Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:08):
Oh death, you are dead to me, your morning friends.
It's Friday May second. On the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
We've been talking through Ephesians four this week and we
talked about how God gave some to teach God's word, pastors, evangelists, apostles, prophets,
(00:28):
shepherd's teachers, and the purpose is to equip you and
I to do the ministry. You know, we have this mindset,
I think. Let me let me give you this as
an example. Someone's in the hospital and they attend your church,
(00:50):
and we expect the pastor to do the visitation. And
a lot of pastors do that. But imagine what happens
when you walk in the door of that hospital room
to visit somebody that you know from church. They expect
the pastor to come in. They don't expect you, and
(01:15):
that carries an incredible blessing. That's the point is that
it says in verse fifteen, speaking the truth and love,
we are to grow up in every way into Him
who is the Head, into Christ, from whom the whole body,
joined and held together by every joint in every with
(01:38):
which it is equipped. When each part is working properly,
makes the body grow so that it builds itself up
in love. Each one of us is part of that
body of Christ, and we're to learn and grow when
we go to church and hear God's word, so that
we can then be the hands, the feet, the ministry
(01:59):
tool used by God to bless other people's lives. That's
the whole point. It's not up to the pastor, it's
you and me.
Speaker 2 (02:08):
Ten past the hours the Morning Show.
Speaker 1 (02:25):
All right, let's take a peek inside the American Patriots
Almanac for May the second, fourteen ninety seven, Explorer John
Cabot set sail from England in search of a westward
route to the Indies.
Speaker 3 (02:43):
Hadn't he heard about Chris Columbus? Jeez the British so late,
but appropriately so.
Speaker 1 (02:54):
Eighteen sixty three, Confederate General Stonewall Jackson accidentally shot by
his own troops at Chancellorsville. He dies eight days later. Wow,
eighteen sixty three. The dude has made it through so
much of the war, and then that happens. Nineteen thirty nine,
New York Yankees first baseman Lou Gagg the streak of
(03:17):
twenty one thirty consecutive games played comes to an end.
The record stood until cal Ripken broke it nineteen ninety five.
Nineteen forty nine, Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman wins
the Pulitzer Prize. Nineteen sixty five, the Early Bird satellite
sends TV pictures across the Atlantic for the very first time.
(03:41):
That lou gereg story is really an amazing story. What
an era of baseball legends. My dad used to tell
me that what he enjoyed doing was when he was
a kid, he would watch the players in the Negro Leagues.
He said, I would climb the fences and watch. He said,
(04:01):
Josh Gibson could hit a baseball farther than anybody he'd
ever seen in his life to the day he died.
He said, that was just awesome watching him. But to
think of Garrig and Ruth and Ty Cobb, and I mean, goodness,
(04:22):
gracious that era of legends. Mm hmmm, all right, today
is National School Lunch Hero Day. Now, is that a
hero sandwich or no? It's dedicated to men and women
(04:42):
that work in the cafeteria. I thought it was a
hero like a you know, a sandwich, not to be
confused with a hero which you'll find at the Greek Festival,
National Space Day, National Life Insurance Day, National Truffle Day.
(05:04):
As long as it doesn't have fruit inside, truffles are amazing.
They just are absolutely all right, real quickly here First Commerce,
Credit Union, our friends. It is National Pet Month. May
(05:24):
is National Pet Month and First Commerce always does a
fundraising effort during the month of May. The Liz Nix Fundraiser.
Liz is honored through this. She was a life long,
longtime animal advocate and and this was created four years
(05:51):
ago in Nashville, Georgia, and it is now spread. And
the idea is to donate funds to support local animal
organizations that care for abandoned and lost animals, thereby making
them more suitable for adoption. So if you'd like to
(06:13):
give I'm gonna tell you how to do that. First Commerce,
SEU dot org, slash, Liz Nix, n I and Nix
and I X Liz Nix. One word. So Gill o'cash
do something really cool. Sixteen past the hour, come back
(06:34):
little dolphin talk here on the morning show. You're like,
what an addition of what would you do? First time
(06:56):
I've ever done this. We're gonna put you in a
situation and I'm just curious how you would handle it.
These are situations that you have a choice, and sometimes
you don't have a choice. But in those situations where
you don't have a choice, how would you handle not
having a choice? What would your reaction be? What would
you do? I'm going to put you inside of a
(07:20):
situation in just a little while and then take your calls.
We'll also have what's the beef in the final half
hour of the show. Is always a little bit different.
Best and worst of the week, Good news, dad joke
headlines from the Bee Jose, Please thrill everybody with your
impression of a dolphin talking. Go ahead, come on, stay
(07:49):
with it. Let's let's let's see how close that is here?
All right?
Speaker 4 (07:57):
Oh that's it's mighty accurate.
Speaker 1 (08:01):
Not bad. That's two dolphins. This is what I think
a lot of people think of when they consider dolphins.
The clicking sounds. Dolphins also have this habit of sounding
like they're blowing a raspberry or you know, you know
what I mean. Listen, there's there is there are some
(08:35):
some of us right now are going straight to the gutter.
We're like, yeah, I know what that sounds like. That
that sounds like bill, that's that's Bill after he ate
the spicy wings. What are you talking about? Here's what
(08:55):
this story is fascinating to me. Google has written a
program and they are using artificial intelligence in working with
researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology and the Wild
Dolphin Project. It's based in Florida, which they together. They've
(09:19):
been studying dolphin sounds for forty years. They've created a
new AI model called Dolphin Gema or gemma, and they're
trying to interpret and figure out what they're saying and
convert it. Because dolphins are incredibly smart, they're remarkably communicative,
(09:45):
and we've tried to figure out for years, Okay, what
are they saying. They think that AI can piece it
together and convert their sounds to work words where we
can understand what they're saying to each other and communicating
(10:08):
to one another. They have been using this program to
analyze a massive library of recordings to detect patterns and
structures and to determine if these vocalizations and clicks and
so forth, if they are being laced together in actual
(10:32):
sort of sentences. See why I circled this story back
a few days ago. I just hadn't had a chance
to get to it. And the other thing is the
Google Phone pixel It has the same technology in it
that they're using in this program. The pixel phone technology
(10:56):
can separate out dolphin clicks and whistles from background noise,
is like waves, boat engines, underwater static and it creates
a clean audio file for the program. And so this
is specifically being used for Atlantic bottlenose dolphins, sorry, Atlantic
(11:19):
spotted dolphins, but they believe that they can use it
for bottlenose or spinner dolphins with a little tweaking of
the program. I'll be honest with you, I would love
the potential of material if we learned that we could
(11:41):
understand what dolphins are saying. Could you imagine that. Let's
just for example, let's just say they've got they figured
out what these clicks are all about and it was Boy,
(12:01):
did you read that story about Adam Schiff? Is he
like a crab or what his bullsy little eyes? That
makes me want to just smack him with my tail?
(12:23):
Just the possibilities are endless. Speaking of Adam Schiff, boy,
have I got some sound for you? Back to back
bombs next on the Morning Show with Preston Scott, The
(12:43):
Morning show with Preston Scott. We gotta get right to this.
We have literally no time to waste because I need
to be able to play this sound for you. I
got a couple of sound bites. The first one is
just Waters with Michael Schellenberger. Michael Schellenberger a former illiberal
(13:07):
climate change nut who had an epiphany and now he's
turned his skills which were muted by the lies of
climate change which he participated in, and wrote a lengthy
apology for into investigative reporting. Listen to this exchange. You
(13:32):
have this new piece on substack that the USAID and
the CIA helped orchestrate Trump's impeachment.
Speaker 5 (13:42):
Yeah, I mean justin it's a crazy story. I mean,
you might forget that. You know, the House of Representatives
impeached President Trump in December of twenty nineteen. Many people
may not remember that it was a CIA analyst who
was left over from the Obama White House who wrote
the memo that led to the impeachment. It was all
based on hearsay. The person had not actually been in
(14:04):
the room with Trump. Nonetheless, this memo that he wrote
relied heavily on a report done by an organization funded
by USAID. In fact, it's initial founding funding. I mean
now it's tens of millions of dollars had gone into
this group called the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project,
a name that's not very memorable OCCRP, but it was
(14:27):
basically created as an extension of the State Department and
then of USAID. And as you know, Jesse, this is
very serious to be involved in an effort to do
regime change at home. As we've been discovering as the
files have come out with what Elon Musk has been doing,
we know that USAID was really about regime change abroad.
(14:48):
It was a kind of public facing part you regime
change operation like CIA, but not covert more overt. Well,
now you see a similar blowback. Just like they did
censorship abroad and brought censorship tools back home. They were
doing this sort of thing abroad, creating a predicate essentially
for Trump's impeachment.
Speaker 1 (15:05):
So I think.
Speaker 5 (15:06):
It's just one of many revelations that we'll see coming
out in the next sit So.
Speaker 1 (15:12):
Adam Schiff and all of this was a coordinated effort
to overthrow Trump unbelievable. But now we get to a
totally different story. I wrote a comment that when Steven Miller,
Deputy Chief of Staff for the President, when he walks
(15:36):
out to address the media, now they are going to
run for cover. They're going to run for cover, They'll leave,
or they'll pull out umbrellas because they get rinsed every
time he is over this protection of MS. Thirteen and
this due process garbage that's being rolled out on people
(15:57):
that broke into this country. Listen to what he said
to the assembled media. He basically called out by Carolyn Levitt,
you talk about due process.
Speaker 6 (16:08):
The Body of Administration made the decision to give extensive
due process to two trained Aragua terrorists that were apprehended
at the border just a couple of years ago. The
two gentlemen, they were from Venezuela. There were members of
trained Aragua. The Body Administration and Border Patrol apprehended them
(16:29):
and made the decision to provide them with extensive due process,
put them onto a program on a supervised release, and
put them on inkle monitors so they could go through
a lengthy legal judicial determination as to whether these legal
aliens who had just foot on US soil might want
to live in the United States for the rest of
(16:49):
their lives.
Speaker 7 (16:51):
What was the result of that decision. What was the
result of that choice that was made.
Speaker 6 (16:55):
Those two men kidnapped a young girl named Joscelyn Hungary
from her family. They beat her, they sexually assaulted her,
they tortured her, they shipped her, they murdered her, and
they dumped her body. That is what the body of
the administration's policy was. Most of your papers never covered
(17:16):
her story when it happened. To the extent that you
covered it at all, it was because President Trump forced
you to cover it by highlighting it repeatedly, over and
over again. He had to shame you into covering it.
And each and every one of you decides over and
over again with these mster teen terrorists to the extent
that you at the financial means to do so.
Speaker 7 (17:36):
You all choose to live.
Speaker 6 (17:38):
In condos or homes or houses as far away from
these kinds of gang fingers as you possibly can. If
I offered any one of you a rent free home
with no taxes to pay in any of these gang neighborhoods,
and I said your neighbors are Mmester King terrorists, or
Mexican mafia or Sineloa cartel or trained Deerragua, I couldn't
pay you to live there, but yet you with your
(18:00):
coverage are trying to force innocent Americans to have these
people as their neighbors and that one day their daughter
may be abducted from their home and raped and murdered.
So you're not going to get an ounce of sympathy
from this administration or President Trump for the terrorists who've
invaded our homes in our country.
Speaker 1 (18:20):
As best dose underwear needs to be worn when you're
around that man. If you're in the media, is there
one word he said that you're not shouting amen to
forty one minutes after the out It's why you listen
The morning show with Pressed the Sky A little follow
(18:50):
up here. Last night, Jesse Waters gets an exclusive sit
down with the DOGE team. They entered the Institute of
Peace headquarters and you're like, what in the world is that.
It's the United States Institute of Peace. It is funded
(19:17):
with our tax dollars. It promotes research, policy, analysis, education,
and training on international peace and conflict resolution in an
effort to prevent and resolve violent conflicts and to promote
post conflict stability. We're spending money on this dose shows
up and unbelievably, one terabyte of records gets deleted by
(19:46):
the accountant in advance of them coming in. They are
just dumping material. Unfortunately for them, DOGE has the nerdiest
of nerds ever. They recovered all of it and it's
(20:07):
all been referred to the FBI and the Department of Justice.
What misspent funds are they uncovering? That's the whole beauty
of DOGE. I don't have an ounce of sympathy for
(20:30):
the slimming of our government, and I'm sorry for anyone
who loses their job, but I promise you people that
work for the federal government know the waste was endless.
It has to happen. Don't think this isn't on my calendar.
(20:58):
June twelve, heal, what's that, my friends? That is the
debut of the new season of Alone. Oh yeah, and
they're putting them in Africa for the first time ever.
The Great Krew Desert in South Africa, wardhogs, scorpions, snakes,
(21:24):
venomous snakes, baboons, cape buffalo, wildebeest, and I can only
imagine if you don't know about the series Alone, I
think it's the best television show period by a mile.
(21:45):
They take ten survivalists, they hand them ten things camera
gear to self document their experiences. Total isolation, punishing weather.
(22:05):
Whoever lasts the longest wins a half a mill, five
hundred thousand, no camera crews, no gimmicks. It is the
purest survival program every They took my buddy Les Stroud
and Survivor Man, and they multiplied at times ten. Survivor
(22:29):
Man was the authentic no offense to Bear Grills, but
Bear had a crew with him, and the guy who
I really admired was the video guy who's jumping and
doing all the same stuff Bear Grills is doing, only
with camera gear. That's the guy. Anyway, Alone is breathtakingly
good television. And we're working on getting a guest from
(22:53):
either this series or one of the producers or a
previous Alone winner which we've had on the show before.
And yeah this I'm yeah, yeah, this stuff is so good.
You're gonna find me geeking out on this from time
to time. I'm just warning you right now. I'm fascinated
(23:13):
by the ten items that they choose. They all get
a base kit and then they get to pick from
a list and you can have ten items out of
this list, and what they pick is crucial to the
survival outcome. But everyone, they're limited, and boy are they searched.
If they try to smuggle something on they are busted.
(23:36):
Forty seven minutes pass. Let's get you set for a
first ever edition of What would You Do? The Morning
Show with Preston Scott on News Radio one hundred point
seven wufla box fang for senior adults that live on
(24:04):
fixed income. When the temperature goes up, their thermometer in
there where they live doesn't change. The thermostat doesn't change.
The thermometer does sorry, but the thermostat does it. They
can't if anything, it changes so that the air conditioning
doesn't run as frequently because they can't afford an expensive bill.
(24:26):
They can't afford a spike. And so these fans, I mean, look,
let's face it, Evaporative cooling is cooling, and if you're
perspiring from heat and humidity, you get a breeze, you cool.
It helps, It matters, moving air through a home matters,
(24:50):
and so these box fans are hugely important. And we
are working with Elder Care Services of Tallahassee and Bay
County Council on Aging and Panama City and so here's
what we're asking you to do pick up a box
van or two, or three or four and drop them
off in Tallahassee at PEPSI distribution center. They've been kind
(25:11):
enough to help us. It's on Pensacola Street across from TSC.
Or here at the iHeartRadio studios during normal business hours,
there's usually somebody here. I can't guarantee that you won't
make a double trip, but we'll ask you to help out.
Drop them off in Panama City, go to your local
Ace Hardware store in Bay Or Walton County and just
(25:33):
buy one there and leave it and then it'll be distributed.
If you want to buy elsewhere, that's fine. Just drop
it off at the Ace Hardware stores in Bay or
Waltern County. All right. It would make a huge difference,
huge difference. We're going to do this through the month
of May. I have come across some stories from time
(25:56):
to time, and I think it would be fun to
hear how you would handle certain situations. When I saw
this story, I immediately thought of this segment What would
you do? And I mean I'm genuinely asking what would
(26:20):
you do? You're on an airplane, you're flying in this
case from Mexico, Cabo San Lucas, and you're coming to Atlanta.
It's an international flight, two of them, in fact, total
of three hundred passengers between the two flights. The problem
is the weather in and around Atlanta will not let
(26:46):
you land. The only airport available for you to land
is the Montgomery Regional Airport in Alabama, where they do
not have customs. And so three hundred passengers landed at
(27:07):
about nine thirty at night and could not leave the
airplane and had to spend the night on board the plane.
How are you handling that? What would you do? Eight
five zero two zero five WFLA. How are you passing?
(27:30):
You can't get off, you're not allowed. How are you
handling that? How would you deal with it? Eight five
zero two zero five WFLA humor me, nobody, nobody wants
(28:09):
to break the ice here. Just we're putting you in
a situation from the news, and I'm just curious how
everybody would handle this. In this case, you have no
options other than staying on bord An airplane. You're on
an international flight. You're flying into Atlanta, whether reroutes you
(28:32):
to a regional airport with no customs and so because
and think of that for just a moment. The southern
border is a sieve, has been. It's not anymore understood.
But we went four years and then how many years
before Trump with Obama of the border being a sieve,
(28:56):
although not nearly as much. For Obama, I credit him
at least he stopped a bunch and sent him back.
But it was a sieve for four years. And here
are a bunch of people coming home. For the most part,
there's probably some traveling to the US from Meco and
(29:19):
you get rerouted to Montgomery Regional Airport where there is
no customs entry point, and you've got to stay on
the plane all night long. Now, I don't know. The
story does not tell us what Delta did. Clearly they
(29:42):
had to service the airplane in some fashion. They had to,
you know, empty the lavatories. You know what I'm saying
by empty. They had to bring some more food on board,
didn't they. You have to feed everybody, and that, by
the way, is something that a lot of the airlines
are prepared to do anymore. There was a time you
(30:02):
could fly I'm before I get into that, I want
to know what you would do if you were trapped
in that situation. How would you handle it? What would
you do? Eight five zero two zero five to be
fla Now I'm not going to belabor this. I have
all kinds of things to talk about. I just thought
it'd be fun to get your thoughts. Sort of like
an alone with one hundred and some odd other people,
(30:23):
there were three hundred people combined that were trapped like this.
Remember now, airlines used to almost always on a flight
of any distance, they'd provide a meal. It would be
a breakfast, a lunch, or a dinner. If it was
a long enough flight, you could conceivably get two meals,
(30:44):
but you'd at least get a meal. Now not so much.
Maybe business in first class get some food. But if
you're trapped on this airplane, they've got to feed you.
They have to deal with the restrooms and make sure
that they're accessible. You have to at some point hope
(31:09):
that they've turned on the Wi Fi or they're giving
you access to the movies free of charge if it's
so equipped. And I've got to believe that a flight
from you know, from Cabos and Lucas to Atlanta has
the capability of having the seat video screens where you
can at least occupy yourself with with some form of entertainment.
(31:35):
But man, this if I don't fly very much, but
this would cause me to say, oh yeah, I got
to bring a book every time I fly, Jeremy, what
would you.
Speaker 8 (31:47):
Do, hey, President? I think the most important thing to
do is check how much toilet paper that plane has.
That's gonna be the first thing I'm going to do
is how much teap we got? And then can I
get another bag of free peanuts?
Speaker 1 (32:05):
I mean, are you expecting them to feed you a
meal if they've got to keep you overnight? And are
you expecting them to like turn on the Wi Fi
and run some TV into their satellite system.
Speaker 8 (32:17):
If they ever want my business again? I would sure hope.
Speaker 1 (32:19):
So do you do you travel with a book?
Speaker 8 (32:24):
I've got a reader on my phone so I can
pull up books and on Amazon and just if I
want to read something, or I've got a Bible app gotcha,
But yeah, that would be that would be entertainment. Would
be hard to do. And I guess also, if you
know you got those crying babies on board, you may
want to receipt passengers and put all those crying children
up front. I can't that's going to be a long,
(32:47):
long night.
Speaker 1 (32:48):
Yeah, boy, Jeremy, thanks very much. I appreciate you breaking
the ice and calling in. John stand by, We're going
to you next ten minutes past the hour. What would
you do? What are your concerns? You can't get off,
that's not an option, So how are you managing it?
What are your expectations? Ten past the hours? The Morning
(33:09):
Show with Preston Scott. This is the Morning Show with
Preston Scott. I would struggle reading from my phone. We
do it right, but I am a book guy. I
(33:29):
want that book in my hands, and even a kindle
doesn't work as well to me. John, what would you
do to handle the situation?
Speaker 9 (33:39):
Good morning, presson. I'm afraid my go to, my go
to problem solver is a lot of praying, a lot
of drinking.
Speaker 10 (33:50):
I'll have a good day.
Speaker 1 (33:51):
Thank you, John, I appreciate it. You realize what they
charged for booze of those airplanes? Thanks for calling in
this morning.
Speaker 11 (34:03):
Hi, Hi, I call a democratic politician and wine and cry,
how dare we have customs? Why can't people just come
into this country and come here customs?
Speaker 12 (34:17):
No?
Speaker 11 (34:18):
I would do that, or I would put on my
big boy pants and entertain myself for three hours?
Speaker 1 (34:25):
Three hours?
Speaker 11 (34:27):
How many years it takes?
Speaker 1 (34:29):
It was overnight. You had to spend the night on
board the plane.
Speaker 11 (34:34):
Oh oh, then I would definitely call a democratic politician
get me out of that situation.
Speaker 1 (34:42):
Gotcha, Artha? Thank you very much. Yeah. In case you
missed the setup, this is a this is a real story.
This happened Delta Airlines. Two flights coming from Cabo San
Lucas to Atlanta. Weather said, nope, you can't land. They
had to They had to go to a regional airport Montgomery, Alabama.
No customs was available, and so they had to spend
(35:02):
the night all night long, from nine thirty in the
evening until five thirty six am the next morning on
board the plane. They could not leave the airplane. Amy,
how would you handle it?
Speaker 13 (35:19):
Hey? Good morning pressions.
Speaker 14 (35:21):
This whole situation really gives me anxiety.
Speaker 13 (35:23):
I have flown, but I don't fly because I like
to have my freedoms. Yep, and so this is another
reason of like feeling trapped utterly and completely trapped. So
I figured I would probably just fall in with however
their group was going, and it could go one of
two ways. Either there could be a great, big uprising.
(35:45):
Everyone's upset taking the social media. How dare they were Americans?
Get us off this plane? Or like the other guy,
like bring the booze cart.
Speaker 15 (35:54):
We're gonna have a party.
Speaker 1 (35:56):
Doesn't even have a harmment on, you.
Speaker 13 (35:58):
Know, and we're just gonna drink and have a great
time until we all pass out.
Speaker 1 (36:05):
Do you fly at all anymore? Or only in emergencies? No?
Speaker 12 (36:10):
Only.
Speaker 13 (36:10):
I flew a couple of times when I was in
high school. And the way this country has gone a
couple different rights routes with you know, viruses and everything.
I like full autonomy of my body and freedom.
Speaker 8 (36:22):
So no, I do not fly.
Speaker 13 (36:24):
And now they're falling out of the sky, and now
I have a strong sense of self preservation. I don't
do cruises.
Speaker 1 (36:33):
Thank you, Avy, I appreciate you call again. Let's go
to Ron. Hey Ron, what about you? How do you
handle it? What are your expectations?
Speaker 10 (36:41):
Good morning? No, I don't know about the boozing it up.
You mix alcohol with people and anxiety that could lead
to a bad situation. Past. I think it's sleep nine
thirty at night. I've believe you said, why not they
sleep it off?
Speaker 1 (36:56):
Whatever do you have expectations of the airline to feed
you and me to turn on the Wi fi to
make sure that they're streaming some TV or something.
Speaker 10 (37:06):
I don't know what they're gonna do, don't you. If
you're stuck, you're stuck. You deal with what you got,
make the best of every bad situation. But I figure, hey,
why not. It's nine thirty at night, it'd be quiet.
I'm sleeping.
Speaker 1 (37:18):
Thank you, Ron, appreciate that. As always. Let's go one
more call here into the segment is Bill, Hi.
Speaker 16 (37:23):
Bill, good morning for resting Well. I was raised with
light the bad attitude, and you sit there and you
just have to.
Speaker 7 (37:34):
Deal with it.
Speaker 16 (37:34):
If you do, can't. If you get anxious and you
start bleeding that out on other people, then that's going
to arise a problem. As far as them feeding you,
the information you get back from the people up in
the cockpit is this air force not prepared to feed you.
Will get you anything we can to take care of
(37:58):
the situation. But honestly, ladies and gentlemen, we're stuck, just.
Speaker 8 (38:02):
Like Yellar.
Speaker 1 (38:04):
Got you. Ron or Bill, thank you. I appreciate you
calling in. I see my mind, and you're welcome to
call in. We've got another segment set aside here eight
five zero two zero five to WFLA. And maybe there's
an airline pilot listening to the show. Former airline pilot,
how are you trained to deal with this? Are you
in fact stuck? Or can the staff get off? Do
(38:26):
you leave the thing just? Do you leave the jet
just kind of powered on but the engines shut down?
Or do the engines run? What kind of provisions? I mean,
are you calling the local pizza shop and ordering one
hundred and fifty pizzas, you're ordering one hundred and fifty
Big Max and you know, two hundred orders of fries?
I mean, I don't know. This is three hundred passengers total,
(38:48):
stuck on board the plane for seven eight hours. Love
to hear from you. Eight five zero two zero five
to BFLA. Taking a scenario from the news and asking
(39:16):
what would you do? Your options are limited. You're stuck
on a plane at a regional airport. It's an international flight,
so you can't get off until customs. But there's no
customs there, so you got your flight was diverted from
your destination Atlanta in this case, to Montgomery, Alabama, and
(39:36):
you're spending the night on the plane, whether you like
it or not. Jeffrey, how are you handling this and
what are your expectations?
Speaker 17 (39:44):
Well, good Friday to you, Presston pressed, and you're never limited.
When you get in your late seventies early eighties, you
get a little clever. Now, if I'm sitting next to
a nice brunette and having fun talking to her, I'm
probably gonna stay on that plane for the evening. I
consider it what a date, and tell my buddies when
I see him a week later. But the other option
(40:07):
is is I got to get off this plane. So
I stand up, I walk down the aisle a few moments,
and all of a sudden, I collapse and I pretend
I'm having a heart attack, and I can pretend that,
and as soon as I know it, I'm off that
plane someplace in some hospital, and I slowly wake up
(40:28):
and look at the nurse looking at me.
Speaker 1 (40:32):
That's what I do, and hoping she's a brunette too.
Speaker 17 (40:34):
Probably well it would matter at that point because I'm
off that plane and I'm kind of tickling myself inside
saying that was a good act I put on.
Speaker 1 (40:45):
Thank you, Jeffrey, appreciate that I'm not sure what I
think of that plan, uh, but I appreciate you calling in.
I did some digging and according to the Department of Transportation,
airlines do not have to a meal even during lengthy delays,
(41:05):
but they have to provide and obtain enough food in
drinking water to provide a serving to all passengers on
board during the delay, and so you're supposed to be
getting something within two hours of the delay. Honestly, this
(41:30):
isn't the airline's fault per se. Now, Delta offered reimbursements
of the airfare to all of the passengers on these
two flights. But if you think about it as much
as look, the airlines are crappy, they really, a lot
of them are. But this isn't on them. The weather
(41:53):
forced them. I mean, you're alive, right. They weren't flying
you through horrible weather. They landed you safely, but the
weather prevented them from getting you to your destination until
the next morning. It's not their fault. Although you could argue, well,
(42:14):
did the weather stay bad for seven hours? Eight hours?
Could they not have just flown us in later? Could
they not have brought another crew in. I don't have
the answer for that. I just thought it was quite
an interesting exercise in how would I deal with it?
Do you? How often have you ever flown on an airplane? Jose?
Speaker 18 (42:38):
Just a handful of times, nothing much at all.
Speaker 1 (42:41):
Enough to say, Okay, when I travel on an airplane,
here's what I have with me? Or not really?
Speaker 4 (42:47):
Oh no, no, yeah, I'm not a I'm not that
versed at flying.
Speaker 18 (42:54):
Okay, I absolutely have no idea what to bring.
Speaker 1 (42:56):
I saw I bring nothing. I used to travel. I
mean when I was working for Fox Sports, I would
travel all the time. I was flying all the time.
Every other weekend I was flying, and I was and
I was flying to these little regional airports. I'd cat
I'd have to go into Charlotte, or I'd have to
go into Atlanta or or you know, some other hub,
(43:19):
and then fly to these little small planes. On these
smaller planes, I always traveled with everything I had. So
I had my carry on with me, but that would
get checked or whatever. So I had this small little case,
a little you know, over the shoulder bag, and I
would always have a book with me always just in case.
(43:45):
Because back in those days, cell phones weren't what they
are now. They were there. You had them, and we
were at the beginning of smartphone type things. But I didn't,
you know, I have a flip phone. You know, it
was like, you know, I could text and stuff like that,
the early days of smartphones. But man books, I'd have
a book. And this is reinforced that twenty seven minutes
(44:08):
after the hour, come back something you must hear. You
must on the Morning Show with Preston Scott. The Morning
Show with Preston Scott, listeners said you must play this
(44:32):
again for the audience in the second and third hours.
Speaker 19 (44:36):
Of the show.
Speaker 1 (44:40):
I will oblige its. Stephen Miller, Deputy Chief of Staff
for the White House, and he is over the media's obsession,
the democrat obsession with protecting gang members, some people that
(45:00):
broke into this country illegally. He is just over it.
And he showed up with receipts and rinsed the media.
Speaker 6 (45:09):
The Body of Administration made the decision to give extensive
due process to two trained de Aragua terrorists that were
apprehended at the border just a couple of years ago.
The two gentlemen, they were from Venezuela. There were members
of Trained Aragua, the Body Administration and Border Patrol apprehended
them and made the decision to provide them with extensive
(45:33):
due process, put them onto a program on a supervised release,
and put them on inkle monitors so they could go
through a lengthy legal judicial determination as to whether these
legal aliens who had just foot on US soil might
want to live in the United States for the rest
of their lives.
Speaker 7 (45:52):
What was the result of that decision. What was the
result of that choice that was made.
Speaker 6 (45:56):
Those two men kidnapped a young girl named John and
Nungary from her family. They beat her, they sexually assaulted her,
they tortured her, they shipped her, they murdered her, and
they dumped her body. That is what the body of
the administration's policy was. Most of your papers never covered
(46:16):
her story when it happened. To the extent that you
covered it at all, it was because President Trump forced
you to cover it by highlighting it repeatedly, over and
over again.
Speaker 7 (46:27):
He had to shame you into covering it.
Speaker 6 (46:30):
And each and every one of you decides over and
over again with these mster ting terrorists, to the extent
that you had the financial means to do so, you
all choose to live in condos or homes or houses
as far away from these kinds of gang fingers as
you possibly can. If I offered any one of you
a rent free home with no taxes to pay in
any of these gang neighborhoods, and I said, your neighbors
(46:52):
are m mister King terrorists or Mexican mafia or Sinaloa
cartel or trained Aragua, I couldn't pay.
Speaker 7 (46:58):
You to live there.
Speaker 6 (46:59):
But yet you, with your coverage, are trying to force
innocent Americans to have these people as their neighbors and
that one day their daughter may be abducted from their.
Speaker 7 (47:07):
Home and raped and murdered.
Speaker 6 (47:09):
So you're not going to get an ounce of sympathy
from this administration or President Trump for the terrorists who've
invated our homes in our country.
Speaker 1 (47:21):
There you go, And I just want to remind you.
In Florida, the governor has taken action to get illegal
immigrants out of this state. But here's the thing. The
(47:43):
Florida legislature will not take action to deal with the
means in which many illegals are sustaining themselves to remain employment.
They won't do a thing because they get too much
(48:07):
money from the lobbyists and the industries of hospitality, construction,
and agriculture. That's how these people they're not all running
drugs and running people. Many are, but not all of them.
(48:34):
These people have broken into this country illegally. Did you
notice the complete and total silence of the media. They
had nothing to say. Maybe they did when he was done,
(48:58):
but there was no interrupting him because they know he's right.
Forty minutes after the hour, What's to be Friday? Coming
up next hour in the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Welcome to The Morning Show with Preston Scott. All right now,
(49:26):
I wish I were making this up, this story. Oh
to have my email box for a week, you would
have so much fun reading what I read. Certainly your
email is welcome and always interesting. Whether it's snarky or
(49:51):
not it's and depending on the level of snark, I
may or may not reply. If it's idiotic snark, I
just gone if it's If it's clever snark, I will reply.
You can form whatever opinion you like from that. I
didn't get a reply, must not have been overly clever.
(50:12):
There you go. But I get great links to stories,
gret I get comments on things people write me this
morning and saying you have to play that sound bite again.
The audience it's in the second and third hours, needs
to hear that I'm obliging because I've received email to
that extent to that effect. But this is the type
(50:34):
of thing that I will get. And this comes from
lawn Starter. All right, that's not a handle, that's the
name of a company. Spring is in the air, and
so are a few bear cheeks ahead of World Naked
Gardening Day on May third, which, by the ways, tomorrow.
(50:57):
Lawn Starter dug into the data to uncover the twe
twenty five's best cities for naked gardening to find the
best places to let it all hang out among the hedges.
We analyzed five hundred biggest US cities using eleven revealing metrics,
(51:18):
including newdest populations, public nudity laws, Google search, interest, and
even the forecast for World Naked Gardening Day. After all,
no one wants to garden awe natural in a downpour.
And so these are the worst five cities for naked
gardening Plymouth, Bloomington, Brooklyn Park, and Woodbury, Minnesota. Why one
(51:52):
can only assume mosquitoes, but I don't know. And topping
that list of the bottom five is Hammond, Indiana. But
here are, my friends, are the top five cities for
naked gardening. Now, keep in mind, according to PhD Alicia
(52:19):
Walker from Missouri State University, nude gardening might seem quirky
at first glance, but it taps into something much deeper,
a radical act of body. Except in self, trust and
even joy. There are places in the body that I
(52:40):
just don't care to be bit you know what I'm saying?
There there are yeah, no, no, no no. But here
are your top five cities. Number five Asheville, North Carolina.
I wonder if that's still the case. I'm just saying,
just from a a at the standpoint of what they
went through the storm. I wonder if anyone's getting out
(53:01):
there naked gardening. I don't know. Atlanta, Gelogias number four.
I'm not seeing it, thankfully, anywhere. Austin, Texas at number three, Seattle,
Washington at number two. Where do you what does your
(53:22):
intuition tell you? First? What state might be the most
likely to be the state for naked gardening? Okay, I'll
tell you what I think. What do you think? What state?
Let's start there, what state would be the krem Dela
creme for naked gardening.
Speaker 18 (53:43):
I'd have to say, Florida, would you unbiased opinion?
Speaker 1 (53:47):
Yeah? Why?
Speaker 4 (53:48):
Oh well, you know, the weather is most of the
times lovely. You got a nice cool ocean breeze.
Speaker 1 (53:55):
Do you and then yeah, you're get in a nice
suntan as well. I would have immediately Hawaii.
Speaker 18 (54:02):
Oh yeah, okay, why that's good.
Speaker 1 (54:04):
But then my mind flipped and went Arizona because there
are fewer bugs that fly and bite. Now you do
have you do have scorpions and things like that, but
they're just scuttering around the ground. All right, we're you know, mosquitoes. Man,
uh huh no, no, no, no, no, no, I mean no,
(54:30):
but guess what, You're right, it's Florida sitting at number
one in the city of the city of note. Nope,
I'll think of Miami. Miami is considered the best city
for naked gardening. So I'm just I'm just look, what
(54:51):
would I be if not offering you information on what's
going on? And tomorrow is naked gardening Day. But please,
in the name of decency, don't please don't. All right,
(55:11):
we come back, We're gonna get you. Ready, it's what's
the beef Friday coming up in just a few so
we've got a couple stories to share and we'll take
your calls. It's twelve minutes before the top of the hour.
It's the morning Show. Please don't with Preston Scott. Callers
(55:32):
are already lining up at eight five zero two zero
five to b FLA for what's the beef. We'll get
to those calls in just a little bit. You're welcome
to join us. Whatever you want to complain about, it's fine.
We just no profanity, don't make it personal. As simple
as that. Yesterday we had Florida US Senator Rick Scott,
(55:54):
who we talked to him about Patrick Tate Adomiak and
his story. He's sitting in prison for not breaking any laws.
Atf framed him. One agent, in particular, lied misrepresented to
(56:16):
the court what he had turned firearms that were not
able to fire into firing firearms. He did things to
try to make the firearms that Tate owned legally illegal.
Every single one of those things that Tate was charged
(56:41):
with and convicted of having, is legal to purchase right
now online. Lee Williams has written dozens of stories on it.
Endless research, and we got Senator Scott to commit to
trying to help and Lee push that out nationwide. The
(57:03):
clip of my interview with the Senator, and so we're
really moving on trying to make a difference in a
very profound way in this young man's life. Get him
out of prison, get his case in front of Pambondi
and more importantly, the President of the United States, so
he gets an immediate pardon, and then they need to
(57:24):
investigate the ATF agent who is named for perjury. I
bring that up because Democrats are never going to stop
attempting to take away your firearms. Now. It's the Assault
Weapons Ban of twenty twenty five. It shall be unlawful
(57:46):
for a person to import, sell, manufacturer, transfer, or possess
in or affecting interstate or foreign commerce a semi automatic
assault weapon which includes a large capacity and unition feeding device.
Now to grandfather those who have them, until they put
(58:08):
a Democrat in office that brings back the ATF in
its worst form and starts confiscating weapons like the Nazis did.
It's sponsored by Adam Schiff, Chris Murphy, Richard Blumenthal. Thirty
seven Democrat senators are co sponsors. One hundred co sponsors
(58:28):
in the house. They are going to try to take
your guns. This is what they do. And they'll never
ever define an assault weapon because they can't. What's to
be Friday is next. One line is open eight five
(58:49):
zero two zero five to WFLA. That line can be
yours if you want it. We'll take your calls.
Speaker 19 (58:54):
Next.
Speaker 1 (59:11):
Well, let's do this final hour of the program, at
least for today, the morning Show with Preston Scott and
it's what's the Beef Friday. If you're new to this
fine radio program, you heard me, fine radio program and
it's radio program.
Speaker 19 (59:29):
Fine.
Speaker 1 (59:32):
We take calls once a week and let people just
get it off their chest whatever it is they want
to complain about. We're here for and we've got callers
standing by the phone number. If you want to call in,
just anticipate the end of a call and begin dialing
because we are on a delay. It's eight five zero
two zero five to b FLA eight five zero two
zero five ninety three fifty two. Good morning, Greg, Welcome
(59:55):
back to the radio program. You are on the air.
What's the beef?
Speaker 10 (01:00:00):
I have a problem with the President Trump ragging about
gas prices, but they're going up here tell.
Speaker 1 (01:00:10):
Your your phone is a little tough here, your connection.
I don't know what's up if I'm understanding here correctly. Uh,
Trump bragging about gas prices coming down, but they're going
up here locally, Yes, sir, Is that what you mean? Well? Uh,
there are a lot of things that factor into that.
I think Trump is playing the long game. But I mean,
(01:00:33):
this is your complaint, so yeah, you're you're you're certainly
entitled to it. Trump is playing the wrong long game, Greg.
You can't bring energy prices down appreciably without production going up.
And that's not going to happen in four months. It
just isn't. Joe Biden crippled our economy. He sold off
(01:00:55):
our our emergency reserves, our strategic reserves. He he literally
sold them off while crippling our own ability to obtain
fuel and and and drill and produce. But I don't
have an issue with things like that, but I understand
how it can be frustrating. Thanks for the call. Eight
five zero two zero five to b F l A. George,
(01:01:17):
you're up, good morning.
Speaker 9 (01:01:19):
Impressed, and my beef is with these morons.
Speaker 20 (01:01:24):
In Tallahassee that I think the fellow that shot the
dog and fired into the car with people around, was
justified and support him.
Speaker 1 (01:01:36):
I'm surprised they haven't done a gofund.
Speaker 20 (01:01:39):
He go fund me for him. Just the amount of
them that have said if they got put on the
jury that they vote.
Speaker 1 (01:01:48):
To quit him.
Speaker 20 (01:01:49):
You know, I'm following C. Stewart's teleass reports on this.
Speaker 21 (01:01:54):
It Uh, it's surprising, it's shocking, but then again it's not.
Speaker 20 (01:02:00):
I just didn't know there were that many people that.
Speaker 1 (01:02:02):
Were lunatics in Tallahasse.
Speaker 20 (01:02:04):
He pressed it, but apparently they are.
Speaker 1 (01:02:07):
Thank you, George, Hope you feel at least a little
bit better getting that off your chest. Yeah, a guy
pulled a gun because he claimed the dog bit his
daughter's hand. Deputies saw no evidence of any kind of
wound injury or bite to the daughter, but the guy
pulled a firearm and shot at the dog while there
are people and children around, and then ripped open a
(01:02:30):
car door. The dog was grabbed, secured, placed in the
back of a car, ripped open the car door, and
shot at the dog and hit the dog. Dog survived,
and he got arrested. Based on that and the video
that I've seen, he should be arrested and there is
no excuse for what he did, none whatsoever. He was
(01:02:54):
not in imminent danger or fear, nor was anybody else
of harm, bodily, injury or death. He had no reason
whatsoever to pull out that firearm at that point. But
that's just my opinion on it. Let's go to Greg. Hi. Greg,
thanks very much for calling in. What's the beef twin beef?
Speaker 14 (01:03:10):
First of all, the Save Act died by Senate filibuster
and Senate Majority Leader. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer is gloating.
Tell me, Senator Schumer, what part of Wisconsin's constitutional amendment
for voter I d constitutes Jim Crow two point zero.
And also, Jose and I agree that the June June
(01:03:37):
parade is a half truth. It's not for Donald Trump's birthday.
It's for the two hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the
US Army that coincidentally appears on Trump's birthday.
Speaker 1 (01:03:51):
So was LA.
Speaker 14 (01:03:51):
Mainsheet press stopped telling us how many social services have
been cut to pay for this parade.
Speaker 1 (01:03:59):
Feel bad?
Speaker 14 (01:03:59):
It's all yours, thank.
Speaker 1 (01:04:03):
You, sir. That's why we do what we do. We're
here to help the community wherever you live, and that
community could be just your home. Enjoy a kindler, kinder,
gentler version of you. Rod. You're up next, then Michael
than John. When one line's open, it can be yours
A five zero two zero five to b F l A.
(01:04:28):
It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott on News Radio
one hundred point seven double UFLA or on NewsRadio double
u FLA Panama City dot Com. Eleven minutes past the hour.
(01:04:51):
Time for more calls, more complaints. It's What's to be
Friday here on the Morning Show.
Speaker 10 (01:04:56):
Rode, good morning, Good morning, mister Preston. And yes, you
have a great, extra fine radio show. I was telling
those days just how you know, impressive and information. You're
not only information or you're entertaining. But I'd like to
just pronounce it. Why did they put the first three
words of the constitution so big? Because that's what makes
(01:05:19):
the difference that we the people, and maybe we've got
a little snowball rolling, but hey, we people need to
get up and keep calling, writing letters, telling people that
we've got to keep the administration like Trump's going or
it's never going to go nowhere. The Democrats, you see,
they don't stop.
Speaker 7 (01:05:38):
You brought that up early.
Speaker 10 (01:05:39):
They're not going to stop try taking our guns. So
unless we the people stand up the ruminators and do
something to make a difference, we're not going to get
what we need back in this country our rights.
Speaker 1 (01:05:52):
Right very much. President, Hey Ron, thank you, appreciate the
kind words as always. But here's the thing. We have
a mid term election, believe it or not, coming up
soon and in twenty twenty six can shut down DOSEE
or keep it going. It's going to be up to
It's going to be up to America because the House
of Representatives, seats in the Senate are going to be
(01:06:14):
up for grabs. It's going to matter. Let's go to Michael. Hi, Michael,
you're up. What's the beef?
Speaker 20 (01:06:20):
Good morning press, And my beef is kind of with yours,
with the legislators and the use of subcontractors, with the
illegal aliens. There is a roofing company that advertises on
your radio stations, I know uses illegals, and like you said,
nobody's going to do anything because too many people are
(01:06:42):
making money off of it. And real quick, I wanna
give a PSA. People will need to understand how expensive
building materials are and if you want to build a
privacy fence. Celebrate gardening naked Day tomorrow. I guarantee your
neighbors will build you a privacy fence for free.
Speaker 1 (01:07:00):
Brilliant. Thank you. I can tell you not all roofers
us illegals. I can guarantee you that. But that's certainly
one of the trades that has a massive exposure in
that front. John, thanks very much.
Speaker 9 (01:07:15):
Now your morning impressed it and thank you again for
what you do. My beef this morning is with President
Trump having to find an executive order to say that
CDL holders hold have to speak and comprehend and read English.
That was already in the law when the CDLs came out,
(01:07:37):
and I can't remember which administration I want to blame
it on. The Clintons rescinded that because of an incident
down in Miami. But the originally it's just like the
border laws. It's already illegal to enter the country. You
don't need to make a new law. You just need
to enforce the ones we got. But anyway, I'm glad
it's going in the right direction now and maybe a
(01:07:58):
little proof things out here. We all have a good weekend.
Speaker 1 (01:08:00):
Thank you, sir, appreciate the call. Let's fit another caller
here in before we go to a break, Polly, you're up.
What's the beef?
Speaker 15 (01:08:09):
Preston? You are the man, that's the first and foremost.
I was on my way to let me.
Speaker 8 (01:08:13):
Do it like they would in Georgia.
Speaker 15 (01:08:15):
I was up on them roads heading to Georgia and
a hit selvester and that's where you cut off.
Speaker 8 (01:08:21):
So you know how far you can go, as far as.
Speaker 20 (01:08:24):
Your radio station.
Speaker 8 (01:08:26):
And let me also say this.
Speaker 15 (01:08:28):
I heard there's going to be a new play in
town and it's called I Shot the Dog and I liked.
I can't believe these people would back up such idiots,
no different than the idiot that took out the healthcare man.
I want to say, God, bless you, God blessed Tallahassee,
(01:08:49):
and let's turn this city with thank you.
Speaker 1 (01:08:54):
Polly, appreciate the phone call. WI you will be up
next sixteen past the hour. What about you? We got
we had lines open, three of them. We got room
for four callers at least in the next segment eight
five zero two zero five w f L A first
time all morning lines have been wide open, So take advantage.
Eight five zero two zero five ninety three point fifty
(01:09:15):
two It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott. We have
(01:09:55):
two lines open eight five zero two zero five wfl A,
two lines open and two callers standing by, so let's
get right to it. Debbie, thank you for being patient
through the break. What do you have on your mind?
Speaker 10 (01:10:07):
What's the beef warning, Preston?
Speaker 12 (01:10:12):
My husband and I and two friends went to the
Prayer UH gathering yesterday. I was disappointed in the turnout.
We were looking for you didn't see you. But my
(01:10:32):
big beef is that towards the end of the program
they have I had been bringing people up throughout the
whole program for a minute to pray. Towards the end
of the program, the woman who organized the whole thing
brought these three trashy co eds up to the podium
dressed in their shorter than short shorts with their butt
(01:10:55):
cheeks hanging out and their ham hellenic T shirts in
blaze and with drooping off of their shoulders with their
brasstraps showing. I was absolutely appalled. I could not believe
that anyone would come and represent their organization, their university, themselves,
(01:11:19):
their parents, and tried to appeal to God, who is thinking.
I know these girls have better clothes in their classics,
more appropriate to come to some kind of a prayer function.
It was just absolutely appalled. So I have been thinking,
how am I going to call these girls out? And
I said, that's my beef today.
Speaker 1 (01:11:38):
Well, I hope you feel better. I do good for you.
Thanks for the phone call. Let's go to Randal. Hi, Randal,
appreciate the phone call. What's the beef?
Speaker 21 (01:11:49):
Hey, good morning. Just to let let you know the
state of the legal system in Tallahassee. A few years back,
I read into a situation where I had to deal
with im civil rights attorney and she told me that
in this town I can't get a fair trial because
of my race and my sex. And what I ran
into here recently was, after being afforded for thirty eight years,
(01:12:12):
we sold our homes moved here to Tallahaster for the opportunity.
Turns out she ever put me on the title. So
I haven't given ninety days to get to vacate the property.
Because I'm not on the title, I have no rights
to the property. I get a small percentage of total everything.
None of the work I did Cleary Gland, putting in
water lines, water meters, power poles, None of that counts.
(01:12:35):
And every time you mow that yard, if you don't
have a received for it, it does not count in
the eyes of the law. And it's just you would
not believe the situation, like I said, because abandonment does
not count. Because she spent two nights in the house
in five years and that did not count. All the
work I did did not count. All the tens of
(01:12:55):
thousands of dollars for equipment materials that I spent, none
of that counted. All that matters is that I have
to get off the property and I'm about to be
made homeless and densitute. You know, nothing like justice in Tallahassee.
I can say that for sure.
Speaker 1 (01:13:11):
How did you end up in this situation where your
name wasn't on the title of the land.
Speaker 22 (01:13:16):
I trusted and loved my wife like a fool, gotcha? Yeah,
I mean that's the whole deal right there. You love
a woman, you trust a woman. They do something like
this and the legal system goes along with this fraud,
this abandonment. I mean, this has been abuse. Man I
can name one of her lawyers. He was telling her
(01:13:37):
to hit me, poke me, and slap me.
Speaker 10 (01:13:39):
Man.
Speaker 21 (01:13:39):
I put it with years of physical abuse. And I
mean not to make this sound white or anything, but
I've been through some tough times since twenty fourteen. I've
had twenty six off surgeries and survive cancer six times,
you know. And to go along with all this, you know,
I've been abandoned here by myself and take care of everything,
(01:14:01):
and yet it having to be kicked off the property
with no place to go sounds like especially gone yesterday.
Speaker 1 (01:14:10):
Yeah, Randall, I I my heart breaks for your situation.
I thank you for calling in. I'm at a little
bit of a loss here. All I can suggest is
that perhaps you consider talking with other legal counsel. I'm
(01:14:33):
not sure that the legal system as it's been portrayed
to you is exactly that bad, but there is no
doubt that broadly speaking, disillusions of marriage favor women over man.
(01:14:55):
There's just an there's just a sometimes it's a very overt,
but there's definitely a bias in most cases, not all,
but I would, I would, if you have the capability,
send me an email Preston at iHeartRadio dot com and
(01:15:19):
and make sure you put a way to contact you,
because I don't know what will happen, but perhaps somebody's
listening that might know somebody, or might be an attorney
that might be able to help you out a little bit.
But thanks for the calls. Twenty eight past the hour
(01:15:53):
the Morning Show, Preston Scott getting a lot of response
to that last phone caller. And you know, inside the
state of Florida, whether your name's on the title or not,
(01:16:20):
if you're married, that's community property unless there was a
prenuptial agreement. And I think you're probably getting very poor advice.
So hopefully you're still listening and you consider getting different counsel.
And I hope you take me up on the offer,
because I am getting some referrals on some organizations that
(01:16:45):
might be able to help. But anyway, yeah, time for
the best and worst of the week. And that was
pretty close to being the worst of the week, that
phone call. And I don't mean that in a negative
way towards the gentleman. Just my heart just hurts for him.
You could hear the anger welling into pain and emotion.
(01:17:10):
But we set aside time each week to kind of
push away from the news and the noise and just
kind of consider what's going on. And so, sir, your
best and worst of the week. Yeah, so I'm gonna
start with my worst first. Just don't get it out
of the way.
Speaker 4 (01:17:26):
Absolutely, Kamala Harris and Tim Walls are unfortunately out in
the public again and I wish.
Speaker 18 (01:17:32):
They would just just leave leave.
Speaker 1 (01:17:35):
Us alone, please.
Speaker 4 (01:17:37):
And then my best was gonna be my brother's back
healing up. He had a pretty bad thing going on
last weekend and he's back is healing up now, but
that has been overcome by the dolphin translating device. I
always wanted to know what are they saying them in Wales.
(01:17:57):
I think that's just the best evolution and find out
whales are saying too. They must be able to know good.
Speaker 1 (01:18:04):
Okay. My worst of the week is the mother in
East Texas who did not read what was being placed
in the jello shots that she picked up for her
kids holiday party back in December. The business that sold
(01:18:26):
them to her thought they might have been for an
office party or something, because it's very clear that she
purchased jello shots that were loaded with booze, and so
she's denied knowing there was any alcohol, even though the
(01:18:48):
investigation showed that on the order, it says clearly jello
shots contained Smirnoff, and so she's facing felony counts of
injuries to children because their fifth grade kids class got
smashed on jello shots. A bunch of them started getting sick.
(01:19:12):
It was brutal and at the risk of going along,
my best of the week.
Speaker 7 (01:19:17):
Is you talk about due process.
Speaker 6 (01:19:21):
The Body of Administration made the decision to give extensive
due process to two Trained Aragua terrorists that were apprehended
at the border.
Speaker 7 (01:19:31):
Just a couple of years ago. There were two.
Speaker 6 (01:19:34):
Gentlemen, they were from Venezuela. There were members of Trained Aragua.
The Body Administration and Border Patrol apprehended them and made
the decision to provide them with extensive due process, put
them onto a program on a supervised release, and put
them on inkle monitors so they could go through a
lengthy legal judicial determination as to whether these legal aliens
(01:19:58):
who had just put on US soil might want to
live in the United States for the rest of their lives.
What was the result of that decision, What was the
result of that choice that was made. Those two men
kidnapped a young girl named Joscelyn Hungary from her family.
They beat her, they sexually assaulted her, They tortured her,
(01:20:19):
they shipped her, they murdered her, and they dumped her body.
That is what the bidy of the administration's policy was.
Most of your papers never covered her story when it happened.
To the extent that you covered it at all, it
was because President Trump forced you to cover it by
highlighting it repeatedly, over and over again. He had to
(01:20:39):
shame you into covering it. And each and every one
of you decides over and over again with these mster
teen terrists to the extent that you at the financial
means to do so, you all choose to live in
condos or homes or houses as far away from these
kinds of gang fingers as you possibly can. If I
offered any one of you a rent free home with
no taxes to pay in any of these gang neighborhoods,
(01:21:02):
and I said, your neighbors are m mister King terrorists
or Mexican mafia or Sinaloa cartel or trained Iragua, I
couldn't pay you to live there.
Speaker 7 (01:21:11):
But yet you, with your.
Speaker 6 (01:21:12):
Coverage, are trying to force innocent Americans to have these
people as their neighbors and that one day their daughter
may be abducted from their home and raped and murdered.
So you're not going to get an ounce of sympathy
from this administration or President Trump for the terrorists who've
invaded our homes in our country.
Speaker 1 (01:21:27):
Okay, I think that pretty much does it as my
best of the week, brilliant I wrote in a reply.
Soon when Steven Miller walks out to speak to the media,
the alleged journalists will either run for cover or pull
out umbrellas to avoid the rinsing back with good news
(01:21:49):
on The Morning Show with Preston Scott Monday, on the program,
(01:22:17):
We'll take you inside a sit down the Jesse Waters
had with doge Elon Musk and some of his team
and what they discovered in one stop. It's just you
gotta be kidnaping. Let's go talk on Monday about the
Box Fan Drive. We'll meet with someone who heads up
(01:22:39):
the elder care services here locally, but we'll be talking
about issues that address the entire area and anywhere it
gets hot. The summer Box Fan Drive is something that
we did last year to great effect, and we felt
like we could make another effort and do it a
little bit better by doing it earlier, and so we
are rolling it out of the month of May and
(01:23:02):
we need your help. But time for our good news segment.
This is a real cool story of a guy in
Michigan named Joshua O'Hara. He's a mailman and he was
doing his route April seventeenth when he spotted a ten
(01:23:24):
dollars bill on a driveway. He said, the way it
was positioned, it just looked like it fell out of
someone's pocket and they were getting into or out of
the car. So because nobody came to the door when
I rang it, I left a note so it wouldn't
fall to the bottom of the box nobody would see it.
(01:23:44):
And so he left the ten dollars bill. He didn't
take it, he didn't keep it. He left it with
the at the home where he found it with a note.
The homeowner was not home at the time and eventually
got the surveillance video from the doorbell camera and said,
I want to in response that, I want to say
(01:24:04):
thank you to the amazing mailman who found ten dollars
in my driveway and left it in my mailbox. Wrote
a note. Mailman wrote the note, and and she said,
my mailman woman is the sweetest And I guess What
(01:24:29):
really stood out to me is that this is an
example of just doing the right thing. It wasn't his.
She said, I'm taking this money and I'm going to
find somebody to bless with it, a waitress, someone that
just could use ten bucks, because it was just found
(01:24:53):
and returned to me with just kindness. It reminds me
of what you do if you get too much change,
if you're paying for cash and you get too much
change back from the cashier and you realize it when
you check your pockets. Do you go back to the
store and give it back or do you keep it? Yeah,
(01:25:14):
the fact that we got good people like this mailman
caught on video doing the right thing, that's encouraging and
it's also a good news. Here in the Morning Show
with Preston Scott, time for a dad joke, something new
(01:25:44):
equip you with for the weekend, and then we've got
some headlines from the Beast standing by When is chicken
soup not good for your health? If you're the chicken? Sorry? Sorry,
you know it's a really pretty good dad joke if
(01:26:05):
you have to apologize.
Speaker 19 (01:26:06):
Sorry, sorry.
Speaker 1 (01:26:08):
Now it's time for some headlines from your hour. My
trusted source for satire ladies and gentlemen. These are headlines
courtesy of the Babylon b Women shocked to learn pill
designed to murder babies might not be safe. I'll just
let that sit and resonate for a moment. Democrats hold
candlelight vigil in front of illegal immigrant mugshots with no
(01:26:34):
pope to oversee them. Cardinals stay up all night playing
GoldenEye and building pillow forts. Trump issues new striped robes
for federal judges. Canada surpasses California as state with most
liberal governor. That's so good. Europe promises to get the
(01:26:55):
electricity back up asap so everyone can hear the Muslim
call to prayer. Kamala Harris livestream speech will charge twenty
five dollars to use the mute button. Newly discovered third
Epistle to Timothy features Paul warning him against starting a podcast.
(01:27:18):
Democrats show solidarity with MS thirteen by getting new face tattoos,
and parents distraught after finding soccer ball under a son's bed.
Brought to you by Barono Heating and Air. It's the
Morning Show one on WFLA. My Goodness covered a lot
(01:27:43):
of ground today, a lot of interesting stories, some really
good sound to listen to. Steven Miller dits an A plus.
He's just dropping bombs every time he addresses the media.
The media is I'm telling you, they are gonna flee
when he walks out. They want no part of that guy.
He's that guy that keeps receipts for everything he's ever purchased,
(01:28:07):
because he drops receipts everywhere he goes. Oh really, you
remember this, You remember this? You remember this? You remember this?
Remember this? You remember this? You remember this? Talked about
Michael Schellenberger dropping a bomb about USAID, USAID and the
CIA involved in the efforts to impeach Donald Trump the
first time around, our own government, trying to overthrow our
(01:28:32):
own government, regime change. Remember, the CIA is not supposed
to have any role in domestic affairs. We're supposed to
leave the overthrowing of our government to the FBI. Democrats,
don't ever forget. They want to take your guns. They
(01:28:52):
want to take your guns, the Assault Weapons Ban of
twenty twenty five. And remember they will never ever define
an assault weapon because if they do, they automatically open
themselves up to cars and trucks and SUVs and knives
(01:29:15):
and explosives and fertilizer and timers and baseball bats and
bricks and glass. You get the idea, don't you. We
shared with you the best cities in America for naked gardening.
Tomorrow is World Naked Gardening Day. Took a bunch of calls.
(01:29:38):
What would you do if you were stranded on an
airplane overnight sitting on a tarmac. And then, as Jose mentioned,
Google working to decode dolphin communication using artificial intelligence. Pretty cool?
Actually Monday inside Doge also the Box Fan Drive, plus
(01:29:59):
whatever happened over the weekend and more. Have a great weekend, friends,