Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Monday's headlines had a way of hitting Candace.
Speaker 2 (00:02):
It was absolutely a gut punch.
Speaker 3 (00:04):
Where it matters most. Her family there.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
The reason I get up in the morning. I just
want them to be safe and to be happy, and
that's it.
Speaker 1 (00:12):
Candace is a Colorado and now calling New Zealand home.
She moved her family there in July in fear that
her transgender daughter would lose access to gender froming care
in the States. Last week, New Zealand's health minister made
those fears a reality, claiming there isn't enough evidence showing
the risk and benefits of that kind of care, so
the country would stop new puberty blocker prescriptions for transgender
(00:33):
miners like Candace's daughters.
Speaker 2 (00:35):
We had done so much research, and we did not
settle on this country lightly, so it really did take
us by surprise. We just uprooted our entire lives to
end up right back in the exact same situation we were
in four months ago when wet.
Speaker 1 (00:49):
The policy doesn't take effect until mid December, giving Candace
time to see if her daughter wants and is eligible
for puberty blockers, but medication or not. She says this
news came with some thing she didn't think they would
get back in the state's little hope.
Speaker 2 (01:03):
The rhetoric and the negativity.
Speaker 3 (01:07):
Is not here like it is in other places.
Speaker 2 (01:09):
Initially, I was like, we're here again. Did we just
blow up everything for nothing? But then you know, the
next day I saw her performing with her Hakka group
and I was just like, no, there were other reasons
why we came here, and this is a massive roadblock.
Speaker 4 (01:24):
But it's just a roadblock.
Speaker 1 (01:25):
That's what Candace will hold on to because for her,
headlines are nothing when family is everything.
Speaker 2 (01:31):
During the move, we kept saying it's the four of
us against the world, and it still is.
Speaker 1 (01:36):
Candace Hose. With an election year coming up, new leadership
will reverse the change. The new policy will take effect
December nineteenth. It won't affect miners already on puberty bockers,
so if Candace's daughter starts treatment before then, she can continue,
So they do have some time to get her started
on it if she's eligible for it.
Speaker 2 (01:54):
And I've been following the family for a while.
Speaker 5 (01:56):
They didn't seem discouraged, But how do you think they're
doing and just dealing with every thing right now?
Speaker 3 (02:00):
Their uncertainty.
Speaker 1 (02:01):
Of course, yeah, they're heartbroken over it. This was something
they were obviously trying to avoid. They did a lot
of research before choosing news dealers. They thought they were
avoiding this altogether, right, So now they're trying to pivot
and trying to figure out a solution before they even
tell their daughter. They haven't even told her their daughter yet,
simply because they want to make sure they have the
right answers for her.
Speaker 4 (02:22):
What are their concerns about their daughter's reaction?
Speaker 3 (02:24):
Did they talk to about that about her body?
Speaker 6 (02:26):
No.
Speaker 1 (02:26):
I spoke to their daughter back in July, and she
carried alive actually emotions over the move. She knew why
their family was moving because of her, so she felt
responsible right for them. So I think they want to
do everything they can to know for her to know
that it's okay and that everything's going to be fine,
and that they will find a solution.
Speaker 5 (02:45):
Here. Tremendous amount of compassion and empathy for a young
person going through this, So I always want that to
be the baseline starting point. That was Jalisa Izari Zari
on nine News. But this is foolishness, This is fantasy.
This is something that as I've done more research about it,
(03:06):
which Apparently this mother has not. She researched where to
go to continue this barbaric Frankenstein like treatment for her daughter,
and I use treatment in quotes. I am fresh off
of an event up in Fort Collins in which doctor
James Lindsay spoke eloquently powerfully along with Evan de la Cruz,
(03:29):
who has since detransitioned back to being a biological female
despite having all of her innerds ripped out. Double mastectomy
for healthy breasts, health problems that may arise and will
likely arise later in life because of these barbaric procedures
(03:50):
for people who do not need them, and in fact
they do far more harm than good. There is no reasonable, rational,
sound science that supports this pseudo science of Transhausen by proxy.
It does not exist. And when a country like New Zealand,
which has been one of the most leftist progressive liberal nations,
(04:14):
when it comes to this issue, for them to dial
it back should be a warning sign, should be a clue.
But this parent is pot committed on a bad idea
and it's the daughter who suffers. Joining us now and
Ryan schuling Lyie my good friend Leland Conway. You can
(04:35):
find him on six hundred Cogo in San Diego, part
of Conway and Larson, and he's filling in for Joe
PAGs tonight.
Speaker 3 (04:43):
Leland, Welcome to the program, dude. It's good to talk
to you. That is wow.
Speaker 5 (04:50):
You know, at some point in history, we're going to
look back on these days and it's going to be
like the lobotomies, yeah, in the early part of the
nineteen hundred, in the blood letting yea, and people are
going to be like, I cannot believe we did that.
But this one's going to be worse, Ryan, because instead
of instead of the way it's been done in the past,
(05:13):
we're going to look back on this and realize that
parents did this to their children, you know, And I
agree with you a lot of compassion and empathy for
the person the child going through this, and I honestly
don't care what adults choose to do with their own bodies.
But if this woman did research, she apparently did not
discover the fact that the puberty blockers that we use
(05:35):
are the same drugs that we use to sterilize, used
to use in some cases still do sterilized pedophiles. It's
designed to destroy your reproductive ability and all of this
because I mean, oh my god, like you can't get
a tattoo until you're eighteen because it will permanently alter
(05:59):
your body. And we'll let kids do this. And of
course it's common sens is reigning today. I mean, Great
Britain and other countries are finally coming to their senses
us here. I'm just devastated for that child's unbelievable. There
are three statewide ballot initiatives that Jennifer Say Aaron Lee
at this last event, I was describing Christian Toto and
(06:21):
I attended an xx X Y Athletics event where Jennifer
Say is bullish on this issue. Make sure that you
sign those petitions, each and every one of them, all
three of them if you live in the state of Colorado.
Speaker 3 (06:32):
So that's my sales pitch for the moment. Leland. You
and I as youngsters, we're about the same age.
Speaker 5 (06:38):
We had a lot of bad ideas when we were
kids about things we wanted to do, things we thought
we knew, things we thought we wanted and wanted to do,
and our parents talked us down off the ledge. Much
like the movie Step Brothers where the father talks about
Will Ferrell and John c Riley's character is saying, you know,
when I was a kid, I thought I was a
dinosaur and nobody checked me out. In my day had
(07:00):
finally set me straight, And it's like, but that's where
we are right now. I mean a great comparison medically
to lobotomies and that antiquated science which this will become.
Mark that there is no doubt about it in my mind.
But what you said about parents not only enabling this
but buying into the mythology of it at the expense
(07:20):
of their children, I cannot understand that reason why, Because
every fiber of my being, although I'm not a father yet,
wants to protect kids from harm from experimental mengala like
surgeries like this one. How can parents be so blind
to it? Yeah, yeah, it blows my mind. And and
(07:41):
it's almost a cliche to say that, but honestly, one
of the problems here for me because it's going to
be even worse when people wake up. And I don't
know if these people ever will, these parents, but if
they do, it's going to be a very sad day
for them because they're going to realize ultimately that they
were used as pawns. Because I think we have to
understand that this movement that is trying to mutilate the
(08:04):
genitals of children is part of a bigger movement that
is trying to move us an inch ust towards Marxism.
And Marxism comes about by confusing people about what is
a true, real right and wrong, and what is objective truth.
It has to remove things like the nuclear family. It
has to remove things like objective truth. It has to
(08:27):
remove things like right and wrong in general, in order
to replace the god with the state, and so a
lot of this woke stuff that's been on college campuses.
The people that are operating this are not stupid. They
know exactly what they're doing. The people that are the
everyday foot soldiers of it, like these parents, are the
ones that have fallen for this larger play that is
(08:48):
a long time, long term play that's been in place
for the last say generation, and it's coming to fruition now.
And what happens when people wake up and they realize,
not only did I do this to my child, but
I didn't even do this to my child for a
reason that would have actually been supportive of the child.
Speaker 3 (09:06):
I did it for the.
Speaker 5 (09:07):
Reason that some jackwagon wrong political movement wanted me to
do it, and I was a pawn in their hands,
and I destroyed my child's life for that reason. And again,
I don't care what an adult does with their body,
with their life. I am perfectly willing and ready to
accept anybody who makes that decision as long as they're
(09:27):
not violating.
Speaker 3 (09:28):
Other people's rights.
Speaker 5 (09:29):
Right, as long as you're not violating other people's rights
and entering other people's space and claiming it as your own.
But if you just want to live that way as
an adult, more power to you. And we should love
and accept and have sympathy for all of that. But
I don't have much sympathy for parents, no, who have
bought into this and are destroying their children's lives. Because
we also know a lot of times they throw this
(09:50):
number or statistic at us that there's a high level
of suicide rates among transgender people, and that's true, but
a lot of it is.
Speaker 3 (09:59):
The result of these not the other way around.
Speaker 5 (10:02):
That suicide rate goes up after these kinds of surgeries
because people began to realize I can never undo this,
and it's not what I thought it was gonna be
Leland Conway, he is the co host of six hundred
News Radio six hundred co goes Conway and Larsen that
airs right after the Dan Kaplis Show evenings. He's doing
like nine hours of radio today. He's a maniac and
(10:23):
he's filling in for Joe Pegs and Night of course
formerly in this time slot on six point thirty K
how Leland got this text you have? I don't know
what this is. It's a troll, but I want you
to respond to it because we have fun with these things,
and I know that you enjoy it. Ryan, do you
have the trader on again? Being right there right being
(10:43):
that he wants to play for Team California Bogo. This
has gotta be a friend of yours. This gotta be Bogo.
I said a co go buy one, get one, but
you gotta do it. Conway and Lawrence, did you buy one?
You get the other? Continuing, I'm surprised that he's speaking
against men and women's sports. I would have thought he
would have joined a women's team by now, Leland, what.
Speaker 3 (11:08):
I consider me? Consider me a missionary to California. You
look at it that way?
Speaker 5 (11:12):
Right?
Speaker 3 (11:14):
Fair enough?
Speaker 5 (11:15):
Hey, I've made my Twitter is at Gavin Newsom's hair right,
and I have had that forever, long before I ever
became a host on Cogo. So basically it was time
for me to put my money where my mouth was
and go straight and speak truth to power.
Speaker 3 (11:29):
So there you go.
Speaker 5 (11:30):
Have you had Have you had a direct interaction with
Governor Gavin Newsom?
Speaker 3 (11:34):
Yet?
Speaker 5 (11:34):
Not yet, but I want to really bad Yeah money
for that, Yeah, I really want to, not yet. And
you know what's funny is there's some actually really crazy
people there, but there's also some really cool people there,
and there's some really common sense people in San Diego's
kind of kind of like a little bit of island,
you know. I mean, it's definitely left right, it's definitely
left center, but as compared to the rest of the state,
(11:57):
there's a little there's something holding back some of the
nut jobbery that goes on anywhere north of San Diego.
So it's kind of funny to have an opportunity to
sit in that position and watch what's coming.
Speaker 3 (12:09):
And so consider me your canary and the coal mine,
and I'll let you know what's coming your way. So
love it. Leland Conway joining us here.
Speaker 5 (12:16):
He'll be filling in for Joe Paggs at the top
of the hour live.
Speaker 3 (12:19):
That's why we have him on right now.
Speaker 5 (12:20):
So this is kind of like his pregame mode, his
preparatory and you can hear him between six and nine
pm right here on six point thirty K House. So, Leland,
what's coming up tonight on your edition of Joe Peck's
Fun Show. Mutual friend of ours, Scott Jennings is going
to join us. Yeah, we're going to talk about his book,
A Revolution of Common Sense. And the cool thing about
(12:43):
this discussion that I think people will like is we
get kind of to the because he's gotten really close
to President Trump and was recently in the Oval Office
with him, and he tells a funny story about that
and how the book came about, but also gives us
a little insight into the human being that is the
President of the United States right now that the media
does want you to know that he's actually a human being.
So we'll get into that with Scott Jennings. Also, we've
(13:07):
got Congressman David Schwikert from Arizona. The reason we're having
him on is yesterday or Sunday rather President Trump announced
what was supposed to come out yesterday and hasn't yet
a new plan from the Republicans on dealing with the
Obamacare debacle, and David Schwiker was right in the mix,
right in the middle of the discussions on that, and
he's got kind of an interesting take on whether or
(13:28):
not this is a good idea or not. So I'll
let people listen to find out what he thinks about that.
But yeah, we'll have that, and we're going to get
into snap benefits and all that kind of stuff, which
is a lot of fun Leland. Another cause that's near
and dear to your heart and mine is that of
our veterans, those who have served and who are now home,
and how they are treated or not treated. And one
(13:51):
person who stood out in this latest kerfuffle over the
last week which involved Representative Jason Crowe and others the
Seditious Sick, the Seditious six with the video trying to
inculcate our enlisted men and women, our troops in the
field to make individual, case by case a la carte
(14:11):
decisions on.
Speaker 3 (14:12):
Orders they've been given. I don't like disorder. I like
this order.
Speaker 5 (14:14):
This one's legal, This was not illegal, this one follows
the Constitution.
Speaker 3 (14:17):
I'm not sure. Maybe no, no, no, creating this confusion deliberately.
Speaker 5 (14:20):
And you know a guy that you and I both like, respect, admire,
and have worked with in the past, Chris Boyer, formerly
of the Honor Bell Foundation, still an advocate for veterans.
I'm not sure if you saw it, Leland, but there
was a Facebook post and he was heated about Jason
Crow in particular, and he's going to be joining me
tomorrow to offer his response. But just your sense of
(14:43):
a guy that should know better an Army ranger veteran.
We respect his service, representative Crow, but everything else since
then is fair game for criticism, and certainly this video
backfired in a big way.
Speaker 3 (14:56):
Yeah, this is one of those.
Speaker 5 (14:57):
Little land minds that the Democrats planted and then stepped on,
and Jason Crow is particularly disappointing in this, along with
Mark Kelly, the Senator from Arizona. I was on kf
YI in Phoenix the last two mornings and this was
a huge story because today the update, of course, was
that Mark Kelly's being investigated by the Department of War.
I fully expect Jason Crow will be getting one of
(15:18):
those letters pretty soon too. And he's the one that
probably disappointed me the most because of his history as
an army ranger, and you know he's he's actually a
Bronze Star winner. You know, he served two tours in combat,
so he should know better than this. And the thing
that concerns me the most about what they did is
number one, they knew what they were doing and it
was part of a syop and they're being used as
(15:38):
pawns by the CIA or they're they're okay with it,
and Jesse Waters on Fox News confirmed that yesterday, by
the way. But number two, this is going to put
soldiers in danger. And during the Biden administration there was
a really active effort. And by the way, it's interesting nobody,
none of these guys Jason Crow didn't seem to be
too worried when Biden gave an unconstitutional order to force
(16:00):
soldiers in Colorado in nationwide to take a vaccine which
was bringing harm to them.
Speaker 3 (16:07):
But in the Biden administration there was a real effort.
Speaker 5 (16:09):
They fired all those soldiers that took that wouldn't take
the vaccine. There was an effort to push those kinds
of soldiers out and bring in people, especially in the
brass that are woke.
Speaker 3 (16:18):
And I think this was two things.
Speaker 5 (16:19):
This video was both a dog whistle to those woke
members of the military brass for something that may be
coming up in the future, something that they're planning in
the next year.
Speaker 3 (16:28):
Very concerned about that.
Speaker 5 (16:29):
I don't mean to sound like a tenfold hot wear,
but I really believe that's what's going on. I think
this is more than this video is part of a
larger thing. And number two, it will so doubt and
division amongst not only Americans, but also soldiers themselves. And
you do not question chain of command, and there's already
checks and balances in place in the military. It's with
the Joint chiefs of Staff is for that's what the
(16:52):
brass is for, to question those things. And they're trying
to create this picture for their talking points that somehow
Trump is sitting in the White House planning to what
are a bombing attack on Portland because people there don't
like him, and that's just it.
Speaker 3 (17:04):
It's utterly insane.
Speaker 5 (17:05):
They know what they're doing and they should be ashamed
of themselves, and there are going to be consequences from
a legal standpoint, And I hope there are final minute
of play with Leland Conway joining us before he takes
the mic for Joe Peggs tonight, and some texts rolling
in for our good friend Leland. Is Leland's hair pink?
Yet that's one. Here's another. Tell Leland he has two
(17:28):
years to convert California red.
Speaker 3 (17:30):
Well, that's a pretty good timeline. I'll take it. I'll
take a challenge.
Speaker 5 (17:34):
Diego sucks, Leland, come home bogo lol. And then finally
this one, I miss Leland in the Denver market. I
will be listening to PAGs tonight. So there you go, Leland.
That's awesome.
Speaker 3 (17:46):
I love it. My hair's not pink, it's blue.
Speaker 5 (17:49):
And I have four nose rings now, no, no, I
traded in my camouflage. Oh goodness, gracious, you'll be happy
to know I'm still packing and I'll never tell the
government how many guns.
Speaker 4 (18:02):
I have.
Speaker 3 (18:03):
There you go, it was a voting accident. We all know.
That's it for Leland.
Speaker 5 (18:07):
You can hear more coming up at six o'clock. He's
filling in it for Joe Paggs. Leland Conway, we love you.
We'll talk to you again. To brother all right, Leland Conway,
right there your reaction five seven seven three nine. And
when we come back, my good friend Courtney Odell Sweet
Seas Designs, last minute, creative, affordable, tasty, awesome Thanksgiving side
ideas you want to stick and stay right here to
(18:30):
Ryan Schuling Live.
Speaker 3 (18:37):
Carrie. I know we're going full weird.
Speaker 5 (18:38):
Al there a song about Thanksgiving food and eating and
stretchy pants. And I'm not suggesting that our next guest
needs those, No, I am not, but her recipes will
make you need them on this Thanksgiving Day coming up
on Thursday, less than forty eight hours away and from
Sweet Seas Designs, my good friend Courtney Odell joins the
(19:01):
program here on Ryan Shuling Live.
Speaker 3 (19:02):
Courtney, welcome back. It's been way too long.
Speaker 4 (19:05):
It has been too long, and actually I do have
stretch a pans, I thought.
Speaker 1 (19:13):
So.
Speaker 4 (19:15):
Wait to make me regret not picking a song I did.
Speaker 5 (19:19):
That's the thing behind the scenes, folks, here we go.
I asked, Corney, you know what song would you like
to come onto the show with. She's like, I don't know. Well,
you're not gonna like a surprise, but you're gonna have
to go with what I choose. And that was it,
Carrie Underwood. But it's thematic, Courtney. We're gonna stick with
this right now. And I actually got inspired by you.
I wanted you to know this, so I went to
(19:40):
your website in preparation for this conversation, and I always,
in fact, well all your dishares, but in particular your
seafood ones, and I clicked on that going you know what,
this is outside the box.
Speaker 3 (19:50):
I'm kind of feeling frisky. Let me do this.
Speaker 5 (19:53):
And while I'll be traveling for Thanksgiving, I am donating
my famed crabcorn to a local Thanksgiving gathering. And I
was working late until the night like one of Santa's elves.
Speaker 3 (20:07):
Finally got it ready and it's up to peak form.
Speaker 5 (20:10):
Now on your seafood list here, is there any that
you feel works best on Thanksgiving or at all on Thanksgiving?
Because you don't really see a lot of that generally speaking.
Speaker 4 (20:21):
So I actually love brown sugar and butter glazed scallops.
I rat them with bacon amazing. They're perfect as an appetizer.
But also a lot of my readers love lobster tail
on Thanksgiving. I don't know if it's just their festive
time to get together as family. It's a really popular
(20:41):
dish on Thanksgiving, which blows my mind. Not not something
I usually make on Thanksgiving. But it is really easy
to make bobster tail. So I don't know if people
are just dressing it up.
Speaker 3 (20:52):
A little bit. Are you kind of church you up?
You class up the joint.
Speaker 5 (20:55):
You got a lobster tail here and there, maybe for
a smaller gathering. Heck, you're going hog wild with a
big one.
Speaker 3 (21:00):
Good for you.
Speaker 5 (21:00):
I means you've had a very good twenty twenty five
Sweet Seasdesigns dot com. That's where you can go sweet
Csdesigns dot com for Courtney Odell. Now, I ran this
one by you and gave you advanced notice because Petty
Patty came out of the woodwork with this one. She goes, Ryan,
looking forward to your culinary interview.
Speaker 3 (21:19):
That's you, Courtney. I wonder if either.
Speaker 5 (21:21):
Of you have had cranberry snowball that social media has
made very popular. My great niece made some for us,
very unique and tasty.
Speaker 3 (21:30):
Courtney, what have you found so?
Speaker 4 (21:33):
I haven't actually heard of it being called cranberry snowballs?
I have had them before. They are delicious. They're super
easy to make. You take fresh cranberries and you soak
them overnight in prosecco. Some people do orange juice or
other juices. You need it to be liquid. Actually I
had it with egg whites. It's slinky candy cranberries. Then
(21:57):
after that you're gonna direct and all of the liquid
and toss them and powdered sugar. You toss it so
much as they're coated and look like little snowballs. Then
you spread it out onto a baking dish and chill
it for like twelve hours. When you go to eat them,
they have a really, really satisfying krispy crunch and it's
(22:18):
sweet and part It's just a really easy, simple, fun
party trick.
Speaker 5 (22:22):
She's everywhere sweet seas, easy recipes and foody travel. That's
what you'll find at the website, all kinds of great
ideas here. And again, if you're in a pinch right now,
you're trying to think of ideas, it might be kind
of stalled out, like, well what do I do outside
of the traditional Well, this is a good way to
augment what you're already doing. And Courtney, I want to
go back to basics originally here because everybody got their
(22:43):
own method if they've got it down to a science.
I know there was a time my dad liked the
deep frying of the turkeys and the peanut oil and
the cyran, the juices and the flavor. But cooking it traditionally,
how would you go about this? Maybe it depends a
little bit on turkey size, but everybody's always concerned, you know.
It's it takes longer for the dark meat to cook,
So I don't want to have the turkey breast be dry,
(23:05):
and that's the worst. Then it turns into like Christmas vacation.
You don't want that. So how and what is your
method for cooking a turkey? Evenly?
Speaker 4 (23:16):
I have too go through methods. So first I like
to spatchcock a turkey. That means you basically take out
part of the center bones of the turkey and you
cook it flat. You don't have that large cavity that
you have to work around, so everything cooks really easily.
You don't have the sime eat tucked underneath. It is
all laying out flat, so it cooks at the exact
(23:38):
same time. Love doing a spatchcock turkey, but if you
want a traditional turkey shape, I cook it in a
brown paper bag. When you cook it in a brown
paper bag, it actually kind of steams the turkey as
well as roasting it. You have that hot air circling
around the turkey. It comes out so perfect, tender and juicy.
(23:59):
There's just no other way to make it for me.
If you're making a whole.
Speaker 5 (24:02):
Turkey brown paper bag method. Now, I've got other things
that I use. A brown paper bag for hiding the
liquor late at night on the Thanksgiving night. But I've
never heard of that before. Now my immediate thought goes to, well,
fire hazard. But you put that in a regular convection
of and you're fine.
Speaker 4 (24:18):
You're fine. There are actual roasting bags that you can
get a King Super, not just the Now I've done
the King Super bag. You probably shouldn't because it stuffly
dies in it. That being said, I've done it. It works,
but they do sell. Like the parchment roasting bags. It's
(24:39):
the perfect way to make a turkey and make sure
that it doesn't thry out.
Speaker 5 (24:43):
Okay, now, Courtney, and she's there, gonna Courtney O'Dell. Last
minute Thanksgiving Day ideas. You still got time, get some
shopping in, do it smart, do it quickly. The stuffing
idea is just I've just scrolled down a little bit.
Either one of these sounds amazing. Polish killed bossa stuffing
pepper stuffing. That's an interesting twist those two.
Speaker 4 (25:04):
There's also a new stuffing recipe I have on my
site is a sausage and pretzel roll stuffing. I love stuffing.
Stuffing makes me so happy. I could have just a
meal of stuffing. So we're going to have a couple
different kinds. We're actually at my parents' house now and
planning out what we're doing. And I'm definitely going to
(25:24):
do the pretzel roll stuffing again because that was a
knockout with my kids. But the Polish cobossa stuffing has
a really great hearty flavor, have tons of hair away
in there, there's some sour crowd in there. And then
the Italian pepperoni stuffing tastes a lot like Old Chicago's
Italian MACHOs. You have pepperccini peppers, there's sent dried tomatoes.
(25:49):
It's so so flavorful, and I made it with socaca
that you just cube.
Speaker 3 (25:54):
Up and dry out.
Speaker 4 (25:54):
It's so good.
Speaker 5 (25:56):
So many different ways you can go with stuffing, really,
and I'm with you. It's a total comfort food. That's
what I'm looking for right. A lot of the mashed
potatoes gravy. I want the green bean casserole, I want
the stuffing.
Speaker 3 (26:06):
Give it all to me. I'm ready.
Speaker 5 (26:08):
But Courtney, if there's maybe a couple of things, I
don't know if you call them trendy, but good ideas
that people can implement into their meals right now at
this point, I know a lot of people did all
their shopping last week, and God love you, you're head of
the curve. Well done. But if you're not, what are
some of those last minute tips you would give somebody?
You can throw something together, real nice and quick, real tasty,
(26:29):
don't spend a lot of money.
Speaker 3 (26:31):
What do you recommended along those lines?
Speaker 4 (26:33):
Try a no need bread so you can make your
own fresh or teasonal bread. And do you like a
bread dip? You take herbs and spices and put it
out would like you would at a really nice restaurant
where you're dipping your bread and a seasoning thing. Things
like this add a really great creative, homemade touch and
(26:54):
don't take a ton of time, effort or money. I
have a couple of different no need breads on my
website that are really really easy. I'm actually oddly not
that much of a baker. My husband bakes most of
the baked recipes on my site, but a no knee
bread is something that even I can bake and feel
like a star in the kitchen making Courtney, I know.
Speaker 3 (27:15):
That, like me, you're a footy.
Speaker 5 (27:17):
Obviously, you travel, You experience all these new things, you
implement them, you get ideas.
Speaker 3 (27:22):
I know this is like asking you to pick. You
know who your favorite kid is.
Speaker 5 (27:25):
But is there a particular side dish that you'll be
serving this year that you were most amped about, most
excited about.
Speaker 4 (27:33):
This is going to blow a lot of people's minds
and be the most controversial thing I say. But I
actually love Brussels sprout and I love to make Brussels
sprout hash. So the key to Brussels sprout's not tasting
bitter is you want to make sure you caramelize all
of them. It's a lot easier if you chop the
brussels bruts up really. Finally, I toss them with bacon.
(27:55):
You have tons of herbs and garlic and butter in there.
It just brings out this really rich savory flavor. And
they're not better.
Speaker 5 (28:04):
So many recipes you can find on our website. It's
Sweetseasdesigns dot com. She is the founder in Easy Recipes
and foodie Travel. She's got it all. She's at her
parents' place right now. We are ripping her away from
her family, and I want to reunite her with them
right now. Courtney, always great catching up. It'll be a
great Thanksgiving thanks to you. So appreciate your time here today.
Speaker 4 (28:27):
Thanks so much.
Speaker 5 (28:28):
Happy Thanksgiving, Happy Thanksgiving to you and yours, Courtney Odell,
Sweet Seas Designs, Sweet Seasdesigns dot Com five seven seven
three nine. When we come back, final thoughts from you?
What are you most looking forward to? And I'm talking
from a culinary standpoint food on Thanksgiving? What is it
that really revs your engine that you're really looking forward to.
(28:49):
Maybe it's a family member that brings us same thing
every year and you want it every year. For me,
who's my uncle arts twice baked potatoes?
Speaker 3 (28:56):
My lord?
Speaker 5 (28:57):
When my brother and I were in high school running
cross country, I might I eaten.
Speaker 3 (29:02):
Seven of them seven.
Speaker 5 (29:04):
There is absolutely like crack cocaine, but in twice baked
potato form. So if you have something along those lines,
maybe it's a dessert something like that that just tops
off the whole meal. Send that along five seven to
seven three, and I we will share the wealth with
all of the.
Speaker 3 (29:19):
Listeners here on Ryan Schuling Live. After this the holiday season,
it's already upon us, folks, and I know it's a
lot of fun and it's exciting.
Speaker 5 (29:29):
It is stressful, though, and it's still not too late
to check this year's financial resolution off your list.
Speaker 3 (29:34):
And remove some of that stress.
Speaker 5 (29:36):
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(29:58):
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Speaker 3 (30:16):
Live advisory services through Trajan Wealth LLC SEC registered investment advisor,
client paid advertisement additional disclosures at Trajanwealth dot com.
Speaker 5 (30:26):
It's time once again for another edition of Trump's hot Takes,
charting the forty seventh president's epic interactions with the fake
news media.
Speaker 6 (30:34):
Talk about priscar in size, but when I talk about Prisco,
I get angry because he's not letting us do the job.
Speaker 3 (30:40):
So I'm not going to tell my Prinsker joke. They
have a very cute little joke.
Speaker 1 (30:43):
You know.
Speaker 6 (30:44):
Some speechwriter wrote some joke about his weight. But I
would never want to talk about his weight. I don't
talk about people being fat. I refuse to talk about
the fact that he's.
Speaker 3 (30:56):
A fat slab. I don't mention it.
Speaker 6 (30:58):
On a more serious note, as we gather around a
dinner table, I'd like.
Speaker 3 (31:02):
To lose a few.
Speaker 6 (31:03):
Pounds too, by the way, and I'm not gonna lose
it on Thanksgiving. I can tell you that because I'm
gonna have a turkey. But it's not gonna be that one.
Speaker 3 (31:12):
Again.
Speaker 5 (31:13):
Where does President stopped Trump stop? And where does Sean
Ferish begin. There's a real Venn diagram going on their
kamalo style. I don't want to talk about what a
FATS lobby is. He's totally if I will not make
that joke. Okay, he needs the stretchy pants that Carrie
Underwood was talking about. Okay, he was on fire today, folks,
(31:38):
if you can watch that entire delivery.
Speaker 3 (31:40):
I mean, this was a stand up routine he makes
fun of.
Speaker 7 (31:43):
I would name these turkeys Chuck and Nancy, but then
I wouldn't pardon them no matter what Melania said.
Speaker 5 (31:50):
He repardoned was a peaches and blossomed the turkeys from
last year because it wasn't.
Speaker 7 (31:57):
An official pardon. It was the auto pen, it was
the audio. It wasn't a real part, and we had
otherwise they'd be eating just diet over here. Guttfeld says
it a lot. We don't deserve him, and he's so right.
Speaker 5 (32:13):
The funniest president evert Ronald Reagu was funny, a great timing.
He was an actor, humorous guy, glint.
Speaker 3 (32:18):
In his eye. Will there he goes again?
Speaker 5 (32:21):
But Trump, my goodness, gracious, this guy is laugh out
loud funny. All right, this Texter keeps going at Leland.
What are you guys doing with Leland? It's one of
my best friends in the business. You're having fun with him,
That's what this texter says. I'm definitely trolling him, but
not in a bad way, just a fun way, because
he's a good sport.
Speaker 3 (32:41):
He did he is.
Speaker 5 (32:42):
I rarely met individuals in this business who have a
better sense of humor about oneself than Lelando. We have
a lot of fun together. You hear it on the air.
That's genuine, that's us. That's what we did. You know,
when I was helping put his show together in this
time slot when we would do Twisted View on Fridays,
it was always a great time, rip roaring time. But
(33:05):
this texture took umbrage Ryan Way to follow up the trader,
we call him the Trader. He left, He went to
San Diego. Who does that with somebody who has better
ideas about life like Courtney Well, I will tip of
the cap to Courtney Odell. She's magnificent. And those tips,
there's the little things about how to prepare a turkey
(33:27):
paper bag.
Speaker 3 (33:28):
I didn't know anything about that. Maybe you did, Orr
and your dumb you're behind the times.
Speaker 5 (33:31):
Yeah, maybe I love it when my dad would deep
fry the turkey's though hot pot, peanut oil.
Speaker 3 (33:39):
Sear it.
Speaker 5 (33:40):
It is just fall the bone, tender, juicy, fantastic type stuff.
Speaker 3 (33:45):
Well, my sister does, Angie, and she'll be making the
meal this year. I'm really appreciative to her. She's a
great cook, some say the greatest. But I'm cooking the turkey.
Speaker 5 (33:55):
And you may have heard about this one like upside
down so that the juices, you know, dry down into
the white meat that you do not want to overcook.
You don't want that saw that's turkey breast, you know
what I'm talking about.
Speaker 3 (34:09):
Because you gotta get the dark meat done.
Speaker 6 (34:11):
Now.
Speaker 5 (34:11):
My brother, he's good for a turkey leg. He's gonna
take one, and nobody's gonna argue with him or get
like a rabid dog and he'll bite your arm off.
So we let him have that. But I've always been
a white meat kind of guy. And when it's done right,
when it's done right, oh man. And my mom contended
that you know the flavor was in the dark meat.
She's not wrong, she's not wrong. There's more tax here
(34:34):
five seven seventy nine. Well, just going back to our
our one interviews, appreciate both of those gentlemen joining us
John Brooks seems nice. However, his website identifies many problems
with very few solutions on any of them. He was
pretty detailed, I thought, in his plan, his knowledge of
the issues, and what strategy he would use his background
(34:58):
in business in managing a budget, bringing diversified interest together.
You gotta do that in Colorado. If you're a Republican
and you want to govern, it's not that you sell out.
Speaker 3 (35:09):
You're not a rhino. I'm not talking about that.
Speaker 5 (35:11):
You can have principled stances, but they have to be
common sense based, and I think that's the starting point
for any Republican in this race for governor.
Speaker 3 (35:19):
And I was very impressed with John Brooks. I certainly was.
Speaker 5 (35:22):
And our thanks to Bill McClay as well, author Jewish
Roots of American Liberty. It was a cast of thousands.
Gina asks me the following, So are you off tomorrow?
Your show is sounding awfully like Cappy Thanksgiving. I'm out
of here, Gina, until you hear Adam Sandler sing the
Thanksgiving song. It ain't over for this guy, and you're
gonna hear it tomorrow. I'm back with you on Ryan
Schuling Live right here on six point thirty ko