Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello, Kelly nash Yo, Yo, yo yo. It's tomorrow's shoe today,
Tomorrow's already Thursday, Sahi, t This weekend is fine. This
week is fine. By heading into the weekend.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
Yeah, and hopefully the weather changes, because right now it
looks like Saturday is going to have rain in the
afternoon and early evening. We don't want that. We don't
want it for the rodeo. We don't want it for
the football games. Is Clemson playing at home this week?
Great question. I haven't looked at the Clempsons. Is anybody
following Clemson football anymore at this point? Or they're just
(00:32):
wait until next year? I mean, we got one more
loss till we go to wait till next year. Game
Cocks lose to Kentucky, it's wait till next year. Time.
Let's say Saturday Clemson another noon kickoff. Oh, actually that's
October fourth, so they're on a bye week and then
they return with a road game at noon at North Carolina. Now,
(00:54):
if you can't beat North Carolina, then it's wait till
next decade.
Speaker 1 (00:58):
Absolutely, So we'll wait to see if Bebo will be
booing as well.
Speaker 2 (01:06):
Good lord, he's booing himself.
Speaker 1 (01:11):
Hey, tomorrow is when we give you the first opportunity,
and yes, now we can say it. After the big
announcement this morning, Eric Church is coming two shows Greenville
and Charleston.
Speaker 2 (01:21):
Free the Machine Tour with Ashley McBride next spring in
South Carolina. March seventh, he'll be in the North Charleston Coliseum.
April third, he'll be at the Bonsecuz Wellness Center that's
in Greenville, Nice Arena. Tickets will go on sale to
the fan club nine nine tickets will go on sale
(01:43):
to the general public the rest of you riff raff
on October third, but you can even buy him or
excuse me, win them before the fan club can even
buy him. So tomorrow morning we'll have what you're talking about.
The word of the day. Nit like to nitify something.
(02:04):
That's what I thought it was. And then at first
I was like, what it sounded like, nit, But it's not.
Speaker 1 (02:09):
It's nidation. Yes, I'm drawing a blank over here. I
can give you a book. Excuse me, almost cursed. Even
on the Worldwide Web, you can curse on this pot.
Speaker 2 (02:21):
You could have the freedom of speech. Brother, power to
the people. We're not going to kimdle you here. No
we'll just go to the answer. The answer is the
act of building a nest. Now, I'm assuming it's usually
used in terms regarding birds or maybe even don't don't
like snakes have nests, But I guess people could actually
(02:45):
say that, I'm, you know, building a nest at home,
my home. I'm this is I'm currently in my nitification era.
It's more of a female thing in that regard, but yes,
the nitification continues tomorrow, Jonathan, I know Hallmark is your
favorite channel.
Speaker 1 (03:02):
Oh my god, Sally had one of those things on
yesterday and I'll walk in and out of the room.
Speaker 2 (03:08):
Well, bigger news. Hallmark's getting bigger. Hallmark has expanded, as
you know. They've got the Hallmark Channel, the Hallmark Plus,
and I think they have some other Hallmark network as
well now. But that's still not big enough. So the
announcement comes down this morning. More rom coms are coming,
(03:31):
specifically for Netflix. Netflix users in the US beginning next
month will start seeing a Hallmark series called The Way Home.
Then in February of twenty twenty six, which will be
here before you know it. Sure you will be able
to start watching their Hallmark Valentine's themed moment Oh, that
(03:52):
will be a huge cash register ring for them. Yes,
and then you got the Netflix Christmas movies will some
of them will be Hallmark movies starting there. I mean,
how much Hallmark can we have? We can't have too much?
Love Kelly.
Speaker 1 (04:08):
I know the one she was watching yesterday, Some guy
was talking to another dude. Because I'm now I've come
off the channel, she said, Okay, find something else, and
now I'm going through the guy.
Speaker 2 (04:17):
But I'm still having to listen to the audio.
Speaker 1 (04:19):
And it's a guy talking to another talking to a
girl about what kind of floral arrangement he should buy
for his friend, who's a guy, for his birthday. And
I'm like, oh my gosh, was.
Speaker 2 (04:33):
This friend of the softer persuasion got to be? Because
I mean, why would any to give you flowers? Because
I'm like what.
Speaker 1 (04:41):
She said, would you ever buy Kelly flowers for a birthday?
I said no, If I did, I know there's an
ass kicking coming.
Speaker 2 (04:48):
Do you remember the lady who used to work here.
I won't say her name, but miss Nope and Miss
Nope was at an event once where we were honoring
teachers of the year and we had flowers as part
of the prize. I forget what the real prize was,
but the I mean, that was a small part of it.
(05:11):
And again, it's not stereotypical to say that about ninety
percent of school teachers are female. That's just traditionally a
female job. So the guy who had won from w
COS was a guy. The WCOS Teacher of the Year
was a guy that year, and he couldn't make it
to the event, and he told us in advance, I
(05:32):
can't get there. He had some sort of conflicting schedule
thing or whatever. So as the event is wrapping up,
Miss Nope said to me, can you get me his address?
And I guess I could probably try to find it,
And what do you need it for? We've already we
already got him the money, and she said, well, I
(05:52):
wanted to make sure he got his flowers. And I
just kind of laughed and I said, oh, okay, and
I was just going to leave it at that, and
she said she got indignant. Oh my gosh, of course
she did. Why would you laugh? Do you don't think
that men like flowers? And I just, again, I'm trying
to go away from it. I was like, I don't
(06:15):
think most guys really care about flowers now, And I
started to turn my back and she said, has anyone
ever given you flowers before? And I said, I don't
think I've ever dated anyone who would have given me
flowers before. And she said, well, maybe that's why you
don't appreciate it. The guys that I date love it
when I give them flowers. And I said, the guys
(06:35):
you date would and Gary David busted out laughing. And
I thought, for sure, because she have started making a
beeline for the individual in charge of human resources at
that time, and I thought I was about to be
written up.
Speaker 1 (06:50):
Wow, I can't remember anyone ever. Wait a minute, now,
hauled on a second. Did anybody send me flowers when
I was sick?
Speaker 2 (07:06):
For instance?
Speaker 1 (07:09):
Thankfully I have. I haven't been in the hospital for
an overnight stay.
Speaker 2 (07:14):
Well, when did you do the next surgery? That was outpatient?
They were like freaking moving your spinal cord and stuff,
freaking amazing what they could do. And you were outpatient,
in and out.
Speaker 1 (07:25):
So I woke up. I woke I didn't even realize.
You know me, I don't pay attention to these things.
You don't do an operation whatever, Just get in, I
got work.
Speaker 2 (07:33):
To do. So get in, get it done, and get
me the hell out of here.
Speaker 1 (07:36):
And I woke up and and they said, how do
you feel? I said, I feel fine, And I put
my hand on my neck because I was I was.
I thought i'd have a neck brace once They literally
just cut my neck open and replaced two discs in
my neck.
Speaker 2 (07:48):
This is left it on. They stitched it. I hope,
I said, Sally, I don't have She said, you're not
going to get one. Do you get a band aid?
What they did? Do anything for you?
Speaker 1 (07:59):
I got the liquiddid okay, and no, you get up
and he said, just do this.
Speaker 2 (08:07):
I'm out of surgery now. Five minutes. I'm doing my neck.
Speaker 1 (08:09):
I'm twisting it every way possible. It's amazing. He said, yeah,
when you can hearin it, you can get out of here.
I said, I'll use that trash can right there.
Speaker 2 (08:16):
Watch this. I'm here, y'all. No, I don't believe.
Speaker 1 (08:22):
At my home when I went for recovery, and Sally
was saying, yesterday, because we know someone else is going
to have the same surgery, Sally was saying yesterday that
I was only go out to work for one day.
I'm like Yeah, it's because I scheduled it wrong. Next
time I do this, I'll know how to not miss
a day.
Speaker 2 (08:36):
It's like the vasectomy. Got to schedule that for Friday.
After the show.
Speaker 1 (08:41):
I'm there, I'm out by four point thirty. Back in
the office tomorrow. Everything's fun. No, nobody sent me flowers
when I was sick.
Speaker 2 (08:48):
Nobody.
Speaker 1 (08:49):
If I went to the hospital, somebody sent me flowers.
I think we talked about this before. Somebody brought flowers
to some dude in the hospital.
Speaker 2 (08:59):
Again. I can't pass judgment on other people who may
appreciate getting flowers. I just don't find it to be
common amongst men to have a appreciation for the gift
of flowers, and.
Speaker 1 (09:14):
Flowers are expensive. Hell, for the price of the flowers,
you could have sent me a yetty with silver bullets
already packed in.
Speaker 2 (09:20):
I could have had a couple of Bruskies in there
for me. Now we're talking, all right, So, Jonathan, you
might be remember that AT and T had a data
breach back in twenty twenty four. Well, the time for you,
as an AT and T customer to get in on
the payout is closing. So apparently a was it an
(09:43):
AT and T customer. At this time, AT and T
has agreed to pay one hundred and seventy seven million dollars,
and the Kroll Settlement Administration Group says that if you
want in, uh, time is almost over. So you got it.
I mean, I'll put it up on the Morning Rest
(10:04):
blog so you have the link. But if you were
an AT and T customer last year, hopefully you knew
that that all your data was released. All your information,
anything that AT and T had on you, now it's
now in some sort of Russian monsters hands. But again,
like we always joke, if you're a taxpayer in South
(10:25):
Carolina is back in what was it, twenty fifteen, twenty fourteen,
whenever that big leak happened, all of our taxpayers in
South Carolina's information was released. Dear brother's maiden name, whatever.
You have a good bit of information over there on
you on the door the But the good news was
we got a year of experience, experience. The state paid,
(10:48):
so we paid well, but we paid for it as
a tax base, right, yeah, so we paid for the
security for one year. That's right. For the screw up
knowing that the.
Speaker 1 (11:00):
Dark web keeps all that information on a shelf for
about five years. Then they come after you. Now is
when they're using it exactly. That's when the dark web
really goes to work.
Speaker 2 (11:09):
But they don't get very much money. I'm always shocked.
Do you ever watch these like stories where they interview
people who were formally involved with this type of fraud
and they'll say, oh, you can buy Like I could
get Jonathan Rush's bank account number, cell phone, mother's maiden name,
and you know, social security number. I get all that
(11:30):
and it's like one hundred and fifty dollars Like what,
it seems like they could do a lot. I mean,
I don't know if I can. If I have access
to your bank account and your credit cards, I feel
like I could do a lot more than one hundred
and fifty dollars worth of damage.
Speaker 1 (11:46):
It wasn't explained to me from the fraud department exactly
what kind of egregious what's the word I'm looking for?
Speaker 2 (11:55):
Attack?
Speaker 1 (11:56):
Yes, the egregious attack. But it was it was enough
of them to close down one of my checking accounts.
And I'm still going through that nightmare now because a
lot of the things I had attached. I'm talking about
this a little bit yesterday so I want to get
into it again. But I'm still going through rearranging and
now setting up new financial information to the persons who
(12:19):
I normally make payments.
Speaker 2 (12:20):
To, which is a total pain in the butt.
Speaker 1 (12:22):
Oh my god, it's been. I thought I just saw
another one yesterday. I'm like, dad, coming, I forgot about
that one.
Speaker 2 (12:28):
Well, and it's good that once you get it done,
hopefully they don't leak it again. So hopefully there for
somewhat protected. Good Lord, can I change myself security number?
How long has it been since the DR I think
it was well, I mean it was before Trump ran
for president, and I'm I'm thinking it was like twenty thirteen,
twenty fourteen has been.
Speaker 1 (12:48):
It had very well been from that, Yeah, from that
batch of information that was released to the world Wide Web.
Speaker 2 (12:55):
Yeah, by now the experience protection has run out. I
have a LifeLock. Yeah, we have LifeLock. Well, not everybody
at I Heart, but I know a lot of people
do at iHeart because we get some sort of corporate discount.
Speaker 1 (13:07):
Or I did ask the bank. I said, it's interesting
that I had to find out about this by trying
to use the card and that was dyed and then
my wife got very upset because she was embarrassed apparently
at the grocery store. What do you mean my card's
been denied?
Speaker 2 (13:20):
Oh? She was on my phone quickly? Did you tell
her pride come up before the tall sugar.
Speaker 1 (13:25):
I don't work for the bank, but I will. I
know people that do. I'll call over there and find out.
Speaker 2 (13:30):
It means we don't have any money.
Speaker 1 (13:31):
I said, Dan, can you tell me what's wrong with
my account right now? Because my card's not working? Oh yeah,
we closed that account. Oh okay, well we look poor.
Speaker 2 (13:43):
That's what they're saying about me at the Kroger.
Speaker 1 (13:45):
And I said, well, why wouldn't you like give me
a heads up on this? And she said, because we
know that there are people out there who call and
pretend to be us. And I said, you're right. I
got one of those phone calls a couple of years ago,
and they almost got me. That guy was very convincing.
The con artist was very good that day.
Speaker 2 (14:02):
The con artists apparently are upping their game also in
those phone call things, where with AI they can now
replicate voices pretty well. They say, so you might get
a phone call from what's say, your your mother's or you.
(14:26):
Probably not your mother because they probably don't have a
lot of recordings of your mother, but perhaps your brother
or your sister or somebody like that, and it will
come from their phone number and so and then you
pick up the phone and you're like, hey, Donna or whatever,
and the voice on that phone will sound like Donna
pretty close, maybe not perfect, and Donna will say whatever,
(14:47):
you know, oh my gosh, you're not gonna believe what
happened to me, and blah blah blah, Yeah, I really
need five thousand dollars desperately.
Speaker 1 (14:55):
And it's a double edged sword because if you engage
in a conversation with someone you think to be somebody else,
there's actually just an AI voice. They're actually recording your
voice so they can duplicate it. Well, I mean they
call the bank, you use a voice stamp, because that's
one of the things they use.
Speaker 2 (15:10):
They use your voice identifier, well according to the identified
your voice, and they're replicating it. When the sixty Minutes
people did their special, they just showed these con people
going through Facebook. If you talked on a Facebook video,
they got you true so that that video could be
twenty years old and they got you it's amazing. They'll
just age it the forces of evil that we're working
against over here. Yeah, I don't know how anybody stays
(15:33):
safe in an AI era. There's got to be a way,
you know, like right now today, like thank god, my
phone will alert me if it's a suspected spam caller.
Somebody else has already done the hard work and said, oh,
this guy this number block it, it's spam. Well, so
(15:53):
now I get that alert. For years, we never got that.
I mean, for you people under the age of like
twenty two to twenty three, you wouldn't know that. But
in the olden days, you'd get phone calls from people
all the time, and you'd pick a Oh, I couldn't
even save numbers for a while, so it would just
be like a number, and I would recognize it as
my mother's phone number. Oh my mom. Okay, But if
it's you just pick up most phones because you don't
(16:13):
even know who they are, and you're like hello, and
then it would be like, hey, Kelly, this is so
and so with such and such, I'd like to talk
to you about such and such, and next thing you know,
you're stuck in a spam call. Yep, unless you had
the cojones to just hang up on them. Well, nowadays
you don't have to deal with that. In the future,
they're gonna have to figure out a way to alert
me this call may be AI generated. That would be
(16:37):
That is fantastic information, if you can, because I would
never answer that. It's kind of like now they're showing
you on Instagram, which I think is a fantastic thing,
especially for younger people who might be influenced by this.
A lot of the imagery that we're seeing videos and
whatnot that's AI generated, and so you're looking at and
(16:57):
so now it'll say this video is AI generated. So
you don't see you don't look at the guy with
the ten pack abs and go oh, I got to
do more work. He doesn't exist. No, he's probably got
a roll of fat an inch thick. You know what
I'm saying. That man does not exist. Either he's not
a human being or he's artificially he's aied his own imagery,
(17:19):
his own video to make himself look a better way,
either one but or both. Anyway, that's enough of that.
Now we've got a morning rush challenge. According to this guy,
and I think his sister is well, not his sister,
who was it. His friend. His friend told him, I
think good information, not bad. The information that his friend
(17:40):
provided him is that when you go to the delivery room,
most of the time will be you doing nothing. They
don't have you in the room with her. You are
sitting outside the room. You are just there doing nothing anymore.
Speaker 1 (17:58):
I remember the last two as we had I was
in the room doing nothing. I was sitting in the corner.
I was watching the news.
Speaker 2 (18:04):
Yeah, and that's what this guy said.
Speaker 1 (18:05):
He said as far back with John, because that's when
Saddam Hussein began his mark. So I'm watching the tanks
go across the desert. Sally's over there yelling. I'm like, hey,
keep it down.
Speaker 2 (18:13):
Keep me down. I got big news over here. So
he says, you know, his friend said he got bored
scrolling the internet for hours on end yep, and so
he said, quote, I just reading from the email. So
I'm thinking about bringing one of my portable game consoles
to the hospital, you know, since I'm not going to
be doing anything for hours anyway. I don't think there's
(18:35):
anything wrong with it. But my sister says that's a
bad look. I don't know I mean, is it a
bad idea for me to She's not going to know
what I'm doing. I'm going to say no, You're gonna
say no.
Speaker 1 (18:47):
I'm going to say no because and I was frustrated
by this until I had a conversation with David. David
loves gaming, Okay, loves it. Yeah, Now what you can
you can ask David about movies.
Speaker 2 (19:00):
Okay, never saw it? All right?
Speaker 1 (19:03):
Uh, instead of watching Tombstone for the fourth time, well,
who am I kidding?
Speaker 2 (19:09):
For the four hundred exactly, you could quote that movie
word for word, like scripture.
Speaker 1 (19:13):
Instead of seeking refuge and relief and relief by watching movies,
he does it by playing video games. So for him,
it's just it's just as entertaining and a form of
entertainment as me as watching the news or watching a movie.
It's just a different thing. So I would say that's
not unacceptable and literally, have you do nothing. You were
(19:36):
there for no reason other than they want to make
you this feel like it's a family thing. They're not
concerned about the family thing. Just make sure the baby's born.
Speaker 2 (19:44):
Well, this is a so I sold mind shift for
Jonathan Rush because the Jonathan Rush that I began working
with back in five would have mocked the.
Speaker 1 (19:52):
I would have mocked the crap, But after I had
to recognize this was happening in my own family, that
my son is playing video games as much as he
did when he was a.
Speaker 2 (20:02):
Kid and he's a father himself. Yes, yes, up two.
Speaker 1 (20:09):
But if he wants to take his disposable time for
entertainment and play a video game as opposed to watching
Tombstone or a Few Good Men or any of the
movies that you and I quote, Okay, that's fine, that's
your choice.
Speaker 2 (20:23):
I thought you would have said, well, you know what
I did when we were waiting for you to be born.
I read scripture and I prayed over you. That's how
I spent the ten hours waiting for you. But if
you think a better use of your time is to
play Donkey Kong, well, ladies, maybe we'll hear from you tomorrow.
(20:49):
Is it a bad idea for your daddy to be
sitting out there just fooling around playing what do they play?
Grand theft Auto? I don't know what the people play
video games he plays, but they play all these games?
Should or should he be more attentive focused? And if
he brings that he has to have headphones, right, because
(21:09):
otherwise you're distracting everybody else in the hospital.
Speaker 1 (21:13):
I got to tell you, I think we're going to
be surprised by the answers here.
Speaker 2 (21:16):
All right, well, well we'll get into that tomorrow just
after seven o'clock. But six thirties when we play what
you're talking about for the Eric Church concert tickets.
Speaker 1 (21:22):
What you're talking about, what's going on in your neighborhood.
We should be talking about what's happening with you. Yes,
that's chu, what's happening with you? You let us know
when you reach out to us in social media. You
can also email the same rush at ninety seven five
couple you c.
Speaker 2 (21:36):
Us dot com Nation ninety seven five w s us
dot com. Eric Church is coming this time. For sure.
Speaker 1 (21:41):
We don't have to worry about hurricane. We'll get rained
out Carolina, venture world out. We don't have to worry
about the weather. Condition is going to be inside because
they say the North Charleston Coliseum.
Speaker 2 (21:51):
Correctyeah, North true. I mean don't ever, let's not jinx
it and say it's impossible, because I mean, if you've
got a big storm coming shore on March seventh, I
won't chinkx it.
Speaker 1 (22:03):
I think that he was wise to choose indoor arenos
when he comes to the Carolinas. I can tell you that.
Speaker 2 (22:07):
I noticed, we we we We no longer have to
worry about the torrential downpour since Luke Bryan stopped bringing
the farm to exactly what was called here, literally, we
hit a drought. We're calling you like three years ago.
I got rained out, all right?
Speaker 1 (22:20):
Well, do I remember the number to calls the saying
number to chit chat you want to win tickets? At
six thirty tomorrow morning Zato three nine seven eight w
cos in the morning wash