Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:16):
There's a guy on the tiki talkie and he does
this bit about movies that you think are real but
they are not, all right, And he did one about
a movie we all love. Okay, so I'm gonna play
it and we can just talk about it as as
he's going through it. It's gonna hurt some people's feelings.
Speaker 2 (00:40):
It's almost completely start over here, back up, What based
on a true story is almost completely made up. This
is your reminder that the real Rudy is an asshole
and this movie is full of crap. Already made a
video about this, but it bears repeating that. Literally everyone
who played with the real Rudy agrees that he was
an insufferable try not only constantly risk injury to himself,
(01:03):
but was so reckless that he actually put other players
in danger. They'd apparently be like walking through offensive sets
like hey, we're going ten percent here, and he would
just come at people at one hundred percent and tackle
unprepared players.
Speaker 1 (01:16):
Can you imagine. I've been on football teams where you
do walk through is and there isn't really any contact,
and some piece of shit runs at you, yeah and
tackles you like you would get beat up I would
think you would get beat up for sure if that happens.
Speaker 3 (01:36):
You can't do that because it's rudy man. Come on, Yeah, no,
he's not a good dude.
Speaker 1 (01:40):
But the movie portrays the exact opposite of that thing,
and a lot of people hold this movie in high regard,
high regard. He is a model. Hey done.
Speaker 2 (01:54):
Carried him off the field as a joke, because according
to Joe Montana, who was on that team, he was
such a joke to the football program that they like
condescendingly carried him off the field.
Speaker 1 (02:06):
Also care like he did. They hear he is being
a dick and they're like, yay, you right, They're like, no,
get the hell off of my field. And how how
many times have we seen this movie that we never
have talked about nor has it been pointed out that
Joe Montana was on the team. Yeah, I know that
because I think that's a pretty viable piece of information.
Speaker 4 (02:29):
Yeah, makes it a little bit more serious.
Speaker 1 (02:31):
Right, And you go, wow, I mean Joe Montana was
on the team.
Speaker 2 (02:35):
Right, there's more so the jersey scene never happened. Actually,
Coach Dan Devine's idea to have members of the practice
squad dress for that last game.
Speaker 1 (02:44):
It was it was the coach's idea of the whole time,
and not just Rudy. Everyone right, Yeah, that's funny. That's
a big part of the movie when they go and
lay their jerseys out and the whole time. Meanwhile, in
(03:04):
the movie, they also picked Divine is not into it.
He doesn't know anything to do with it.
Speaker 2 (03:10):
The and Divine openly hated how he was portrayed in
this movie. Oh yeah, his family was also super supportive
of him throughout his life. It's even been rumored that
members of Rudy's extended family were actually really unhappy with
how his brother was portrayed in the movies integral character to.
Speaker 1 (03:24):
The plot, so his whole not only not only is
he a dick in real life his family, he also
makes them look like pieces of shit. And they weren't supportive,
but they actually were. The guy who's one of the
more endearing characters in the movie, the groundskeeper, not a
real person. It's a made up character.
Speaker 5 (03:46):
Just isn't a real person.
Speaker 2 (03:48):
The only reason this movie exists is because the real
Rudy like new friends of friends of people in Hollywood
and just incessantly campaigned for years to have this life
story made. Yes, this movie is very good, very inspirational,
and also just total fiction.
Speaker 4 (04:04):
Hey make a movie of me, Hey make a movie
of me. He can make a movie of me?
Speaker 1 (04:09):
Oh god, right, what kind of jerk does that? Right?
Speaker 4 (04:14):
All right?
Speaker 3 (04:15):
But if it worked, it worked, you got a movie
made of and a very highly popular movie at that.
Speaker 1 (04:20):
Oh it's huge. Right, I've got another one with a
with a local tie. And when he explains it, you'll go,
this makes complete sense.
Speaker 2 (04:29):
What based on a true story is almost completely made up.
Speaker 5 (04:32):
I'll go first.
Speaker 2 (04:33):
I already talked about this movie, but so many of
you requested it on my last video that I can
talk about it a little bit more.
Speaker 5 (04:38):
Catch me if you can.
Speaker 2 (04:39):
Is completely full of crap, but in the most incredible
way possible, based on the exploits of a guy named
Frank Abagnaiale Junior who was insistent that Leonardo DiCaprio play
him in the movie. And here's what he looks like
in real life, not even remotely close.
Speaker 3 (04:55):
No, but if you're gonna have somebody portray you and
in your movie, wouldn't you like one of the hottest ones,
not one that looks like a troll, like you do.
Speaker 1 (05:03):
Yeah, me, I guess if I was a narcissist maybe yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2 (05:08):
Life just feel like that should have been maybe our first.
Hendrick abag Nail is a con man, and the movie
is the supposed true story of how he eluded the
FBI for several years by posing as an airline pilot,
a doctor, and a lawyer. The thing about those claims
is that upon further investigation, it's been pretty much confirmed
that he didn't actually do any of this is he's
a con man. The most they've been able to prove
(05:30):
is that he probably did forge checks and he really
did kind of become an amateur.
Speaker 5 (05:34):
Expert in check fraud.
Speaker 2 (05:36):
But his greatest con is convincing a movie studio made
up of Steven Spielberg, Tom Hanks, and Leonardo DiCaprio to
make a movie about his life, movie that has made
up almost entirely of falsehoods of things that did not
actually occur.
Speaker 1 (05:50):
Did you watch that movie and you're like, Wow, this
guy's had an amazing life.
Speaker 4 (05:54):
Right, Yeah, he's good.
Speaker 1 (05:56):
He you know, redeemed himself in life. Can you find
out No, it's all made up?
Speaker 4 (06:02):
No, he swindled the other ones And then making a
movie about him.
Speaker 2 (06:04):
Yellow, the movie the real Frank Abagnail has said is
made up is this relationship with his dad. After Frank
Abnail ran away from home, which he really did do,
he actually never saw his father again for the rest
of his life. So these scenes where he continues to
go back throughout his life and try and touch base
with his father were clearly Spielberg playing with his father's
son dynamic, which he does in a lot of his films.
Also quick side note, but if I had a nickel
(06:26):
for every time? Leonardo DiCaprio starred in a supposed true
story about a con man in a movie that was
later revealed that the con man invented. Major portions of
the movie have two nickels. But it's weird that that
happen twice, right, what based.
Speaker 1 (06:39):
Wolf of wall Street is also what he's done that
there's none of that happened, like it's a lot of
it's completely made up. Yeah, it was great movie though, right,
no entertaining. Yes, sure, but I think about this with
The Titanic a lot, because I think it's a fantastic movie.
Then not one lick of that movie other than a
ship going down, and maybe the people on the ship,
(07:03):
some of the some of them, right, not the main characters,
is real.
Speaker 3 (07:09):
I have to say that, unless it's a documentary, the
chances of any of it being real are slim to none.
Speaker 1 (07:16):
Yeah, And I would even argue then is yeah, because
there's a lot of movies out there, Like I watched
that one, The Upside.
Speaker 3 (07:21):
I told you guys about that yesterday with Brian Kranston
and Kevin Hark. It's based on a real story, right,
there's the key word.
Speaker 4 (07:29):
Based, right exactly.
Speaker 3 (07:31):
So I'm wondering, like how much of that is just
you know, Hollywood bullshit. Great movie for sure, all of
them great movies, but you know, when you get down
to it, you know.
Speaker 4 (07:41):
The fucking story sucks.
Speaker 3 (07:43):
So they're like, well, how can we make this sexier
exactly and making and make some money off of it?
So we start putting in our own thoughts and making
sh up.
Speaker 6 (07:51):
But going back to the to the Titanic, I think
it was probably believable that they didn't have enough lifeboats
on the ship.
Speaker 1 (08:00):
No they no, they didn't. But it's again that's that's
little things. Yeah, that doesn't make it a true story though,
right right, It's like going the sky was blue in
that movie. It did fucking go down.
Speaker 3 (08:15):
It was an Iceberg involved Allegendly, we've gone down that
hole before, you know, insurance were you there? Was it
sunk by a torpedo or some shit?
Speaker 1 (08:26):
Yeah, he's got he's got another one. He's got Uh?
Uh did it? Uh? What is this one? Patriot Day?
Patriots Day with Mark Wahlberg about the bombing. You want
to listen to that one? Get get all, get your
feelers hurt on that one too.
Speaker 2 (08:43):
Based on a true story, is almost completely made up.
I'll go first. It's not full of crap. Here's the
problem that a lot of people had with Patriots Day.
Patriots Day tells the true story of the twenty thirteen
Boston marathon bombing and the Boston Police Department successful tracking
down an arrest of those bombing suspects.
Speaker 5 (08:58):
There's a fatal flaw.
Speaker 2 (08:59):
With this movie though, that particularly a lot of people
in the Boston area had an issue with this movie
purports to depict the real life manhunt of the Boston
Marathon bomber. Quick side note, but calling that event the
world's greatest manhunt is to me a little bit of
a stretch.
Speaker 5 (09:13):
But that's for.
Speaker 2 (09:13):
Another important thing about this real life event from history
is that it brought out everyday heroism in the people
of Boston. Images from that day were so powerful because
they depicted real life Boston citizens coming to the aid
of their real life Boston brothers and sisters. That day
produced countless real life heroes. So what does Patriots Day do?
It centers the entire story around a fictional character. This film,
(09:37):
Mark Wolberg portrays Tommy Saunders, a fictional police officer. Now,
the filmmakers have said that they did this because there
were so many real life heroes that day that they
wanted to create a single composite character to represent all
of those people, particularly the officers in the Boston Police Department.
Many people in Boston, however, have said that you could
have depicted several real life Boston police officers. Filmmakers could
(09:57):
have chosen to depict actual real life ha.
Speaker 1 (10:00):
I don't have a problem with this one.
Speaker 6 (10:01):
I don't really either.
Speaker 1 (10:03):
For a movie, you can't. It would not transfer very
well onto the screen. To have multiple main characters. You
gotta have a main character in storytelling, and sick to budget, Yeah, so.
Speaker 3 (10:13):
You glump them all into one person, and that's the
main character that makes sense.
Speaker 1 (10:17):
Yeah, so I don't love that one. Let's see if
we can do another one that's completely made up because
he does different variations about it too, Texas Chainsaw Massacre,
Stand and Deliver. He also does like an accurate version, right,
(10:41):
what is it with.
Speaker 6 (10:41):
The Texas Chainsaw massacres?
Speaker 1 (10:43):
Well, let's find out.
Speaker 2 (10:44):
Yeah, what based on a true story is almost completely
made up?
Speaker 1 (10:50):
I'll go for.
Speaker 5 (10:51):
Of course, this movie is full.
Speaker 2 (10:52):
Of crafts, not real. It's completely fictional, the one. All
the ways this movie was influential. I don't think it
gets enough credit for how influential it was on the
But what if it were real? Subgenre of horror that
Blair Witch project The Strangers, which I'd previously done a
video on and even uses the inspired by true events
right there on the poster been something like paranormal activity
(11:14):
that doesn't purport to be real, but it's clearly playing
with this notion of what if this was real? That's
to Changsawn Masker kind of invented that filmmakers did actually
take inspiration from real life serial killer ed Gean, whose
crimes I can't get into on TikTok.
Speaker 5 (11:27):
But you can look them. My filmakers also specifically.
Speaker 2 (11:29):
Cited the behavior and actions of a man named Elmer
Wayne Henleygin can't get into TikTok on what he did,
but you can look that up. Point this is the
filmmakers made this story up, but they used elements of
real life and made the story up in such a
way that audiences, particularly before the Internet, believed that maybe
possibly it was real. Filmmakers have also talked about how
the influence of the Vietnam War and the images they
(11:51):
were seeing on their television every night influenced a lot
of the gore and violence in this movie. My opinion,
this is this movie's greatest legacy. It took real aspect
of violence in our culture and put it into a
fictional world.
Speaker 1 (12:04):
Because I thought that movie was real the whole time.
Me too, Yeah, so did I, And it's not I
made up.
Speaker 3 (12:09):
I knew that they had taken bits and pieces from
like Ed Geen's stuff, you know, and put it in there.
Thought it was just maybe Hollywood step, but I didn't
know the whole thing was just, you know, a bunch
of bullshit, completely made up. Got me interested in this
Elmer Wayne Emily, I had never heard of this serial killer.
Speaker 6 (12:28):
He was convicted in nineteen seventy four for his role
as a participant in a series of murders known as
the Houston mass murders, in which a minimum of twenty
eighteenage boys and young men were abducted, tortured, raped, and
murdered by Dean Coral between nineteen seventy and seventy three.
Henley and David Owen Brooks, Coral's other teenage accomplice, together
(12:51):
and individually lured many of the victims to Quarrel's home. Henley,
then seventeen years old, shot Corarel dead on August eighth,
nineteen seventy three.
Speaker 4 (13:01):
Seventeen.
Speaker 6 (13:02):
He's serving six consecutive terms of ninety nine years for
his involvement in the Houston mass murders, which at the
time were characterized as the deadliest case of serial killers
in American history.
Speaker 1 (13:17):
I got another one for you, A true story one.
You know the movie, uh, Spotlight, big movie?
Speaker 4 (13:23):
Okay, won an oscar?
Speaker 5 (13:25):
Pretty accurate.
Speaker 2 (13:25):
This movie is pretty accurate, only inaccuracy. Hears that it
just covers their initial reporting up until their first issue.
In reality, the Spotlight team of the Boston Globe continued
to publish stories about the priest abuse scandals for several
years after that reason they have to condense down some
of the witnesses.
Speaker 1 (13:41):
Yeah, so I got it right. It was just it
was just they implied that it was over pretty fast. Gotcha.
Speaker 4 (13:47):
I've never heard of that movie.
Speaker 1 (13:48):
Yeah, oh you haven't. It's one that if you watch it,
you'll get pretty angry, only because the the uh the
kid rape now is that it took him so long. Okay, yeah,
here's another one that's not gonna be awesome.
Speaker 2 (14:09):
What based on a true story is almost completely made up?
Speaker 1 (14:12):
I'll go first.
Speaker 5 (14:12):
Yeah, this movie's full of crap.
Speaker 2 (14:13):
When the real life title character disowns the movie about himself,
you know you're in for a rough time. Yes, the
real Patch Adams despised the movie about himself, going so
far as to tell film critic Roger Ebert, I hate
that movie.
Speaker 1 (14:28):
So what did he hate about?
Speaker 2 (14:29):
That's a little nitpicky artistic license, things like the fact
that Robin Williams is way too old to be playing
him in medical school. It's even a minor plot point
in the movie that Patch Adams is supposedly way too
old to be a medical school. When the real Patch
Adams enrolled in medical school at the age of twenty
two and graduated at twenty six. Love interest who gets
murdered by one of their patients is not a real character.
The biggest problem with this movie, and the biggest complaint
(14:50):
from the real Patch Adams, is that it waters down
his advocacy and the health care causes he's fought for
for the sake of sentimentality and a much less progressive.
Speaker 3 (14:59):
Meth sure, I love that movie again making it sexy
for Hollywood because the real story is boring.
Speaker 1 (15:06):
Let's see, there's some other ones here Wall Street where
I talked about Ray.
Speaker 4 (15:12):
Like from about Ray, Charles almost said Ray Stevens.
Speaker 1 (15:15):
Hidden Figures, which is this story about women singers if
I remember right?
Speaker 6 (15:25):
Nuh no hidden figure isn't that the Aero Nautical women
or whatever they.
Speaker 1 (15:32):
Yes, yes, that's the role they played. Yeah. The Mark
Wahlberg where he plays the football player in for the Eagles. Okay,
Uh the one with uh oh Man. What is this
movie's name? I could remember it? Green Book? Uh, Bohemian
Rhapsody o. Uh, Pocahontas, the team of the cartoon? Yeah, Moneyball. Oh,
(15:59):
here's a good one. Gimbiill know this movie, fantastic movie
with Morgan.
Speaker 2 (16:05):
Freeman, based on a true story, is almost completely made up.
Speaker 1 (16:08):
I'll go first.
Speaker 2 (16:09):
This movie is not entirely full of crap. Fact, it's
a fairly accurate depiction of what occurred that school year.
Where it gets a little shaky is when you start
to talk about the legacy of Joe Louis Clark and
if he really made east Side High that much better
in the long term. So Leno Mean tells the true
story of this guy, Joe Louis Clark, who was brought
in to be the principle of east Side High School
in New Jersey and basically turning around and prevent it
(16:29):
from coming under state control. As shown in the movie,
east Side High School was a really bad high school
where there was tons of gang violence and no learning
was taking place, and they had really really low test scores.
And the movie accurately depicts Joe Louis Clark is a
very strict disciplinarian. One of the primary moves he made,
which is depicted in the movie, is that he kicked
about three hundred students out of the school for causing
nothing but disruption and basically creating gang violence and dealing drugs.
(16:52):
But the movie makes it seem like these really strict
policies worked and he turned the high school around and
it was a super happy ending. Problem is that a
few years after the school year depicted in the movie,
test scores didn't really get any better. Now, as an
education professional, I have opinions about grading schools using test
scores and standardized tests in general, but that's for a
different time.
Speaker 5 (17:11):
While it seems like he.
Speaker 2 (17:12):
Did clean up the school a little bit at first,
there were actually some people that in the long term
were very critical of his strict practices, one of the
main criticisms being that the school never got better because
the community around it never improved, which a lot of
people blamed on Joe Lewis Clark because he took three
hundred really bad kids out of the school and put
them onto the streets. Oh. To be clear, as an
education professional, I am not saying I have the answers
(17:34):
that I know.
Speaker 1 (17:34):
Yeah, I don't. RANDI your lecture on that Moneyball the
greatest show ever Zodiac conjuring Argo. Have you ever seen Argo?
Speaker 3 (17:50):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (17:51):
Yeah, remember the Titans O.
Speaker 6 (17:54):
I was gonna ask if that's on there. Yeah, what
does he say about that.
Speaker 1 (17:57):
It's a great movie?
Speaker 2 (17:58):
It is what based on a true story is almost
completely made up.
Speaker 1 (18:03):
I'll go first.
Speaker 2 (18:04):
This movie is not full of crap, though it does
stretch the truth quite a bit. For starters, this movie
does do a better job than a lot of other
movies in this series, and that it does depict real people.
Coach Boone was a real person. Coach Yost was a
real person. Gary Bertier was a real person. The Sunshine
character was a real person. But apparently everyone on the
team had long hair. Even the little girl Coach Yost's
(18:24):
daughter was a real person.
Speaker 5 (18:25):
So what's this movie making up to start?
Speaker 2 (18:27):
T C. Williams was not a newly integrated high school.
It had been integrated for several years. What the district
had controversially done is taken three area high schools, each
with their own football team, and combined them into one
big football team. And that was the team that the
real life Coach Boone was selected to be the head
coach for. But all three of those high schools were integrated,
and they weren't the only integrated high school in the area.
(18:47):
One point in the movie, Coach Boone makes a big
deal about saying that they're the only team that has
both black and white players, so they have to worry
about race, and no other team in the conference has
to worry about that. In fact, literally every other team
in T. C. Williams Conference was racially integrated. Movie also
depicts TC Williams playing several close football games, when in fact, just.
Speaker 5 (19:05):
About every game they played was a blowout.
Speaker 2 (19:08):
Closest game they played all season was against George C.
Marshall High School, which is depicted in the movie, and
they really did win that game with a last second
running play that scored them a touchdown as time expired.
But the movie depicts that game as the state championship
game at the end of the season, when in fact
that was just a regularly scheduled regular season game they played.
The actual state championship game was played against Andrew Lewis
(19:28):
High School, who they shut out twenty seven to nothing.
Andrew Lewis High School actually had negative total offensive.
Speaker 1 (19:34):
Yards for the game.
Speaker 5 (19:35):
Also, Gary Bertier's car.
Speaker 2 (19:36):
Accident occurred after the season was over, and he actually
played in every game that year. But overall, this movie
isn't as egregious as some of the others in this series.
Speaker 1 (19:43):
Okay, okay, yeah, but you know they've fledged some lines.
We all know the blind Side isn't real, right, yeah?
Cool runnings? Oh man, the Jamaica bobs like the Brave Heart. Okay,
Braveheart's a big one. A lot of people have identity
in that movie. A lot of people think that that's
(20:05):
the movie that is the manhood movie. Right there.
Speaker 2 (20:08):
Good movie, what based on a true story is almost
completely made up.
Speaker 5 (20:12):
I'll go first, Good God, this movie.
Speaker 2 (20:14):
It should start by saying that historians who ran such
things say that this movie, Braveheart has a legitimate claim
as being the most historically inaccurate popular movie.
Speaker 5 (20:23):
After there are.
Speaker 2 (20:25):
Literally too many historical inaccuracies in this movie for me
to just go through and list them in a TikTok video.
Everything from the fact that Scottish people didn't wear kilts
at that time, to the fact that the weaponry that
they're using is all completely wrong for the era, to
the fact that William Wallace is portrayed as sort of
this poor, almost nationalist guerrilla type, when in fact he
was born into a noble Scottish family and grew up
(20:45):
kind of rich. Battle of sterling Bridge is depicted in
the film, except it was very crucial to the actual
battle that it was fought on a bridge, because it's
called the Battle of Sterling Bridge if there's no bridge
depicted in the movie. Also, the depiction of Edward the
first brutality is just wildly exaggerated. Most historians agree he
was kind of temperamental, but he was also sort of
a nice guy who gave a lot to charity. He
(21:07):
didn't just randomly throw people out windows, as is depicted
in this film. I could go on, but if you
really want to have some fun, check out the Wikipedia
for the movie Braveheart and look at the historical inaccuracy section,
which has multiple sub sections in it based on a truth.
Speaker 6 (21:24):
Oh that's so awesome, Yeah and disappointing all at the
same time.
Speaker 1 (21:30):
I don't know if you put that much onus in
a movie, right, for your identity, right, or your motivation
to be a good man, that's on.
Speaker 4 (21:42):
You, Right, It's just a movie.
Speaker 1 (21:44):
It's it's literally made to be entertained. Yeah, that's it.
Decisions were made to make it more fun. Never have
they made a movie and gone, ooh, but it won't
be accurate.
Speaker 4 (21:57):
Yeah, we got to make sure that we are spot on.
Speaker 6 (22:00):
It can be a little inaccurate for you know, the
drama's sake, but to do it like the brave hearts.
Speaker 1 (22:09):
That all movies. Yeah, back to Titanic, right, there's a
lot of inaccuracies in that movie in regards to.
Speaker 4 (22:18):
What it was. Yeah, but it's entertaining as shit for sure.
Speaker 1 (22:23):
The idea you could just make up take a piece
of history and go what can I what could I
do to make it more entertaining? Right, because I don't
know what really happened, right.
Speaker 4 (22:34):
We weren't there.
Speaker 3 (22:34):
We're just taking the stories that we have, yeah, going
with it and then exaggerating them, adding things.
Speaker 4 (22:41):
To make it more entertaining.
Speaker 1 (22:42):
Yeah. I don't want to ruin disclaimer for Lindsey. I
don't know if she's gonna watch it, but that's pretty
much what that movie is about. What that TV shows
about is one's making letting one picture represent what you
think happen.
Speaker 6 (22:56):
That's why a lot of times too, I don't like
movies that were based off of the books because it
never matches up. I read the book and then I'm like, well,
that didn't happen in the book, or it didn't happen
like this, But I hate.
Speaker 1 (23:08):
I'm so good with that because the book's made up too,
so we already know it's not based off anything real, right,
But I do.
Speaker 6 (23:15):
I love the books way better.
Speaker 1 (23:18):
They just can't make a book into a movie. You
just can't. There's not enough time. Yeah, books have freedom.
That's why you know it's different. It's a different type
of entertainment because books have room to go deep into things.
Speaker 4 (23:29):
Right.
Speaker 6 (23:30):
I wonder if you probably closed out of it. But
I wonder if Aaron Brokovitch was on his list.
Speaker 1 (23:36):
I don't think so, I didn't see it. I didn't
see it. But there's a lot of them, and he
does some that are about true and then he does
some about plot holes that are never explained and why
they're ridiculous. Those are always fun, They're way fun. Yeah,
but I spend so much time on that one. Hey.
So next week, yeah, after next week, after next you're
(23:59):
talking about the NYBD. Yeah, yep, week after next No,
it's the it's the sixteenth, that's next week.
Speaker 4 (24:07):
Is that next week?
Speaker 1 (24:08):
That's next week is the seventh. So next week, on
the sixteenth, we will be at the hard Rock Hotel
and Casino for the the blood drive to help save lives.
And it's one of these things we've done for years
on KMOD and it's about you know, being there for
people when you know you didn't know you they were
(24:29):
gonna need you. It's an easy way to help out.
Takes a few minutes. And if you can't go because
you can't get blood, because you got a tattoo or
what you've been you know you've been to I don't
know Papa New Guinea, right at least you know, recruit
some people to go or tell them about.
Speaker 4 (24:47):
It your office to go out there. I'll take a
take a break, go save some lives. Get out of the.
Speaker 1 (24:52):
Office for a little bit, save lives. You have a
choice on Thursday, save a life or don't. You have
to live with the decision again. That's going to be
a week from this Thursday the sixteenth at hard Rock
Hotel because you guys have a fantastic week.
Speaker 4 (25:07):
See ye bye bye