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September 8, 2025 • 12 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello, Killy Nash, Hello Jonathan Tomorrow Show Today, Tomorrow, Tuesday.
It'll be the ninth of September when we reconvene Morning
Russia regulars and we get another opportunity for you to
be there. It is a historic night for the Fireflies,
is the first time they made the playoffs. SEGREA part
is going to be a light. That's a reference to

(00:20):
this morning's word at the day.

Speaker 2 (00:21):
Hey, look at you, ty in.

Speaker 1 (00:24):
It's also Neon and Navy Thursday. So where's something Neon
fireflies and Navy colored? If you got it? Okay, Now
that's that's a city wide plead by the Fireflies. We
all become part of the celebration.

Speaker 2 (00:38):
Yes, we're all part of that. This we're going to
make history here in Columbia, and you'll be making history
with your free tickets to the game on Thursday, September eleventh.
We have a pair of tickets. I thought I knew
what this word meant, and I have been wrong. Ooh gosh,
not gosh, gosh.

Speaker 1 (00:58):
Gosh, gee. I'm going to go with just a relevant
to tacky.

Speaker 2 (01:11):
That's kind of where I was. But it's not. It's
unsophisticated and socially awkward.

Speaker 1 (01:19):
I can't. We're we're kind of leaning in the right direction.
But I guess it's more of a personal thing than
it was, like an item attachment.

Speaker 2 (01:26):
Yeah, socially awkward person is not like when I would
hear the phrase used in most of the eighties films. Yes,
I would have assigned it to tacky, Yes, but it's
really about their social awkwardness.

Speaker 1 (01:41):
What was that movie about the social awkwardness? It was?
It was an invitation at dinner? Was that what that
was called?

Speaker 2 (01:48):
Oh my gosh, I I kind of remember seeing it,
and the idea was like, invite an idiot to dinner.

Speaker 1 (01:54):
Invited the idiot at dinner. I can't remember the name.
We all mocked them. Maybe that was the name of
the movie.

Speaker 2 (01:58):
Invited idiot to dinner.

Speaker 1 (01:59):
It might have been. I know it was so uncomfortable
for me because I relatable carefully to the more socialist and.

Speaker 2 (02:05):
I'm assuming, if I'm assuming that they found out that
one of the morons they invited to dinner to be
a really lovable person, and when you know, they won
them over, and now we feel like.

Speaker 1 (02:17):
Thedio, I need to go back and watch it.

Speaker 2 (02:19):
Now, do you need to. I don't know if this
is really high on the priority list. I feel like
Jay Rush has many better things to do with his time.
But anyway, gosh tomorrow's word of the Day answers on
the Morning Rush Blog. Got a pair of tickets for
you to go see the history making first ever playoff
game in Columbia, South Carolina. We'd love to get you

(02:40):
into that. Other things that are on ninety seventy five
to b sos dot com right now. What else did
I have on the Morning Rust Blog? I thought I
know I had something. Oh, I've got a warning. I
had never heard of this, Jonathan. The kissing bug disease
is now in South Carolina. We do not know how
many people have it. We US know it's here. I

(03:01):
thought that wasna No, that's the kissing disease. This is
the kissing bug. The kissing bug is something called I'm
probably going to mispronounce it conaness bug. We know it's
from Central America. It's never been in the US before.

Speaker 1 (03:18):
Thank you Joe Biden.

Speaker 2 (03:20):
They're here in the millions now.

Speaker 1 (03:23):
Oh, we're dragging all kind of stuff across.

Speaker 2 (03:29):
You've now got this the disease that it will give
you is called I guess chagis c H A G
A s now. The reason the bug is called the
kissing bug. And it's not a small bug. It probably
looks like it's about a half inch and it kind
of looks like what I would call like a stink bug,

(03:51):
you know those books. It's what it kind of looks like.

Speaker 1 (03:55):
This is gross.

Speaker 2 (03:57):
They like to bite people on the face, and they
often will bite you when you're sleeping, and you do
not know you've been bitten. Now, if you've been bitten
by one of them, unlike a mosquito, which unless the
mosquito's got some sort of like disease in it, if
you get a normal mosquito bite, the only way you

(04:17):
would know is you don't have a little itch for
you know, maybe a half hour or something like that.
This you might not even notice anything. You might not
notice anything.

Speaker 1 (04:27):
I'm accord by the kissing bug and I won't notice it,
and it's on my face.

Speaker 2 (04:31):
The according to the Male Clinic, most will not have
any symptoms. If they do have any symptoms, they'll be
very mild. The problem appears ten to twenty years later.

Speaker 1 (04:42):
What yes, that is worse than shingles. That shingles lays dormant.
We know from the what is it measles, chicken pox,
chicken pox. This thing bites you and lays dormant in
your skin, whatever it put in there.

Speaker 2 (04:58):
And what happens, well, ten to twenty years later you die. What, Yes,
you experience irregular heartbeat and ultimately heart failure, sudden cardiac
arrest kicks in. You might experience trouble swallowing for a
day or two, You'll have massive constipation, and then you'll
drop dead.

Speaker 1 (05:17):
What the hell are you telling me?

Speaker 2 (05:19):
Joe Biden has brought a death bug into America.

Speaker 1 (05:22):
God buites me on the face. I don't even notice it.
Ten to twenty years later, I just dropped dead. How
do they know this because of the kissing bug?

Speaker 2 (05:30):
Because then when they do the autopsy, they'll say, well,
why did this forty year old man die? Oh? But
when he was, you know, twenty three, he was on
a camping trip and he got bit by one of
these things. Because it'd be unusual for a forty five
year old kind to just drop dead.

Speaker 1 (05:42):
I could have already been bitten it. I don't even know.

Speaker 2 (05:47):
And Los Angeles County there's currently forty five thousand people
being treated. Forty five thousand Americans didn't twenty years ago
know that know that they've been bitten. They think there
might be over three hundred thousand that don't know in
La County. Yes, and they've now discovered it here in

(06:08):
South Carolina.

Speaker 1 (06:08):
Okay, right now, there are cosmetology companies scrambling to come
up with the perfect makeup that's also a kissing bug repellent.
You'll be to buy that today for a million dollars
in ounce. And it says that if they're not making it,
we should be in a laboratory somewhere Kelly wearing white coats.

Speaker 2 (06:29):
It says, if you've come in contact with people from
Mexico and Central America, the bugs are likely with them.
And the more rural the area, the more they like it.
So it seems like a prime thing for chicken farmers.

Speaker 1 (06:46):
And for you know, this is a nightmare. This is
a nightmare. This is a nightmare. So I thought I
knew somebody going through a nightmare. I didn't even know
the state of Tennessee has a large population of brown
recluse spiders. But you're aware of that.

Speaker 2 (07:00):
No, my son got bit by one, but it was
in Saint Thomas when he lived there, and so he
was in the hospital for like.

Speaker 1 (07:06):
Ten days exactly. So the house that Janey bought, yes,
I think she's finding out. One of the reasons she
got such a great deals. His house was infested with
brown recluse spiders.

Speaker 2 (07:16):
So maybe set it on fire.

Speaker 1 (07:18):
Well, and then we built it. She ended up putting
those little traps out, the sticky traps. She put them
everywhere once the first one was seen. And they have
a violin on their back. That's the design. That's how
you know it's a brown reclue spider. I got a fiddle.

Speaker 2 (07:34):
Gotta have a fiddle in the band.

Speaker 1 (07:36):
Gotta have a fiddle. So she put these things, and
she brought in an exterminator to take a look at it,
and he said, well, if you put any traps out,
and she said, yeah. He's like, my god, look at
all these bucks. It even scared him. But she had
to have the insulation in her attic completely removed because
they were already nesting. There's a new insulation they spray

(07:56):
in that kills the existing bugs and wards off other
boards bugs from coming in. The spiders, and then there's
like ten other things you gotta get done. You have
to take all the covers off of your outlets and
your light switches, and you put in a powder behind
there because they like to go up and down and
it kills them when they hit the powder. I mean,
it was like five six thousand dollars to have the

(08:16):
house treated. But it was infested and she's already been
bitting a couple of times. What Yeah, but thankfully she's
not apparently highly allergic to it. I mean, this insect
thing is no friggin joke.

Speaker 2 (08:31):
Yeah, Jordan, if I remember, I got bit on the
ankle and there's still pretty big scars like where he got.

Speaker 1 (08:38):
Some people do not react to it. Well, yeah, that
could have killed him.

Speaker 2 (08:42):
He was only like eight years old, Yeah when it happened,
so it was a near death experience.

Speaker 1 (08:47):
Now that's an immediate kind of thing we're talking about.
It in sect that bites you on the face, You
didn't even know what happens, and then fifteen years later
you drop dead.

Speaker 2 (08:55):
Yeah, you go on a camping trip or something like that,
or perhaps I mean, you know, if you have like
woods near your house and you're just kind of sitting
out there and joining the.

Speaker 1 (09:04):
Day I'm always outside.

Speaker 2 (09:06):
Yeah, you might not notice, they say, you wouldn't feel it,
you'd see it, because it's a big enough that you
would notice that thing flying at you. But if for
some reason you weren't looking and it just came up
on the side of you, you wouldn't hear it, and
it could just land on you and bite you and
it sucks your blood and then it puts in some

(09:28):
sort of virus or something. And by the way, the
CDC has asked that we reclassify this disease as an
endemic right now because so many people are going to
be getting it here in the next few years. Lord,
so be aware. It's in South Hero It's We're not
alone on that. By the way, thirty two states have
now reports of it. So again, thanks for the open
border policies.

Speaker 1 (09:49):
Love it.

Speaker 2 (09:52):
We got a morning rush of regular who has been fired.
And she was fired from her babysitting job. First and
I on the job as a babysitter, and let me
just read from her email. I do a lot of
this type of work, but this is the first time
I was at their home. They were out for the
night and I ordered door Dash do. When they got home,

(10:13):
they asked who came to our door? We saw on
the camera it alerted us that somebody came to the door,
and I said, oh, I had ordered some food. And
she was like, you can never ever order food and
allow strangers to come into our house and deliver things
and things. Anything could have happened. And I was like,
are you kidding me? And she's like, you know what,

(10:34):
we don't want you in our house because you make
it a more dangerous place to be by ordering food.

Speaker 1 (10:40):
Look, I get the argument, but if you're that, if
you're that staunch in your rules, you really ought to
lay those out before you let the babysitter stay at
the house by yourself.

Speaker 2 (10:49):
Well that's what she will do, and that's what And
so the babysitter now former babysitter, is thinking the same thing,
but the mom is thinking. Everybody feels this way about
their kids. Do not invite strangers to the house.

Speaker 1 (11:02):
Is that why DoorDash is so popular? Because nobody ever
orders anything?

Speaker 2 (11:06):
Well, I guess mostly they walk down the corner, they
go to college kids, don't they For the most part,
I haven't never ordered.

Speaker 1 (11:13):
My home and blossom, I'll be at the great maybe
at the draint great.

Speaker 2 (11:16):
So how do you feel about that? Is that an
unspoken because that was not even an option ten years ago.
Ten years ago, I mean, I guess you could add
the pizza delivery guy, but that would have been about it.

Speaker 1 (11:27):
Oh, this is it? Okay, this is good. I feel
like an idiot now I would have ordered door Dash
to come to my house.

Speaker 2 (11:34):
How stupid would you have been upset fifteen years ago
if she had ordered pizza and they got the pot
smoking weirdo at your front door?

Speaker 1 (11:43):
What are you saying about that morning Russia regulars?

Speaker 2 (11:46):
Why did I just denigrate all pizza delivery drivers? And
I know many that are are great people.

Speaker 1 (11:52):
Of course they are. Hey, what other unwritten rules do
I not know about? Somebody gotta write them now for me.
Maybe I got a tattoo him somewhere on my risk.
I'd be like a quarterback. I got to take it
the play every time. What are you saying? Ninety seven
eight nine two six seven at three nine seven eight
nine two six seven. That's the number used to wind
tomorrow morning with chit with chat about all kinds of
fun stuff you tell us tomorrow in the morning. Rush
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