Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello, killing ash Hi, there, Jay Rush, It's tomorrow show
today Tuesday and more tickets for Rodney Atkins coming for
the Big Red Barn Retreat, new location, new venue, as
they say, for the concert to raise money for the
Big Red Barn and their associated programs including Warrior Path.
Speaker 2 (00:19):
Yeah, and we want to give you a four pack
of tickets to that show. If you'd like to win,
very simply go to the Morning Rest Plug at ninety
seven five WCS dot com. What's you talking about tomorrow,
Fan Todds.
Speaker 3 (00:32):
Fan Todds, Oh, I know what this is.
Speaker 4 (00:35):
When you don't have one of those cushions to put
in your seat and you have to sit on the
hard metal.
Speaker 2 (00:41):
It's fan Todds.
Speaker 3 (00:43):
Fan Todds. You get that in your your your your honor,
your honor, your.
Speaker 2 (00:48):
Yeah, don't believe Jonathan. If you want the four pack
of tickets for the November eighth concert at the Township,
you need to know that fan Todds means a state
of extreme anxiety, nervousness or distress. You're suffering the fan
Todds man.
Speaker 3 (01:06):
Interesting, I wonder what they order that one.
Speaker 2 (01:08):
I do not know, but the answer is on the
Morning Rest Blog. So you can just go there at
ninety seventy five to b sos dot com and that'll
we we do suggest you do it and look at
it before we we You know you don't want to
be driving, can't pick up your phone.
Speaker 3 (01:24):
We were talking about.
Speaker 2 (01:25):
That this morning. We've got a lot of people getting
in trouble now.
Speaker 4 (01:28):
Absolutely, brand new law in place now for the first
six months is only a twenty five dollar fine. After
that it becomes one hundred bucks. Your second offense, it's
two hundred dollars and four points. Remember what the third
offense is.
Speaker 2 (01:41):
But how am I going to like Google check my
wife in an argument? When I'm driving?
Speaker 4 (01:49):
You'll let the pull. Oh you can't just do it
while you're at a red light. That's illegal. You get
to pull into the parking lot of whatever. Then when
you're legally part you can use your hand.
Speaker 2 (02:01):
We've got a survey out, Jonathan. The vast majority of
Americans Merrick, Almost seven sixty nine point three percent of
Americans say they could be just as productive in four
work days as they are in five. The majority of
them say I do find myself actually killing time.
Speaker 4 (02:23):
So I cut out the twenty percent of slacked during
the regular five day work week, and I do it
in four with the promise that I won't slacken off.
Speaker 2 (02:30):
Well, it's the same amount of work. It would be
done in four work days, and of course that would
come with less pay. Sixty nine point three percent of
Americans they were for that. We're all for it, given
one day less pay, four day work week. No, that's
(02:51):
the answer all my responses. I guys, I would you
be I think that's a fun question to put to
the people. Would you be willing?
Speaker 3 (03:02):
We're got to put it to the people.
Speaker 2 (03:04):
Give it to you, brother, We're gotta put it to
the people. You lose a day's pay, but you also
get it. You gain a day for the weekend. You
get a three day weekend. And which one do you
would you rather have off? Would you rather have the
Friday off or would you rather have the Monday off?
You love these questions. I think I'm a more of
a Monday off kind of guy than I am a
Friday off kind of guy. Sundays tend to think.
Speaker 4 (03:29):
I think I'm more of a Friday because a Monday's
just a Monday is the first day of the work week.
So now all you're doing is delaying your Monday to Tuesday.
But if I get to start the weekend early, now
I'm into it.
Speaker 2 (03:41):
Well, and we've changed I mean biblically, I mean it
was Sunday was the first day of the work week
and Saturday was the Sabbath. So we've been taking the
first day at the work week off for a long time.
And if you look at certain calendars, they still have
Sunday listed as the first day of the week, which
always throws me off because it's supposed to be Monday.
(04:02):
What are you all doing going old school on me?
But yeah, why do you want to be all Jewish? Yeah?
Stop being all Jewish and stuff with me? So yeah, great,
So we've got that story that we can bat around tomorrow.
(04:22):
But we also have a question, which is a dang
good question. I don't have the number in front of me,
but I laughed out loud when I read it last week.
It said, well, first off, there was two versions of
the story. First version talked about the engagement ring that
(04:44):
Travis Kelcey gave to Taylor Swift cost thirty three, five
hundred dollars, and they showed you the store that he
bought it at. I said at the time, that is
a shockingly low figure.
Speaker 4 (04:55):
I thought it was surprisingly low giving the budgets an
availability of cash.
Speaker 2 (05:00):
I don't know if his money, I don't know if
his management updated the story or whatever. But like the
next day People magazine I think it was had an update.
It was now a half million dollars.
Speaker 4 (05:11):
Oh okay, now we're starting to get into the ballpark now.
It's still smacks of commercialism. Not to say that that
would be something unusual for either Taylor Swift or Jason
or Travis, but to have the jewelry store, like pointed out.
Speaker 2 (05:30):
Oh, I thought it was ironic. His father's gonna mess up.
His father said too much. In that story, Dad says
that Travis actually wanted to wait and do something special
for the engagement, but Taylor was getting antsy, and so
he just had to rush the proposal in order to
(05:53):
satisfy her, which is why he did it in his
backyard rather than some more elaborate thing that he was
hoping to pull on. You didn't say all that. Oh
oh she was getting antsy. Yeah, that's what Dad said. Dad,
that was between you and me. You're supposed to shut
your mouth. Zip it. But the other story was, and
(06:13):
I really would like to see the actual figure because
it it shocked me how how funny it was because
they were the headline. I think it was one hundred Okay,
let me just I really want to look it up,
because it became they became like the second richest power
couple on the on the planet. This merging of their
(06:37):
two a little high. Yeah, well, the number one is
going to be Beyonce and jay Z, who are worth
something like some ridiculous amount of money. Here we go,
is this it Yahoo dot com? This might be it
right here, ultimate celebrity couples, blah blah blah according to
this Ah, they're not giving me the figures in this story. Anyway,
(07:01):
I don't think I'm mistaken when I say Taylor the
Taylor Swift Travis Kelsey combined net worth in the headline
was like one hundred and sixty nine point seven million dollars.
That's their combined networth networth. Then if you looked deep
(07:24):
into the story, it said Taylor Swift currently worth one
hundred and sixty nine point two million dollars.
Speaker 3 (07:34):
Embarrassing.
Speaker 2 (07:35):
So he's bringing, you know, a couple of million into
the to the equation. He seems to have blown it
all on those ridiculous Gucci outfits anyway, yeah, price, So
in reality, if this was a rich guy, Taylor Swift
is a rich woman. If this was a rich guy
getting married to I mean, he's not poor, but if
(07:59):
you know what I'm saying, but he's not wealthy. He's
not like I can buy a team kind of guy.
I'm still playing for the team. I'm not the kind
of guy who could buy the team. Lebron can buy
the team. Yes, mister Kelsey is nowhere near that type
of wealth. Is he in fact is a gold digger?
Speaker 4 (08:21):
Oh my god, those words just came out of your mouth.
Speaker 2 (08:27):
Did Travis Kelsey orchestratum potential marriage based mostly I'm not
saying exclusively, but mostly off As Jonathan Rush likes to say,
her checkbook, She got her own checkbook, and her checkbook
is fat. How about this? If Taylor Swift was a
(08:49):
struggling singer songwriter who is playing at coffeehouses throughout the
Southeast right now, and she met him and they had
a great would he in fact date her if she
was bringing in an annual salary of fifty three thousand
a year.
Speaker 4 (09:07):
The article on the Atlanta Constitution, which Kelly says no
longer exists on the internet.
Speaker 2 (09:12):
I think it was originally published in the La Times,
and then it was quickly retracted and has now been
erased from ever being on the interwebs. Like any of
the early COVID science that you would have seen, that's
all gone. It's not on the internet anymore.
Speaker 4 (09:28):
That would beg to differ that in fact, or would
actually show that he is a gold digger.
Speaker 2 (09:38):
I think you got to put that gold digger on him.
By the way, speaking of gold digger, did you see
Bill Belichick's girlfriend?
Speaker 3 (09:46):
Not last night?
Speaker 2 (09:48):
Bill Belichick's girlfriend, and I forget her name. Now, she's
twenty four years old. And look, Bill Belichick broke up
with his quote unquote girlfriend of I think sixteen years
to get with this girl, which should have married the
other girl anyway, after sixteen years at some point, I
mean he was like sixty eight sixty nine years old
(10:10):
when he breaks up with her, so that means they've
been dating since he was like fifty. So she put
up with a lot of his craps as the head
coach of the she of the of the Patriots, and
then she gets nothing, and the new girlfriend somehow has
gone from her mom and dad make nothing basically. I
(10:32):
mean they're like middle class, Like she's a nurse and
he's a mechanic or something. She now has a real
estate portfolio valued at like eight million dollars. Wonder how
she built all that? Do you think just really good brains?
Speaker 3 (10:45):
'de Nancy Pelosi check out.
Speaker 2 (10:47):
The brains on her. But again, to Bill Belichick, eight
million dollars is not a whole lot of money. I
mean he was making like fourteen million a year, so
you know, he's lost months of his salaries over the
last two or three years to this girl, plus whatever
dinners and those types of things cost them. But she
(11:08):
has now launched a new company. Now I don't know
what the investment is from Big Papa Bill, who is
fifty years older than her, but Big Papa Bill is
going to have to write a check to launch this
thing that's going to sell keychains, necklaces, earrings. They're all
going to be gold and the name of the company
(11:28):
is gold Diggers.
Speaker 3 (11:30):
That's good, good for her.
Speaker 2 (11:32):
Do you think that a lot of people want a
keychain that says gold Diggers on it?
Speaker 4 (11:37):
No, I'm good I'm glad that she's recognizing who she
is in marketing and trying to market that. Not a
lot of end users for you for that.
Speaker 2 (11:46):
I mean she's trying to be ironic, I guess. And
what do you think that those two even talk about?
I mean literally, I've got kids, I've got grandkids, your age.
What are we going to talk about here? We started
dating when you were a junior in college.
Speaker 4 (12:05):
Maybe this is maybe she's a huge college football fan
and that's why he went back to you win.
Speaker 2 (12:10):
See did you see they banned her from practice? No? Yes,
the athletics director have thrown her off the property. She
is pushy, she is very Oh you could tell that.
Speaker 3 (12:22):
Did you see the older I love the interview part.
Speaker 2 (12:25):
We're not talking about that. That was a CBS This
Morning interview. And if you get the wide angle shot
from over Bill's shoulder, you can see her just snap up,
not talk. Well, I'm just wondering how you too met,
not talking about it, not talking about that. I was like, oh,
I guess we're not going to talk about that.
Speaker 3 (12:40):
Tony.
Speaker 2 (12:41):
Yeah, why who the hell are you? You're still a child?
Speaker 4 (12:47):
Can you imagine if I'm at the table on Thanksgiving
and I make some comment, any comment at all, and
one of my grandkids says, we're not talking about that.
Speaker 2 (12:58):
I mean, think about it. You're not even close to
his age yet. The girlfriend is significantly younger than Janey,
significantly Like.
Speaker 3 (13:09):
She's younger, but she's Lee's age.
Speaker 2 (13:11):
She's Lee. So you've got you've got a female lead
that you're now in a romantic relationship. In about seven
years from now, that's when you're gonna launch it. What
the flip are we talking about? Wow, that's insane. She
is a gold digger and she's doing well. She's digging well.
(13:34):
She's I mean, she's got eight million dollars portrait.
Speaker 4 (13:36):
Smarter than the other girl. Did the other girl get
Bill to make a commitment to her company. Did the
other girl start building a portfolio of financial investment properties
or otherwise? No, she just was She just was fine
with staying at the house and going out to dinners.
Speaker 2 (13:51):
I like Bill what you got now? I like being
around Bill, I like it, I like his company. I
like Bill. Well, that's you're gonna need it a little
bit more than that. That is, by the way, there's
another side note. This has nothing to do with anything
we're talking about, and I know we're out of time.
But the Cowboys Netflix series called like the Gambler and
the Cowboys or something like that. They say in the
(14:14):
and he does not push back that. Jimmy Johnson, the
coach from Miami who then became the head football coach
at the Cowboys, told his wife, imagine this, I am
more committed to winning than I am to you, and
for that reason, we need to divorce. He asked for
(14:38):
a divorce and so that he could be completely committed
to the Cowboys. How insane is that? And they showed
his wife like there's like a photo of them smiling together,
and I'm like, I can't even imagine what she would
have thought, Like, you're kidding, right, I don't.
Speaker 3 (14:55):
Think they even raised an eyebrow. Yeah, maybe she was.
Speaker 2 (15:01):
He'd already coached the national championship at Miami.
Speaker 4 (15:04):
Maybe she'd was surprised he said it out loud, but
plainly she had already live with that attitude.
Speaker 3 (15:09):
This is nothing new.
Speaker 2 (15:10):
Yeah, I wasn't even planning to move to Dallas with you,
Like I was gonna stay here at Miami. No no, no, no,
let me give it. Give you half of the money
right now, let's just call it and that way, I
don't feel obligated to call you or wish you a
happy birthday. And that was too much of a burden
for him. He had and like and then Jerry.
Speaker 4 (15:29):
Jones holidays been together as the fourth of July because
all the other major holidays are during football season. So
I'm not asking much here.
Speaker 2 (15:37):
Well, and Jerry Jones said, I asked Jimmy Johnson to
give it all. He gave it all, and I appreciate
That's what That's what I'm looking for. That's commitment. Yeah,
that's commitment. You just abandon your family. You people are
in the way of my success. So no more talking.
You're gone.
Speaker 3 (15:56):
You know, I don't know.
Speaker 4 (15:58):
Every time I hear football player or a football coach
and talking about the commitment level and stuff, it's so
embarrassing to mankind.
Speaker 2 (16:08):
I hate to even bring it up again. Okay, but
you will.
Speaker 3 (16:12):
But I will.
Speaker 2 (16:15):
Because Florida State fans are way too cocky.
Speaker 3 (16:18):
Right now, let me just bring this up.
Speaker 4 (16:20):
Oh so Bobby Bowden's wife, Now she's talking.
Speaker 3 (16:24):
He's not even in the room.
Speaker 2 (16:26):
Of course not. He's recruiting. Oh okay, she's doing an interview.
Speaker 4 (16:30):
Yeah, and she's talking about life as a wife of
a head football coach.
Speaker 3 (16:34):
And family life. Yes, yes, yes, And she goes on
to describe.
Speaker 4 (16:39):
And one of the things she points out is that
at one point, uh, there's a daughter who I'm going
to guess at the time was three two three years old.
The phone rang and the daughter said Dad, and they
just laughed and laughed. They thought it was the funniest
damp thing ever. I'm like, oh my god, lady, if
you said that about all, he said that about me
(17:01):
in an interview and I was alive to hear it
anywhere on this planet. Okay, if I was on Mars
man it coming back.
Speaker 2 (17:10):
That's a thirty more journey, can't make it.
Speaker 4 (17:14):
But if she said that about me as a father,
I don't even know how I would ever walk out
of the room where I was currently. I think I
just stay barricaded in there. I would never show my
face in public again.
Speaker 2 (17:27):
Well, I'm not a Clemson fan, but what Dabbo's done
with his kids, including putting them on scholarship to be
the flipping holder.
Speaker 4 (17:35):
He was the kid's the first one to get a scholarship,
and everybody said Dabo is probably happy about that because
it's saved in college money.
Speaker 2 (17:41):
You don't think Dabo's got college money anyway.
Speaker 4 (17:46):
Now I can point to the stands and give you
a couple of faces whose dads can't afford college money,
but they're sending them anyway.
Speaker 2 (17:52):
But I mean, I think it's great what he's done
to be around his kids. I think it's great. I mean,
it's amazing what Shane Beemer's done to me. Shane Baemer's
son was right look about a Will Muschamp fan, because
he was never nice to me. He was always mean
to me when I saw Will Muschamp. But Will Muschamp
quit his job at Georgia in order to move up
to be near Vanderbilt so he could be near his son,
who's pin. You know, that's a great So I mean
(18:13):
there are I mean, now maybe he missed out. No,
but you know what, let me just bring it back
to Will mus Champ again. Will Muschamp had that amazing
house on Lake Carolina for those of you who remember
seeing it as like a recruiting videos and whatnott. It
was an incredible house. But that's not where he lived.
He was there on the weekends for the most part
because he wanted to spend more time with his kid
(18:34):
down here in Forest Acres. His kid was going to
one of the schools down here somewhere.
Speaker 3 (18:38):
He lived right over there across from.
Speaker 2 (18:42):
Behind the fresh Yeah, yeah, whatever that is. Yeah, he
lived over there, and he lived in like a regular
plain boring house. And that way he could go to
the kids high school football practices, and yeah, he could
do all these types of things. It didn't take him
forty five minutes to an hour to get into town.
And I just you know what, that's great. It must
be tough to be a football coach. And that's not
(19:04):
the only job boards stuff, but the dads who make
the sacrifice to try to find a balance and be
successful in a career where it takes eighty five ninety
hours a week, that is the minimum base load for
the job, ninety hours minimum. And yet I'm still gonna
make time to go to a football game for my kid,
(19:24):
or I'm gonna go Sue's practice, or I'm gonna take
my daughter to a dance, those types of things. Salute
to those guys. It's got to be incredibly tough. You'll
be a father and a football coach and on that level. Yeah,
Bobby didn't bother with the with the father part of Pendent.
That's how you got Tommy.
Speaker 3 (19:42):
Bout He just laughed and laughed, and so.
Speaker 2 (19:44):
You got Tommy about it can be a mid level
coach for Clemson.
Speaker 4 (19:47):
Wow, Well he had to win a record when they
kicked his ass out, got to spend a lot more
time with the kids. What a great story though, for Dabo.
What an incredible story for Dabba. Dabo literally had the
conversation with his wife, according to the interview I've heard,
Okay literally had a conversation with his wife when all
(20:07):
that came down, and he told his wife, look, we
maybe packing because I have they just fired a head
coach and then firing of the coaches.
Speaker 3 (20:14):
I'll be coming.
Speaker 4 (20:14):
I think I'm coming home here in a less than
an hour, and you know we'll figure it out. Sure,
And he walks in the office and he becomes the
head coach introm but a head coach, and then what.
Speaker 2 (20:26):
An incredible story I'll never forget. I love Dabo. I
love Debo's story. We had Corey Miller here working for
sports Dog fourteen hundred at the time, Gamecock legend. Corey
Miller and I said, well, what do you think chances
the Carolina Compson game this year? And he said, no
chance comes and wins zero. I said zero. He said
(20:51):
zero chance because the substitute teacher does not have a
shot at beating the professor, the head ball coach, the
old ball coach, depending on who you talk to, is
not going to lose to some young pip squeak substitute teacher.
Speaker 3 (21:07):
I thought he was a commercial real estate agent.
Speaker 2 (21:11):
I thought he was a life insurance salesman. Dabosweeney was
a life insurance for a while, I think too. But anyway,
he lost and they all said let's give him the job.
That's all it takes. He lost to the substitute teacher
and launched his career. Yes, dabos Sweeney is a great
American success story. Totally. Yeah, nothing you can say about that.
(21:36):
Don't need to put the holder on scholarship. That is
one of the more stupid wastes of a scholarship. If
I was a Cumpston fan, I'd be upset about. I mean,
there's like, you know, I was talking to a guy
who does play by play. I won't say for which school.
It's not comes into South Carolina. But he does football
play by play, and he was talking about you could
literally take almost any fan out of the stands and
(21:58):
within two weeks teach to be a great holder. That's
how That's how easy that skill set is. If that's
all you're practicing, it's not like the kid's going to
get the laces any straighter. Laces out, Dan, I got it, Okay,
laces out. Anybody can learn this skill set. This is
not you don't have to be physically gifted, you don't
have to be mentally gifted.
Speaker 3 (22:19):
It's the pressure of the position, that's all.
Speaker 2 (22:22):
Never have we ever seen anyone get a scholarship simply
to be the halter.
Speaker 4 (22:28):
No, not even Shane. All right, So anyway, it's going
to be an exciting season for both teams. Absolutely, I
got I should know the answer to this because I
usually do follow them. I don't even know what Coastal
did this past weekend. I think they opened up with
(22:49):
a much lesser opponent.
Speaker 2 (22:50):
No, I thought they lost. I mean, I mean we're
running later. We got to get on that meeting. But Coastal,
I mean, look come up real quick, Carolina. Not football,
that's what I want to not baseball. Coastal Yeah, they
took a pretty good shellaking forty eight to seven, but
that was it for so that's an acc team Virginia
(23:12):
got them. So this week they got Charleston Southern, then
they move on to East Carolina. That's probably gonna be
a really tough game in South Alabama. Then Old Dominion
that'll probably be a tough game. Yep, Louisiana Monroe.
Speaker 3 (23:24):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (23:24):
Coastal Carolina seems to be in a little bit of
turmoil this weekend.
Speaker 4 (23:27):
We got the bulldogs of South Carolina State. They taking
all the game Cocks, and tomorrow, like we told you,
win at six thirty, we get into is Travis Kelcey
a gold digger? That's good tomorrow morning on the Morning
Match