shooting them. They're good, they eat ticks and stuff.
Speaker 2 (13:16):
But if once in front of your car, don't swerve, No,
don't no, don't do not not a good idea to
swerve in traffic. Don't direct me, do.
Speaker 1 (13:23):
Not do not hit a possum, hit your bakes.
Speaker 2 (13:26):
I didn't say swerve at it.
Speaker 1 (13:28):
Hit your brakes, do not kill the possum. And also possums.
Find a video of a possum carrying its babies when
babies are born for the possum, they're the only animal
that has a pouch in North America.
Speaker 2 (13:41):
You could run over the whole thing.
Speaker 1 (13:42):
No, do not do that, the whole So so then
the babies jump on mom's back and you can see
these videos of like possum mamas carrying like ten babies
at once, and it is incredibly cute. You have to
find those. You'll feel differently about them, I promise. Scariest animal,
Scariest animals, we'll talk more. News Radio eleven ten kfab
(14:04):
doing the Friday four having fun. Scariest Animals was the list.
My four was the giant centipede, which I'm gonna have
to show you a video, you know, so you can
get like kind of an understanding of what this thing
can do. It's creepy scorpion. Don't like the thing with
eight legs with a singer on its back? What do
you want from me?
Speaker 2 (14:25):
Would it be better if it had fewer legs? Think?
Speaker 1 (14:28):
I think so, you know, like you know, I had
somebody email and I'll get to some of these lists.
But like fire ants, right, it's not unlike fire ants.
It's just like this thing is big enough for me
to kind of see the menace.
Speaker 2 (14:39):
Yeah, but it's just one. You get fire ants, you've
got thousands.
Speaker 1 (14:42):
Yeah, and that could be a real problem. But like
just to see a scorpion, which I haven't in person,
Like i've seen them in person, but in like a
zoo or a you know, a thing that they're taken
care of, right, like in the wild, that would really
mess me up. I can see the stinger on it.
Speaker 2 (15:00):
Oh. A lot of Nebraskans know a lot about scorpions
because they go down to Arizona for the winter and
you go out in the backyard with a is it
a blue light or a flashlight light, and they kind
of glow and you can get them out of your backyard.
Don't like it.
Speaker 1 (15:15):
Don't like it. I haven't actually ever been to Arizona
except flying through. That's a place that I really like
to be. Yeah, I was supposed to go there, but
we changed our plans and went to Orlando instead, which,
by the way, was a great trip. Cassowary it's a
giant bird. I mean it's gonna be throwing some really
hardcore leg action at you and it could absolutely kill
(15:36):
a person doing that. And then the box jellyfish, which
has a very potent sting if you find yourself exposed
to it in the ocean. So those are my four.
Your four was differently.
Speaker 2 (15:48):
I had the camel cricket because they're creepy and they
can jump sideways in all weird and at different angles.
You really have a gigantic back leg. Yeah, they're just gross.
Much bigger than that is the Asian dill spider.
Speaker 1 (16:02):
Gigantic.
Speaker 2 (16:03):
These sounds are huge. Yeah, are our soldiers in a rock?
Shoot them and then hold them up and pose with
them smiling. Uh, they're creepy. The spider is not the soldiers.
Speaker 1 (16:13):
Thanks for clarifying.
Speaker 2 (16:14):
The alligator snapping turtle, which is a snapping turtle so
big it can it can have an alligatory. These things
are huge.
Speaker 1 (16:24):
Have you seen how fast free historic Have you seen
how fast they can strike too, Like like like find
videos of how quick they can just like be sitting
still and then just like chomp. Right, it's like within
the blank of an Now, Oh it's there. Are kids
out there like, oh, it's a turtle, and they go try.
They want to go pet the back of a snapping
turtle and they don't realize how much that weird creepy
(16:46):
headneck can come out and take a finger off bat
and they will take a f they will.
Speaker 2 (16:52):
They love little kiddy fingers. And then my fourth one
was the controversial choice of the possum or apossum. The
other thing, which is it it's possible we do it.
You can say possum, but it's oh possum, yeah, but
if it's O possum, I shouldn't be able to say possum.
Speaker 1 (17:10):
Yeah, but it's accepted just because so many people rejected
the O. But it's supposed to be O possum.
Speaker 2 (17:16):
Rosa, razory teeth, little beady red eyes, weird tale, they
hiss at you. I don't like them. They're great. And
then you showed me a picture of some mommy possum
with a bunch of cute little baby possums on her back. Yeah,
and it made me not want to kill them as much.
Speaker 1 (17:31):
Thank you. That's great. I'll show my next video for
you is going to be a possum that is in
rehab eating cat food and you'll be like, oh, this
is just like a cat with a weird tail.
Speaker 2 (17:40):
I'm not a big fan of those either.
Speaker 1 (17:43):
Yeah, well that might be a problem either way. Oh, possum,
and the only the difference is opossum. It's just the
species in North America. The possum without the oh is
the distant cousins that are in like Australia and in Asia.
Speaker 2 (17:58):
I was today years old when I realized that there
was a difference there. That's the difference, thanks doctor Emery.
Speaker 1 (18:06):
Opossum only marsupial in North America.
Speaker 2 (18:11):
Are you one of the wild crats? Never mind wild
You either have to be certain age yourself or have
had kids of a certain age. The wildcrats these are
the Krat brothers who at first they tell you in
live action things about animals, and then there's a whole
cartoon series where they kind of create this this shell
(18:31):
for themselves or they become that animal and they live
amongst those animals and you learn about them. Oh, and
they have adventures. It's the Wildcrats.
Speaker 1 (18:38):
I'd be down with that. Yeah, well, i'd watch that
right now.
Speaker 2 (18:40):
You would actually like that show. It's a fun show.
I watched it with my kids and enjoyed it.
Speaker 1 (18:44):
I would watch that right now, and I don't have kids.
Chuck says polar Bear. That was on the list. It
was a late cut for me simply because what's the
likelihood of me actually running into any of these animals.
Polar bear is probably the least likely, unless I go
to the very top of Canada. But those are things.
What do they say? They say, if it's black, fight back,
(19:07):
if it's brown, lie down, if it's whitow, No, it's
if it's white, you're seeing the light kind of thing.
Like a black bear. If you like, pose at a
black beerry and like act big and angry, it's likely
to just get away from you. It's not interested in conflict.
Speaker 2 (19:26):
It would just die laughing.
Speaker 1 (19:28):
It's just like yo, man, take it easy. A grizzly
bear or a brown bear, they are willing to fight.
Lying down means that, oh, you're not actually threatening my territory.
I'm not gonna bother you. And then the polar bear,
if it's white, you're seeing the light. It doesn't care.
You can do whatever you want. It's gonna get you.
And when it wants to get you, it's gonna take
you out.
Speaker 2 (19:48):
If it's polar, it'll eat you down to the molar.
Speaker 1 (19:52):
It'll eat your molars too. It doesn't care. But they're
so cute in those coke commercials exactly, And that's what
people say. Just carry a Coca cola when you're in
there the territory. Maybe that'll work for you. Good luck
with that. This chuck also said a mamba and like
the black mamba snake. You can go a lot of snakes.
I don't mind snakes, even rattlesnakes. Have been in areas
(20:12):
where rattlesnakes live. It's really just be careful. It's not
that big of a deal. They're not gonna hurt him
unless you, like you're trying to get them to hurt him.
And then a mandrill monkey. They look very strange. They
look strange. I don't think they're dangerous. There's weird. And
then the salt water croc crocodiles I think are unsettles
some people.
Speaker 2 (20:31):
Yeah, the mandrill monkey are They got like all the
markings and stuff on them, and they look kind of prehistoric.
Speaker 1 (20:36):
And yeah, the mandrill is the guy who uh raffiki
in the Lion King.
Speaker 2 (20:42):
Well he's yeah, It's fine if it's an old wise
mandrill monkey, but if it's a young, crazy, howling mandrel monkey,
you don't want it.
Speaker 1 (20:50):
They are really interesting looking, though, Yeah, you look them up.
They're pretty interesting. At five seventeen. If you've got thoughts
on this, I got a couple of emails. Otherwise I
will read that. People say, at me list. We'll get
to that momentarily. On news radio eleven to ten kfa
B and were you songer, Doug, we were talking about
scariest animals. Doug sent me a list, which I think
is pretty interesting.
Speaker 2 (21:09):
Friday four.
Speaker 1 (21:10):
Oh yeah, Friday four of scariest animals that we were
talking about, and we had our list and we were
talking about them, and I had some people send me
their list and this, Doug says, First, the small and
clear scorpions. So there must be like a subspecies of
scorpions that are like clear, like harder to see.
Speaker 2 (21:29):
Those are those the ones that show up in the
black light. Go ahead and plausible take them out of
your yard in Albuquerque.
Speaker 1 (21:35):
Clear scorpions. Let's see here, the Arizona bark scorpion. The
bark scorpion, the small, light brown but looks kind of
clear when it's on the ground translucent. Yeah, like my thighs. No,
nobody wants to see that, dude, It's true, dude. There's
(21:58):
a picture here of a female Arizona bark scorpion. How
do you know it's a female because it says so.
And it's carrying a bunch of young on its back
like the pastum I showed you.
Speaker 2 (22:12):
Oh yeah, little spiders that carry even littler spiders. And
you're like, is that spider pulsating? Yeah, and you look
more closely and it's there's a ton of lot on
the pin of a head. There's a billion baby spiders.
Speaker 1 (22:27):
Well, that's what this looks like. That's what this female
Arizona bark scorpion with young. And it's got the eight legs,
it's got the pincers in the front, and it's got
the stinger hanging in the back. That is a menacing creature. Yeah,
that is a menacing creature. I do not want to
(22:49):
see one of those things.
Speaker 2 (22:50):
You don't have a snake on your list?
Speaker 1 (22:52):
No, I like snakes.
Speaker 2 (22:53):
I'm at odds with rattlesnakes as a golfer. If you
go trapesing into longer grass and of your warmer, drier climates,
even in western Nebraska. Yeah, there's a chance you could
start hearing a rattle at you. I heard a rattle
at me in Carnee and Carney, Yes, just south of
carneye W. And I just backed away. And that's when
(23:14):
you wish you could reason with animals going just looking
for my golf ball. Yeah, and the stakes be like, oh,
it's all right, it's over there. It almost hit me though.
You should yelled something like I didn't know you were here.
I'm sorry, dude. Yeah, I have a good, cool conversation.
Speaker 1 (23:28):
The reason I don't have a problem with them is
for the exact reason that you were able to know
they were there, because they don't want to attack. They
just want to let you know, Hey, you are too
close to me and you may not see them, and
they I think, objectively speaking, that is an evolutionary thing
that they have come up with because they're hard to see. So, yeah,
(23:48):
you hear that rattle. You did the exact thing.
Speaker 2 (23:51):
But I've also seen them just lounging on cart paths
or fair ways. Yeah, you got a bask and you know,
you walk fairly close to them and they just at you. Yeah,
They're not going to rattle at you. They're like, what
what exactly do you think you're doing? Exactly? Want to
get a picture with me?
Speaker 1 (24:06):
Yeah, exactly are you coming at me? You're coming at me, bro,
because we can we can talk about this, right. I
only have garter snakes in my yard. I have a
few of them. I like them. They also are useful
for gardening and for protecting some of your your You're
from the bugs that will help kill some of your
flowers and your plants. They take those out, they can
(24:28):
take out mice. They they are They're incredibly useful, just
like the possum.
Speaker 2 (24:32):
I like bats because they just just destroy mosquitos, the
mosquito They are machines. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (24:38):
I like bat love bats.
Speaker 2 (24:39):
I love seeing them just flapping around all weird in the.
Speaker 1 (24:45):
They do not fly very gracefully. That is one thing
I will I will say this though. If you go
to Australia, they have giant bats, the big flying foxes,
and those are awesome. I know people are like, I
don't need bats to be any bigger than the ones
we have here, but ours are tiny compared to like
these flying foxes and those flying foxes that are like
you know, I don't know, a couple of feet long.
(25:07):
They're big, but they just look like a dog with
wings almost, and they behave like one too, and they
just eat fruit mostly. So honestly, bats put them on
the good list. I'm down for that. The second one
small clear scorpions for Doug. He said, fire ants. We
kind of touched on that. You get yourself mixed up
(25:27):
with some fire ants. That that's tough. I mean, how
do you get out of that situation.
Speaker 2 (25:34):
Buddy of mine had hurt his kid, his wife hurt
his kid, like two year old crying in the backyard.
They go to investigate, covered in fire ants. I was
down in Texas.
Speaker 1 (25:43):
That's that's good. So you just like hose him down,
Like what do you do?
Speaker 2 (25:47):
Like, you just just gotta let him go, I know,
you get them out of there. Yeah, you spray him
off with the hose. I don't know, let him go,
that's what I'd do. I'm like, well, Johnny, it was nice. No,
I want to get fire ants on me, I know that.
He said, army ants. I don't know what army ants
will do other than are they biers too. I'm not
(26:07):
so familiar with them. Then he said fourth Piranha, which
is interesting. So so Pirana.
Speaker 1 (26:14):
You see the movies and they're like, you drop, like
a guy gets dropped into a thing of piranha. They're like, right, yeah,
well Mike guy coyote Peterson who allowed to centipede to
bite him, well he had like an experiment with piranha
and put like a piece of meat in the pirana
tank and you know what happened. They did nothing. Really, Yeah,
they're scavengers. They don't care. They didn't care. It was
(26:35):
just like, well, when that like, when that thing settles
at the bottom of this tank, I'm gonna go ahead
and take a couple of bites of it. Is kind
of what their attitude was.
Speaker 2 (26:43):
In the movies. They can skeletonize a.
Speaker 1 (26:45):
Cow, that's exactly exactly. Apparently that's not actually true.