Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello, Killing Nash. Hey, it's Tomorrow Show. Today we get
to talk about Monday, Monday, Monday Monday. After we celebrate
a big, big victory. Who's we in Missouri?
Speaker 2 (00:11):
Oh, you're thinking the game Cocks are gonna They're like
two touchdown underdogs.
Speaker 1 (00:15):
Did I bet the four oh one k? No? Not,
As of this time on Friday morning, I haven't bet
the four oh one k on that game.
Speaker 2 (00:24):
You know what, you are a wise man. Don't bet
the four oh one k. Look, it would be great.
And as a Gamecock fan, I have had in the
Shane Beamer era plenty of times where I thought there
is no hope going into a game and then we
are stunned by what happens the turnabout. But just looking
(00:45):
on paper, like for example, even with Leonora's Sellers, where
the one hundred and seventh ranked offense in America, Missouri
is the sixteenth ranked defense. I look at that and
I say to myself, uh oh. I also look at
the fact that Missouri doesn't even need.
Speaker 1 (01:03):
A quarterback to win.
Speaker 2 (01:04):
They rush the snot out of the ball. I mean
they they rushed for something like literally as a team
in the last game, it was like three hundred and
fifty yards. They can just run the breaks off teams,
and so that means that they get long possessions that
you just can't get the ball back, and then you've
got to be pressing and you're going to have to
try to pass to stay into the game. Certainly because
(01:26):
we have a horrific run offense right now. I just
don't see any upside to this. And again, you're going
into Coola Miszoo where we even with our best teams.
Speaker 1 (01:38):
We're talking to Kelly because you're helping Clemson fans come
to the conclusion somebody ought to spot me fifty. I
bet the four oh one k.
Speaker 2 (01:45):
You will bet the four oh one k, now, Clebson,
If I'm a Clemson fan, you better win big this Saturday.
I mean your seventeen point favorites at home now. But
I'll also warn you that the the quarterback for Syracuse,
I forget the kid's name. Last week he threw for
four hundred and fifty yards, which is like almost an
(02:07):
NCAA record. Now and you say, well, he was playing Colgate.
Big whoop. First week of the season, he threw for
over two fifty against Tennessee at Tennessee so he can
pick apart defenses so dangerous.
Speaker 1 (02:22):
And I don't know how.
Speaker 2 (02:23):
Clemson could possibly cover a seventeen point spread with the
offense they're currently running, because that would mean that you
would have to get them to score negative three points.
Speaker 1 (02:31):
Another Clemson making sure that professors watched their lip, but
the fans better watch your lip. Dabo's already done told you,
Oh is he? I didn't see that.
Speaker 2 (02:39):
Dabbo's warning the fans against booing and things.
Speaker 1 (02:42):
I don't know if he's warning them against booing. No,
he said he was booing with them.
Speaker 2 (02:46):
That's what I thought. Yeah, if you've had a lot
of money to go to these games, so let them
know what you think when you're excited, get excited.
Speaker 1 (02:54):
You know, I get it. Debo is standing on a
pretty good record up there. So he could have a
bad season and survive, or could he Because we've seen
before winning teams, winning seasons, and coaches get booted out
of Clemson University. They get a history of that.
Speaker 2 (03:07):
Well, Dabbo's got a unique history. He's gonna be Do
they have like a Hall of Heroes or something like that.
He'll be remembered.
Speaker 1 (03:14):
That might be a new installation a new facility to
be built, the Hall of Heroes.
Speaker 2 (03:20):
Yeah, I was thinking about the Ring of Legends or
whatever the Cowboys have. Yeah, I just feel like, you know,
Dabblos Sweeney in you know, seventy years or fifty years
or whatever, they're gonna remember him much like Danny Ford exactly.
He'll be talking better, He'll be better than Danny Ford.
He will be the greatest Clemson coach they've ever had,
(03:41):
without questions. And so it takes a lot to replace
a legend. I mean, you're not gonna he's gonna leave
whenever he wants to leave. I feel like, I mean
he could go you know, three and nine, probably three
or four years in a row before it really started
getting the hot seat.
Speaker 1 (03:57):
Yeah, he's already overshare out of Frank Coward? Did I
say that out loud? Oh?
Speaker 2 (04:03):
What if we got like, what could Dabbo have other
than a rock?
Speaker 1 (04:08):
I was thinking, is there something else in Death Valley
we could bring back that he could use as a doorstep, doorstep,
a doorstop?
Speaker 2 (04:14):
Do we only call it Death Valley because Frank Howard
got the rock from somebody else who brought it home
from Death Valley?
Speaker 1 (04:21):
No? Now, I don't know the origin of the term
Death Valley and how it came to be known as
Death Valley, but I do know that the rock was
brought back to Frank Howard because one of his friends
was in Death Valley and he brought him a rock,
which Frank Coward used as a doorstop and then told
somebody the throat of the damn thing away. I'm not
(04:43):
sure if they actually threw it away or not, but
then he had give me that rock back. So that's
when he brought the rock and made them make the commitment.
Speaker 2 (04:50):
Oh my gosh, I just looked up the history of
how did it become known as Death Valley. Well, we
have to credit Presbyterian College head coach Lonnie McMillan, who
coined the term after his team had suffered many many
losses there, feeling it was a place where we just
go to die.
Speaker 1 (05:10):
Rode to three hundred.
Speaker 2 (05:11):
So he apparently coach McMillan from Presbyterian was unable to
put up much of a a fight for against the
Clempson Tigers, as I wouldn't expect Presbyterian to be able
to put up much of a fight against them, and
so he's the one who said, it feels like every
time we go there, it's just going into death Valley.
Speaker 1 (05:31):
All right, well, there you go. There's the origin. I
did not know that, and it is in South Carolina history.
There's something I didn't know. But there'll be a lot
of things I'll learn as we get ready for SC
two fifty.
Speaker 2 (05:41):
Oh my gosh, the year he made that clebration, I guess.
I guess coach McMillan ought to watch what came out
of his mouth because coach McMillan said that before the game,
and that game clemps and beat them seventy six to nothing.
Don't don't put that in to the universe. We can't
win there.
Speaker 1 (06:01):
It's like loud.
Speaker 2 (06:03):
You don't even think it other way to talk about it? Nothing,
you can pretty much bet. I don't know if he
had a Oh you think you bet on the game,
Coach McMillan bet the four to one K. I bet
you we can't cover. I bet you we can't get
within the twenty one point spread that you have on
this game.
Speaker 1 (06:18):
Now, you clem some fans. You got a point. You
gotta spot me seventy six and I'll bet the four
o one K. Hey We're gonna give you a chance
to win a six thirty on what you're talking about
brand new prize. But I say brand new prize is
it's another opportunity for you to win because Jason Alding
is going to be here next weekend in Charleston at
the Credit one Stadium.
Speaker 2 (06:38):
He's with Nate Smith and Ray Lynn. It's the full
Throttle tour at the Credit One Stadium Saturday night to
the twenty seventh, and we play what you're talking about
Monday morning at six thirty. I did not look up
the pronunciation. I was planning to do that and I
got dragged into something else. So I'm gonna go with
cacothas cacothas c ac o E t h e s.
(07:02):
I'm gonna pronounce that as cacot this until I go
and listen to Julian pronounce it on YouTube.
Speaker 1 (07:09):
This exists only in the animal Kingdom. I say animal,
I mean farm animals. This is an agricultural issue and
it has to do with a bree paralysis in livestock.
Speaker 2 (07:22):
How in the world do you come up with these?
Speaker 1 (07:24):
That's what it is. Don't question it.
Speaker 2 (07:28):
I mean this is Jonathan Rush's ability to come up
with definitions that are and sometimes not even close. Is amazing.
That is a that you are a brilliant man.
Speaker 1 (07:40):
I'm going to insist now that I get my definition
and the real definition you can use either the win.
Speaker 2 (07:45):
Oh if people listened and what was the something about?
What with a farm animal and a what was it?
Speaker 1 (07:52):
Aan? They know what I'm talking about. We all know
what we're talking about it. We're afusing it with something else. Yeah,
it's a fascist something. It's a fascist. We all know
what we're talking about here.
Speaker 2 (08:03):
Uh coquote this again not possibly The proper pronunciation is
the irresistible urge to do something that is inadvisable. Oh,
you just can't stop yourself. You know this isn't going
to turn out well, but you just do it anyway.
Speaker 1 (08:19):
This is usually something that strikes twenty two to twenty
five year old males.
Speaker 2 (08:25):
He strikes a lot of young females too.
Speaker 1 (08:27):
Well, that's true. Yeah, they get more so prevalent with
the females these days.
Speaker 2 (08:30):
They end up dating the You know that that guy
is a loser and a bum and he will never
account into anything. I know, but I just find him
so hot.
Speaker 1 (08:40):
He's a bad boy, he's a bad boy.
Speaker 2 (08:42):
He's gonna rob for my parents, probably, but I can't
stop myself. For me, It's more like, you know, in
the old days I had, I really struggled with like
ice cream, and I would say to myself, don't go
to the freezer.
Speaker 1 (08:57):
Don't do it, don't do it. I hear that that
that quart of chunky chocolates calling your name.
Speaker 2 (09:04):
Whatever was in that freezer was getting eaten. And not
only that, but this is the thing I used to do,
which is probably I don't want to say I'm unique
in this. I'm sure there's other people who struggle with
sugary foods and they do some bizarre things. But because
I couldn't thinking about the way I'm saying it now,
it just sounds like I've I was insane. I felt
(09:28):
like it took too long to actually eat the half
goawn ice cream because you got to dig the spoon
in there and it frozen. So I'd put it in
the microwave and just put it in there for like
thirty seconds, and then it's very easy. Now you're just
scooping up like the scoop would be almost the size
of like one of those like round scoops on top
of an ice cream cone, and I would just shove
(09:49):
that in my mouth and then I could just go
right and by the time you got to the bottom,
because it wasn't melted at the bottom, it was more
on the top, it would slowly be melting as you
worked your way down, so you could polish off like
a half gawn on ice cream in like less than
five minutes.
Speaker 1 (10:01):
If you did it right, then you get a lick.
The knuckle muck. Knuckle muck ought to be a word.
Speaker 2 (10:05):
I don't know what knuckle muck.
Speaker 1 (10:06):
I was reminded of the knuckle muck last night. I
was at a gathering that guy said, every time I
think of you, I think of the knucklemuck. What is it?
And I think it was It's not actually a word.
I believe it to be one of Uh who was
the guy that did the Snakelet's Rich not ch Oh,
Rich Hall, Yeah, Rich Hall, Yeah, Rich Hall did the knucklemuck,
I believe is one that we created on the morning
(10:27):
rush when you're dipping ice cream and you you know,
you scoop it so hard you end up with it
on your knuckles.
Speaker 2 (10:33):
Oh, pick it off, you get knuckle muck. That's a
good one.
Speaker 1 (10:36):
It's it's all trashy and trash out for me. I
just it's trashy and speak it trash out. You know,
I don't people ask me about stuff we settled the
radio years ago that they still remember for whatever reason. Knucklemuck. Okay,
i'd forgotten we talked about that, but in fact we did.
And Kelly we get the knuckle buck because he puts
his ice cream in the microwave, makes it soft enough
(10:58):
for him to get when he takes a spoon. It's
hand all the way in it.
Speaker 2 (11:01):
Well, no, to me, that's the way you would you
you would not get the knuckle muck because I could
just take it from the side and scoop it. You know,
it's it's soft. It's like it's so easy with the
knuckle muck. I imagine, like you said, it's hard and it's frozen.
You got to kind of push in there.
Speaker 1 (11:14):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (11:15):
I didn't want to have to work for my ice cream.
I liked my ice cream easy. He likes it like
a sweet Spotsha think about how fast I was. It
was too much work to scoop the ice cream. That's
how you're about to ingest roughly three thousand calories of
sugar and fat.
Speaker 1 (11:34):
But it's trying to scoop it.
Speaker 2 (11:37):
No, no, I mean preferably I could get it to
where it was almost melted. I don't want it quite
but basically, like a milkshake. Could I just pick it
up and pour it into my my neck hole? That
was what I was going for. But anyway, thankfully I
no longer suffer from that cacocis of the inability to
stop myself to do something inadvisable.
Speaker 1 (11:57):
All right, you got the word that, you got the answer.
You can read it off the morning rest blogging, and
you get the Jason Aldean tickets for next weekend Saturday
night or is it Saturday night?
Speaker 2 (12:05):
Saturday night in Charleston. And you know, look, if you win,
I'd probably book a hotel room in absolutely make it
a whole weekend down there. That's that's a fantastic opportunity
for you to get down there. Did I have anything
else in the lifestyle way move?
Speaker 1 (12:19):
We got to do a world dilemma?
Speaker 2 (12:21):
Well, yeah, I was trying to give you one more
thing here before I go. This is an interesting thing
for me. Seventy eight percent of women claim that Girls'
Night out is their number one way of recharging. This
is particularly true of mothers. So when you as a husband,
(12:45):
here from your wife or we'll say the baby mama
is because you have these spous like relationships so common
today that she needs to go out with her girlfriends
and you need to babysit. They apparently, according to not
just the survey but some scientific data here, that is true.
(13:05):
And on average, they need once every twenty two days, wow,
every twenty two days, three weeks. Basically, they need to
reconnect with their with their pals, their friends. What do
they call each other besties?
Speaker 1 (13:21):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (13:23):
Possibly some cocktails, some wine, something like that. And while
men don't look at it that way, that's the way
they look at it. That's the way their mind processes it.
And so that's an interesting statistic again just pointing out
the difference between males and females. If I hang out
with a bunch of guys, great, If I don't hang
(13:43):
out with a bunch of guys, great, I could sit
in my I could sit all by myself, I feel
like forever and be okay like when they but I
mean obviously I couldn't. But you know, that's why they
have solitary confinement. But if you ask me to sit
by myself for two or three days, I'm actually kind
of enjoying that. But the women, they need to get
away from the kids.
Speaker 1 (14:04):
I believe that's true and.
Speaker 2 (14:05):
Into the adult lifestyle.
Speaker 1 (14:09):
And even you need to find it. We need to
find a way to facilitate single moms. Single moms need
it more than once every three weeks. I think like
every every other week, you're going to give them the
time out. That's a that's a hard.
Speaker 2 (14:20):
Job, absolutely absolutely. It never stops, all right, and we
and that brings us to our moral dilemma. I guess
she's a single mom, and I guess he's a single dad.
Because the moral dilemma involves our lady friend who listens
to the morning rush and she says that she goes
and brings her kid to the bus stop. I guess
(14:42):
you walk the kid to the bus stop. It's been
many years since I've been to a but and I'm
guessing if you're walking your kid to the bus stop,
they're pretty young, because I think by what middle school
at the latest, the kid's going to be telling you
to buzz off.
Speaker 1 (14:54):
I'm not well. Wintertime too. You got to drive them
there because it's gonna be cold. You need to sit
in the warmth. Why you wait on the.
Speaker 2 (14:59):
Bus is that where we're at now is a society.
Speaker 1 (15:03):
I see a lot of that happen.
Speaker 2 (15:06):
In the car waiting for the bus. Anyway, in this instance,
she walks her kid again, I'm assuming a young child
to the bus stop where there's another young kid who's
there often with his dad, who she has detected. She
(15:27):
doesn't tell me how that he is divorced. So we've
got a single dad and a single mom, it sounds like,
and she says, the dilemma is should I let him
know that I kind of have a crush on him?
Let him know. I'd be very open to the idea
(15:49):
of going out on a date, obviously rife with possible problems.
Whenever you put yourself out to ask somebody on a date,
that's always a problem.
Speaker 1 (16:00):
This could be equated to like dating a coworker, because
you're going to see this person at the bus stop.
Now this didn't work out, you're still going to see.
Speaker 2 (16:06):
Him, you mean, oh, especially if you go out on
a couple of dates and then there's some sort of
impasse where you found out that you know, he's a
huge Joe Biden fan and you're a Trump fan or
something like that.
Speaker 1 (16:18):
Did you get to see him? Yeah? That's the thing
about dating inside a social circle or a work setting,
is that Now if this doesn't work out, now we
got the awkwardness coming. But do you do you cast
that to the wind?
Speaker 2 (16:31):
Well, and then she's also.
Speaker 1 (16:32):
This abandonment and you run towards him.
Speaker 2 (16:34):
Well, and she's up the ante. I think here a
little bit, Jonathan, because she's pointing out that the kids
may feel awkward. Wait a minute, what are you doing?
You're going out on a date with her? Are you
going on a date with him and we're going to
have babysitters together?
Speaker 1 (16:48):
Well?
Speaker 2 (16:49):
Yeah, I mean, do I have to start calling so
and so on my brother?
Speaker 1 (16:52):
Now? Do I? Is that my new daddy? What's going
on here? Good? Oh? I love Now the awkwardness has
been introduced to it all. It's not you you managing
the situation. Now you got to manage two different relationships.
The kid, yes, and this possible relationship or worst hit,
not a relationship.
Speaker 2 (17:13):
Leave it alone.
Speaker 1 (17:14):
That's my advice. Yeah, leave it alone.
Speaker 2 (17:16):
Don't bring it up. And look if he brings it up.
That's different. But you know, well, I don't know younger people.
You know, the ladies are certainly more aggressive than they
were in our area.
Speaker 1 (17:26):
No mom is going to agree with this, because they're
going to say, you got to protect your kid first
and foremost, and you're going to put him in an
awkward position. Don't do that. Now, I'm trying to think
as a woman.
Speaker 2 (17:35):
Well, what about the women who say love is so
hard to find after the age of thirty, and especially
it's hard if you're a single mom. Here's a guy
in the very similar situation, and perhaps God created this
opportunity for the two to become one. You guys both
need each other.
Speaker 1 (17:51):
The bus driver brought you together. You're on the same route.
Speaker 2 (17:55):
There's that possibility.
Speaker 1 (17:57):
Okay, okay, this is why I said dilemma. I'm sure
she's thought of all these ramifications.
Speaker 2 (18:02):
Oh, she's probably laying awake at night running all the
angles and what could go wrong, what could go right?
Speaker 1 (18:08):
Where?
Speaker 2 (18:09):
Oh my gosh, And he's got a beautiful house.
Speaker 1 (18:10):
I could move into there, and then he could bring
up to both to the bus stop and I wouldn't
have to do that.
Speaker 2 (18:16):
I could sleep in Oh my gosh, this is the best.
Speaker 1 (18:20):
Now the enticement is there? Hey, what are you thinking
about that? You tell us it's the same number you
use when you want to call it win. It's a
three nine seven eight ninet two six seven eight or
three nine seven eight w cos you had a Clempson
Families to spot me seventy six. I'll bet the four
oh one.
Speaker 2 (18:34):
K when you say spot you seventy six? Which game
are you talking about either? All right, so we I'm
good with that. And then what's going on in your neighborhood?
We should be talking about what's happening over there at
your bus stop. Get you see parents looking at each other?
(18:55):
You let us know social media.
Speaker 1 (18:56):
You can also email us I'm Rush at ninety seventy
five WCS dot com.
Speaker 2 (19:00):
In ninety seventy five to b c US dot com
Speaker 1 (19:02):
When we reconvene Monday on the morning, Rush