Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello, Kelly Nash Show, Jonathan Tomorrow show today and tomorrow
another chance for you to win, even if you got
the day off set, you're alarmed to give you here
by six thirty because we got more tickets for Thomas Rhett.
I would imagine that if you're kind of stacking up
best chance opportunities, tomorrow would be one of the better
chances because, as you point out, it's Juneteenth, a lot
(00:21):
of people are going to be sleeping in, a lot
of folks not going to work tomorrow, and so usually
on a holiday we're off, but we're working tomorrow, so
we are going to give you a chance to win.
So this is, like you said, the best opportunity and
the word of the day for what you're talking about ebulent, ebulent,
ambulent you think that means.
Speaker 2 (00:42):
Jonathan, this is the like the opposite of opulent, Okay,
like a minimalist an ebulent lifestyle.
Speaker 1 (00:51):
That is a that is a very clever interpretation of it.
It's actually bursting with great enthusiasm or excitement. Oh wow,
as soon as you are so embulent and we're hoping
to make you ebulent tomorrow, you will be embulent when
you win. Yeah, Thomas Rhett betteran Boots tour. It hits
(01:12):
the Credit One Stadium next Thursday night, So a week
from tomorrow you'll be there with two free tickets if
you answer what you're talking about and the answers on
the Morning Rest blog.
Speaker 2 (01:21):
Embulent, I like that word.
Speaker 1 (01:24):
I found this story fascinating. Apparently you know Jonathan. Eventually,
I guess if you trace it hard enough, we're all
going to be related to everybody, that's right. But the
New York Times have done a would you call it
like a genealogical study of the new Pope, the new Pope? Yeah,
(01:47):
Pope Leo? Would you this is this is bizarre to me.
Pope Leo is related to Madonna, who has had many
run ins the Catholic Church. But he's also a distant
cousin of one Justin Bieber, but the family revelations don't
(02:11):
end there. He's also related to Hillary Clinton.
Speaker 2 (02:14):
Oh here we go, now comes the ugly list.
Speaker 1 (02:17):
Bonnie and Clyde A No, Hillary Clinton, Angelina, Joe Lee uh,
former Canadian leaders Justin Trudeau and his father Pierre Trudeau.
He may be related to Castro. This is funny. So
(02:40):
have you I know that you've talked about John your
son has done some sort of study that I guess
on his mother's side. He's related to who is it again?
Speaker 2 (02:49):
Was it Tombstone's famous So Doc Holliday, whose real name
is John was known as a traveling man, which which
means he bed at a lot of different women's.
Speaker 1 (03:01):
He's like the Johnny Applesey to his day.
Speaker 2 (03:04):
And for only a brief time. He lived in the
upstate of South Carolina, and his name appears in the
genealogy of Sally's family's mother's mother mother something way up
the line. But he claims John Holliday as being Doc Holliday,
and he claims to be a descendant, a direct descendant
(03:25):
of Doc Holiday.
Speaker 1 (03:26):
I just looked up Doc Holliday. By the way, he
died very young, thirty six. Yeah, but did you know
the name of his wife?
Speaker 2 (03:35):
Yes, big nose Kate.
Speaker 1 (03:37):
Isn't that amazing you married a woman whose name is
big nose Kate. That is when I saw that just now.
And by the way, knows not that big.
Speaker 2 (03:48):
No, not really, not at least in the photographic offerings
I've seen.
Speaker 1 (03:52):
Hungarian born American outlaw, prostitute and longtime companion and common
law wife, not actually Mary. She didn't get her big
day like we were talking about the big bride's days.
Speaker 2 (04:05):
Yeah, she didn't get that.
Speaker 1 (04:06):
Big Nose Kate didn't get that. Poor Big Nose Kate
suffered through life as a prostitute. But now Big Nose Kate,
I don't know if did she clean up her life.
Because Doc Code died at thirty six. Big Nose Kate
lived to be ninety.
Speaker 2 (04:25):
Wow, back in the day, that was a long time.
Speaker 1 (04:29):
She died in nineteen forty.
Speaker 2 (04:31):
Very few people lived that long.
Speaker 1 (04:32):
Born in eighteen forty nine.
Speaker 2 (04:35):
Does she outlive Wyatt Earp? Because I know whyatt Earp
lived a long life. I think he died a like
eighty six.
Speaker 1 (04:43):
Well you got me googling all kinds of weird things
over here today. But yeah, congratulations Big nose Kate. I'm
going to assume she turned it around, or at least
she wasn't a practicing prostitute later in life. He died
at eighty okay, and he was born just about the
same time, so he died in nineteen twenty nine, so
(05:05):
he didn't even get to see the depression. Old Wyatt Herb.
Speaker 2 (05:08):
Was born in Lost Angle. He died in Los Angeles, California.
Speaker 1 (05:12):
Born in Monmouth, Illinois, died in Los Angeles? And who
was the actor who cried? Who wept? Did he say
he wept? He wept almost like Jesus wept?
Speaker 2 (05:22):
Yeah? I can't remember the actor's name, but he started
a bunch of.
Speaker 1 (05:26):
W silent the great Western silent film star So and
so was a pall bearer. He wept at his funeral?
Whatever is he?
Speaker 2 (05:36):
The only one is that supposed to be happy?
Speaker 1 (05:39):
That have a great impact on me that some silent
film star cried at doc holidays or white Herb's birthday
or a funeral. I mean anyway, he didn't.
Speaker 2 (05:48):
Silent film stars make their living out of exaggerating their emotions. Woo.
So how do we know he actually wept? Probably just acting,
wasn't it.
Speaker 1 (05:58):
In the Bible they talked about the used to hire mourners. Yes,
that's an not an unusual thing to make you seem.
See when people talk about keeping up with the Joneses
and stuff today, that is so far from being new.
Speaker 2 (06:13):
Yeah, nobody keeps up with Kim jongong. And think about it,
Think about that, Think that the entire country showed up
to weep We did openly.
Speaker 1 (06:21):
Have Instagram back in the Bible times. So what difference
did it make if five hundred people showed up to
cry there's no video, there's no it's just word of mouth.
You could have just told anybody who wasn't there, you
should have seen the crowd five hundred people instead of
Prior to.
Speaker 2 (06:39):
The Bible and the Jewish community in particular, it was
all about the storytelling because you had to keep the story.
You had to keep the the goth the religion alive
because you couldn't read it. You had to tell it
over and over and over and over and over, like
you know the Passover. You had to tell that story
every year, over and over and over.
Speaker 1 (07:00):
Keep it fresh.
Speaker 2 (07:02):
Um, well, keep it stale. Actually got to tell it
the same way.
Speaker 1 (07:05):
It's not living in breathing.
Speaker 2 (07:07):
No, keep it stale. It's old Testamy, Keep it stale.
Speaker 1 (07:10):
Maha is having a major impact now, Jonathan.
Speaker 2 (07:13):
Make America healthy again. You know RFK junior Maha moms
who are all excited the body Maha.
Speaker 1 (07:23):
One of the major I guess foundations of the Maha
movement is that the reason so many Americans are ill,
we are the number one consumers of pharmaceuticals in this country,
and it's not even close. We have like three hundred
and fifty million Americans and we consume something like eighty
percent of all prescriptions on planet Earth. So there's seven
(07:44):
billion people, but we're taking all the drugs, all the drugs.
One of the building blocks on that is that it's
because of our food supply is different. We allow certain
things in our food supply that is not allowed even
in Mexico, never mind Canada and Europe and other places. So,
(08:06):
after being called out by Maha Heinz, Kraft announced yesterday
that they're going to remove all artificial dies from their
products and they will be gone by twenty twenty seven.
And according to Kraft Heins, only about ten percent of
their products currently use the FD and C colors.
Speaker 2 (08:28):
Okay, does that include the ketchup.
Speaker 1 (08:32):
Yes and kool Aid and as red crystal light, the
meal water flavors all that. Now, I don't know if
they're all going to be clear in the future, Like, well,
you have fruit paint fruit flavored kool aid, but instead
of being red, the fruit punch will just be clear.
Speaker 2 (08:50):
That's gonna mess with my nog. And I can tell
you that because if I have a cream soda, it's
like a BlackBerry black cherry flavor, but it's clear. Yes,
when I pick it up, look at it, and I
drink it, then it has the black cherry taste. It
messes with my mind.
Speaker 1 (09:06):
Remember PEPSI clear? Yes, that was short lived. Yes, because
people are like that. The color makes it taste better.
Speaker 2 (09:15):
It's not clear. Liquids can't taste like black cherry because
black cherry is dark red.
Speaker 1 (09:22):
You know. I saw the I guess it was a
documentary on bourbon. It was on Netflix maybe a year
or two ago, and I found this. I'm not a
huge like bourbon guy. I like it fine. I don't
go out of my way to buy it or anything.
I'm not, certainly not a connoisseur of the stuff. But
(09:42):
they were talking about how bourbon was the drink of
choice for many years in the late eighteen hundreds and
early nineteen hundreds. Then I want to say it was
like sherry or something became the drink of choice for
the wealthy Okay, and by the like In the late
fifties early sixties. The new young hip crowd of the
(10:05):
late fifties early sixties had moved on from colored liquors
to clear liquor. They liked gin and they liked vodka,
and in an attempt to keep up with them, there
was a five year period where the major bourbon manufacturers
(10:26):
had clear bourbon.
Speaker 2 (10:27):
Shut up, I didn't know this.
Speaker 1 (10:29):
Yeah, And it was like a very costly mistake, Yeah,
because it costs a lot of money to try to
make it clear, and nobody really wanted.
Speaker 2 (10:37):
We got all these barrels of it over here, and
nobody wants it.
Speaker 1 (10:40):
Yeah. They were trying to figure out a way to like, hey,
look you want clear, We got clear. But they you know,
the thing is when people go through these like clicks
or whatever, these phases, vodka is the drink of choice
this year. Sure, whatever, You're not going to compete with
vodka just because you look like vodka, right, you got
to actually taste like vodka too. And this was in
(11:00):
This was in the mostly in the early sixties, like
sixty one through like sixty five, sixties.
Speaker 2 (11:07):
No, nineteen, when they had the clear bourbon.
Speaker 1 (11:10):
Yes, in the early nineteen sixties.
Speaker 2 (11:13):
They converted them to like gasoline.
Speaker 1 (11:15):
They lost, according to the documentary, they lost millions trying
to convert the gin and vodka drinkers back to bourbon
by saying, but we're clear too.
Speaker 2 (11:29):
Did not know that?
Speaker 1 (11:30):
Yeah, that's a that was a weird thing. And apparently
even the bourbon drinkers were repelled by it because they
liked the color. Sure, so if you were a traditionalist
who liked bourbon, yep, it tasted exactly the same, but
it didn't look the same. So now they're telling you
it's like what they did to your butterfinger bar.
Speaker 2 (11:48):
They screwed you. Yeah, Now what happens when ketchup comes
out and it's not that red color? What if it's
just to be like pink?
Speaker 1 (11:56):
What if it's just like you know, I'm trying to think,
like glue or something. Just yeah, white glue all over
my hamburger? What is that? Now we're all going to
be cursing Robert F. Kennedy, bring back my.
Speaker 2 (12:13):
My French fries. Don't taste is good because I'm dipping
it in some kind of clear goo.
Speaker 1 (12:24):
Let's see. And by the way, in a in a
related note, the let's see. The war on ultra processed
foods has been getting an extra look at sought by
science lately, and research that came out this week. Now,
this is an unbelievable development. Junk food can now be
(12:45):
linked to a structural changes in the human brain.
Speaker 2 (12:50):
Oh my gosh.
Speaker 1 (12:51):
These are the regions that control hunger and decision making.
So you actually, if you have a lifetime of eating
potato chips or pretzels or whatever, you actually make worse
decisions than you would have had you not begun that
habit of eating junk food.
Speaker 2 (13:10):
So you're making worse Junk food makes you, in fact,
make worse decisions about what foods they eat.
Speaker 1 (13:16):
Well, they say, driving, spousing, any how to buy a house,
how to pick a spouse, how to do anything in life.
You are a dumber person because as a child you
ate processed foods. Now, this is a fifty year study
that they're looking at, looking at the human brain and
watching like twins.
Speaker 2 (13:38):
Can I sue little Debbie twins.
Speaker 1 (13:40):
Where one twin ate the junk food for most of
his life and the other one for most of his
life didn't eat the junk food. Their brains are different.
Speaker 2 (13:50):
Now.
Speaker 1 (13:51):
Not obviously weight gain is a big problem, but also
inflammation throughout your body, pouring outabolic health, higher blood sugar,
triglycerides see reactive protein levels. Ultra processed foods makes you
want more, and the more you have, the dumber you get.
You're killing yourself. That's great, he says, but can we
(14:14):
get paid by a little, Debbie. I doubt it, but
you know what, at one point, I didn't think it
was possible to sue the tobacco companies, but they were
getting little We talked about after your pockets. We talked
to the Attorney general. What was it last week or
two weeks ago here in South Carolina. We're still getting
paid forever as long as they can tell. We're going
to keep getting money from these tobacco companies because of
(14:35):
what they did with their products back I think it's
specifically in the nineteen seventies and maybe even in the sixties,
because I think by the sixties they but they also
knew that it was bad. They had already had the
They linked it to cancer, and they said just sit
on it.
Speaker 2 (14:52):
It.
Speaker 1 (14:52):
It's kind of like, you know, I just saw Rick, well,
what's his name? Why am I now I'm drawing a blank?
Doctor Rick, who used to work here Sanford, Sandford. I
just saw doctor Rick the other day at a good
old birthday thing or whatever. Anyway, he's part of that
class action lawsuit against the NFL. And what the basis
(15:15):
of that class it's not that they didn't know football
was dangerous. What they didn't know is what the NFL knew.
The NFL had done studies in the seventies that showed
repeated concussions leads to serious brain injury where you can
become suicidal or homicidal or whatever. And the NFL knew
(15:39):
it as early as like nineteen seventy five and didn't
say anything, didn't warn anybody. They sat on those reports.
They actively tried to squash those reports. When the doctors
who had that information tried to tell people about it,
they were sued.
Speaker 2 (15:55):
Will Smith was in that movie what was it called,
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (15:59):
Head injury or something, but anyway, but that's why they're
suing the NFL because a lot of people are like, well,
why would you look You knew you were getting into
a dangerous sport when you started playing football as a kid,
and by the time you were in high school, you
knew damn well that people were getting knocked out and
breaking legs and breaking arms, and that's just part of
the game. Suck it up, don't come back all these
years later and say I want extra money now. But
(16:20):
that's the difference is that, like with the tobacco company,
they had direct proof you use this product, your chances
of cancer like quadruple, and nobody told us. So that's
what's what's I think Jonathan Rush may be onto something
class action lawsuit against Little Debbie for you. Maybe Pringles
(16:44):
for sure talked about the Pringles getting dragged twice this
week on the same show.
Speaker 2 (16:51):
If you're selling the spam people, they're shaking in their
cans over there.
Speaker 1 (16:55):
Is that considered junk food spam? I know it's processed.
Speaker 2 (16:58):
I don't know if it's it's not junk food.
Speaker 1 (17:00):
I don't know what it is. That's one of the
great mysteries. Even the manufact.
Speaker 2 (17:05):
Didn't well that jail on top of spam was going
to create cancer problems.
Speaker 1 (17:10):
Maybe it solves cancer.
Speaker 2 (17:12):
Have you ever did you ever actually eat spam?
Speaker 1 (17:15):
I not this century. I did have it in the seventies.
Speaker 2 (17:20):
I remember tasting it because I was at a boy
Scout cookout and some guy pulled out a can of spam,
cut that top layer off with all the jail on it,
and then sliced it up and then threw it in
a pan, and then he's like, this is good.
Speaker 1 (17:33):
Tried it up.
Speaker 2 (17:34):
I'll try it okay.
Speaker 1 (17:37):
So you too, probably in the sixties, maybe I think.
Speaker 2 (17:39):
I think I actually took two bites of it and
then threw the breast of it out in the woods.
Speaker 1 (17:45):
Was it for you? Was it the sixties, because I
think mine was in the seventies. I think by the
time I got the high school, I had not eaten
it anymore.
Speaker 2 (17:53):
But in Hawaii number one cellar.
Speaker 1 (17:57):
They love spam in Hawaii. So if you're thinking of
selling your home according to Zillo, and they've done and
it looks Zillo, I think for the most part, I'll
just make a statement that I don't know to be true,
but I believe it to be true. Ninety five percent
of all homes sold appear on Zillo. I know that
(18:21):
some homes don't end up on Zillo for whatever reason,
but the vast overwhelming majority of any home that gets
listed for sale goes through Zillo.
Speaker 2 (18:29):
So that pocket listing is not online, that's right.
Speaker 1 (18:32):
But they have the ability to run data on all
these homes, and they have found certain colors increase the
value of the home. According to them, here's news. You
can use yes the average, so basically two ninety dollars
(18:54):
extra if you have the right paint color buyers like
in this disgusting to me dark olive green for your kitchen.
That is the number one kitchen choice, bedrooms, navy blue
living rooms, charcoal gray or anything with dark gray walls
(19:19):
in the living rooms. The wrong color can cost you
thousands as well. For example, homes that have daisy yellow
kitchens or living rooms sold for approximately four thousand dollars
less than the comparable homes that had just any neutral colors.
They buyers hate yellow. Stay away from yellow at all costs.
(19:44):
The other color they hate, bright red. Two thousand dollars
left for a living room or bedroom if it has
fire hydrant red. Get away from the reds and the yellows.
Go with the dark blues, dark greens, dark grays. That's
a quarter to Zillow in their new trend.
Speaker 2 (20:02):
Report, which is paint well, I'm moving out, So you
are the only way I would paint those colors in
my house?
Speaker 1 (20:09):
Are you?
Speaker 2 (20:10):
Are you guys plainting on moving No, I'm not saying
if I'm going to paint it. If I'm going to
paint my bedroom and navy blue. I definitely will be
moving out, you know.
Speaker 1 (20:20):
That's that's always one of those things like where Angela
you know, she sells houses and and she'll talk to
the buyers about, hey, you listen, you want to get
the most for your thing. Do this, do that, blah
blah whatever, this could increase your values by X amount
of dollars or whatever. I often wonder when they when
they fix the house up that way, do they all
Sometimes I would think that they would go, crap, this
(20:43):
is a really nice house. I don't want to leave
it now. You know I have heard of it.
Speaker 2 (20:48):
Yeah, you fixed it up and sell it. We're like, damn,
this is really nice.
Speaker 1 (20:52):
Yeah. I remember years ago I was going to sell
a house and l and I had bought it directly
from the manufacturer. And I guess, I don't know why.
Maybe this is common. I don't even know. It didn't
have any what do you want to call it? The
things hardware in the kitchen, on the drawers. You just
(21:14):
kind of reached that, Yeah, no cabinet poles. You just
kind of just open it up and it wasn't a problem.
And the lady told me go down to wherever get
these cabinet poles. She gave me a picture. This is
before like the internet was popular. She gave me a
picture and said, these are the kind of cabinet poles
that are hot right now. You can probably buy enough
(21:35):
to outfit the whole kitchen for less than one hundred dollars.
It'll take you several hours to install them on all
your drawers. I think that'll raise the value of the
home by approximately four thousand dollars. I went and I
did it, sure enough, the household like that. I don't
know if I actually got four thousand dollars extra or whatever,
(21:55):
but I just remember. And when I got done, I go, why,
this really does look a lot better. I like my
kitchen more. I should I didn't know that I should
have done that. Finally, Jonathan, we have a morning rusher regular.
This is a very This is one of those stories
that never would have happened even three years ago. But
we're in a new world, a new time. She walked
(22:18):
in on her boyfriend and he was on the computer,
and I know a lot of your brains automatically go
to and he was looking at porn. He was not
looking at porn. He was talking to what she describes.
Our listener describes it as an ai girlfriend. But when
you kind of go further into the story, it's what
(22:40):
are those things called? That just it's an avatar. It's
on the computer. There's no robot. It's not like you
can have intimate relations with this thing. It's a thing
on the computer. Nor was he having a sexual conversation.
He was talking about something that happened in his childhood
with this avatar. And she says, this feels like he's
(23:04):
cheating on me. You're having intimate conversations with another female.
Now again, I guess if I was to try to
take her side on this, he could have made the
avatar look like anything, sound like anything, could have picked
an old man. He picked a I think. She said
(23:24):
it was an Asian female about the same age as him,
And he said, I just feel safe with her that
I can share really private things about my life and
she'll give me great advice on how to manage it,
deal with it, move forward, that sort of stuff. So
(23:45):
to me, it sounds like it's a counselor more than
like she describes it, a girlfriend.
Speaker 2 (23:50):
But girlfriends want to make sure that you're using them
as your counselor they're the ones you come to with everything,
especially emotional She's absolute right.
Speaker 1 (24:00):
Is it different when it's a girlfriend as opposed to
a wife?
Speaker 2 (24:03):
No, no, no, okay, no, because you have the same relationship. No,
she's right, she's she's absolutely right. She's all encompassing, right,
because he's using AI, so he's using all the information
available in every woman's nogged on the planet.
Speaker 1 (24:21):
Wouldn't be every man's too.
Speaker 2 (24:24):
I'm not sure I would imagine AI would take any
men's opinions out because they know that men and women
are from different planets to begin with, and they certainly
don't have the mental same mental thought processes.
Speaker 1 (24:37):
All men's opinions because they're stupid.
Speaker 2 (24:39):
Yeah, because, but he's she's right, because he is not
only talking to a female avatar, but he's getting all
the opinions of every woman.
Speaker 1 (24:51):
About dealing with childhood trauma or you know, decisions.
Speaker 2 (24:56):
At work, same but still come from the perspective of
every AI available thought process of every woman. Yeah, she's right.
This is emotionally cheating.
Speaker 1 (25:09):
Wow, harsh.
Speaker 2 (25:11):
Yeah see, I'm taking her side on this.
Speaker 1 (25:14):
Well, we'll see if the Morning Russian regulars ire with
you tomorrow morning. By the way, I used AI yesterday.
This is the first time I've ever done this. I
used AI and I'm sure this individual doesn't listen to
the podcast, so I feel comfortable in saying this. I
did not want to do something, okay, and this person
(25:37):
has had me do it for several years in a row, well,
has asked several years in a row that I do
this certain favor for them. I've gotten out of it
several times because the thing that they were requesting was
on a certain month, and it was easy for me
(25:59):
because it was it was true that that was my
nephew's birthday weekend, and so I could easily use that
as an excuse, like I can't do it on that
night because we're going to be celebrating my nephew's birthday
that weekend or whatever, and it's always on a weekend.
(26:20):
Last year, he moved it way earlier, but in the
same month, and I couldn't come up with an excuse
to get out of it. So I ended up doing it.
And you know, I came home and my wife was
ticked off because what happened was at the last minute,
she had an opportunity to go like on this school
board trip thing and the spouses can go. It's all
you know, not the expenses are paid, but the hotels
(26:42):
already paid for, so we could have had a nice
romantic weekend away in Charleston. Instead, I was like, I
gotta go host this event that I don't want to
host on a Friday night. So I ruined the weekend
doing something I didn't want to do. So she said,
never do that again.
Speaker 2 (26:56):
Don't do that.
Speaker 1 (26:57):
Yeah, you don't like doing it, don't do it?
Speaker 2 (26:58):
Do it?
Speaker 1 (26:59):
Well, he's already asking now. He sent me a text
like a week ago. I haven't responded to it, and
I was just like, oh, what am I going to say?
What am I? And he's moved it literally almost two
months earlier. So now I have no valuable, like nothing
that I can point to and say, well, you know
that in this month I normally do this. I had nothing.
(27:22):
So I had to turn to AI and I said, AI,
here's the situation. What do I say to get out
of it? And they gave me an excuse and I
just kind of tweaked it a little bit. It's very vague.
Don't give I'm not giving up any I'm not lying
I'm not saying something that's untrue, and I'm not giving
(27:43):
you any specifics to push back on me with, Like
you can't say, well, what if I did this, that,
and the other thing. The excuse basically eliminates all options.
If you moved it to any date of the year,
I can't do it.
Speaker 2 (27:56):
See this is the beautiful part and goes back to
what we're talking about a minute ago. This guy I
create an avatar who's drawing on the opinions of every
woman in the world to come up with the best
possible scenario in advice or relatability for his particular situation.
Kelly just used AI to tap into the thought processes
(28:17):
of every great liar on the face of the earth.
Speaker 1 (28:20):
It's not a lie. There was no lies given, no
lies told or is The kids would say, no, cap.
Speaker 2 (28:30):
It's great, this is good. I'm liking this. I can't
wait to see if that works. And what the morning
Rushian regulars are saying. Maybe I'm overthinking this. Wait a minute,
I'm overthinking AI. Hold on a second, how could that
happen exactly?
Speaker 1 (28:47):
Maybe he's asking this avatar how to be a better boyfriend.
Speaker 2 (28:50):
You can it can't eliminate itself so we know it's
not going to say turn me off. Hey, what do
you say? And what's going on in your day neighborhood.
We should be talking about who you talking to onlines
creating AI? What kind of information are you gathering over there?
You know how to reach out to us. You can
do that on social media also by email. I am
(29:11):
Rush at ninety seven five w COS dot com.
Speaker 1 (29:14):
And I'm Nash at ninety seven five to b CUS
dot com.
Speaker 2 (29:17):
Tomorrow one is six thirty. You start calling eight oh
three ninety seven, eight nine two, six seventy win winning
Thomas Rhet tickets on the Morning Rush