Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Back here on Ryan Schuling Live. Happy to have you along.
Speaker 2 (00:02):
So much to get to in this second hour, and
you can text us throughout the program throughout this hour
at five seven, seven, three nine. Now, as you know,
we love to have comedians on this program. I was
previously mentioning before the break, Tim Dylon Shane Gillis, you
know we're looking for family friendly comedy and that really
is at the top of the line. With our next guest,
(00:25):
Henri Chell, he joins us here and I know you
take pride in the fact, Henry that you are from Tennessee.
Speaker 1 (00:31):
You are Asian in appearance, but you have that draw,
you have that act.
Speaker 2 (00:34):
Said, where could he tell us about your upbringing, your
background and exactly what makes you unique?
Speaker 3 (00:40):
Well, thanks Ravan, thanks for having me on. Yeah, I
am when my parents immigrated from Seoul about seventy three
years ago. I was born in Knoxville, Tennessee. And you know,
back then I was the only Asian kid around. And
I actually credit my buddy's parents for never treating us
like were like the family. We were just to choose
(01:01):
and I was just gay and we weren't the Krean family.
I went to the Korean kid I'll never get. In
high school, we went to the beach on a trip
and some girls were asking my buddies to go, who's
that Asian guy. My buddies go, like, what Asian guy?
They go that guy right there? They go, He's Korean,
but he ain't that kind of thing. So I was
(01:21):
just one of the guys. You know.
Speaker 2 (01:24):
Absolutely now your entry into comedy, you and I have
spoken about this before. In fact, you were in Denver
about a year ago, almost to the day when we
last had this conversation. But for those listeners that are
just catching up, that are getting their first kind of
listen in to you, what took you down the road
of comedy and what appealed to you about it as.
Speaker 1 (01:43):
A career, Well, I tell you you know, I never.
Speaker 3 (01:46):
Went to comedy clubs. I never hung out or anything
like that. I was just watching guys on TV, and
so I thought I'd try it, and I signed up
for a competition and Knots Full Funny Bone Comedy nineteen
eighty six. I went up on a Monday night and
me and my college roommates wrote my set on the
(02:07):
way there, and lo and behold, I won, and they
hired me I started working on Wednesday, and then I
dropped out of college on Friday, and that was over
thirty nine years ago.
Speaker 2 (02:17):
Henrichell our guest. He is coming to the Paramount Theater.
And as I looked this up online, if you're trying
to get tickets, you can there, but they're selling fast.
There's like a flame emoji right next to his name
for Paramount Theater. That's this Friday, June sixth, eight pm
start time. And I'm telling you what, Henry, you're picking
them up and putting them down because the very next
night you're going to the factory in Chesterfield, Missouri.
Speaker 1 (02:38):
Take us through this travel schedule of years.
Speaker 3 (02:41):
Yeah, it's pretty crazy. You know. Well, I'm an empty nester.
It's the empty Nest tour. So you know, for about
fifteen twenty years, I stayed within a two hour flat.
I'm from home because I had my.
Speaker 1 (02:52):
Kids, I had ball games, I had.
Speaker 3 (02:53):
All kinds of stuff I wanted to be around. And
so I'm finally just letting loose again. So my youngest,
my daughter went to school last fall. So I've been
coast to coast this then. I mean I was in
Boise in Portland last weekend. I'm doing Denver and Saint
Louis this weekend, and next weekend I'm in Boston and
New Haven and DC. So I'm going coast to coast
(03:17):
and I'm loving it. It's fun, it's all new material.
I'm having such a great time just fleshing everything out,
and you know, it's what I do, and I'm finally
getting to do it like full throttle, like I haven't
been able to do in years. So it's been a lot.
It's been a great time.
Speaker 2 (03:33):
We're gonna be giving away not just one, but two
pairs of tickets today. I'll be giving away another on Wednesday,
and still you had another on Thursday, and it's all
happening Friday, So stay tuned for your chance to win
there and you can win by text at five seven seven,
three nine as soon as we're done with our conversation here,
Henry show and again he's coming to the Paramount Theater.
And what I like about that venue, Henry, is it's
(03:55):
old school. It's a throwback. It's always to me like
a journey back in time when I go there. I
was just there for a music concert and for you
doing comedy.
Speaker 1 (04:05):
What about the venue?
Speaker 2 (04:07):
It doesn't have to be this one. But any particular
venue stands out to you. What makes you decide on
a venue and what's important to you.
Speaker 3 (04:15):
You know, size is one thing, and how it's laid out.
It's just not pure numbers. You know, I'm old school.
I'm not saying I could sell out an arena, but
you know, it's the way my act is. I just
if I had thousands and thousands of people, I just
feel like I was reading a book, because I'm not
one just to tell jokes. You know, I interact. I
(04:36):
do a Q and A. I've done a Q and
A in my show for thirty five years. I still
do that. And you know, this year's been really great because,
like I said, it's new material. So you know, the
first forty five minutes or so is all this new stuff,
and then I do my Q and A. And I've
been taking requests at the end just to do jokes
that people wanted to hear that I wasn't planning on doing.
(04:58):
And I mean I've had requests from jokes that did
like in the eighties, and then I've had them, you know,
early nineties. The jokes I have to really think about
to remember how to do and stuff people have seen
on the internet that they've never seen live, that kind
of stuff. So it's been a lot of fun. And
the size and the acoustics are what's most important to me.
Speaker 1 (05:20):
Henry cho joining us here.
Speaker 2 (05:22):
He's performing at the Paramount in Denver this Friday night,
and again you all have a chance to win tickets
two pairs today, but if you're not successful today, the
giving them away for the balance of the week as well.
To be an eight pm start time there now, Henry,
I remember I watched the documentary Comedian with Jerry Seinfeld,
one of the greats of the craft, and he scrapped
all of his old material from the nineties and he
(05:45):
wanted to start anew and he went back to that process.
You kind of touched on it a little bit about
how you construct jokes and what makes them yours. What
is it about this routine? You talk about going back
on tour all new material, But how do you do that?
How do you just kind of go, you know what,
I don't want to just play the greatest hits. I
want to come out with a new album. And where
(06:05):
does that take you creatively?
Speaker 3 (06:08):
Yeah? You know it's crazy. So I've known Jerry for years,
and he was like one of my great mentors, still
good friend, and I worked with him the first six
months I ever did stand up, so I've known him forever.
And Jerry was a sit down writer. He would unplug
his phone back in the day when we had phones,
and you actually had to unplug him from ten am
(06:28):
to noon, and then he'd come to lunch and probably
meet us half the time, and you know, we'd all
hang out and run jokes by each other till about
two pm. Then he'd go back and ride from two
to four. I'm a different kind of writer. I think
of stuff all the time, and I jot it down.
Of course, now I just text myself so it's in
my phone and then I put it in my notebook
(06:51):
and I kind of ride backwards. Norm MacDonald and I
both did this, and he and I talked about it
for years, because if I get if I got a punchline,
I okay, this is the funny part. Then I kind
of work backwards, Okay, how do I get there? And
then I create that part of it. Sometimes it's just
(07:13):
the way the story happened, and I'm just kind of
pushing it out how it went down. In real life.
Other times something just happened and I got to create
a way how to get there in my point of
view and in my voice. So that's how I write.
And I mean, you just got to sit down and
do it. I mean, I'll never get so this year
at my tour starting in Jacksonville in the January, and
(07:37):
one of my openers, I have a handful of openers
I tour with. Nathan Wallace's coming with me this weekend.
He's from Fort Myers, Florida, great comedian. And these guys
tour with me, you know, they'll do you know, ten
twenty shows a year with me. And the guy had
in Jacksonville. He hadn't seen me since probably October, and
(07:57):
I told him I was doing a bunch of new stuff,
and you know, I opened up with a brand new
forty five and he was like, going up, how do
you do that? How do you just go out and
do that? I go, well, that's how what I used
to do. You know, I can finally write like I
used to. I'm not in the middle of my brain
session and one of my kids comes in because you know,
(08:18):
they need a band aid or something and throws everything
off or or I gotta go pick a kid up
at school, or there's soccer practice or whatever. So now
I'm back. I feel like I'm back to being a
full time comedian and a part time dad.
Speaker 2 (08:32):
Hen Rachel empty Nester on the tour coming here to
Paramount Theater. That'll be Friday, June sixth, and it starts
at eight pm here in the Mountain time zone. Henry
great stuff is always always enjoyed catching up with you.
Best of luck on the tour and have a great
time Friday night right here in Denver.
Speaker 3 (08:50):
Hey, Ryan, thanks for having me on. And hopefully next
time I've come in early a few days and I'll
come in and say hey and shake your hand and
we'll do it live in person. I appreciate you.
Speaker 2 (08:59):
Yeah, do it live like Bill O'Reilly used to say.
We would love to have that happen. So Henry, Yeah,
next time you're in town, let's mark it down.
Speaker 3 (09:07):
You got it.
Speaker 2 (09:07):
Appreciate ll all right, Henry Chail right there. He does
a clean style of humor. It's family friendly, it's fantastic,
it's great. Could not recommend it more. This guy's a legend.
He talks about going back to the eighties, the names
that he mentioned, influences that he had, and that leads
us to our question for the first two correct answers,
And Kelly's going to be keeping tabs. You want to
text it at five seven seven three nine, And that
(09:29):
is Henry described his process of writing jokes and that
he likes to write them backwards from the punchline and
then work his way back from there. What other comedian
And I'll give you a hint. He's one of my
all time favorites, and that might give it away. What
other comedian did he say he conferred with and did
things the same way in constructing his jokes. Give us
(09:52):
that answer five seven seven three nine. First two correct
answers will receive a pair of tickets. This is a
great venue for it, folks, Paramount Theater Friday night, eight pm.
Be sure that you can go and text that to
Kelly right now five seven seven three nine of the
Great Henry Show.
Speaker 1 (10:07):
And I really look forward to meeting him in person.
Speaker 2 (10:10):
Well, I have been reliably informed that Comrade Kyle has
posted about my conversation with Danielle Jirinsky, which occurred earlier
this morning when I was filling in on the Ross
Kamenski show.
Speaker 1 (10:21):
I'm not sure what.
Speaker 2 (10:22):
He posted, and maybe some of you can find that out,
but here is a portion of that conversation, and we
start with commentary from the aforementioned Kyle Clark.
Speaker 4 (10:32):
Responding to speech with violence is cowardly and it's un American.
The terror attack on the Jewish community in.
Speaker 1 (10:40):
Boulder was both firebombing old.
Speaker 4 (10:44):
Ladies was also an act of anti Semitic hate, one
of the oldest forms of hate.
Speaker 1 (10:48):
In human history.
Speaker 4 (10:49):
After this, many centuries of it, there's no excuse not
to identify it and call it by name. The latest
target was a group including a lot of older folks,
who came together each week to remember the hostages held
by hamas a peaceful gathering to draw.
Speaker 1 (11:04):
The community's attention.
Speaker 4 (11:05):
They weren't protesting, they weren't picketing, but even if they were,
they would not have been deserving of violence in response
to their words.
Speaker 1 (11:14):
That's not how.
Speaker 4 (11:14):
America is supposed to work. It's one of the things
that makes this country a beacon attracting people from less
free places, and for those who come here from the
world over, that's a non negotiable. You don't get to
come to America and meet speech you don't like.
Speaker 2 (11:29):
With violence, Kyle Clark nine News, but he's making my
point for me in the following way. He says, responding
to speech with violence is cowardly and it's un American.
He's absolutely right. I agree. We haven't accord. Will it continue.
I'll check in just a moment. However, the individual who
perpetrated this terror act was un American, was not an American,
(11:52):
was here illegally over state of visa Egyptian national, had
not conformed to our culture, to our society, had not
been come an American citizen, did not assimilate to our
belief system, to our constitution, to what makes this nation great.
Speaker 1 (12:08):
And Kyle hit on part of it there, but.
Speaker 2 (12:10):
He doesn't connect the dots like I just did. Those
who would come here illegally, they don't all intend us harm,
but they are undermining the laws of our country, the
immigration laws of our country. Let's see if Kyle can
keep it together and if he and I can remain
on the same page.
Speaker 1 (12:29):
I have my doubts.
Speaker 4 (12:30):
Following the attack and Boulder, we've heard calls for a
crackdown on speech that criticizes the government of Israel, suggesting
that's somehow an automatic precursor to hate and violence. No,
that's also cowardly and un American. Instead, the worst moments
(12:50):
should invite us to respond with the best of this country,
a place where speech should be protected and political violence
should not be tolerated.
Speaker 1 (13:02):
You had me and then you lost me.
Speaker 2 (13:03):
Yeah, Sinatra group, Phil Hartman classic sketch.
Speaker 1 (13:06):
Go look it up, SNL.
Speaker 2 (13:08):
That's a straw man argument, literal fallacy of the straw man. Meaning,
all these people out there they're trying to do is
criticize the government of Israel. That's not what is happening.
And Kyle Clark knows it, or he should know it. Boycott, divest,
sanction Israel is designed to choke Israel out of existence
(13:30):
from the river to the sea, eradicate Israel from the map.
Free Palestine. That has become code. That is what this
terrorist was yelling before throwing molotov cocktails at Holocaust survivors.
That does not mean literally what it says, not anymore.
And we're seeing it play out. The assassinations of the
(13:51):
couple in Washington, DC because they were Jewish, not because
they represented Israel.
Speaker 1 (13:56):
Because they were Jewish. Say it. Kyle was saying it, and.
Speaker 2 (14:00):
Then he veered off course, and he diverged from the plan,
and this Texter points out, since you're about to have
Danielle Jirinsky on, Kyle Clark made it a point to
report her reaction on both Next and the ten PM News.
Although he's technically correct that Democrats did not legalize murder
and rape as she claimed, he completely failed to acknowledge
the indirect effects of progressive and Democrat policies that Danielle
(14:24):
was pointing out as being first over being Jewish. A
post from Kyle Onex saying, quote leading Colorado Republicans are
blaming Democrats for the anti Semitic terror attack in Boulder,
Aurora City Councilwoman Danielle Jirinsky says Governor Jared Poulis and
other state leaders are not really Jewish and belonged to
a quote demonic cult hashtag COO politics. So he joins
(14:46):
us now in her own words, daniel Jerinsky, Aurora City
Council Ryan Schuling with you, Danielle, thank.
Speaker 1 (14:51):
You for your time.
Speaker 5 (14:53):
Thanks Brian, thanks for having me.
Speaker 2 (14:54):
Your response to this post from Kyle Clark about you
saying that Jared Polis and others leaders are not really
Jewish and they belong to a demonic cult.
Speaker 6 (15:04):
Well, so what else do you call it?
Speaker 5 (15:07):
The Democratic Party has been eaten alive by socialists, by
Karl Marx followers, by folks who call for intifada, for
folks that call from the river to the sea, from
folks that call for genocide. I don't care how they
(15:28):
word it. From the river to the sea means what
where do Jews go?
Speaker 6 (15:35):
Then? Where do they go? You go back in history?
Speaker 5 (15:40):
How many places have we as Jews been kicked off,
kicked out of our own lands? My family from the
Ukraine kicked off their land and in nineteen seventeen lost everything.
Just told you have no home, you have no land,
you have no animals, leave leaves.
Speaker 6 (16:03):
So they go to Poland.
Speaker 5 (16:04):
They go to Poland thinking they're going to be safe there,
and they go to Loads, Poland, which becomes the Load's
ghetto during the Holocaust, So they have to flee there
where where?
Speaker 6 (16:19):
What does it mean?
Speaker 5 (16:21):
What does it mean? It means that the Democratic Party
no longer exists. It's been eaten alive by demonic worshiping
socialist Marxists who want gen aside.
Speaker 6 (16:41):
And I don't see moderate.
Speaker 5 (16:42):
Democrats necessarily standing up to them.
Speaker 6 (16:46):
I see some who have tried.
Speaker 5 (16:50):
But then there are those like Kyle Clark who want
to paint themselves as a moderate.
Speaker 6 (16:56):
Who who who egged this on?
Speaker 5 (16:58):
Oh con want to attack people like me. But you
don't see him attacking Elizabeth Epps regularly, Kim Hernandez regularly
when they're in office. You don't see him outraged by
these protests calling for literal genocide. And let me tell
(17:23):
you something.
Speaker 6 (17:24):
Lets they have made murder legal.
Speaker 5 (17:29):
Caitlynn Weaver, twenty four years old, beautiful young woman with
her whole life ahead of.
Speaker 6 (17:36):
Her, driving home from work in Aurora.
Speaker 5 (17:41):
In broad daylight, was murdered by a fifteen year old
illegal illegal.
Speaker 6 (17:51):
A fifteen year old illegal, let's start? Where do I
start with?
Speaker 5 (17:56):
How many crimes were committed? He's ten years old, he
has no driver's license, he has no insurance. Who brow
how he got the car? Mom says she didn't know
he had the car. Who knows what the heck the
real story is.
Speaker 6 (18:12):
With all of that, I have no idea but to
start there.
Speaker 5 (18:19):
Then he has young children. I'm guessing younger siblings in
the vehicle with him. He's doing ninety in a forty
five ninety he hit Caitlin Weaver, an American citizen. He
hit her so hard she was dead instantly, instantly. And
(18:48):
what was his punishment by the new DA in the
eighteenth Judicial District, Liberal Amy Patton.
Speaker 6 (18:56):
What was his punishment? Three years probation?
Speaker 5 (19:00):
What does that say? The typical democratic motto, we're monitoring
the situation.
Speaker 6 (19:09):
So yes, you have made murder legal. And Kyle Clark,
when I spoke up about the sex trafficking, horrors, the rape,
the extortion, the beatings, the stabbings.
Speaker 5 (19:25):
Everything going on in the apartment complexes in Aurora, where.
Speaker 6 (19:31):
Were you, Kyle? You've never once invited me on your show.
You turned a blind eye to this day.
Speaker 5 (19:38):
You call me a hysterical Oh she went on a tirade.
Oh more unfounded claims. So yes, you have you have
made these crimes legal.
Speaker 6 (19:53):
Yes you have.
Speaker 2 (19:55):
That's Danielle Jorinsky, just a portion on my conversation with her,
making headlines and apparently drawing a response from the aforementioned
Kyle Clark. We'll take this time out when we come back.
Elizabeth Mitchell of The Daily Signal has written an article
her latest Education Department to launch Title nine investigations to
Mark Law's anniversary. One of these twin investigations launched focused
(20:18):
right here in Colorado. I'll give you one guess as
to which school system. Here's a hint. The initials are
jeff Co Public Schools. She joined us after this on
Ryan Shuling Live. Now coming up on Thursday. I'm looking
right at my calendar. I've got another sit down, my
second consultation with Andy Justice from Trajan Wealth. I'll be
(20:39):
bringing Kelsey in in the conversation setting up long term
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kind of cobble together a plan and take us into
that direction for financial security and peace of mind. If
you'd like to do the same that first consultation, it
(21:01):
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four zero five thirty three hundred to get it set up.
Speaker 1 (21:06):
That's seven to.
Speaker 2 (21:06):
Two zero four zero five thirty three hundred. You can
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fiduciary advice, committed to working collaboratively with you and what
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fit all. Every person's situation is unique, your tolerance level
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Speaker 1 (21:37):
They're going to give you a path.
Speaker 2 (21:38):
They're going to give you the keys that you need
to drive this into the sunset. And that's what I'm
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Find them there their website Trajanwealth dot com. That's Trajanwealth
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Speaker 1 (22:03):
Back here on Ryan Schuling Live.
Speaker 2 (22:05):
So thankful to have you along and to be joined
by our next guest, who you can follow on x
at the Eliz Mitchell. Elizabeth shares the name of my
youngest sister, Elizabeth Troutman Mitchell. She's a White House correspondent
for Daily Signal, proud Hillsdale alum back in my home
state of Michigan, and her latest for the Daily Signal
hitting home right here in our state of Colorado entitled
(22:28):
Education Department to launch Title nine investigations. To mark Law's anniversary,
she joined us on Ryan Schuling Live.
Speaker 1 (22:34):
Elizabeth, Welcome, Thanks so much for having me.
Speaker 2 (22:37):
Now, these two investigations are right here in the Mountain West.
Speaker 1 (22:41):
One is to our north in Wyoming.
Speaker 2 (22:44):
The other involves a very controversial school system, as has
come to bear through the work of jeffco Kids first
and my good friend Lindsay Dadco. And that is with
regard to a field trip. I'll let you take it
from there. People in our audience may be familiar with it,
but Elizabeth, but the story as you see it, and
why the White House the Department of Education decided to
(23:04):
launch an investigation into it.
Speaker 6 (23:07):
Thanks so much.
Speaker 3 (23:07):
Yeah.
Speaker 7 (23:08):
So, there was a field trip in which Jefferson County
Public schools allowed a boy to room with little girls,
and of course parents were outraged. This sparked a huge
coalition of parents fighting to protect their girls from this
type of.
Speaker 2 (23:23):
Abuse and the young biological boy that you're talking about here.
This is kind of a muddled area and it's been
exacerbated by our recent bill passed thirteen twelve into law
with the signature of Governor Jared Polis, and he tried
to write this off like, well, you got to respect
people in the workplace. But this has so many implications
(23:43):
when it comes to schools, when it comes to other
public places, and whether or not we must affirm a
young person's gender, play along or suffer the consequences. And
in this instance, you mentioned this field trip, this young man,
I mean, this was an intact male, biological individual was
going to share a bed with a biological female. I'm
(24:04):
trying to wrap my head around that, Elizabeth and figure
out how that's okay.
Speaker 6 (24:08):
It's a big deal.
Speaker 7 (24:09):
Any amount of this happening to young girls is too
many times. The fact that these girls were violated in
this way is horrific, and it's great to see Trump
administration taking action after four years the administration which didn't care.
Speaker 2 (24:21):
Elizabeth Troutman Mitchell our guests and again the Eliz Mitchell
is where you can find her as well as her
article the Daily Signal involving this Jeffco Public schools scandal.
Speaker 1 (24:31):
It's just one of many too.
Speaker 2 (24:32):
Not sure how much you've dug beneath the surface on
this particular school district, Elizabeth, but I'm here to tell
you this is just part of a pattern, a widespread,
far ranging pattern in the Jeffco Public schools of trying
to undermine the authority of parents, that it would include
this incident and empower those who would otherwise come between
(24:54):
parents and their children. And in this instance, it really
does put the safety, the well being, i would say,
the mental health and the psychology of a young girl
at risk to know that unless she plays this game
by affirming her classmate's gender, even though, like I said,
it needs to be said, this is an intact male
(25:14):
that in and of itself is a threat to a
young girl. She should not be forced to be put
through this. So I'm glad to see it get to
the front of the queue, the front of the docket
for the Secretary of Education in a department that I
know that President Trump would like to shut down. But
what does it say to you that in the quest
to protect Title nine, to protect girls and women sports
(25:34):
and spaces, that this is one of the very first
cases getting attention from the Trump administration.
Speaker 6 (25:41):
I think that's exactly.
Speaker 5 (25:42):
What we need to see.
Speaker 7 (25:43):
And I think it's really cool that we've had years
of celebrating pride, months in June celebrating the spreading the
sort of LGBT ideology to children. And now we finally
have a switch that instead of celebrating, you know, rooming
these the lgabatiadiology. Instead in June, we're going to be
celebrating Tail nine, the law which created equal rights for women,
(26:07):
equal spaces, equal sports.
Speaker 2 (26:09):
Let me ask you a very basic question. This is
defined in the movie by Matt Walsh. What is a woman?
To you, Elizabeth? What is a woman?
Speaker 7 (26:19):
I think that it is alarming how many people cannot
define what a woman is. But it's just a female,
as someone who has you know, xy chromosomes. It's really
an easy question to answer, despite how many Democrats have
treated it over the years.
Speaker 2 (26:33):
Well, I like your point about this month of June
being common deared. And here's the thing, you know, I
am very good friends with several members of the log
Cabin Republicans.
Speaker 1 (26:41):
Here in Colorado.
Speaker 2 (26:42):
There are gay conservatives who are absolutely militantly against this
adoctrination of kids, this transing of the kids, cutting off
their body parts, pumping them full with hormones and drugs,
and they need to be recognized. Rich Guggenheim being chief
among those Valdemar Archiletta being another. And I know that
they feel we've gotten to a point in our society
and this is a good thing that we don't need
(27:03):
to celebrate an entire month for a person's sexuality. That
go ahead, live your life, enjoy it, knock yourselves out.
But by bringing this back into the public focus, we
see sports teams having pride nights over and over again,
and I just think this is now it's a bridge
too far because of what it has led to. And
unfortunately for those in the gay community, it has been
(27:25):
hijacked in a lot of ways by this trans the
kids movement that they want no part of, and so
now they face the dilemma of how do we divorce
ourselves from that mindset and how do we communicate that
message to people that would lump us in with this
trans ideology, which again they are not a part of.
Speaker 6 (27:42):
Absolutely.
Speaker 7 (27:43):
I think Rachrum and him is doing excellent work in
Colorado on protecting kids.
Speaker 6 (27:48):
And what really.
Speaker 5 (27:49):
Matters here is not what adults are doing.
Speaker 7 (27:51):
What matters is that.
Speaker 1 (27:53):
This type of thing, type of.
Speaker 7 (27:54):
Ideology, ideology, is not being pushed on kids at an
age where they're not going to understand it, and it's
just going to wait to confusion.
Speaker 2 (28:02):
Linda McMahon will be heading up this investigation for the
Department of Education. And again, one of these two cases
that is getting top line news is in Wyoming and
the other right here in the Jeffco Public Schools in
our state of Colorado. Elizabeth Troutman Mitchell. You can follow
her on x at the Eliz E. L I Z
Mitchell joining us here the White House correspondent for the
(28:24):
Daily Signal, where you can find that article I just mentioned. Elizabeth,
thank you for your time. We appreciate it and appreciate
the work that you do.
Speaker 6 (28:31):
Thanks.
Speaker 7 (28:31):
It's great to talk today.
Speaker 2 (28:32):
All right, Elizabeth Trout Mitchell. So nice they named her
thrice Your reaction to anything you just heard, man, We're
coming at you in waves here, fast and furious five, seven, seven,
three nine. Kelly's sorting through the winners for Henry Chow
on Friday, and don't fret if you didn't win this
time around, there'll be plenty more chances throughout the rest
of this week. My buddy Murph over in sales Wh's
(28:53):
hooked me up with five, count them, five pairs of
tickets for Friday Nights Paramount Theater appearance by Henry Chow
comedian and that'll be an eight pm show, So we'll
announce those winners when we come back. Sheriff Steve Reims
just walked into the studio. He's filling in for Dan
Kaplis rounding out with your text after this on Ryan
Shuling Live. Yes, the show must go on, and it's
(29:17):
coming on with Sheriff Steve Reams Weld County, who made
the news in the Kawa newsroom yesterday by opening the program.
I was listening on an airplane coming in on Delta
from Detroit to Denver his exclusive interview with Tom Holman.
Timely as it was in the wake of the terror
attack in Boulder. Your tax five seven seven three nine.
We'll get to the sheriff in just a moment. How
(29:38):
about this love, I think Sheriff Steve Riams and Da
George Brockler need their own shows.
Speaker 1 (29:43):
I like them both.
Speaker 2 (29:44):
Thank you and Dan so much for having both fill
in for both of you. I got to tell you,
Steve Raams, let's bring him in. What about a show
with the two of you together, Reems and Brockler.
Speaker 8 (29:55):
You know we we actually discussed that off the air.
We were talking about doing that on a fill in
day one day and just seeing how that would work.
Speaker 1 (30:05):
How does George feel about that?
Speaker 8 (30:06):
It was his idea, which makes it a really bad.
Speaker 1 (30:09):
And then you immediately suspect that there's something going on there.
It's not right. Yeah, something's off.
Speaker 8 (30:13):
So he and I have done a lot of stuff together.
Speaker 2 (30:16):
He he.
Speaker 8 (30:18):
Moderated a few debates where I was the timekeeper, and
so we had some interactions there. I mean, we've we've
crossed paths so many times it's not even funny. So
we have a we have a brotherly love, kind of
like step brotherly love. I guess for one another.
Speaker 1 (30:31):
Do we just become best friends?
Speaker 8 (30:33):
We might have.
Speaker 1 (30:33):
Yeah, you can do.
Speaker 8 (30:36):
We're gonna have so much room for activities.
Speaker 2 (30:39):
They're gonna build bunk beds. That would be a show.
I would watch a reality show where George Brockler DA
on the twenty third and retiring sheriff Steve Reims from
Wild County. Well, they've been thrown in together and they've
got to live in the same apartment.
Speaker 1 (30:53):
How would that go?
Speaker 8 (30:54):
Sheriff hang him up in a closet somewhere.
Speaker 1 (30:57):
By us underwear, Big Weggie, atomic Weggie.
Speaker 8 (30:59):
Absolutely Wow.
Speaker 2 (31:01):
Speaking of which, Kelly, you want to give an atomic
wedgie to the listeners that won, but they didn't give
us their names?
Speaker 1 (31:08):
Yeah, what happened there? What he talk to me? I
don't know. First of all, let's case of stupidity.
Speaker 2 (31:17):
Wow, listeners views expressed by Kelly cou charity not necessarily
reflect those of six point thirty k O, iHeart Denver
or yours truly?
Speaker 5 (31:24):
Well, you indicated that we would need their names in
order for them to go.
Speaker 1 (31:29):
It's kind of part of the process.
Speaker 2 (31:30):
So we got some phone numbers here that I'm not
going to read out loud because that would be rude.
I'm not going to do that, but the correct answer
we got two of them. The comedian who also wrote
his jokes backwards, and I'm sorry I have to talk
about him in the past tense because he has passed
along with Henry Cho And these are the tickets that
you're going to win.
Speaker 1 (31:48):
You're going to see him at Paramount Theater Friday, eight pm.
Speaker 2 (31:51):
Norm MacDonald would start with the punchline and then work
back from there all of his oj jokes. You remember
him doing Weekend Update on Saturday.
Speaker 1 (32:02):
Live right here.
Speaker 8 (32:02):
Oh, he was the best. He was my favorite all
time in that position.
Speaker 1 (32:06):
Me too, he was nobody was like him.
Speaker 8 (32:09):
He was the best.
Speaker 1 (32:10):
He careful, that's my lucky Sabin hat.
Speaker 2 (32:13):
You know, there were so many I want to just
run a compilation of those from over the nineties.
Speaker 1 (32:19):
He really marked the time in that trial.
Speaker 2 (32:21):
I mean, it was insane that trial being televised, right, Sheriff.
Speaker 8 (32:24):
That was one of the big, the big ones that
was first on TV and that was Saturday Night. I
have gold for Norm MacDonald and a lot of other skits.
Speaker 2 (32:32):
Actually, could you imagine having been on that police force
working that case?
Speaker 8 (32:36):
No, because it was botched. You know, there was there
were so many things that were done wrong and it
was brought to light. I mean, you know, things happen
on cases, you know, things get messed up. But everything
that they did, like they stepped in it. And yeah,
and then you had to Mark Ferman debacle that and
you know, now he's made a name for himself again.
(32:57):
So who knows? I mean I guess, I guess you
can be a screw up and still end up somewhere.
Speaker 1 (33:01):
Well, hey, Sheriff, did oj kill those people?
Speaker 8 (33:04):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (33:07):
Who do you gotta come ou up on the show.
Speaker 8 (33:08):
And there's no controversy there. He wrote a book about
it for christ if I did it, yeah, it should
have been when I did it exactly. We've got Congressman
Gabe Evans and Congresswoman Lauren Bobert, which will both be
on the show today, one in the first hour one
and the second to talk a little bit about the
(33:29):
one Big Beautiful Bill, but also to get their reactions about,
you know, the goings on in Boulder and kind of
the information we're learning since since all that stuff has
kind of come to light, and you know, with every
news break it seems like we get more information. So
we're gonna get there, get both of their reactions and
just cover a lot of turf today.
Speaker 1 (33:49):
Cover a lot of turf.
Speaker 2 (33:49):
And I gotta tell you, between yourself and yours, truly,
we've gotten three of the four members of Congress from
this state on. You will have had representatives Gabe Evans,
Lauren Bolbert. I had Jeff Crank on. You can catch
that in the podcast if you missed it. So that
means we've got to track down Jeff Hurd in the
third and get him on this program or are you
back again tomorrow?
Speaker 1 (34:08):
Let's just have Reams week.
Speaker 8 (34:10):
No, I'm out tomorrow and.
Speaker 2 (34:11):
We're gonna miss you.
Speaker 1 (34:13):
You'll be fine, stay it bye.
Speaker 2 (34:14):
You got two hours of Sheriff Steve Reams coming up next.
There we got one of the names of our winners,
Brian Saunier. I think I'm saying that it has a
French accent.