Episode Transcript
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(00:00):
He said, my summertime job wouldbe I'd get up and I'd throw hey
from five fifty am to eleven am. I'd eat lunch and then go walk
Milow from noon till four. I'mnot sure what Milo is, but he
says, I eat lunch, thengo walk Milo. But that's for four
hours whatever that is. Wow,So it's four hours of walking seemingly.
(00:20):
Well, that's one big dog ifhe needs a four hour wal Yeah.
Well Milow was the cat in Miloand otis, so it couldn't have been
him. What else could Milo beof typo? Maybe? I don't know,
maybe, And he said, Ithen I mowed yards in the evenings,
Brian, did you have any funin there? Just? You know,
like that sounds like an Again,I come from a different generation than
(00:41):
a lot of people. All right, I'm I'm I'm a millennial for sure.
I'm right in the heart of themillennial generation. And maybe that was
me. And I'm sorry if Isound super lazy, but I kind of
am when it comes to like physicallabor. This just does not sound like
fun under any circumstance. And Briansaid, it taught me about hard work
and dedication. And I wouldn't changeit. I mean, that's fair.
(01:03):
It's hard to get angry at that. Right. There's a lot of other
stuff that I'm sure Brian did,but wow, that's a that's hardcore.
Yeah, no, pretty funny.Some of the stuff that we do for
our summer jobs and how that stuffgoes down. There's certainly the ability for
you to reach out to us andtell us about what you got going on.
(01:26):
Four two, five, five,eight eleven ten. Four two,
five, five, eight eleven ten. Let's go ahead and go to Ken.
Hello, Ken, what's on yourmind? Well? I just wanted
to bringing up to speed on walkingmilo. It's not a dog, it's
a crop in Nebraska. Oh,he was walking rows of milo, which
is a sorghum crop, walking fromone end to the other, cutting sunflowers
(01:46):
and weeds and things like that.I think of the tasseling corn, only
it's not Yeah, I would havegot the detasseling thing. Yeah, so
it's not the same thing, butit's it's it's maintaining a field of milo.
I'm glad you're educating me here,Ken, So doing that for four
hours, like how long of theseason is that? Like an all summer
thing I would. We didn't haveMilo on the farm that I grew up
(02:08):
on. But I'm guessing it's probablytwo or three weeks. Okay, so
that wasn't like for three months.No, no, it would not be
okay, all right, all right, sounds good. Just wanted to help
education now that you're in Nebraska.No, can I need it? Appreciate
you calling in. I'm not.Yeah, enjoy the show, Thank you,
(02:29):
man, I appreciate it. Look, I I've never been Have I
ever said that I know everything?No, I've said more often than not
that I know nothing, not nothing. I know the history of the four
major professional sports leagues as we've established. Right, but uh, you know,
I mean you didn't know what milowas and you're from Nebraska. What
did he say? I was onthe phones the whole time. Yeah,
it's a it's a sorghum like crop. Brian followed up and said, Milo
(02:53):
is a crop that used to beplanted everywhere. You couldn't spray it,
so you walked through the fields cuttingweeds with a corn knife. Ah.
Okay, it's like the tag exceptfor a different you know, to Tasseling.
Right, we all know what thetasseling is yep, Ben says,
it's a grain crop. There yougo walking Milo? Is you walk the
fields of Milo? He could haveput a couple more prepositions, maybe a
(03:14):
verb, maybe a you know,an adverb, you know, maybe even
a noun in there that would havehelped us with that sentence, because when
you say I had to walk Milo, I think, oh, how old
your dog? Yeah? But youknow, but Milo was the cat in
Milo and otis so Milo's a cat'sname as far as I'm concerned. And
Milo is a little tiny town southof Des Moines. So when anybody says
Milo, that's the first thing Ithink of, right, is little tiny
(03:37):
town in central Iowa. But alaswalking Milo, as we have now learned
on this show, is you're walkinga the rows of the crop and making
sure that you cut the weeds ofthe milo as the season wears on.
We appreciate Ken for calling in andhelping us out with that in phone call.
(04:00):
No, no, you're here onthe phone, and then it was
a one way conversation. Sometimes that'sso how they are. He wanted to
say something about was there a dogin the mask named Milo? Oh?
Was there? I think that's whathe said. Milo the dog, Yeah,
yeah, it is the dog fromthe mask is Milo. There you
(04:21):
go. Congratulations, never mind,Milo's a dog too. My bad,
Please don't hurt me. Rob alsoemail didn't want to talk about philibusters.
He said, tiny tunes were longafter my time. But I still left
when I think about a phil aBuster from thirty years ago when Buster Bunny
was in Congress and the filibuster wasthey connected him to like an air pump
(04:44):
and filled a Buster philibuster, getit, I mean kilin. I still
think that'd be a great buffet restaurantin Washington, DC, going down to
philibusters all you can eat. It'sjust a whole bunch of pork. Oh
boy, that's good. That's good. No, all right, so we
know what Walke Milo is. Nowwe're in radio. You've been in radio
(05:09):
before. Have you had a hotmic moment? What is that again?
Hot mic? Like you're off theair? You think the MIC's off?
Oh, and you start talking offthe air, But a hot mike here's
the conversation. And then as doesthe people that are listening to the radio
station, they can hear what you'resaying and it can get you into an
(05:30):
awful lot of trouble. I guessI have to say, yes, Well,
do tell, gonna make me tellthat story? Do tell? I
mean you got job security? WeI mean if it didn't happen here,
and it didn't happen in college either, we Well, you don't have to
tell us where it happened, justtell us how it happened, what happened.
(05:53):
There's a reason I bring this upbecause I'm still embarrassed by this.
But it's crazy. It happens toevery it does you know. I'll be
honest, it hasn't necessarily happened tome. Knock on wood because I have
a producer background, and I justdo not know who is hearing what,
and I don't want to say anythingthat Like, Okay, so Min de
(06:14):
Moin show, for instance, right, one of the things that I do
when I'm hosting that show, I'mdoing it from the studios here in Omaha.
My producer of that show is inDe Moin, So our technology is
allowing me to talk to them whenwe're in commercial breaks. They can hear
what I'm saying. But I toldI tell them specifically, no matter who
is on the board, you haveto tell me when my mic is on,
(06:34):
and you have to tell me whenmy mic is off, right,
because I am not. I willnot communicate with you until you tell me
my mic is off. And I'mjust not gonna get caught because there are
horror stories that I've heard of peoplelosing their jobs because of hot Mike moments.
So Matt case hot Mike me.No, no, no, no,
no, let me rephrase. Pleaseinform us of your hot mic moment.
(06:55):
Please don't hot mike me. LikeI said, I'm still smarten over
this. And it's been years,been a couple of years. Anyway,
I was reading a slew of likebasically, what they were is not coupons,
but specials for a grocery store onthe air. This was not live.
(07:15):
It was actually this is the embarrassingpart. It was recorded to tape
and I just edited the thing wrong. You had I kept in my very
frustrating middle parts where I was veryannoyed at how they were displaying the information
that I had to read. Itwas a very Casey case A moment.
If anybody knows snuggles the dog,Yeah, yeah, I got very frustrated.
(07:39):
Did you say a bad word?I don't think so it was just
you saying like, oh, theywrote this so poorly. Yeah, it
was like, well could they justput it correctly? You know, very
very frustrated. But and that wentout over the air. It sure did,
and you were hearing it live asit was going on the air.
I heard it and in the momentlike what do you do? Do you
kill it? Do you just lether go? Like? What did you
(08:00):
do? I was I was athome. Oh no, there's nothing I
could do. So, So didyou like, did the bosses, did
somebody else hear this? Or wasit an automation? Did you feel did
anybody tell you about this after thefact? Did you have to either?
Was there a reckoning? There wasnot a reckoning because the people I worked
(08:22):
with there were very good people,Okay, kind and understanding, and I
appreciate that you just got you gota talking to potentially. I think it
was just kind of like, hey, remember to uh to edit, to
edit your your words there so thatthat doesn't happen, right buck go?
Yeah, And I'm like, yeah, I'm an idiot. Huh. Did
(08:43):
the grocery store people did they havesomething to say about this? I don't
think so. So you didn't hearfrom them, and there wasn't like a
bunch of angry listeners saying, Wow, this guy's really unprofessional. You didn't
hear any of that either. No, that's not that bad. I mean,
it's a hot mic moment, butit's it's not that bad. It
could have been worse. I've heardway worse. It could have been worse.
There's a lot of things Like youand me, we have talks off
(09:03):
the air in this studio. It'snothing because we both have mics and we
know when we're on because the sounddoesn't come out of the monitors, so
it's almost impossible to set ourselves upfor that kind of failure. But when
we're talking, like in one ofthe other studios, I'm very careful about
the conversations that we're having, eventhough that's on the like that's rolling,
you know what I mean? Sure, because live microphone, you just never
(09:26):
know who might be on the otherend of that thing here, and even
if it is just the two guysthat are in that studio when we're recording
stuff, you know what I mean. Yeah, I don't really have a
juicy or salacious one to share,but I think the there was one that
happened in the a former place thatI worked at where there's kind of a
conspiracy theory. I'll tell you thestory now. It's it's kind of a
(09:48):
wild story. I have to explainit, and I need a little bit
more time, so we'll do thatnext year. On news radio eleven ten
kfab Emri sung on news radio eleventen kfab Terry. The email says,
how many of us through Hey duringthe summer. Showed a pick of his
dad and said, it's bringing backa lot of good memories. That's cool.
Uh, not me. Did youever throw Hey? Nah? If
(10:09):
you did, you would have knownwhat Milo was probably right. Yeah,
I've never I I guess I haven't. Yeah. Yeah. One of my
buddies when I was in school wantedto recruit me to detassele and make like
that fifteen hundred dollars over the summerthat you could make by just detasseling,
and that's a lot of money tosomebody who you know, doesn't have any
money. But then he chickened out, and I was just not that interested
(10:31):
in waking up that early to gointo the go into the farm fields and
figure that stuff out. It's goodwork. For those people who uh don't
mind getting a little physical though,good for you. I was going to
tell you about my hot mic moment, and it wasn't mine. It's the
story that was told to me abouta place that I worked out before I
got there. Essentially, what happenedwas there was and there's a conspiracy theory
(10:54):
in this, and I know weall love our conspiracy theories. There's a
producer in a separate room. Soyou know, like how the newsroom is
in a different room than this oneis, or where Lucy sits and does
her traffic in the mornings, it'snot in this room. It's in a
different place. Well, those differentrooms. That's how this place was designed.
The producer is in a different roomthan the hosts are. The producer
(11:18):
has control of the microphones. Butmuch like I hear, I have a
button here that I can turn myown mic on and off. Now,
you turn my mic on and offlike a lot of producers would generally,
I can also turn my mic onand off from where I'm sitting. This
was the same setup in this place, even though those are in a different
room. Right. Well, whathappened is there was apparently this huge rivalry
(11:39):
between two of the hosts, andthey had to intersect each other. One
guy would leave, the other guywould be coming in, and they did
not like each other too much.There were a couple of other bystanders in
the room, and also there wasa producer in the adjacent room that was
in there and could see what washappening. Host number one on the show
(12:00):
ends and he is about to leave, while host number two walks in and
slams a bunch of books onto thetable. At this point, the theory
goes, the mics turn on.Somehow, they are not in live programming,
they are in a commercial break,but the mics now are on,
and over the commercials you can hearabout fifteen f bombs ooh, and a
(12:20):
ton of bad, foul language ofthese two hosts in this room basically yelling
at each other, and one ofthe microphones in this room is picking this
up and broadcasting it live over theair. Yikes. So that obviously the
next morning that entire crew was fired. The hosts who you could hear their
f bombs were both fired, andthe producer was fired. The bystanders were
(12:43):
not, but the producer was alsofired. Fair to the producer. It's
kind of the producer's responsibility to protectagainst stuff like that from happening. But
is it fair to the producer thatthis all happened and they didn't catch that
the microphone was on in their roombecause they're the one who The thought is
the mic gets turned on somehow,right. The conspiracy theory is how did
(13:03):
the mic get turned on? Andthe story was told that a bunch of
books were slammed onto the table bythe second host as he walked into the
room before he started yelling at hostnumber one. Oh. There's also this
theory that maybe ooh, the producerdecided just to flip on the mic to
let this middle school argument go outover the airwaves, which certainly, if
(13:28):
that was the case, you haveto fire the producer got to and he
obviously would have known that he wentdown with the ship on that one.
But there's at the same time,we don't have definitive proof that the producer
did that, right, So that'stough. So do you find But if
I had a hot mic moment andyou were sitting there and you didn't notice
because you were on the phone orsomething, Yeah, and I said the
(13:50):
F bomb and you didn't catch it, I'd probably be toast. We'd both
be toast probably right. Yeah.Oh, he's on the phone right now,
So now now's my chance to sayit. No, I'm not going
to do that. Yeah. No. But that's that's the thing. I
bring this up because in Kansas,it was in Kansas. In Kansas,
there was a hot mic moment atthe halftime of a high school soccer game.
(14:11):
And I don't want to play itbecause there's a lot of bad language
in it, but I want toread through the quote, and the quote
is during halftime of one of thesegames. But before we get to that,
I want to get to Dan,who's on our phone line of four
to two, five, five,eight eleven ten. Dan, you got
a story about a hot Micah,Yes, I do. Thanks for taking
my call. So this probably goesback about fifteen years or so and I'm,
(14:35):
you know, doing an air shiftdown in Lincoln, Nebraska, you
know, just going through the motionsand blah blah blah. I was like
back then, I was what youwould call it an assistant program director,
you know APD. So sure,anyway, some of my responsibilities were uploading
tracks from our station to other stationsout of market. Now, this was
(14:58):
a daily feature. It was itwas classic rock station. So the host
who recorded the track, it waslike a lost classic. Hey, this
is so and so, and we'regoing to do a lost classic from this
band. So what we do?And he did a great job, and
he just screwed up on this oneand he just forgot to edit it.
He was having trouble with the content. So he's like, okay, you
know, basically the track was likeI'm going to give you a bunch of
information, then I'm going to playthe song. So it's like, okay,
(15:22):
he's going through the motions of readingthe content and he screws up and
he stops, and he's getting frustratedreading this copy or well whatever he was
reading. Then he started dropping allthese all of these curse words. Okay.
I mean it went on for abouttwo or three minutes. But I
didn't know anything about it until Ihad sent the track to these various stations
who were getting this feature. Andone of my coworkers calls me from out
(15:46):
of state, and you know,I'm like, wow, why is this
guy calling me? Hopefully he gotthe track. Maybe I need to reload
it or up, you know upyeah, yeah. Yeah. So he
calls and he's like, hey,man, did you hear so and so,
you know the Lost Classic? AndI go, nad, not really,
I hope it was good. Andhe goes, oh, it's funny
as hell, you know, andhe's just going on and on and he
played it for me. I'm like, oh, I go did that go
(16:08):
over the air? And he's likewell yeah, And I go, well,
did anyone call you up about it? He's like, oh no,
man, that's all good. Itwas just funny. It's basically it.
Man. So nobody heard anything aboutthis, Like it went out to all
these stations and nobody like was like, hey, we got to talk to
that guy. He is in trouble. There was no retribution whatsoever. But
(16:30):
I'm going to say, you know, it was a small market station that
was receiving this. I'm sure someonewas listening, sure you know it,
maybe thought nothing of it. Iwould have freaked out an old radio guy,
right, yeah, no, forsure. The FCC probably would have
too if they would have got intothat. Yeah. Oh yeah, yeah,
that's crazy. All right, Dan, appreciate the story, man,
thanks for listening, Thanks for callingin. Yeah, so I'll tell you
(16:53):
the context of why I bring thisup, because there was a pretty bad
one. And I don't know whyguys don't learn their lessons because it happens
to so many people every single year, especially in sports broadcasting for some reason.
But there is a there is astory coming out of the Kansas girls
soccer tournament for high school and man, I tell you what. These guys
(17:18):
are in trouble. These guys arein big trouble. I'll explain that next
on news radio eleven ten kfab Emerysung on news radio eleven ten kfab Hot
Mike. So the mics are hotright now. But a hot mike moment
is when you're sitting and you're talkingand you don't necessarily know that your mic
is hot. That makes sense thatI explained that properly. Yeah, Like
(17:41):
it's a microphone that's on and peopledon't know what's on. And then people,
yeah, they are within range ofthe microphone picking up what they're saying.
Right, Yeah, oh boy,here we go. In Kansas.
They had the girls state soccer tournament. Okay, and they will broadcast this
was third place game of this particularclass, and well, well there was
(18:06):
an announcer who was there to dothe play by play, and this is
what one of the quotes was athalftime of this game. Ah boy,
feel free to interject at any point. And I quote, my mind kind
of flicked the kill me now switchat about thirty minutes in. If they
are just gonna keep kicking the blankball out of bounds and missing passes all
(18:30):
day, I may as well justgo home. I want to do a
header off the top of the pressbox. Unfortunately it's too low. It
wouldn't kill me. It's like theyaren't even trying to pass. They're just
chucking the ball down field. Alittle technique would be nice. What the
blank are they teaching these kids inpractice? It's unbelievable. So then the
(18:53):
PA announcer, who they think thatthis guy's talking to, right, they're
up there in their littleress box andit's got this announcer and the PA guy
next to him, and the PAguy says, you know, bonus of
color in high school soccer though girlssoccer for high school the soccer moms.
(19:15):
The broadcaster expands on that and says, blank, yeah, baby up top,
baby, the one that's facing us. Let's see if she can tear
it the blank off. I can'tsee the lags, but I can feel
the blank from here. So that'sjust a tidbit of this Kansas State tournament,
(19:37):
this third place match between and it'sthe kids, you know, the
kids saying, uh, what wasit? I want to get the team.
So it was McPherson and Rose Hill. Those are the two schools that,
unfortunately are going to be tied tothis this controversy. Well, the
website Awful Announcing basically, he says, reached out to this guy named Toby
(20:03):
Moore. Toby Moore is it lookslike he's in his forties to fifties,
Like he's not a young guy.But he was the guy that was doing
the play by play and he confirmedthat to Awful Announcing and said, yep,
that was me. And he hasdone horse racing stuff. He has
done plenty of Like he's kind ofjust like I would have been generally,
(20:29):
where you know, you just pickup a ton of odd jobs to you
know, fulfill your passion. Forhim, you know, it's still calling
sports. He is substituted as callingraces at different race tracks in the Oklahoma
area, which I think he's fromOklahoma, and he drives up from northern
Oklahoma in the Kansas for some ofthis stuff. They keep bringing him back.
I don't think they're gonna be bringinghim back anymore after this. But
(20:52):
you know, I follow I foundhis Twitter account and most of everything he
posts on Twitter is Immaculate grids.You know the Immaculate Grids. That's the
game that the Baseball Reference dot Comdoes where you it gives you like three
teams and three other teams or stufflike, and you have to guess a
player that fits both of those ohparameters. Okay, he just post like
(21:17):
you know how people post all theirwordles, right, He's one of those
guys, like every single day.I don't know why it's like, and
he only shares it when he getsthem all right, because there are some
days that are missing and I'm guessingthat he just didn't get them all right.
And nobody reacts to this because hehas like barely one hundred followers.
Well now, I'm surprised more peoplehaven't done this. He posted on May
the twenty fourth, which was whatwhat was that Friday? Yeah, it
(21:41):
was Friday, he said, thego bag packed car, gassed up,
and homework done. I'm headed toWichita to call the Kansas State Girls soccer
tournament for the NFAHS network. Lookingforward to seeing and he lists a few
teams that I'm guessing he had someconnection to, and one person has only
commented on this, and it's thefour and a half minute clip that is
(22:03):
going around of him on the hotmic. Yikes. But nobody else is
trolling this guy because I'm guessing justnobody cares. But this guy's career,
as far as I mean, it'sover. It's over now. He's never
going to get another broadcasting job underany there No one will hire him for
anything, under no circumstance, fairor unfair. I would say that's pretty
(22:25):
fair. You can't be doing thisnow. NFHS is a national organization essentially
that helps broadcast this. They providekind of the networking and the they provide
the infrastructure if you will, toallow live video broadcasting of high school events,
(22:48):
and you could be a member ofthem. And and I you know,
in Iowa when we my when Iwas working for a small term radio
station, we kind of got intothat video business and stuff, and it
was kind of fun to kind oflearn about it. But as I learned
about it. I learned about itan FHS, which kind of was like
a more organized version of the stuffthat we were trying to do as a
startup. And they have not commentedon this. They are saying, hey,
(23:11):
look, we just do what wedo. And I like, it's
not our fault that the announcer thatwas employed by a different group, a
local group in Kansas, who hiredthis guy to broadcast this that has nothing
to do with us. They arenot commenting on it. The local group
is a different name, and thatis Play on Sports. But it's been
(23:37):
taken down from a couple of differentspots after it was uploaded. A couple
of different spots got rid of itbecause it was claimed as copyright by Play
on Sports that says that's infringing upon their copyright. Now, this obviously
isn't to protect the broadcaster. Ithink it literally is just like, hey,
we don't want people backdoor streaming thegames that we are making people pay
(23:59):
five bucks or so to watch onthe online streaming, which is the way
a lot of that high school stuffis. I don't know if that's how
it's done here in Nebraska. Iknow in Iowa, for the boys State
Tournament. At least you have topay a small fee to have access to
watch all of the boys State Tournamentgames. But either way, that's why
that's getting taken down and it's harderto find. But people are still imprinting
(24:19):
it and throwing that four and ahalf minute clip of him just going off
about this stuff and talking about thesoccer moms and everything, and they've thrown
that on the social media and youcan find it. So Toby Moore,
who is the broadcaster says, hasreached back out to Awful Announcing, the
website that posted this, and said, I would like to apologize to Rose
(24:41):
Hill and McPherson schools, players,coaches, families and communities for my remarks
on Saturday. They were tasteless,stupid, and inexcusable. Those comments did
not reflect the tremendous season and hardwork both sides had during the year.
Thank you to KSHSAA is the governingbody of Kansas High Schools and in FAHS,
(25:04):
which is of course the people thatput together the streaming for allowing me
the privilege to call games on theirnetwork. I sincerely and deeply apologize for
my tasteless and hurt four remarks andasked forgiveness from those who are hurt by
my words. So what do youthink is his apologies enough? Oh?
I got to rate the apology?Well, is the apology enough to be
(25:25):
like? Okay, maybe he didn'tmean and he was just joshing around with
the guy I wanted more tears,more groveling. Well he'd at least he
didn't say this isn't who I am, which is what everybody says. Now
he's like his teeth once. Idon't think so this is all I mean
apology. He emailed this, sothere's certainly no way he certainly thought about
this for a long time. Iwant a camera. I want a dark
room and a spotlight on the face, sobbing tears rolling down the cheeks.
(25:48):
I mean, full on YouTube anystar apology. But if he did that,
would you still think okay, wellhe can still broadcast games now or
are you still like, no,not good enough? F minus minus.
I think that F minus minus forsure. But I now, if this
is somebody who gets an F.This guy gets an F. Can I
give him an F? Give anF? I got to give him an
F. Tell me more, youget an F? Congratulations, you you
(26:12):
officially made it in Nebraska radio.We'll keep talking about this. You can
call in four h two five fiveeight eleven ten and we'll get to the
lines next on news radio eleven tenKFAB and Marie Song on news Radio eleven
ten KFAB. Paul is on thephone line of four h two five five
(26:32):
eight eleven ten. Paul, whatdo you think about this? I've got
a question. Yeah, who's incharge? Who's imponsible when like network TV
doesn't use or they didn't even havelike a ten second delay on a live
interview. Yeah, Indianapples five hundredthe other day. Yeah, get an
interview and the guy that ran secondfor the second year in a row,
he was visibly upset, I meanvisibly upset. And if you ask him
(26:56):
again and again, well how doyou really feel? He goes, well,
it was that's hard, you know, but you could you could you
could hear it. Oh yeah,okay, And the guy just kept going
to say, well how hard wasyou know? Yeah so somebody yeah so
so yeah, no, it isthey are on a little bit of a
(27:19):
delay, like you can hear like, uh, if you ever watch like
a w w E show, sometimesthe crowd or the wrestlers or something will
say something that like or chant somethingthat is inappropriate, and you can hear
the audio kind of drop out ofit. If you watch like an NBA
game where there's a lot of micsnext to yeah, yeah, you can.
You can hear the players, youknow, maybe start yelling at each
(27:41):
other or something, and then allof a sudden, the commentary and everything
drops out for a half second.So they have ways to do that.
I'm just not sure what the penaltyis if they don't catch it like that,
you know what I mean. Ihave no idea, but I'm sure
it's the uh, the network andthe director of the broadcast that would be
at the end of the day responsiblefor that. I thought it was great.
It's entertaining, that's for sure.Appreciate the call, Paul, Thanks
(28:02):
for listening to USA. Brad's onthe phone line four h two five five
eight eleven ten. Hello Brad,what's up? Hey, guys. I'm
just sitting there on deck listening toyour program. I'm thinking, you know,
yeah, there's besides the radio stationowners and that they're probably getting pretty
you know, uptight about it,but you know, other people are probably
concerned about it, or the soccermoms that are sitting out there thinking,
(28:23):
oh my gosh, is he talkingabout me? Sure they're gonna be arguing
with each other and being like,hey, you know what, that's a
compliment, and you know what complimentsare compliments. I wouldn't mind if somebody
googled me. But you know,I think it's a little bit different maybe
for a mother of somebody who's youknow, out there in the sands watching
their kids. Of course, ofcourse, and you know there's one of
(28:44):
our quick comment, you know,regardless of these honor off the air,
you know, when you start,the morals are just disappearing around here.
Yeah, I mean to start talkingabout any individual out there in the crowd,
you know, well in just theway he's talking about these high school
kids who are just trying to playsoccer and just insulting this quality of the
soccer they're playing, you know whatI mean, it's just kind of like
(29:06):
right, like come on, man, like what did you expect them to
be Premier league out here playing soccer? I mean, what are we talking
about here? They're high school girls, Like, let them play the sport.
Quit quit condemning them. For notbeing as good as you want them
to be. But you're right,I mean like it. Obviously he just
wanted to talk smack about him insteadof, you know, being productive talking
(29:26):
to the guy next to him.They just wanted to trash the whole thing.
Appreciate the call, though, Brad, thanks for listening. Joy's on
the line, Hello, Joy,what's up right? Well, okay,
I just heard what you had said, and I may have thought misunderstood something
here. Did he make He madederogatory remarks about another or somebody in the
(29:47):
field. Is that correct? Yeah? So, so it was somebody in
the stands. They were googling andsaying, Wow, she's hot. Basically,
they were saying a lot worse stuff, but that was essentially the point.
Yeah, okay, that's what Ithought. That's what I thought.
So, you know, says she'shot. Okay, that's that's fine,
that's that would be kind of acompliment, you know, But to use
(30:07):
the derogatory language, it doesn't matter. I know, sometimes you know women
and men that women get together withtheir groups and they they talk back and
saying with the guys. But whenyou're at a game or you're somewhere,
especially if you have a microphone infront of it, I have no idea.
Yeah, you know, check doublecheck that that microphone is off.
(30:30):
Well, you know, I said, I would not have been complimented with
the language that he use. Sure. You know, if if someone said,
oh, he was talking about you, I'd say, well, why
would I want anything to do withhim, because you know, you know
(30:51):
what's on his mind. That's that'sno for sure. Yeah, Joy,
I appreciate it. That's a that'sa good point. Thanks for calling in.
I'm off fight. Yeah. Imean, let's be honest here,
a lot of guys in this industrythey're just tummy with the good old boys,
you know what I mean. AndI'm not trying to say every broadcaster
is like that, but it's notsurprising to me that you and another guy
(31:12):
are up there in that press boxand they just start going back and forth
about you know, some stuff thatthey're seeing. They're not even thinking about
the microphone. They're just trying tobe cool with each other, you know
what I mean. This is whothey are. It's kind of guys that
they are, and they were justunfortunate that a microphone caught them talking all
this smack about the girls' high schoolsoccer teams they were watching, and also
(31:34):
Google and these soccer mops. Idon't know, it's pretty weird to me.
We'll see what happens next to oldToby Moore, though not a good
look. Four o'clock our next newsradio eleven to in kfab