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October 4, 2024 • 17 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello, Killy Nash.

Speaker 2 (00:03):
Hello, I was having a Milkchick.

Speaker 1 (00:04):
It is tomorrow show today. Hey, speaking of milk Chase,
we got through SpongeBob meal hopefully to look forward too soon.
We were talking about that on Friday. I don't know
if it's going to be opening up here. It's not
going to be here in South Carolina to senate or
something like that. It's got the Krabby Patty sauce that
sounds gross, the sauce that Plankton spent twenty five years
trying to steal. But you don't watch SpongeBob as much

(00:28):
as I have, only because I had kids who just
every time to this day, because SpongeBob is like it's
like what Andy Griffith used to be. There is at
no point in the world or in America's cable I
put it that way because that's what I'm most familiar with.
There is no minute in the current cable system servicing

(00:50):
North America where SpongeBob is not playing some channel at
some time of some episode of the past twenty five years.

Speaker 2 (00:57):
I remember thinking that about the Rolling Stone when I
was a kid, that every minute of every day, somewhere
in the world there's a Rolling Stones record playing. I wonder,
I mean nowadays, I guess it's not just the Stones.
There's probably what maybe two hundred three hundred artists they
are always playing playing now. But yeah, okay, anyway, we'll

(01:17):
get into that. How about Costco announcing today that they're
going to start selling platinum bars. Really, they say it's
a great hedge against inflation. So you can buy a
one ounce platinum bar at Costco for one thousand, eighty
nine dollars and ninety nine cents.

Speaker 1 (01:36):
Well, no, damn, Gonuel, I can't walk into a Costco
and pick one up off the shelf because I can't
even go and get a cartridge from my printer anymore
because people are stealing the damn thing. So what do
you have? To order it online and they deliver it
in a in a goal Costco truck.

Speaker 2 (01:49):
I guess I know that they're not available in Nevada, Louisiana,
New York, and Utah. I guess those states don't want
you to have a hedge against location. But but I
mean that's like Costco.

Speaker 1 (02:03):
I would not expect, look as many commercials as we've
seen on television to buy these precious these precious skull
bars of gold or silver. I had not seen the
opportunity on television to buy a platinum bar.

Speaker 2 (02:16):
And would it be cheaper at Costco than somewhere else?
I mean, it's platinum, right, it's just the metal.

Speaker 1 (02:23):
Kind of the market price. Yeah, it's just like ordering
your lobster tail downtown at Hall's. You don't know what
the market price is until you order it today. It
could be ony twenty seven dollars and thirty seven cents.
Tomorrow could jump up twenty bucks. Who knows.

Speaker 2 (02:38):
I don't know. I don't trust it. I'm not buying
it from Costco. I think i'd go with like, well,
I'm not buying gold bars or platinum bars anyway. But
if I was, I don't know, I'd simply like I'd
have to go to like some sort of money guy
or which would probably get me ripped off. Costco's probably
the safest bet. For some reason, I don't trust them.

Speaker 1 (02:58):
What else there's an inventory number to them, just move
it in and move it out.

Speaker 2 (03:03):
I feel like they might have watered them down or something.
I don't know. Hey, we're going to have another edition
of what you're talking about, and this week we're going
to be doing paw patrol passes.

Speaker 1 (03:15):
I may so after the most fought after ticket with
the South Carolina State fear coming, because Paw Patrol is
going to be here on the twelfth, I mean next.

Speaker 2 (03:22):
Weekend October twelfth and thirteenth at the Colonial Life Arena.

Speaker 1 (03:26):
And you know they won't just be here, They'll be
here on the double paw patrol paw patrol.

Speaker 2 (03:31):
And so what you're talking about where we give you
a phrase or a word and you tell us what
it means. Now, this one's a little bit of a
trick because I'm asking you on Monday the original definition
of the word K nine because obviously when we hear it,
we think dogs. Why we tied it in with paw patrol,
But it's not the original definition. Now I'm not capable

(03:56):
of speaking Latin Doland.

Speaker 1 (03:58):
But.

Speaker 2 (04:00):
Caneness candoness canoness is the Latin word that the word
canine is a derivative of which basically meant a pointed tooth.
So human beings, we have two canines in our mouth,
but any pointed tooth would be called a canine originally,

(04:22):
So like sharks had canines, you have two canines. Chew
through that that steak does that I feel like I
chew Maybe it helps me rip it off if I'm
if I because I think I do most of my
chewing in the back what I called the molars, So
this would be called what an in scissor or something

(04:43):
like that. Is the word sizor, believe, Yeah, I think
that's what you use, like when you're pulling it away
from if you've got a steak sandwich and you're biting
into the sandwich. You're biting in with the beginning, but
you're gonna chew it with the back part.

Speaker 1 (04:54):
Yes, cuspards, dog teeth, it teeth, vampire teeth things. I've
never heard the dentists refer to it as your fane. Yeah,
but certainly you're most familiar with probably the usage of
the word.

Speaker 2 (05:08):
You might have got that dentist at Costco.

Speaker 1 (05:15):
That's great, all right, So okay, there's your answer. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (05:19):
See it's on the Morning Rust blog. If you forget
and you want to look it up, it's there for you.
How to win Paul Patrol tickets right there at ninety
seven five to WCS dot com. Also on the Morning
Rust blog at ninety seven five w SOS dot com.
We do. It's funny we talk about this off the air,
like there's only probably maybe I'm going to guess like
one hundred to one hundred and fifty what we'll call

(05:42):
bits that we can do. I mean, like different subject matters.
There's really not I mean more than one hundred and fifty.
I think you're really kind of because everything's like we
try to take something from the news of today and
then we try to turn it into a subject that
we can put a fresh angle on. But they're all
stuff that we've already covered. We've been doing this show
now for almost twenty years together, so we've and once

(06:04):
a year or so we will do something about baby names.

Speaker 1 (06:08):
That's true because baby names always well and everybody you
got a friend expecting a baby, we got a family
expecting a baby. Baby names are always kind of just
beneath the surface.

Speaker 2 (06:18):
So this will be about the twentieth edition of the
Jonathan and Kelly Baby Names.

Speaker 1 (06:23):
We do have a different twist on it this time.
I didn't see this twist ever coming. Well.

Speaker 2 (06:27):
According to a website called name Barry, they have just
released their name trend predictions for twenty twenty five. So
typically what we'll do is near the end of the year,
which I guess we're oh gosh, we're coming up on
it pretty quickly. You'll start seeing these most popular names
of the year type of thing, and there will usually

(06:48):
be a surprise in there, and that's where we'll go.
And then we'll the angle is what did you what
was the surprise name that somebody in your family, God
or whatever. But they're saying now that they're predicting for
twenty twenty five some surprising changes, so and what they're
basing this on is what they're seeing in twenty twenty four.

(07:10):
And I'll just read to you what they wrote here.
One of the more popular names, I guess as far
as just growth was the name Skyland. And this is
a girl's name, and it's because the parents couldn't decide
whether the name the kid sky or Lakeland, and the
parents because those are I guess we're too those are

(07:32):
two very popular names currently for young ladies. So the
parents then started combining it. So they just saw like
fifteen hundred parents name their kids Skyland for the first
time ever, like that's never happened before. So they're looking
at names being combined, and they're also looking at names
being the spelling of it being changed.

Speaker 1 (07:54):
We always have to change the spelling that makes it unique.
So for particularly if you're choosing a name this very popular,
you want your child to be as unique as your
child is.

Speaker 2 (08:03):
So like Aiden is a popular boy's name spelled Ai
d a n. What they're seeing is they're now spelling
it differently e y d an like Iiden, but it's
pronounced Aiden.

Speaker 1 (08:18):
And see, this is the kind of thing that frustrates
me at the checkout line, for instance, at the grocery store,
because I will see that name on the name tag
and I go, well, thanks, Island, I appreciate you being here,
and he'll go, yes, it's Aiden. And I have been
tempted several times to say, wow, that's unfortunate, dude, don't
do that that your parents would do that to you.

(08:41):
But I have not, I am yet to do that,
but I got to feel it in the future, I'll
be doing it, I don't you know.

Speaker 2 (08:47):
It's like me are a very sensitive thing. And they
also talk about I remember, like when I was first
getting into like public speaking and things of that nature, sales,
they would say people love to hear their own name,
so like to your point, you should try to read
their name tag and say their name, because people respond

(09:07):
well when you address them by their name. They like that,
even if they know you don't know them. Apparently it
subconsciously brings you closer to one another. But I have
kind of stopped doing it because of what you said.
They have different pronuncis.

Speaker 1 (09:22):
Now I take it as a damn challenge. What are
the odds I can get this one right? I think
to myself, and then I give it my best shot.

Speaker 2 (09:30):
Every Sunday I greet people at my church, and as
part of the greeting team, what I do at the
end of the service is, if you are a first
time visitor, you can bring me your pamphlet filled out
and I'll give you a gift. Right So, but I'm
supposed to read it back to you because I also

(09:52):
have to write you a postcard. Got it? And so
if I can't read the address or whatever, if I
got it wrong, then I need to correct that. So
as I'm but now it's like it seems like in
the last two or three years, I've been really struggling.
I'd say one out of every five names, I don't
know how to pronounce it, and I'll just go ooh,
I think I'm gonna need some help with this one.

Speaker 1 (10:13):
Well, what I've also picked up on is that if
you have one of those names, people are used to
that conversation. So I will go ahead and just openly
say I was talking to a guy yesterday. I wasn't
sure exactly how to say his last name, and even
after I asked him before we started recording, even in
the conversation of us talking, I'm made sure that I
went back and said it enunciated and spelled it because

(10:37):
the people that are listening to the name are going,
wait a minute, what's this guy's name again? So it
actually for those of you who have an unusual name,
it actually could be a benefit. I mean, I'm going
to go back and make sure that I got it right,
and we may even talk about your name, but then
it will help me remember your name. And also, to
Kelly's point, I'm interested in you.

Speaker 2 (10:57):
People do love to hear their names, and I'm wondering, like, uh,
like the name Elvis. Was that name? Like really around
it was Elvis? Because I mean, that's that's such a
great name to stand out, and now any kid named
Elvis today.

Speaker 1 (11:15):
Has to stand in the wake of the king.

Speaker 2 (11:17):
That's right. Elvis is always going to be Elvis and
you're not. But there's not like there's not like a Tim.

Speaker 1 (11:24):
Oh.

Speaker 2 (11:24):
Once you got Tim, there's no more to like Tim Scott.
You know, there's like all these Tims mcgrawl.

Speaker 1 (11:29):
Yeah, it's a bunch of tims that are famous. Yeah,
but like Elvis, Tim, uh what says what's the knucklehead's
last name, Tim Walls? There's another famous, the knuckle He
came to mind. Well, I don't remember that because he
described himself that way.

Speaker 2 (11:48):
I'm trying to think of, like it like Madonna.

Speaker 1 (11:51):
I don't know of another Madonna prior to Madonna. And
was that her real name or that her I think
her real name is MADONNAA Tony or something like that,
C S C S C O any.

Speaker 2 (12:04):
Something like that. Yeah, And then I guess they're big
Catholics and that was a tribute there. But I mean
there's everyone's I'm sure when she was a kid, people
are like, what's your name? Right?

Speaker 1 (12:17):
So Monday, let's talk about combinations other than the plainly
obvious Joe Bob, which is capitalized always into.

Speaker 2 (12:27):
So no Bob, you can't hyphenate Bob with anything because
we all expected that.

Speaker 1 (12:32):
What are some names that you've seen that became a collab.
Maybe we got actually somebody who named the child colab
like it, Like.

Speaker 2 (12:41):
Jonathan Rush for years around here was known in the
hallways as jay Rizz. Yeah, that's when we were using
the word like rizzle things like that. I think that
word has died out now, but it has. But jay Rizz,
that could have been your name. I didn't cling going
to the fad name. No you didn't cling to it.

(13:02):
We did, yes, daft did everybody around here.

Speaker 1 (13:04):
I never liked it, to be honest with you, but
go ahead, But jay Riz, that that could have been
your actual name.

Speaker 2 (13:10):
If we were your parents'.

Speaker 1 (13:12):
If l J, we might have a j Ris listened,
but he's like I LJ.

Speaker 2 (13:17):
And were your parents, you would have been known as
j Riz and there would be I guess you'd spell
that j A, Y ri I z Z.

Speaker 1 (13:25):
And then of course we're going to get anybody wants
to call it and talk about the most unusual names.
They're going to hear about, you know, Chaffide.

Speaker 2 (13:31):
And all that.

Speaker 1 (13:31):
Again, we're not going to get into all that, but you.

Speaker 2 (13:34):
Know what, We're always welcoming a phone call, so if
you want to bring it up, we'll take it because
we like phone calls.

Speaker 1 (13:40):
Maybe there's a new one you come across recently.

Speaker 2 (13:43):
Maybe you'd like to create a name, right, yes, tell
us the name that you're thinking of. Whose names are
you combining?

Speaker 1 (13:50):
And I'm wondering if, if, if Bennefer had actually produced
a child, and I am so unenthralled with their relationship
that they actually ever produced a child.

Speaker 2 (14:02):
I don't no, no, that was not possible. And it's funny.
I'm trying to remember who it was. My wife told me,
my wife used to be a Jennifer Lopez fan. She's
not now, but she was ten fifteen years ago. She
loved Jennifer Lopez for a while. I loved her work,
ethic and that sort of stuff. And she told me
about somebody who said Ben Affleck was never going to

(14:26):
marry you because he couldn't produce a child with you.
He was embarrassed of you, and that's why they never
got married. Why And then sure enough, he gets married
to Jennifer Garner, produces a bunch of kids. Yeah, and
then that marriage falls apart. And then when he's too
old to produce kids. He's like, ah, now I can
take her back.

Speaker 1 (14:46):
Oh oh god, no, it's interesting.

Speaker 2 (14:48):
That's a weird side note there, But yeah, Benifer never
made kids interesting. She did with what Mark Anthony she had,
she did two kids, I can't remember she did, but
she has been married like five time.

Speaker 1 (15:00):
Whenever we think about the combination of names, the collab
of names, Bennifer always comes to mind because that was
the very first as it became a hashtag moniker or
whatever it was. That's before hashtags, wasn't it.

Speaker 2 (15:11):
Yeah, yeah, we weren't really social media even yet. But
you and I we've got a collab name. On our
other show. You put Rush and Nash together and we
used to clap our hands. You get Rash and I
thought it was funny. Years ago when we started doing
that political talk show we used to we were on

(15:32):
every afternoon on the news talk station, and we would
take time off, and when we took time off, we
would have to get guest hosts, and one year we
were able to get at the time, two congressmen to
fill in for us. It was Mick Mulvaney, who was
a District five. That's Ralph Norman seat now and Trey

(15:52):
Goudie the superhero Jonathan superhero.

Speaker 1 (15:55):
A superhero.

Speaker 2 (15:56):
So those two came in and sat down for us,
and we made them little like what they call radio
sweepers with the radio voice guys. And you know, because
we were rash radio and so we were we were
calling them. Was it trick? I think it was trick radio.
Trick radio. So you put Trey and Mick together and

(16:20):
you get that. And and Trey Goudy I didn't hear
him say it live, but some people sent us messages
about it. So he's got his rolling because he said,
I'm so happy that they used Trey and not my
middle name of Preston. Oh but yeah, how do you

(16:41):
get your hyphenated name, your comminate, your.

Speaker 1 (16:44):
Collab name, your mash up name. It's a mash up.

Speaker 2 (16:48):
I guess that's right.

Speaker 1 (16:49):
Okay, Hey, what's going on in your neighborhood we should
be talking about. Let us know, will be hopefully celebrating
the first win of October.

Speaker 2 (16:56):
Oh, that would be so huge, and I know that
the excuse me that the Clemson Tiger fans are going
to be in a great mood Monday. You're going to
just destroy from the state this weekend. And the only
downside is you don't get to beat up on your
old quarterback DJ, because DJ's out with a hand injury,
so he'll miss the uh the game. But yeah, I.

Speaker 1 (17:18):
Can say he's going to be missing it, Bob.

Speaker 2 (17:20):
Yeah, he'll be sitting on the sidelines quite yeah.

Speaker 1 (17:23):
Conveniently, very conveniently. Hey, reach out to us on social media.
You know how to do that. You could also email us.
I'm Rush at ninety seven five couples dot.

Speaker 2 (17:32):
Com and Nash at ninety seven to five to w
CS dot com.

Speaker 1 (17:34):
We start talking, you start talking. Remember you use the
same talking number that you do for the winning number.
It's a three ninety seven eight nine two six seven
nine seven eight w COS on the Morning Rush
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