Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
Well, hi everybody, Maamma Brown with you in the Bama
Brown Experience. I heart podcast Network. We've always got new
listeners coming in every day. I love that. Thank you,
Big Cat Puma, your your sports Cave. You guys are
growing your audience as well in the Sports Cave crazy.
Speaker 2 (00:19):
Yeah, we try to do our best over there. We
won't be live tonight of course. These next two weeks
we have unfortunately we have Cowboys football in front of
a national audience.
Speaker 3 (00:31):
On Monday night back to back weeks.
Speaker 2 (00:34):
The power of the Star, I guess is still worth
it despite the record, But normally live on YouTube Tuesday's
Thursday nights. Just look up Sports Cave Live and then
of course anywhere you get your podcast, you can always
catch the audio versions. Just search for the Sports Cave
with the Biggest Puma Come hang out with us.
Speaker 1 (00:53):
I love the Broncos new uniforms. Man that that is
a gorgeous uniform the Broncos have. But the other side
of that that could plee who are those Steelers house
that anform?
Speaker 2 (01:04):
Yeah, that was a rough week last week across the NFL.
You either had The Broncos throwbacks are arguably what they
should use. Everyone yeah, you just go back to the throwback.
Same way with the Falcons, the Buccaneers. There's a few
of them that the throwbacks look way better than the
new ones. Those Steelers, they said that was from nineteen
(01:26):
thirty three, and that was.
Speaker 1 (01:28):
Now telling Alex my daughter that, and she goes, well,
they needed they need to quit going back. It's okay
to do something new.
Speaker 2 (01:35):
Yeah, anything anything before the artistic expansion of the mind
of the nineteen sixties probably should just should just stay
in nineteen thirty three.
Speaker 1 (01:47):
I've got a couple of boneheads. Let's start out with
one from Austin. You want to do that?
Speaker 2 (01:51):
Austin bonehead, Local bonehead, the National National News.
Speaker 1 (01:56):
Amos I think I got his name right, amos Niawaey.
He's a Travis County Corrections officer right here in Austin, Texas.
He was arrested for smuggling chicken wings from Wingstop into
the boys. Uh, and he ate some of the wings
and that's why he got in trouble. The guy's ratting
him out because he's charging him for Wingstop, but he's
(02:18):
eating half the wings when they get him, and they
were very upset, so they ratted him out. Now, nobody
gets wings.
Speaker 2 (02:25):
That's spectacular because I guarantee you he was taking wings
to some guys that used to sling drugs, and that's
one of the first roles. Never eat your own supply,
never your own like he got busted basically by the
street Code, by gansters that he was ripping off in prison.
Speaker 3 (02:44):
That's so poetically spectacular.
Speaker 1 (02:47):
I could give up drugs, but Wingstop, now, huh, I can't.
That's a that's a permanent permit.
Speaker 2 (02:53):
There are certain lines that I'm willing to sacrifice, and
Wingstop is not one.
Speaker 3 (02:58):
I will say.
Speaker 2 (02:59):
I was happy to see Wingstop has started to lean
back into their actual Texas roots. I've noticed for a
while they were all national expansion. But we're starting to
get zezy top deep cuts in some of the commercials again.
As it was just we need Troy Aikman back in
the commercials.
Speaker 1 (03:17):
I like Troy Igman. I've always thought he was good.
He's a tall guy. I saw him one time. He's
a huge, big All right, here's another bone in. I
thought you'd enjoy this. I'm just gonna read it fifty
you know that's gonna be always. I'm just gonna read
the headline fifty one year old doctor Pattaya Mulinuh. He was,
(03:43):
he was arrested. He was in the Philippines. He's been
arrested for performing penal enlargements in the back of his
nineteen ninety Toyota Corolla.
Speaker 2 (03:55):
Because because if I ever think that's an operation I need,
I'm going to search out the guy who's bringing it
out of a mid nineties Japanese hatchback.
Speaker 1 (04:06):
Doing it out of his car. Now it gets two
hundred dollars. Uh, he's literally done thousands. They say no,
and but somebody didn't get what they promised. I guess,
and then uh, and then they got he got got arrested.
So there's nothing I can say to that. I'm so
close to that. I know this is a podcast, but
(04:28):
still we're iHeart, and we don't go too far, I mean,
can wait too far.
Speaker 2 (04:32):
But there are still some moral lines that, regardless of
what platform you're on, you should just probably just toe
the line, but don't cross it.
Speaker 3 (04:41):
It feels like this might be one of those.
Speaker 1 (04:43):
Thank you all right, here's something that's going on right now,
and I think you and I both would enjoy this.
Scream therapy is becoming very popular. Uh, you stand in
a circle and you scream at the top of your
lungs and somehow that relieves your tension. And there's groups
doing it throughout the US. It started in New Jersey. Uh,
(05:06):
when they would go and get on the shore and
stand around in the circle and scream at each other
or are just scream in general. I don't think it's
at each other.
Speaker 3 (05:17):
Yeah, I can.
Speaker 2 (05:18):
I mean I can see the process of why people
would think this works. I mean every time I worked
to you know, watch my grandpa rebuild a carburetor or
an old engine or something. There was a lot of
screaming involved.
Speaker 1 (05:31):
You learned a lot of words.
Speaker 2 (05:32):
Yeah, it seemed to help him make it through the
end of the job.
Speaker 1 (05:37):
I was when Alex was little and I was doing
something and I did I hit something or did something,
and I let them all go. I mean I set
them all yeah in one and I looked down and
she had her hands over her mouth, going, you know,
it's like four or five. You're gonna get so much
from because she'd rats you out easy. She would she
(06:00):
roll over on you quick.
Speaker 3 (06:01):
That's why she's a good lawyer.
Speaker 1 (06:02):
Yeah, great, great lawyer. Let's do one more bonehead and
get out of here.
Speaker 3 (06:07):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (06:07):
Here's a guy getting divorced. He's been ordered to pay
his ex wife an extra amount of money because it
came out in the trial he saved her con or
contact number as under chubby.
Speaker 2 (06:23):
Wait a second, that's enough in the divorce proceedings to
be labeled what like some logical abuse or something that's
going to equal thousands of dollars.
Speaker 1 (06:36):
It must speak this woman judge a bit. I probably
shouldn't have said that answers all the hate mail, mail
it in, send it in.
Speaker 2 (06:46):
We need some we need some investigation on potential bias
involved there.
Speaker 3 (06:51):
I don't want that. I'm now you have alerted me.
Speaker 2 (06:55):
I might need to do some editing on my own
phone book I have in my cell phone because there's
a lot of names going back multiple I've had the
same phone number since I got this my first cell phone,
whenever I was sixteen.
Speaker 1 (07:12):
Years Let's see what my name is in there to
be you.
Speaker 3 (07:15):
Know, Yeah, yours.
Speaker 2 (07:17):
Yours is easy because it's you know, just Bama is
an easy one to remember.
Speaker 3 (07:22):
I'm real.
Speaker 2 (07:24):
I might be that guy that's real bad with names,
so I use physical descriptors or potentially if you. If
I know your place of employment, it'll be like you know,
short hair coffee shop, right, and so then I can
lock you in that way I.
Speaker 1 (07:41):
Used to get. I wouldn't. I don't get them obviously
very much anymore. But there for a while, I got
a lot of Obama stuff, you know, where they just
hated that guy and I and they would send it
in somehow. They'd get me thinking that I was Obama,
you know. And I mean just some ugly mean.
Speaker 3 (07:56):
People because of Bama.
Speaker 1 (07:59):
Oh yeah, I got it. I got there for it was.
It went on for like about three or four years.
Even after he was out office. I was still getting
I get one every now and then. You know, you're stupid,
and it's hard to differentiate between one of our listeners
and on Obama. I had to read through it to
make sure I go, yeah, I had nothing to do
(08:21):
with that. That didn't me, you know, and I just
let it. I never answered anybody.
Speaker 3 (08:24):
You know, Samma Hussein Obama.
Speaker 1 (08:26):
Yeah, they thought I was Obama. I got I mean
it was. There's some people hate that guy, I mean
hate him. I don't know. I don't hate anybody.
Speaker 3 (08:37):
But god, what you got to say. There's a lot
of people with mental health issues, and I'm.
Speaker 1 (08:42):
Sure there was a couple of them. Probably you would
have told him you sent that to Bama, Brown said Obama.
They would have went, yeah, that's cool, that's fine.
Speaker 3 (08:49):
He can patch along.
Speaker 2 (08:51):
He's a member of that liberal media doing the radio
show exactly. Make sure he gets it.
Speaker 1 (08:57):
God knows, I'm the only I'm probably the only one
left that isn't liberal. But you know, I will say
it's not because I'm political, because I don't give a shit.
Speaker 3 (09:05):
Yeah that that checks out. I have. That's honestly, that's
the safest way to go through life these days. It
really is.
Speaker 2 (09:12):
I have the same name, the same exact name as
my grandfather, who was a longtime county judge. Oh yeah,
a lot of times where I would get letters talking
about how you know you you dis you did my
daddy's so bad whenever he went in front of you
back in nineteen seventy two.
Speaker 3 (09:32):
And I'm like, guys, I was born in eighty six, Like, yeah,
you get the wrong, wrong person.
Speaker 1 (09:37):
Wrong, goy, check it. Do your homework.
Speaker 3 (09:39):
But everybody aarp early, so trade off.
Speaker 1 (09:43):
You should you should go ahead and follow yourself security.
Thank you for listening. We appreciate you