Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello, Killy Nash.
Speaker 2 (00:01):
Hey there, Happy Monday.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
It's a very wet Monday tomorrow hopefully dryer Tuesday show today.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
You're excited about it.
Speaker 1 (00:10):
I'm really excited about the rain moving out now. Granted,
some parts of our states still needed the rain, as
we talked about this morning, but after this, I'm hoping
what we'll be all fill up to the brim.
Speaker 2 (00:21):
Yeah, yeah, hopefully so.
Speaker 3 (00:23):
And you know this is like I guess the April
showers that we didn't necessarily get, the mayflowers will be
here before the end of May, and then the and
by the way, the temperature is supposed to be hitting
ninety this week, so tumbleweed was getting excited down the halls.
Speaker 1 (00:38):
I did think about you yesterday as I walked over
and turned off my sprinkler system. I don't want to
look like the idiot who's ordering his lawn during a downpour.
Speaker 3 (00:47):
Yeah it's in a monsoon and he got the sprinklers
on full blast. Think about what you're doing.
Speaker 1 (00:55):
City of Columbia has as running all the time, and
it's amazing they think so much of that water. When
you get your bill, you recognize that. And then it
also I was thinking about it the other day because
there's two leaks still in my neighborhood. Okay, like look
at them. This is nearly like oil gushing out of
the ground. For the price that we pay for water
around here.
Speaker 3 (01:14):
It is going up and up and up and up
and well, so maybe somebody can do something to fix that.
Hopefully the water coming in right now will help lower
the price. Imagine if it was like raining oil right now,
kind of Joe Biden had where he had to put
the windshield wipers on.
Speaker 1 (01:29):
We got about it. Is this the first time he
got cancer was from the oil?
Speaker 2 (01:33):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:33):
If you people, how much less expensive oil would be
if it just kind of rained like water.
Speaker 1 (01:38):
Man, it is coming down anyway. Well, hello there, welcome
to Monday, the twelfth of May. Let's talk about some
of the stuff we can talk about for tomorrow. I
know we got what you're talking about. Your chance to
win tickets from Maddick.
Speaker 3 (01:51):
Maddox Batson m A d Ox Yes bats in fifteen
year old. Should we call him a prodigy? I don't
know if he's like musically like a I know that
the girls love him, and even just some young people
in general. Sure, I mean the lady who won this
morning said that her son has been following Maddix for
(02:11):
a couple of years, I guess on social media, is
a huge fan of his music. So the vibe is
that Maddox is going to be a massive deal in
the music industry. So this may be the only opportunity
you get to see him at a very intimate type
of setting like the Senate. And this is an all
ages show Tuesday, September twenty third. And when we play
(02:32):
what you're talking about, we give you the answer. Because
nobody knows what tattered d'amalion means, but I do know, Okay, tattered.
Speaker 1 (02:44):
Malion is nearly encapsulated in the word it's datus, it's
in tatters.
Speaker 3 (02:54):
That could be part of it. Ragged, tattered, beat up,
something that's in poor condition, usually referring to a person,
so you could describe their outfit as tetter d'malion, but
usually it's an individual that's described as tetter edamalion. Not
a big seller to it Forrest Lake Fabrics, nobody's buying
(03:15):
the tab By million. Nobody's buying that. No big role
of it. But but I mean think about that. This
is one of those fun words where somebody walks into
the office and you want to insult them, but you
want to do it in a pleasant way. Well, aren't
you looking quite tatteredmalion today?
Speaker 1 (03:35):
But a great compliment. I'm doing that today before.
Speaker 3 (03:42):
Uh, let us know how that one works out for you.
By the way, I have you noticed like sometimes you
just get really involved in something like it almost seems
like overnight, I would say, in the last two weeks,
I have become more and more involved with AI. Like
I felt like I was missing the trend, and I
(04:02):
don't want to be left behind.
Speaker 2 (04:04):
I don't want to.
Speaker 3 (04:04):
Be somebody who's sixty years old and doesn't understand where
the world is. You know, like your grandparents were with
the VCR. They didn't know how to use it. They
couldn't figure it out. We were like kids, going, how
hard is this thing? You press the button on, there's
the play button. It's not that hard, and they're like,
(04:24):
I just don't get it.
Speaker 2 (04:25):
Can you do it for me?
Speaker 1 (04:26):
And thank you to the associate producers or executive producers
or whoever it was that finally stopped or finally stepped
in to tell all the Fox News hosts stop referencing
having your grandkids. Tell you how to DVR.
Speaker 3 (04:41):
It is DVR even a thing anymore?
Speaker 1 (04:45):
I know I still have two cable boxes, So a
DBR is a thing.
Speaker 3 (04:48):
Well, okay, yeah, I guess that's I mean it's inside
the system now.
Speaker 1 (04:52):
It's not like in the cloud or it's in the box.
Speaker 2 (04:55):
Yeah, we used to have to buy.
Speaker 1 (04:56):
That's not a separate a machine, opponent.
Speaker 3 (04:58):
What was that one that I I paid a crapload
of money for a machine? In two thousand, I was
living in Washington, DC, and I bought a big screen
television and I bought the Ah gosh, I'm looking at
the little fella who they had like as their dancing thing.
I think I paid six hundred dollars for a machine
(05:19):
that would record like up to like twenty shows a
week or something. Yes, And it was like the latest
and the latest in technology. People couldn't believe I had it.
They're like, oh my gosh, you got the best one.
And it came with like a lifetime warranty because I
paid so much for it, and I could transfer it
to somebody else. And I found it in a closet
(05:40):
like three years ago, and I'm like, this is absolutely useless.
There's nobody in the world. Who would want this?
Speaker 1 (05:46):
Now? I know I use for the first time. The
other day on my Facebook messenger. AI recommended rewritten paragraph
m hmm, because I'm not so much on the punctuation well,
and you know, it changed a couple of the words
to make it more clear. So I used it for
the first time ever. I used the AI written paragraph
(06:08):
as opposed to the message I had originally intended to send.
Speaker 3 (06:12):
I am becoming more of a grock guy. I have
chat GPT, but I'm using groc now more than ever.
I'm really getting a lot out of it. You know,
my wife tells me it's about the questions that you ask.
The quality of your experience with AI depends on the
quality of the questions. Now that leads us to our
next story. In Greece, I don't understand what I'm reading here.
(06:37):
I will read it to you and then you decipher
what the hell just happened. Okay, a woman who's been
married for twelve years is now filed for divorce after
she took photos of the coffee cup and the patterns
at the bottom of the coffee cups and then ask
chat GPT to read them like a traditional fortune teller.
(06:58):
Would chat. GPT said that the husband's coffee grinds show
that he's thinking about another woman with the initials E
and either wants a relationship or is already in a
relationship with that woman. It also claims the wife's cup
showed that he was already cheating with somebody and probably
was trying to destroy the family.
Speaker 2 (07:20):
Wow. She filed for.
Speaker 3 (07:22):
Divorce three days later. The husband, shocked, said he tried
to laugh it off at first. He wasn't laughing when
he got, you know, sued for divorce. His lawyers argue
that ais claims aren't any legal proof, but the wife
doesn't care. She's not going to reconcile and is demanding half.
Speaker 2 (07:42):
Now.
Speaker 3 (07:42):
I don't is this an excuse to file for divorce?
Possibly she's looking for a way out, absolutely, But could
it also be kind of like when we first started
getting driving things, you know, maps on the cars that
would tell you where to go. We had numerous accounts
of people driving into lakes, yes, and driving into walls
and all kinds of things. That's what the map said,
(08:04):
it said take a left here. I took a left here,
and I drove into the water. I just did what
it told me to.
Speaker 1 (08:09):
Take let somebody I forgot where it happened and they
drove into the water.
Speaker 3 (08:14):
Yeah, I don't think that was an isolated incident. But
there's so I don't know. People might be putting too
much stock into the artificial intelligence already, and I'm with
the rest of you. I think most people are kind
of scared as to where AI is going to go
and what does it mean for society. But in the interim,
(08:35):
like Jonathan said, it'll help you write a paragraph. Absolutely,
you got to get an email out and sound intelligent. Now,
I'd say tweak them, don't let it go on its own,
because you're probably gonna have to change a couple of
words just to make it sound more like it came
from your until chat, GPT or ROCK or whichever one
you're using kind of learns you. That's the scary thing.
(08:56):
It is going to learn you if you continue to
use it over and over again and correct it where
it's not like you. And then if you want to
do a fun thing, ask it to write an email
in the style of somebody that's famous, like Shakespeare. Could
write it like Shakespeare, or you could say, write it
like Mike Wallace from sixty minutes or write it. Like
(09:16):
the other day, I said something about rush Limbaugh to it,
and it gave me a paragraph that sounded like it
was coming from the mind of rush Limbaugh, like what
would rush Limbaugh say about what?
Speaker 2 (09:27):
You know?
Speaker 3 (09:28):
Something that he couldn't have ever said anything on because
it didn't happen yet.
Speaker 2 (09:31):
And by the way they.
Speaker 1 (09:33):
Had it, I've forgotten what date I wrote down, you know, Kelly,
I quit doing a lot of my dates where I'd
stick them on the wall. Okay, I don't do that
here in the studio. Yeah, I do it at my house.
Oh do you Yeah, Sally must love it. Well. I
do it back near my what's my new office space
now that I've given over the old office space to
(09:53):
the dogs, they can have it. But I believe I
have to go look at the date, But I believe
it's August second, Okay, it's when rush Limbaugh will be
back on the year. Where's that happening at probably all
over iHeartRadio stations.
Speaker 3 (10:11):
On August the second, twenty twenty five. Uh huh, rush
Limbaugh makes a triumphant return.
Speaker 1 (10:16):
From the dead. Yes, that's going to be amazing. So
it's all going to be AI generated. Now is this
just you making a prediction it's going to bring it back?
This is you making a prediction? Or is okay, no,
it's me making a prediction. Oh Snerdley's going to bring
it back.
Speaker 3 (10:33):
Well, before we had AI, there was a guy named
Ernie Anderson, and so around the year too well he died,
I want to say, in the late nineties, and most
if you're older and you remember television of the seventies
and eighties, then you remember Ernie Anderson. If you're not
that old, you know, me trying to imitate him is
not going to do it. First off, I don't do
him any justice anybody, Yes, Bud, he kind of had
(10:55):
a grownd. He talked like this and tonight.
Speaker 1 (10:59):
Gotten stupid takes one of the engine room on the
Love Mode.
Speaker 2 (11:03):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (11:04):
So he was also the voice, the original voice of
the most popular radio station in the world called Z
one hundred, and he did that until I want to
say about ninety three. Z one hundred changed into more
of an alternative rock pop station in the mid nineties
and so they didn't use him for that anymore. But
you know, I still remember imitating him in the parking
(11:26):
lot at Casey one to one with a guy named
Tom Polman. Tom Pullman and I worked together at Casey
one to one. Tom went on, he's now the head
of today, he is the head of all of iHeartRadio's.
But Tom was in the in the late nineties appointed
as the program director for Z one hundred, and it
(11:46):
was great to hear what he did. He went and
asked the estate of Ernie Anderson, could we use the
Ernie Anderson tapes. We'll pay you for them, and they
got Ernie Anderson again. This was around two thousand. I
don't know how they did it because there was no
AI or anything. They somehow just spliced it all together
and got Earning to say things that he had never
(12:07):
said before. So the phrase, like I'm trying to remember
what it was is whatever the phrase was when he
was the guy, was not what it became, which was
New York's number one for hit music Z one hundred.
He never said that phrase, but he said it every
hour on Z one hundred, number one for hit music,
(12:27):
Z one hundred. And then they did a yeah and now,
like you said, they can take your voice and just
you live forever. The voice will live forever if they
wanted to do a Rush Limbaugh show. They could actually
get Ai to think like Rush Limbaugh, and using Rush
(12:47):
Limbaugh's voice, they could have him comment on people that
weren't even alive or in power when he was alive
talking about things. So he could be talking about like,
what's the guy's name, the British Prime minister. He came
out with a big news today. I'm trying to remember
his name, Kir whatever his name is, Kir Stammer, I
think is his name. And Keir Stammer announced today that
(13:11):
they're changing all of the immigration policies for England and
they're gonna kick all the immigrants out. I mean that
is huge news. You just went from being one of
the most open borders to one of the most closed
borders overnight. You sound exactly like Donald Trump does now,
and you know when you're saying, so, what would Russell
Limbaugh say about it?
Speaker 2 (13:31):
They'll have the computer can do that.
Speaker 3 (13:34):
The Kier Stammer late a little late to the party,
but it's good to have you anyway.
Speaker 1 (13:38):
It'll do one of those Rush Limbaugh things where he
flashes back and plays the actual audio.
Speaker 3 (13:43):
Here's what we said about Kir when he first came
to power three years after I had died.
Speaker 1 (13:48):
Actly, it's gonna be freaking listening to it. I would
listen to that show, though, absolutely I would.
Speaker 3 (13:55):
I would listen to that. That would freak me up,
but I would love it.
Speaker 1 (14:00):
It's funny. I was talking to somebody the other day.
We were talking to some We lost someone who worked
on the old n Okay staff years ago, and we
were talking about I got serious trouble, almost probably more
serious than well. I think what I did this morning
was more serious than what happened then. But we hired
Ernie Anderson, which you could do when I first came
(14:23):
back to Columbia. We hired Ernie Anderson to read one line,
one line, and Kelly will say that was a bargain.
I got it five hundred bucks. That's a bargain, but
you got a tack on the union dues and the
production charges and all that stuff ended up being like
six hundred and twelve dollars. So I had approval for
(14:46):
five hundred bucks. I came in at six twelve, and
the general manager at the time just went ballistic over
one hundred and whatever twelve dollars. I think I ended
up paying it out of my pocket. Oh geez, to
make up the difference in it. But and I've got
to go back and find that tape. I know I've
got it somewhere, the original that was sent because back
(15:07):
in the day they recorded it on tape and sent
it in the mail.
Speaker 3 (15:11):
Nonetheless, yeah, the real to reels. My friend al Levine
used to be the production director at ninety six TIC
in Hartford, and they were using Ernie Anderson as their
voice guy, and he played the outtakes which were hysterical
of Ernie Anderson. And Ernie had a contract with TIIC
(15:31):
and what they would try to do to beat him
was because it was like, I don't know the figures.
Let's just say, because he's a contract, so he's going
to read X amount of lines every week for these
people or whatever. So it's not like five hundred dollars
like you paid because you're buying in bulk. You got
a retainer, you got the retainer fee, you got the
other things done. So I think it was like five
(15:52):
hundred dollars for a promo, but it was only like
fifty dollars for a line or something like that. So
if the promo could be done in less than ten lines.
What they would try to do is they would write
ten separate lines or eight separate lines, say, and then
they would splice them together later to get the promo
and saved the one hundred bucks or whatever. Sure, so
(16:12):
he started reading it. So he's just sitting there and
you could hear the background. He's like, he's smoking, buy
the microphone, he's got the paper, and he's just like,
all right, t I see Hartford ninety six t CFM
is your concert connection. And then he'd be like, naety
six t CFM with tickets to see Survivor at the
Hartford Civic Center. Wait a second, and he's like, I know,
(16:37):
and he started calling them all kinds of names. I
know what you blah blah blaus are doing. You're trying
to rip me off. Well, here, I'm gonna end everyone
at an up syllable, so you can't splice it together.
Speaker 2 (16:47):
Your son's.
Speaker 1 (16:51):
Think about that. Every time I see the girl do
with the commercials for Rebath, Oh my gosh, okay, she
ends every sentence of an upswing.
Speaker 2 (17:00):
Oh does she?
Speaker 3 (17:00):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (17:00):
It drives me nuts. I can't. I have to turn
it whenever I see the commercial. I can't listen to her.
Speaker 2 (17:06):
That's funny, Jonathan.
Speaker 3 (17:09):
When it comes to sleep, apparently it's a lot depends
on where you're raised. I had no idea. According to
this sleep study of fifteen thousand people, and these people
are spread out around the world, so North America, Europe, Asia, Africa,
South America. Sleep needs actually vary by culture. The shortest
(17:32):
is Japan, where the what you need in Japan is
six hours and eighteen minutes, So the US is seven
hours and fourteen minutes, so we're almost an hour more culturally.
They don't know why this is, but they're able to
measure I guess somehow your response rates and all those
(17:53):
types of things. So yes, you are all whether it's
slept up or whatever. You've already got the restorative meta
parts of it. But and in other parts of the
world that's over eight and a half hours. So that's
that is bizarre to me, how different that is. Have
you found that you need more or less sleep as
(18:14):
you get older?
Speaker 1 (18:15):
I think I need more. I just see over the weekend,
or I found out or was reminded just by the
clock over the weekend, because usually on Saturdays and Sundays,
I wake up somewhere around four thirty because I get
up at four o'clock. But I don't set an alarm
for Saturday and Sunday, and I'll wake up around four thirty. Okay, Well, Saturday,
I slept until six fifteen.
Speaker 2 (18:34):
Good for you. Feel good?
Speaker 1 (18:37):
Unusual that I would already be fifteen minutes late to
be a dunkin Donuts to get my coffee. I'm usually
laying in bed just watching the clock tick so I
can get up and get ready.
Speaker 2 (18:46):
But did it feel good? Like it? Worke up feeling like?
Speaker 3 (18:49):
Ah?
Speaker 2 (18:49):
I got kind of more what I needed.
Speaker 1 (18:51):
But I found out that because I typically get about
five and a half to six hours sleep at night,
I found out that lately my nap time, which is
about every other day at about one o'clock in the afternoon,
is deeper, so my body is going into more of
a sleep mode.
Speaker 3 (19:08):
I bought something over the weekend that if you see
me using it, you're going to Jonathan will laugh in
my face. He won't hold it back, he won't try
to stifle it. He will laugh in my face. It's
called a Happy Light, and I read about it groc
recommended it. I was talking about trouble with sleep and
(19:32):
it said something about your cicadia rhythm, and you're supposed
to within an hour of waking every day, you want
to be exposed to sunlight. Well that's impossible for me
because I wake up at three thirty, there is no sunlight.
There's not gonna be any sunlight for several hours. So
(19:53):
groc suggested that I buy this thing called a Happy Light,
and even found one for me on Amazon. It's only
like forty bucks, and so you got to spend ten
to fifteen minutes with this light. It's like within two
feet of your face. So I've actually brought it to
(20:14):
work and I sit it in my office now and
you know it. So you just go ahead and do
whatever you're doing, typing emails or whatever. But today was
my first day using it. It says it will reset
your cicadia rhythm, and so it will. Your body will eventually,
over about a month or two, learn like three thirty
(20:36):
is not going to be a problem for you. That's
going to be the time that your body understands that
you wake up because that's when you see the sunlight,
and then you will get tired and you will fall
fall asleep at like seven thirty eight o'clock at night
like you're supposed to, because I my problem is falling asleep, gotcha,
And then I'm miserable the rest of the day because
I get three hours.
Speaker 1 (20:56):
You also used to have one of those salt blocks
with the light, didn't it. What were those supposed to
do for you? Forgot?
Speaker 2 (21:02):
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (21:02):
I never got the salt block, some kind of salt,
I know what you're talking about.
Speaker 1 (21:06):
I never had it, though it was like a hunk
of salt in the light. I never remember it. I
don't remember what those before, Probably for memory, and I
needed one, but I don't remember what it was for.
Speaker 3 (21:16):
There was a thing. Let mean, I didn't almost do anything.
I flirted with the idea of buying this thing until
I actually saw the price, because they said it's like
guaranteed the best sleep you'll ever have, and I was like, well,
can you put a price on that? Apparently I could.
I could not afford in my mind, four thousand dollars
(21:39):
for this thing which goes over your over your mattress.
So you just basically add it to your king or
queen or whatever. They come in all the different sizes,
and apparently I think with it if I understand the claims.
It will change its temperature throughout the night to maintain
(22:01):
your body's temperature, so you'll never be hot and you'll
never be cold. And if you're snoring, it will adjust
without waking you the bed so that you will be
in a position where you'll stop snoring, because when you're snoring,
you're not getting the deep sleep.
Speaker 2 (22:17):
You're just kind of getting whatever.
Speaker 3 (22:20):
It has, like four or five different freakish things that
it can do.
Speaker 1 (22:24):
I thought I saw that already advertised in a sleep
Number bed commercial. Not to go look at that again.
Speaker 3 (22:30):
And that's what it says. It says it's like Sleep
Number except fifty to one hundred times better. Oh so
far more. Technology gotcha far more, you know, because you
do it like your friend mister Manley. He's Charles Manley.
He invested in a Sleep Number bed said, worst investment
he's ever made.
Speaker 1 (22:48):
I still have mine. Wouldn't give it.
Speaker 2 (22:50):
I won't give it up.
Speaker 3 (22:51):
He spent thousands of dollars on it. And he says,
I can't even give this thing away right now. He's like,
I might end up just throwing it in the trash.
What yes said? He bought it like a year ago.
Knowing him, I'm guessing a king.
Speaker 1 (23:06):
I would think a king. Now the room I'm want
to put it in is not a king, but I
will email them. Yeah, say do you still got that number?
You were disgusted about it? Yeah, that's what I'll take
it when it's absolutely free. That's when it's for me.
Speaker 3 (23:20):
Hey, Jonathan, before we get out of here, there is
a one are those things called where people start petitions
and they make them go like online and they go
viral or whatever. We got a petition now to ban
flip flops while you're on a plane.
Speaker 1 (23:35):
What is the problem with being on a plane wearing
flip flops?
Speaker 3 (23:38):
Stink feet should not be exposed. Ladies can have their
toes exposed, but dudes, you're gnarly and you stink, and
put some socks on.
Speaker 2 (23:49):
That's the move.
Speaker 3 (23:51):
Would you like to see men have to cover their
nasty toes? Now, this was not an issue until what
the nineties, maybe the two thousands. Guys never would have
gone anywhere really in public in flip flops other than like,
you know, your backyard barbecues and things like that. In
the eighties and nineties, everybody covered their feet.
Speaker 1 (24:13):
Back in the day old and Andy Woods, it's excited
that he moved to Savannah, Georgia. Yes, because flip flops
are like commonplace all over the place near the beach. Oh,
he wore them every day.
Speaker 3 (24:27):
He got written up. Andy got in trouble for his
addiction to flip flops. And then like when he was
trying to make a concession, he would wear sneakers as
if he was like wearing like some sort.
Speaker 2 (24:39):
Of dress shoes. Exact.
Speaker 3 (24:41):
Oh, Andy, you're wearing your ten year old converse. What
is the treat? What have we done to earn this
on it? Yeah, you still got your shorts and your
fancy T shirt. He always had a fancy T shirt,
like some very high degree like Lucky.
Speaker 2 (24:56):
I think that was the favorite.
Speaker 1 (24:57):
But the latest, the latest fad throwback T shirt.
Speaker 3 (25:02):
Yes, and so it would look like it could be
like a nineteen seventy three Volkswagen Bug or something would
be on it, or a Harley Davidson motorcycle or Pepsi or.
Speaker 1 (25:11):
Say far from Nuken across it. Yes, you go, wow,
where did you find that? I just ordered this?
Speaker 3 (25:16):
Got it at Coles.
Speaker 1 (25:18):
Well, it looks like it's fifty years old, right It
nice to touch it.
Speaker 3 (25:21):
It's way softer than anything you would have got. I'm
not touching your shirt.
Speaker 2 (25:23):
Get away from me where it though?
Speaker 1 (25:24):
Okay, what's going on? What are your what are you?
What do you object to other than toes? Maybe there's
something else we should cover here.
Speaker 3 (25:33):
Something else you'd like to ban on. By the way,
have you noticed the fights are getting more and more
at the airports these days? Maybe it's a social media
but like especially, I don't think no matter what the
price is, I don't think I'll ever fly Southwest air
I've never been on Southwest air But when you see
I've seen like four fights in the last two weeks
(25:55):
from Southwest Airlines.
Speaker 1 (25:56):
Yeah, I saw one the other day. It's not a
flight that stops in the southeast. Forgotten the name of it.
It's not them, it's it's uh God, it's gonna come
to me in a second. So Earline's been around for
a while, had a lot recently, a lot of fights.
Speaker 3 (26:11):
The one that I saw the other day that really
surprised me. There were like two women like sixty years
old going at it, like grabbing each other's hair and
throwing each other to the ground. Like I don't know what,
who said what to whom? But I'm I'm not sixty,
but I'm well past the age of giving a crap
what you say to me, it's going to cause me
(26:31):
to do anything physical.
Speaker 1 (26:34):
What you'd have to say to me to offend me
to that level, I just I'm not offendable.
Speaker 2 (26:41):
That's the way to be.
Speaker 1 (26:42):
I am not offendable.
Speaker 3 (26:43):
That should be the name of your podcast, Jonathan Rush. Unoffendable.
What's their name was, like uncanceable or whatever they show.
And then every week people call into your show and
they just try to say things to tick the off off,
and You're like, I ain't doing it.
Speaker 1 (27:01):
No, No, you didn't come close.
Speaker 3 (27:06):
No are you offended? That I'm not offended shows how
weak you are with your offensive statements.
Speaker 1 (27:10):
But then again, what if you said something about Sally? Okay,
that's guys that I got a lower bar there. Maybe
maybe these two women said something about each other's husbands. No,
it doesn't work that way, Yeah, and Sally would agree
with you.
Speaker 3 (27:23):
The husbands were nowhere to be seen and it was
just two sixty year old women, apparently, yeah, going at it,
dropping all kinds of f bombs and b bombs on
each other great look and then rolling around on the floor.
Speaker 1 (27:37):
Did we play that on the video for Mother's Day?
Speaker 2 (27:40):
Happy Mother's Day? That somebody's mom. Can you imagine that's
somebody's somebody's.
Speaker 1 (27:44):
Mom wallowing on the floor one of them? Are you
lost the wig? Oh my gosh, that's great? Hey, what
else is going on? You tell us when you reach
out to us on social media, you'd also email us
I have Rush at ninety something five w co S
dot com, Nation at ninety seven five w c S
dot com And tomorrow it's a tad. We're gonna give
(28:07):
you a chance to win yourself for your tickets at
eight thirty. And what you're talking about the numbers A
No three nine, I say a thirty. That's wrong, that's
six thirty at six thirty tomorrow at a No. Three
nine seven eight ninety two six seven, I'm becoming discalculated
a No. Three ninety seven eight nine two six seven