Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello, Killy Nash, Happy Monday.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
Here we go.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's tomorrow show today, tomorrow be the last day is July?
Speaker 2 (00:07):
Then we had it?
Speaker 1 (00:08):
No, no, no, no, no, Is that right? I always say,
you know something I was never able to remember as
a kid, thirty days has whatever that little rhyme was,
we always did.
Speaker 3 (00:17):
I never learned that rhyme thirty one days? Am I wrong?
Now there's thirty one days? Okay, Okay, August first will
be Thursday.
Speaker 2 (00:25):
That's right.
Speaker 1 (00:26):
Okay, So we're wrapping up July heading into school time.
We got the big tax free weekend coming up this weekend.
A lot of parents planning to go out and get
their back to school shopping done.
Speaker 3 (00:36):
Oh that's right, take advantage of that new clothes.
Speaker 1 (00:39):
Yeah, new clothes without tax. All those schools supplies no tax.
Speaker 3 (00:45):
Well, according to this story, you could, I mean, I
guess in South Carolina for the most part, although I
did hear about a dress code going in in one
maybe middle school or high school in Richland too. I
don't know about anybody else. I'm sure those parents know
about it. But according to the headline, Alabama School District
band's popular teenage apparel with strictest dress code in the US.
(01:09):
And then one of the high schools sent home a
picture of all the things that your kids cannot wear
next month when they return to school. How do you
feel about this? And I'll give you some of the Well,
we'll start at the bottom, work our way up. No
jeans with holes above the knees. So if you want
(01:30):
holes in your pants, you can show off your cankles. Okay,
no body. The word they're using is con confitted, which
I've never heard of that word con f I t ted,
but it's basically body hugging clothing, dresses, skirts, shirts, whatever. Guys,
(01:54):
we can't wear this. No midriff or short shirts. Your
stomach must be covered at all times. No bonnets, no bandanas,
no headbands or sweat bands, so you can't even wear
like your wristbands if you're an athlete. No hoodies, no hoods,
(02:15):
no hats, no caps, no sunglasses, no crocs, no open
toe shoes, no slides, no bubble slides, no pajama pants,
no tights. I think I've covered them all there. Yeah,
the pajama pants for me. I think we should just
(02:35):
outlaw that relation.
Speaker 1 (02:36):
We really had to make that put that on the list.
You got people wearing pajamas the school.
Speaker 3 (02:42):
Have you not seen the typical University of South Carolina class.
I mean it's pajamas, slidess.
Speaker 2 (02:50):
Sunglasses, the form fitting yoga pants. None of those anymore.
Speaker 3 (02:54):
Gone. Yeah, all tights are banned. I feel like most
younger people are looking to dress sexy. They're dressing like
they want to be in bed. They don't ever want
you dress like you've got the flu and you're sitting
on the capook. Yes, that's the way they most of
(03:15):
them want to dress these days. But again, for those
of you who want to be exposing your midrift or
your thighs with your holes in the jeans, all that
is banned. I like it.
Speaker 1 (03:27):
I get the open toe shoe thing. That's a safety issue.
I think the crocs I don't really understand.
Speaker 3 (03:34):
Because it's just another form of being lazy. We're going
to force it.
Speaker 2 (03:38):
See.
Speaker 3 (03:39):
I think during COVID we got into an era where
it was acceptable. We were sliding towards that, but I
think COVID accelerated it where people dress for comfort rather
than to impress. Like there was an old saying dress
for the job you want, not the job you have
and people would you know, if you subscribe to that,
(04:03):
you might be wearing a suit and tie to a
job where you were, you know, not expected to wear
a suit and tie, and you were trying to be
like Michael J. Fox's character what was his name, Alex P. Keaton,
because you were trying to be the president of the company.
And so I'm dressing like I am the president of
the company. I'm not I recognize that, but I'm behaving
(04:26):
as such, and eventually that will come true. These people dress,
like I said, as if they're all sick, and I imagine,
you know what, you dress like you're sick, you're going
to act like you're sick. I remember when I was
a kid, my parents told me, I got to take
a shower when I'm sick, and you've got to get dressed.
Even if you're spending the day at home, you're going
to put on your school pants and your school shirt
(04:48):
and they're going to lay on the couch wearing that,
but you're going to be dressing up.
Speaker 2 (04:52):
I didn't remember doing that.
Speaker 3 (04:53):
No, that was a rarity, but they were right after
my shower, when I got dressed, I felt better. I
always said, not good enough to go to school.
Speaker 2 (05:02):
Yeah, can't even pay to the second half.
Speaker 3 (05:04):
But I did feel better.
Speaker 1 (05:05):
I thought this was just the evolution of the slide.
When you know people would call you out because you're dressing.
Come on, don't dress, don't dress up for school. We're
slacking off over here. I thought this is the evolution
of the slackers. We got down and now to crocs
and pajama bottoms with a bare mid drift and a
cheap T shirt with a rip in it and jeans
(05:27):
ripped up well.
Speaker 3 (05:29):
According to the school board members and some of the
quote unquote educators that spoke, a stricter school dress code
will force or allow students to face fewer distractions while
they're learning. There are no plans yet to introduce school uniforms,
although they all agree that would solve most of the
(05:50):
problems instantly.
Speaker 1 (05:52):
Right, so we could reverse the peer pressure a dressing down.
So now we just got to come up with a baseline.
When I'm not landing of yes, what's acceptable?
Speaker 3 (06:02):
Well again, I get anything that doesn't. They didn't come
up with what's acceptable. They came up with with is
not acceptable. So you can figure out, like, okay, I'll
give you an example when I was a kid. And
again we're going back not only to the last century,
but the nineteen eighties. In the nineteen eighties early eighties,
things called parachute pants were very popular. So there's nothing
(06:28):
prohibiting me in this dress code from wearing parachute pants
or creating my own pants out of tinfoil. I could
come to school in tinfoil pants that I have created
in order to stand out as a unique individual, or
I could buy some. You know, it doesn't say you
can't wear high heels, and nowadays we've got guys wearing
high heels. You could wear nine inch high heels. You
(06:52):
could dress like your Gene Simmons from Kiss according to
this dress code.
Speaker 1 (06:58):
Well, you couldn't wear the form fitting pant, but you
could have the platform shoes.
Speaker 3 (07:02):
Yeah, those boots that Jean Simmons wore where he'd be
like ten feet tall.
Speaker 2 (07:06):
Because he's wearing humps stilt boots.
Speaker 3 (07:08):
Yeah, he'd have like this, they'd have like studs or
something all over the sides of him. Doesn't say I
can't wear it, that's true.
Speaker 1 (07:16):
Hey, we talk about this similarly every time it's back
to school time, because this is when parents go out
and pay way too much money for pants or whatever.
Speaker 2 (07:24):
The kids want.
Speaker 1 (07:25):
They give them what they want, and you got to
make sure it's even on the list of what they
can wear.
Speaker 3 (07:30):
Well, that's in Alabama right now. I would like would
you as a parent or maybe even a student. I
don't imagine a lot of students are up listening earlier
to the morning rush. They're probably sleeping in these days.
We'll catch you again in August. But if you happen
to be up, what do you think of this idea
of strictly limiting what you can wear? Because, like you said,
(07:52):
the blue jeans are overwhelmingly on fire popular. Right now,
I'm in church. I'm at the amount of young ladies
wearing holes appear to go all the way to the
special section. I'm like, are you really wearing that? In church?
Speaker 2 (08:12):
I could see your ass.
Speaker 3 (08:15):
I almost saw more than that. I mean, it goes.
I mean, I don't know what kind of underwear you
have on, but it's it's getting pretty close. And you know,
there's just all kinds of problems with these types of outfits.
I like the idea. It's like the educators said, of
giving less distraction. I don't know how much of it
like less distraction it is for the women. And this
(08:37):
is a I mean again, it sounds sexist because it
is sexist because I truly believe that men and women
process information differently. Men, from what I've been taught and
my own personal experience, are visual creatures. We absolutely we
respond to visual cues. And if you're wearing something that
(08:58):
is suggests, that is going to go into the guy's minds.
If they're especially when they're hitting puberty, they're fourteen years old,
they see a fourteen year old girl wearing something like
you know that exposes a part of them or gives
the implication that they might be open to a suggestion
or an idea. That's all they're going to be thinking about,
not I mean, and I understand they can reel it back,
(09:19):
but a lot of them don't, and they become obsessed
with that individual why she's wearing that outfit. I think
that will help them. I don't know how much it
helps the women. Do the women really feel distracted because
the guy is wearing holes in his pants? I don't know.
I know girls have that puppy love and those by
the way, side, note.
Speaker 2 (09:40):
This is not a problem for girls.
Speaker 3 (09:42):
Although I mean maybe there's a apparently a lot of
Olympians are starting what are those things called OnlyFans pages?
Speaker 2 (09:52):
Amazingly so yes.
Speaker 3 (09:54):
And they were talking about an Olympic diver for England
and he's twenty one years old and he just started
his only fans page. He was talking about the I
guess that the swim and dive teams. I know you're
an amateur allegedly, yes, but the support has not changed
in twenty years for the Olympic or dive people. So
(10:18):
it's twenty eight thousand dollars a year. That's all you get.
You got to figure out a way to live off
of that while you're working full time towards winning a
gold medal or whatever. Well, when he got to the Olympics,
lot of female attention because he's got an eight pack,
yeah he is, and he's got the Doe eyes so beautiful.
(10:38):
So he started an only fans page. It's ten dollars
a month, I guess. And they said it's loaded with it.
Speaker 1 (10:44):
You got to strike while the iron is hot, brother,
they're talking about you internationally now.
Speaker 3 (10:48):
He says he won't do full frontal nudity, but he
will do the behind like you see him without his
swim trunks and all that sort of stuff, and it's
women are signing up for it. Now. I'm sure there's
a lot of gay guys signing up for as well,
but he is crushing it. And he says he's shocked
at how many women are reaching out to him because
they're falling in love with the only fans account. So
(11:10):
maybe our stereotype of the women has become outdated as
we've all rewired our brains forty years or so, that
a great the consumption of what we'll call triple X
content is apparently skyrocketing in the female community. Younger females
are becoming addicted to it younger and younger and younger,
which back when we were young, I don't think females
(11:34):
even were exposed to it. We found it for some reason,
always in the woods. You'd always find it, like never.
Speaker 1 (11:41):
A convenience store of the woods, but to find all
the magazines.
Speaker 3 (11:43):
They were always spread out amongst the leaves in the woods.
And then there you are ten years old, going what
it was crazy? I don't know, the seventies were crazy, iha,
what else we got? Should pickleball be an Olympic sport.
Speaker 1 (12:00):
Don't know how you could say no. I mean the
world's falling in love with it. You would think that
the viewing for pickleball competition would be at an all
time high. Everybody's got pickleball courts in their neighborhoods now.
Speaker 3 (12:12):
I you know I would if it was up to me,
if I'm the Olympic Sport guy. Not only is pickleball
not a sport, I'm kicking out a lot of other sports.
I'm kicking out BMX, I'm I'm kicking out all of these.
I don't want to say non traditional, but these X
games they're all gone. I'd even kick out tennis. I
love tennis. Kick it out. It's not an Olympic sport.
(12:34):
Golf not an Olympic sport.
Speaker 1 (12:36):
Look at the popularity of pickleball. For Pete's sake. Everybody's
into the pickleball craze. Why not put it on television.
That's what they want to see, This what they want
to talk about. Obviously they're into it.
Speaker 3 (12:45):
Getting back to our last conversation, porn's real popular too,
But we're not having a sport out of it. We're
not making an Olympic sport at.
Speaker 1 (12:52):
Least it is in the Olympic village if you exactly
giving out giving out medals over there.
Speaker 3 (13:00):
By Either way, Coco Groff posted something on Saturday, I
guess and if those are not familiar with Coco, she's
one of the world's top female tennis players and an
American God bless her. She claimed, I shouldn't say, she claimed.
She documented that the that the female dormitory rooms that
(13:23):
they were given slept ten per room but only had
two bathrooms.
Speaker 2 (13:31):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (13:31):
And so she said, all of the tennis players who
had enough money, which apparently a lot of them do
because they're pro left they left the Olympic villages because
they're like, how is ten women with two bathrooms and
we each got to take a half hour to forty
five minutes to get ready, We'll be here all day.
(13:52):
So they went and got their own hotel rooms. But
that seems a bit crazy. And also if there's ten
people sleeping in there, if this intimacy thing is.
Speaker 2 (14:00):
Correct, what guy designed this? I'm surprised.
Speaker 1 (14:04):
Protest automatic as soon as you walk in the room,
they just turn around, walk right back out. We can't
stay here ten girls and two the bathrooms.
Speaker 3 (14:13):
Yeah, but I'm also wondering, is that part of the
trying to eliminate the sex thing, because there's so many
women who would be able to see you or hear
you as you're having your intepations. They said something about
the beds or made a cardboard. But then I heard
something I think it was Friday or Saturday. They were
talking about They're called the anti sex bed, but they're
(14:37):
very high tech. They're sturdier than a regular bed. And
then the mattresses. I guess when you come in, they
have you lay down on a mattress and then they
decide which mattress is best for you. Interesting, so you
get a great night sleep. I thought an anti sex
bay would be like a hammock.
Speaker 2 (14:55):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (14:56):
Then Coco Groff said that the bed sucked and that
she had to go buy a mattress topper and have
that brought in. She should have just gone to a
hotel room. She's a millionaire.
Speaker 1 (15:08):
Hey, I remember seeing a headline pop up on my
iHeart radio app over the week one of the coaches
was found dead in the Olympic village.
Speaker 3 (15:16):
Hadn't heard that one.
Speaker 1 (15:17):
I hadn't seen a follow up on that.
Speaker 3 (15:19):
I think it was Team Canada got kicked out of
the Olympics for soccer because and they were apparently like
the defending champs. They were caught using drones to record
other teams practices, and so they kicked all the coaches out.
(15:40):
I don't know, I mean dead at the Olympic village.
I remember during the World Cup a reporter died. You
remember that during that day. That was kind of crazy
not I mean like forty eight years old type of guy.
So it was kind of out of left field. And
I think he had like a Originally they thought it
was COVID, but it was something else. I guess they
(16:01):
got him.
Speaker 1 (16:03):
Hey, what's what do you feel about back to school?
What you got planned? And do you like the idea
of doing the strict code or what? Have you personally
told your kid you can't go to school wearing that.
Your kid was going to walk out the door wearing that,
and you drew the line. I don't care if the
school says it's okay or not. You're not going to
show up in your pajama bottoms over there.
Speaker 3 (16:25):
Well, you know, I'm sure my mother told me that
she used to do it in the fifties, that she
would have her clothes at her friend's house.
Speaker 2 (16:34):
Oh, and go change.
Speaker 3 (16:35):
And so I'd walk out of the house dressed one way.
My father would approve, right, I changed into whatever I
want to wear. So, I mean they've been doing that
for if that was the fifties, Yeah, goodness, gracious, that's
what seventy years ago.
Speaker 1 (16:48):
What's going on in the neighborhood we ought to be
talking about. You reach out to us on social media
by email. You can do that in Rush at ninety
seven to five you cos dot com.
Speaker 3 (16:56):
By the way, it was the Samoan boxing coach who
died at age six of a heart attack in the
Olympic village, Eh Saturday. It looks like I'm Nash at
ninety seven five ws dot com.
Speaker 1 (17:06):
And you can always tomorrow and we start talking, You
start talking. It's eight o three nine seven eight ninety
sixty seven nine seven eight w COS on the Morning Watch.