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May 9, 2025 • 26 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello, killing, Hello Jonathan.

Speaker 2 (00:01):
It's a Monday show today, but get a brand new
prize beginning Monday for what you're talking about.

Speaker 1 (00:08):
Yeah, I'm excited about it. I was just reading some
breaking news about a former Supreme Court justice ba by
the way, but law, yes, yes, But we've got a
youngster named Maddox. What's his last name again, Maddox but Batson, Batson,
Maddick Batson. Apparently when he was like fourteen, started well

(00:29):
probably even younger than that, was doing cover songs on YouTube, TikTok, Instagram, whatever,
and built quite a following.

Speaker 2 (00:37):
He became a sensation.

Speaker 1 (00:38):
And now that he's fifteen, he's not only got a
record deal, they say he's starting to sell out like
bigger and bigger venues, so they're expecting this show to
sell out when he makes his debut in Columbia, South
Carolina Tuesday, September twenty third at the Senate. It's an
all ages show, so if you want to bring your
kid to see him or whatever, sure you can do that.

(00:59):
But we're anyway, I'm thinking it's pairs of tickets to
see Mattic bats in Tuesday, September twenty third. All you
need to know is what is the definition of the
word of the day and what you're talking about and
the word of the day. I have not looked up
the pronunciation. I'm going to give it a shot. I
will do a better job by Monday. Abstemious abstemious. Wow,

(01:31):
this is something that Sally asks you to do all
the time.

Speaker 2 (01:36):
Really okay, now I'm totally lost. I thought it was
an accounting word.

Speaker 1 (01:41):
Refrain from eating or drinking things that bring you pleasure. Oh, yes,
she does. Abstemious. Oh he's so abstemious, that guy. That's
why he gets such a great figure. Abstemious?

Speaker 2 (01:57):
Oh should I keep that? Even in the now, in
the wake of COVID, I always keep the hand sanitizer
in my car. Why in case I should stop and
pick up the regular sized bag barbecue potato chips. Oh,
you can't have any lingering smells?

Speaker 1 (02:17):
Well, what about your mouth? Don't you have to have
like mouthwash or something, because you can.

Speaker 2 (02:21):
Keep a little nuts, a little chilbls ah.

Speaker 1 (02:24):
Well, and you probably, I mean we mentioned it off
air on Fridays. Jonathan sees for some reason McDonald's pops
up all the time, and then he's got to go
have a fish sandwich in the news. Well, now today
it's to honor the pope, right, McDonald's is the proper
way to honor the pope is to go get a
fish sandwich because they created the fish sandwich to honor
the Catholic religion. And so you're gonna honor and we

(02:45):
got the you know, get the first American pope. It's
a big deal.

Speaker 2 (02:49):
I read it because I believe this is it Candid
or Elgent It's Elgin Elgent told McDonald's take take a hike.

Speaker 1 (02:56):
Now is that official? Or is that just the well
a mers on there there's a protest. Oh, it's a protest.

Speaker 2 (03:02):
There's become a petition that will be taking up June
third at the town council meeting on whether McDonald's should
be allowed to build.

Speaker 1 (03:10):
We know that McDonald's wants to build.

Speaker 2 (03:12):
Yes, yeah, that's on the books. Okay, So, and I
guess everything was going swimmingly for Ronald and then word
got out they're going to building McDonald's and then you're
going to create traffic problems. We don't want it. But
there's always a story about McDonald's that comes up on Fridays,

(03:32):
and I can tell you they start serving the filay
of fish in exactly forty three.

Speaker 1 (03:38):
Minutes, and you'll be there in forty two. I'm just waiting.

Speaker 2 (03:45):
But there's always a story that comes up on Fridays,
and because it's a Friday, I want to get the
filay of fish.

Speaker 1 (03:51):
Well, have it, enjoy it.

Speaker 2 (03:52):
And then they only give you a quarter of a
piece of cheese. They literally take an American scene go
and tear it in half and put it on your
file of fish.

Speaker 1 (04:04):
So you get half a piece of cheese, half a piece.

Speaker 2 (04:06):
Of American single cheese. That's it. Have you ever asked,
maybe I should walk in today instead of going to
the drive room and to walk in and go, why
do y'all only give you half a piece of cheese?

Speaker 1 (04:16):
I was just gonna say, would it be too much?
Because I don't know what you're gonna do with that
other half? Probably what you're gonna wait another hour. You're
gonna wait another hour until somebody else orders this and
then give them that stale house.

Speaker 2 (04:25):
It's one of the more popular items of them.

Speaker 1 (04:27):
But can I have the entire Would it be too
much to ask for the entire slice of cheese? May
I have a piece of cheese if a sweet tat
of the person at the counter, hopefully it's a girl.
Do I have to pay double, like for double.

Speaker 2 (04:42):
Cheese for the extra piece, I'll pay for the whole
piece of cheese.

Speaker 1 (04:45):
Yeah, I don't want to skimp. I don't want to
make you do any extra labor either. That's extra labor.
You don't need to do the pulling half of the cheese.
It really is.

Speaker 2 (04:53):
It's very frustrating now when you order the filet fish.
I don't know if the same thing happens with the
burgers at McDonald's because I only order the file of fish.

Speaker 1 (05:03):
But it makes me think, like how much money do
they save? Like how many slices of cheese does a
typical McDonald's use, Like, but they do use the full
slice on the cheeseburgers and the all my dology, Yes,
but just that one sandwich, the filet of So how
many file of fishes do they are? They are? They
talking about maybe a thousand? So then you're you're you're

(05:26):
saving five hundred slices of cheese.

Speaker 2 (05:29):
What was the story because they stopped by, what was
the story about burger king? And they went to court
and they won. It's a fraud case. It just came
down the day before yesterday. I didn't read it. Yeah,
it's a fraud case about the whopper. But when you
look at the picture at McDonald's, at the file of fish,
the cheese plainly is coming off or all four sides
of the actual filet that's not the case. When you

(05:50):
order it first you open the box and you you
swear this thing just came through. It was just thrown
around in the back of a ups a truck for
about amy hour and a half. You have to reconstruct
the sandwich. That's how I know there's that small a
piece of cheese.

Speaker 1 (06:06):
Oh so okay, So Burger King, by the way, this
is just beginning yesterday the news was the Burger King.
According to Judge Roy k Altman, Florida has ruled that
Burger King must go to trial over a twenty twenty
two lawsuit claiming that it's misled their hungry customers with
ads that actually exaggerate the size of the whopper. According

(06:27):
to the lawsuit obtained by USA Today, nineteen plaintiffs from
thirteen different states say the advertisers of the burgers as
large burgers, comparing them side by side with other competitors burgers,
but they are not. They are not the burgers, and
the photos are approximately thirty five percent larger than they

(06:48):
are in real life.

Speaker 2 (06:50):
I'm saying, I'm going to lead the protest. Does the
pictures show the cheese coming over the filet inside the
butt and at no point is the sauce all outside
and in the box? No point in the photograph does
it show you that. You only assume that the sauce
is in fact on top of the filet under the bun.

(07:11):
But when you get it, it literally looks like they
threw the thing around the fed extra you have to
reconstruct your sandwich before you can eat it.

Speaker 1 (07:22):
Threw it around?

Speaker 2 (07:23):
Do I ask for too much here?

Speaker 1 (07:25):
I don't know how much did you pay for your
fish fillet?

Speaker 2 (07:28):
So it's gotten real damne expensive if you get the
If you get the regular filet, not the large, don't
upgrade to the large fries. I gotta I'm counting my
carbs over here. I just want the protein. So if
you get the regular win, I think it's like it's
like eight dollars now m for a regular filet of
fish with the with the regular fry and the regular jury.

Speaker 1 (07:48):
Interesting is this a breaking news? John Daily shares Grim
health update and he says, waking up is like a
wind for me. I didn't know that. But he's still
a smart alec totally. So the fifty nine year old
says he takes full advantage. I guess because he won

(08:11):
something the Masters, or he won enough lifetime exemptions, or
now he one of the leugh Championships where he has
a lifetime exemption. So he's he doesn't have to be
selected to play in any tournament now. He just so,
He says, he just shows up. Yeah, he goes, I
go there, I suck and I get six thousand dollars.
Why wouldn't I keep doing this?

Speaker 2 (08:33):
It's great and the bar is always open.

Speaker 1 (08:36):
He says, he's waking right. In September twenty twenty, he
said he had bladder cancer. I've started cutting back on
my diet cokes, and I have to count minutes before
I'm allowed to have another cigarette. The doctors are not
telling me that it's too late. And apparently I don't

(08:58):
know what the Grim health update is, but I mean
it sounds like he's been battling. That's his twenty twenty
all right, Jonathan. Other things on the Morning Rush blog
that you can take a look at how many bridesmaids
are you allowed to have.

Speaker 2 (09:16):
I don't know if we have an etiquette, what is
socially acceptable? What's the policy?

Speaker 1 (09:20):
So this woman in Northern Ireland, her name's Catherine, I
guess her our name is now McCowan. She got married
to Jack McGowan. They had two hundred and fifty guests
at their wedding, which is large. It's not the largest
wedding I've ever heard of, but it's pretty stinking big.
She started with ten bridesmaids. That's that's a lot. That's

(09:41):
a lot, but ended up with ninety five. Oh my god,
thirty eight percent of the people at the wedding were
in fact bridesmaids. She said, these are all just my
friends and people that I've known for a long time.

Speaker 2 (09:55):
You imagine being the father of the groom. You're picking
up the bill of the rehearsal dinner. You get a
high undred and sixty people just counting the bridesmaids and
their date. Is it a plus one?

Speaker 1 (10:05):
I don't know, ninety five bridesmaids. It's hard.

Speaker 2 (10:09):
Got to have ninety five grounsen, it's hard.

Speaker 1 (10:11):
To feel special.

Speaker 2 (10:12):
They all have to be walked down individually. Well, my
mom was a ceremony. This is like a damn high
school graduation, just to walk across. Well, and what do
you how do you get the photo?

Speaker 1 (10:24):
I guess aerial shot. You got a drone, Now you
got a drone. Itt maybe you have some stories about
weddings like that.

Speaker 2 (10:32):
That's good, we've got.

Speaker 1 (10:34):
Northwestern University announced this week that they've created a new
super thin wearable device that they call the Haptic Patch.
The Haptic Patch will let you touch virtual reality.

Speaker 2 (10:53):
My noggin can't even wrap around that. So I have
to wear one in order to experience it, because I
can't even imagine it.

Speaker 1 (11:02):
So when you're you, have you ever worn those like goggles? Yeah,
that's already too much for me. It's a bit much
because well because I guess, because like they make you
do stupid stuff like fall out of buildings. Yes, and
you're and you it's like you can't stop it, and
it's it's horrible. But imagine if like in this instance,

(11:23):
the haptic device. Unlike older bulky haptic devices, this one
is soft and will move with your body, making it
comfortable to wear. It'll use tiny electronic parts controlled by
your smartphone to make precise sensations where you're supposed to
feel them, Like if somebody was to walk up and
tap you on the shoulder, you're going to feel that

(11:44):
tap on your shoulder.

Speaker 2 (11:45):
See another. This is all of this, and strangely we
have to give a big salute. All of this goes
back to the porn. Porn danned all of it. You
wouldn't have PayPal if you didn't have porn. You wouldn't
have stream videos as early as you had them if
you hadn't had porn. The porn industry hires the very

(12:05):
best of technology so they can deliver it as much
information as quickly as possible.

Speaker 1 (12:13):
So you're saying this is porn.

Speaker 2 (12:16):
The whole thing was created by some porn dude. Wow,
now we can use it for other things if you
want to.

Speaker 1 (12:21):
Yeah, that's what they're pointing out here. It's gonna feel like.

Speaker 2 (12:24):
You're actually in the Tour de France and you're riding
the bicycle. Yeah, you're gonna feel that.

Speaker 1 (12:29):
Well. They say it helps people with disabilities feel digital signals,
things that they haven't felt in a while. It also
helps with surgeons who are doing surgeries and those types
of things. But who knows, maybe they're watching porn while
they're doing the surgery. No, I don't know. They don't
mind them.

Speaker 2 (12:44):
There, I'm saying, the porn industry hires people to get
this kind of breakthrough technology.

Speaker 1 (12:49):
Well, I guess that is next level. I saw the
what's his name, who's the guy who runs Facebook again, Zuckerberg?
Did you see he's gonna have virtual friends?

Speaker 2 (13:00):
Now? No? I did not.

Speaker 1 (13:02):
So that's the thing that he was working on. And
they made that announcement like Monday, and I was listening
to him talking about it, and I just felt sad
for the world and listening to him. So he said
that there's some research that shows that the average I
guess this would be Western culture because that's all that

(13:24):
Facebook would be in for the most part, is Western culture.
The average person has two friends, yes, in their life,
and the average person, according to this, wants more friends.
They want more connection, they want to be able to
go deeper with people, but there's something holding them back,

(13:46):
whatever that is. So with the new virtual friends that
they're going to be launching on Facebook, that friend will
be your best friend and it will understand and he says.
He claims, within a year or two of being your
virtual friend, it will know you better than you know you.

Speaker 2 (14:07):
I believe that's probably true given the AI technology. And
then the friendly said that people have three friends. At first,
I saw, yeah, that's about right, because so I think people,
for the most part of the adn't. Given point in
your life you have three best friends.

Speaker 1 (14:18):
Well, he said it's actually less than three. And he
said it's about two point six is what the number was.
But yeah, so they want ten or twelve friends. But
what they really want is to go deeper with somebody,
and they can't tell you what they're struggling with. They
can't tell Jonathan Rush I got a porn addiction. I'm
over here with the VR investing all my money in

(14:39):
virtual reality because I'm addicted to porn, and I'm ignoring
my wife and I'm mortgaging my kid's future on this.
I can't tell that to a human being, but I
can tell it to my virtual friend. And then my
virtual friend will encourage me, or my virtual friend will
make things feel better.

Speaker 2 (14:56):
You need an accountability partner who you can share everything with.

Speaker 1 (15:00):
Yeah, and then by after a while, your virtual friend
will make suggestions. I guess they're like, this weekend, I
was checking out some things for you, and I was thinking, maybe,
you know, would be fun. Have you considered going to
this thing? And you're like, I didn't even know about
that thing or I hadn't really thought about it. And
then they're like, well, I think that this and this
part would appeal to you. Why don't you give it

(15:21):
a shot? And then you go and you have a
better time than you ever imagined because you've got a
Mark Zuckerberg virtual best friend.

Speaker 2 (15:29):
I could see some benefits in the virtual best round
because it would know everything it's it's it would a
you know, you're only forty seven minutes away from bloh
whatever BLA is. Yes, it's a fish fry, it's for you.
It's always a food thing. Yes, a food thing. It's
a shrimp festival. You're only forty seven minutes away. I
know you're not feeling hungry right now. You're gonna be
feeling hungry and exactly thirteen and a half minutes, Oh yeah,

(15:51):
you can make it for another half hour. If we
leave in the car now.

Speaker 1 (15:54):
In forty seven minutes, I guarantee you're gonna be hungry.
I don't know they Oh, yeah, your best friend here,
who's your buddy, who's your pal? I just feel like AI,
maybe I'm I'm supposed to be the guy who embraces change,
and yet I'm very nervous about the future of mankind

(16:18):
because I could see us going into matrix pod mode,
where I would much rather be in the matrix pod
where everything is great. I don't actually have to deal
with you, or my wife or my kids. I don't
have to talk to anybody, and whoever I'm talking to,
I am the version of me that I want to be.

(16:40):
I can be a total badass because I could back
it up in the virtual world. Or I could be
the most sweet, loving person in the world. Or I
could be a sex pervert, or I could be a whatever.
I could have fake money that I'm handing out to everybody.
I'm the most generous guy in town. All of it's fake,
none of it's real. And why would Eventually, You're going

(17:02):
to get to the point, why would you have a
human relationship. Why would you do that? Be open to vulnerability,
be open to the idea that somebody could hurt you.

Speaker 2 (17:10):
This is the end of mankind because you're replacing everything
in reality with virtual reality.

Speaker 1 (17:17):
Which is a better version of reality, because there's no
pain there pain. There's no pain.

Speaker 2 (17:23):
Really, you have a fill over the coffee table while
you're playing one of those stupid games with that blind
or over your face.

Speaker 1 (17:29):
Well, not pain, not when I'm sitting in a pod.

Speaker 2 (17:34):
You really can't play that game unless you're in an
empty room. You have to be in an empty room
with a television on the wall.

Speaker 1 (17:40):
We're just in the very early early stages too, I
mean exactly. I mean, think about how great this stuff
is going to be. I mean when I say great,
I mean how advanced it's going to be in five years.
In five years it's gonna I mean, if you just
look at the iPhone and what the difference between the
two thousand and nine version and like the twenty twenty version.

Speaker 2 (18:01):
It's like what you know, for a long time, people
thought if I could only and people have actually had
their brain put in a deep freeze so that when
the technology is available that you can come back and
you'll actually have a new body, and YadA, YadA, YadA,
you get a body donor or whatever. But we've gotten
to the point now where you actually could take the

(18:23):
brain while you're alive. Download all the information so you
don't have to worry about the deep freeze thing. You
don't have to worry about freezer burn on your gray matter.
We've downloaded all the information from my great grandfather into
this disc now because I'm going to step into virtual reality.
I'm going to go to a family reunion with my

(18:44):
great great grandfather, my great grandfather, my Mett. Yeah, and
something's going to come up about whatever happened in history
with a great depression, and they're going to be people there.

Speaker 1 (18:57):
That lived in Well, they'll say, let's just go there exactly.
Let's go there. Why are we talking about it when
we can live it. Let's go check it out. Let's
see how it really played out. You got all these
theories about did FDR do the right thing? Let's make
another president. We'll have another guy and he'll do these
different policies, which.

Speaker 2 (19:15):
Is leading to where I want to go parallel virtual reality.

Speaker 1 (19:23):
So when they say not my president, they really mean it.

Speaker 2 (19:27):
You wanted to go back and say that Donald Trump
was never your president? Yes, you can go back, and
you know whoever ended up winning the election a very choice.

Speaker 1 (19:37):
That Hillary Clinton did beat Donald Trump intent sixte Clinton.

Speaker 2 (19:40):
You could put in al Gore whoever you think al
Gore beat Bush should have been there. You could actually
then live in lightning speed the four years it would
have been like if they would have been in office
directing the affairs of the United States.

Speaker 1 (19:54):
But why do it and lightning speed? Why not just
live it in real time? Because it doesn't matter. Right,
I have nowhere else to go. I don't have a job.
Those are all gone.

Speaker 2 (20:03):
Brother, I gotta leave here in thirteen minutes to go
to the dance shrimp Festival.

Speaker 1 (20:07):
Or do you just in your mind you're there and
it tastes like shrimp, but you're just getting like an
IV and it feels like you're tummy's filled, you know
what tastes you.

Speaker 2 (20:14):
Take seven minutes because my car is going to drive
you there, so I'll just stay hooked up. We got
broadband thanks to James Clyburn.

Speaker 1 (20:20):
I got broadband. All oh, thanks James.

Speaker 2 (20:22):
So I can just be in that reality of that
alternate virtual reality or virtual or alternate alternate reality while
I am going to my real reality, which is the
shrimp fest. We no longer had to worry about freezing
the noggin we're gonna start downloading all the information before
you die. Like when my mother passed away and we

(20:46):
had the family come over after her service. One of
my cousins looked at me when someone walked in the
door and said.

Speaker 1 (20:55):
Who is that?

Speaker 2 (20:56):
And I said, we have to ask Dot? But Dot's
no longer will.

Speaker 1 (21:00):
This so that person has been lost to history. We
don't know who that other person was anymore.

Speaker 2 (21:05):
My mom could tell you the family tree, she could
tell you the county tree.

Speaker 1 (21:11):
And if that person shows up today, your father's going
to say, I gotta call nine one one because there's
a stranger here. Who is this weird all on my
front doors?

Speaker 2 (21:20):
I had all that information available in a hard drive
or in the cloud. What are you kidding me? All
that's going to come true?

Speaker 1 (21:29):
Well, there was a question asked if Elon Musk, who's
the smartest person you've ever met? And he struggled with
it a little bit. He's like, you know, the smartest
I don't know. I'd probably some CEOs. Larry Ellison's a
very smart person. He mentioned somebody else named Larry who
I didn't know, and he says, but you know, it's
really only what you accomplished that matters. You know, you

(21:51):
could be quote unquote smart. If you're not accomplishing anything,
you're not really smart. So he said, you know, Bezos
pretty smart. Guy did some pretty tough things, but you know,
in two or three years, none of them. I mean,
I guess the term will be used in the next
few years smart for a human because there's nobody going

(22:12):
to be very smart compared to what the AI is
going to have for you in the next few years.
And he goes in like in five or ten years,
I don't imagine a child would ever even ask their
parents for anything, Like why would I ask my parents'
opinion on anything? They're broken, flawed human beings. AI has
the better answer, So don't even bother talking to people.

(22:35):
Why would I go to Elon like he said, why
would I ever go to Elon Musk. Elon Musk doesn't
know better than the AI that I built. So we're
wiping ourselves out. It's happening in real time.

Speaker 2 (22:48):
Stumbling to get there.

Speaker 1 (22:49):
But I was listening to another podcast where the guy
had an interesting theory. He said, there's going to be
some people who are going to go the opposite way.
Some people are going to go all matrix and people
are gonna be like, I don't want it. I want
real grass, I want real sunshine. I want a normal,
quiet life. They're gonna go to the mountains or they're
gonna go to someplace and disconnect. They won't even have

(23:12):
a cell phone, and they're just gonna live and die
quiet lives. But there's no there's not gonna be it
in between. There's not gonna be like some people who
are like, I'm sort of virtual reality and then and
then I live most of my life in the real
life or whatever. Because once you get a taste of
that virtual reality, you're either gonna love it or you're
gonna hate it, and that'll decide which kind of a
life you live.

Speaker 2 (23:33):
Yeah, that's interesting.

Speaker 1 (23:35):
Finally, Jonathan, speaking of real life, we got a real
life moral dilemma. While we still have morals. The moral
dilemma is she's engaged and she's excited, and it's her
best friend that she loves this man. But then out
of left field, quote, my husband to be just dropped

(23:55):
this bomb on me that he wants to get a prenup.
He said, I was talking. He said he was talking
to his friend about it. And his friend said, only
an idiot would get married without a prenup. And honestly,
I had never even thought about it. I didn't think
we were those types of people. And now I'm feeling
super uncomfortable about it. And he does own his own business,

(24:19):
so that's I guess his reasoning for it is that
I'm coming into the marriage with not a lot of
money and he's got most of the money. But now
that he's put it out there is this like a
red flag. Do I just jump out of the do
I break off the wedding?

Speaker 2 (24:34):
And it's not the prenup that's the rip flag. It's
the conversation that brought on the conversation about the pre nup. Okay,
because this is not cold feet, this is a problem.
This is not just getting nervous about marrying you spend
the rest of my life with you. This WI is
get nervous about losing him. I crap to you. Mm
so run run, Wow?

Speaker 1 (24:55):
Are you going to do the third one? Like the
what's the movie with the tom Cruise Movi? It's running?

Speaker 2 (25:05):
What was that movie?

Speaker 1 (25:06):
I can't well? The one about them? It was like
about them the crimes in the future, and they could
see he was a cop Tom Cruise movie. Yeah, he
could stop the crimes in the future like the thought
Police movie. And it was like the three people sat
in the water with the stuff Tuget know that movie?
I know. I can't think of it.

Speaker 2 (25:25):
See I'm not plugged into AI.

Speaker 1 (25:27):
Oh you would.

Speaker 2 (25:28):
I would already know the run time, who produced it,
who wrote it, who is the actress, who said, what
the box office score was, how much money they made?
I have all that information. See how much I miss
it all?

Speaker 1 (25:40):
Was it collateral damage?

Speaker 2 (25:42):
No? No, that was Arnold Schwarzenegger movie.

Speaker 1 (25:46):
I don't know. I spit it out there.

Speaker 2 (25:50):
What do you say about all that? With the Monday
Morning World dilemma? And do you want to win your tickets?
Because this is this is gonna be one of those artists.
Next time he comes around, it's gonna be at the
Colonial Arena eighth three nine eight, two six seven eight
or three ninety seven and eight. You can also reach
us w COS. You can also reach us on social media.
I'm speaking this alone now because I'm about to pee
in my pants. Oh, I got to run to the

(26:10):
little boys room. You can also reach us on email.
Rush at ninety seventy five w cos dot.

Speaker 1 (26:14):
Huh Nation, ninety seven five w sos dot com. The
movie was Minority Report in two thousand and

Speaker 2 (26:18):
Two, Monday on the Morning Rush
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