Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Everything celebrity sauce has or entertainment apart what you got
for us.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
I know we've been talking about this all week, well
honestly for weeks now. The defense team of Sean Ditty
Combs will counter the federal prosecutor's closing argument. So Diddy's
mom and his kids are expected to be attending again today.
They were there yesterday and basically the assistant US Attorney,
Christie Slavic, spent more than five hours yesterday summarizing the
case against Ditty. So they asked the jury to convict
(00:24):
him on counts of sex trafficking, transportation to engage in prostitution,
and rocketeering. Like again we talked about yesterday, but they said, quote,
he thought that his fame, wealth and power put him
above the law. That stops. Now it's time to find
the defendant guilty unquote. So Christy basically emphasized that every
freak off may not meet the definition of sex trafficking,
but it takes just one to find him guilty. She
(00:45):
reminded them that witness testimony prude forced labor and that
that satisfies rocketeering. So I'm not going to go down
everything because it's it's you can google it. It's just
I can't. It's disgusting anyway. But in some happy news,
Jesse Jay has shared great news with our fans. She's
cancer free. We talked about yesterday how she said that
it's gonna be her last show for a bit because
you know, she's getting surgery, she's starting chemo. But basically
(01:08):
there's a positive health update that comes to her very
early breast cancer diagnosis. Is that again, Like I said,
she's cans free. But she posts yesterday on Instagram and
she did give her fans insight too into like the
pros of and cons facing this new stage of her life,
and she said that she could watch Love Island with
no guilt and that she could connect with people who
are going through something similar, which is nice. But of
course the cons include not knowing if the cancer's all gone,
and don't like the pain discomfort which I can't imagine
(01:30):
where it's like we're praying for her and all that stuff.
But she's cancer free.
Speaker 1 (01:33):
That's awesome.
Speaker 2 (01:34):
And what's not awesome the new Golden Bachelor. So we
love the Golden bacherette Joan La. She's from here, She's
from here. Front of the show the first Golden Bachelor
Jerry Gary. I know his name is felt weird, but
this guy, I don't know if we're gonna like him.
He's sixty six years old. His name is mel Owens.
His age doesn't really qualify him to be a jerk,
but he's a lawyer form a linebacker for the Los
(01:55):
Angeles Rams. Sounds sick, but he has this interview and
it's like, just you know, before you go on TV,
maybe like I don't go through something to like make
you not sound like a jerk. He said. Quote I
told the producers forty five to sixty just being honest.
If they're over sixty, I'm cutting them. This is not
the Silver Bachelor. This is a Golden Bachelor. They got
to be fit because I stay in shape of workout stuff.
Speaker 1 (02:14):
You're sixty six, Yeah, are you talking about?
Speaker 2 (02:16):
And I told them to try and stay away from
like artificial hips and wigs and stuff.
Speaker 1 (02:21):
Okay, yeah, yeah I did. I mean you could just
not say that and just pick you just like not
tell you like how you feel.
Speaker 2 (02:28):
So Owen's actually tip like technically did not have a
stay and who the producers picked. But he did say
in the same interview. Quote they're going to be hot,
don't worry about it.
Speaker 1 (02:37):
Unquote.
Speaker 2 (02:38):
So like, if you don't know what the ick is,
you probably have it now. So congrats, welcome to my life.
I feel like for something to watch this weekend, there's
not a ton of TV, but we got the twenty
twenty five and HL NHL Draft on ESPN, The Royal
Housewives with Atlanta on Bravos, Squid Game season three's out
today on Netflix, and then it is the series premiere
of Smoke on Apple TV. Plus it's an arson investigator
trying to catch a serial arsonist.
Speaker 1 (02:58):
Thanks, you're welcome. If we need something to listen to,
especially if you're traveling this weekend for the fourth bring
us with Get the podcast, Just Search intern Johnny Morning Show,
wherever you listen to podcasts. Sauce had sent this to me.
We've been pretty open us about how bad dating apps
are and how recently they've gotten far worse. Yeah, Bumble
laid off thirty percent of its workforce ye this past.
Speaker 2 (03:20):
Week week to two hundred and fifty people.
Speaker 1 (03:22):
Crazy, So the layoffs come the companytion I cut costs
the CEO who also co founded Tender. So really yeah,
she's love that backing that money. Yes, I think she
did Tinder. And then she's like, okay, I want to
make one that's the women talk first, and that's why
she should Bumble. I think that was like her first.
Speaker 2 (03:39):
So was Tene the only one of them all that's
not owned by the match I believe.
Speaker 1 (03:43):
So okay, yeah, and so she said the reality is
we need to take decisive action to restructure the company
into that dating apps are at an inflection point.
Speaker 2 (03:51):
Okay, I was gonna say she said an inflection point.
I was like, really, because all these ice keep coming
out that they're like busy than ever because everybody thinks
for a sessions coming and people still want love. But
Bumble's one of the most expensive subscription apps for dating.
Speaker 1 (04:03):
It's the worst.
Speaker 2 (04:04):
It's like more expensive than Hinge. And I used to
complain about Hinge. Then Bumble's like, hey, if you want
to have a week, It's like, I don't remember exc
I delete my Bumble. But I think for a month
it's like seventy bucks or sixty bucks, which.
Speaker 1 (04:15):
Is crazy, and you think, well, why would you pay
for it? Well, if you don't pay, he only gets
certain of my swipes per day and then they'll hide
the people like you, which is like that's the weirdest
part of the whole thing. It's like, well, you're saying
that you're here to help people find people, but then
you're hiding who likes them.
Speaker 2 (04:29):
Well, Hene is the same thing. It's like the app
meant to be deleted and then it's like hey, like
and like both Bumble and Hinge are the same thing. Like,
like you said, they put people behind these like paywalls,
and it's like, so it's a game.
Speaker 1 (04:39):
Yeah, I understand because it's like, if I made the app,
do I want Sauce to stand the app longer or
find her person right away delete the app? I wanted
to stay longer. So maybe if I find somebody it's
ten out of ten mash for her that match with there,
I'll hide that dude in the back and I'll give
her like the six out of ten first. So she
has some days, but it's not like the one that's
(05:01):
I mean, I guess it's a.
Speaker 3 (05:02):
Business, right, Yeah, that doesn't make sense to me, as
like I'm thinking, like, if it were a successful app,
you would be telling your friends, Oh yeah, definitely go
on on Bumble or hinder or whatever where this it
sounds like it's just burning everybody out and everyone's saying
get off, like don't go on apps.
Speaker 2 (05:17):
It's yeah, so a lot of my friends don't use
dating apps anymore, Like a lot of them just like
have them, but they don't have the subscriptions anymore because
but also we think it's like this area.
Speaker 1 (05:27):
Yeah, and the west part of the problem too, So
they say that Bumble. When it first went public in
twenty twenty one, its value is that seven point seven
billion dollars. Okay, now it's about five hundred and thirty
eight million, Like that's a huge shop up.
Speaker 2 (05:42):
Also, think about how much it's changed since then, because
before it was like so basic and fine and you
can meet people. But then it turned into like this
like subscription based service, which you know they all did whatever,
but now like there's so many different things to add
and it's become almost like a a I almost said
about word sorry, a part time job to like fill
out your to fill out my Bubble profile. When I
(06:02):
re downloaded it in January, for the three weeks I
had it, it took me an hour.
Speaker 1 (06:07):
Yeah, and now it's weird too. I always thought bumble
is funny because the idea was women were tired hearing
guys say sup, and so we're gonna women the power
to talk first. Yeah. And then they had like a
sales call meeting like my yoga about how much anxiety
people get making the first move. I'm like, well, yeah,
there it is, and now I'm bumble you can set
up so I'm actually sends the first message for you. Yeah,
just like auto dating almost.
Speaker 2 (06:27):
But also they have like the prompts that people can
reply to. And what I found when I had it
for that three weeks is that guys would like it
or something or sound like an emoji to like start
the conversation. And I put that in quotations with my
hands as if you can see that. But they didn't
do anything that's fair. They'd basically like like the prompt
but not say anything. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (06:49):
I mean we we well the average dude. I think
it's like it needs a thousand swipes for the gimatge.
Speaker 2 (06:56):
I don't believe that. I had this whole talk my
best friend yesterday about this. I was like, for me
the proof, I don't believe it.
Speaker 1 (07:01):
I mean, I'll try to find it, but I think
for most dude, just like, yeah, if you send a message,
you're supposed to get better matches, But if you sent
a hundred messages and gotten one response, Like I've stopped
sending messages because like it's not worth.
Speaker 2 (07:12):
It, you guys will not like it. It's like that
out I think everyone should go read your data Nomics.
It did come out in like twenty ten, so it's
a little outdated. But data Nomics explains how dating is,
like not now now, so maybe like they should update it.
But dating, like it's basically about how evolutions change, how
(07:32):
women are and men are not keeping up with it.
Speaker 1 (07:35):
Are we ever though, and where we ever keeping up
with it?
Speaker 3 (07:37):
But like they're like.
Speaker 2 (07:38):
Trying it, like not all of us. I'm not going
to speak for everybody, and I'm just not just talking
about women because like some men do too. But I
feel like we're all taking care of ourselves and trying
to better ourselves and we're like leveling up, and then
guys are not keeping up with that trend.
Speaker 1 (07:49):
That's a whole nother show. I feel like that, Well
you sorry, as I usually do. I love your thoughts
that three three eighth to text. Let me hit this
next for your Friday, is your boss toxic? Give me
just under three minutes, Intern
Speaker 2 (08:02):
John in your morning show True at iHeartRadio.