Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Hour number two. I don't even know what the date is.
I think it's the seventeenth. Things are booming, man, nineteen
Is it the nineteenth? Are you kidding me?
Speaker 2 (00:13):
Help? Yesterday was the eighteenth?
Speaker 1 (00:15):
Wow, I wrote seventeen down on my sheet. I tell
you what. I'm so out of it, ella, I've been
so busy with good guys and Arthritis Foundation and everything.
So but anyway, Second Hour coming up, Day two, one,
nine eighty six. We need some calls. Man, you guys
open phones. Let's get a rock. And I know it's
uh warm and everybody's tired. That's so freaking hot. I
(00:35):
imagine everybody's sleeping in loving or ac right now. But today,
Arthritis Foundation, this is our last show, last show of
the weekend, I should say is Saturday, and today they
do the individual classes. But tons of car shows coming up,
and I want to remind everybody go to Honor Flight
Columbus and for your chance to win the golf cart.
It's fifteen thousand dollars golf cart. We've got great sponsors
(00:58):
stuffed up to the plate and please look at the sponsors
when you click on the win me fun. But I
can tell you that it the golf cart's unbelievable. We
were driving it last night at your Threat It's Foundation
show and I was like, my gosh, this things fast.
I mean, it's almost too fast, but it's street legal,
it's with It retails around fifteen plus thousand dollars and
(01:19):
I'm telling you, I put every option on it from
Ride Power Sports up in Delaware, and all my great
sponsors stepped up to the plate to make this possible
because at all the proceeds, one hundred percent of it
goes to Honor Flight. So you just simply go to
Honor Flight Columbus and you click on win the golf Cart,
and I'm gonna pull it up right now because it's
(01:39):
it's pretty cool Columbus. That's always an old school wterflight.
And you go the homepage and oh great, my phone updated.
But you go the homepage and on the homepage it
(01:59):
opens up here on homepage, right on the front of
the homepage, it says when this golf cart and you'll
see one of our great sponsors come up right off
the bat. It is fast response over in Grove City
does a great job for us. And then trying to
find all the let's see here websites acting up today.
(02:21):
Don't you love us old guys here? So the sponsors
stepped update was Auto Smart's obviously Care Patrol, Columbus Garage,
flore Coating, Columbus Pest Control, Fast Response, Heating and Cooling Ends,
Keep Printing, Peak Retirement, Ride Power Sports, Ohio, Tattletail Arm Systems,
Triteco Design, Western Automotive, and at Worthington Moose. The Moose
(02:43):
stepped up without even hesitation, wrote a large check. So again,
go to the website. Check it out. It's only twenty dollars.
There's only twenty five hundred tickets, and I think there's
a few hundred tickets left. So we're going to give
that away on the ninth of August. All the entries
stop on on August seventh so we can get the
big old Tumblr going to put a raised name in it,
(03:04):
but on August ninth we will draw the name. Ella.
Did you buy your ticket yet?
Speaker 2 (03:10):
Noop?
Speaker 1 (03:10):
Have you seen Superman yet?
Speaker 2 (03:12):
I actually have. I can't believe I am able to
say us to that question.
Speaker 1 (03:17):
Wow, I thought you'd say no, was it. I've heard
a lot of mixed reviews.
Speaker 2 (03:22):
I've only heard good reviews. I it's well done and everything.
I'm just it's this is like asking you to review Barbie.
It's just it's not for me. I'm not into the
superhero comic book stuff. So it's like I'm sure it's fine,
but you know, I don't know it was entertaining. I
just get kind of like, all right when all this
(03:43):
like crazy fantasy stuff is happening, that's you know, not realistic,
which obviously you don't go into Superman expecting realism, but
it's like, this stuff happens and then it's just, you know,
with the snap of a finger, everything's fine. It's like
all right, like.
Speaker 1 (03:58):
Wait, wait, wait, wait, A good question for you, what Chris,
you can jump in on us too. Superman used to
go to the phone booths. There's no phone booth. Where
does he change?
Speaker 2 (04:06):
Now, you're right, you never see him change. He doesn't
go in the phone booth.
Speaker 1 (04:12):
I mean, he can't get in his cell phone.
Speaker 2 (04:13):
I just I don't I don't believe there was ever
a case in this movie where he had to do
a quick change.
Speaker 3 (04:21):
That's not in the movie.
Speaker 1 (04:22):
Yeah, did did? Did? Lois is the chicky chicky stock
what's her name? Lewis Lane?
Speaker 2 (04:27):
Yeah, Lois Lane stalked.
Speaker 1 (04:29):
Well, you know, he's Superman. He get whatever he wants. Yes,
he's like Bill Clinton. It was Lois Lane into Clark
and all that again. Or give me same old Superman
just modernized together.
Speaker 2 (04:45):
There's a dog.
Speaker 1 (04:47):
They have a dog? Yeah, pet dog to Superman have adoodle.
Speaker 3 (04:51):
I don't know what, mutt, but I did see that.
It has led up to more like dog adoptions being
looked up.
Speaker 2 (04:59):
Yep, Superman, Yeah, yeah, he's the dog.
Speaker 1 (05:04):
Does a dog have a cape? Yeah, no, you're joking.
Speaker 3 (05:11):
He's always had a cape, even in the comics though,
So it's.
Speaker 1 (05:16):
What you're saying. Christopher Reid didn't have a dog. He
did not know, but he still have phone booths. Yes,
so you get rid of the phone booth and add
the dog. Yep.
Speaker 2 (05:25):
Yeah, that's the trade off.
Speaker 1 (05:26):
Well, I can promise you both this. I will no
go I will not see Superman. I have a guy
it works for me that's in his fifties and he's
a Star Wars over the top, like addicted to it?
Am I missing something here?
Speaker 4 (05:42):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (05:42):
A lot of people are over the top addicted to
it star Wars? Yeah, did you not know that Star
Wars was popular.
Speaker 1 (05:49):
Have you never heard of Star Wars as a kid
and saw it, I was like, this is stupid.
Speaker 2 (05:54):
Never But you're aware that it has a large fan base.
Speaker 1 (05:58):
Yeah, but you outgrow that stuff. I like pee Wee
Herman too, but you don't see ride around on an
imitation bike like he had when he's one of the
Alamo looking for the basement.
Speaker 2 (06:07):
Well, I have some pe Wee Herman glasses in my
covered at home, so I can't talk.
Speaker 1 (06:10):
But that's a joke. You're a stand up comic.
Speaker 2 (06:14):
I don't know what that has to do with it.
Speaker 1 (06:16):
But well, I think a person like that, like if
you entertained people you want pee Wee Herman makes sense. Okay,
I like pee Wee Herman excephal he went to the
adult bookstore and got trouble, but you.
Speaker 3 (06:27):
Know, well him and others.
Speaker 1 (06:31):
Yeah, I don't think he's the only one had stuff
sticking to his shoes when he walked out. But anyway,
but what other movie, Like, I haven't seen a good
movie in a long time.
Speaker 3 (06:40):
The f One is probably the best.
Speaker 1 (06:43):
They're good. Okay, Oh it's I.
Speaker 3 (06:45):
Think that's the best movie I've seen all summer.
Speaker 1 (06:47):
Okay, you two, what was your favorite movie of all time?
If you had to watch one you're gonna die tomorrow,
you have to watch one last movie you have to
to get accepted to the Pearly Gates? What movie would
you watch?
Speaker 3 (07:00):
Star Wars?
Speaker 1 (07:02):
Really, Ella, I.
Speaker 2 (07:05):
Had answer the phone. What was the question?
Speaker 1 (07:07):
If you had to watch one movie and you're on
your deathbed and you gotta go to the Pearly Gates,
Peter says, Okay, I like, you gotta watch one last movie?
What would be your pick?
Speaker 2 (07:16):
Ah, I don't think I'd have the mindset to watch
a movie if I'm about to die. But if you're
asking me what my favorite movie is, that's fine. It's
kind of a tie. It's a Wonderful Life and some
like it Hot? Are my two favorite movies?
Speaker 1 (07:33):
Some like it Hot? What is that?
Speaker 2 (07:35):
It's nineteen fifty nine, Tony Curtis, Jack Lemon, Marilynd.
Speaker 1 (07:40):
Really you like old school movies? I do? Okay? A
Wonderful Life you liked?
Speaker 2 (07:45):
I love that movie?
Speaker 1 (07:46):
Was that What to Do? Was running around a snow going? Same?
Was he saying yeah?
Speaker 2 (07:51):
At the end of the movie he does, Yes.
Speaker 1 (07:54):
It's what's the famous words? H?
Speaker 2 (07:59):
Merry Christmas? See beautiful old building alone. Merry Christmas?
Speaker 1 (08:03):
Is that what it is? Okay? How many times have
you seen it? Oh?
Speaker 2 (08:05):
I watched it countless times.
Speaker 1 (08:07):
I don't really well. My Christmas movie would be Christmas Vacation,
obviously with Chevy Chase and DeAngelo. My favorite movie of
all times is Hollywood Nights. And my fictional movie would
be Paul Fiction. And my sissy side is Urban Cowboy.
I love Urban Cowboy.
Speaker 3 (08:27):
I haven't seen Urban Cowboy in so long.
Speaker 1 (08:30):
No pun on the sissy, by the way, because she
was in it. Ella, what's your favorite? Uh, it's romance movie.
Speaker 2 (08:40):
What are we talking about here?
Speaker 1 (08:42):
I said Urban Cowboy because he fell in love with Sissy.
She was the dirty butt that lived out in the trailer.
Speaker 2 (08:47):
I bag some like it hot and it's wonderful life
of some.
Speaker 1 (08:51):
Like it hots a love story. Sure, all right, Well,
the phones are finally working again, so it's uh, let's
go to break and we get back. We got Scott Mark,
But Mark's my poem. Guys it same Mark? Yes it
is man, he's early, all right, This is Saturday morning
on phones on damn boots. Always brought to you by
the metal of Company, Always protected by the undefeated. American
made tattletale from the Harlem Bank Studios on news radio
(09:13):
six ten WTVN.
Speaker 5 (09:15):
Hey, how you doing. I wonder if we might be
able to talk about cars.
Speaker 4 (09:20):
About what about cars?
Speaker 1 (09:23):
Can you hear me talk about not cars?
Speaker 5 (09:26):
Okay, talk about cars?
Speaker 1 (09:30):
Talk about cars. Well that's that's an auto, smarts, soap
and phones.
Speaker 5 (09:35):
Yeah, I know, but I'm not able to get I'm
not able to get you a call at that time.
Speaker 1 (09:39):
Oh it's car. I love talking cars. Cars are my life.
Speaker 4 (09:44):
Cool.
Speaker 5 (09:44):
So I have a project car that needs everything, and
I'm looking for a shop to get it done. And
what I'm finding is the shops that will take a
full project, that's what they do unless I have a
high dollars show car budget. Not really interested. And I'm
(10:06):
really looking just to get a really nice driver. And
I have talked to some shops that, you know, their
core business are everyone's daily drivers, which you know they'll
take the project, but they have to prioritize their core business,
you know, first, so you never know when it's gonna
get done. So I'm open you might be able to
(10:27):
give me some insight on where I might go.
Speaker 1 (10:29):
Okay, what kind of car is it?
Speaker 5 (10:33):
The sixty eight Cadillac convertible.
Speaker 1 (10:37):
Okay, well, it needs floors, it needs pain, it needs interior.
What's all it needs?
Speaker 4 (10:44):
Again?
Speaker 5 (10:45):
I want to put a new motor in it. It
needs some metal path just in typical you know, problem
areas as part of that age. It needs pain and
eats the interior chassis at it just needs the chassis
gone over and pushing and everything right, you know, put
(11:06):
in it.
Speaker 1 (11:07):
So let me let me be the bear bad news. Okay,
let's start off with this question. I always ask people,
is it their emotional connection or family values to this car?
Connected to you?
Speaker 5 (11:21):
I've always loved these cars. It goes back to when
I was a kid. Friend of my father's very good
friend of my apologized one and whenever we go to
this guy's house, we go off for a nice little person.
Speaker 4 (11:33):
I just always yeah.
Speaker 1 (11:36):
So here's the problem number two when you take a car,
and that's so so. I I have a rod shop
and I am so backed up right now, and I
have two rules. And the rules are you have to
have plenty of money and your wife has to know.
And the reason I say the wife has to know
because I have a current wife and an ex wife.
If I want yelled at I don't need your wife
yelling at me too. That's a little joke at Tarba.
(11:57):
But but the problem is you're gonna have every bit
of fifty plus thousand dollars restoring that car paint alone,
ten to fifteen grand, mechanics, motorwork, that's to say, the
lower und five or six grand. The terior. It's a
leather interior. Unless you put fake fake leather in it,
(12:18):
you're still gonna have every bit of eight to ten
grand interior. It adds up so fast. And most shops
are well over one hundred dollars per hour, so every
time they touch your car. So here's what I recommend.
I always tell people to do this, and in cruising classics,
buy a car pretty much done, go over to Jagg's,
(12:39):
pick your own set of wheels, pick some things that
you want to do to it, and then make the
car your own. But unfortunately, you're gonna have so much
money in that car. You're gonna have double what it's
worth once you get it done, and and it's just
not you can do about it, just because the cost.
And then getting employees to work it though on those
(13:00):
because they don't want to work anymore. I have a
hard time getting guys. Minor guys are part time, and
they if one guy, one guy missed the whole week
because he had a tummy ache. He told me, it's insane.
And the painters. Then you have body men. They they
and then painters and they don't get along and they
(13:22):
all think they're Picasso, and they all over just charge
charge charge, And I don't know how to coach you
on this. And the best thing I've been telling people
my buddy when he cruising Classics, bought a nice Chevelle,
went over to Jake's put a set of wheels on it,
and he just tells everybody he did it, you know,
tell him what level you did it. But but you're
going to have easily fifty thousand dollars in the car.
(13:45):
The way you explained it to me, that's that's on
the low end. And you could buy a nice Caddy
for thirty But if I could.
Speaker 5 (13:53):
If I could get that car done for fifty thousand,
I would be I think for like two hundred thousand. Oh,
do you have a budget of one hundred? It's ready
to go?
Speaker 1 (14:04):
Well, so much for a hundred? What's that one hundred
should be easy. I mean this, it's really, really, really bad.
Where where's the car located at?
Speaker 5 (14:17):
I have it in storage out out in Lincoln County.
Speaker 1 (14:21):
Lincoln County. Okay, well don't. I'm gonna put you on hold.
I'll I'll give you my sell number because because you
scared me at first, because most guys, well, I got
twenty grand to spend and I'm like, eh, well, but
you sure you want to put one hundred grand in it?
You're positive? What year is it?
Speaker 5 (14:37):
Sixty eight?
Speaker 1 (14:38):
Okay, that's a pretty body style. Okay, all right, I'm
gonna put you on hold. Yeah, okay, yeah, I'll put
him the whole game my number. You can, I'll talk
to you later on the day. Let's go to uh,
let's go to let's go to Paul.
Speaker 6 (14:52):
Good morning, Paul, Good morning, boots. I'll make it. I'll
make it quick.
Speaker 1 (14:57):
How are you no, you got plenty of time, buddy.
Speaker 6 (15:00):
Well, I don't want to take up I don't want
to take up.
Speaker 1 (15:02):
Too much time.
Speaker 6 (15:03):
But you were talking earlier with Mark, and I agree
with you were stupid. Stupid doesn't water it?
Speaker 4 (15:12):
Well?
Speaker 6 (15:12):
Now hold on, now you've got to listen to this.
And we know that you know, like in the Middle
East they've been fighting for thousands of years, doesn't really matter.
But the point the story is is you realize now
that the Department of Defense for the United States, they
have a budget of a trillion dollars.
Speaker 1 (15:31):
Yeah, why not spend it?
Speaker 6 (15:34):
Well, I'd like to not see them spend it. But
the problem is is every year that's a trillion dollars.
That's twenty percent of what we pull in as a
country in taxes. What do you think that they're they're
going to do something with that money. So the point
of the story is, and we'll get into all these
things across the world and all this nonsense and people
(15:56):
slaughtering each other for no reason, but they're not you.
That money isn't They're not putting that in a bank account.
They're going to use that money and next year they're
going to get another trillion. In the following year, they're
going to get another trillion, until it moves up to
one point two or one point five trillion, and then
another trillion and a half and then whatever. But the
point the story is is you, I know it's stupid,
(16:20):
and I know you don't care about it, and I
know you're done with it. I get it, but you
kind of have to pay attention because either that or
we need to slash a budget. I don't know which
way to go, but you have to pay attention. That's
a lot of money, brother, That's twenty percent of what
we bring in as a country.
Speaker 1 (16:37):
I own. I think it's nuts, you know, I mean.
Speaker 6 (16:43):
I mean how much if you stop and think about it.
I think it was I told you before about this.
I think it was an LA schedule. They spend one
hundred and sixty eight million dollars. I know it's ridiculous,
but it's a nineteen story building, and I think there
was two hundred and forty eight or two hundred and
sixty eight year units for a homeless. Part of it
was for veterans with mental illness, but it was it
(17:07):
was a place to give these people a place to live.
And that was only one hundred and sixty eight million, right.
Speaker 1 (17:13):
And But for Paul, let me ask us, if let's
just say Russia and Ukraine kiss and makeup. Yeah, somebody
else is going to blow somebody else up over there
that I'm going to say it. They're all a bunch
of nuts. They don't think that's the problem with America.
We think everybody thinks like we do. Like if we
most of us, most of us see an old lady struggling,
(17:37):
we help her. Now some Americans take her person, knock
her down, but that's the scumballs. But most of us help.
So we try to put our beliefs in our our
respect and our way. We love other humans in other
countries that don't look at especially in the Middle East.
I've talked to some of them, guys that worked for
(17:57):
me over the years. They think in America because just
a waiting room for the perfect land that you go to,
so it doesn't matter what you do here. They think
that you go on to get in seventy two virgins
and everything's golden and everything is fla la la la lah,
and it's But we don't think that way. We think
that there is a better life after this. But we
want to live our life while we're here, and we
(18:19):
want to help others. But when we in America, we
spend a trillions of dollars helping crazy countries. You know,
I'm burnt out on a man, I'm fried.
Speaker 6 (18:30):
I know, man, Well, if you ever moved down to
Georgia and a trailer. Make sure there's two bedrooms.
Speaker 1 (18:36):
Yeah, hey, how about this. If I'm flying a jetliner
into a building that the last minute, I'm like, yeah,
I'm gonna swear to the left. I don't think I
want to fly into a building. But that's where we're
smart and they're not. And then now you know everybody's
they have planes that was all fake and made up,
and those people weren't on the.
Speaker 4 (18:53):
Plane, and the moon landing was.
Speaker 1 (18:55):
Fake and blad and blad, buh blah. I'm so tired
of conspiracies, like conspiracy theory people. It's like, dude, dude,
we know that the government's crooked. We know they waste money.
And if I hit another pothole, I will never love
the government until I miss a pothole that doesn't exist
because they don't care. They don't care.
Speaker 6 (19:17):
All right, Rather be good. I have a wonderful weekend, you.
Speaker 1 (19:21):
Too, man, Saturday morning, the phones on Damn boots, protect
by the metal of Company, Always protected by the end
offeed American Metal. Tale from the Heart and Bank Studios
on News Radio six ten w TV And all right,
I'll like another question for you Ella, your comedian kind
of background. How about Cobert getting whacked. I was pretty
(19:42):
excited about that.
Speaker 2 (19:44):
I don't I don't watch it anyway, so it's really
not on my radar.
Speaker 1 (19:48):
No Cobert, he has a late night I know.
Speaker 2 (19:50):
Is I'm just saying I don't watch it.
Speaker 1 (19:52):
He's gone, bye bye.
Speaker 2 (19:53):
The one I can't stand. The one I can't stand
is Seth Meyers. I would love to see him.
Speaker 1 (19:58):
Yeah, Jay gone, Jimmy Kimmel, get rid of him. Gosh,
these guys. You know what. Gutfeld is rocking and ratings
on Fox News and he's not woke, and he says
stuff that we oh boy, he can't believe he said that.
But the funny part is his ratings are killing all
(20:18):
late night shows because America's over the wokeness. That's what
people don't get. We're over it. We're over it wherever
wards where, over everything. I just want to live life
and have fun. I want to be able to joke
with somebody and not go, oh, you may be wings.
You can come up with these gee butcher beard, silly looking.
I can say, well, I do a foreign or flight
(20:39):
Gee Butcher fat and bald well. I used to be
fat or ha ha ha, Butoch your dumb appllation Caucasian.
You're right. I got a sixth grade education. I played
football shop class. That's what I did in high school.
That was it. He won't hurt my feelings, I promise, promise.
Speaker 2 (20:54):
Yeah. I just want to tune into late night TV
and not not be in a political argument again, you know, like,
let's leave it out of it. And that's why my
favorite was always Conan O'Brien. He just had dumb fun.
There was no politics. I can guess what his politics are,
but I don't know from watching him for decades, I
(21:15):
don't know what his politics are for sure because he
never brought it up. He just entertained. Yeah, and he
got run off the air.
Speaker 1 (21:21):
Make America Great Again always puts into like, well, you
don't want your racist No, I want Johnny Carson back.
I want a TV show like Happy Days. I want
to be a watch Lavernon well, not Laverna Shirley Threes Company.
I want to watch Dukes of Hazzard. How is Bill
Cosby still on TV? The Cosby Show?
Speaker 2 (21:39):
Where is it on TV?
Speaker 1 (21:41):
Everywhere?
Speaker 2 (21:42):
It's I love the Cosby Show. Yeah, I know, fifteen years.
Speaker 1 (21:47):
Hey, Rufie, you know, but but he could roofy women
and get away with it or whoever he did. But
the Dukes of Hazzard is racist.
Speaker 2 (21:55):
Oh you know the big Confederate flag.
Speaker 1 (21:57):
Yes, but I never I'll give you that.
Speaker 2 (22:01):
I gotta what you got to point on some things.
But Dukes of Hazzard is a weird hill to die
on here. Let's leave that way.
Speaker 1 (22:10):
Why there was no racism other than the rebel flag.
They're from the South. They think differently.
Speaker 2 (22:16):
It doesn't excuse you can't just you can't keep a
slave in your house. Hey, we think differently.
Speaker 1 (22:23):
They see you're not. You're not thinking about Dukes of Hazzard.
I watched it for two.
Speaker 2 (22:26):
Years saying if you I mean so if somebody was
on a show with a swastikas all over their car, whatever,
they think differently.
Speaker 1 (22:37):
But here's a thing. Richard pryor I mean Richard Pryor.
Speaker 7 (22:40):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (22:41):
Bill Cosby raped women was convicted of it.
Speaker 2 (22:45):
Yeah, and you can't find a show anywhere. I don't
know where you're watching it.
Speaker 1 (22:49):
Google it, it's on. But Dukes of Hazzard's horrible because
Daisy had a swimsuit on a bikini. I love Daisy Duke.
Why I was thirteen years old, Daisy Duke and a
charger jumping a bar.
Speaker 2 (23:00):
Yeah, what a hot take.
Speaker 1 (23:01):
You're the only I was a wrapped up kid going
through puberty, that's for sure. Let's go back to fine Lines.
Got a John, We got Forest John.
Speaker 4 (23:10):
And it's calling in about the story about the rent.
Did you see the price you have to make to
a little comfortably in a two bedroom apartment?
Speaker 1 (23:22):
Probably seventy five grand a year. I didn't see it,
but I'm guessing.
Speaker 4 (23:27):
It's unbelievable. I mean, we're talking twenty two dollars and
fifty one cents an hour is what you need to
make to afford a two bedroom apartment.
Speaker 1 (23:39):
And those jobs are pretty oat there. They're out there,
believe me. I know Jake's is still highing, but I
think it's you guys did the four day shift at
twelve hour shift.
Speaker 4 (23:48):
But I think they're Yeah, kids nowadays are aren't going
to do that. No, I mean, you know the state
minimum wage right now is ten dollars and seventy seven.
I mean, I know, I don't know how they expect
children to move out.
Speaker 1 (24:07):
Have you gone to a fast food restaurant and got
two meals? It's like twenty five bucks twenty two dollars.
Speaker 4 (24:13):
Now, oh, I don't even want to talk about that.
That's for fake food.
Speaker 1 (24:19):
Food. Like I'm telling you, this is my opinion. When
I go to McDonald's, I never leave there going, man,
that was delicious. I go, well, I got a full belly,
and I get on my day. That's the only reason
you see me at Mickey D's. Not because even Wendy's.
I don't even like Wendy's. Anyone burn out on all
that I and all the Arby's I've seen where two
Arby's have shut down that I've passed.
Speaker 4 (24:39):
Oh, Arby's, they just priced theirself out of the market. Yeah,
I mean five for five and now they want, you know,
ten bucks for one.
Speaker 1 (24:53):
I know, and I usually don't complain about pricing, but
lately it's just been I think the gas prices open
the door for Hey, they're algemum on gas, scalgum on
a big Mac. Yeah, you know, I just like you.
And it's not you know, on behalf of the fast
food restaurants. If men and wage is eleven bucks an hour,
almost flip Burgers, they have to charge it somewhere.
Speaker 4 (25:16):
Yeah, I agree.
Speaker 1 (25:18):
Back for a few more bucks and go to Roosters
and get a real meal.
Speaker 4 (25:22):
There you go, there you go.
Speaker 1 (25:24):
All right, I appreciate you, John, Thanks Budy. Let's go
to Michael. We got Michael.
Speaker 8 (25:30):
Big Good morning, Boots. So you know what you were
just talking about with that last caller. That's a perfect
example of what happens when you don't care about politics.
When you don't care about politics, politics will care about
you and it will screw you. And that's what's happening.
People in this country have went to sleep, and inflation
(25:54):
is beginning to you know, have an effect unlike any
time prior. And this is the secret tax that we're
all paying because the banking system has the right to
print money out of finn air. When you print money
out of finnair, you have to pay interest on the
(26:14):
money that nobody actually possesses. But it's a fairy tale.
The Federal Reserve was granted this right back in nineteen
thirteen with the Federal Reserve Act. And so now the
dollar in nineteen thirteen is now worth ninety six to
(26:34):
ninety seven percent less. Can you comprehend that? No, ninety
six percent less than what it was worth in nineteen thirteen?
And that's because of all the printing of money and
the interest we have to pay the Federal Reserve banksters. Now,
(26:55):
there was a group of about six families that started
the Federal Reserve from Europe. Now I could go into
detail and talk about who those families were, but I
really don't want to deal with the anti Semitism accusation,
so I won't go there. Okay, uh, But the fact is,
(27:18):
if you do your homework, you will find out who
these five or six or seven families were. And to
this very day, those same families or their offspring are
in control of the banking system that is destroying this country.
And the banking system, like the legal system, have been
(27:41):
weaponized against you, the people because you not you boots.
But people have cho Yeah, the people have chose not
to pay attention to politics. You know, it's boring, or
it's it's it's a waste of time, whatever the reason.
I get it, because I too get so tired of
(28:03):
hearing the lies. But like I said, if you don't
pay attention to it, it will pay attention to you
and it will screw you every single time. And this
is the main reason we are an uneducated people in America.
We have been dumbed down with the public full system. Okay,
(28:24):
fool system, not school fool. It's a joke. A bunch
of Marxist communist democrats have operated and controlled our city,
inner city school systems for decades and it has resulted
in an ignorant populace. For example, you had a guy earlier, Paul,
(28:44):
and I'm not picking on Paul, but Paul made a statement, Oh,
we've been fighting or they have been fighting over there
for thousands of years talking about Israel. That's not true.
That's not true at all. Prior to nineteen forty eight, No,
prior to nineteen forty eight, there was peace in the
(29:05):
Middle East. Palestine was a thriving city town. It had
an airport, it had high rises. It was an unbelievable
place in nineteen forty seven. But after nineteen forty seven,
when a certain group of people, and i'll refrain from
using their identity so I won't be called an anti Semite,
(29:28):
they are the ones. They are the ones that bombed
and destroyed Ben Gurion admitted to being a terrorist. They
invented terrorism. But prior to nineteen forty seven, when the
Balfour Agreement was created. That place was peaceful. Catholics, Jews, Christians,
(29:51):
Muslims lived in harmony, but until nineteen forty seven forty eight,
So you really need to do your research to find
out the truth. We have not They have not been
fighting over there for thousands of years. It's just that simple.
It's a big lie, and we need to stop the
genocides that take You're.
Speaker 1 (30:13):
You're educating all this. I know you study a lot
on this, Do you really do You don't think they're
crazy over there? You think they're all I don't think
there's an I've never ever ever interacted with someone from
that part of the world with just a different different
mindset than you and I have. That's what that's my point.
Speaker 8 (30:32):
First of all, you have to understand. First of all,
you have to understand we're getting news through a filtered,
controlled lens. You need to find out who owns all
the media outlets the same group of people.
Speaker 1 (30:47):
Get what I'm saying. I'm just saying, if you them guys, man,
they they they they are the ones that think we're infidels.
They they they don't like us.
Speaker 8 (30:57):
Well they have that right. But you know, if you
think it was terrorists from Saudi Arabia that did the
nine to eleven bombing. On nine to eleven, you're very deceived.
We've been rolled a bill at Goods about nine to eleven.
It was it was not Muslim terrorist.
Speaker 1 (31:15):
It was into a building that has any type of
I know, Hey, who flies a plane?
Speaker 8 (31:21):
Well, you need you need to check out a former
United Airlines pilot, Dan Hanley. I just did an interview
with him last Tuesday night on our website. You can
go to Truthactionproject dot org and you can watch the video.
Dan Hanley was twenty five years United Airlines pilot. He
(31:44):
talks about the uninterruptible auto pilot system that was installed
in Boeing planes. Those planes were able to be remotely controlled.
You know, clear back in the sixties we were going
to do an operation in Camp opera Operation Northwoods. Okay,
(32:05):
I'll continue.
Speaker 1 (32:06):
Say I thought for next week is Satday Morning on phones,
damn boots wrought by the metroo of company, protected by
the innfeed American Mate tell Tale from the Heartley Bank
Studios on news Radio six ten to be TV. Oh
We're back, Kyleen, my part time producer. That's how old
I am. I took her to chuck e cheese and
now she's almost forty. I'm terrible. It's terrible, not old.
(32:30):
So oh, thank you. We made the morning work and
not a lot of calls today, but we pulled it through.
But we always finish up with Mark, the best poem
writer ever been with us for about three years now.
Every week I bet Mark, do you wake up and say,
I bet I get the poem ready for Saturday morning?
On phones?
Speaker 7 (32:47):
No, I start on about Wednesday?
Speaker 1 (32:49):
Well, okay, Wednesday?
Speaker 7 (32:50):
All right, body, all right? I promised you two poems
every week. I have one that I've read in the
past and one new one. How much time do I have?
Speaker 1 (32:58):
You have three minutes?
Speaker 7 (33:00):
Okay? Here is the poem from the past. It is
one minute and five seconds long, rated G. It's called
the Sword or the Flower. Step out of comfortable speak
with another, offer the kindness that you would expect. Conquer
that schism, spend time with each other. You may discover
(33:23):
a way to connect. People can bond over bach or puccini,
bird watching football or auto repairs. Maybe you will by
preparing linguini, entertain angels at lunch unawares. Tony sought peace
with the sharks and the jets. Reagan told Gorbachev, tear
(33:45):
down this wall. At last, we have honored our Vietnam vetts.
I have a dream will forever Enthrall. Do you greet
people with goodwill and ardor do you attempt to a
rival factions? Vilification is always much harder when you see
(34:06):
them as people and not just abstraction. Okay. Today's new
poem is dedicated to everyone who has ever tried to
seek validation on anything from their spouse or significant other.
The poem is based on an actual conversation with that
my wife and I had about fifteen years ago. It
is rated. The poem is rated PG, and it's one
(34:27):
minute and twenty five seconds long. Okay, go posing in
my new swimsuit. I donned a new swimsuit one day
and wondered what my wife would say. I said, what
I propose to do is prove beyond all doubt it's
true that men who reach a certain age can still
look red and all the rage to entertain and maybe
(34:50):
thrill her. I flex just like a body builder, a
front lap spread, a side triceps, a quarter turn with
a side. I said, I know this sounds absurd, but
tell me, please, just say the word that best describes
the site you see and share your thinking. Honestly, when
(35:12):
I am posing, do you find that beefcake is what
comes to mind? Or since my sit reveals much braun,
is cheesecake what you settle on? I wondered which she
would prefer My validation lay with her. She took her time.
I wondered why. At last she offered her reply, you
(35:34):
think you'll make the ladies lear or draw a host
of Hatty's near beefcake cheesecake. Let's be clear, what comes
to mind is fruitcake?
Speaker 1 (35:45):
Dear the end, Talk to you next week. Mark. This
has been Saturday morning. On phones, Auto Smarts is next
on Damn Boots always brought you by the Metal Roof Company,
Protective Body Undfeated of America Matelltale from the Harlem Bank
Studios on News Radio six ten wtv S