Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
There's way too much stuff in here that shouldn't count.
There's stuff which would would kick government funding down the
road or whatever, buy them some more time before they could,
you know, work on a long term budget plan. But man,
there was a ton of stuff in here, including a
four percent pay raise for lawmakers, which a lot of
people are looking out of the side of their eye about.
I'd love to get your thoughts on this. Four oh
(00:21):
two five five to eleven ten is the number? Four
oh two five five eight eleven ten. How do you
feel about the government spending a bunch of money? I'm
sure I could guess, but I like to hear particulars
in all that. Jazz and Kevin's on our phone line
to start things off, Kevin, how do you feel about it?
Speaker 2 (00:37):
Thanks for taking my call, Amory, and I must call
you guys too much. Matt didn't even have to ask
me who I was today. Thank you for that.
Speaker 3 (00:44):
Hey, we do. We have a rolodex of our regulars. Kevin.
It's all good.
Speaker 2 (00:48):
There you go. When we talk about government spending, most
people fail to understand is that is actual taxation. The
government has absolutely zero income of their own, which I
don't understandondering how much they regulate. They should absolutely be
a for profit business, but they don't have any money
of their own. All they have to spend is what
they get from we, the taxpayer. So it's not government spending,
(01:11):
it's government theft of our economy. With what they've done
with this fifteen hundred and thirty seven page omnimous bill,
there was so much porkbelly spending in that. There was
a ton of special interest spending in that. But God,
the spending wasn't one got me so mad about that deal.
It was they tried to sneak in a way so
that we cannot prosecute people in Congress or sent up
(01:31):
for times they've committed. They tried to put in a
blanket pardon into that omnibus building. They have no business
doing that. All that is supposed to do is kick
the financial can down the road until the next Senate
and Congress get in and can actually determine a fiscal
spending budget for US. Yeah, and more more people need
to get involved on Twitter because Elon Musk, like your
(01:52):
Fox News said, Elon Musk railroaded that day. No he
did not. Elon told Twitter what was in it and
the people in Twitter that are moving this government on
the ones that started contacting people. I'm myself contactor no
less than thirty elected officials on Twitter telling them if
you can't read it, you can't vote for it. This
is not rocket science. Just do your job.
Speaker 1 (02:15):
Yeah, I love the passion, Kevin. Well, this is why
we like it when you call in. Thanks for listening, man,
We appreciate it.
Speaker 2 (02:21):
You bet emy, thanks for letting me talk. Bud. Absolutely
what you're doing. I love you guys.
Speaker 1 (02:25):
Hey, well, we love you too, Kevin. We do appreciate
you for being a part of our show today. Yeah,
you talked about some of the things that are in
this thing. Some of it includes the legislation for a
provision stipulating that members of Congress don't have to participate
in Obamacare or the Affordable Care Act. You can opt
(02:45):
out of that program and participate in the federal employees'
health benefits program. Oh, it must be nice, must be nice.
We mentioned that raise. You know how much money that
raises on what they usually make six hundred, six thousand,
six hundred dollars a year, So a sixty six hundred
dollars a year raise on top of their one and
seventy four thousand dollars salary. Now again, I think that
(03:09):
this is an important job and we should take care
of the people doing it so more people want to
do it. But right now you're going to vote for
yourself to get a raise. Right now, Phil's on our
phone line of four h two five, five, eight eleven ten.
Speaker 3 (03:22):
Phil, what say you?
Speaker 4 (03:25):
It's worse than just spending our money. It isn't even
our money, it's borrow money. It's a credit card. They
want to take a credit card and build a new
stadium in Washington, d c. For For whatever the name
of the football team is now. They want to They
never get tired of spending money. Every single corporation, every
(03:49):
single major corporation has been through downsizing numerous times. Has
the federal government ever been downsized? Answer? No. The other
thing they wanted to do. The other things is they
wanted to indemnify themselves basically so that they wouldn't be
investigated with the January sixth committee scam that they ran
(04:09):
up all right now, why don't they want any investigation there?
Because it was all a fraud, That's why. And then
there's a lot of Republicans that let that fraud continue,
let it perpetrate, So none of them want to really
deal with this. I'm for I was listening to klam Buck.
I'm I'm for the idea that Ran Paul put forth.
(04:33):
An Elon Musk is Speaker of the House, maybe we'll
get some stuff down there.
Speaker 3 (04:38):
That'd be pretty crazy.
Speaker 1 (04:40):
You got the guy who was making electric cars and
sending rockets into space just a few months ago, and
all of a sudden, such a major player and a
trusted ally of Donald Trump, And now you got people
in Congress saying, hey, Elon would get this stuff done,
we wouldn't have to worry about any of that. That
that would shake some things. That's that's for sure.
Speaker 3 (04:58):
Phil. I appreciate you calling in. Thanks so much for listening.
Speaker 4 (05:01):
Yeah, yeah, what.
Speaker 3 (05:03):
Do you think Elon Musk Speaker of the House.
Speaker 1 (05:09):
No, oh, you're you No, Well, you know, it's interesting
he can't serve as President of the United States, and
he would be third in line from that position, So it.
Speaker 3 (05:20):
Isn't isn't he a little much?
Speaker 4 (05:22):
No?
Speaker 5 (05:22):
Well, I mean he's coming on a little strong these days, Elon.
Speaker 3 (05:26):
Yeah, billionaire buying up all this stuff.
Speaker 1 (05:29):
Well, you know, it's hard for him to relate to us.
But in terms of doing things, there's nobody that does
things better than Elon Musk. Let's just call it like
you see it. He wants to do something, he's bored
with something, he decides to do something else, he does it.
Speaker 5 (05:48):
I tell you what pepperid Farm remembers was that when
Barack Obama gave Elon Musk a bailout to save Tesla
back in the day. Yeah, he did that to everybody.
Though it wasn't just Tesla.
Speaker 3 (05:59):
It also little a part of it.
Speaker 5 (06:00):
It was all the automakers. So for whatever that's worth.
Speaker 3 (06:03):
I know, I just like to be fair.
Speaker 1 (06:05):
I'm hearing what you're saying. I'm also like, at some
point we have to come to we have a new
Congress coming in in two weeks. They need to get
this thing either like like the cankick, which is this
what this was supposed to be, so the new Congress
can get the more long term bill done, which, okay,
(06:28):
the House is still very slim in margins for the
Republicans having the majority, But you have to at some
point feel like, all right, when is that mandate coming
into effect? The mandate of the American people that we
want conservative values to be done here. Save us money.
(06:48):
And like Phil said, it's not really even our money
as much as it is just borrowed money. Already, we
have a you know what the debt is? Update on
the debt? Can you can you give me a guess?
Speaker 5 (06:58):
It's a whole lot of numbers to too many numbers
to count.
Speaker 1 (07:01):
Thirty six trillion, one hundred and eighty nine billion, three
hundred and forty five million, eight hundred and twenty six thousand,
one hundred and forty dollars and sixty two cents. And
it's probably different now because that was from like three
minutes ago. It's probably higher now because that's how quickly
this thing is like multiplying, it exponentially growing. Right, all right,
(07:23):
I'm just gonna tell you straight up, there's no way
we're paying that money back.
Speaker 3 (07:27):
There's no way.
Speaker 1 (07:29):
At some point we're just gonna have to like declear
country bankruptcy or something like that. I don't know, I
don't even know where you go from here, right, You're
not Where are you coming up with thirty six trillion
dollars in our lifetime?
Speaker 5 (07:42):
You know?
Speaker 1 (07:42):
What's money we actually have to spend just to keep
the country moving, right, and we can get upset about
the Ukraine stuff. We didn't actually give them hard money.
We gave them stuff that was worth money, but it
was resources, it't it wasn't actual dollars, right.
Speaker 5 (07:58):
You know what I would do when I was playing
monopoly that happened to me, I'd go have a piece
of pie and call the whole thing off.
Speaker 1 (08:04):
Yeah, well, I wonder if trying to be okay with that, Hey, China,
let's just go out for pie.
Speaker 3 (08:11):
And on top of that, you know you have all
this other.
Speaker 1 (08:13):
Stuff, the military strength, and you know you're trying to
strengthen the military, trying to have peace through strength, and
how you accomplish that, how do you cut spending in
a way that you can still put a bunch of
resources where they need to be that the previous administration
had put them. Illegal immigration enforcement would be another good one, Right,
there's going to have to be money spent for our
(08:33):
government to operate. But you're giving me fifteen hundred, sixteen
hundred pages of this thing. And Vivek Ramaswami put this
up as well as just like I'm trying to read
every single page of this. If you're in Congress and
you're not trying to read every single page of this,
then get the heck out. You need to be primary
stat It's a little early for that, but yeah, take notes,
ladies and gentlemen. We're all ready getting a little bit
(08:56):
frictioning and we don't even have all the new cats
getting into Washington.
Speaker 3 (08:59):
DC.
Speaker 1 (09:01):
Still got a couple weeks before Congress flips over. We
have a month before Donald Trump still gets inaugurated. What
do we doing here?
Speaker 3 (09:09):
Why is it so long? Why is it so long?
It makes no sense.
Speaker 1 (09:13):
If you got some opinions on this, we would love
to chat with you, just like Kevin and Phil Passion.
If you disagree with us, if you got some thoughts
about it, we would love to hear from your four
oh two five five eight eleven ten four h two
five five eight to eleven ten. You're listening to news
radio eleven ten KFAB.
Speaker 3 (09:28):
Every songer on news radio eleven ten KFAB the New
and Improvement.
Speaker 1 (09:34):
What I want to do is you're a Republican like
in this like I'm just gonna swap you out for
Mike Johnson.
Speaker 3 (09:40):
You're in charge. You're a Republican. You're in charge.
Speaker 1 (09:43):
How likely are you on a scale of zero to
one hundred, will you try to work with Democrats for compromise,
for the greater good, to achieve things, to mend fences?
Speaker 3 (09:57):
What's sehere?
Speaker 1 (09:59):
Where's your personality act in the middle of all of that.
Speaker 5 (10:03):
I'm just looking for the best deal that has the
best chance of getting the most votes. That's politics, right,
fair enough? Yeah, it isn't. Isn't that. There's something about
the word politic is like Latin for compromise or something like.
That's something in that, something like that. The truth is
down there somewhere. Just got to find it. Find that truth. Yeah,
you know, I don't.
Speaker 3 (10:21):
Know that that's what that would be on my impulse,
and I would be in this. I would be in
trouble too.
Speaker 1 (10:25):
I'd be a Kevin McCarthy type, I think, because I'm
I'm a guy that likes to bring people together, you
know what I would be good at. If the Trump
administration wanted somebody in their ear, I would be the
guy that would be like, here's how to appeal. Like
like I'd be chief strategist for twenty twenty six. Hire
me right now, and I could be your chief strategist
(10:46):
for twenty twenty six, because I'm going to tell you
the fairest way to talk about certain things to make
the Republicans look better to improve their majorities of twenty
twenty six.
Speaker 3 (10:58):
Do you want to know why?
Speaker 1 (11:00):
Because I have a prediction to make by twenty twenty six,
the Democrats are going to have some of their stuff
together in a lot of these districts that were competitive
in the last House cycle and in the Senate potentially
for the seats that are coming up there. And you
want to know something, They're going to be very competitive.
And if you lose control of the House or the
Senate in twenty six, you can throw away any positive
(11:23):
gains you were hoping to still make in the last
two years of the Trump administration. You have to be
winners in twenty six. Talking to people in the American public,
it is going to matter how you talk about this stuff.
It is going to matter how you legislate this stuff. Now,
you shouldn't be putting in giant, fifteen hundred page omnibus
(11:46):
spending packages when you're just trying to kick the can
down the road. That put all this extra stuff in,
including blanket pardons for people who would be prosecuting January
sixth people, Oh, or giving themselves six thousand dollars are
raises when the economy is where it is right now
for the rest of America. Oh and on top of that,
(12:07):
right just trying to do this all in one package
that nobody's going to read. It's a bad look for
the American public to see you voting for this. So
I am in support of Yeah, we should be compromising,
but we should be compromising while also trying to get
our stuff done. We have a Republican majority in this chamber.
(12:27):
There's no way this should be the thing that passes.
There's got to be different ways that we can actually
pass this stuff. And if you can't do what you
can the bare minimum to kick the can to the
next Congress so they can get the long term spending
plan done. Because what are the motivations for a lot
of lame ducks that are still just sitting there on
their hands. Now, I'm going to ask you, Matt on
(12:49):
a scale of zero to one hundred, what's the likelihood
of you actually trying to achieve anything in your last
two months in office? If you lose reelection. I don't
know about you, but I'd have a massive case of
senior itis.
Speaker 3 (13:01):
If you know what I mean, my constituency and want
me to be here. I want to be here.
Speaker 5 (13:07):
I'm here to collect the check and then I'm leaving.
Maybe that's what would be best, But I don't know
if that's the temperament of the best sort of leader.
Speaker 1 (13:16):
Yeah, but you're not, like why would you? And this
is my thing with the big gap between the previous
administration and the upcoming administration, Right, there's such a long time.
There's two months between election day essentially and us inaugurating
the new Congress, And there's two and a half months
(13:36):
between election day and putting in the new executive branch
the Congress that's outgoing, including the executive branch. They can
do whatever the heck they want in that time span
and have and know that there's just really nothing anybody
can do about it. Like let's just eh, man, I'll
just go ahead and I'll just do this thing. I'll
(13:57):
part a bunch of people, we'll put it in a
few executive orders here, make a mess for the next
guy to clean up.
Speaker 5 (14:02):
What do I care? I'm gonna be out of here,
you know what I mean? Could I pose it too long?
Could I posit though, that the length is the way
it is designed to best create and manifest the most
peaceful transfer of powers possible.
Speaker 3 (14:15):
I I'm with you.
Speaker 1 (14:16):
I think that's probably likely the case in twenty twenty four.
Speaker 3 (14:20):
That's too much time.
Speaker 1 (14:22):
We should be able to peacefully transfer power much quicker
than this, not make a sitting ducks for the rest
of the world who maybe want to exploit the weakness
that we have in that two and a half month span.
Speaker 5 (14:32):
But everything you just said there is why we're in
it's worrisome. If that it's too much time in twenty
twenty four, that just means that both sides are a
little too much these days.
Speaker 1 (14:42):
Well, that's definitely true. If you got thoughts calls four
oh two, five, five, eight, eleven ten, we got more
on the way on news Radio eleven ten kfab Emrie
Sunger Mitch is on the line. Welcome to the show, Mitch.
What's on your mind? Oh geez, well we're talking about
it any way, right and no doubt, no doubt to me.
(15:05):
I gotta tell you that there's a lot of people
out there that have different things on their mind in
regards to this, and uh yeah, just from from a
from a down the middle, Strike one, strike two, strike three,
standpoint right, At what point do we step up and say, hey,
(15:26):
we should remove you because you're not doing what we
the constituents want. Is that a dangerous president? Do we
have to let them do their term? How do we
do this right? How do we as American citizens hold
people accountable? And again we talked about some of these
Republican leaders that hadn't even got a chance to do
anything yet because we were kind of talking about this
in the UH in the break. One of the reasons
(15:49):
why there was such a long transfer of power or
window for power is UH transportation in the day wasn't
exactly going to allow these people to all get the
k Washington DC very quickly back in the way horse
and buggy days, and that's when this stuff what's going on.
You know, remember they didn't inaugurate the president until March,
and that wasn't until mid eighteen hundreds. They decided to
(16:10):
do January twentieth.
Speaker 3 (16:14):
Right, So.
Speaker 1 (16:16):
With that specific thing hanging up over there, what's stopping
us from changing to a little bit earlier. I get
that there needs to be some time for any challenges
to votes and recounts and all that stuff, right, but
transportation is not an issue anymore. These people could start
the job like within a few weeks, you'd think, and
(16:39):
why are we letting people who are on their way
out make decisions for what the Congress that's about to
take over do. This is this whole thing is designed
just to like get us across the line. But instead
they're like, oh, yeah, by the way, six six hundred
dollars in a raise. Oh and we get to opt
out of Omamacare. What are we doing here? There's got
to be a better way. There's got to be a
(17:00):
better way. If you got thoughts, call us four h
two five, five, eight eleven ten is that number?
Speaker 3 (17:06):
Got a couple updates here for you.
Speaker 1 (17:10):
We were talking about these drones.
Speaker 3 (17:14):
Well, it finally happened.
Speaker 1 (17:16):
You know what they finally did The Federal Aviation Administration
otherwise known.
Speaker 5 (17:21):
As the Federal was of Aviation Administration, the FAH Nice,
that's exactly what I was gonna say. Oh really, yeah,
oh I just sounded it out.
Speaker 1 (17:32):
Yeah, or the FAA, but the FA yeah, and yes,
and yesterday they actually issued flight restrictions prohibiting drone flights
over parts of New Jersey. They finally did it after
all this time. So here's how this is going to work.
Commercial drone operations are allowed with a valid statement of work.
(17:55):
There must be an approved special governmental interest Airspace waiver,
and all applicable FAA regulations must be followed. This is
going to be in effect until January seventeenth, and I
guess we'll see if these drones still pop up. And
if they do, then what do we do? Does that
(18:16):
mean we get to wrangle these things? Have we given
ourselves the ability to, you know, tackle one of these guys?
Somebody asked Speaker of the House Mike Johnson what he
should do. Do you think he knows what's going on? Any
speak of the House knows anything about these drones? And
he hasn't said so if he does. He was asked
about it on Fox News yesterday and he said, look,
(18:38):
I'm the Speaker of the House. I have the exact
same frustrations that you do, and all of us do.
We don't have the answers. The administration is not providing them.
Speaker 5 (18:46):
That's a pretty good Mike Johnson impersonation. He's got quite
a bit of Southern in him. But they also kind
of just ducks. He's very pretty low in the way
that he speaks in. Representatives from the FBI, the FAA,
the National Security Council, the DHS, and the DoD all
(19:06):
intended to call about these things with the Biden administration
over the weekend. Yeah, yeah, no, bed eh, not too bad. Thanks, thanks.
He could have played a good like police officer from
What's that movie with Paul Newman cool Hand Luke. He's
trying to catch cool Hand Luke, get him back into jail.
Speaker 1 (19:28):
I thought you were going to say something like watch
Cassidy and the Sundance Kid that one too. Can you
imagine Mike Johnson on a horse?
Speaker 3 (19:36):
I think anyone could be on a horse at some point,
you know. Was that right? Yeah? Why not?
Speaker 1 (19:42):
The FBI official also said, we're doing our best to
find the origin of that specific or these drone activities,
but I think there's been a slight overreaction. So the
FBI continues to say, hey, chill out, chill out, relax,
relax there, Pal, We'll get some more here as we
roll along here on news radio eleven ten Kfab and.
Speaker 3 (20:04):
Marie Sunger on news Radio eleven ten Kfab.
Speaker 1 (20:10):
Jelly Roll in his interaction with Donald Trump at that
UFC fight last month. You remember that, You remember when
when when when there was a UFC fight and Jelly
Roll was already there along with Kid Rock. They were
hanging out, and then Trump and a whole gang of
people including Mike Johnson and Elon and Tulci, they all
showed up.
Speaker 3 (20:29):
You know remember that, Not really, but I'm sure it happened.
Speaker 1 (20:33):
And then Jelly Roll gets pulled into the conversation cause
Jelly Roll openly was like, hey, we need Democrats back
in there kind of thing. And uh, Donald Trump, you know,
I was like talking to him, and you know, they
dapped up and stuff, and Jelly Roll doesn't know him,
but you know, you could tell that they were like
chatting and talking to each other about stuff. And then
(20:53):
Kid Rock goes in there and he's talking to him.
It's a pretty interesting Uh it's a pretty interesting mick.
But now a lot of people who are Jelly Roll
fans are all like, jelly Roll A two, jelly Roll,
how are you? Why are you talking to the guy
that we were supposed to hate? Jelly Roll? Now, what
(21:15):
did he say? He showed up on a podcast and
you know what he said. I don't care who you are.
If you were in that building, the hair on your
skins stood up as Trump made his entrance. You look
and you know all you're watching is the president elect
too got elected like eight days ago, walking in with
his entire cabinet with him almost you.
Speaker 5 (21:36):
Know what I mean, and his kids and his grandkids.
And it was powerful. Dude, Like, I don't care what
side of the Ali rom fair assessment. I think right
the guy is gonna be the president. They make this
huge interest. Stand at White's walking down with him at
a UFC event.
Speaker 1 (21:52):
He's got his entire like entourage of the people that
he's put in RFK was there, Tulsa is there?
Speaker 3 (21:58):
Elon? Is there?
Speaker 1 (21:59):
Mike john Since there a bunch of these people, his son,
you know, Don Junior and Eric they're there right Like,
if you're just a person that appreciates America, that's a
sweet meal moment for you.
Speaker 3 (22:12):
I don't care if.
Speaker 5 (22:13):
You're famous or not. You're just like, WHOA, that was awesome.
I would say that there's a fraction of the people
among us. They're a fraction of the people, but they're
also very very loud and very very present online who
demand that you take every single thing personally. You know,
(22:34):
my guy or gal didn't win, so now I have
to take it completely personally, and I have to scream
into my camera phone and put it online.
Speaker 1 (22:41):
M Well, he continued, He said, everybody's like, you look, really,
you got a goofy smile on your face in those pictures.
He's like, y'all couldn't feel what we were feeling. Like
that room was palpitating. What a word from jelly roll?
There palpatatinge palpitating? Ooh palpitating?
Speaker 3 (23:04):
Who Like? That room was palpitating.
Speaker 1 (23:07):
And when Trump walks right by me, I'm like, he
don't know who I am. So right then, I was like, well, damn,
I'm not gonna get to meet the president.
Speaker 3 (23:16):
I was kind of sad.
Speaker 1 (23:18):
I kind of looked over and he made eye contact,
and what you don't see in the video was he
kind of gives me the Trump point. I go to
shake his hand, put my hand on his shoulder, and
he puts his hand on my shoulder. He's like, there's
not a chance in hell I'm not meeting the president elect.
I don't care if I would have got to call
to meet Joe Biden at any point, I would have
(23:38):
stopped it.
Speaker 3 (23:39):
I was doing to go meet him too. That's the
active president.
Speaker 1 (23:42):
I wouldn't have cared what people thought, what I even
think about his policies. I don't hide behind the I'm
not political stuff. I'm not political. I like to talk
about things I'm passionate about. With that, I like to
know about them. I don't know enough about politics to
act like I know everything that's going on.
Speaker 3 (23:59):
Would anybody staying for policy was? I genuinely don't know.
Speaker 1 (24:04):
Well, I don't know. I don't know about I don't
know about all that. I mean, how does a guy
that famous just not know where people are on policies,
especially if he's out there telling.
Speaker 5 (24:18):
People who you should vote we should vote for? Wow,
isn't that interesting? You mean to tell me that person
he told you what to do without knowing what they
were talking about. Now, that didn't happen, not in my America.
You mean to tell me the jelly roll got a
(24:38):
talking point and followed through with it without annoying a
word he was saying. Not jelly Roll, not the Rhodes scholar.
Jelly Roll. Hey, you could read the Rhodes scholar thing
on his face, because he has face tak Yeah, it
looks like a diploma on his face.
Speaker 3 (24:55):
Oh it does. I don't know. I just there was
a tattoo face show. Oh, because he's.
Speaker 5 (25:01):
Got a tattoo face. I like that for the face
tats among his tattoo face. Yeah, he's tatto tattoo face.
You find a tattoo face guy, just call him tattoo face.
Everyone know he's here. You're talking to you know, when
I see a tattoo face guy, I stay nice. You
don't want to mess with a tattoo face guy. You
know you want to play nice. I play nice with
(25:22):
the tattoo face guys. Hey, so, so he's been in trouble,
jelly roll. He's a new guy. Now he's a better man.
Speaker 1 (25:28):
But his post malone really has popularized the face tat.
Speaker 3 (25:32):
But you know, I I don't know.
Speaker 1 (25:35):
He seems like a nice enough guy, pretty solid musician
to be honest, But like, I don't know, I'm not
not really interested in hanging out with the guy who
looks like that and acts like that. He doesn't do crimes,
but like he's he's just an interesting cat. Other face
famous face tats Mike Tyson. Obviously he's done some jail time.
(25:56):
I mean, yeah, there's a lot of face tat guys
that most face tag guys that I could think of
off the top of my head. Not the greatest characters
to be hanging around.
Speaker 5 (26:05):
What is it about getting to jail and just getting
the you know, getting it on your face? Like there's
other places, Well this one I'm saying that, I like,
do they think it's cool? Like Lil Wayne has like
the tear drop thing on his face and now he's
got like a book on his face, like he just
decided to keep going. Do guys like tattoos so much
that they're just like, Oh, I want more, I want more,
I want more.
Speaker 1 (26:25):
I've talked to people that are not tattoo types and
they come back to me and be like, Emory, you
have no idea when you get the first one, You're like, actually,
I just you just start immediately thinking about what you
want next. And if you have the money to like
get good ones and you have a person, it just
becomes a thing that you like kind of enjoy doing
and you like gift it to yourself. There's something about
(26:46):
like breaking through the first one. Does that make sense?
I mean, there are zero tattoos in this room.
Speaker 3 (26:54):
So, like.
Speaker 5 (26:56):
I say, if you want a tattoo, get a tattoo.
I know I don't think I have will. In fact,
i'd be surprised if I do. But same same I've
thought about it. I like the one thing would be
dog related, right, like like to commemorate my dogs, the
dogs that I've had, with their names or maybe like
their ID numbers or something somewhere on my body. And
every time I've actually thought about it, I'm just like, actually, no,
(27:18):
I would hate that, Like why would I do that.
Speaker 1 (27:23):
I have a hard time understanding like the appeal of
having something that I can't change. I hate the idea
of not being able to change it. Like once you
have it, it's basically there. I think you just want
people to see your feelings when you get a tattoo.
Maybe you throw them all the time and you want
people to see them. Chris Daughtry has like blackout tattoos
on his arms. I saw him last night. He's jack too.
Speaker 5 (27:48):
Like they actually look great on him because he's got
awesome gigantic arms that are very muscular.
Speaker 3 (27:54):
Makes them look really cool. I don't have that going
for me.
Speaker 1 (27:57):
Uh, if you got thoughts on tattoos, call Us four
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