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May 23, 2025 • 26 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello, Kelly Nash.

Speaker 2 (00:02):
Oh, I'm so happy it's Friday.

Speaker 1 (00:04):
And this will be Tuesday Show today because we're not
here Monday. It's some more Music Morning Rush Edition Monday Morning.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
I hope people are having a great weekend. I think
the weather's supposed to be pretty nice. I'm not really
doing much this holiday weekend. I know I'm going to
a party Saturday afternoon. It's one of those weird times too,
if they're listening in no offense. But they have it
every year and we go every year. It's like two
o'clock in the afternoon and it wraps up at like

(00:32):
six and then they live. To me, it's like the
other side of the world. It's like on the other
side of Lake Murray. So it takes me probably seventy
five minutes to get to their house. They live out
dirt road and stuff. So I got to leave my
house to get there at like twelve thirty and I'll
come home it'll be like seven thirty. And I was like, well,

(00:53):
the whole day is gone pretty much for three hours
of hanging around eating some good food. Mostly I know
the people who throw it, I don't know any of
their friends. I see them once a year. Got it
at this event, same time, next year party, now, two
or three years ago. One of the guys started introducing

(01:16):
me into some high end bourbons, right, you know how
you get. I wasn't drunk. Let's let's put that on
the table. I haven't been drunk in twenty years, probably,
but I was buzzed. I was not expecting to be buzzed.
And it was probably, you know, cause you're only you're
not even drinking a shot of bourbon. You're drinking like

(01:38):
one sip, that's it, and then you clean cleanse your palates.

Speaker 1 (01:43):
Right, just enough to cover your taste.

Speaker 2 (01:44):
But yeah, you talk for a few minutes about it.
Did you taste this? Did you taste that?

Speaker 1 (01:49):
All? Right?

Speaker 2 (01:49):
Now, let's try another one at this one and he
had like these He had like eight bottles of each.
One of these things was like apparently like two hundred
dollars a bottle, big dollar bourbon that he brought with
them from North Carolina just for this event. And he's
giving us like a bourbon tationing. Well by about shot
number seven or so, I was just like, I love

(02:09):
you dudes, and they and it's literally right there planned
a trip. We were all going to Kentucky. We're all
going to go to the Bourbon Trail. We had the
ideas like how much, like guys are googling, how much
does it cost to rent a luxury bus?

Speaker 1 (02:25):
How much do we do?

Speaker 2 (02:26):
Like can we what week can you get off?

Speaker 1 (02:29):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (02:31):
I had to make the phone call on Monday or Tuesday.
I think it was like, hey, I said out like
the group tex guys, I'm not going on that trip.
I don't know what I was thinking. That's in the fall.
I got work, I gotta do. I can't be just
taking bourbon talk. I can't be just taking like four
days off in the middle of October to go to
a Bourbon trail.

Speaker 1 (02:49):
Reminds me of one of my neighbors. At one point
he invited me. I think it could have been a
Memorial Day weekend. And on his Florida room, he had
a wall in the wall he had hand built this
cabinet to haul these very specific jars I'll call them,
and it was all these vodkas from around the world. Okay,
and each vodka shelf it was the same vodka, but

(03:15):
he had different things in it, like a green onion. Oh.

Speaker 2 (03:21):
It kind of changed the taste. Yes, did he put
those things in there?

Speaker 1 (03:25):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (03:25):
Oh interesting?

Speaker 1 (03:26):
Yeah, and then he would take you around the world
with different flavors of different vodkas.

Speaker 2 (03:33):
So this tastes like chili? Wow?

Speaker 1 (03:35):
Yeah, the colors?

Speaker 2 (03:37):
Who did you get buzzed on that trip?

Speaker 1 (03:42):
That was that? You know, something that was interesting afternoon.
I'll just leave it to that. I'm remembering now things
that happened in that all right. So on Tuesday when
we get back, we've been celebrating Keith Urban and for
those of you headed down if you're listening to this
on Friday or Saturday, it could be headed down right
now to then New Island.

Speaker 2 (03:59):
Yeah, what a thrill for us to give away tickets
all this week to Keith Urban and Charleston. And then
our promotion staff goes beyond and I say our staff,
I've never met them, but they.

Speaker 1 (04:12):
Never met her.

Speaker 2 (04:13):
Well, I mean I think there's three or four of
them involved.

Speaker 1 (04:16):
Now we only communicate with Mallory.

Speaker 2 (04:18):
Yeah, Mallory works out of I think is she and Charleston,
and then we have a couple in Savannah that partner
with her, or maybe she's in Savannah and these other
ones work in Charleston.

Speaker 1 (04:27):
I forget. I don't know how it works, but anyway,
Nanny Clad promotion people, the.

Speaker 2 (04:31):
Crew has put together another Keith Urban giveaway for this
coming week and this is going to be Keith. I
didn't know that Keith Urban only works on weekends. So
after he plays in Charleston Saturday, he don't play again
until next Friday night, and that one happens to be
in char Charlotte, And so at the Panz Music Pavilion,
we've got tickets to send you Friday night to the

(04:51):
Panz Music Pavilion. And of course it's the clicks for ticksteal.
It's the what you're talking about. And the word is
fantosme or Fan Tod's band Todds.

Speaker 1 (05:03):
Oh, I know what this is. Okay, this is it's
kind of like hemorrhoids, but it's for specifically guys who
go to a lot of baseball and football games. You
know those horrid benches. You get the roids, you get
the fan Todds. Interesting the roid it's aid.

Speaker 2 (05:21):
You should have created. Uh what was that guy's name,
Rich Hall? Who was it Rich Hall? Who came up
with the snigglers?

Speaker 1 (05:26):
I love the snigglets. You would be sniglets one of
my favorite books. You would be great at creating snigglets.
One of my mind is busted at the time of
the year, where are you going to see a lot
of pebbledestrians? Those are people crossing the street or walking otherwise,
maybe in a beach or resort area, barefoot. And they
got that beginning of the year when your feet are tender,
They got that funny walk to them. Oh, those are pebbledestrians.

Speaker 2 (05:49):
See did you create that one?

Speaker 1 (05:51):
I did not? That is an official sniglet?

Speaker 2 (05:54):
Was his name, rich Hall?

Speaker 1 (05:55):
The guy who do is? Yes, I believe it was.

Speaker 2 (05:57):
Anyway, Fan Todd actually means means a state of extreme
anxiety nervousness.

Speaker 1 (06:04):
Oh so as it was way off.

Speaker 2 (06:06):
As they said here, it's like an extreme case of
the willies. Got it, extreme anxiety and nervousness. So maybe
you're experiencing fantids right now, thinking, gosh, will I win?

Speaker 1 (06:19):
How can I possibly win? How can I get this
answer at a moment's notice and be able to reference
it while I'm doing the contest? Well, you already got
the answer. We can go to the morning rush ball,
I get to read it.

Speaker 2 (06:29):
Yeah, and you could do that as well. But the
question is what number will Jonathan be looking for Tuesday morning?
And can you be that person?

Speaker 1 (06:36):
I can tell you it's going to be a nine
to five or seven. You're giving them. My head's up already,
So there you go. It's the easiest contest known to man.

Speaker 2 (06:45):
Other Now, Jonathan, we have talked about the ending of
civilization here and we have another great example of the
ending of civilization. The world is ending, and here's how
we know it. A serve of two thousand gen Zers.
How old are the gen Zers? By the way, these
are all adults now right.

Speaker 1 (07:06):
I have to remind myself in all the generations what
the age bracket is by referencing my phone.

Speaker 2 (07:11):
I'm going to gen z years right now. These are
people born between nineteen ninety seven and twenty twelve. So
the youngest one twenty twelve, twenty twenty two would have
been ten years. So the youngest is thirteen. I'm imagining
that we're not talking to the thirteen year olds here.
I think this is an age of eighteen and up,
all right, So that would have been if you're eighteen.

Speaker 1 (07:33):
The subset of gen Zers, Yeah, of legal age.

Speaker 2 (07:36):
Of legal age, the survey of two thousand of these
individuals equally spread between male and female, so one thousand
men and one thousand women in that age group eighteen
to roughly twenty five. Okay, question, would you consider marrying
an AI partner? Think about this. You're committing yourself to

(08:02):
spend the rest of your life with a robot in
essence that is going to be your spouse, male or female.
What percentage of gen zers said I would seriously consider
marrying an AI.

Speaker 1 (08:20):
I am going to say, based on the gen zers
that I know, this is unbelievably high at twenty seven percent.

Speaker 2 (08:28):
The first part of your statement is accurate. The second
part way off. Okay, it is an unbelievably high number.
The answer eighty three percent. Oh my god, the end
of the world is near. My friends, We're not going
to have grandkids. These people are not procreating. Eighty three
percent of adult gen zers said yes, I would seriously

(08:51):
consider marrying an AI partner. Now, clinical neuropsychologist Shefali Singh
chimes in and says, quote, some of my research has
demonstrated that people with social anxiety tend to like using
digital tools more because they're not so afraid of the repercussions,

(09:11):
the judgment, especially with social media. They think, if I
can interact with AI, who will give me this generally
non judgmental interchange discussions that's meaningful. Young adults are so
used to being judged and commented on and scrutinized in
ways that human beings were never meant to be scrutinized

(09:34):
that this result is not surprising to me. So what
I heard in all of that, get the hell off social.

Speaker 1 (09:43):
Media, exactly, do yourself a favor. Run from social media.
If you were not raised, you're already married to social media.

Speaker 2 (09:50):
If you were not raised like we were raised, which
is we don't give a flip what other people think. Really,
don't give a fat damn. And I mean that was
including our parents and they and they tried to beat
it into us. But for the most take, we do
not care literally what you say about us. You could
call this fat, ugly, bald boomer whatever. Your insult of

(10:12):
choices doesn't affect me in the least, and.

Speaker 1 (10:15):
Do it to my face, not behind a screen. Do
it in the lunchline.

Speaker 2 (10:19):
Oh yeah, I mean, if you're talking about somebody commenting
on one of my posts on social media, in all honesty,
and I hate to be this blunt. I probably don't
even read it. I only read about maybe a tenth
of the comments. My own mother commented on a photo
like three days ago, and my wife had to tell me,
you didn't respond to your mom's comment. I'm like, I

(10:40):
didn't see it. I don't read what the people say
on my photos. But in all honesty, these people are
not built to handle criticism, apparently on social media.

Speaker 1 (10:53):
I thought the attraction may have been if I marry
an a I partner, all I gotta do is turn
her off. That would come in handy as some relationship situations.
All I gotta do is mute.

Speaker 2 (11:03):
And it's easy to turn on. Un Like your life exactly,
you're living like your spouse like relationship exactly. But again,
this is a thousand women too. One thousand women, eighty
percent of them say I'd consider.

Speaker 1 (11:17):
That you're right. We're not going to have another generation
to follow that one.

Speaker 2 (11:23):
This is insane to me.

Speaker 1 (11:26):
And by the way, they give up with some robots
that could do some work.

Speaker 2 (11:30):
It's sponsored by a company who I don't think that
they have the robots. I think that they just have
the name of the company I think is joy Ai. Okay,
all right, And so if you go to the company website,
which they have a link on this story too, it's

(11:52):
like they have what appear to be real people, all right,
but they're not real people right there. They're computer narrated
what do they call those things, avatars or whatever, and
you see like their picture, but it looks like it's
a real woman or man, and some of them are older,
like this one guy. I was just looking at it.

Speaker 1 (12:10):
Literally, my spouse is on the screen. We're not talking
about a sex robot here that the Japanese about. I
don't know. The Chinese have been working hard on.

Speaker 2 (12:18):
I don't know if they look lifelike, but but they
say on this website you can be as intimate as
you'd like with these I'm trying to get it to open.
It's not opening, right.

Speaker 1 (12:29):
So joey Ai is just a software. It's not a
it's not a hardware.

Speaker 2 (12:34):
It's a website that you go to and then you like,
you can create your boyfriend, create your girlfriend. But they
give you recommendations, you know, of how people like, here's
a young Asian girl, if you'd like to marry, here's
a would you like this woman. She's roughly forty five
years old with blonde hair. Here's a here's a nice

(12:54):
looking redheaded lady.

Speaker 1 (12:55):
I wish what was the line from? As good as
it gets? I wish that did it for me. I
wish that did it for me. No, I got to
have like a real person in my life. But I'm
not gen Z.

Speaker 2 (13:10):
I mean so, I guess like you, if I'm to
understand this correctly, these people are considering a lifetime relationship
with something that just communicates on their computer like he're
on their phone.

Speaker 1 (13:24):
That's the way I'm reading it.

Speaker 2 (13:25):
Talks to them, and that says you have like real
conversations with these people.

Speaker 1 (13:29):
Oh, I'm sure you can. So it's fascinating.

Speaker 2 (13:32):
It's like the thing that looks just like a person
actually will talk to you like a real person, but
you're never going to meet them because they're not a person.
There's no way to meet them.

Speaker 1 (13:45):
The only way I see this ever becoming beneficial is
if I had it in my hand and I have
a girl. I don't care what her national origin appears
to be, but I want her to be an AI mathematician. Okay,
I'm at the blackjack table she's watching the cards being played, Right,
do I want to split on this hand? What are

(14:08):
the odds? Split? You always split from What are the odds?
What are the odds that I'm going to end up
with a face or an ace? Now that would come
in handy, Well, I bet you Vegas has already put
up some kind of string at security safeguards against AI mathematics.

Speaker 2 (14:24):
And I'm thinking about the damage that this is going
to do to you, because if you have somebody in
your life who and I understand AI is not a somebody,
but to these people, it will be a somebody, and
all they do is encourage you no matter what you're.

Speaker 1 (14:43):
Doing, because this is Joey AI. Yeah, so whatever your
whatever's constant confirmation.

Speaker 2 (14:50):
Yeah, whatever behavior you're engaging, it just encourages more of that.

Speaker 1 (14:54):
Got worse.

Speaker 2 (14:55):
Yeah, you're you just keep walking down a path with.

Speaker 1 (14:58):
What Michael Jackson ends up dead. Surround yourself with yes man,
and you end up dead.

Speaker 2 (15:05):
I would block that website from your well, you can't
do it from the adults.

Speaker 1 (15:12):
But don't open that Pandora's box. I'm not sure once
you open it you can ever close it. It's probably
taken over your computer.

Speaker 2 (15:19):
System, very scary stuff. Regal Cinema's got a promotion going
on this summer, Jonathan, I like this. You know, the
movie theaters. We've talked about this since COVID hit really
tough time coming back. A lot of people no interest
in going to a movie theater. And it's not because
I guess maybe there's a whole.

Speaker 1 (15:38):
Generation of people that don't go to the movie theater.

Speaker 2 (15:41):
Well it's only been like four years now.

Speaker 1 (15:45):
And they're formidable teenage years. Yeah, So.

Speaker 2 (15:49):
I don't think that it's I don't think, although it
probably is for some of them, a fear of germs.
I think it's more of why would I pay twelve
dollars to watch something when my home screen and surround
sound sure might be maybe not as good, but it's
pretty flipping good.

Speaker 1 (16:07):
I got a seventy inch television and I'm four and
a half feet away.

Speaker 2 (16:10):
And able to pause said story and go eat or
answer the phone or do what. And I don't have
to worry about some smelly person sitting next to me.

Speaker 1 (16:19):
So I got surround sound without anybody colling. You're taking
a phone call, I don't say, have any distractions by
somebody's cell phone screen flashing because they're texting.

Speaker 2 (16:28):
And if I want to be loud, like if I
want to go damn when something happens on the screen,
I can do it without worrying about affecting other people
and people giving me the side eye anyway. So movie
theater's got to figure out a way to get people back.
Regal Cinema's just announced and we have the details on
the Morning Rust blog if you'd like that for this summer, parents,
you can take your young children to Regal Cinemas for

(16:52):
just a dollar on Tuesdays and Wednesdays. They got a
special promotion going on. It starts June tenth. And these
are kid movies, so like Puss in Boots, Sing Too,
Sonic the Hedgehog.

Speaker 1 (17:05):
This is in Peru. Parents are looking for something to
do with their kids in a controlled environment, air conditioned
and where they can get out and get a great
deal like a dollar ahead.

Speaker 2 (17:16):
And these cinemas need to figure out how to get
people to say I like going to the movies, because
right now it's more like.

Speaker 1 (17:23):
You get to somebody to get a condition of these
people saying I like paying twelve bucks for a soft
drinking popcorn.

Speaker 2 (17:30):
Well, when you're a kid, you're not paying squash. So
it's like, I like having mommy and daddy buy me
the fancy popcorn tastes better than the stuff we have
at home.

Speaker 1 (17:39):
So this is a right.

Speaker 2 (17:41):
This is a great break and if you're a parent
of a young kid and you're looking to take advantage
of it. We got all the details on the Morning
Rest blog at ninety seven to five WCS dot com.

Speaker 1 (17:49):
Let's see.

Speaker 2 (17:50):
The other thing was, it's not a moral dilemma, Jonathan.
It's already happened. So normally on Mondays we would do
moral dilemma Monday, but this is twoay. So we've got
a guy. According to him, his wife every now and
again has girls night, and girls' night happens apparently like

(18:12):
on a weeknight. It's not like a weekend. It's a
week night, because he says, I never usually see her
on girls night when she goes out with the girls.
I go to bed at my normal time. She's not home.
I have no idea what happens on girls night, and
I don't know that we know what a typical girl's
night is either at this point, because this is the

(18:33):
first time that this has happened.

Speaker 1 (18:34):
Every girl shows up with a bottle of wine.

Speaker 2 (18:38):
I don't know, I don't know, but she said. But
she called him it like one in the morning and said,
I'm too drunk to drive. Can you come get me?
Now that again, this has not happened in the several
years that they've had these girls.

Speaker 1 (18:54):
First time.

Speaker 2 (18:55):
Yeah, it could be the only time something something went amiss.
She drink before. She's doing the responsible thing, saying I shouldn't.

Speaker 1 (19:02):
Drive, very responsible. We got to reward that.

Speaker 2 (19:05):
But again, it's one am and it's a weak night,
and he said, of course. And then I told her,
why don't you just take an Uber. I've got to
go to work.

Speaker 1 (19:14):
In the morning. Uh oh, wrong answer.

Speaker 2 (19:17):
Well, now now that she's sober and the light of
day is on it, she's angry. And she said, you know,
a real husband would look out for his wife and
you'd come and got me. But you had me contacting Uber,
some stranger giving me a.

Speaker 1 (19:35):
Ride at home o'clock in the morning, and you're a
sleep and.

Speaker 2 (19:38):
The whole reason was you were sleepy. You're too sleepy
to come get your wife. Is that how this hurts?

Speaker 1 (19:43):
Just a little bit of time, get up. You could
probably keep your pajamas on. Just drive over, pick her up,
drive back. I'd keep my pajamas on, but I guess
you would. Yep.

Speaker 2 (19:56):
And again, this is not a routine thing. So for
people who are calling her a drunk or something, this
has never happened before, so this is a one time thing.

Speaker 1 (20:04):
She's absolutely right. This guy is an idiot. That's not
the answer, sir. Not even like if you answered the
phone in your sleep subconsciously, you should know the answer
to this.

Speaker 2 (20:16):
I hope my mom's not listening to this podcast. But
years ago, when I was i'd say sixteen, I was
probably sixteen years old. The house is quiet, everybody's asleep.
Turns out not everybody was asleep. The phone rings in
the middle of the night. It's probably I want to say,

(20:38):
eleven thirty, twelve o'clock ish, right, And this is back
when you had home phones. And so I had to
get out of bed, go down the hall and answer
the phone. And my mother didn't wake up, she didn't
hear that phone ringing. So I pick it up and
they're like, hello, is this Kelly, And I'm like yes,
and they're like, this is Sergeant so and so with

(20:58):
the East Hartford Police department, and I'm like, because I
used to get in trouble, so I'm thinking, crap, why
are they calling now? Like what did I do?

Speaker 1 (21:07):
Now?

Speaker 2 (21:07):
What am I getting busted on? And they're like, uh,
do you know Cliff, And I'm like my stepdad. They're like, yeah,
we currently got him pulled over out here. He's in
front of the strip club on Main Street. And I'm
like what and they're like they we told him we'd
let him go if somebody could drive him, and he

(21:27):
said to call and ask for you. And so there
I was, and my my form of pajamas like sweatpants
and a T shirt that I had worn to bed
that night, going out to my car, driving down there,
picking him up, and driving him home. He was bombed
and we got home and I just remember thinking like,

(21:49):
this is weird. This is really weird that you're depending.
Thank god I answered the phone, because I can only
imagine what my mom would have said had the police said,
we've got your husband pulled over outside of a strip club.
I do not like a Wednesday. I don't know if
it makes it worse than it's on a Wednesday, but
it was a Wednesday that.

Speaker 1 (22:07):
Would have been the best phone call ever, because now
I got you. You're never saying anything to my mom
about anything I ever do.

Speaker 2 (22:15):
Oh yeah, we well, I think we had already crossed
that bridge, gotcha. I mean the first time I got
in a big time drunk, I was just turned sixteen.
I think I just turned sixteen. I must have, because
I was already working at the Marketplace restaurant as a dishwasher,
and Saturdays, my friend Dan was supposed to pick me

(22:36):
up and take me to work. Well, Friday night, I
had never played the game Quarters before, and Dane had
like a get together of like five guys in his
house to play Quarters. And I apparently I wasn't that
good at quarters yet and I got destroyed and I
ended up destroying Dan's house. Oh my god, I've told

(22:58):
this story before. I did, Like again, this is nineteen
eighty two money, nineteen eighty two. I did like eighteen
thousand dollars in damage to Dan's house. And I don't
remember coming home. I don't remember any of it. Apparently
somebody tried to walk me they and then he started
talking to somebody else and I just wandered off by myself.
I got home at like three in the morning, knocking
on the door with my head, like with my head,

(23:19):
and when he opened up the door, I fell down
and vomited on his feet and he had to carry
me to bed. And then when he woke me up
the next morning, I remember just trying to like I
was shocked, like how did I get here? Like what's
going on? I didn't even have a hangover yet. I
was just like, what's going so drunk? And he's like,
I want to talk to me about last night, and

(23:41):
I was like, I went to the movies, like I
said I did. Really, he seemed like you were kind
of sick. And I was trying to say something like
I hate too much popcorn or some crap like that,
and then he was like I could smell the booze
on you a mile away, and I was like, oh well.
Then I tried to blame it on some other kids
they had the boom and blah blah blah.

Speaker 1 (24:02):
And then he goes, look, I'm not going to tell
your mom about this. Oh but oh so you already
had that understand.

Speaker 2 (24:07):
They said, But you need to go to work this morning,
because real men, if real men get drunk, they still
go to work.

Speaker 1 (24:14):
It's a real man's world.

Speaker 2 (24:16):
And so when and then when Dan picked me up,
I got in the car and I was like, so
he's like, he's like, I'm so happy you're here. And
I'm like, you're happy I'm here. He goes, nobody knew
what happened to you, like you were you were a
missing person. We had people driving around looking for you
last night. And I'm like really, and he goes, and
you destroyed my house and I'm like, what do you

(24:37):
mean I destroyed your house? He's like, well, you pulled
the sink off the wall and that flooded the whole
first floor. All the furniture down there is ruined. And
then you also did some sort of head dived off
the from the second floor down to the first floor,
and you took out all the spindles on the staircase.
And I was like, I did what And he was like,
it's like thousands of dollars in damage. And I'm thinking,

(24:57):
I make three thirty seven an hour, right, how long
is it going to take me to pay off thousands of
dollars and damages. I'm gonna be working at the marketplace
for the rest of my life. Like a hotel room
and a Van Halen tour exactly, but I didn't have
Van Halen money. I wanted to be a van healing
guy that I wanted to be. I lived like I was,
but I was not a Van healing guy. But anyway,

(25:19):
you say this guy screwed.

Speaker 1 (25:21):
Up, totally screwed up. You lost your man card on that.

Speaker 2 (25:26):
One, I almost feel like the uber is the quicker
better route rather than me getting out of bed driving
to wherever you.

Speaker 1 (25:32):
Are talking about quicker better. We're talking about responsibility to
your wife. You're the husband. You get up and you
do it.

Speaker 2 (25:39):
Wow Jo the rest down the law there.

Speaker 1 (25:43):
Yeah, I lost your man card.

Speaker 2 (25:45):
Maybe other people will be bold enough to disagree with
you on Tuesday morning.

Speaker 1 (25:49):
I'm sure they will. I can't wait for that phone call.
I'm gonna be set straight again by the morning. Rushing
regulars usually the re education of Jonathan Rush. We continue
with Tuesday when we're back live. Hey, what's going on
in your neighborhood? You know how to reach out to
us on social media. You can also email us. I
am Rush at ninety seven five, w COS dot com.

Speaker 2 (26:10):
Nash at ninety seven five, w SOS dot com, and.

Speaker 1 (26:12):
Keith Urban tickets, this time for Charlotte beginning Tuesday morning.
And the number you call is you know, three ninety
seven eight ninet two sixt seven. You already get the
answer to the word of what you're talking about. Of
the Morning Rush blog. Click on that multiple times when
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