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June 6, 2023 • 106 mins
Audio heard on the KC O'Dea Radio Show
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Episode Transcript

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(00:08):
Remember remember remember all right, goodmorning, it is six h eight here

(00:57):
on the case O Day Radio program, Tuesday edition, phone number eight eight
eight nine three four seven eight sevenfours. We get things kicked off.
Coming up on the show, wegot us some Supreme Court ish news.
I find this um rather interesting butalso kind of a no brainer. And

(01:23):
of course it's getting the maximum maximumamount of coverage New York Times, Associated
Press, you name it. Andoh yeah it has to do with Trump.
So I'll let you do the maththere. I mean, granted,
it is this Supreme Court case.But you know, we sit here and

(01:47):
we talk about um. Oh youknow, well, you know journalists are
sitting there and they you know,they they parsed the news and figure out
what is what is relevant to andgo ahead and presented for the American public.
And I've mentioned many, many manytimes on this show that story selection

(02:13):
is just as informative as what iswritten in the stories. Right, So
you know, we sit here andwe say, all right, well they
wrote this story, and in thestory they they started using the term what
was the one they invented just forduring the Trump administration where basically where there

(02:38):
was you know, the suthing alongthe lines of there's no facts supporting this,
which is, look, when you'recovering politicians, I don't care who
they are. That's a term thatcould have been used since day one,
Right, that's the reality of it. However, being able to use it

(03:00):
also calls into question, well didyou attempt to verify whether it was true
or not? And some will useit and then they'll put something after it
and say, you know, andwhen we looked at it, here's what
we got. Because then I canevaluate as a as an individual who you

(03:21):
know, knows how Google works orduck duck go or whatever you choose to
use the veracity of it, andyou just have to be consistent when you
apply that. Like I'll give youan example something Trump. What did Trump
say the other day? Oh,birthright? He said, if he's elected,

(03:42):
he will within the first six monthsundo birthright citizenship. Okay, he
can go ahead and make that claim, but the reality is the birthright citizenhip
citizenship is based on a reading ofthe Constitution and then court cases surrounding it.

(04:05):
So how do you undo it?You have two methods, but neither
of which are an executive order.Do you get what I'm saying so,
and that's just a Trump example.There's other examples that we've seen with Joe
Biden where he's like, I'll goahead and do this thing if elected,
and then obviously when he attempted todo it, courts came in and said,

(04:29):
no, you can't do it.It's clearly here in the Constitution.
Right, There's a lot of complexityto it. I'm just pointing out that
this is the nuance within which weoperate. So if you're a reporter and
you want to take it upon yourself, hey, this politician made this claim
on the campaign trail. Here's thereality of what it looks like within our

(04:54):
system. I there's two things Ihave to evaluate, Okay, One what
the campaign said. Three things actually, one with the campaign said to the
process within my own understanding of howI think that could or could not be
accomplished. And then three based onwhatever information you provided. I'm also evaluating
whether the person who wrote the storydid so in a good faith way.

(05:18):
All right, So if they sayTrump couldn't do that, because the current
case law based on interpretation of theUS Constitution, clearly lays out than anyone
born blah blah, blah. Allright, So I can sit there and
read it and then I you know, I'm not a lawyer. I'm not

(05:40):
a lawmaker for that matter, butI can evaluate based on my own understanding.
All right, well, that tracks. But if you write he can't
do it because he's too dumb towrite it, I'm just giving an extreme
example. He's too dumb to writean executive order or something. Well,
now I'm calling into question everything elseyou reported. It is through these tenants
that we sit there and we evaluatethings. Case in point. A lot

(06:06):
of people have active lawsuits and investigationsand all sorts of stuff about Trump.
But the reality is there's a lotgoing on with Joe Biden's stuff too.
They're getting ready potentially on Thursday tosit there and hold Christopher Ray in contempt.

(06:29):
That's kind of a big deal.And and and it's just very passively
talked about in a lot of thereporting. Now they are reporting it because
you can't get away from that.But then it turns into the tenor of
which of the way that they're reportingit. You know, James Comber and
Chuck Grassly are out of control.Well wait a second, how is this

(06:51):
dissimilar from what the heck's going onright now with everything that we suff forever
right under the under the Trump administrationor being critical of information with January sixth,
So you know, there is there'sevidence now and it's easy to verify

(07:15):
that the some of the tapes andthe sizzle reel, you know, the
stuff that basically was mocked up forthe prime time J six committee hearings,
that they took audio or they tooka video that had no audio and laid

(07:35):
over a soundtrack. Now, whyis that important? One of the grand
scheme of things. They did thisand identified in other cases, and they
matched it up with audio that wasgoing on over Capitol Police radio. But
in after review, some reporters havefound out that there is other video where

(07:59):
they they didn't we have no ideawhere the audio came from, you know,
and and reporters just gave it theassumption or the benefit of the doubt
that well, they just matched upaudio from another source, Really did they?
These are standards that wouldn't hold upin a court of law. And

(08:20):
I point this out because there's aSupreme Court case over just oddity, and
frankly, both the Trump and hispeople and the current administration for that matter,
seemed to be on the same sidehere, but it gets coverage because

(08:43):
people like it. And it's sohere's what it is. So do you
remember when Marco Rubio and Donald Trumpare going back and forth and Trump decided
the way he was going to attackMarco was little Marco, right, he
was going to make fun of hisheight, and Marco got a dig in
that's stuck, and it mostly stuckbecause Trump responded to it, and it

(09:07):
was the little hands thing, right, Rubio, the fact you're here,
let me read the quote. Rubiobegan the verbal jousting when he told supporters
at a rally that Trump was alwayscalling him little Marco. But Trump,
who says he is six foot three, has disproportionately small hands, Like have
you seen his hands? And youknow what they say about men with small

(09:31):
hands, You can't trust them,all right, Trump started in with it
on Rubio. Rubio responded, andif Trump had left it there probably would
have gone away. But then famouslyyou remember Trump holding up his hands saying,

(09:52):
someone, I guarantee there's no problem. I guarantee you that. And
so some guy decided he want tomake t shirts out of it, and
the T shirts read Trump too small. Yeah, that's right. He created
merch. Well, then he triedto trademarket. And that's literally what the
Supreme Court thing is about. Andthere is like extensive coverage I was reading

(10:16):
yesterday and again, I know it'sa Supreme Court case, but the fact
that it's up to the Supreme Courtis laughable. It's pretty clear that you
can't trademark something about somebody else usually. However, when it comes to a
public official like the President of theUnited States, it actually it pivots all

(10:39):
the way to the other end ofthe spectrum. So if if I wanted
to put out a series of abunch of merch hats, T shirt stuff
like that about uh, let's say, um my gahbor okay, right,

(11:00):
and I want to I want toput a bunch of stuff out. It's
got her likeness on it, andyou know, phrases that are derogatory.
All. I wouldn't do that,by the way, if you're listening.
But if I wanted to do thatand then profit off of it, she
could sue me. I'm using herlikeness without her express written permission, which
is the standard. There be itwe contract where she's getting money or she

(11:24):
just signed it away. But whenyou get into the former a president or
a former president of the United States, it's different because the likeness within that
office is actually owned by you andme, which is why if you want
to go put you know, GeorgeWashington merchandise out, you can go ahead
and do that. This guy,though, on the other hand, is

(11:46):
wanting to limit the ability of anybodyelse to do it. And it should
be easy to throw out, buthe's been able to chew up the political
ladder to get this stuff to whereit is. And so now the Supreme
Court's going to have to come inhere. And again the Biden administration is

(12:07):
actually supporting Trump's position on this.So my point is there is a dearth
of coverage on literally ongoing stuff versussome guy with a nuisance lawsuit, which
is one of hundreds that Donald Trumpis still facing and now it's going to

(12:31):
go to the Supreme Court. It'sjust the dumbest thing I've ever seen.
Now, there is middle ground here, like, let's say, hypothetically,
all right, go with me here. Let's say hypothetically, we're not talking
about a public official, but perhapsa private official. But somebody who is
you know, who has a publicprofile right there, an athlete to our

(12:56):
let's just say a morning radio host. Okay, this will be easy to
quantify. And let's say that somebodydecided to put out merchandise that some might
construe as derogatory. A good examplewould be maybe they put their picture next
to a serial killer's picture and maybemake comparisons over I don't know name,

(13:24):
look whatever it is, and thennot renumerate that person without express written permission.
Well, now this is where I'dlike to see this Supreme Court address,
And unfortunately this is not one ofthose cases. But like, can
you imagine if somebody would do that? It would be very questionable, very

(13:52):
problematic. Some would say a violationof, you know, a trademark,
even if it's one assumed to notrenumerate that person for selling merchandise with their
picture next to a serial killer,not to mention the serial killer. There
a state I don't even know,crazy crazy stuff. Ross, you're not

(14:15):
a lawyer, right, make sureRoss is not a lawyer here, I'm
not, but you would understand whythat might you know, might want to
take that to the Supreme Court.Right now, I'm not seeing it with
put in a chat GPT and it'sa no case. So you put into
chat GPT just a general scenario likemaybe that exact scenario I explained where somebody's

(14:37):
likeness was used next to a serialkillers, which some would say is derogatory,
and then somebody else is profiting thisthird party. Yeah, put in
a chat GPTs is no case.M actually gave me examples to bat too.
Oh wow, okay, yeah,yeah, so it's cited cases.
It did because you remember that storywe had last week right where it's cited

(14:58):
cases and that one thing it didn'twork. So all right, well,
well I stand corrected if chat GPTsaid, so who am I to question
it? But yes, that isan actual Supreme Court case with Trump.
Everything's so dumb, all right,hang loose more to come, we'll be
back. Show after the show ison the iHeartRadio app. Search casey O

(15:22):
Day for the podcast on the iHeartRadioapp. So it's just it's just a
coincidence. Is just a coincidence thatthere's somebody just posted you because I can
see you posted on the show accounta photograph reading random at Hayes for sheriff

(15:46):
that would be you by the way, studio shot and it just happens to
be a picture of a mug withmy picture next to John Wayne Gacy and
other pictures that were like AI generatedor whatever, buy some stupid app on
a like a tumbler. And yousaid, what you were just taking a

(16:07):
picture of your sheriff's badge. It'sjust a coincidence. Correct, the sheriff's
badge is you didn't even get allof the sheriff's badge because it's to the
right and like two of the pointsare missed. Full disclosure. I'm awful
taking pictures. Look, I'm reallybad at it. Your foot, so
you're gonna fall back on the nota professional photo. Listen. I admit
my my weaknesses, so you respectme more, very humble. So it's

(16:30):
just ran just happened to play themugs in question. You know, some
would call that evidence chat GBT wouldnot not guilty, all right, I
didn't run down to some other stuffcoming up, hangga keeping you connected.

(16:52):
This is WPTI in the Triad andone oh six one FM Talk in the
Triangle. Are you good morning?Six thirty five? Oh that's nice?

(17:17):
Oh man, all right, we'lllove to get to I'll have to get
to that as well, all right, So the this is rather interesting.
The Mayor of New York, EricAdams, yesterday suggested one of the ways,
well, actually, here, letme read and read the quote.

(17:38):
It is my vision. This isbased on housing illegal immigrants in New York,
which is being done in a varietyof ways as they make their way
to New York City, neither ontheir own or with the assistance of several
Southern governors. They're currently being housedin hotels, including one hotel I read

(18:03):
a piece of the New York Postover the weekend was crazy around Times Square,
where it just sounded like it's bonkersup in there. Other hotels outside
of the city where the City ofNew York literally shipped them out, including
hotels that had previously been contracted tohouse homeless veterans, where they kicked the

(18:29):
homeless veterans out. We did thatstory. So now Adams, who referred
to it as a crisis, whichis laughable when you consider that those numbers
in New York pale in comparison towhat small Texas cities are dealing with,
said quote. It is my visionto take the next step to this faith

(18:52):
based locales. I do find itironic now with all of the demonization of
the charitable acts of many church entities, which politicians, especially in New York,
love to demonize. Like do youremember during COVID when Samaritan's Purse went

(19:12):
up and literally built it's another hospitalup there, and you had New Yorkers
and New York politicians demonizing them.Oh they have they're religious, religiously aligned,
and now they're available for some ofthe funds that are well, technically

(19:33):
it's the people inside that are gettingthe funds that are getting treated. But
yeah, yeah, they're constructed kindof their own hospital there in the park.
Now Adams wants to exhaust those resources. And then this is the line
that's raising eyebrows. Excuse me,I'm about to sneeze and I'm trying not

(19:56):
to. We'll take the next stepto the faith based locales and then move
to private residences. They have sparerooms. I am so excited. If
he's serious, I am through thethrough the roof. Man, what do

(20:18):
you think the net impact will be? Now here's the deal? Will there
would there be people who would stepup, sure? Absolutely, but is
that the fair way to do it. I mean, the reality is that
the majority, the vast majority ofthe city voted for the policies that have
brought this about and New York many, especially many of the very expensive buildings

(20:44):
have an actual daily occupancy rate thatis that is much lower. I mean,
in some cases it's less than halfas very very rich folks from all
over the world. One of thethings that they hold I guess as an
investment as well as if they everneed it, is high end condos in

(21:07):
New York, especially around Central Parkand especially with the very like Billionaire's Row.
A lot of those buildings, lessthan half the people live there full
time, so it sounds like alot of room to me. Probably should
use those All of the uber richlimousine liberals there on the Upper East and

(21:32):
West Side. I'm sure they gottons of extra rooms and those big old,
big old park mansions and the bigold brownstones that dot those streets.
Why should some folks over in Brooklynwho will actually say, yeah, yeah,
we got an extra room. Andalso there is there any sort of

(21:56):
liability on the part of the cityif they do that. Just wondering,
so, hey, this is thisis the mayor you elected, These are
the policies that you voted for.Let's go, let's figure out. Let's

(22:17):
figure out. And it's very easyto determine, as they have all the
records. Right, you go down, you look up. All right,
So, uh, sixty five ParkAvenue or whatever. I'm just making up
an address. Don't know who ownsthat. Probably pretty nice though, that
home according to our city records,because of course we love bureaucracy and everything,

(22:41):
we show that it has eight bedrooms. We also show that it's to
a you know, an uber richdemocratic mega donor couple that lives in there
and there's no kids in the house. It's just them, so boom,
seven bedrooms. You can double uptoo, that'll be fine, especially with

(23:04):
you know, the military age mailsthat are on their own. You put
two in each room. That's fine. Let's do it. What are you
waiting to don't just suggest it?Do it? Aha? Now? And

(23:26):
I knew somebody would send this tome, and it was Boston Paul.
Third Amendment. We don't think aboutthat very much. Pretty sure they're not
soldiers, although they are military agemails traveling alone. But yes, quartering,
quartering on behalf of the government doesaddress soldiers. However, I wonder

(23:48):
if based on intent that could beextended to be interpreted as basically, if
the government is forcing you to quartersomebody, that would be a violation,
and you know what, that'd bea better use of the Supreme Courts time
than nuisance lawsuits basically meant to continueto screw with the former president. I

(24:15):
can't wait. It makes you gotthe cameras. I want to watch this
too. I want to see it. I want to see the totality of
those uh, you know, doubledigit million residents, you know, ten
million and above residences filled to thefilled to capacity. Man, let's take

(24:37):
advance that. And I don't knowif you know this, um Governor's got
a whole island man adjacent there inNew York. I believe it's called that,
so you know, that's a lotof land out there. The official
residence is actually of the New YorkMayor is on one of the islands there

(24:57):
on the east side of New York. Or is it on the I'm sorry,
is it on the island? Ican't remember if it's on the other.
But regardless, there is the officialresidence there. Let's get that loaded
up. What are we waiting for? I love this suggestion. At Frankly,

(25:18):
I'm surprised Eric decided that this wasAdams decided this was something he wanted
to do. The irony, ofcourse, is if you come out and
openly whine about this, and you'reone of the people who literally voted for
how we got here or donated forhow we got here, maybe you couldn't
even be bothered to vote. Youjust look like the big old giant hypocrite

(25:42):
that you are. And I wouldalso point out that forced quartering is a
hallmark of a communist doctrine. Ohyeah, no, no, no,
they they love it. Man.There's lots of examples historically where basically there
was changes in governmental style to youknow, from something to communist or advanced

(26:07):
socialist style stuff where they basically said, hey, all of you rich folk,
we're gonna be repurposing your homes andproperty. You'd be lucky if you
got a room, if you wereespecially if you were not politically aligned with
whoever was coming in. So yeah, man, I look forward to that.

(26:27):
Let's get let's get that rocket androlling, all right, eight eight,
eight nine, three four seven,eight seventy four. But there's lots
of hypocrites. And the reason theyare is because most of the time they
don't get called out on it becausethey're you know, they're in the in
crowd. In the end, thein crowd right now controls the federal judicial

(26:49):
system, which has created this giganticdouble standard, and of course the media
is sympathetic to them, and thatgoes a long way. Then you can
do the stuff, the really scarystuff, like go after your political opponents.
In the media will be like,no, this is necessary. Well

(27:10):
wait a second, what about literallysome of the allegations you're throwing out that
really kind of match with some ofthe stuff that we now know about people
within your club. I mean,well, that's attempt to take down democracy.
Man, How do I know becausepeople like James Comee exist. Try
not to fall out of your chairlistening to this insanity. In an interview
from the other day, four yearsof a retribution presidency might look like.

(27:37):
All right, so he's asked,what do you think Trump, if Trump
got reelected, what do you thinkit would look like? Well, think
about what four years of a retributionpresidency might look like. Just settle on
that first statement right there, I'dsay that we're about two years into one,
Mary Garland's probably gonna indict Trump.You realize that, right. I

(28:04):
know that they were testing the watersearlier and everyone freaked out, but they're
just softening it. So you bringit up the first time, everyone like
cringes because I don't know if thiswould be good for us, And then
you bring it up again and maybeyou don't get as visceral reaction, and
then eventually you pull the trigger onit. But anyway, I'm sorry,
continue, mister Komby. He couldorder the investigation and prosecution of individuals who

(28:32):
oh oh oh could he? Uh, he's as enemies on the enemy's list
because the president constitutionally does oversee theexecutive branch entirely, which includes the Department
of Justice prosecutors and investigators, andso he could commission direct that individuals be
pursued. He could also direct allkinds of other conduct that people would maybe

(28:56):
take to court to try to stop. But who enforces court orders? Yeah?
Yeah, Rosse, I'm sorry.I'm so happy you survived. Having
to dub this in this morning dueto made so angry. It made me
so angry because I realized how Ifelt when I listened to it. Yesterday,
and I said, I didn't evengive him a trigger warn. I

(29:17):
just send it in the prep.All right, I'm sorry, continue,
mister Combe. Mostly the United StatesMarshall's Service, which is in part of
the executive Branch and reports to thepresident. And so President Trump could say,
I don't care what Supreme Court saysor these district judges say, I'm
telling the Marshal Service don't enforce thecourt order. And so our constitution really

(29:40):
does give a rogue president, whichis what this would be tremendous power to
destroy as well. So here iswhat Coomb, he says, is the
nightmare scenario. A presidency that isrot with the investigation and attack of its
political opponents, where the DOJ andfederal law enforcement has been weaponized, and

(30:06):
where they just decide to ignore thelaw in their pursuits. Can you imagine?
Can you imagine such a scenario existinghere in the United States where exactly
what Comey just laid out was somethingthat we the public had to deal with.

(30:32):
Could you fathom such that? Ross? Could you imagine that you're an
imaginative guy? Yeah, I reallycould, Like but no, no,
no, but I mean, like, really imagine it where like you know,
federal law enforcement has been weaponized.Nuisance lawsuits as well as an investigations
by the hundreds literally are out therefor the purpose of attacking one's political opponent,

(30:52):
and in many cases the law isignored. Once again, I can
envision that, yes, somebody wouldsay, I don't know that. That's
what's been happening since twenty sixteen withthe Russian collusion, and you know,
going into an investigation knowing that there'sactually absolutely no evidence, in fact,
knowing that the evidence you have beenprovided has been provided by the Hillary Clinton
campaign and it's falsified and you're stillpursuing it. Or or maybe you know,

(31:15):
knowing that you have Hunter Biden's laptopand you know that it's full of
guilty stuff, but you know,not investigating that. But more well,
actually but old on not just ignoringit, but also say like countering by
denying that it's real. Correct oryou can save in like knowing in in
the summer of twenty twenty that JoeBiden was taken bribes from I don't know,
say like China, which you knowis that China? Yeah, and

(31:37):
just ignoring it. Okay, you'renot investigating it. Some would say that
is what's the word election? Someonedo with an election interference? Is that
the word election? That's because youcould have pursued that, been honest about
what you knew, and that thatwould have sunk Joe Biden's campaign. But
you did not do that because youknow Orange man bat Yeah, so it's

(32:00):
just like she'd be in prison.So she'd be in prison. So this
is a movie you watched or ystopianthing. I'd prefer if it was a
movie. Was it on Netflix orsomething? You and the wife sitting down?
He goes at the end of thataudio, there's more to that audio,
which we tweeted out at case inthe radio, the whole video.
He says, it might just mightseem like science fiction, like is it

(32:22):
even possible? But it is ifTrump was president. No, it's reality.
It's happened since twenty sixteen. Andhe says it out loud, and
he knows he knows, but heknows that the interviewer is not going to
push back. Did you have tosee who the interviewer was? Yes,
I did. It's very familiar.Was it Tucker? Was it? I

(32:44):
think it was not Tucker? Itwas not Tucker Tucker. Was it O'Reilly?
Was it was? It? Wasit Bill O'Reilly? No? Mmm?
Was it an Irish looking person ofperhaps? What now? What characteristics
made them look? Okay, shevery weasley, like okay, your Harry
Potter fan, m sou Weasley.But also an appearent like maybe red hair

(33:08):
or something. Yeah, it's aginger correct. Huh did you recognize her
from anywhere else? I believe sheused to work for a presidential campaign or
president in an administration. Oh wow, what'd she do? Probably like cleaning
services or cook or something. No, no, no, no, she
would get up there every day andanswer questions for the president. She would
speak for him. Oh wow,So literally the the minister of propaganda pretty

(33:30):
much. Yeah, huh, soweird. We're doomed. Six fifty one
hang on, thank you. Caseyis on w PTI in the Triad and
one h six one FM Talk inthe Triangle. All right, a long

(33:51):
segment there, but he'd you know, needed it call me of such a
slug man cross and or just talkingoff the air. Yeah, I do
remember. I remember when people thoughthe was especially about the time he came
out with all the Hillary stuff.They're like this guy's awesome, But I
think it's just a prime example ofpower corrupts man. And what I call

(34:13):
the vampiric nature of Washington, DCis settle in. And why wouldn't Why
wouldn't you settle into that side.They're gonna always protect you, They're gonna
lift you up, they're gonna makethey're gonna keep you relevant even after your
time in office. They may giveyou a teaching position at Harvard or a
cushy gig is a person a noshow job at some sort of a nonprofit

(34:36):
and or political action group. Butthe ability to sit there and say what
he said and not flinch and nothave the reporter pushback tells you everything you
need to know. All right,good morning everybody. It is the Casey

(35:37):
O Day Radio Program, Phone numbereight eight eight nine three four seven eight
seven. What is this stupidity?Oh? Good lord man. We yeah,

(36:00):
I'll tell you what. We gotsome We got some crazy, crazy
news in the in our little collectiveof kicker stories, you know, the
little weird ones, funny ones,Florida man, that kind of stuff,
carcass seating, which rituals, youknow, just you know, the stuff
you see on the day to daythat gives you a little chuckle or a
little pause, so um, infact, we'll sprinkle those throughout the show.

(36:25):
Just f y eyer on that again. Eight eight eight nine three four
seven eight seven four. You knowwhat I was reading? You know what
I was reading about yesterday? Well, actually you know what. Let me
because I wanted to connect these twostories coming off the James Comey audio And
in fact, I'm gonna play itagain because it's so insane. So if

(36:50):
you did hear it in the lastsegment, you'd be like, I should
hear that again, and you should, and if you didn't, then at
least you'll get to sap it up. But I want to make a connection
here, So let me jump backto this real quick and keep in mind
all of the stuff that got ushere, right, the years long Russian
collusion narrative, which we now knowand I think most people probably realize,

(37:13):
but not those in levers of poweror those who didn't go along with it
because it served political interests that whatyou saw was APO research, and obviously
and not even APO research, basicallyOPO fiction research that was then shuffled through
the standard levels of bureaucracy in Washington, DC came out the other end,

(37:37):
and full fledged investigations, newspaper articles, narratives, bogus documents to be the
Russian collusion thing, which we spentso much time, so much money,
and frankly, so much ability tohave any sort of discourse over political issues,

(37:59):
that was squandered. And that's acurrency, and that's a currency that's
gone in the same way that currencyof parents trusting their kids teachers, which
ironically isn't always fair because many ofthe decisions that got us there were not
the teachers individual decisions, But that'swhere we find ourselves in the same way.

(38:21):
Rouse did you see the video ofthe kids having the pride parade where
the teachers dressed as a gay unicorn? It was all over Twitter? Yes,
I did. Yeah, And whatdid you think when you saw that?
You thought, man, they mustbe learning some stuff? Not really?
Oh oh okay, you had youhad an opposite because you believe it
or not, others had the samereaction that you did, which was not

(38:44):
one that felt that that was probablywhat the school should be spending time doing,
you know, kind of seeing thelittle bailey well way over the top.
Yeah, yeah, it was quitea bunch. So you know that's
that's currency though, that you're squanderingwith that you spend and in that you're
spending that trust. We do itin relationships, interpersonal relationships all the time.

(39:07):
Right you're you're dating somebody, you'remarried to somebody and they're you know,
they're flirting with somebody else, oryou know, they go out and
they lie to you about something,right though, these are all things that
are a currency. Trust is currency. So all of that's going on simultaneously.

(39:29):
There's literal information coming to light thatthat could impugne one of your allies,
and you not only actively ignore it, but you participate in what you
call a cover up, or ifyou want to be polite, you called
a distraction, but cover up seemsmore accurate. And then you cobble together
a bunch of your buddies to goout and do a series of interviews like

(39:50):
Clapper and Coby and all the rest, and and others, to sign on
to a document attesting to something thatis then treated as though it was under
oath by the media, which alsowill accompany you on this mission. So
your damn right that James Comey willsit down with the former press secretary of

(40:12):
the Biden administration on her new MSNBCshow and unronically say this, which he
refers to as some sort of quotescience fiction. Right, it's so crazy
what he's suggesting. It would bescience fiction. When asked what he thinks
a re elected Trump for your termwould look like, I think about what

(40:34):
four years of a retribution presidency mightlook like. He could order the investigation
and prosecution of individuals who he seesas enemies. I'm sure on the enemy's
list. Because the president constitutionally doesoversee the executive Branch entirely, which includes
the Department of Justice prosecutors and investigators, and so he could commission direct that

(41:00):
individuals be pursued. He could alsodirect all kinds of other conduct that people
would maybe take to court to tryto stop. But who enforces court orders
mostly the United States Marshals Service,which is in part of the executive Branch
and reports to the president. Andso President Trump could say, I don't

(41:20):
care what Supreme Court says or thesedistrict judges say, I'm telling the Marshal
Service don't enforce the court order.And so our constitution really does give a
rogue president, which is what thiswould be tremendous power to destroy. So
again, Comey's nightmare scenario, theone he described as damn near science fiction,
is a presidency during which there areinvestigations of one's political enemies. There

(41:47):
are investigations outside of just within thepresidency, as well as lawsuits after lawsuit
after lawsuit of one's political enemies,and a ignoring of the law for political
means. That's the doomsday scenario.No pushback, no reflection in his eyes

(42:13):
about what he's saying, knowing,and he has to know, I mean.
And here's the story I want topair with this because so much of
this is Russia based. I wasreminded yesterday based on another story that emerged,
if you are to look at ourmodern history, what was the most

(42:38):
injurious betrayal within the federal government tothe advantage of Russia, what was it?
Because they would have you believe itwas a Russian collusion or the Hunter
Biden laptop based on reporting, Butin reality, the most injurious betrayal that

(42:59):
we noah of, I guess toan advantage for the Russians in the modern
history of the United States comes fromwithin the FBI. Robert Hanson, remember
Robert Hanson, the former FBI agentturned Russian spy. He thought he was

(43:23):
going to be and he said this, He thought he was James Bond,
who received no less than some fifteenissme one point five million in cash,
diamonds and bank funds for committing treasonproviding all sorts of information started as Spine
back in nineteen eighty five, useddead drops. He compromised human sources,

(43:47):
counterintelligence techniques, investigations, tons andtons of classified government documents and gave them
directly to his Russian handlers. Thestuff that he turned over was very important,
was very informative, and when you'retalking about human sources, was also

(44:14):
very detrimental to those who may havebeen working in undercover positions. I we
don't know the full scope, becauseyou know they're they're not going to tell
you. We don't know the fullshit. There's a possibility that somebody was
killed when it came to light thatthey were not necessarily you know, perhaps

(44:36):
it could be a US resident spy, but the likelihood is as it was,
names of Russians who were actively workingfor the US. What do you
think happened to them? You thinkthey you think they might have fallen out
of one of those those horribly designedwindows in Moscow. Probably Hanson found dead

(45:02):
in his prison cell natural causes,as appears, I guess at this point
he was housed at the supermax ADXand Florence, Colorado home to But who
eld do we got in there?We got well, that's El Chapos in
there, basically the worst of theworst of the worst, right, that's

(45:23):
the That's it. There's no prisonclassification or correctional facility higher than that.
He was seventy nine years of age. He was found unresponsive. Emergency medical
services were rendered, they even broughtin outside medical personnel. Eventually was pronounced
dead. But yeah, Hanson hadbeen there since well, he was arrested

(45:46):
in two thousand and one, sofollowing whatever the case was, on charges
of spine for Russia and the formerSoviet Union. So all of these things
we freaked out over. Actually wasthe worst of it came from within the
FBI, So, you know what, I was gonna look something up,

(46:09):
but it just dawned on me.Hold on, we're we're looking this up
on the fly. How long wasCoomy at the FBI? I know he
wasn't director back and when this wasgoing on. Let's see, that's right,
because he was a US attorney priorto that, That's what it was,

(46:31):
so he wasn't at the FBI atthat time. So I'm just I'm
just pointing out that, you know, for all of this, we have
our example, and it was remindedon us yesterday when we learned the news
of the worst spy case in modernhistory, which was one of our FBI
own. So Coomy's got some stones, man, I'll tell you what.

(46:54):
All right, So I have aquestion for you, and this is,
uh, what was that Abe showcalled What Would You Do? Right?
Where they create these scenarios in frontof people and they're like, dah,
let's see how they react, andit would be something crazy like some guy
who's like, I don't know,Middle Eastern or whatever was. They're all
actors, but would go in notall the people around those. So some
actors, like a Middle Eastern guywould walk in because the scenarios seemingly were

(47:19):
mostly around white people being super racistfrom what I've seen of that show,
So some Middle Eastern guy would walkinto like a coffee shop and the you
know, the little white actress girlbehind the counters posing as a barista would
be like, you can't come inhere, terrorist, and then like everyone
freak out, and then John whateverhis name is, would walk out.

(47:42):
I'm like, don't worry. Itwas just the thing and let's talk about
how you felt. And it wasvery popular. So what would you do?
All right, So we're gonna playa little game of what would you
do? And I'm gonna throw itout to you Rossa, you're gonna get
it first though, in this scenariarea, what would you do if you
walked outside and they're in your yard? Were three naked witches having a carcass

(48:07):
eating ritual right there on the lawn. Uh they're they're completely naked. Uh
yeah yeah, and they're eating likea dead animal or something. Yeah yeah,
yeah yeah. Are they inside apentagram? Uh no, but it
isn't night, so it's hard totell. Maybe they you know, are
they hot laid one? Well?Now, why would you ask that?

(48:31):
I mean, either you want toeither way, I'm gonna proably I'm gonna
call the authorities to be like,there's crazy people eating I don't know,
squirrels or something in my front yard. It's bizarre, but I mean,
if they're attractive, I might takea few more seconds to assess the situation.
Whereas you know, if they're beingarmed with the facts, where if
maybe they I don't know, likeif they're big boned or have a hormone

(48:52):
disorder or whatever it is, I'dbe like, oh my, I'm calling
right away. I'm honest. Sothey look like I don't know, maybe
some of the mug shots from theAntifa arrests in Portland, but right,
I'm on the phone right away.Oh okay. But if it's like if
it's like three, you know,clones of Kate uptonny in a squirrel,
it might take a few more secondsbecause you want to You're like, well

(49:14):
that would be weird because I'd bea Bad'd be like why do they all
look like Kate up the right?Like why are there clones? M m
all right? So this was adeer? Has that change? Does that
change anything? That was a dear? It doesn't really matter. I mean
it's dead animals. So now whatlike a cow and they're like making a
stake or something, you know,grilling out. Well, it's the religion

(49:36):
though, so you would call peopleexercising their religion on my property. Yes,
what if they were having I don'tknow the eucharis. Well, you
understand I don't want anyone new property. What if they're out there? This
is you know, this is thebody of Christ. This is the would
you? I don't want you onmy property. Mmmmm okay, all right.
So Rossa does not a fan ofreligious freedom. How do we know

(50:00):
this is a thing because there isan insane story. This is up in
Canadian though, so take it forwhat it's worth. A nature lover's attempt
to capture wildlife on her property camerabackfired horribly after she said she documented what
appeared to be naked witches eating acarcass next to her house. I mean,

(50:25):
who knows, Probably some big prank, I don't know. Social media
post picked in the alleged you're crunchingcoven blowing up with viewers speculating the nighttime
gnashers. This is New York Postarticle all day. We're conducting some sort
of satanic ritual. I don't knowwhat the heck was up with that,
said Karina Stanhope. It freaked usout. It's not something you see every

(50:49):
day. Well, that's the understatement. The native had been reportedly riding one
of her horses when she came acrossa dead deer in her garden. But
it was only later when she assumed, you know, nature would take care
of the carcass, that she reviewedher security camera and saw what she saw.
She described the women as naked,disheveled looking, with long black hair

(51:10):
obscuring their faces, squatting over thedead deer, appearing to dine on it,
reminding her of the horror movie TheWitch. They did have slight loincloths,
though, you know, in casethey got chilly. I don't know.
The whole thing's creepy. We'll tweetout the story. You look at
it, tell us how fast you'dcall the cops. Okay, all right,
so we'll do that at Casey onthe radio on Twitter. We'll take

(51:34):
a break and be back in justa few hang on smart talk all DAYTI
in the Triad and FM talked inthe Triangle. Well, now it appears
there's a little hitch into getting upon the crazy naked and I went and

(51:59):
I read the actual post here,So you're just joining us. This h
this woman she's got she got wildlifecameras on the on her property. There
she lives out Jason to the woods, and um, she had noticed she

(52:21):
had noticed a dead deer carcass inher garden, so she drug it out
of the garden, threw it onthe edge of the property there and uh,
that night she heard her horses actingweird. So the next morning she
started looking at her her security camerasand what she saw and shared was pretty

(52:44):
insane looking. It's, uh,several naked women that are crouched around the
deer carcass and ravenously tearing into thething. Described as some sort of naked
witches eating a carcass cover and somethingsomething something right. It appears though,

(53:04):
and we gave this scenario like whatwould you do, It appears if you
actually read her post that technically itlooks like the carcass she pushed it off
onto like forest property, off theedge of her property, so that they
I don't know that they were trespassing. So they're just they're they're sitting there

(53:25):
in public forest. Uh, youknow, mowing down on a deer carcass
in tiny little loin cloths with everythinghanging out for the world to see in
the middle of the night. SoI don't know, you've called the police
now kind of it's very caring ofyou. Ross, she's still calling the

(53:47):
police on the Kate Upton clones thatshe took a while to evaluate her now
that you know they may not evenbe on your property, just right on
your property line. Oh well,that is completely different, I would agree.
I mean, you still you know, you still want to document it
though, right, well, yeah, I mean you have to in case
something just happen after and uh,you know, you're one security camera that's

(54:10):
gonna be a little grainy, somaybe if you've got someone a little more
zoom. Oh, I mean,well we have multiple cameras, so yeah,
yeah, you different angles, gotit. You can never be too
careful. So they run out inthe traffic or something to get hit by
a car. They're like, ohwait, does anybody have filming is right
here? Yeah, we do.Which angle would you like? So?

(54:32):
Uh yeah, yeah, I feellike that's a really important component of the
story with the crazy naked witch covengoing on there. Uh, speaking of
all things creepy, we'll call thissegment, uh today's iteration of Hollywood.
Uh don't not that they'll listen.Michael Keaton and Tim Burton, you're ready

(55:04):
beetle Juice too. Do we needa beetle juice too? What the hell?
I understand that there is a renaissanceof Michael Keaton, right the Batman
um basically in the Spider Man movies, one of the bad dudes, right,

(55:24):
all right, So I got that, and actually he's in that,
and he's knee in the DC stuffin some capacity. I can't even remember
what it was because he's like itwas like Batman cameo or something planned for.
I don't remember what it was.But the point is is, you
know, he's back on the radar, which is fine. I've always liked
Michael Keaton. I'm good with MichaelKeaton. Is there something I don't know

(55:45):
about Michael Keaton that I that shouldmake me not like him. He doesn't
even seem overtly political. I remember, I've never heard anything bad about him.
I'm having like I'm conflicted even withMichael Keaton because he's gonna Have you
seen the trailer for the air Deevilor not? The Flash movie Flash movie?
Yeah? Yeah, yeah, sothat's the one where he comes back.
Okay, Ezra Miller. I waslike, I'm not going to see

(56:07):
that movie because Ezra Miller is apsychopath and I can't support that. And
he's a lunatic, right, Andthen I see the trailer in the theater
before the New Guardians movie, andI'm like, now what do I do?
Mm, because he's if you haven'tseen the trailer, he's coming back
as Batman. Michael Keaton is goingto be Batman on the silver screen again.
And I sort of I sort ofhave to see that. Remember how

(56:29):
dark and edgy we thought that Batmanwas prior to like Nolan's Batman or because
that was so dead, because ourframe of reference prior to that was the
Batman TV show, right, Imean, he's still Marky's favorite Batman.
I know, I know a lotof people that that's their favorite Batman.
Michael Keaton, Dude, I remember, I remember what a big damn deal
that was that movie. Oh mygosh. But Beetlejuice, I don't know,

(56:52):
No, I don't trust you,high don't ruin. Beetlejuice has a
special place for me. So BeetleJuice came out in nineteen eighty eight,
so I am seven or eight whenit premier September or now that's when it's
new premiere is for Beetle Juice Too. I remember when in nineteen eighty eight.

(57:13):
But the point is, I'm sevenor eight, and I was so
excited about this movie. Remember whata big deal it was when it came
out. Ah, this is cool, it's the special effects are awesome,
it's crazy, it's so good.And I remember I wanted to watch this
movie so bad and my mom saidno, she didn't feel that it was

(57:38):
approach. Now, to be fair, my beef with my mind. I've
told her this back in the day. We had a conversation before she passed
on this and she kind of fessedup to it. So because I always
thought it was unfair being the oldest, because it felt like some of the
restrictions that were put on me werenot about me, but like averaging the

(58:00):
kids. Because she didn't want todeal with me getting to see it and
my sister's not getting to see it. But she she's like, no,
you can't. And I remember Imade a big deal about it, and
she, you know, she expresslyforbid me. And the reason this movie
is holds a special recognition is becauseit was the first time as a kid

(58:23):
that I remember I'm sure I didit previously, but I remember openly concocting
a plan to go around her.And it was because my buddy had a
copy of the Beetlejuice movie. Theyhad rented it, So is that to
me? I guess maybe it waseighty nine or whatever, and we're like,

(58:47):
I'm like oh, and he's like, yeah, so my parents rented
it. They're not going to behere, like his older sister was going
to be there, and she's aloof. She doesn't care. So if
you want to come over, wecan totally watch it. And I so
this whole thing, this whole planwas concocted like an Ocean's eleven movie,

(59:08):
right, And I'm a kid,so I you know, I'm not good
with espionage at this point. SoI remember I went over and I watched
it and it was amazing. Andthen I remember every day for weeks after
just assuming that like the you know, like the scene at the end of
Family of Christmas Vacation, like thatversion, but it would be my mom

(59:31):
was gonna just one day to justlike kick my bedroom door in and be
like, aha, we figured outwhat you did, and I was just
gonna burn for it. And shenever caught me. And one of my
favorite things when I was much olderis to explain to her that I pulled
one over on her. And whatshe should have done is said, non
you because it would have totally deflatedme. But she's like, ah,

(59:53):
you got me now explaining it.Why didn't you want you to see?
Was it like by you know,the beetlejuice is the devil Bobby Bouchet or
what was the reason? No?No, no, no, it so
was. And this was a conversationI had with her. She didn't.
She just wanted to keep you know, this this ship happy. So she
let me watch it because my sisterswanted to watch it, and they're like
six and five respectively, right,and she she didn't think it was appropriate

(01:00:16):
for kindergartner. Okay, So ifshe let me watch it because I was
such a turd, I would havelike bragged about it to my sisters and
then they would have been that infighting. So her plan when it came
to a lot of stuff is shekind of like averaged what the kids were
able to do. And I resentedit because I was the oldest. It
makes sense because I was the youngest, and I'm telling you, being the

(01:00:37):
youngest. It's badass. Do youwant to be the youngest? Oh yeah,
my brother Cody. Oh that kidgot everything. But I was gonna
say too, like even as likewhat you were eight or whatever at the
time. Yeah, in or No, movie really isn't scary when you go
back and watch even for any Iwould say, like the large march scene
is way scarier than anything of Beetlejuice. Oh my gosh, dude, that

(01:00:59):
was terrifying. I just could Icouldn't once you've seen it once every time
because you want you watch that moviebecause you're a kid, like you knew
when it was coming and you wereyou know, you're thirty seconds ahead of
it. The moment he climbs inthere, you're just like, but if
you're with your friends, you gotto pretend like you're looking, but you're

(01:01:19):
not. You're kind of averting youreyes, but your head's faced the same
way because you don't want to getlabeled a coward. I will say this
one of the most exciting things ofbeing Apparent so far. There's been tons
of him right, but yeah,showing Link in that scene for the first
time and watching his reaction was itwas amazing. What was it what he
thought it he thought because it's likeyou're a kid, like you're scared to

(01:01:39):
death and you're like, then youwant to watch it over and over and
over again. Yeah, and thisis like now it's like modern age.
Back in the day, like wehad, you know, the pause maybe
if you were lucky, if youhad it on tape. But now you've
been like every millisecond of it.He's pausing every millisecond, wants to see
how it's done. And it reallybreaks down if you slow mow it.
And that was Tim Burton too,Yeah it was. But yeah, so

(01:02:01):
yeah, we're looking at September sixof next year the beetle juice too.
I hope they don't find a wayto ruin it, but you know,
I don't hold a lot of confidence. All right, seven forty six k
c o DA radio program Rastagic fromthe Weather Channel. Yeah, now they're
doing a beetle juice too, becausewell, anything with a two after it

(01:02:21):
usually does not live up to hearthe Godfather sir or oh yes, well,
I mean usually or terminator, terminator. There are exceptions, did you
hear of my let's see every thosecop two jaws too. Back to the
Future too, back to Ill thatwas just on. Actually I was watching,
I was like, yeah, thisis a not so good movie.

(01:02:43):
What Yeah, it really kind ofYeah, back to the Future too,
wasn't It wasn't. I will sayI like three better than two. I'll
say that much. Yes, yes, three better than two. So I
don't think that. I don't thinkany of them were soft. I think
they were all good. No,it was a great strategy. I just
what you get when you get intois the original always better, always is,

(01:03:04):
except for Empire strikes back. Sothe seconds better than a new Hope.
So, and that's all backwards toLet's not get into episode numbers with
that discussion. But Robin said,you didn't like the third one? Was
that? Of which one? Now? Of the of the originals, the
third one we were talking? Wasit you? The other times I was
talking to some of you. Whatmovie are we talking about? Star Wars?

(01:03:28):
Uh? I'm under the impression theEmpire was the last great Star Wars
movie. Yes, I think it'swriting on nostalgia ever since then, Like
I just yea and Jedi is notbad, believe it or not. I
put like um Rogue one actually,even though it's not part of the you
know, the trilogy series. Istill put that. I put that up

(01:03:52):
there. You see a panel?Did you see there was a panel yesterday
but probably box and he fell downon the stage. No, I did
not see that, which obviously,like I get it right, he's there's
a fast expone Philly. And thenrather than just seeing the story being glad
that he's okay and loving the factthat him and Tom Wilson and Lloyd are
all up there on the stage,right biff um. You know, people

(01:04:14):
have to drag it into the worldof politics. Yeah, like see see
people make fun the president for fun. I'm like, really, Michael J.
Fox is such a strong individual.I was at the Jamasonly and he
was on the panel with the View, and I'm like, this dude is
a strong dude, not because ofthe Parkinson's but because he's on the view
and he has to go with thosewomen. Plus I mean, no,
he's so strong dude. But it'sit's sort of like it's heartbreaking to watch

(01:04:36):
him now. It really is like, can we just find it here for
Parkinson's. Police really appreciate that.You thank you, all right, but
first ye, so go ahead,Yeah, the sun may look a little
different. There's a little haze andsmoke in the air from a wildfires,
believe it or not, that's comingin from Canada. There's no air quality

(01:04:56):
alerts, but there are out onthe mountains out near Asheville. So the
year it's a little bit kind ofdirty, the lack of a better term,
so hazy sunshine with some clouds,load of mid eighties today, Tomorrow
afternoon maybe cleaning it out a littlebit. With a front coming in probably
after two o'clock, we'll start tosee some showers and through the evening hours
low eighties. And that chance ofrain and showers continues Tomorrow night to Thursday

(01:05:17):
morning, and then maybe some sunin the afternoon. You'll feel a difference
in the airmass only in the midnupper seventies, with load of mid fifties
by Friday morning. So beautiful Fridaymorning, and we go Friday, Saturday
Sunday with a warm up and plentyof sunshine. Low eighties Friday into the
middle maybe upper eighties for some overthe upcoming weekend. Right now, Casey,
the weekend looks great. All right, thanks sir, talk to you

(01:05:40):
in an hour. Have you goingyep? And all right, we'll come
back. We got we got alittle NFL store I got to share with
you. That's although I might beable to debunk it pretty quick. And
ABC News getting ready for the upcomingelection. Just just wait for this.
We'll be back one oh six oneAM Talk and f w PTI, two

(01:06:02):
stations driving the best in talk.This is Cacoda and Carolina's Morning News.
All right, seven fifty four,Good morning, It is the Cacoda Radio
program. At first, I thoughtthis was something different yesterday when I first
saw it. So ABC News putout a tweet. This is actually from

(01:06:28):
ABC News's PR. ABC News hasnamed its campaign producers reporters for the twenty
twenty four presidential election, and thereare sixteen of them. And what was
interesting was is I kind of misreadthat because I was simultaneously looking at the
montage of all sixteen of them,and basically it's just a headshot with their

(01:06:50):
name, and I thought they saidI thought they meant like junior, like
these are kids, which you've seenlike you've seen this, right, you
see MTV did this back in theday, obviously, but other networks have
done it where they get youngsters,you know, high school kids to essentially
act as junior reporters. And it'sabout building interest even in an election that

(01:07:12):
you know the target audience isn't necessarilyable to vote in, but um bringing
them into the process. But thenI realize it's not that. It's actually
ABC News is campaign producer reporter slatebecause Ross, you got the picture in
front of you. Yes, Ido over under on how many of them
were able to vote in the lastpresidential election? At least one, two,

(01:07:42):
maybe four maybe four. I wouldsay four at the least. Anything
else you notice about the group there? It's a very diverse panel, is
it? You feel that you feelthat the the average breakdown and represented a

(01:08:02):
breakdown in the US. If youwere to take sixteen people that twelve of
them are women, you think that'san accurate representation or I mean, I
say diverse in one direction? Ohokay, okay. Do you feel that
the average breakdown doesn't include is therea white male there? Maybe the dude
in the upper right hand corner?Who who's that? Nick Kerr? I'm

(01:08:25):
sorry, Nick, Nick Kerr nI c k k E r r ay.
I think you're saying it's too slow. Can you say it very quickly.
I will not so I can betterunderstand what. No, I need
to know who it is. Youthink somebody in there is the one white
dude out of the sixteen, andI just want to know which one do
you think it is? I thinkis that one? I've tweeted it out.

(01:08:47):
Who's that one? Nicholas? Isthat what it says? That is
what it says? Oh no,it doesn't. It's very unfortunate for him.
What's unfortunate that he's outnumbered is thathe's down number women big time.
M I mean, there's like twodudes on the panel, two or three,
there's four dudes. There's oh,it's it's a well based on how

(01:09:08):
anyone identifies who the hell knows?But um, yeah, but in the
top row the only dude, whowould you say, is the only dude
in the top row? I thinkthere's actually well, if you're talking about,
like, you know, how you'reidentifying, I think there's actually three
what they would call cis mails.Oh you know what are you referring to?

(01:09:30):
Kendall? Yes, I am azooming in that picture. I don't
know that's true that that if you'reif based on the I'm just noticing that
you two junior un here are youjust now noticing that? Yeah? Yeah
yeah yeah, so so Kendall iswe don't know so other than that,

(01:09:50):
it would be what I will rightmc duffy, Oh he this guy?
Okay, all right, now what'she? The guy? Fritz Barren?
Then who's the guy on the topagain? What's his name? That is
Nicholas Kerr? I'm sorry, yeah, read it as it's written. I
want to be accurate. Um whatis it? Or we are out of

(01:10:13):
time? But we're now we haveyou got a whole nother hour. Oh
man, that weather report, wellthat is a lot of traffic as well.
So all right, hang loose forthat. Well, good pep talk,

(01:10:46):
Thanks coach, appreciate that. I'mgonna go shop for a grave site
now. Last year, though,have you mentioned you were like, you
know those reporters that ABC were like, Hey, these are the people are
going to be covering the campaign andstuff, right our political reporters. He
were like, oh my god,this is like uh like I thought it
was the teen reporters, Like yeah, teen reporters like a special and you

(01:11:08):
realize those are the that that meansyou're getting old. No, no,
no, no, no, no, you're getting it. That happens when
I'm on When you turn on thenews and you're like, why is this
ten year old on the news?It makes you realize that you're getting The
first time I felt that way itis the first time I saw Peter Doocy
on Fox when he first debuted.I'm like, this dude is twelve.
Why is there twelve year old onmy team? And I'm like, dear

(01:11:28):
god, I'm old. He doeslook a lot younger than he actually is,
but still Also, I remember thefirst thing I thought was, oh,
that's an interesting last name. Howthey find two doocies? Right?
Um that? No, no,no, I think that the deal with
it is um one. You know, most people right before you come back
in the entertainment industry, like youknow, would be like, hey,
we're gonna have it. We're gonnahave a good show. You gonna have

(01:11:49):
it. This is gonna be great, guys, and you're like, you're
gonna die. That was Ross's peptalk right before we started this, although
to be fair, he was all, he also means he's gonna die too,
so he was self deprecating. Buttwo, no, if that's your
presidential team, It is a combinationof me having a harder time recognizing who's
old enough to drink now. Butit's also the fact that you would have

(01:12:12):
a mix of reporters because it's allof them, you know what I'm saying.
Yeah, you're correct, you should, right, because you have to
have you have to have people onthe team. You want young people,
and you want that mix. Andyes, you even want a mix of
backgrounds. Not it doesn't even haveto be just racial backgrounds, but like
you want somebody who grew up inthe Midwest, background, experience, age,

(01:12:33):
and perspective, right, it allhas to be covered, right,
because our opinions and perspective and experiencesare different than somebody, say, born
in the year two thousand and thecompletely, absolutely absolutely, And I've and
I've talked about this on the showone of the you know there's I can
talk about the perspective of growing upout west, right, I can talk

(01:12:54):
agriculture stuff like that, my ownlife experiences. You can talk about growing
up in New York. You cantalk about being a father. I can't
that I know of. And solike you want that, you want all
of these different experiences, And Ilook at that and even though it's intentionally
not homogeneous, they've basically created somethingthat is. Chances are ideologically, I

(01:13:25):
suspect that one of them is theDC version of a Republican so that,
you know, like the Jennifer Rubinkind, you know what I'm saying,
or one of the view Republicans,just so they can be like, look,
we we wanted intellectual diversity as well, but in reality, there's not
there. There's nobody who can whocan talk about There's nobody there who could

(01:13:45):
talk about even the George Bush eraor a Barack Obama's initial election with any
perspective, let alone any other city. There's nobody there who was probably alive
to be able to talk about aone term president. Do you know what

(01:14:06):
I'm saying, other than Trump?Do you think anyone there has any thoughts
of real life experience of Herbert WalkerBush. Oh, there's no way.
You don't us do. When itcomes to the Republican candidates, you have
a lot of people comparing them,right. I know. I've heard this,
I've seen it on Twitter, andI've had this conversation with people in
person where people are comparing certain candidateson the Republican side to Ronald Reagan.

(01:14:30):
Right, that that's the comparison alwayshere, because Ronald Reagan is sort of
the modern day standard of what wewant, like great president, right,
Ronald Reagan. And here's an example. There was God, maybe it's like
eight years ago. We had anintern in here. He was working in
news and the subject, the subjectof Ronald Reagan came up and he was

(01:14:50):
just out of NC state and Iwas talking about Ronald Reagan. It just
and he discounted it and he said, well, Ronald Reagan was a horrible
president. Oh, Ran, Isaid, you weren't even alive. How
you weren't You weren't a lie?You have no idea what you're talking about.
You have no idea how good,how good the eighties was? That
ar wasn't how good of a presidenthe was. But he just knows what

(01:15:11):
he's been taught, and he wastaught. Ronald Reagan was a bad president.
So anything I'm gonna say about himis going to be discounted. Right.
He was a president, was ahorrible president. He tried to bankrupt
the country. Luckily Clinton was ableto come in, and yeah, not
Clinton, but yeah, you know, basically the Democrats were able to see
his control on the House side eventuallyput a stop to his madness, and
basically Jimmy Carter created a utopia andReagan. Yeah, Carter was amazing,

(01:15:39):
top tier president. But it's like, you know, that's sort of a
thing you'd want to know now andlive through because you have people comparing the
current de Santists and Trump both toReagan. Yeah, some Reagan perspective would
be good. And arguably if theywere all just our age, that wouldn't
even be appropriate enough. It wouldnot do to our age at the time
of Reagan. So that's your team. That's the point. But I got

(01:16:08):
high hopes for the guy in thetop right corner. What is his name
again? I can't remember how you'retalking about, Nicholas No, no,
no, no, sir, Soright now he's been nighted. Huh.
What do you think high school waslike for Nick? Just saying probably a
little tough, um do either.It's a coincidence, like we've had six

(01:16:30):
earthquakes in two weeks in western NorthCarolina and I got a head over and
broadcast from the Greensboro studio coming uphere. I feel like that might be
aimed at me. Yes, that'sright. Now, I haven't been big
ones, but it doesn't take abig one as folks and Sparta will tell
you to crack up foundations and spillchips and stuff. Six earthquakes have hit

(01:16:50):
the same area of western North Carolinawithin the past two weeks, all within
a mile of each other. Itjust so happens to be northwest of Asheville,
So yeah, maybe it's God.I don't know. Yeah, Western

(01:17:11):
North Carolina not a major fault line, however, I just referenced the Sparta
one from a few years ago andobviously did some damage. But it's the
cluster of them that I think ismaking people nervous. While quakes in North
Carolina tend to be minor, mostdo little to no damage, only one
has been recorded in a magnitude ofmore than five. I want to say,

(01:17:33):
I don't know if it still is. Do you know what the second
largest earthquake in US history it happened? In fact, I want to make
sure I call this up some I'mone hundred percent accurate, which I didn't
know. And I thought it wasrather interesting because when we think about earthquakes,
we think of you know, ringof fire stuff, right, You

(01:17:54):
think California. Alaska gets a lotof earthquakes too, but it's you know,
largely because Alaska. I don't knowif you knew this has the most
volcanoes of any state active volcanoes,and it's not even close, but most
people probably don't realize. And whenit gets into and and by the way,

(01:18:15):
the largest recorded earthquake in the UnitedStates nine point two happened in Alaska
back in nineteen sixties. Uh,that list is a little weird. Yeah,

(01:18:40):
here we go, nineteen sixty four, or maybe it was the most
damaging quake. I'll come on withyour pop up ads. Here. This
is the thing I had up earlierthan I closed. I don't want to
start a free trial of anything.Leave me the hell alone. Uh,
when I got North Americans, herewe go, that's what I was looking

(01:19:02):
for. Yeah. So if youlook at US earthquakes, yeah, here
it is Missouri, New Madrid,Missouri. And that was back in the
eighteen hundreds, a very significant one. So places we don't think of his
fault lines. I want to saythere was a big one centered in like

(01:19:24):
Virginia or South Carolina too that wasreally really damaging back in the day.
But no here in North Carolina.As far as the actual epicenter, now,
we've never had one over five.But yeah, you get a bunch
together that people can fill and it'spretty crazy. And I've been in I've
been in a larger than seven earthquake. I think it was actually they settled

(01:19:48):
at seven. Think initially they saidit was seven point one or seven point
two, and then they they evaluatepost and it was seven. I remember.
I was pretty crazy, man.And it wasn't fast too. That's
that's the other thing too. Itlike I would say, it was over
the course of a minute and ahalf. And when like the ground,

(01:20:09):
the ground's moving and stuff shaking andyou have perspective on it, it's um
pretty crazy. Like the lamps theyhad, like the hanging lamps in the
room I was in, and theywere just going back and forth. It
was pretty crazy. In a buddyof mine, I was traveling at the
time, and a buddy of minewho was with he was up on the

(01:20:30):
twenty sixth floor of the hotel andit was far worse up there. But
like in, it kept going andgoing and going and going. And the
craziest things is there was one ofthe there was a bartender who apparently doesn't

(01:20:50):
deal with earthquakes very well. Andshe made a bee line out of the
restaurant. I was in a restaurantand ran out the front door of it
and almost got hit by a car. She did not, but she was
just she was crazy. I nevergot the full story on it, but
I'm like, oh my gosh.I just kind of sat there and watched

(01:21:11):
what was going on, and nobodyelse was really moving. And I got
up and I just basically walked out. And there were no tall buildings next
to where I was. I'm justkind of out on the sidewalk towards the
street. There was nothing that couldfall, and she's standing out there.
But we had seen her run out. Man, So even a little one

(01:21:31):
will throw people for a loop.But the idea that you get a bunch
together, people ask questions, theyget a little nervous man. So but
we shall see, are you whenyou hear something crazy? People for the
Ethical Treatment of Animals, Remember yesterdaywe mentioned the stupid t rex thing.

(01:21:55):
Ingrid new Kirk announced that she hasupdated her will to include a rather interesting
final request. Ross you still wantto be scattered over Disney, but not
cremated, right or have you?Have you changed it up? That's it
now you don't remember mine? Right? Right? You want you want the

(01:22:18):
giant hole. You want your your, your body to be thrown in the
giant hole along with the skeleton oflike a lion and you with a spear
and cover it with dirt. Soand like you know years that I want
a lot of stuff that's non sequitur. Sure they'll open it and they'll discover
and be like, what the hellhappened? Like you completely confuse the scientists

(01:22:39):
guys wearing modern clothes or you know, the twentieth century clothes. But there's
a lion of spear from the fifteenhundreds and some VR goggles, right.
I just I want him to openit up and go what the I want
him to be incredibly confused. Sothen I end up in the news.
That's gonna be my legacy. Well, Peter, crazy chick. She has

(01:23:01):
updated her will to include the requestthat her body be donated for a human
barbecue. Yep, flesh is flesh, and mine is given. Not taking
some new kirk. The thought ofcarving up human flesh for stakes might just
be the jolt to jolt diners intokindness. The request detailed a desire that

(01:23:31):
her flesh be carved out and searedas part of a giant barbecue, fried
up with onions, and after it'sdone, packaged this is so morbid,
packaged into individual servings and shipped offto various individuals and groups, basically people

(01:23:57):
she wants to shame over, youknow, people within the beef industry,
politicians, you name it, whichI gotta tell you is definitely thinking outside
the box, very creative. Canyou imagine, right, you're some you
know, you're some big cattle rancheror whatever. You run a big feed
lot like out in Nebraska or something. You get a package in the mail,

(01:24:20):
you open it up and it lookslike liver and onions, and then
that you read the note, you'rejust horrified. It's crazy. Let's see
here. New Kirk's bodily bequests willinspire animal advocates while also encouraging everyone still

(01:24:42):
slumbering in Species is M to wakeup? Do you know what species is?
M is? By the way,I had to look it up when
I first I know what it is. Now when I first heard it,
I had to look it up.Me imagine it would be like, you
know, you believe that one speciesis superior to another apex predators, Yes,
yes, yes, humans are.In fact, animal species are inferior

(01:25:04):
to humans, so we have theright, you know, we would believe
that we have the right to eatthe animals because they're delicious, yes,
correct, yeah, yeah. Yeah. By the way, are they going
to eat all those Irish cows?Did you hear this insanity where they're like
they want to grease like two hundredthousand cows in Ireland because you know,
climate warming, global change thing.Yeah, yeah, yeah, And you've

(01:25:28):
seen these countries that have done thislike where you know where they're with the
fertilizer stuff. Sri Lanka has destroyedits economy. It's done and ironically,
well, it's horrible for the SriLankan people. It's also horrible for China
who carried so much of that debt. China's they got a world of hurt
from a financial standpoint because they've madea lot of investments that are not going

(01:25:50):
to read benefits. But also whatwas it Norway or Denmark or or wherever
where the where the farmers are allupset because they just decided to add a
bunch. You don't get to armanymore. Yeah, and it's all over
es g hunsense. Yes it is. And in Ireland they say that to
meet their targets, which they haveset, because you know, they just
set their arbitrary targets. The onlyway they're gonna be able to accomplish it

(01:26:12):
likely is to grease like two hundredthousand cows, which ain't a great thing,
by the way. I remember,I remember the first time I visited
Ireland. You know, you don'tgo there for the food, but I
remember going to this, um there'sa place they had Irish answers or something
near Dublin, and I was goingto have the corned beef and all that
because which ironically is not even reallythat of an Irish dish, but tourist

(01:26:36):
love it, so they make it. But um so I had that.
But then I also, I thinkI had a stake the next day at
the hotel, and I was excitedand then I ate it because it looked
really good in the picture. Iate it and it was awful. They
were talking about all this Irish beefand I'm like, you all should come
to America. Mand so like,no great loss if it's picking on the

(01:27:00):
Irish beef. But um but yeah, no, that's insane. I think
you being an Ireland to be alot of grass for them to graze on,
right, Uh yeah, absolutely.And when you drive around Ireland,
man, I mean there's you know, cow pastures, sheep, branching galore.
Man, it's all over the place. I don't know what it is.
But you can see four the headlinescoming leg and they'll be oh my
god, the second Irish Famin,how did this happen? You're wiping out

(01:27:24):
of the food, dude, Well, I mean not all the food,
there's all that grass ross. Comeon, I retract my statement. Yeah
what you've never eaten four leaf clovers? That's got to be healthy and lucky.
I just assume. All right,So that lady obviously it's a big
publicity stunted, but you know what, take her up on it whatever,

(01:27:45):
don't care? All right? Eighteight eight nine three four seven eight seven
four you want to be on theshow. That's how you make that happen.
And oh yeah, we gotta getinto the Cameron Robbins story. That's
the that's the guy who jumped offthe cruise ship the eighteen year Old has
some more details on that coming upjust a few minutes here on the case

(01:28:08):
O Day Radio program, Keeping youconnected. This is ninety four five WPTI
in the Triad and one oh sixone FM Talk in the Triangle. M

(01:28:34):
sorry, it was muscle memory.I'll just sudden Ross a laudio snippet I
wanted, and I texted it tohim. It doesn't do him any good,
all right, on the way there, sir. Sorry, I was
just I want to help. Iwant to help this woman achieve her goals.

(01:28:58):
We'll call it unsolved mysteries, butalso us helping. Okay, I
saw there's there's a plea for help. It's been posted on the twitters and
the tiktoks and all that. Shegot quite a dating conundrum. Things can
be tough, and um, Idon't know. We'll see if we'll see

(01:29:21):
if we can figure out perhaps whatwe can do there. All right,
Uh, Ross, got that dubbedin and then we'll share it with you.
Horrible news. We already did ourno Hollywood no segments, so let's
do no science no, shall we? And I think we got a we

(01:29:41):
got a snippet of this because Iremember it being mentioned that it was something
that was being worked on, butapparently now we're here, robots could soon
be cloaked in human like synthetic skin, similar to I don't know, the
terminator. After Stanford, you Diversityresearchers say they were able to actually achieve

(01:30:02):
an ultra realistic self healing material,so human like synthetic skin to go over
the murder bot, which heals itself, so that you know, the murder
bot will better blend in before itmurders you. So and not just for

(01:30:23):
people, but also those little hellhounddogs with the oozies on their back,
well you make that look like areal dog. This is horrible. Researchers
zenen Bow and fellow researchers have takentheir studies into the future, creating layers

(01:30:45):
of synthetic skin. They can nowself recognize in a line with each other
when injured. That's that is terrifying. So yeah, good news, We're
we basically got all the termination yourstuff ready to go. Okay, all
right, let's go and get intosome phone calls. Here. Um am

(01:31:06):
I reading that name crokay red Man? What's up? Yo yo? What
okay? See hey, yes,sir, I was getting at you and
not you. That's a shout outto Big A couple of weeks ago.
You Ai, you talk about theaid how did two Big voice and had

(01:31:30):
some singer nahs New York state ofMind? Well, Big Big was a
live when New York State of Mindcame out. Uh, And I know
you're a hip hop fan, soI just wanted you good to be comfortable
with that, to know that getshurt. But I don't understand what the
I'm I'm confusing what it is.So you don't think it was Ai generated?

(01:31:56):
Yo? I do think it wasAi generated, Okay, but you
had mentioned you you had mentioned thatit had to be because he was singing
the song in his own voice.But what I'm saying you had said that,
uh that Big wasn't even alive whenthat song came out, but he
was alive. Well he's still alive, sir, him in Tupac and Elvis

(01:32:16):
Yeah yeah yeah yeah, and andand in the spiritual Yeah you know you
they just lost stay physical of coursethey still here. Enjoy you are you
doing? Okay? No? No, No, that's that's fair. I
honestly I was basing it off.You know, in my mind what I
thought to be the case. Butare you cool with that though? Like,
do you want do you want newdo you want new Biggie music?

(01:32:40):
Do you want new Tupac music?Do you want new Elvis music for that
matter? Or do you think thatonce they're john uh maybe we should not
do this, yes or Johnny Cash? Yeah, No, I'm not.
I'm not. I really ain't.But you know, I think I got
kids, man, So I thinkabout it like this. I was like,
but that's cool. What if?What if? What if I'm going
and and I could I could havemy voice singing my kids favorite song.

(01:33:05):
You know that that and that technologyis that technology is here now, sir
um. That is something that companiesoffer where you can they can take the
voice recordings of you and they don'tneed very much of it, and they
can create a chat bots. Yourkids can literally have a conversation with you
if you're gone, sir gracious man, I gotta make a six that I

(01:33:26):
want to be gone, bro,I want to be gone, just gone,
y'all go, Yeah, get myvoice for somewhere else. But it'll
be cool like that. But yeah, I agree that AI can uh Um.
Artists have gone and move music.I don't even like reruns like that
or remaker who let me ask youa question? Well, let me ask

(01:33:47):
you a question. Who's your favoritefootball team? NFL football team, favorite
NFL football player team? Yeah?Team? What team do you root for?
Oh? San Francisco? All right, San Francisco, even though I'm
I'm from New York State, Ijust I just always like the San Francisco
Okay, but so, but keepin mind that if I have your AI

(01:34:09):
voice, can make it say whateverI want. I could like record a
whole thing talking about how great youthink that. You could talk about how
great the Seahawks are so and thenI then I send it to your family.
You're like, hey, you shouldhave heard of what this guy said.
You know what I'm saying, that'sso like it could be abused and
in a lot worse ways than that. To be quite honest, I don't

(01:34:30):
know. I'm to creep out,but I appreciate the call. Thanks for
sending me straight. I I justuh yeah, I didn't search it out.
I was just trying to do themath. So hey, man,
hey, that's cool. You knowI brought with y'all. Every morning,
I'll be driving this big truck outhere. You keeping frawing, baby keeping,
keep doing what you're doing? Whatare you hauling? Anything good?
We can flip for money? Oroh yeah, I got some molds for

(01:34:53):
you, so some aunt. Canyou just dump that in Ross's yard?
If I give you an ad dress, will you do that? Hey?
Yeah? All right, all right, thanks man, appreciate it. Alright,
Ross, I got you a gift. I can't believe you were wrong
in a hip hop fact. Iam flunt, like has it ever happened

(01:35:14):
before? Crazy? Just saying Ican make a whole thing if I we
got enough Ross's voice, because theshow it's just you talking about how awesome
Godfather three is. Oh gotta beawful, all right, so the multi

(01:35:36):
will be there and I need youto do your best impression of Biff Tannon
when you hate manure. H Ohwhat a mess? All right, Jake,
what's up? Talking about the greasein the cows and Ireland? Um
damn? Kenneth think to have askit? Uh. He would talk about

(01:35:58):
the African starving in Africa and he'slike, this is sand. Nothing grows
in sand. Move where the foodis, but now you can't move where
because they're not growing the foot Well, no, the food is the grass,
sir. We just covered this solush, green country, the beautiful,
beautiful country. I love it andit's amazing. What have you ever

(01:36:20):
never been to Ireland and you canfind a way to fly in during daylight?
It's pretty impressive. Pretty cool man. Yeah, But and it's it's
also a good thing. We gotpeta people so we could eat them.
Hey, yeah, that's what That'swhat they want right there. They want
to send a message, So Iappreciate the call there, sir. Wait,

(01:36:40):
I just praised out ross. Areyou implying that I am not the
encyclopedia of hip hop? Just figureit out? Figured out? I think
you were trashing on me right there. I just can't believe you were wrong
about a hip hop fact. Yeah, all right, making sure to help
somebody want to solve a mystery.I feel like we can do this,

(01:37:04):
although I can't play the music andthe thing at the same time. So
let me just do this. SoI saw this woman's TikTok and I'm gonna
throw it out to you. I'mgonna play it. I want you to
think about it while we're doing weatherin business and all that, and maybe
if you have some solutions because it'sa conundrum. I just I can't think
of any what she might be ableto do. All right, check this,
check this poor woman's predicament out doyou? I don't know. One

(01:37:26):
of the saddest realizations I recently had, Okay, all right, I do
go ahead, was that as aliberal woman, it is really hard to
find a man who was willing toplay the more traditional masculine role in the
relationship in today's dand age. Ahah, man, I wonder why that
is. By the way, she'snot a bad looking woman right there,

(01:37:47):
and I appreciate it. As youcome to find out, she dates across
political spectrum. She's given it achance, but she's conflicted. So you're
you're dating now a lot of liberalmen. And when you date liberal men,
you don't feel that they're they're youknow, they are masculine, traditional
male rule men. Okay, allright, continue, a conservative a man

(01:38:08):
who wants to pay on the firststate, who wants to open your door,
who has that want and desire,who is not a conservative? And
obviously, as a liberal woman,I do want to be respected from independence
and I okay, you know,most conservative men I know who I would
consider you know, good guys.Um, I think they do respect women.

(01:38:30):
I mean, there's a lot ofyou know, d bags on on
all sides of this, but forthe most part, yeah, I don't.
They absolutely do respect. That's partof it. And if there's a
religious component and you're called upon thatso it's right there, all right,
continue, you want to have myown autonomy in the relationship and not be
combined or conformed to the traditional femalehomemaker child bearing rule. All right?

(01:38:58):
Well okay, and I get thatthere's some people that's down. But so
you want the male to be traditionalin all senses, yet you don't want
to be traditional in all senses.Maybe in some senses, maybe that'd be
a good compromise, because it soundslike you want the thing, but you
don't want the things. We dohave that more natural provider masculinity about them

(01:39:23):
are normally conservative. So I don'treally know what to do because I don't
want to compromise my morals and valuesjust to find a man. But am
I asking how my key can eatit too? Yes? Yeah, I
I don't even know what to tellyou, lady. So the irony,

(01:39:45):
of course, is it seems likethat's exactly what she wants, and she
just hates herself for wanting that,and obviously her friends are probably around her,
like Noah, he seems like hemight be a conservative. There's Looney
Tunes. Ross. You have anyadvice for this woman. She's struggling.
She's struggling, doesn't know what shewants, doesn't know what she's gotta do.

(01:40:10):
All right, So if you guyswant to help out, go ahead.
First race agent here to help outwith whether you should wear a jacket
or none? All right, Yeah, you're nacer. Nay, I'd say
nay with eighty degree weather even whenwe cool down. I mean, if
your tolerance for low and mid fiftiesby Friday morning requires the light jacket,
her long sleeves, so be itmay want to dust off the umbrella.

(01:40:31):
By tomorrow afternoon, we'll have someshowers. So hazy sun today. Now
that haze and that pretty looking sunshineis compliments of some dirty air that's wildfire
smoke mixing into the atmosphere or ourwest northwest flow. Other than that,
dry and load to mid eighties todayTonight, clear low sixties, and the
shower chance goes up with an approachingcoal front tomorrow afternoon, so that chance

(01:40:53):
after two or three o'clock on someshowers. We'll continue into tomorrow night and
early Thursday. Thursday's highs will bedown a bit, mid upper seventies,
and then Friday morning we'll be inthe load of mid fifties, so cooler
there, beautiful afternoon they're up neareighty than warmer over the weekend with more
sunshine, So just a bit ofa rain chance tomorrow afternoon, scattered it
around through Tomorrow night and Thursday morning, casey. Then after that, I

(01:41:14):
think we're really good shape. Hopefullywe'll get enough rain and change our wind
direction to lose some of this wildfiresmoke. But you know, a little
kind of ugly out there. Imean, it looks hazy and don't look
real nice in many places, andI think that we'll continue through the day
today, hopefully we'll try to getit out of here by tomorrow at the
end of the week. All right, thank you, sir, appreciate it,
okay, and we'll come back chatwith Jeff Melinger next hang on show.

(01:41:44):
After the show is on the iHeartRadioapp. Search case o day for
the podcast on the iHeart Radio app. Alrighty, fifty four. Jeff Bellinger,
what's happening Loo, Good morning,Casey. A stock market future is
a little bit lower right across theboard this morning now. Futures are down
twenty seven. The nation's financial outlookis improving, at least in the opinion

(01:42:06):
of economists at Goldman Sachs. Theinvestment bank says the odds of a recession
in the next twelve months have declinedto twenty five percent after the agreement in
Washington to suspend the debt ceiling.Cyber security experts are concerned about a possible
wave of extortion demands from computer hackers. A recently discovered vulnerability in the file

(01:42:27):
transfer product move It is already beingexploited. The Department of Homeland Security is
issued an alert about the vulnerability.Hollywood may have a tentative contract with the
Director's Union, but there's still alot of leabre tension in Tinseltown. Contract
talks with movie and television actors areset to begin tomorrow. Actors have already
authorized union leaders to call a strike, and in many cases, Casey customer

(01:42:50):
ratings have essentially become meaningless because well, we're just too nice. People are
reluctant to give bad ratings. Thisseems to be especially true when it comes
to the ride sharing companies. TheWall Street Journal says most Uber and Lyft
passengers give their drivers five stars.People might give a poor rating to a
company, but they feel guilty whenthey give a bad grade to an individual.

(01:43:13):
Casey. By the way, didyou hear they're making a beetlejuice too?
Jeff? I did not. Yousaw the first one though, right?
I believe so, But it wasa long time ago. It's a
long time ago, and it's likeHollywood, man, they just can't stop
themselves. All right, Well,I'll let you go. Thank you very
much, sir. Okay, youhave a good day, take care,
all right, I go. JeffBellinger, Bloomberg News. So you saw

(01:43:41):
the first one, right, didhe? Ross? And every wonder and
off they are? I don't know. Oh. By the way, I
was reading more on these insane Peterwoman and she wants like her body served
up. She also wants her skinpeeled off and used to make leather goods.
And now I'm excited because I wanta what is this chick's name?

(01:44:01):
New Kirk charity. By the way, she looks pre leathered in this picture.
As somebody pointed out online, Iwould love How great would it be
to have a nice, uh newleather sling for your hunting rifle? I
get down with that. That'd beamazing. Throw one on there. You're

(01:44:25):
out there in the woods tracking thecritters. That's your official PETA president leather
leather sling. So that's great.Absolutely. So. China's announced they're digging
a thirty three thousand foot hole andwork has just begun. They expect they

(01:44:46):
will penetrate ten continental strata and reachthe cretaceous system of the your's crust.
Obviously, the problem with the superdeep holes I think the deepest still is
in Russia is he gets really hot, really quick, and equipment starts malfunctioning.
But um, they're saying about ayear and a half now. Everything

(01:45:08):
China says is take it with agrain of salt. That being said,
um, what do you think that'sfor? I know they say it's for,
but I'm I'm sure it's not ross. You don't think that Possibly that's
for I don't know, dissidence orwhat you know. The giant hole.
Yeah, well, I'm just sayinglet's say that hypothetically, you have I
don't know, several thousand students showup at a protest in you know,

(01:45:33):
Hong Kong, or you know,in a square named Tiannement, and like
you got to disappear him. It'sa lot of work. But if you
got a thirty three thousand foot hole, you throw them in there where you
just put the tanks in front ofhim and then just push him into the
hole. Push him in, man, just kind of like or you can

(01:45:53):
kick him in. Like heard geothermalpower right for green energy, you're harvesting
the power of the earth. Core. I hope they saw the movie Core
and they think they can do it. That movie is absolutely horrible. Let's
drive a giant adult toy to thecenter of the earth. But where can
we find when my buddy's making onein the desert? Sade one. Yeah,

(01:46:14):
it's got the lasers and then allof a sudden, it's got a
new material which withstands all the heatconsummation. They're getting crushed and they're like
inside their little thing, they're like, just hold it together for one more
a second. That was so bad, so bad, all right, all
sorts have been standing on the Twitterat Casey on the radio, Go check it out
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