Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
That's one of the things that I think a lot
of times boys need is not just exposure to one
guy one dad. No matter how good the dad, he
can't be everything, and that that boy may need somebody
to give give the boys some perspective on the dad.
(00:24):
One of the most valuable things I learned as a
guy was I had a gay professor in college at
a time when openly gay folks still weren't out of
line who became one of my favorite professors and was
a great guy and would call me out when I
(00:45):
started saying stuff that was ignorant. You need that to
show empathy and kindness. And by the way, you need
that person in your friend group so that if you
then have a boy who is who's who's who's gay
or non binder or we're heavy, they have somebody that
(01:06):
they can go Okay, I'm not alone in this. Yeah right,
So why are you gee?
Speaker 2 (01:14):
So Barack Obama says young boys need a gay dudes
in their lives in that interview, was that his wife's
podcast that he was on, everybody's doing a podcast, kill me.
It's like everyone, I mean, the world's going to be
full of podcasts and no listeners. Welcome to the show.
Our radio broadcast. You can watch the radio broadcast one
(01:35):
three forty seven direct TV. You can also find the
chat to rumble x Facebook YouTube, all that good stuff.
So what did I just hear? What did I just hear?
He says that, well, they need, you know, because having
a dad isn't enough. I think having a mom and
a dad is like enough. I mean, that's you know,
(01:58):
that's completely enough. You know, you don't you don't need
anything else from that. It was so Michelle Obama and
her is it her twin brother? It's like her bald.
Speaker 3 (02:11):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:12):
I've never seen two siblings look more like than Michelle
and Craig Robinson. Michelle Obama and Craig Robinson, her brother.
I have never seen two siblings look more like in
my ever loving life. Did you google it and kin?
Speaker 3 (02:25):
Yeah, it does look like Mike, Mam Michelle.
Speaker 2 (02:31):
So the her podcast is called Emo I AMO in
my opinions, super super super original. But they had an
hour long discussion about how boys need gay dudes to
provide perspective, and then he talked about the gay guy
(02:55):
that had influence on him when he was at Accidental College.
I'm just saying just saying, uh, I don't know it was, didn't.
He also talk about having a gay liaison when he
was in college.
Speaker 3 (03:08):
I think so.
Speaker 2 (03:10):
I'm just like, I just remember there was so much
stuff that was happening, like so many things that were
flying around at the time. This is not going anywhere. Well,
you know what I mean, It's Friday. Stop it. All
of you need Jesus. Anyway, he thinks that gay men
help boys develop emotional awareness. What is emotional awareness? I
(03:35):
hate these stupid buzzwordy phrases. I'm just like away. It
sounds like like the Kylie Jenner thing.
Speaker 4 (03:41):
You know.
Speaker 2 (03:41):
It's me and my friends. We're just like realizing things.
We're just like realizing emotions. You know, we're like aware
of them. What does that even mean? Our society is
full of just stupid buzzword Uh all of it?
Speaker 5 (03:57):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (03:57):
We need uh, we need. They need to develop emotional
own a is an empathy and a broader perspective. That's
what they need. I don't know, they just need a
mom and a dad and to stop doing social experiments
on them. Let them be kids, you know. You know.
Maleak Obama, Barack Obama's brother, said that he was definitely gay.
In July twenty twenty three, he posted it on x
(04:20):
He said he was absolutely definitely. I'm just saying me,
here's his brother. I don't know, maybe instead of saying
specifically a gay dude, why can't you just have like
a man that understands like a compassionate male figure and
that could be anybody, not necessarily a gay dude. You know,
(04:42):
being gay is not synonymous with being compassionate. There are
a lot of absolute blank holes out there that are
gay dudes. Marxist gay dudes are the worst, right, and
then there are some that lane conservative and they're not
like that. But what it's not sonat with being gay's
not synonymous with being compassionate. And I feel like for
(05:04):
someone who you know, brags about how educated he is,
that's a nuance that he would have been aware of
before he decided to talk about it mistakenly for an
hour on his wife's podcast. It's just so weird that
this whole conversation is so weird. They just need Basically,
it all boils down to Barack Obama going, well, boys
just need nice people in their lives. That's it. You
(05:27):
need to have a male and a female that's pretty much.
Yet I think God had it pretty much in order
when he was like, We're gonna give you a mom
and a dad. That's pretty much how it's covered. There
you go. I don't know, a lot of people think
Obama's gay and he had kids with me. I unless
I see evidence to the contrary, and I'm not really
(05:48):
all that interested in it's it's not gonna make him
a better president if he is or isn't, it's not
gonna make I mean, you can't get pretty, you cannot
get any worse than what he was as a president.
So you're like, well and he was gay, Like, well,
he was already a horrible president. He ruined health care.
They took health care, rip the face off of it,
(06:08):
defecated in the skull, put the face back on, and
send it out to the world. That's that's what they
did with Obamacare. That's what obamacare is. Did you know that, Dana?
Why do you speak in such terms? I guess I
didn't have a gaming on my life. I don't know.
I mean, you see goofy. This is this is so goofy.
It's also sounds like you need a babysitter in order
to raise your child the way that the leftists want
(06:30):
you to raise your child. It's nanny statism. And I
just also have a major problem with anyone if you
have a problem with your family, I always think you
find the solution within your family. You don't go outside
of it. Like if you're a kid and you need
you know, parental help, you know, or you you need
you know, you don't go and seek strange gay men
(06:50):
for influence. That sounds like it's gonna start off badly right.
It's like, Oh, we gotta get this young boy some
influence in his life. We need to find a nice
gay man. Let's go find him a nice gay man
to get him some You know, Steve, you're not doing
this to me right now, No, you're not. What were
(07:12):
we do you?
Speaker 3 (07:17):
I do recommend against it, but I just want to
make that public.
Speaker 2 (07:20):
I'm just gonna state I'm not going to say it. No,
I'm not going to talk about it. It has to
do Steve, What did you say on break? Where did
this go? Well? We said what everybody needs a gay
man in their life?
Speaker 3 (07:31):
And then I said what kind of game man? There's
more than one time?
Speaker 2 (07:35):
Yeah, And Steve was throwing up twink and then bear
and I have directions. Yeah, I have a very interesting
story and how I learned what a bear was. That's
not an animal in the woods and it is it's
like a Burb's like Tom Hanks and the Burbs. It's
kind of like that. It's like basically in that vein.
It really is, and I'm the Bruce Dern character. It
(07:57):
was pretty much just like that. It came with the frame.
I don't really want to tell the story because there's
certain things you just don't know if you want to
risk virality with it. You know, it's one of those situations.
(08:19):
Are you encouraging me? Should I wait till the third hour?
Speaker 3 (08:21):
No, I'm saying I know it's Friday and everything. Don't
get tempted.
Speaker 2 (08:24):
Okay, Well Steve brought it up and he literally said
in slack, explain your bear twink story. So there's my
story explained it as a story. Huh are a wand
and wand just adds I am today years old. I
don't think it is the bear. That's like the gay
(08:46):
dudes that we're plaid and they're big. I see they're
like more of them. Yeah, like h like if Paul
Bunyan was gay, that would be and you could you
could tell me, Dana. I think that the stereotype is
(09:07):
applicable to like the hyper masculine, like adudes, which I
don't think like being a lumberjack is hyper masculine. It's
just you're just a dude. But I do think that
there's like a uniform with it. Oh, I know there's
a uniform with it, because there are literal patches that
go with it. And I really don't want to explain
how I learned that. It's one of the craziest stories ever.
(09:30):
It beats the time that I got literally into a
slat fight with a chimpanzee and the time that I
got into a fight with goats. I mean, so all
animals that I fought. I mean anyway, So that's it.
We're just gonna leave that on the table. There you go,
So moving on.
Speaker 3 (09:49):
If I'm a listener, I'm feeling really cheated right now.
Speaker 2 (09:53):
Do not do this. Do not it is you can
what's the stories out there? It never goes back. I
didn't do anything wrong. I was just sometimes you're really
you're like, am I innocent or naive? You know, like,
have you ever been in a position where you're like,
am I just that innocent? Or am I just super naive?
Speaker 6 (10:13):
It's possible.
Speaker 3 (10:18):
Sounds like alanis morset lyric.
Speaker 2 (10:21):
Oh my gosh, where she thought miss miss mistakenly that
something was ironic and it was just a bad coincidence.
Mm okay, So we got we gotta move on here
because I can't we can't do this. Oh my gosh.
All right, so where do we go from here? Oh
my gosh? Audio? Somebody audio? So, oh yeah, I'm not
playing the game of fourteen questions with them. I still
can't believe that she is. How many times does she
(10:42):
do this podcast? Michelle Obama? She like pitched and moan
about having to do stuff in the White House, and
now she's still doing stuff that's like kind of White
House related because she's still talking about politics. I thought
she hated this, right, good night? All right? So m okay,
a couple of other things we need to because we
got to move on here. Audio. Let's see audio sound
(11:04):
bite four. This is Kevin McCarthy, right, Kevin McCarthy talking
about these because we got to talk about the Epstein stuff,
these Epstein files. He said Democrats never asked about them
when he was House leader.
Speaker 7 (11:16):
Listen, was this something the Democrats were clamoring for when
you were speaker? Never once? They never asked about it.
They tried to hide from it. You know, they've got
nothing going. It shows in the poll they have no leader,
they have no message, they have no policy. So they're
lashing at this. But what I love, even watching CNN.
Speaker 2 (11:38):
They didn't. They didn't ask about it because they didn't
want it to be asked about. Let me tell you something.
Here's some of the fun stuff if you want to
learn something about the latest with Epstein. This Epstein letter.
So the Wall Street Journal reporter that was behind it,
Per Intelligencer also was behind the Stormy Daniels the fake
reporting about Stormy Daniels also, and Real Clear Politics broke
(12:01):
the story just earlier about how this same reporter who
wrote this story with the letter in the Wall Street Journal,
this guy his only prior reporting experience was with an
entity called Maine Justice. Maine Justice is owned by Mary Jacoby,
who's married to Glenn Simpson. How do we know Glenn
(12:22):
Simpson because Glenn Simpson founded and runs Fusion Gps. Fusion
Gps is the entity that Hillary Clinton and the DNC.
Their law firm Perkins Cooey hired to basically launder oppo
through the press so that they could get a wire tap.
They produced the Steele dossier that was central to the
Russian collusion hoax. And Simpson and his wife also both
(12:47):
worked for The Wall Street Journal before he launched Fusion
GPS and she launched Maine Justice. So you tell me
that's not shady, as I'll get out. I always think
it's important to be able to protect oneself, and I
tell you guns save lives. We have statistics out there
every single day that highlight this defensive gun usage is
actually over three times out of criminal usage. It's just
(13:07):
counted differently city by city, state by state due to
existing local municipal standards, and as a result you get
different numbers. But by and large, it's always good to
be able to protect one sells. One of the companies
that makes a good product is cel Tech. It's the
PR fifty seven. It is a five to seven chambered
in five to seven. It's lighter than the other five
(13:28):
to sevens on the market, forty percent lighter and in
fact has a very unique top loading design. Chambered in
five to seven. You use clips instead of actual magazines.
That's the top loading design that it incorporates that gives
it a twenty plus one capacity MSRP three ninety nine
made in Florida in the United States of America. Because
(13:49):
guns do save lives. Learn more at kel tech weapons
dot com. That's k E L T E c Kell
Tech Weapons dot com. Tell them data sent.
Speaker 3 (13:56):
You and now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's quick five.
Speaker 2 (14:02):
All right, all right, all right, so I mess up,
So I got to go back to my eleven o'clock
headlines here. Puerto Rico law is now criminalizing hormone therapy
and gender affirming surgery for transgender for people who are
pretending to be transgender under age of twenty one. This
is huge because their bodies aren't even developing. It's so
incredibly important that we're not doing this hormonal abuse to
people whose bodies are still developing. The governor of Puerto
(14:25):
Rico signed a bill that prohibits this hormone therapy and
gender affirming surgeries. The governor is getting a lot of criticism.
Jennifer Gonzales approved the law late Wednesday. A lot of
similar legislation has passed across the United States, so it
applies to people younger than twenty one. Calls for fifteen
years in prison for any violators, as well as a
fifty thousand dollars penalty and the revocation of all licenses
(14:46):
and permits of medical staff. Perfect So congrats to the
governor of Puerto Rico. That is huge. Also, the number
of first time home buyers is plummeting. This is bad,
bad news, and it's bad for the US economy. Data
shows that the number of first time home buyers has dropped.
Younger people or feeling locked out, but they're also not
(15:07):
embracing it like older generations did. So it's a one
to two punch. It's not just that they're being locked out,
they're also not pursuing home ownership in the same way
that previous generations have done. So the consequences of having
fewer first time home buyers will obviously have a major
negative impact on the economy and people who make up
(15:30):
the largest point. It's all prices sore during the pandemic.
They came back down, but still that hasn't It hasn't
corrected that gen Z though over millennials Gen z. At first,
they three out of four gen zers reviewing renting a
home as a smarter move than buying one, because apparently
they don't understand equity. So hopefully that'll change if we
(15:50):
have a little bit more financial literacy out there. Coca
Cola is not quite sure that they're giving up fruptose
for cane sugar, but they did say that they appreciated
Potus's enthusiasm for their produm you put sugar in it,
I may not drink code zero. Steve Miller canceled all
other band their tour dates because of weather disasters, which
is code for our tickets aren't selling. Are you tired
of doctors telling you no, can't get affordable off patent medications.
(16:14):
You're not alone. All Family Pharmacy connects you with licensed
to US doctors who approve prescriptions online, fast, legally, and
without insurance gatekeeping. Get hard to access medications like Ivermectin
starting at just two dollars per capsule now up to
twenty five percent off, plus Mebendozole hydroxychloroquin antibiotics in AD
(16:35):
plus the anti aging injectable taking the country by storm,
Order online in minutes and have it shipped straight to
your door. Take back your health at allfamilypharmacy dot com
slash data use code data ten. That's all familypharmacy dot
com slash data code data ten.
Speaker 4 (16:54):
Have you heard? Do you think that he's going to
end up going to con because he can't revoke complete
home rule authority for DC without actually going to Congress first.
He can't even extend this past thirty days without going
to you all first. Have you heard that that's what
he plans on doing? And if he went to Congress
and said, you know what, there's this crime emergency. We
need a National Guard out there longer, we need to
take over Washington, DC, would you grant it?
Speaker 3 (17:16):
No way?
Speaker 2 (17:18):
Oh my gosh. He's so tough. His tough meter went up.
You know, whenever his heart tries to stop because of
his old age, he just spits out some f bombs
and it immediately triggers a hormonal response within his person
that kick starts his hard Yeah, kick start my heart.
My gosh, I just throw myself off a roof. Welcome
(17:40):
back to the program. These are the people that are
supposed to be leading our country. This is why Cain
hates old people. Man. This is why old people hate
like older people like Chuck Schumer. I'm saying, you know
this is I get it. I get y'all. Man alive,
welcome back to the program, or at the bottom of
this first that you're living breathing dharia. So the oh man,
(18:06):
I gotta get to this. Sorry, Wan's like, are you
ever going to get out of the first segment of
the first hour. I'm I swear I will. Guys, do
you remember an esteemed actor named Juicy Somalier. No, it's
not a fat wine expert. It's a Juicy Somalier. Justice
(18:26):
for Juicy guys. Remember this. So he's back. I know
you guys are so happy because you you were counting
the days Juicy Smolier. I don't even know how you
say his name, but we're doing it the Dave Chappelle way. Nope,
that's a wrong, It's wrong Caine. He slams the Chicago
(18:47):
Police Ram Emmanuel as villains, and then he denies that
they hate He denies that it was a hate crime hoax,
and he says he's mounting a comeback and his story
has never changed. Oh boy, oh oh man. Now you
guys remember what happened, right guys, remember what happened to Juicy?
Speaker 4 (19:05):
Right?
Speaker 2 (19:06):
So man, he uh, he fabricated a hate crime. He
fabricated a hate crime. Let's what what you were? What
year this was?
Speaker 1 (19:17):
This?
Speaker 2 (19:18):
I remember it was in It was during this it
was during winter. It was during a snowstorm in Chicago,
but it was Yeah. So he said that these these
men in Chicago beat him up, put a noose on
his neck and yelled, this is Maca country. And it
(19:41):
was something like, ah, what like happened at like in
the middle of the night, essentially, right, happened in the
middle of the night at twenty nineteen and it was
febru February. Well, he was charged in February. Yeah, you're right.
January twenty ninth. He said he went out to get
a sandwich in a bad snowstorm, as one does, you know, yeah,
(20:04):
three in the morning, you know, got to get them meats.
I get it. So he goes out. I don't. Actually
he is out in the middle of a snowstorm in
downtown Chicago going to get a sandwich. Right, So these dudes,
he said, oh my gosh, they were yelling and I
was gay and saying homophobic slurs and racial slurs. They
put a noose around my neck. And remember he took
(20:26):
a picture of himself with a noose around his neck, like,
didn't he take it off? And nothing was adding up.
And as they were investigating, they came across these two dudes, right,
so weird these two dudes. He so ultimately Juicy paid
them to go in and do this. He hired these
two dudes to beat him up and then pretend to
(20:48):
do all this stuff and then he was going to
make this big, you know claim. He was going to
act like a victim. You know why he did this
instead of took acting lessons because this is how we
people get power. Weak people get power by pretending to
be a victim. It's a rejection of meritocracy. They want
they want the notoriety, and they want the power that
(21:11):
comes from trying to care for and satiate a victim,
and they weaponize that and they use that as leverage
to make themselves more famous. This was a pr stunt
for him, and so he went to the Northwestern Memorial Hospital.
They released him because he's fine. But the investigation found
out that he paid these two work acquaintances from Africa
(21:31):
who were brothers to stage the assault. Then it came
they were on CCTV at a hardware store buying the
noose and that like kidnap supplies, and they wrote a
check for it. They wrote a check for it. You
might as well just put kidnap supplies in the memo section.
And so Kim Fox was in charge, and she was
(21:52):
trying to drop the charges and do all of this stuff.
And after all this came out, Smollier fired a countersuit
against the City of Cogo. He said that he was
the victim of mass public ridicule and harm and the
city spent thout. They spent six figures investigating this hoax,
and he said he should not have to reimburse the
city for his failed PR stunt. And he said, no,
(22:14):
he's the victim of mass public ridicule and harm. Well,
yeah you are, because you're a lying hoaxter and you're
a racist bigot. That's why I mean, can you again
the jokes that were written about this in the middle
of the night in a snowstorm at Chicago, and I'm
really sure people are going to be out there going
this is mag contry and all this stuff. This is
just the dumbest stuff ever Dave Chappelle's like five minute
(22:35):
bit on it is still the best. So, anyway, where
the hell has he been? Nobody knows, and we don't care.
You know why we don't care because he's he's just
not valuable into our culture. I'm sorry, but he's not.
And then he does all this stuff. He tried to
he tried to just actually like kickstart like a race war.
(22:57):
He tried to do that. He tried to divide his
country with this stuff. And I just find that absolutely unforgivable.
I really do. So he pled no contest, well he
came up, but he's had a little bit of a
rap sheet. He pled no contest to some charges back
in two thousand and seven. In twenty twenty two, he
(23:18):
was sentenced to serve one hundred and fifty days in jail,
et cetera, et cetera. Anyway, so he's back and for
some reason, Variety was like, you know who we need
to go interview. Let's go interview Juicy Smalia. So he
still maintains that he did not fake it. Dude, dude,
(23:42):
I know, I know, and Smolia goes he was saying
that his story is still his story, and that quote
we're living in a world where the higher ups their
main mission in order to do all of the underhanded
things that they're doing, is to distract with the shiny object. Wait,
(24:02):
that's what you were trying to do. You were trying
to distract people with like racial claims. Literally what you
were doing, I mean you he made it up to
the ins degree. It was disgusting. So he says that
my story has never changed. Well, that's irrelevant. That just
means that you just you can keep to a lie.
(24:24):
That's it. And I don't know. He's trying to. He's
trying to make a comeback. He signed a deal with
some record company that nobody knows about, and he's coming
out with the dumb song that no one's going to
listen to. Uh, actually, I think it's already out. No, yeah,
it's already out. Nobody cares. Yeah, it came out a
few days ago. Nobody cares. He's only doing this because
he's he's, you know, trying to. He's still chasing that fame, right,
(24:47):
He's still chasing that fame. But he says that he
didn't do anything wrong and that the judge, Remember the
judge told him in his case that he was someone
who quote craved attention, and he acts like he was
this big civil rights hero. Do you know that when
he was a kid. Fun fact, he signed and was
(25:07):
represented by Kurt Cameron's mom, who's in The Mighty Ducks.
Isn't that interesting? Just wanted to point that out. I
find that fascinating. So I just find this so sad.
I mean, he no one believes that you're a victim.
You're a Hollywood actor, you were in very successful television
programs and movies. You are the epitome of privilege. Nobody
(25:33):
believes that you are a victim of anything. They don't
believe you're a victim of a single thing. That's just nonsense.
He wanted to be a victim, I guess because he
wasn't getting enough attention in his professional life. So he's
actually trying to come back. I cannot believe that Variety
thinks this is the time to launch this. Dude. It
(25:58):
just this is unbelievable. So juicy, Somalier. You know, that's
like a true crime story right there. Good night. Now,
a couple of other things. We were talking about Hotus
versus Hunter Biden, and I'm really wanting I really want
to see that happen very badly. Also on deck the
we're gonna I'm gonna get into this, the tale of
(26:21):
two nuns, the nuns that are being forced by the
courts to provide abortions, and then the fake nun that
was being trotted out by some of the woke right
as like this measure of Christianity. So there was a
nationwide ruling via the Becket Fund against the Religious Conscience
Rule Conscious Rule. It's a federal district court ruled at
the little against the Little Sisters of the poor because
(26:43):
they they're trying to force them to provide abortion coverage
and their healthcare plans. It's nuns. They're nuns. That that's
that's like forcing Taco Bell to sell hamburgers. They're nuns,
you know, that's they kind of don't do those things.
And this is I just am just this is crazy.
(27:05):
They they've been actually now these are actual nuns. They've
been caring for the poor for you know, two hundred years.
This is a fourteen year court battle. It's a fourteen
year court battle. They've been in court for fourteen years
trying to fight back against this effort to force them.
(27:26):
And it was under the HHS a federal mandate under
Obamacare that was demanding that employers employers provide contraceptives and
abortifacients and their health care plans because women are apparently,
you know, they just can't help themselves. We're all just
giant horrors, and we can't help ourselves. We can't go
out and pay, you know, the nine dollars to go
(27:47):
get birth control of Target or Costco or something like that.
So we have to make health care more expensive for
everyone else by demanding that we, as empowered women, have
to have it paid for us like kept like concubines.
I mean, that's what this is. All these people that
are arguing for government funded abortion on demand, like taxpayer
(28:07):
funded and taxpayer funded all of this. You're just federal concubines.
That's all you are. Don't sit here in like wax.
You know about how you're so empowered. No you're not.
You have to go to Uncle Sam with your handout
and ask for money. That's what prostitutes do. At least
they're honest about it. So they won protection against the
(28:27):
federal government in twenty sixteen. But this has been going
on this entire time. The entire time and they just
will not leave them alone. This has never been about
you know, you live your life and will live our life.
It's never been about that. It's always about forcing compliance,
forcing people to bend the knee, even like actual nuns,
(28:48):
not like the fake nuns that were on Tucker's show,
but like an actual nun. We're gonna have more on
that coming up too. By the way. The people who
help bring you the program, it's the folks over at
Patriot Mobile. Look, I'm just gonna tell you like this.
Do you want to spend life money on your cell
phone bill? Yes? Or no? Okay? Do you like supporting
issues that you vote for at the ballot box supporting
them with your money? Oh, it's all good things. Do
(29:10):
you want to be able to have a plan customized
to what you, your family, or your business needs. All
of these things Patriot Mobile can do. You've just got
to switch your service. They make it so easy. They
have a one hundred percent US spased customer service team,
and they make it easy to switch. This is a
carrier that fights for your values and like major wireless companies,
(29:32):
Patriot Mobile literally actively defends faith, family, and freedom. They
helped us take back our school board in our town.
They're involved in the legislative process right now. They're helping
with Texas and a bill two forty protecting women and
girls in private spaces like our bathrooms and our locker rooms.
And it's the only Christian conservative wireless provider. When you switch,
you're going to get better service, you're going to get
(29:53):
better quality, and you're going to pay less and working
with like minded people. I think that that's something you
got to remember, or you're voting with your dollars too,
So that's something to keep in mind. Switch today because
it is about better coverage, but it's also about supporting
causes that matter to you. Do not do When you
have a great and better alternative, there is no reason
(30:13):
for you to keep working with any other cell phone
service that actively undermines your values and what your family
stands for and protects. So you need to switch today
to Patriot Mobile. Visit Patriotmobile dot com, slash data or
call nine seven to two Patriot and get a free
month of service using promo code Data defend freedom with
every context. It's Patriotmobile dot com slash Dana nine seven
(30:34):
to two Patriot like SAMs.
Speaker 3 (30:37):
Through the aut glance, so are the days of the
United States.
Speaker 2 (30:42):
There's a lot of memes of jd.
Speaker 5 (30:43):
Vance on the internet.
Speaker 7 (30:44):
There are what's your favorite meme or like funny joke
about yourself, like after the Pope or.
Speaker 2 (30:49):
You know, there's a lot there's a lot of options.
Speaker 3 (30:50):
To pick from this.
Speaker 5 (30:52):
So my favorite meme was and this is very inappropriate,
but maybe it's it's it's not too soon, but you know,
there was the whole thing about how I was into couches, yep,
and right after the Pope.
Speaker 8 (31:05):
Died, there.
Speaker 5 (31:09):
There was just a meme of the Pope Usha and
a couch, and it.
Speaker 1 (31:17):
Like took me a second to get it.
Speaker 5 (31:18):
And then when I got I was like, man, that's
pretty good.
Speaker 2 (31:20):
That's pretty good.
Speaker 5 (31:20):
In fact, I like to think the left isn't very
good at meaning. So my hope is that a right
winger came up with that, because that was a very
funny meme.
Speaker 2 (31:27):
That is kind of funny. That's the way that you
should respond to it, not like this is petty, like
his response versus Christy Gnomes response is that's the way
you got to handle that stuff. I just don't. It's
like when it's funny, if it's funny. I would have
people that would make uh like stuff about me, and
I was only offended when the person thought it was
(31:48):
good and it was really bad. Like if it's funny,
I'll allow it, but it's not. If it's not funny,
then I actually feel slighted. It's worse to me than
the original intent of the offense. It's actually more offensive
when it's not funny, because I'm just like, I thought
(32:09):
that smart people were disagreeing with me. Smarter people I
would like to think that I had a better quality troll,
and then it made me feel like not as worthy
of better trolls. And it's just like a whole like
existential crisis. So I was just like that sucks, Like
these are really they're just not creative people. So that's funny,
and that's the way that you should If it's funny,
(32:32):
it's funny. They had. So he's in the Cotswolds, right,
and he's out New York Chadlington where Jeremy Clarkson's and
I love Diddley Squat Farm where he's got his farm.
And you got the Beckhams that live out there, Golden
Ramsey and Tony Blad all these people. But he's like
vacationing JD Van's and their family. They're vacationing out there.
(32:54):
I guess they have like a country house out in
the Cotswalds. And people are mad, but they don't know
what they're mad about. And Clarkson's been making fun of
it on Instagram, showing the beautiful quiet countryside birds chirp
and he's like, he goes, look at this absolute mess.
This is all this chaos is from JD Vance. The
people are complaining, but there's nothing for them to complain about.
(33:16):
That's what's so amusing by this. But someone did rent
a truck with one of those giant Jdvans memes. It's
the one reason the giant he has a giant fat
face and corkscrew curls and his big o' eyes and
they put that on the side of Lorri and they've
just been driving it around. But the problem is that
the truck is so big and bulky that it's creating
(33:40):
a traffic problem for people in the Cotswold. So it's
having the opposite intended effect that they that they wanted
it to have. They thought they were going to be
making fun of Jdvans and now everyone's mad at them
because this truck is so big and bulky and it's
making snarling traffic in these little villages. It's actually quite funny.
Our friend's over at super Beach the super Borene product,
which is a great product. They have it now also
(34:02):
at Sam's Club, along with the Superbat's Heart shoes. So
if you are healthy metabolism and if this is one
of your areas of concern and also helping to control
your blood sugar levels, metabolism link to everything. Blood sugar
levels incredibly important. This is where Superberine comes in. It's
plant based, doctor formulated it's a unique form of high
absorption berberine. And then you have Italian olifruit extract as
(34:25):
well for antioxidant and cardiovascular support, and that olifruit extract
also helps to minimize any gi distress. Now, the Superberine,
it's highly concentrated. That means one easy to swallow capsule
a day. It's been clinically studied to deliver ten times
higher absorption than standard burberin you can find the new
Supermarine and then number one best selling Superbeats sarchoes at
(34:47):
Sam's Club and that's where you can rastock your heart
health support with the Superbeat's artoes as we just said,
and the superberine for healthy metabolism and blood sugar support.
Start to day, get on the road to better cardiovascular
health support.
Speaker 4 (35:00):
Rosie o'donald even on principal vot so recently he blames
you for the batman being overweight depressed it frum, What
do you say to that?
Speaker 9 (35:08):
Do you think pediac is gonna ever get get in?
Speaker 2 (35:11):
I don't know about Rothnie. I watched Rosie. Rosie's a mess.
She's a mess. But she left our country, which is
a good thing, not a bad thing. She made her
really mad when he said that. I don't want her
to come back. Don't talk about her. Maybe she won't
come back. Welcome back to them. What yeah, if you say,
(35:31):
if you say her name, if you go into your bathroom,
you close your door, you stand in for the mayor,
and you say her name three times, Rosie, she'll appear
behind you and complain until you die. What happens, It's
very real. Forget bloody Mary, it's Ruthie. Okay, can't say
(35:55):
it again. Gotta wait until the quoter runs out. You
gotta wait for like an hour I never understood that.
By the way, sidebar, welcome back to the show, blah
blah blah, the good stuff. I have a pressing issue
that's very important. How does the beetlejuice rule work? Like,
you know, can you only ever say it three times?
Or does it expire?
Speaker 3 (36:12):
That's a good question, right, because if you said it twice,
how long do you have before it resets?
Speaker 2 (36:19):
Exactly? That was never answered answered. I don't know. I
have no clue. Huh. Well, I know someone that could
find out. But how weird is that for me to
just go by the way out of nowhere? Is there
a beetlejuice roll? So anyway, all right, back to the
Professional Politics Radio could to be with you. We're at
(36:42):
the top of the second hour on Monday. We've yeah, no,
I that was Potus on. He's just trolling her, and
I think it's fine. She's easy to be trolled. She's
so emotional. Super emotional people are easy to manipulate. It's
so easy to manipulate emotional people because you know their
currency right off the bat, right off the bat, you
know what it is. And so she's kind of one
of those, right, She's one of those individuals the potus
(37:04):
was speaking with the NATO head from the White House earlier,
and we're going to cover more of that later on
with Stephen Yeates. Here's a big question for you. We're
going to completely flip the table here because I know
we've got other issues, but I also think that cultural
issues are important as well. There is a big dust
up right now with the games Chip and Joanna Gaines.
(37:31):
I don't know if you've ever been to Waco, but
Waco is basically Magnolia territory. Like, right when you get
into the town of Waco, everything is about Magnolia. Here
are the silos, silo there, good to see you, here's
the It's I mean, it's Waco Magnolia. Really, it's just Magnolia.
(37:52):
They're probably gonna rename it. Who knows. They it's I mean,
they own the town, like they control everything in the town. Basically,
you know, it's a cute, cutie little town. But they've
gotten very, very famous. They had their HGTV show and
they've gone on to go leave HGTV and create their
(38:15):
own media entity, which I think has been very successful.
And there are a lot of people that are big
fans of them, and I've been down. I've taken my
mom down there before, and uh, it's it's they've you know,
they're very faithful people. They're Christians. They've talked about their faith,
and now they're kind of in some hot water and
(38:40):
it's not hot water the way you think it would be,
right because they've previously been in trouble because they've been Christians.
Now they're accused of going woke because they feature a
same sex couple in one of their in their new series,
it's a series called Back to the Frontier on that
new network they created, Magnolia Network. Series premiered on July tenth,
(39:04):
and they, I guess select the couples that are going
to be the people that are going to be on
the show, and they I haven't seen it the show,
but they go to the frontier. That sounds like camping.
That's too close to camping to me. And you guys
know how I feel about that sidebar if you're unfamiliar
with it. We invented the house as a people. I
don't like appropriating my ancestors way of living because we
(39:27):
have all of these new innovations and you know, I mean,
I hate modernity, but I love electricity and hot water,
so you know, there we go. So anyway, they have
a Texas couple that appear on the show with their
two sons, and they're two men and they're one of
the three couples. They live like eighteen hundred's homesteutters sidebar,
sidebar again. Sorry, there's no social media in the eighteen hundred,
(39:48):
so that probably that's a big selling point for me.
Would you like to get away from influencers selling me
the exact same stuff that you can find at home goods? Yes,
you do want to get rid of Okay, you want
to you want to get away from all the white labies. Okay,
let's go be homestadters in the eighteen hundreds. So they
they're getting a lot of heat because they featured the
(40:09):
same sex couple in their show. Is one of these
three couples, right, They're getting a lot of heat for it.
And to the point where you have the American Family
Association that has babylon bias said something about an American
Family Association. There are people that are concerned because they
expected the Gains to continue to upholding biblical values and
(40:32):
make that part of what their work is. And the
AFA said quote, it's said, disappointing because they've been very
influential in the evangelical community. They've stood firm on the
sanctity of marriage, et cetera. Said, they're not sure why
they've reversed course, and the comments have been very interesting.
(40:54):
They've gotten a lot, They've gotten a lot of heat
in the past. I don't know, for not how having
gay couples on their shows, like when they were doing
their house flipping, like the show where they flip the houses.
Apparently they had never had like a gay couple on
their show, and they were getting heat for that. I
don't know if this is to maybe satiate some of
(41:16):
those criticisms, but I do think that it poses a
problem for them. And here's why I think it poses
a problem for them, because, first off, I don't I
think that they need to handle it better on social media.
Social media is a poor place to mitigate things. Number one,
especially this nature, because everybody's immediately defensive because social media,
(41:40):
by entering it is a defensive place. That's why everybody's miserable.
Everybody only wants to show you the pretty curated side
of things because everybody's so judgmental. Social media is where
people go, especially Instagram, and they they want to either
jealously lurk or they want a flex. It's like one
of the two. So that's why I hate them. It's
(42:00):
why I'm not as active on Instagram as I used
to be because I just can't. It's just that's it can't.
I don't know, but they have been getting a lot
of criticism, criticism from a lot of even pretty influential
people on the right. I think the problem that they
have is when they started their building, their their new business,
(42:21):
when they started in this industry, they really came out
very strongly as a Christian family and a Christian couple,
and that's how they promoted themselves. They talked about faith,
they talked about family, family values, and their work as
you know, kind of like a mission basically like an
extension of like their ministry, so to speak. And they
(42:42):
really leaned into that, and that's great. The problem is
is there are certain demographics that when you lean into,
you can't compromise it after you lean into it. If
you're going to go the evangelical route, if you're going
to go to the Christian route, you cannot temper it
by including like a same sex couple because A that's
(43:04):
not your base and and it's not your base and
be it looks inconsistent and authenticity. If there's anything that
we've learned with the advent of social media and oversharing,
is that authenticity is keing. People like authenticity. They are
gravitating away from the highly stylized, curated stuff and they
just want the real thing. They want authenticity. This looks
(43:27):
highly inauthentic. It does kind of seem like they're doing
it and as a way to maybe insulate themselves against
some of the criticisms that they've received. And I'm just
speculating for on my part here because I don't know
why they would do it. I mean, there's certain things
you can be as loving as you want to, and
it has nothing to do with being mean or loving.
(43:49):
You know a lot of Christian people they think, well,
you know, there's multiple different kinds of sin. And one
of the reasons that people you know, try to speak
about it is because they love people and they want
people to be able to join them in evan and
that's you know. I remember a pen and Teller, I
think it was Penn who had said because he's an
atheist and he had said that he actually, of all
of his friends, he loves his Christian friends. And he
(44:10):
was saying that. Someone asked him if he was ever
annoyed that they were trying to like witness him, and
he said, no, I would be mad at them and
think they were inauthentic if they didn't, because they if
they really believe this, and they really believe in this
kind of life after death, and why wouldn't you want
someone that you care for to take part in that?
And so they're reaching out to me so that I
(44:32):
can experience that. And he had said that that was
you know it, really he kind of uses that as
a basis to determine someone's validity and their belief set.
And I think that makes a lot of sense. And
I apply that to this situation as well. And I
think that Christians, especially those who have followed the Gainses
this entire time, they have every every reason and justification
(44:54):
to question why are you doing this now? It would
be one thing if they started and they came out as, uh,
what am I thinking of? Not agnostic in terms of belief,
but agnostic in terms of their content. What they talked
about their content and the perspective through which they wanted
to show you their content, and they didn't take that route.
(45:15):
And that's why it feels like a one eighty to
so many of their base, because now it kind of
seems like, regardless of where you're at, it kind of
seems like they're doing it. It would be like, you know,
for it would be like a gay couple all of
a sudden, you know, going back on and going the
other way. It just it's inconsistent. It doesn't make sense,
especially if you've built your career on this right. It
(45:37):
would be like that show Queer Eye for the Straight Guy,
just having like all straight stylists or something, you know
what I mean. It's just different. Why would you? Why
would you flip like that with your base? And I
think that this is what a lot of people are
asking questions on. And I've never met Chip and Joyna Gains.
I know his sister, and there's this. They're the sweetest family,
(45:59):
and I don't think that any but he's doing this
or having this position or expressing, you know, defense of
their position out of meanness or cruelty. But I do
think that he's coming across as a little bit too
defensive on social media, and you got to be careful
with that because social media does not allow for a
lot of nuance. And when you seem overly defensive, you
(46:19):
seem hostile, and you really want to avoid that, especially
as it concerns this topic and the what I get
from them as they're saying that, you know, uh, this
is it's about showing love, and it's about you know,
showing you know, including people showing love or whatever. And
(46:40):
this is the defense that he has given in a
couple of different tweets. I understand the Christian criticism of it,
that you don't show love by mainstreaming what the Bible
has declared to be a sin, and you don't show
love and acceptance by making someone easy in a behavior
(47:01):
that goes against the scripture you claim to uphold. And
I understand the criticisms that these individuals have, and that's
not the media misrepresenting it, and it's not these people
misrepresenting their intentions. You cannot create an entire industry based
on faith as an extension of your faith and then
(47:23):
be seen as compromising it to the people who help
build your business. That's the real problem here. And it
does seem like whenever people get to a certain point
in success that that tends to happen. It is very
very hard to stand your ground, and there's all different
types of ways that people try to use to justify it.
But it is a very unpopular thing to say that
(47:44):
the Bible says what it says, and that's what the
Bible says. If people have a problem with it, they
can take it up with God, not the people who
are reading the Bible and just simply repeating what it says.
It has nothing to do with the feeling of hatred
or anything else. Again, you either believe or you don't.
You don't get to pick and choose what parts of
scripture you want to believe and what parts of scripture
you don't. And everybody falls short by the way of perfection.
(48:06):
There's no such thing. I mean, that's why you know
churches are oftentimes viewed as a spiritual hospital, so to speak.
But I don't know what their motivation for doing this is,
but it doesn't look good and I think they need
to find a different way to address it than what
they're doing now because this is going to really hurt them,
(48:28):
especially now with younger generations being more conservative and demanding
more authenticity and consistency. This is a really bad sign.
Are you tired of doctors telling you no, can't get
affordable off patent medications. You're not alone. All Family Pharmacy
connects to you with licensed to US doctors who approve
(48:48):
prescriptions online, fast, legally, and without insurance gatekeeping. Get hard
to access medications like Ivermectin starting at just two dollars
per capsule now up to twenty five percent off, plus
Mebendazole hydroxychloroquin antibiotics in AD plus the anti aging injectable
taking the country by storm. Order online in minutes and
(49:11):
have it shipped straight to your door. Take back your
health at All Familypharmacy dot com slash data use code
Dana ten. That's All Familypharmacy dot com slash data code
Dana ten.
Speaker 3 (49:24):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 2 (49:30):
All right, First up, man, this one headline totally distracted me,
and I apologize. I'm me just go ahead and say
it's It's a story from New York posis as daily
showers are purely performative and have no real health benefit.
Did a landfill write this? Did an actual physical landfill.
Write this, but yeah, what in the world, I don't know.
(49:54):
I don't even know. But they said that, yes, you know,
you don't have to take it. They were the experts.
Whoever these are experts are we're trying to say, oh,
you don't have to take them every day, you know,
you don't. It's not really necessary. You know, maybe you
know a few times a week instead, you can Some
say that you could actually spray yourself with good bacteria
(50:14):
that neutralizes your smell, making chemicals. That sounds disgusting, No nod.
A hippie who lives in a landfill wrote that that's
I mean, that's that's truth.
Speaker 3 (50:31):
That's clean.
Speaker 2 (50:32):
Yeah, a gim, this is a I think this is
a gym in Britain, of course it is. It's a
UK Jim. They banned women from the age of twenty
four from working out during peak times, like every they banned.
It's a thirty six year old woman reported it. They
(50:54):
heard Jim banned women over the age of twenty four
from working out during peak hours. So the from four
to seven pm Monday through Fridays, we're reserved exclusively for
females age twelve to twenty four. I have no idea why. Also,
just because you go to a gym doesn't mean every
guy wants to hit on you. Get TF over yourselves.
Not everybody wants to in on you. And also if you're
(51:15):
doing influencer stuff in the gym and hogging machinery, I
would be absolutely one of the people who would bully
you about it. Stop it. I don't know why people
are so ridiculous. So she's leaving that gem by the way,
I didn't even know. That's like horrible. Let's see Superman
open to one hundred and twenty three million. Also, ooh,
(51:35):
a flight from London to Cancun landed in the US
after a flight after a fight broke out on board.
We're all real excited about that. I'm telling you sure,
it's the people over at Berner Gun. I'm telling you
you know, if you've got young adults that are living
on the room, maybe they're going to college, they're not
old enough to carry a handgun, but they're old enough
(51:56):
to live by themselves and be targeted. You want to
make sure that they're able to defend themselves, especially if
you've got municipal restrictions, private prop whatever. This is where
The Berna gun comes in Burna shoots chemical irritant projectiles
that can deter threats from up to fifty feet away.
There's two versions, the SD the most popular model. I
prefer the CL because it's more concealable and it's lighter,
(52:20):
and you're not losing any of the ability for target
acquisition any of that stuff. There's no recoil with us
at all whatsoever. And when you consider that stunt guns
only have one or two rounds, that burna cl you
got a fifteen round shot capacity per cartridge. Legal in
all fifty states. There is no background check, there is
no permit, there is no fee, and it can be
(52:42):
shipped directly to your door. It doesn't care about gun
for his zone signs. It is accessible to everyone, and
I think it is incredibly smart to diversify what you
use in terms of self defense instruments. You have different calibers,
you have different blades. You need to have an option
when you are entirely disarmed, but you got to be
a big kit and you still got to go there.
So this is where Bernagunn comes in. Visit Berner dot
(53:04):
com slash Dana check out the new burn Up cl
B y r NA dot com slash Dana.
Speaker 9 (53:11):
It's kind of a Sunfresh at thirty first in Prospect
is struggling. This is the first section people see when
they come in.
Speaker 2 (53:16):
There's barely any produce.
Speaker 9 (53:18):
A lot of the coolers and shelves around the store
look the same way empty. So shoppers have been asking
us if the store isn't closing, then where's all the food.
A riden smell comes through the door, and anywhere you
turn you'll see products that need to be restocked. No
hot food or deli.
Speaker 2 (53:36):
No. I'll watch people walk in and walk out.
Speaker 7 (53:39):
The grocery store has received financial assistance from the city,
but has been unable to keep those shelves stocked in
an area that in the past has often been referred
to as a food desert.
Speaker 1 (53:50):
Around here, a good thing don't last.
Speaker 6 (53:52):
Too long and impacts a lot of people and a
lot of families.
Speaker 9 (53:57):
The city owns the Loomwood Shopping Center it operates the
grocery store.
Speaker 2 (54:02):
What does his shirt say? I need to go back
and have a freeze frame on that feller shirt. Well,
and if you'd be so kind the man's shirt, who's
saying from the Gutta to the butter. What what is that?
What is that? What does that shirt meant you? I
(54:31):
don't know what is that.
Speaker 3 (54:32):
Steve was the one that told what.
Speaker 2 (54:34):
He was like, you guys need to watch his shirt.
Speaker 5 (54:36):
We ran the clip we always discotched was clipped run
and I was like, just pay attention to the Sky's
shirt from the.
Speaker 2 (54:41):
Gut to the butter, from the gutta to It's like.
Speaker 3 (54:44):
Started from the bottom.
Speaker 2 (54:45):
Now we're hear you in the gut and now you
got the button right. I kept thinking that there's gonna
be something. I was like, oh, I think I see butt,
And I just was like, man, this is gonna be
one of them stories where we got it's gonna be
something inappropriate. I'm just saying, like, that's the shirt. I mean,
you know, you know they ask you advance if you
want to be on camera. You know, when they show
up and do this stuff. I mean, good for him,
I mean if he made some of himself. But you know,
(55:06):
I'm just at least if you're gonna wear a shirt
like that, don't cover the bottom with your hands, because
then we're gonna be all doing this, like wait, what
is this short day? What does that say? Because it
almost looks inappropriate, and you're on like you're on TV man,
and it's a story that's gonna go national because of
(55:26):
what they're talking about. I really want to know what
the bot Caine look to see you. Not that I care.
I don't need people.
Speaker 3 (55:32):
Good It's actually lyrics from old Goodie Mob from nineteen
ninety eight, back in the late nineties. Oh got a
but all right?
Speaker 2 (55:40):
There you go. Interesting? All right, So welcome back to
the show. That's how and that, by the way, was
Oh I mean, of course you Lorraine found the shirt.
Yeah she did. She literally found it already a minute ago.
She's a robot. She's like, wait, here's the shirt right here.
I got it for purchase if you want to buy.
Speaker 3 (56:02):
So that's what the shirt says, from the gutted to
the butta, you make the choice. The choice.
Speaker 2 (56:07):
Good for him. There you go. That's hysterical. All right.
So this was what city? This is in Kansas City?
Speaker 3 (56:16):
Hold on, I'm ordering a shirt?
Speaker 2 (56:17):
Are you serious? What you're ordering the shirt? Right now?
This was in Kansas City. All those store shelves were bare.
Can I get a shot of the store shelves? Real quick?
City funded grocery store it's a city funded grocery store.
And I have never seen I have never seen that's
a store that's like open. I have never seen. Uh,
(56:41):
I have never seen shelves like that. That's crazy. That's
look at that. There's nothing in the middle, there's nothing
in the end caps, there's nothing. There's no fruit, there's
no onions, there's no nothing. There's nothing on them shelves.
And it's a city what is it the sun Fresh
And they're saying it's in decline, Well you think it's
(57:02):
in decline. It's already failed. It wouldn't even open that long, honestly,
So this sun Fresh Market, they're still going there, but
I don't even know what you can. I don't even
know what was in it.
Speaker 3 (57:15):
Come the bottom was this is one of mom Donnie's
desires for New York.
Speaker 2 (57:19):
Well I'm getting there. Oh sorry, I'm getting there. They
have not stocked vegetables or eggs in two weeks. Empty coolers,
and they said everyone said it smells rotten when you
walk in. And apparently they say it goes through ups
(57:40):
and downs, so like within a thirty day period, like
they'll get stuff in and then it just they they
don't have anything anymore. And it's oh, that's what happens
when you have a city run grocery store. Who would
have thought that would have happened. And you know what's
crazy is Kane said, this is literally what ma'am Danny wants.
Soized grocery store, that's what you get with it. It's
(58:03):
like the DMV of the it's the post office of
the grocery store. It's the it's what it is. By
the way, our mail it takes if we send something
to like Kane, if I send something from here to
Saint Louis, it takes some months to get there.
Speaker 3 (58:20):
It's crazy.
Speaker 2 (58:21):
One of my kids that had our birthday this spring
just got their birthday cart a couple of weeks ago.
Not kidding. So this is like the usps of the
grocery stores. Wow, they said, it smells like rotting corpses
in there. Oh, how would you know what that smells like?
But also eow wow, oh it's so bad. This is
(58:44):
what they're going to have in New York City. This
is what they're gonna have in New York City. Well,
the city runs it. So if the city runs it
and it's entirely you know, they don't have to be
dependent upon they don't have to They don't have to
ensure good customer service or anything like that because they
don't have to meet us specific standard. There's no demand
for that standard. Totally shocked, it's already failed. When did
(59:07):
they get more food in? And I was trying to
find that on social media. It doesn't look like they're
going to get anything. I mean the food desert We
needed food deserts, or maybe you just I don't know,
need to have an environment that grocery stores that already
operate on tiny margins can actually operate in. It's not
the government's fault. I love these people that, but like
(59:29):
it's in downtown Saint Louis. Let me just talk about
downtown Saint Louis, and I don't want to hear no
smack from nobody. My husband worked and he did a
lot of historic renovation in Saint Louis and built a studio.
He got blacklisted in his industry by a bunch of
jealous drug addicts who ended up They were all Marxists,
(59:50):
but they ended up in Saint Louis. A beautiful city
like Saint Louis is known as brick city. I mean
a beautiful architecture, that German wire cut brick, which is
so valuable, and Saint Louis made tons of it, exported
it around the world. It's incredibly valuable. People wanted they
want to buy it.
Speaker 9 (01:00:09):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (01:00:10):
We lived in downtown Saint Louis for a number of
years because of work, homeschooled our kids, and I never
understood the disconnect that people had. They all bitched and
moaned about not having like a supermarket supermarket downtown. You
remember this kne Like the closest supermarket when I lived
downtown in Saint Louis was I would have to go
(01:00:30):
to like near the Beva Mill area. I'd have to
go down what I can't remember what the Schnucks.
Speaker 3 (01:00:37):
Yeah, on Ninth Street. That is Schnucks there, and then
the one you're talking about is another Schnucks.
Speaker 2 (01:00:41):
Down but the one but the but it was a
tiny almost like wine and cheese super It wasn't like
a full on supermarket. It's where you would go if
you were having some wine and cheese. Let's maybe make
some shock CUTTERI and let's get some oduves. Let's do that.
That's the kind of store it was. There was one
in Soux Lard that had a lot of stuff that
they've closed, and I used to go there and get
(01:01:01):
some things. It was a tiny little market, but people complained, well,
you know why, because supermarkets already operate on such small margins.
Saint Louis had an earnings tax. They had all kinds
of taxes, all kinds of fees, crazy structures that you
had to, you know, weave yourself through in order to
even operate a business in the area. And then you know,
(01:01:21):
the property taxes everything else. They made it so inhospitable.
And I just couldn't get over the disconnect from the
people that would joyously go and vote for the individuals
that put up all these barriers to creating your wonderful
supermarket in the middle of the city, and then they
would bitch about, we can't believe these people that said
they were going to do all the stupid state of
stuff when they were campaigning and we voted for them
(01:01:42):
are doing all this stupid state of stuff. It's like
I voted for the leopards eating faces party, and I
can't believe that these leopards broke into my house and
they ate my face and my kitchen, like they are
shocked about this. It's like, well, what did you think
was going to happen? Right? You voted for this, You
created this environment. It's not a food desert. You are
just that votes for moronic policies and moronic status lawmakers.
(01:02:04):
That's what you do. Good night. So that's you know.
I it just blows the mind with all of this.
They can't stores can't stay open. They're not there just
to be charitable. It is a business. People work there,
There are people that work to bring it. All of
these things to you. I don't know, it's something else.
(01:02:29):
So can we just have a quick convoe about why
Pedro Pascal is in every single film right now? I'm
tired of him, tired of him, tired of it. He did?
What is he in? Fantastic for which I'm not going
to go see because that's I like that lease out
of all the superhero stuff. I'm so tired of the
superhero movies. There's nothing in theaters right now that would
(01:02:52):
persuade me to go see it. It just there's what
else is there?
Speaker 9 (01:02:56):
What else?
Speaker 2 (01:02:56):
I don't know? Every movie is a Pedro Pascal movie.
I saw this online where it's like, do you want
to go see a Pedro pestcal movie, a Pedro pest
gal movie, or a Pedro pests gal movie. He's in
like three movies. Can we talk about twenty two? Real
quick audio? Somebody twenty two fans are really confused. Pedro
Pascal is on a press tour his married, pregnant CoA
star Vanessa Kirby. She's lovely, she looks like a lovely
(01:03:18):
Lady's very pretty. What behavior is this? This is weird?
Watch this? This is so weird.
Speaker 3 (01:03:24):
These are gorgeous. That's my I think that's my favorite
image so far.
Speaker 5 (01:03:28):
It's just not happen.
Speaker 2 (01:03:29):
Yeah, as long as you don't have to.
Speaker 3 (01:03:32):
See my face.
Speaker 8 (01:03:34):
Terrible confession.
Speaker 2 (01:03:36):
Why are they so some of the best men in
the world so they didn't count? Why are they always
so handsy? That's so weird? Like there, what is up
with that? And why does he come off like an
infant that needs to be mothered? Right? Am I the
am I root? Am I reading too much into that?
Speaker 3 (01:03:58):
No, he has admitted as such that he's like, you know, codependent.
Matter of fact, I know I saved this somewhere. Let
me see if I can find it.
Speaker 2 (01:04:06):
What do you mean he's he's admitted that he's codependent.
Speaker 3 (01:04:09):
Yeah, one, this is it here. I don't know, if
you have a chance to drop this, I'm gonna drop
this in right here.
Speaker 2 (01:04:15):
So he needs to act like a freak on his press.
Speaker 3 (01:04:18):
That's exactly what he admits in this in this clip.
I'm like, so he so he understands these where his
insecurities are, and he's I guess, just being open and
honest about it. And these people that are with him,
I guess on these movie tours are willing to accommodate
his you know, emotional illness. Like let's let's listen. So
(01:04:41):
what he has to say.
Speaker 8 (01:04:41):
Here, you can.
Speaker 3 (01:04:50):
Come on very codependent, very codependent, just like I'm very.
Speaker 2 (01:04:56):
He's like I did. I can't stand. I'm already like
judging his vie. I'm using my discernment. And he's a
guy that I could I would not get along with.
I can tell that immediately. I don't he needs to
be mommied and he's I don't know, I just think
that's all weird. That's all weird. Not only is he
all over the theaters. I don't like him because of
what he did to Gina Carano and how he was
real silent about all of that because he has a
(01:05:18):
brother who's trans. And then he like said something pretty
nasty about people who were questioning like women's men and
women's sports, et cetera. He just seems like nasty and
he's so eager to kiss the backside of whatever Hollywood
executive will give him his next role. He comes across
as like as like a desperate fame hort. That's what
(01:05:38):
he seems like.
Speaker 3 (01:05:40):
Yeah, I noticed that, and he's very touchy hansy feely.
Speaker 2 (01:05:44):
Now I would punch him in his face.
Speaker 3 (01:05:46):
I just put in slack this video of when I
guess it was Willem Dafoe was getting his Hollywood Star
of Fame. Here will Dafoe and he actually, Pedro Pascal
touches Willem Dafoe's wife the chin, like lovingly, and then
Willem Dafoe like scolds him for this.
Speaker 2 (01:06:04):
I want to watch this. So here's William Dafoe standing
up Pedro Pescal to Pedro pescal is wearing clown pants.
He touches it. Oh yeah, I see it. That's Willem
Dafoe immediately gets it. I don't like that. I don't
like people who are handsy like that. I'm not there.
I've come across some of those people and like you'll
see them and they'll try to they'll give you a
hug and then they want to like hug you a
little longer, and I'm like, you know, I'm being civil,
(01:06:26):
but I'm also giving you a warning sign because you're
gonna get kicked in the franken beans. I just don't
like that. I don't like that stuff. It's weird. It's
weird to me, and she's married. It's weird, is that.
I mean, I'm not trying to read too much into it,
but also like when you display it out there on
a publicity tour, you invite that, just be a little
bit more self aware. I just can't stand him. Also,
(01:06:46):
I really don't like him. If we were in school,
I bully him. I think I don't like him. I
don't know. He just seems to He's a pick me girl.
Speaker 3 (01:06:58):
It's his laugh mission to make bad decisions. It's time
for Florida man.
Speaker 2 (01:07:07):
Oh boys. So a couple of different stories here. First up, Oh,
by the way, the Chuck E Cheese dude that we
told you about, well, the guy addresses Chuck E cheese
you know how they arrested the Chuck E cheese mouse. Anyway,
so he was arrested for credit card fraud, apparently a
lot of it. So I found another story actually was
(01:07:27):
just filed. I mean literally, it was filed like ten
minutes ago. He got arrested for credit card fraud. So
remember we were like, oh, he's got these felonies that
he was arrested for, and they never actually said what
they were, which made me think he's got bodies and basements. No,
it's credit card fraud. So I needed to update you
with that. Florida man drove to a rival insurance agency
(01:07:48):
and threw Molotov cocktails at it. Yeah, well, he drove
his Toyota over to the Unit Vista agency in Lake Wales, Florida,
attacked it and threw molov Molotov cocktails because the rival
agency moved into close to the competition. Are you serious?
That's how you you? What year do you think this is?
(01:08:10):
My dude? He uh, yeah, he threw a ton of
Molotov cocktails in it. They tracked him down because guess
what he was called on surveillance footage, and and he
did it and then went to work and they went
right to his work and arrested him. After they they
checked his cars registration. It went to a low. It
(01:08:32):
belonged to a local lab testing company and he worked
there and uh yeah, so they found him at work.
Great job, guy, you're so smart. You're so smart. Let's see.
Oh I don't want to read. Okay, I don't like iguanas.
I mean they're pests, but also they have feelings too,
taste like chicken. Uh. Florida man was arrested after he
(01:08:54):
he didn't just kill an iguana, he tortured it to death.
He allowed his dog to chase it, and then he
brutally killed it. So he's facing a half dozen charges
on this. Sorry, that's the auto thing. He's uh, oh
my gosh, shut up. He's facing a half dozen charges
because he tortured it. His five thousand dollars bond. So
he let his dog chase it and then he picked
(01:09:15):
it up by its tail and then started slamming it
against a rock and then a sidewalk and all kinds
of stuff and everybody. He did this in front of witnesses.
So yeah, you can't do stuff like that. That's just
you're a psycho. Stop it just quit. A couple of
other ones a apparently everybody left their baby in a
bar or a baby in the car while they went
(01:09:35):
to a bar. A Florida couple was arrested. They left
their baby alone in a running car while they went
to go drink at a bar Flaker County. Oh my gosh,
you know how hot it was, how hot it is
outside of how humid it is outside there. They were
arrested child felony, child neglect with out great bodily harm.
And they apparently he went and checked out. The dad
went and checked once on the baby in the vehicle
(01:09:57):
before going back inside and drinking. They just said it
was infant. They didn't say the age. The baby's okay.
And then a teen mother was arrested because she left
her baby inside a hot car so she could go
watch a Smurfs. Eighteen year old woman in Florida. The
child was flushed and crying. It was one hundred and
seven degrees in there. They rescued the baby. The mom
went to jail. Good Night, Stick with Us, Third Hour
on the Way, Welcome back to the program, Dana lash
(01:10:19):
with you. We're at the top of this third hour.
We got a lot of stuff to get into. We
got tsa stuff to hit, we got immigration stuff to
hit with the ambushes. Can I just get this out
of the way, because it's like summer, You're supposed to
have summer blockbusters that come out right. Oh by the way,
real quick chats at Rumble. You can stream also the
radio program channel through forty seven Direct TV. Okay, anyway, Uh,
isn't this the time that for the summer blockbuster? I
(01:10:46):
had to explain to my kids what blockbuster meant Blockbusters?
Like when isn't it when they stood around the theater,
like lines around the theater, like everybody wanted to go
in and see the film, and so it was a
blockbuster because they were lined up around the block Yeah, yeah, yeah,
has I don't know, has there really been one? Like
I watched the Last Mission Impossible and that was great,
(01:11:06):
and I went and watched Ballerina, and then I watched
it again. I've seen it twice. It's fabulous and I
appreciate it. I told you how she's not like a
woke Mary Sue. It's like Linda Hamilton type Ripley type female,
like a heroine, and that's I will want to get
back to those days. Uh, I don't really know if
there is one. I think they were wanting Superman to
be like the next one, and it's not going to happen.
(01:11:29):
Are you done with superhero movies? Kane?
Speaker 3 (01:11:32):
Yeah, there's so many, there's you know. I think they've
extended it. They went even into the antihero portion of it,
and I think they've exhausted that too.
Speaker 2 (01:11:41):
I see it advertising. I'm like, dah, I'm not you again,
you know, I just saw you go Away.
Speaker 3 (01:11:46):
Well, well, if you look at the statistics of the
highest grossing movies so far in just twenty twenty five,
it's Leelo and Stitch.
Speaker 2 (01:11:54):
It's like, well, after the horribleness with snow White and
every thing. I don't know. I don't know why people decided,
let's do this with Superman, Let's have Superman be woke.
I don't know, y'all, but it's getting absolutely savaged in
(01:12:15):
some early reviews, and I think it really does. It
deserves it.
Speaker 6 (01:12:20):
So.
Speaker 2 (01:12:22):
James Gunn is directing this film. He was Guardians of
the Galaxy. James Gunn had his own problem. Let me
just give you some insight a little, some little bit
of time ago. He got fired because he had some
really nasty posts on Twitter, and this was back in
(01:12:44):
like twenty eighteen. He I don't even know if I
can read some of what he said. I don't think
I actually can. It's like he said, oh, how do
I how do I just really inappropriate stuff. He had
one tweet where he talked about boys and another tweet
(01:13:08):
where he was mocking like literally rape, like saying, no,
the best thing about rape is when you're not being
raped anymore. Like he actually tweeted that out. I don't know.
And he had a bunch of these so he had said,
you know, my words at the time totally failed and unfortunate.
I was trying to be provocative and I failed, blah
blah blah. And he was like, I'm still you know,
I take full responsibility, whatever, whatever, whatever. And remember they
(01:13:33):
were firing they were going to fire Maffa, Guardians of
the Galaxy, and everybody like pitched in and they were
all defending him, all the actors, everybody. When Chris Pratt,
everybody's defending him. So he was kind of quiet for
the most part, just doing his job. And then Ninnay's
he's behind the camera for Superman and it's supposed to be.
(01:13:53):
It's supposed to be out when July eleventh, I think,
is when it comes out, and it's woke, apparently apparently
even more so than snow White. Well, how is that possible?
So he's decided to make the story about immigration, he said, quote, Well,
(01:14:15):
let's go ahead and hear what he has to say.
This is audio sound by to eleventy million. Go ahead
and play this.
Speaker 3 (01:14:20):
It is exactly what the movie is about.
Speaker 8 (01:14:24):
I think that, like, we support our people, you know,
we love our immigrants, we love Yes, Superman is an immigrant,
and yes.
Speaker 2 (01:14:34):
This is his brother. Is this not his brother? Sean?
Speaker 8 (01:14:37):
Do we support in this country our immigrants and if
you don't like that, then you're not American people?
Speaker 2 (01:14:44):
Who So that was his brother. But he also said
quote he did an interview with the Times of London.
He said that Superman is the story of America, an
immigrant that came from other places and populated the country,
and it says it's a story that for me says
basic human kindness is of value in something that we
have lost. Okay, well, I don't know if he's read
(01:15:07):
the room. When you look at polling on this issue especially,
I mean when you're looking at Democrats and you're looking
at Republicans. People have no problem with immigration. It's illegal
immigration that they have a problem with. And whenever you
have Hollywood celebrities or politicians that pay lip service to
this issue, no one cares enough about the issue, apparently
to offer that nuance to provide that distinction when discussing it,
(01:15:30):
which then I think they do that on purpose as bait,
so that they can say, look, how mad you are
talking about immigration. No, you're conflating two separate things, legal
immigration and illegal immigration. They're two entirely separate things, and
you're conflating both of them. And so that's what we're
seeing here. I really don't want to go see it.
I don't even know who. I mean, the majority of
(01:15:52):
the country feels this way about immigration, and I don't
understand why you would make a movie that intimates that
if you don't support their vision then you're somehow yeah,
a big I don't. I wasn't going to go see
this movie just because I was I'm like, I'm so tired.
(01:16:15):
I don't like Superman. I'm not a big DC guy, right,
I mean, I'm not a very big Superman fan, and
I get it that? How was it put? That Superman
is essentially almost kind of a mockery of humanity because
he has to pretend to be weaker and lame in
order to fit in with everybody else right, and has
(01:16:36):
to hide who he really is. It's really like an
exposition on humanity. But I just I don't know. I've
never been in I don't know. I've never been into.
Speaker 3 (01:16:45):
It, even as a kid. I find it hard to
believe that just a pair of glasses somehow keeps him
from being noticed as Superman.
Speaker 2 (01:16:51):
Okay, can I interject on that? Not in a rubb?
I'm gonna let you so. I've been to events and
if I have my hair pulled back, nobody has no
idea who I am.
Speaker 3 (01:16:58):
Seriously, nobody has an idea. Yeah what yep, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (01:17:02):
Nobody has any idea. It's hysterical.
Speaker 3 (01:17:04):
I don't know, but I didn't. I've never even as
a kid. I'm like, this makes absolutely no sense. How
do you not know that's not Superman? It's Clark Kent?
Speaker 6 (01:17:12):
Sure?
Speaker 3 (01:17:13):
But does he not lower his glasses once?
Speaker 2 (01:17:15):
Like?
Speaker 3 (01:17:15):
Can you not?
Speaker 7 (01:17:16):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (01:17:16):
There he is there?
Speaker 3 (01:17:18):
He is like none of that.
Speaker 2 (01:17:21):
Ever, I went I will never forget. I went to
an event somewhere. I was supposed to speak at the event,
and I got through the evening before and they were
doing some kind of reception and I had my hair
pulled back, you know, I was going to style on
my hair for the next day, and they were't going
to let me in because they had no idea who
I was. And it was the keynote and it was hysterical.
And then I was like, wait a minute, it's me,
and I undid my hair and they were like, oh
(01:17:42):
my gosh, like totally, I swear to you this happened.
And I have always been endlessly amused by this. And
then I thought maybe I should be a spy. Maybe
I could have been a spy if I could just, like,
you know, hide my appearance that easily. Maybe I'm in
the wrong line of work. I don't know. So that's
not the only one apparently that they're having problems with
(01:18:03):
the Superman reboot. I mean, first off, I just think
that you're immediately running a foul of the majority of
the country and how they view this issue. But apparently
where's this other story. So apparently they also have the
issue of what one is this Pixar. Let me pull
this up. So this is toy story. From what I understand,
(01:18:25):
it's Disney. So are you shocked? So fans are upset
because Disney got woke and they said that it's supposed
to be uh Disney Pixar. They left them, and they
left fans in a panic. It's the fifth one. This
is the fifth one, really, and it is a snap.
(01:18:46):
If I can pull this up, which I'm having a
little difficulty doing. They said that, I guess like Jesse
the cowgirl or something that's missing in the story. I
don't know. I don't care. It's a damn kids animated movie.
Why are we making anything woke? Mister missus patad are out?
No potato heads buzz and wootier back. Let's see there's
(01:19:07):
And I guess people are mad because it's a buyinar.
I don't know, kine, Yeah, didn't some of those voice
actors die. Maybe that's why they're not coming back.
Speaker 3 (01:19:20):
Probably. I still am upset at the fact they can't
originate something new, they can't create something new. Why why
are we always redoing stuff?
Speaker 2 (01:19:30):
That's literally what makes people mad when they redo this.
I saw a thing on streaming services where it was
Ane Bolin and it was a black actress playing a balin, which, okay,
then have a blonde Norwegian play Mulan. I don't care.
If that's what you're gonna do, then go ahead and
do that. Let's go ahead and like completely remake Black
Panther and make it all pasty, pale, white, blonde people. Right,
(01:19:55):
go ahead, Let's just go ahead. I mean, also, we
just need a more original content. I mean, there's so
many great stories from so many different corners of the globe,
Like why are we rehashing the same stupid stuff over
and over and over again? I just it's it's so
frustrating at this point. So I I don't know, I'm
(01:20:17):
not gonna go see I probably I don't even know
when I'm going to go back to the theater to
see another movie. I don't see everything I want to see.
Speaker 3 (01:20:24):
I don't suspect he's going to stay in the theater. It's
very long. If they're not going to get the revenue
from it, and they see that it's just falling off
a cliff, uh, you know, immediately they may pull it.
Speaker 2 (01:20:34):
Didn't didn't that get a theatrical release? And it came
and went. Now it's gone, lorrainos to be fair, Superman
is an undocumented alien, Lorraine, he's a Martian. He is
literally like from space. Now, if someone shoots to Earth
in a rocket from space for the purpose of studying him,
(01:20:54):
I'm gonna let him cook. Okay, let him go.
Speaker 3 (01:20:59):
But if she's I haven't seen anything like.
Speaker 2 (01:21:01):
The world was chat talking about that? That's what.
Speaker 3 (01:21:05):
Seen any Superman paperwork? She's probably right, he's undocumented.
Speaker 2 (01:21:08):
Seen any Superman paperwork. It's Clark Kent. I'm an American
named Clark Kent. That's what it is. I don't know,
and so they I is he he's he's an alien.
That's like saying, are we really doing this? That's like
saying Predator is a movie about undocumented immigrants? Are we
(01:21:30):
really doing that? We really? Because let's take it to
the full and final. The Predator was also from space.
This is the Predator was a movie about undocumented immigrants. Kane. Look,
get all these ignorant people that were fighting him and
being rude.
Speaker 3 (01:21:44):
Predator didn't have any paperworkan he didn't.
Speaker 2 (01:21:47):
Did he have Did he have special Predator paperwork?
Speaker 1 (01:21:49):
No?
Speaker 2 (01:21:50):
Did he have a special Predator like? No, he was
an undocumented immigrant, Kane alien alien.
Speaker 3 (01:21:58):
Whatever, undocumented alien.
Speaker 2 (01:22:00):
Early an alien or what about the actual alien? Well,
they were in space, aliens, aliens, the Xenomorphs were in space.
I have no idea how I know that the Xeno war,
but they were in space. But you know what I mean,
like just saying there's there. We got a lot of
uh what is it? Uh? What was the one that
Richard Dreyfus was in and he made the mashed Potato Mountain?
Speaker 9 (01:22:18):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (01:22:18):
Yeah, close Encounters as Close Encounters, Yes, yes, those that
was a movie about undocumented aliens. They were just snatching
people up to be friendly, Like, how dare you you
see what I mean? Like, this is so stupid. It's
a movie about a guy who flies with a cape
and he wears an adult onesie. Okay, stop trying to
be like it's the movie about immigrants. Just shut up
(01:22:39):
and make a stupid movie one of a million about
your superhero. Dude. Stop trying to make this about a
political issue and sucking the joy of life out of
everything that we know. Just quit, please, And.
Speaker 3 (01:22:53):
Now all of the news you would probably miss. It's
time for Dana's quick five take.
Speaker 2 (01:22:59):
Karaoki's up for the rest of the show. I'm telling
you him it's such a Then I got to tell
you about my soft serve thing that I got. It's
just so weird here today. I have no idea what's happening,
all right? So first up, oh, Poland has reintroduced border
control border controls with Germany. Now, remember, let's go back
like a year real quick, when you had different European
(01:23:21):
Union nations that were freaking out over the absolute deluge
of people coming in from North Africa, et cetera, and
they were going in through Germany, and Germany was like,
we're not going to respect borders. We're just go ahead,
You're part of the EU. We're just gonna let everyone
filter through. So Poland has reintroduced border controls with Germany
in a crackdown. Their president said it's a Pole's first
agenda and they are not messing around Carol. Now, Rocky
(01:23:45):
ran on the slogan of Poland first, Poles First, and
defeated the more liberal candidate, and now they're taking a
very very tough approach, similar to what Italy's been doing
on immigration. So very interesting. Amman's and custody after he
made a bomb threat on a plane that was leaving
Saint Petersburg and Clearwater International Airport. Yeah, you can't do that,
right if you ever watched Meet the Parents, because that
(01:24:07):
you can't even say the word bomb, bomb, bomb, can't
even do it. You can't, But not like that. Twenty
seven year old Taj Taylor told another passenger that his
laptop was a bomb during the flight. Clearly they didn't
watch Key and Peel either, because that passenger immediately went
and told one of the airline attendants and was I
(01:24:27):
mean you would write, you would be like, this guy's
got a bomb. This is like really crazy, and they
were getting ready to take off. Guys twenty seven years
old told the passenger's laptop was a bomb, and like,
I'm just saying, I really were going to Drac A.
Speaker 9 (01:24:42):
Sclounce.
Speaker 2 (01:24:44):
I'm not talking about no Terry Bradshaw or no Terry Clouth.
You know, I'm just saying, you know you got to
direct them. Clounce. A man setting off fireworks this is
in Boston, killed himself. I mean, I was just telling
the show, congratulations, everybody got here with all their fingers
and toes. Intact, one year old Robert Spagnuolo, well, he
was apparently killed by a firework Friday night. According to
(01:25:07):
ten Channelton Boston, it was a fireworks incident and it
was Plymouth County District Attorney's office. They confirmed it, and
they said that he was identified and it was directly
involving fireworks. They didn't say like what. They didn't say
if it was, you know, a Rouman candle or what
it was, but you just do. It was a big one.
You gotta be careful out there. I do not want
to talk about the eel one. Can we just not?
Speaker 3 (01:25:29):
Okay?
Speaker 2 (01:25:31):
Are you gonna make me? You can read it? Share
this one? This is yours? No I triple dog Dare
you well?
Speaker 3 (01:25:39):
Scientists have found the doctors have found a live eel
swimming in a man's abdominal cavity. It was in him,
swimming around in the abdominal cabin. You're welcome.
Speaker 2 (01:25:54):
Okay, this is so gross. The world's largest time capsule.
I love how that was just the story opened in
Nebraska fifty years later. Do we know what's in it?
Probably cornerscure stuff. I don't know what's in it now.
They just said it was the world's largest head. Pet
Rocks artwork, achual suit Chevy Vega, all that good stuff.
(01:26:14):
It's already tough when you're flying right, you're on an
aluminum tube and you're in the sky, and I just
get real antsy. When I'm in I feel like I'm
being held captive with a bunch of people. I don't
even know how I'm gonna do a cruise later. The
academic thing with MRC going up to Norway. I mean,
it's not like I can scale up the size of
a fiord to get away or anything. But being on
(01:26:38):
a plane, like where else you're gonna go, like open
the door and fall to the ground. Like where else,
you're gonna go, hide in the bathroom, hide in the laboratory.
So I get it. When it's time to get off
the plane, people want to get off, especially if you
have connecting flights that can be tricky, or if you
got to use the loo, because using the restroom on
the plane is probably one of the nastiest things ever,
next to riding the subway in New York. It's horrible.
(01:27:01):
They're always so bad, Like you got to use it
first and then just give it up. Then you just
give it to God after that, because that's you know,
only he can help after that point. So I get it,
you want to get off the plane, right, but I
think there's like ways to be polite about it. But
also people don't want to be polite. In today's society
for whatever reason, it feels like there's less of it.
I think there's less of it because people are tired
(01:27:22):
of putting up with stuff. They're just tired. People are
just tired, and there's too much. There's too much happening.
So Audio sun By seventeen. This is at Fort Lauderdale,
Hollywood International Airport. This woman went on a tirade because
she was getting criticized by passengers for getting up and
moving forward to get off the plane before the passengers
(01:27:46):
in front of her were able to get off. Now,
I don't know how all of this kicked off, because
you know, it's always we have all of these it's
like bigfoot. We have phones and all these video recording things,
but you know, nobody gets bigfoot. So I don't know
exactly how how bad it got to get to this point.
But Audio somen By seventeen, this is what happened right now,
(01:28:06):
what people, Oh my god, you're all whiny for no reason.
Speaker 3 (01:28:15):
Let the people go.
Speaker 2 (01:28:17):
Get up the way you want to. You're just a
Cameron and it is you whad people. My god, why
did you off showing up?
Speaker 5 (01:28:29):
It's not affecting any of you.
Speaker 2 (01:28:35):
Yours are so funny. You are the Karens about it
because you're the ones. You're the one to make a noise.
Nobody talk and not even I'm sorry, do you have
my permission to record me? Because you've never said one?
I can tell you, Oh yes, I can give him
(01:28:57):
your I wouldn't even doing nothing. He just sitting back
there and get you can be No, you're not going
to because of an accident. We're not doing that. Figure out.
Speaker 6 (01:29:08):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:29:10):
When they say eight and they talk about low, I
Q I use AIDS and i'm I'm in a doctoral program.
Oh my god, I don't say eight. Do you even
know who it raises?
Speaker 9 (01:29:24):
Means?
Speaker 2 (01:29:25):
Oh my god, you're White's we're talking about accent maybe vocabulary.
Where when we get off this plane, I'll meet you
out there with my bar. Everybody everybody is in. I'm
sorry that everybody on this plane is insufferable. They're all horrible.
Everyone is horrible. If I was the pilot, I would
(01:29:47):
have dove it into the ocean. I'm like, wow, gone
doing mankind of favor. Oh my gosh, where do you
even start? She was trying to get off that she
wanted to get off the plane before every I've been,
I've seen that before. Most Most of the time, people
are nice. The only time that I ever said anything
(01:30:08):
on a plane when people were trying to rush forward
was actually my oldest son was with me. I can't
remember where we were going, but there was an elderly
lady who was right across the aisle from us, and
she was like really elderly and apparently like talk to
her a little bit. She her husband had passed earlier
that year. She was going to see her sister, whose
children had placed her sister in a nursing facility. So
(01:30:30):
I'm already like, my heart was already hurting for this lady, right,
and we helped her put her suit case up and
helped her get you know, situated, because she had she
wasn't she didn't have mobility issues, but she was like
eighty something. She was very it was she still an
independent lady. Sharpa's attack and she had every right to fly,
but you know, just have a little consideration, right, So
when the plane landed and everyone's getting up, and my
(01:30:53):
uh son was actually making sure she got up and
had her toe bag. There was a younger woman, and
then people just started coming forward and one woman literally
pushed past her to get to the front and almost
knocked this woman on the other two passengers in the seat,
and then everyone else it was like murmurh. They saw
(01:31:14):
this one lady going up, and I'm you know, I'm
like immediately trying to help this elderly lady because the
flight attendants were in the front, they're opening the door,
they're doing they're not right there in your section, and
I'm like, this woman is gonna get trampled. And all
these people came up. So I got up and I
was like, can you please wait? You know, I'm still
trying to literally get her up from the aisle and
this was probably like in two thousand and nine, twenty ten,
(01:31:38):
and they kept pushing, so finally I lost my caol
and I did yell at people. I was like, can
you guys just chill the hell out for five seconds.
I'm like, we're all going to the same place. I'm like,
can I let her get up first? Because she got
knocked down by one of you. And I was so
mad that they didn't even notice that this woman was
literally knocked over in the aisle, and I made sure
(01:32:01):
she got out before us, so if they were gonna
like try to run her down again, at least they
would hit me and my child first. But you know,
getting off the plane, and she was just slow getting up.
She wasn't like slow walking, it was just you know,
she's eighty something, and I was just like and I
think the people realize what happened, and they saw her
kind of trying to get out of it, because when
(01:32:21):
you fall in between those aisles, you know how hard
that is to get if you're not eighties, it's like
hard to get up anyway because you're on your stuff.
You can't move the sea, you can't get up. It's awkward.
And I think they realize, oh my gosh, we got
a chill. We knocked this littleady down. And then they
were fine after that. But I literally did have to
yell at people. That's the only time I ever did.
(01:32:42):
Otherwise I just don't care. I'm not in a rush
to get off the plane. I always whenever we have
connecting flights, There's only been one time that it's been
close because there was nothing else. But I always give
myself tons of time if I got a connecting flight
somewhere A. I avoid connecting flights, but if I have
to take when, I always give myself tons of time.
And not everybody can prepare that, you know, plan that
far in advance, but just try. But I mean, what
(01:33:05):
is it going to save you a couple of minutes
to rush forward? If that? This doesn't make any sense.
But the problem with this is that I don't know
if she had a connecting flight, I don't know. She
could have been a heck of a lot nicer and
everybody else could have been. But she didn't say Kane
at any point that she had a connecting flight that
she had to get to or anything like that. She
(01:33:26):
was just like, you know whatever, I mean, lady live.
Speaker 3 (01:33:29):
If I had a connecting flight, I would say, yeah,
all right, you guys, you got me. But you know
I have a connecting flight.
Speaker 2 (01:33:34):
So that's why I got up the yeah, yeah, yeah,
because I've been on planes where her like, if you
don't have a connecting flight, you know, can you let
other people go forward? And it's like, I don't, you know,
I don't have an issue. I'm not in a rush
to get off the plane, and I my husband likes
to get off the plane like as soon as possible.
But I'm like, h, chill, we don't got to be
in a rush. It's all good. It's all good. Seriously,
(01:33:54):
Clearly some people got places they got to be. Just
let it go. It doesn't really doesn't really bug me.
But what bugs me is like when I see older
people like that lady. I don't know if I've ever
been that mad in public in a long time, like ever,
I was so mad for her. I just could not
believe this. I'mone just like powered through and just not
I mean literally knocked her in between the seats like
(01:34:14):
she was butt up and her I mean almost like
a downward dog position. They knocked her in that seat
and it was really awkward for her to get up,
and the other seat mate passengers, the other passengers in
her row were trying to help her. I'm trying to
help her, but everybody on that plane was just not
helping the situation. Not helping the situation. Clearly, she felt entitled.
(01:34:37):
She was snotty. You know the point where it went
really downhills, where the other lady was like, I'm in
a doctorate program. Oh my gosh, nobody cares. Just stop. Stop,
don't engage with stupid because stupid loves it and stupid
feeds off it.
Speaker 7 (01:34:52):
You do not have to.
Speaker 2 (01:34:53):
I always tell everybody you do not have to attend
every fight to which you are invited. You do not
have to just let it. Some people just need to
show their backsides. Let them do it. But it just
got it, and I'm like, there's kids on this flight.
I felt bad for the one dude who was just
sitting there eating snacks. Did you see him? He was
(01:35:14):
the only guy who would not bothering his soul on
this flight. He's sitting there just eating his snacks and
she turns around and starts at him. I was like,
that poor man, he's eating his snacks, probably eating them
plane whatever the plane trail mix? Did they even offer
it her to the people with peanut allergies get upset?
I don't know. The whole thing is just just too much.
Speaker 3 (01:35:36):
That dude was my spirit animal, right. I'm the same
way if people are are in a rush and they
would just let them go. If you're in the plane
and you're not in a rush, to get off the plane.
Having three or four more people in front of you
as you're heard it off the plane through the jet bridge.
Speaker 2 (01:35:50):
Is you're not You're not gonna get a special award.
Speaker 3 (01:35:52):
You're not gaining anything.
Speaker 2 (01:35:53):
Yeah, they're not gonna They're not gonna be at the
end of the thing like you were the first stuff.
Here's a million dollars you guys are losing because you
didn't get off the plane first. Now no one's doing that.
There's not those types of role.
Speaker 3 (01:36:05):
Fifteenth, I'm a better person.
Speaker 2 (01:36:07):
Put that on my tombstone first off the plane, you know.
Speaker 8 (01:36:10):
Just just.
Speaker 2 (01:36:12):
But it it just yeah, I and I don't like
being in crowds where you're jostling like that. I don't,
Oh man, I can't stand it. So I will totally
just chill, let them, let it, let them go by,
and then do what I gotta do. Right And because
I already have I pack light anyway, already have all
my stuff. I only ever do carry on. So it's
(01:36:33):
like one in one and I'm out. But there are
a lot of nice people that'll they'll see you because
if you don't go, then it's like the current of
people just and then you just you know, you just
sit there until the whole plane gets off. But every
now and then there are people nice enough that are like,
oh my gosh, go ahead and go, like you're you're
sitting here ready to go. I'm just not going to
like fight with people to get off the plane because
I don't have that much patience in life, so I
(01:36:55):
like to reserve it, you know what I mean, for
like the times that it would really would matter, right,
like picking up an elderly woman who gets knocked over
in the aisle. That's you know, things like that. But this,
I see things like this, and it makes me not
want to fly. I already don't like it. But I
don't know what I'm going to do on this cruise. Guys,
(01:37:16):
I don't even know. I was looking at the boat,
the boat ship, I don't know. I literally all everything
I know about getting on boats is from lakes, fishing
canoes and then having a power little power boat like
in the zoomas and going, you know, driving around that.
And I know how to I know ties and know
how to navigate. I know how to read nautical maps.
Because there was no way I was taking my family
(01:37:36):
out in the open ocean without ever being able to
do that because insane. But we're on a big boat
and came we're going to be in the Fiords, which
is basically like there's no ground, it's just you look
around at it's water and rocks. That's it. Sheer cliffs
that goats couldn't even get on, Like a goat couldn't
even like one of those weird ones couldn't even get
(01:37:56):
up there.
Speaker 3 (01:37:57):
It's not a carnival cruise you're going on. No, No,
it's I think you'll be okay.
Speaker 2 (01:38:02):
I don't know. All I'm worried about like food poisoning
and everybody having diarrhea and like oh god, a valid
or like what if, oh my gosh, I don't know.
What if the boat what if there's a drunk captain
that happened you guys remember that story. What if there's
a drunk captain, they hit something and the we capsize
in a fjord and then a lockness monster from Scotland
(01:38:25):
eats us.
Speaker 3 (01:38:25):
I don't know, before he capsize, you just drink with
him so that he's not drinking as much.
Speaker 2 (01:38:29):
I don't know. I'm just it's real. I don't know
how this is gonna work. So yeah, we'll see. So,
oh boy, this justin all new This is all new
new news. Yeah, that's right, new news. So Angela Paxton,
who is a Texas state senator, posted quote today, after
(01:38:49):
thirty eight years of marriage, I filed for divorce on
biblical grounds. I believe marriage is a secret covenant. I
have earnestly pursued reconciliation, but in light of recent discoveries,
I do not believe that it honors God or is
loving to myself. My children were ken to remain in
the marriage. I move forward with complete confidence that God
is always working everything together for the good of those
who love Him and who are called according to His purpose. Now,
(01:39:14):
Angela Paxton, she said, Ken, that is Ken Paxton's wife.
He is the age of Texas, and he is running
against John Cornyn in the primary for that Senate seat. Wow.
I also heard that apparently Cornyn was at the White
House visiting with Potus, and that the White House, I guess,
(01:39:34):
trying to get the White House involved in this race,
which I thought. I always thought Potus had a good
relationship with kN Paxton. I can't see them sad, you know,
signing up next to Cornyan right now. But all very
man alive, very interesting. So what do you mean recent discoveries? What, dude,
(01:39:56):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (01:39:57):
I am.
Speaker 3 (01:40:00):
She be getting fed false information? Or do you suspect
this is accurate stuff?
Speaker 2 (01:40:09):
I have heard stuff before about I don't like to
get into people's like marriages and personal businesses. And I
don't know. People in Texas gossip more than anybody else
I've ever, Like in Missouri politics, they gossip, but in
Texas it's like an art form. It is a whole
new level. And I have heard a lot of stuff,
(01:40:32):
and I'm not repeating any of it because I have
no idea whether or not it's valid or but I've
heard a lot of things, so I don't know. They
she was accusing him of adultery, and that's according to
Kut and a couple of other sources. And they said
(01:40:55):
that they in her filing. It was apparently in the
petition she was accusing him of adultery and they had
stopped living together in June of last year. Wow, So
what does that mean for that senter race? Because Cornin
may not be the quickest, but his operatives are so man,
(01:41:17):
that's gonna get real spicy, real fast. So we'll see
how that goes. That's very there, and she's gonna regardless
of what is happening in their situation, she's they're gonna
go at her because they're going to look at her
as helping Cornan. So all right, that's all. Have more
on that tomorrow. I'll have something up at substat coming
up kind of looks at the lay of the land
(01:41:38):
on that today's stupidity came.
Speaker 3 (01:41:39):
Oh it looks like Michelle Obama and Juliet Luis Dreyfus.
Oh God, they're claiming that man life is difficult, difficult
life for American women. Listen to this.
Speaker 6 (01:41:51):
Women, we have so many landmines and barriers and don'ts
and limitations. It's you know, I mean, Craig, you're the
guy at the table. But I think it's important for
all guys listening, especially men raising daughters, to realize.
Speaker 3 (01:42:11):
That this is what Michelle's pushing these days in her
IMO podcast.
Speaker 2 (01:42:16):
Everybody wants to be Oprah. I don't get it, folks.
That does it for us today. Make sure you find
us on Substack, Chapter and Verse, YouTube, Facebook, I can subscribe.
I'll be back with you tomorrow