Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello, Kelly Nash. Hi there, it's tomorrow show today, and
tomorrow we can be doing what you're talking about. I
don't even know. I guess were we hoping that the
web page will be back up.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
Doesn't look good, So you know, basically, we'll tell you now,
might even put it in our promo. Yeah, here's the
answer for tomorrow what you're talking about. Normally we call
it clicks for ticks because we're trying to drive people
to the website. Maybe we did that too well and
blew up all the iHeart So every iHeart radio station
in America currently does not have access to their local pages,
(00:34):
just the national pages. So that is a problem for
us because we're local and so we can't give you
the answer on the website, so we'll just give it
to you here. What you're talking about.
Speaker 1 (00:44):
Word of the day is approcate, apricate. I only know
this because Kelly's already told me, because we couldn't put
it up on the web page. Back in this yesterday
in the Florida room at about three o'clock in the afternoon,
because the sun shining just perfect for me to sit
in this chair and just relax.
Speaker 2 (01:05):
That's nice when you can approcate basking in the sun.
Speaker 1 (01:08):
As cold as it was, I was still apricating.
Speaker 2 (01:11):
You might want to apprecate. I mean, I don't know
if it's considered approcating if you're basking in the light
of the incredible Sega Park light show. But maybe it's
a form of approcating, possibly so that I can't get
over how bright those lights are. I mean literally, I
was about two or three blocks away at an event
(01:32):
and we were inside and out the window. I was
at what's the name of that new place that they
have down there and Bull Street? The venue, I can't
remember the name of it right now. It's like the laundromat,
I think is the name of it.
Speaker 1 (01:46):
Yes, the laundry, the laundry.
Speaker 2 (01:48):
And I'm inside there and through the windows.
Speaker 1 (01:51):
Yes, it was distracting.
Speaker 2 (01:53):
It's like, what the freak is going on out there?
Speaker 1 (01:56):
It really is amazing. If you take your kids there,
I mean it, it just engulfs them. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:02):
Oh yeah, you don't need to flash there on cameras.
You need a flash, that's for sure.
Speaker 1 (02:07):
Wow.
Speaker 2 (02:08):
So again the word of the day, approcate answer bask
in the sun. Six point thirty tomorrow morning, Jonathan I'll
ask you for to be a certain number caller, and
if you are and with that answer, then you win
the tickets.
Speaker 1 (02:21):
By the way, so you know when you get there
it is embarrassing, So I'll save you the embarrassment. If
you're an adult, you're too big to ride the train.
I learned that the hard way.
Speaker 2 (02:32):
You wanted to ride the train.
Speaker 1 (02:33):
I wanted to ride the train and it or something
or well, I could barely fit in. It's like watching
Will Ferrell and Elf try to fit into the bathroom.
How he s needs some alone time, Papa, I can't
get enough of that movie. I've seen it like four
times already. You keep going back, Yeah, I keep going back.
(02:56):
That's fun. Ye haven't figured out by now is human?
It never will?
Speaker 2 (03:01):
Oh my gosh, what else we got going on? Jonathan,
let me grab this.
Speaker 1 (03:06):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (03:07):
He wants to confront all of his friends. He believes that.
First off, he's thinking of just breaking up with his
friends because he says they knew that my wife was
cheating on me. He says, long story short, I found
(03:31):
out that my wife was cheating, and it make matters worse.
A few of my friends knew about it all along,
and they never told me. I don't know if I
should yell at him or just completely drop them. Is
this an overreaction?
Speaker 1 (03:46):
This is his wife, correct, not his girlfriend.
Speaker 2 (03:48):
Yes, his wife was cheating, and somehow he's now I
don't know. He doesn't explain how he knows that they knew,
but he's confident in that. And so if you're confident
in the fact that your friends knew she was cheating,
and I'm going to guess that they were joint friends.
It's not as if, like I know Sally, I'm friendly
(04:12):
friendly with Sally, but I'm Jonathan's friend. So if Sally
was cheating on Jonathan and I knew about it, I'd
be like, bro, you better, you better get a track
or you get a GPS down that car or something.
Speaker 1 (04:25):
And it's never happened to me with Sally. But when
I was dating, some of my friends knew that this
girl was spending time, put it out way.
Speaker 2 (04:37):
She's getting around.
Speaker 1 (04:39):
And then it kind of slipped out in a conversation
with a dude that was my friend, and I just
looked at him and he said, look, ho, ho, stop
put yourself in my shoes. How awkward would this be?
And I wasn't for sure. I'm thinking you were for sure,
but I get it. But if it's your wife, that
(05:07):
would be different.
Speaker 2 (05:08):
Well, and now you're you've always been of the mindset.
Uh You've quoted it numerous times. Don't grab that dog
by the ears. This is not your fight. This is
between you don't even know. Maybe he already knows that
she's cheating on him. Maybe they have one of those
open marriages. Heck, you've told me about people who used
to work here who tried to invite people to enjoin
(05:29):
in the extramarital affairs with their spouse. So we don't
know what's going on. Maybe that's I don't know what
kind of arrangement y'all came to.
Speaker 1 (05:40):
Uh wow, this is that is tough. You're not supposed
to grab that. There's not none of your bees wax.
What's going on over there? Or is it? Is this
your bees wax?
Speaker 2 (05:56):
I feel like that's your dog bite. I feel like
that's something. Where are you aware?
Speaker 1 (06:02):
I just want to I.
Speaker 2 (06:03):
Mean, if if you're cool with it, you're cool with it.
But perhaps you didn't know that your wife was seen
going to a hotel with the other guy that we
both know and if he comes back with I don't
worry about it, okay, then I'm not worry that. I
will never bring that up again. I would never bring
it up again. I'm not trying to embarrass you, but
(06:25):
I just thought that that might be. You can't something
of interest to you that your wife was spotted going
into a hotel with so and so.
Speaker 1 (06:36):
This is I can't wait to hear what the Morning
Rush regulars say about this.
Speaker 2 (06:43):
Do you just break up with them? Do you confront them?
Or do you just say, well, they assumed it wasn't
their business. Would you be ticked off if somebody definitely
knew that Sally was stepping out but they never told you.
Speaker 1 (07:00):
Uh, I gotta put myself in their shoes. That's what
the guy told me, and I did. I sat there
and thought about it. Mm hmmm mm hmm.
Speaker 2 (07:13):
Well, I guess tomorrow morning we'll we'll find out how
Morning rest of regulars feel about it.
Speaker 1 (07:17):
I think you'd have to get inventive when you bring
it up. You know, you gotta you gotta, you gotta
figure out how to say it without saying it.
Speaker 2 (07:25):
I didn't know Dave and your wife were such good friends. Well,
I mean their.
Speaker 1 (07:30):
Friendly yesterday, and I saw that, you know, I couldn't
decide what I was gonna order. And then I saw
Sally was having you know, what appeared to be like whatever.
But Dave, who was at the table with her, now
he was having the ruben. I thought, I don't, I don't.
I ended up ordering what Sally had.
Speaker 2 (07:52):
I didn't realize that Dave and Sally were so affectionate.
You know, I know in some Italian cultures they kiss
on the cheeks. I'm not sure which culture she's from
where they kiss on the.
Speaker 1 (08:04):
Mouth like that. But that's that's friendly.
Speaker 2 (08:07):
That's very friendly. Not concerned about the flus, not concerned
about catching a cold this holiday season. By the way,
remember Maury Povich, he says he wants to make a
TV comeback. I guess he hasn't been on for a
couple of years now, and they've just been running repeats,
and so Maury's pushing eighty and Maury has a new
(08:28):
idea on how to relaunch his television career because his
whole career, well it used to be Inside Edition or
one of those types of shows. Then he launched the
talk show that was kind of flailing and not doing
so well until he stumbled upon the idea of who's
your Daddy? We're going to do you know, the paternity tests, yes,
give the results, live fist fights and all that. Well
(08:50):
that kind of played out too now, so that's kind
of yeah. But he's not getting paid anymore.
Speaker 1 (08:55):
Did you know, by the way, the people who actually
appeared on that show didn't get paid.
Speaker 2 (08:59):
Nobody's getting paid. He's not getting paid. Nobody's getting paid. Well,
the producers are getting paid. The people who came up
with the ideas getting paid. But he's got a new
idea that he's pitching and apparently it's he says, and
I would he even know this? I mean, he's whiter
than I am. That he is very aware that there's
(09:21):
a lot of very famous rap beefs. These are rappers
who have beef with one another. And so he is
right now apparently in negotiations with Cardi B and Nicki
Minaj to launch his show where they would come on
(09:41):
and we're going to settle the rap beef.
Speaker 1 (09:44):
Maury Povich, the idea is great. I'm not sure he's
the perfect host. He he doesn't even understand half the vernacular.
Speaker 2 (09:56):
His wife said, I think this will be exciting for America.
Remember Connie Chung this Evening News.
Speaker 1 (10:03):
Yeah, she hasn't.
Speaker 2 (10:04):
Worked in twenty plus years.
Speaker 1 (10:05):
Nah, she'll be a better host for this.
Speaker 2 (10:07):
But Connie Chung says, I think this will be exciting
for America to discover that my husband has a vocabulary
larger than you are, or you are not the father.
Speaker 1 (10:17):
Well maybe that's a tip. He does speak street. Okay,
that's a great idea. Generate a lot of ratings, I'll
tell you that.
Speaker 2 (10:26):
But it's just the rappers. I mean, don't we have
like musicians who have beef?
Speaker 1 (10:29):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's just gonna spill over. I mean
we got like Chris Young and Morgan Walla, what's the beef?
Speaker 2 (10:38):
What is the beef?
Speaker 1 (10:39):
Ste what's the beef Stu? All right? It does great
idea for a television shob Well.
Speaker 2 (10:46):
Hell, now that he's got it out there, why doesn't
somebody younger take that idea in one?
Speaker 1 (10:49):
But here's one Kevin Costner and his wife producer. Yeah
like six wives, but also the guy who've created Yellows,
Tyler Sheridan. Yes, get those two on them. We's the
beef stud I.
Speaker 2 (11:05):
Think, mister Sheridan was that I have no beef. He
just didn't want to work as hard as we wanted
him to work, and he felt like he was getting
put in a little pigeonhole and wanted to go make
that crappy movie as his to bankrupted him. So we said,
go bankrupt yourself. It was so bad, and we still did.
Speaker 1 (11:18):
They just give up on the second the second they
did it, just gave up on it, I think because
my understanding was he'd already shot the second, Yes, but
in order.
Speaker 2 (11:28):
To promote it, you'd have to spend even more money
out of his own pocket. So I don't want to
throw good money after bad. So if nobody watched the
first one, why would they watch the follow up to
the one that nobody like for no.
Speaker 1 (11:40):
Other reason to see the supposed rape scene he got
sued over.
Speaker 2 (11:43):
It was like, I think it was like less than
fifty thousand people in America bought tickets to see this movie.
Speaker 1 (11:48):
Yeah, and I waited till it was streaming, and it
was a colossal waste of time. And I am a
big Kevin Costner fan. Not personally, I wouldn't walk across
this read to shake his damn hand, but he generally
is in movies that I enjoy watching. I watched again
the other night, Field to Dreams. He's He's in a
(12:10):
lot of good movies. Not every single one of them,
but a lot of them are always good. For the
love of the game. I saw that recently again, Draft
Day another great movie. You know.
Speaker 2 (12:21):
I remember years ago speaking of Kevin Costner. When I
worked for Universal Records, they had this I don't know
our CEO president, guy named Monty Littmann, was very into celebrity,
we'll just put it that way. He hung around with
a lot of celebrities. He wanted to be seen with celebrities.
(12:43):
He'd so when we were going to the Grammys in LA,
he arranged it so that the staff got to take
a private tour of Kevin Costner's new movie. And Kevin
cost was not in it, but he's I guess like
the per new or the director something to that effect.
And it was called the Butterfly Effect.
Speaker 1 (13:06):
I remember the movie You Do Okay.
Speaker 2 (13:08):
And I'm looking it up right now, and apparently it
stars Ashton Kutcher, who I didn't even know who that
guy was, Amy Smart and Eric Stoltz. I knew who
Eric Stultz was Butterfly Effect. We took a we took
a tour on the scene of the set of the movie.
We got to meet Kevin Costner, and I remember thinking,
(13:31):
this guy is such a jerk. Yeah, total jerk, this
guy is.
Speaker 1 (13:37):
I gotta tell you. If I if I saw someone famous,
generally I go ahead and mock them. Like one of
my favorite moments was I was in five Points and
Jeff Bridges was walking across the street and he didn't
make it all the way across before the light turned green. Okay,
and he saw that it was green. Yeah, but he's
(13:58):
still just taking his slow ass time walking across the street.
So I yelled out, Hey, who the hell do you
think you are? Bo?
Speaker 2 (14:08):
Did he respond?
Speaker 1 (14:09):
He gave me a grimaced look. Now Bow Bridges, he
can hold up traffic and come on be all he
won'ts but not Joe act.
Speaker 2 (14:17):
No, yeah, not you.
Speaker 1 (14:18):
You're not out of the way. You're no bo exactly.
Speaker 2 (14:22):
Well, you know, I'm not a big fan of Kevin
Costner after meeting him.
Speaker 1 (14:28):
Love his movies.
Speaker 2 (14:30):
Some of his movies, yeah, I'd say maybe three or four.
Speaker 1 (14:33):
I liked only three or four.
Speaker 2 (14:35):
Yeah, I get lured into some of his movies like
the one where he was like, well, like, what's the
one where he's the nfl uft horrible movie? Hated that movie. Uh,
there's another one where he's like a CIA guy and
he's like trying to train a younger agent. Hated it,
watched like thirty minutes of it and said, this is awful.
(14:57):
So he's got movies where I would like the subject.
I just didn't like him.
Speaker 1 (15:02):
I didn't like him. I didn't like the movies. Okay,
how about like in the beginning, like No Way Out
or sil loved No Way Out? How about Silverado? Didn't
like it?
Speaker 2 (15:14):
Okay, but No Way Out is a that's great movie
and and they I'm not gonna spoil it for anybody,
but the surprise ending. I'm still shocked that movie came out,
what around eighty seven or something like that, something like that.
Like Gene Hackman fantastic. Now, Gene Hackman's a guy who
I don't know if I would have liked him if
I ever met him.
Speaker 1 (15:34):
I don't think anybody would like him if you met him.
Speaker 2 (15:36):
But Gene Hackman movies trade. I can't find a bad
Gene hacksually, even the crappy movies. He's in them, They're great.
He makes the like what was that the moose thing?
Welcome to Mooseville or something. I'm not a Ray Romano fan,
but I like that movie. I like I liked him
and all the way back to when he was you know,
(16:00):
what's that one where he's the he's trying to listen.
It's called the Conversation. The conversation that came out aroun
nineteen seventy four is I think that might have even
been before the French Connection. Good movie, good French Connection,
fantastic one.
Speaker 1 (16:16):
Yes, yes, French Connection.
Speaker 2 (16:18):
Big movie for the one with him and Will Smith and.
Speaker 1 (16:21):
The Enemy of State.
Speaker 2 (16:23):
Gosh, that was a great movie. And now, by the way,
now that we've drifted, why.
Speaker 1 (16:28):
Did you have to blow up the building because you
made a phone call?
Speaker 2 (16:31):
Exactly now that we've had mission drift on this podcast
that we're now talking about favorite Gene Hackman movies and
things like that. That movie, though I just talked about
Enemy of the State. I was listening now, don't mock me.
I was listening to NPR yesterday and they were doing
a piece on this. They somebody found a website that
(16:54):
looked like it had come from the early two thousands.
He said, everything about it, screamed two thousand, two thousand
and two. It's not apparently trying to attract a lot
of viewers or whatever, but something about it. And he's
an investigator. He did a deep dive into that website.
What he discovered was shocking that that website was the
(17:19):
central piece to a massive conspiracy that's happening in the
world where they have the technology to and this sounds
like science fiction, but they have the technology to tap
your phone without tapping your phone. So any phone that
uses any cell tower on Earth is tappable through this technology, okay.
(17:46):
And they were recording movements of he said at that
time about twelve hundred individuals. He didn't recognize most of them.
Speaker 1 (17:55):
He googled.
Speaker 2 (17:57):
He recognized one of the phone numbers as an Italian
phone number where his mother lived, so he googled that
try to track it down. Turns out that that guy
is a reporter. They started tracking him three days after
an investigative piece that he had brought out against the
pope like ten fifteen years ago. They use that to
(18:19):
track down his sources, and then they fired and arrested
the Pope's butler because they were able to prove that
that's who it was. They'd never admitted in court how
they got it, but the Vatican was in on it.
I mean, but it's everybody's phone, and they're like, yeah,
they they just charge you to Like you want to
(18:41):
track somebody, We can give you their exact location any
minute of the day. We can tell you what their
emails are saying in real time, what they're tech. We
can just put it on your screen. You watch them
text and they've never been to your phone. They're not there.
And they do it off things that are based in
Litho in some other country. There's two countries that have
(19:04):
the thing, and they can track every telephone in the
world on sell fascinating. It's crazy to think about that.
There's nothing you can say that's private.
Speaker 1 (19:14):
No, you can't even turn your phone off and think
you're talking to yourself.
Speaker 2 (19:21):
Now we've got to blow up the building.
Speaker 1 (19:25):
Because you had to make a phone call, right. I
love that lone. Will Smith was great in that movie too,
They were both It was a very good movie, well written.
I liked it. Yep, okay, hey, uh tomorrow will be Wednesday.
The seventeenth of December. We've already given you the word.
We're gonna talk about, Uh, we're gonna talk at seven o'clock.
(19:48):
We want to talk about you're gonna squeal? Are you
gonna be the pig that squeals? You're gonna grab that
pig by the years and make it squeal. I think
women are more likely to squeal. Oh, totally, I think,
but you know the even if they're squealing on the woman.
Speaker 2 (20:07):
But here on the because of this podcast, I wouldn't
use the phrase on the air, but on the podcast,
I'll use the phrase that is famous bros Before hose. Uh,
that doesn't necessarily apply.
Speaker 1 (20:20):
I don't believe.
Speaker 2 (20:20):
I don't think that the guys are just looking out
for the guys. They might look for to help cover
up the guy's sin, but they are not necessarily going
to out his wife. That's something that like, I think
a lot of guys are from the Jonathan Rush school
of thought of not my business, where the women will say,
(20:42):
did you know so and so was having lunch with
so and so?
Speaker 1 (20:45):
Totally? And then right in the middle of the story,
she's going to tell you what they order for lunch,
And she showed sadly talking to her friends on the phone.
I'm like, oh my god.
Speaker 2 (20:55):
And that woman had the audacity to show up it
with a skirt with a slit almost up. You were
a hip bone.
Speaker 1 (21:01):
You know who. It reminded me of remind me of,
you know, when Jill showed up at so and so's
party and she had that like that fusia colored skirt.
It was kind of like that one look at me,
look at me, Yeah, but not with the same kind
of heels. She wore these other heels. I'm like, oh
my gosh, get to the point. The fashion is the
point exactly. I love it. Hey, what's happening in your neighborhood.
(21:27):
We should be talking about how to reach out to
us on social media, and you know how also to
get to the Morning Rush page. If it's working. If
it ain't working, they're still working on it. They're working
on it. They're working on it, and the phones and
you'll be tracked tomorrow by some of Lithuinian web page
is eight oh three nine seven eight ninety two six
seven eight oh three nine seven eight cos tomorrow The
Morning Rutch