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August 27, 2024 • 29 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:14):
This isn't behind the scenes thing that we'll bring in
the listeners. On during the last segment, a fire alarm
went off, and that's not uncommon. It has happened more
than ten times, maybe since we've been here, maybe longer,
maybe more than that. It happens a lot. They test
the system, thank goodness, frequently. Absolutely.

Speaker 2 (00:37):
I hate to be up here doing the show and
then burn up alive because the lights and sirens never
went off.

Speaker 1 (00:42):
I'll circle back to that, all right, But we have
an alarm in our studio and it's just a strobe
and it caught me off guard when it happened, but
I was like, oh okay. And in the radio world,
it's always been the policy that short of you thinking
there's a fire, you stay put it until you're told
it's time to get out, right, That's always been the policy.

(01:05):
And the company or the industry has evolved and there's
less people working here, and so we've kind of always
gone with that. And during the segment when we were
doing to Tell the Truth, I was popping over to
the window to look and see if I saw a
fire truck or smoke or the power stayed on, Like
you can tell when the power goes out here, even

(01:26):
though this room would be on a generator if the
power went out. Nonetheless, I just was like, Okay, we're good,
everything's fine. But then I noticed people were out there,
and you know, maybe they're doing a tricky like ah
rather than just telling people. Now, with all that being said,
we've never had a fire drill here. Never.

Speaker 3 (01:47):
Never.

Speaker 1 (01:47):
When when I talked to my wife or she's like, oh,
we had a fire drill thing, I'm like, huh or
tornado drill. We've never had one here that I can
think of. Lindsay no, oh no, never, not one time,
kim b No, no drills here now. Granted we leave
between ten and noon, so maybe they do one later,
but there's never been an email that I recall going, hey,

(02:09):
this is the drill, this is where you go. Right.

Speaker 2 (02:11):
The only en fire drill that we've actually been actively
a part of when we was at the other building
and they did send an email out saying we're drill
and you.

Speaker 1 (02:19):
Were expected to participate in even the on air it
was everything right, sure made sense. I was glad we
were doing it, and they were like, we're going to
do them all the time. We did it once yea.
And even then because radio people suck, there was a
fucking bunch of jokes and all this other stuff. Yeah,
and so whatever, so far alarm goes off. I checked

(02:41):
kind of whatever my gauge is to if there's an issue,
and it passed my bucket list, you know, the buckets
siphon thing to like, oh, there's no problem, we should
be okay, yeah, yeah yeah. And in the past, again
it's always been like somebody from upper management, our boss
would be like you need to leave, yes, something to
that regard. So we get a text from somebody. I'm

(03:05):
going to read the text, read it because I think
it's bizarre, and it says, hey, this is the team
fire captain speaking. You need to meet with us at
pole B. Now, I'm assuming pole B is a fire
as a light pole outside out in the parking lot somewhere.
I'm making that assumption. Didn't know they're labeled. Don't know

(03:25):
which direction I would go to get to poll B.
It's a pretty big parking lot. Yeah, so I don't know.

Speaker 2 (03:31):
We'd be searching around for at least twenty minutes trying
to find Pole B.

Speaker 1 (03:34):
To be honest, I would just go out to where
my car is assess where the fire is and move
my car if I need. I'm just being honest, right, right,
And nonetheless, I also didn't know we had a fire captain, No,
a team fire captain.

Speaker 2 (03:48):
These are all new things, you know, we're trying to
implement in twenty twenty four as we are over halfway through.

Speaker 1 (03:54):
So again, whether it's a Tornado fire, the policy has
always been you stay the absolute last minute.

Speaker 2 (04:02):
Until the firemen are coming upstairs and saying, hey, we're firemen,
get out.

Speaker 3 (04:06):
Get your ass.

Speaker 1 (04:08):
Yeah. But to be fair, I think the fireman might
be busy. If there's a real fire, they might be busy.

Speaker 2 (04:14):
True, true, I mean, but there's a lot of firemen
in this city, right, and I imagine they're going to
send more than just one truck of like four dudes.

Speaker 1 (04:21):
I could be wrong. I mean they might send ten.

Speaker 2 (04:24):
If they could send ten dudes, then it's like, all right,
you four fight this fire. We're going to go check
Florida floor and evacuate, make sure everybody's out.

Speaker 1 (04:32):
I don't think they do that. You don't think so
I think there's an actual fire, I don't think they
go Florida floor to check. I think they get to
let's try to put out the fire. Maybe, so at
least send one person to go. I don't think they
would leave it. There's no solo work. Two people in
buddy system, I got you, and one person's got to
man the truck. And there's two trucks. So there's two trucks,

(04:52):
there's two people. So now we're down to eight. Yeah,
and then you leave? Ah No, I think I don't know. Maybe,
so I'm wait, nonetheless, hear what you're saying, and I
have heard that as well. Right, you wait until they
tell you to drag you out of there. And maybe
and again we're just kind of spitballing this in real
time for the listeners, and maybe they're bored by it.
I don't know, But maybe we just say, hey, there's

(05:14):
a fire drill, we might be back. Yeah, I like that,
and then hit the commercial and say good luck and
then not come back into the tomorrow and leave everybody wonder.
Yeah that also feels reckless. Yeah, because there's this system
here is built. I mean, we'd have to do some
things for it to run autopilot. Right, how long are

(05:34):
you sing? If we're just supposed to lead? How long
are you supposed to sit here putting best ofs in
exactly and for how long? Right do we put in
a twelve minute tool song? You know? And for just
for those playing along at home. If the building were
to burn down, not good, right, the station would stay
on there. Right. It is not conducive to me standing here,
It is not conducive to the computer in the room.

(05:56):
It would run still run, I believe if the server's
burnt out. I'm trying to remember if they're on site.
I don't know if the servers are on site anymore,
I don't know. I don't know. There's that room over there.
They won't let me in anymore, So I don't know.

Speaker 3 (06:10):
Why won't they let you in anymore?

Speaker 1 (06:12):
Have you looked at me recently? Would you? He've always
looked the same, So I don't know what that means.
So nonetheless, I'm sure we're going to have a meeting.
Of course, there's gonna be something like a morning show.
Didn't think they needed to. We're just like I just.

Speaker 2 (06:28):
Would it be great if we're the reason for a
company wide you know, mandates and stuff.

Speaker 1 (06:33):
Good, I don't care. And our boss, and to his credit,
I think he was he was like, hey, but he
was doing hand gestures and I don't know what the
hand gesters are he was. I think he was one
obviously trying to look out for us, but he still
hadn't left, right, which it makes sense. Go down to
the ship, captain, I get it, and go around make
sure everybody's left. Hey, don't forget about the morning show.

(06:55):
We're kind of back in the corner, right. You know why?
I found this funny video on the TikTok and it
was firefighters saving children in reverse, so it's like they
were climbing up the ladder and putting the kids barking far. God,
what have you been watching in your algorithm for that

(07:17):
to populate it? I don't know, man. Some shit's been
going down lately on my TikTok.

Speaker 2 (07:21):
It has been a lot of The Ranch today, like
clips from the fucking TV show The Ranch.

Speaker 1 (07:26):
I haven't watched The Ranch since fucking season one.

Speaker 3 (07:29):
Are they trying to make a comeback?

Speaker 1 (07:30):
I don't know. So I'm getting a lot of those.

Speaker 2 (07:33):
And then the other day, actually it's been the last
couple of days, it's.

Speaker 1 (07:38):
Been a lot of cruise stuff, cruise like terry crews,
cruise ships got new ships, like people enjoying their cruise
and like, this is why you should choose Carnival. And
they're like cruise ship wars. They're like, look at this
pansy ass cruise ship over here compared to this giant,
massive one. And they just popped up.

Speaker 2 (07:59):
I am never searched cruises. I've never really watched any
cruise videos. They just fucking pop up. And now they
just continue to carry on.

Speaker 1 (08:09):
I'm like, yeah, interesting, Oh god, I mean it could
have been you watch one person's video and it was
the only video they have that doesn't include cruises, right,
and so then that populated cruises. Maybe so I don't know,
I mean I've talked about going on a cruise before.

Speaker 2 (08:24):
Maybe that's what it is. They're like, because they're always
constantly listening. They're they're like, huh, he said he wanted
to go on a cruise sometime, Well, let's just start
overloading his FYP with carnival stuff and maybe we'll get
up next year, right, Or maybe you were looking up
children death funny man, and that's what it started popular.

Speaker 1 (08:42):
Was just that feels more logical than it was. Listening
to you and like it's hilarious like firefighters in reverse.
I saw this thing, and I think it's so fascinating.
These are people who were missing who were became found. Okay,
these are and some of these are super crazy. Some
of them aren't, right, like this one from twenty nineteen

(09:03):
where a woman was lost for seventeen days in the
Maui forest and she got didn't take phone or water
or anything, and she got lost and they found her
seventeen days later, some burnt leg injuries, she had lost
her shoes if she survived on berries and water and
a helicopter foundal Right, no big deal, that's pretty mild,

(09:24):
best possible scenario. Seventeen days is a long time. It's
over two weeks when you are by yourself. That feels
like eternity anyway, So I didn't think that one was
that bad. This one. In nineteen ninety one, eleven year
old jas Douguard was kidnapped while watching the school watching

(09:44):
waiting for the school bus. Eighteen years later, a parole
officer discovered her when they investigated her abductor and his wife.
She had been forced to bear two children for the
man and had been kept for years in a series
of tents and sheds. In his backyard. She had been
trained to not talk about her real life, but to

(10:05):
pretend that she and her daughters were all children fucked up. Wow, right?

Speaker 3 (10:13):
Ye?

Speaker 1 (10:13):
How do you keep somebody in a tenth though, in
a backyard?

Speaker 2 (10:16):
In a backyard? Yeah, because those things they zip pretty easily.
I guess if you lock, you get one.

Speaker 1 (10:24):
Of those little luggage locks, you know what I mean,
and lock the two zippers together. I guess one way
to think of the heat, the weather, right. I don't
know where that happened, but the snow maybe right. This
one's really great too, especially off the sports story that
Lindsay had with the Swindell And this is Natasha Ryan.
She disappeared from her home in nineteen ninety eight at

(10:46):
the age of fourteen. Police didn't take it seriously in
the beginning, and she had run away with her twenty
year old year old boyfriend a month earlier. Fears grew
when several women went missing in the area. In nineteen
ninety nine, a serial killer confessed to killing her. Though
her body was never found, her family held her memorial

(11:07):
in two thousand and one. During the trial. In two
thousand and three, she was found alive. What hiding at
her boyfriend's house, where she had been living voluntarily since
her disappearance. She testified she didn't know that guy, never
met him.

Speaker 2 (11:24):
The boyfriend, no, oh, theready killed her. Okay, how do
you live so long with your boyfriend and not be spotted?
You know, I'm imagining they're living in the same town, right,
Not necessarily somebody who would know them and see them
be like, oh, you look like Rebecca.

Speaker 1 (11:41):
Not necessarily. You got to think this is nineteen ninety eight,
the Internet and the spread of information, and it didn't
really kick into the gear we know it now until
two thousand and two. Right, it wasn't because of nine
to eleven. They didn't make this is nerdy network switchers
to be as fast and useful as they are now.
They the Internet was actually starting to go down because

(12:02):
they we were like, we don't know what to do
with it. They didn't realize the information could move so fast,
so they upgraded the equipment to make it so we
could utilize it today. So it would make sense that
maybe there's no Facebook MySpace scenario. Uh, how about this one.
In January of eighty seven, a father of two disappeared

(12:24):
after withdrawing money from his bank. There were no clues
to his whereabouts for twenty three years, and all that
is known is that he suffered a severe blow to
the back of the head that left him with total amnesia. Eventually,
he recalled his real name and applied for a Medicare card,
which brought him to the attention of the police, who
had never given up looking for him. Wow, so you

(12:48):
get back hit on the back of the head and
you're just like a dirp and dirt and derp and
dirt go all through life. Brenda Heist disappeared after dropping
her kids off at school in two thousand and two.
Eleven years later, she was found in Florida after investigators
said she was upset about an upcoming divorce and she
survived by joining a group of homeless people living in

(13:10):
tents under bridges and eating scrap food. Okay, scrap food,
well out of trash can what But she was like, Nope,
I don't want to get divorced, so I'll just go
into hiding so you can't get me divorce, which we
know from Jeff that's not a real thing.

Speaker 2 (13:24):
Right, got a file of publication in a newspaper. Wait
thirty forty days in the.

Speaker 1 (13:30):
In two thousand and two, a waffle house employee left
home after an argument with her mother never returned. Police investigated,
especially after another waffle house wood worker vanished weeks later.
They suspected the first girl's boyfriend, linked to a previous murder,
might have killed both women. Six years later, the boyfriend's

(13:50):
case appeared on a true crime show. And if you
will recognize the supposed victim as her neighbor, she had
simply moved and start a new life.

Speaker 2 (14:01):
And see that's what I was talking about with that
girl that you know, stayed with her boyfriend for years
or whatever, like somebody would recognize them. You don't need
the internet or all that. But that lady saw it
on a true crime thing, was like, oh, I fucking
know her and it's my neighbor.

Speaker 1 (14:16):
Yeah, unsolved mystery type of thing. Sure, so you would
think that.

Speaker 2 (14:21):
But I guess if they do a special right, well
that and I guess if it's like, you know, the
boyfriend is the only one that ever goes to the
grocery store. He goes out and gets things and she
just stays at home, I guess it is POSSI yes.

Speaker 1 (14:33):
Lula Hood was a single mother of Foign, Illinois, who
reportedly suffered from mental illness and had her sister adopt
her kids, but remained active in their lives. Then, in
nineteen seventy, after a heated family argument, she disappeared. When
she didn't come back, the family grew worried. Unfortunately, there
were no clues as to what could have happened to
her until nineteen ninety six or twenty six years later,

(14:55):
when a skeleton was found in the neighborhood Back Britain,
in a neighborhood brickyard. It was assumed that these remains
were her. Then in two thousand and eleven, so nineteen
seventy to twenty eleven, eighty four year old Lula was
located in Jacksonville, Florida.

Speaker 3 (15:12):
Lulu was located doing what was she fine? Was she okay?

Speaker 1 (15:19):
She was a yeah? I think she was alive. I
mean all these people were found alive. Yeah. A seventeen
year old Juliana Kapecki survived the Lansa Flight five awight
plane crash in nineteen seventy one after the plane was
struck by lightning. She was ejected from the plane fell
two miles still strapped to her seat. She survived the

(15:41):
next eleven days in the Amazon rainforest until she was
rescued by a local lumberjacks after finding the camp. Yeah,
I think we've we talked about. Yeah, we talked about
one of my favorite ones. You're like, what can you
imagine plummeting to the earth in the sea. No, you
go do it?

Speaker 3 (15:59):
Surviving?

Speaker 1 (16:00):
Yeah, once you survived the landing, and they're like, oh no,
I'm in trouble.

Speaker 3 (16:05):
What the fuck I survived.

Speaker 1 (16:08):
In twenty twenty two, two boys went missing while trying
to catch birds in Brazil's rainforest. After eight days, the
official search was called off, but two hundred and sixty
volunteers continued searching around the clock. Nearly four weeks later,
a man cutting wood discovered the boys three miles from
the village. So miracle Elizabeth Smart, I think we all

(16:33):
know that one. Right when she was living like down
the street, these people were keeping her hostage.

Speaker 2 (16:40):
She went on to do like I believe, like hosts
like crime shows and stuff.

Speaker 1 (16:46):
I think she tried.

Speaker 3 (16:48):
I think she still does, or she gets on as
a special that might be true.

Speaker 1 (16:54):
Yeah. Tanya McCrumb is an American woman who was held
captive for years by Thomas Jose, a security guard who
worked at the school she attended. In February of ninety six,
she was confined to his home, locked in a bedroom
for four years with a bucket as a toilet. Later,
the man created a false identity for her, called Nikki Allen,

(17:17):
and introduced her as his girlfriend, allowing limited freedom with
strict curfews. After ten years, she revealed her captivity to
a grocery store owner who called the police. He was
sentenced to fifteen years in prison, was released in twenty
twenty two, and he had registered as a sex offender.
I am fifteen years fifteen years. No, you should go

(17:39):
to way for life. You are not allowed to come
back into society. Ah, fifteen years you figured out? Uh
Shoshi Yokoe Japanese soldier who served as a sergeant in
the Imperial Japanese Army during the Second World War and
was one of the last three Japanese holdouts to be
found in the jungles of Guam in nineteen seventy two,

(18:05):
twenty eight years after the war ended. Wow, still holding
his post, by the way, Huh that's a dedication. Yeah,
uh Ariel Castro kidnapped three young women between two thousand
and two and two thousand and four. We know this
story is incredibly fascinating and incredibly heartbreaking at the same time.

(18:25):
One of them breaks three breaks free from the home
and goes into alerts of neighbor Right.

Speaker 3 (18:28):
Yeah, and didn't he impregnate almost all of those women?

Speaker 2 (18:32):
He looked like a scummy motherfucker. Yeah, he was nasty, greasy,
sound bitch.

Speaker 1 (18:38):
Stephen Stayner, seven was kidnapped by Kenneth Parnell, a pedophile
who abused him for seven years and convinced him his
family couldn't afford to keep him. When he was fourteen,
Parnell kidnapped a new child named Timothy. Afraid for him,
Stayner ran away with Timothy and was finally reunited with
his family, although readjusting to normal normal life was reportedly

(19:00):
very difficult. In nineteen eighty nine, after starting starting a
family of his own, he died in a motorcycle accident.

Speaker 3 (19:09):
Wasn't there a movie about him? I think there was
a movie about Stephen's story. Say more, I think that
might even be the name of the movie is Stephen's Story.
And I want to say the actor that we have
talked about on this show who were like, he's so underrated,

(19:31):
the redheaded actor.

Speaker 1 (19:33):
Uh are you talking about? I know, my first name
is Stephen. That's one movie. There's another one. There's another
one out there that looks like they did a movie.
I don't see this. There's a crime docu series on
Hulu called Captive Audience, a real American horror story, which

(19:53):
is pretty good if you've seen that. I don't think
that the person you're talking about from ask Yeah, okay,
and was supposed to be in Back to the Future, right,
I don't see his next I was thinking of right,
But there was a two part mini series that, like
GIMPI mentioned, I know my first name is Steven, that
was on in nineteen eighty nine. But that's that's the

(20:17):
only one that's on here. Uh riiker Web survived two
days in Montana wilderness in near freezing temperatures in an
area that, according to locals, is heavily populated with bears.
In American Life. We've talked about this kid before it
was been on, since we've been on the air. Just
amazing the number of people that do get found, yeah

(20:38):
after all that time, which is good. Yeah, I mean,
which is why you say you never give up hope, right,
I think, I think just for just your sanity. But
how long do you go exactly?

Speaker 2 (20:51):
And isn't it better to like go ahead and just
give up hope now and when they come back later.

Speaker 1 (20:56):
You're like, this is amazing. I think that the idea,
like the boy who the guy molested him and all
that for so many years and was told his family
couldn't didn't want him. You get discovered and then you
hear that they moved on. That's that's a deep scar
man something like that. Yes, totally, but I feel like

(21:21):
the feeling you get inside would be better, like, oh,
let's just hold hope and hold hope and hold hope,
and then years later, you know, you find out that well,
they're actually dead. We found him in the bottom of
a ravine, and you're liken.

Speaker 2 (21:36):
Held hope for all these years just to find out
they're dead, you know, when you just go ahead and
give up hope now and when they find him later.

Speaker 1 (21:43):
You're like, fuck, yeah, you're fucking alie. I'm pretty sure
that'll be my reaction when we find him, as it
should be. Yeah, I think I would need a body, Okay,
I wouldn't give it. I would need to see. Well,
that's what I said. They found a body was at
the bottom of No. No, I'm just like you're saying to
give up hope, and I would say, I wouldn't you
need that to just give up the hope? Gotcha? Yeah?

(22:06):
I don't think I could give up just because you know,
I got a four o'clock tea time. Life goes on.
Life can also go on while I have hope. Those
two things can coexist.

Speaker 2 (22:19):
It's going to throw off your golf game if you're
constantly thinking about your missing child or brother or sister
or whatever.

Speaker 1 (22:24):
Yeah, I mean there if you think about the Sandy
Hook kids, right and the dad who uh won't give
up and it's ruined his marriage and his life and
he has no money and he's like, I don't care.
I need to do this to honor my kid. Is
that sick? I have no idea? Or is that honorable? Yeah?
I know about the Sandy Hook but I don't know

(22:45):
about that particular guy. Yeah, like people giving him death
threats because they said his kid was an actor. Okay,
his little child who was blown apart by a gun
was an actor? What's he holding hope for what's he
holding on to hope? People respond, okay, and those people,
especially people that are saying it was faked. God, yeah, crazy,

(23:08):
story makes sense. But people going missing, man, it happens
all the time. Crazy, how it's crazy how often it happens,
And it's crazy how often we go, right, Hella, what
are you? I don't know, I don't know. Apparently not
the milk carton thing.

Speaker 2 (23:25):
No, that doesn't work. And does the courtboard at the Walmart? Yeah,
they have that up there. Have you seen this child?

Speaker 1 (23:32):
No? Maybe it does. I don't know. Yeah, I don't
know the number of people that have. If you are
someone who goes and checks the board every week, that's
kind of sick too, right is it?

Speaker 2 (23:46):
But I mean if you're just you know, you're trying
to be the citizen that saves the day or keep
an eye out for missing people.

Speaker 3 (23:53):
Or just to see if you know any of them,
if you know.

Speaker 1 (23:55):
Any of them, part of Walmart's way to be like no, no, no,
we're trying to help, right, they're under the Walmart.

Speaker 2 (24:01):
I don't know, right, yeah, no, so so uh No,
I don't think that's too awful.

Speaker 1 (24:04):
I don't think that's sick. I don't think that's bad.
I don't know why that has an advance. I don't
know why it's still a bulletin board. I don't know
why someone is printing out pictures and then stapling it
to a board. You could literally put a TV screen
up there and just have a feed and do more. Right, Yeah,
and whose job is to put it up there? I'm
gonna have to ask somebody that works at Walmart whose
job is to update that? Or? Oh god? Yeah? Right?

Speaker 3 (24:26):
And how often does it get updated? Because I don't
I barely notice it.

Speaker 1 (24:32):
Really, Here's what I'm gonna do. I will go to
my Walmart. I will take a photo of it, and
then I'll keep taking photos of it for I don't know,
and then we can just compare the photos. And then
when I get in trouble for some other thing and
the police want to look at my thog, they're like,
why do you have all these pictures of missing children billboards?
Maybe that's not a good idea. Maybe need No, we're

(24:54):
doing a so for the show.

Speaker 2 (24:57):
Yeah, do they pull Steven from electri on be like, Steve,
I need you to go. Here's here's the this week's
batch of printouts for missing children.

Speaker 1 (25:05):
Don't ask Susan in kids toys, right, it's too emotional
for somebody who hates fucking kids, may not even put
them up there. Yeah. I'm friends with a child sex
unit detective. Okay, And he he tells me pause is important.

(25:26):
He tells me all the time. He's like, if if
we think someone's a suspect, we just take their phone.
And they say you can't do that, I'm like, no, no,
I can preserve evidence. I can't. I won't go through it,
but I can take your phone to preserve the evidence
to make sure you don't do anything nefarious. If I
think you're up to something, you're not out there deleting shit.
And he's like, and the threshold's pretty low. I just

(25:47):
take it, right, what are they gonna do? Bitch about it?
Then bitch about it. But I'm not. I don't have
to give it back because there's a presumed danger to
the evidence, right, and because if it's usually it's an
electronics crime, it's literally the smoking gun. Yeah, if you
didn't have anything to hide, and you wouldn't be so
fucking PARENTO worry about them taking a shit. Yeah, he

(26:07):
tells me that he can see people and know. I'm like, ah,
the mustache, isn't it? Yeah right, it's the church coat,
black socks being held up, m brown loafers. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (26:19):
Ye.

Speaker 1 (26:19):
He tells me crazy stories and you're like what and
tells me stories sometimes of where people are accused and
then you find out that the child, normally it's a female,
is doing it because they're trying to like woo, like
that actually does occur, and the guy has no idea

(26:40):
how crazy is that. He's like, it's not common. He's like,
but it does happen where they're like trying to date,
you know, like let me send you a picture, and
then when the person refuses them that, the child turns
them in. Oh yeah, psychotic shit right there. Yeah, And
you're like they have to approach it with you are

(27:01):
a predator no matter what, right, And then they piece
the evidence together. You're like, wait a minute, Yeah, this
fifteen year old girl's just crazy. There's well they don't
say that there's no evidence that he propositioned or pursued
any of this, right, right, But.

Speaker 3 (27:15):
You always have to trust the accuser one hundred percent.

Speaker 2 (27:20):
That minimum though, if if a fifteen year old girl
sent him an ass pick and he's got it on
his phone, right, then he's got your how pornography on
his phone.

Speaker 1 (27:29):
Yeah, but even if you delete it, there's evidence of
it still there, right, So, and you still get held
for that.

Speaker 3 (27:36):
Right, Investigate whether or not he asked for it.

Speaker 2 (27:40):
Still possession of child pornography, no matter how you look
at it, whether he asked for it or not.

Speaker 1 (27:44):
Yes, but you can make a mistake in terms of
I didn't want this and delete it. You're showing intent.
Intent is really important, right right right? Just because you
put it like, oh, no, I deleted it, then you
saved your deleted folder. Right, You never heard your deleted
folder hardly means you're innocent that.

Speaker 2 (28:00):
I'm sure the length of time between you getting it
and deleting it, you know, has a factor there.

Speaker 1 (28:06):
Your buddy gets spopped by this and he tells you, no,
I deleted it. Do you even follow up with, well,
how long did it take you to delete it? Right?

Speaker 2 (28:14):
You just go good? You should delete as you should.
I think that's the natural thing to do. But maybe
you should ask people, well, how long did it take
you to delete it? Did you delete it immediately or
did you wait the next day? If you wait till
the next day, you're five busy man.

Speaker 3 (28:29):
Yeah, I was at work and.

Speaker 1 (28:32):
Yeah I can meet at pol b Yeah. Now you're
just fucking making up excuses. Chomo, he says, three days
do you question your friendship? Yeah? Or do you go
what did she look like? Right?

Speaker 2 (28:45):
No, it's like, I know you're a busy guy, but
come on, bruh, it doesn't take You can literally be
walking and delete a message at the same time.

Speaker 1 (28:52):
I cannot stand when people are like I was busy, bitch.
People are glued to their phones. Real you saw my
message pop up? Yeah, that's why I I'm finally having
that count back where you can see if I read
something like I don't.

Speaker 2 (29:08):
Care, You're lucky I got back to you three days
A week later, what happened.

Speaker 1 (29:13):
I don't have to get back to you. I ain't
your fucking monkey. You don't get to yank the leash,
and I'm like, your yells? What can I do? Yeah? Uh,
all right, that was quite the journey we went on there,
all right. So uh yeah, hey guys, have a great week.
We'll see how rockaholm if you're out there. Apparently we'll

(29:33):
be out there Friday. And Saturday. You guys have a
fantastic week. Bye bye
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