Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Oh, the sun will come up tomorrow. It's Tomorrow show today. Hey,
this is Jonathan Rusher's killing Nanna, good morning. We're gonna
be talking about what we'll be talking about and what
you're talking about for Warren Zider's tickets tomorrow morning six thirty.
Speaker 2 (00:15):
Yep, and the answers on the Morning Rust blog at
ninety seven five to b CS dot com. I'll give
you that in just a second. In the meantime, the
average Facebook count for an American is almost three hundred friends.
Speaker 1 (00:27):
Okay.
Speaker 2 (00:28):
According to a survey, four of them actually care about you.
Isn't that amazing?
Speaker 1 (00:39):
Or out of three hundred, yes, actually give a damn
about you. Yes, that's great.
Speaker 2 (00:45):
And most of them are just trying to use you
for some sort of social clout. They just want followers,
so they followed you in the hopes that you would,
you know, fall back or whatever. According to another this
is from like a secology today, a human being can
only maintain about one hundred and fifty relationships that mean
(01:10):
anything to that.
Speaker 1 (01:11):
Wow, that's much more than I thought it would be.
One hundred and fifty.
Speaker 2 (01:14):
Yes, that's the most that a human being can contain.
Your brain can't go past one fifty, so you know,
as they pointed out in their story, which I think
is hysterical, So when you start deleting elementary school classmates,
that's actually not mean. It's biology. I can't care about
you anymore because I haven't seen you in forty years,
(01:40):
so I've got another one hundred and fifty people to
care about. How many friends do you actually have on
social media? Real friends, people who you actually I met
a guy Friday night. He said his name I won't
say it here because he's I don't want to say
he's a public figure, but he's somewhat known. And I said, gosh,
(02:02):
I do like because he's so young. I was like,
do I know your dad? Because that last name sounds
so familiar. And he said, well, we're friends on x,
Instagram and Facebook. I said, we are. Maybe that's how
I knew his name, but it probably just popped up
in my feet at some point. And he works in
(02:22):
Colombia and he does sports and political which is kind
of what I do as well, which is kind of
weird that we would both be in both genres. But
I've never met him before before Friday night. When he
came up and introduced himself to me, and yet there
I am on all three platforms with him as a friend.
Speaker 1 (02:42):
Well, I can tell you that from what I've been told,
because I can't get on my Facebook page or the
Morning Rush page, and I'm hoping to get an update
from corporate on that I was hacked by some dude
from Nigeria.
Speaker 2 (02:54):
We don't know he's from Nigeria.
Speaker 1 (02:56):
We don't know where he's from, but he claims and
he took a photo me, I understand, and put it
in a certification, a certification or a certificate that I
had received that I am an official crypto dealer.
Speaker 2 (03:07):
Oh congrats.
Speaker 1 (03:08):
That is incorrect, and I'm hoping to actually gain access
again on my Facebook pages. But Sally tells it because
Sally went on my Facebook page and made a notification
or put a comment on that this is not true,
that I've been hacked. So he promptly deleted that comment
and then blocked her and blocked everybody else that I
know that tried to set it straight. So some people
(03:30):
think that I've left the Morning Rusher. I'm doing The
Morning Russia. And then after that I go into my
crypto office where I'm a crypto dealer. So if you
are one of my Facebook friends who believes that I
actually am dealing in crypto, now that is incorrect. So
but I'm thinking back on my Facebook friends and thinking
if I took that same because I know on the
(03:50):
Jonathan Rush page, I think your page of my paper
they max out of like five thousand unless they.
Speaker 2 (03:55):
Change the parameters.
Speaker 1 (03:56):
Okay, so then if you use that what was it again,
it was four out of three hundred.
Speaker 2 (04:03):
Well they know, they said, yeah, it's four people on
your social media page actually care about you, Okay, fifteen
of them have any real interest in you.
Speaker 1 (04:12):
Okay, so they're just following this to make sure they
follow me, to make sure they know when they can
win their tickets for Warren Zyders or whatever given away. Okay,
I got it. That's fine. That's why it's there. Well,
I'm there to tell you how to win your stuff.
That's what That's what the Facebook page basically does. Anyway,
that's an interesting thought process. Now I can tell you
that I would imagine that for women that number is
(04:34):
woefully short. I think women actually use like Facebook in
particular because they truly care about the other person.
Speaker 2 (04:41):
For guys, and not according to this, they had fifteen
hundred excuse me, two thousand men two thousand women between
the ages of eighteen and sixty five who made regular
use of social media. Then they had another thirteen hundred
and seventy five professional adults who quote work full time
(05:02):
and don't have a lot of time for social media.
So the two thousand and eighty six they spend a
lot of time. But most people on here, it's actually
four point one people are your legit friends, and then
you have thirteen point six people who actually have any
(05:23):
interest in you. So most people like, here's what I do.
And my wife absolutely hates this about me. When I
go on any social media platform, I start scrolling and
I'm liking every post. I'm just liking. I don't even
read it. I have no idea what I'm liking, and
I try to like fifty posts a day if I can.
Speaker 1 (05:42):
I really get hung up on the woods where somebody loses,
like a family member or something, because I don't know
which aboji to use. You can't put the thumbs up
although they're talking about what a great daddy was or whatever.
You can't just put a thumbs up because that doesn't
seem like it fits the moment.
Speaker 2 (05:55):
I must have. I mean, I've probably given thumbs up
to things where you know I'm battling, answer I'm near
death thumbs up or because I'm just going through and
like and so my wife is like, I can't believe
you liked that post or whatever. And it might be
something very bizarre or something. You know, people put some
crazy things on social media and if you're not looking,
(06:15):
which I am not for the most part. Now, I
will read some of my quote unquote friends because I
mean I probably care about maybe twenty people that I
have some sort of interest in on social media, like
real interest, like they're in my circle in some capacity.
But I agree with that that most people have four friends.
That's about all you got in this world. There's about
(06:36):
four people. If you have a car accident at three
in the morning, who can you call? And they're gonna
say they're not gonna be surprised.
Speaker 1 (06:44):
Find out who your friends are.
Speaker 2 (06:46):
Yeah, you're not gonna you know, like if I called
ninety nine point nine percent of you and said, hey man,
it's Kelly. It's two am. I'm in a bind. I
need some help. Why are you calling me? But for
that three or four people that would go, gotcha, I'm ready.
Speaker 1 (07:04):
I had a guy walking to me one time in
a social gathering and he said, and it was true.
I often contemplated, did he really say that because it
was true? Or did he hear some really smart psychologists
say that that's a way to build him to add
to a friendship. He said, I just want you to
know that you're one of the people on my short
list that I know if I ever needed something at
(07:26):
three o'clock in the morning, I could call you and
you get them and get out of bed and be there.
Speaker 2 (07:30):
He said that to you, did did you feel that
way about him? I probably would, Oh, okay, So it
wasn't like some Mirando noime.
Speaker 1 (07:39):
It wasn't somebody I saw all the time. I would.
I would absolutely get out of bed. But I can't
think of a lot of people that I wouldn't get
out if he called me at three o'clock in the
morning either a I'm on your short list of people
you trust or be you're down to me?
Speaker 2 (07:52):
Yeah, oh crap, Everyone said no. Everybody else said how
big is Bill?
Speaker 1 (07:56):
But I want he go one of those things you know,
with how to become a better person or how to
motivate people, or you know, how to manipulate your friends.
Speaker 2 (08:03):
I'm sure there's to manipulate your friends.
Speaker 1 (08:06):
I never could figure that out. I am figured it
out to this day. I just take him at his word. Now,
move along. I don't even know why I mentioned it here.
If he's listening to this podcast, he's going to go.
I said that he thought I was manipulating you.
Speaker 2 (08:16):
That's hysterical, all right. So we always do the words
contest called what you're talking about every morning at six
point thirty and again that answer is coming up in
just a second. But first from Lake Superior State University.
They started this tradition in nineteen seventy six. Now Lake
Superior University, if you're not familiar with that, it's on
(08:37):
the banks there in Michigan of the Lake Superior. And
what they put out every year since nineteen seventy six.
First they take in nominations and then they put out
their list of what they call banished words. Sometimes it's phrases,
but it's their banished words list. So for this year,
(08:59):
some of the words that were banished cringe. And I've
heard that a billion times this year, So cringe. Donald
Trump said something total cringe. Barack Obama said, total cringe.
Game changer. You can't say anything's a game changer moving on,
because everything became a game changer. This is a total
game changer. Era. Taylor Swift has ruined the word era,
(09:25):
so that is now off the table. You can't use
the phrase I y k y k, if you know
you know, it's time to let that go, if you
know you know is dead in the water. Sorry, not sorry, sorry,
not sorry. Totally that they're done with that one saying
(09:47):
period when you make something and you emphatically want people
to know that there's nothing to be said. This is
your mic drop moment and you say, you know whatever,
jo out of the rush is the greatest radio personality period.
Don't say the period anymore. We're all tired of it.
Speaker 1 (10:07):
We've done with it.
Speaker 2 (10:07):
Do you have any words you'd like to add to
that one? Words have just got tired of in the
last time.
Speaker 1 (10:13):
Yeah, I've got like three or four that I totally
for forever and ever. Discount anything that follows the phrase
like when somebody says me personally, When you put the
personally thing in there, Yeah, that was an assumption going
into the conversation. So now I'm discounting everything you said
after that, kind of like the word honestly. If you
(10:33):
insert the word honestly before your answer, you know, honestly, Okay,
that means I'm not even I'm tuned out. Now, I'm
thinking about reruns from the Andy Griffith Show while your
mouth is moving.
Speaker 2 (10:44):
Well, when a politician says, let's be clear, oh my god,
that's about to be the cloudiest statement you've ever heard.
Speaker 1 (10:50):
Or and my favorite one that I heard again the
other day from an up and coming politician, I'm like,
I hope you drop that, because I really want to
hear what you have to say. But if you say
the notion that.
Speaker 2 (11:00):
A notion, the word notion, I know that one's rubbed
you the wrong way for many years.
Speaker 1 (11:04):
I am out.
Speaker 2 (11:06):
How about when they say to tell you the truth,
that's almost a guaranteed lie.
Speaker 1 (11:11):
Yes, I have not added to any phrases this past year,
although I agree with most of those, including the acronyms.
I'm done with the especially when you speak an acronym.
If you speak i DK, I'm not even I'm not
even talking to you.
Speaker 2 (11:27):
How about TCB? That was Elvis's phrase, Elvis used to
like to say TCB and he used to and he
had necklaces made up for all his uh what it
called the Memphis Mafia.
Speaker 1 (11:38):
That's right, I had the TC banner of the acronym
speak Elvis President.
Speaker 2 (11:42):
Yeah, we're talking about ten care of business over here.
All right, we're gonna be taking care of business tomorrow
morning at six thirty with what you're talking about. Warren
Zeider Concert Tickets, Saturday, March twenty ninth, Township Auditorium with
special guest Tyler Braden. The word. Let's see how Jonathan
does on today's word. Okay, this is a funny word.
Speaker 1 (12:00):
I don't like it.
Speaker 2 (12:01):
Nitification, notification, I know this one.
Speaker 1 (12:05):
Notification is really it's a psychological term having to do
with persons who build up, uh, they build up a
protection mechanism around their thought processes, much like hearing someone speak,
I d K. I've already I've already built up a
protection mechanism around my thought processes where your words don't
even penetrate my nogget.
Speaker 2 (12:25):
Now, where what are you basing that off of? Is
it like the Greek word something or no?
Speaker 1 (12:30):
No, I just remember the word.
Speaker 2 (12:32):
You're so close I mean you're I got it wrong,
you almost had it almost. It's to build a nest,
So birds have nidification. But you know, we also use
the words sometimes for people who are We could say
they're they're nidifying their home building a nest.
Speaker 1 (12:51):
That that does have a tinge of isolationism, which I
could be I could be guilty of.
Speaker 2 (12:58):
A tinge of isolationists. He has a notification thought process.
There you go, he's building anty.
Speaker 1 (13:07):
But now we have the answer. Because this is an
e learning situation. We're helping expand the morning RSS your
regular's vocabulary. It's notification.
Speaker 2 (13:13):
Notification. Doesn't it sound like a word though that you
would use as an insult?
Speaker 1 (13:17):
It does.
Speaker 2 (13:19):
This guy's total nidified. He's a you're gonna pontificate with
your notification, you know.
Speaker 1 (13:26):
And that's one thing that we've never done where you
actually should have a double payoff on this. We should create,
like pe wee Herman, one of the words meths of
our time. We should actually have the word notification as
the contest word. And you give us the open book
E learning answer to the word of the day, then
we use it three times today in a regular vocabulary
(13:47):
to make it part of your vocabulary. We should use
it another time in the show, and that's when you
call again, because if we use notification without any explanation,
then that would be like the pe Wee Herman word
of the day do without the caffetti and the loud noisemakers.
Although I've always liked that of the pe Wee Herman show.
And the only reason I ever watch a rerun but.
Speaker 2 (14:08):
The word of the day.
Speaker 1 (14:09):
Watching reruns of Pee Wee Herman. That's great. Hey, what
are you doing. I'm just over here watching some YouTube
reruns a pee Wee Herman show.
Speaker 2 (14:16):
He was so good in eighty seven.
Speaker 1 (14:17):
He was glass. It's really good when he's in the spotlight.
In the dark not so much.
Speaker 2 (14:22):
No, don't get him in the theater.
Speaker 1 (14:23):
So anyway, that's uh. We may find a way to
get double prizes in the future of by using the
word in their conversations sometime during the morning.
Speaker 2 (14:30):
Rush happen to be pretty obvious, though, when we use
like a word that no one's ever heard before, that's
got to be the word of the day. That's great
and mender you and I would have to think really
hard how to use these words. How do you work
nitification into a regular morning dialogue.
Speaker 1 (14:48):
Well, given that we're going to be looking at seventeen
degrees next week, so you have a lot of people
that will be making sure that their home is already.
Speaker 2 (14:56):
No more, no more vacations, it's time for nitification.
Speaker 1 (15:00):
Or it could be you walking you're a pantry, which
because of let's see, let's say let's figure out a
wait Tnesday. All right, we look at that a load
to night. It's seventeen degrees. This will be next week, right,
but why now are we going to hit seventeen By
the way, I mean, is that just I saw that
on the extended forecast. I'm like, shut your frig and mouth.
Speaker 2 (15:19):
It's putting you in a bad mood. I can tell
you that.
Speaker 1 (15:21):
Yeah, seventeen degrees like a warm spring day in Ohio.
I can't handle. I may have to call in sit.
Speaker 2 (15:27):
All right, So I've got my lowest low right now
is next or this coming Monday will be twenty one,
then it's twenty two, then it's twenty four, and by
next Thursday we're back up to twenty five.
Speaker 1 (15:38):
Okay, all right, Well, at least now we're doing the
same thing we did a couple of weeks ago, because
we had a forecast down to like twenty eight by
the time we got closer to that particular day, or
he moved back up to like thirty two.
Speaker 2 (15:49):
I'm guessing that the cold front is moving in Saturday night.
And the reason I say that is because Saturday ninety
percent chance of rain, so that's when this cold front
must hit. And then because the overnight low on Saturday
is forty six, the overnight low on Sunday is thirty three,
and then Monday it's twenty one, and then like I said,
(16:09):
it starts working its way back up twenty two, twenty
four to twenty five.
Speaker 1 (16:13):
Wow, I'm having flashbacks of when I lived in Ohio.
Speaker 2 (16:17):
I was only there like a year.
Speaker 1 (16:19):
I was there two winters, two very long winters. But
in the first winter, I woke up one morning at
a call front of coming in, and I'm standing at
my not in my apartment, but outside of my apartment,
in the hallway and the entrance to the apartment building,
and I know that outside it is four degrees and
I literally said to myself, I don't even know what
(16:40):
to happen when I step outside this door. I could
step outside and literally collapse onto the steps. I don't
know what four degrees feels like. And I stepped outside
and I stood there for a monment to see if
I was going to fall down. I should put my
bicycle helmet on because I could have given myself a concussion.
And I remember thinking, Oh, this isn't too bad. And
I took a breath in through my nose and I
(17:03):
could feel my nasal cavity. The little hair is in
my most freeze over and the freeze just went all
the way up behind your eyeballs.
Speaker 2 (17:12):
Isn't that why you eat peppermint patties.
Speaker 1 (17:15):
I know that's why you wear a scarf. Get the
cool to keep the warm air of your breath, Get
blocking out that cold air that's going to take over
your brain. And I remember that. I remember getting in
my car looking at the review mirror and I had
a little bit of a curl, like typically I do,
the way my hair curls up on the right. So
I went to brush it back and it went and't
brushed because I had not dried my hair all the
(17:37):
way and it was already frozen. And I'm like, how
would the hell do people live here?
Speaker 2 (17:42):
Yeah? That was always fun. Like going to school and
your hair was still a little wet, and then it
would get frozen, and then sometime in the first period
it would thaw, and then your shirt collar be wet.
Speaker 1 (17:56):
See, those are.
Speaker 2 (17:57):
Things we never interio.
Speaker 1 (17:59):
Now, did I ever get to the first day of
school on the ninth of September and sit down to
the chair and your callars wet because you're sweating? Yeah? Yeah, yeah,
yeah I did that.
Speaker 2 (18:08):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (18:08):
Okay. Anyway, so you got the word of the day,
you know where to find it, you know where to
get the answer, and we can be talking about your
Facebook friends. That's a phenomenal research study. Yeah, or only
four people care about you, all right, So we'll find
out who our friends are tomorrow in the morning. Rush.
And you might want to scroll through your Facebook friends
and see how many people on here, which one of
(18:29):
the four of the first three hundred you scroll through
actually give a flying damn about you, And.
Speaker 2 (18:34):
Which one hundred and fifty make the cut that you
could have interest in mm hm, Because again it's only
one hundred and fifty that they say your brain can
comprehend as like legitimate interaction. The rest of them are
just mourning. Fred Morn Ted, How you doing?
Speaker 1 (18:48):
How you doing? All right? So we'll do all that. Hey,
what's going on in your world? Reach out to us
on social media because we care about you.
Speaker 2 (18:55):
We oh, we care a lot.
Speaker 1 (18:56):
We do care a lot, So you can reach out
to us. You also email us. Could be I Came
Russia ninety seven five w C O S.
Speaker 2 (19:02):
Dot com, nash At ninety seven five w SOS dot com.
Speaker 1 (19:05):
We started talking tomorrow you start talking to numbers eight
O three eight O three nine seven eight nine two
six seven eight O three ninety seven eight w C
O S