Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Well, the detention center in Newark, the privately run detention
center in Newark at Delaney Hall, has been the center
of national attention. And there's one person to blame for
the fact that it spiraled out of control. There's one
person to blame for the fact that there was some
(00:20):
violence there, and that's Mikey Cheryl. Mikey Cheryl and then
maybe in a subcategory, Rosparaka. Both of them refused to
send either the state police or local police, and it
started to get worse and worse and worse. As the
coverage started. It was growing to be the next Minneapolis,
(00:41):
and I think that's what a lot of the people
that were funding this wanted. And there was outside agitators
that were there, you know, by some of the arrests,
most of them were from out of state. You know
that because the FBI had facial recognition, they said that, yes,
many of them were in Minneapolis. And the other thing
is it has all been funded. Have you seen any
(01:03):
of the video of all of the supplies that are
left blocks away, you know, including batons and including umbrellas,
including pepper spray that is left blocks away, and food
and lots of water, bricks all left in piles so
that they can go and take it to the there. So,
(01:25):
by the way, the FBI is investigating that, and they
said there's going to be criminal charges for anybody they
find that was going ahead and funding that. Mikey Cheryl
finally caught up on Friday and she said, all right,
we're bringing in the National Guard. But the reason she
was bringing in the National Guard, she says, was not
(01:48):
to protect ICE, not to help ICE, not to make
it spiral out of control, but to protect the protesters.
Speaker 2 (01:57):
As some of the reporting got were sin Delaney Hall,
you had more and more protesters and then I started
to come out. They used batons, they used rubber bullets,
and measures that we felt like were escalating in violence.
We saw, I think someone being beaten by an ICE agent.
(02:18):
That is not how we conduct our policing.
Speaker 1 (02:22):
Forget the fact that they had bricks thrown at them
and they stood there and didn't do anything. Forget the
fact that they had garbage thrown on them, that they
were spit on, that they had pepper spray sprayed into them,
and they did nothing. They they did nothing until it
got out of control, until they actually attacked them. So
(02:42):
for Mikey Cheryl. She's trying to play this political game.
She has to keep things under control for politics, but
at the same time she can't be on ICE's side.
So everything she says, it's to protect the protesters, not
to protect Ice. Did you see the ICE officers hand
that was bitten. It was bleeding all over the place
(03:04):
and there was skin taken out by a guy that
bit him. Now, I went to look it up on Google.
This has happened in Minneapolis, It's happened in Nashville. This
biting thing is something they do. And so several people
were arrested. I think there was three one night, five
another night. There were several people that were arrested in
all of this. And Mark Wayne Mullin, by the way,
(03:27):
at first congratulated, congratulated Mikey Cheryl for finally sending out
the National Guard, but then he when he realized what
was going on, he took it back. Listen, Tom Holman
is going to send a whole lot more ICE officers
into New Jersey as he is in New York. He
said that now several times that was about to get
(03:50):
way out of control. So if you're going to give
Mikey Cheryl any credit, it's for moving in in time.
Because the Proud Boys showed up, there were counter protesters
showed up, and they put fencing up to keep both
on the different side of the street. That didn't work.
As soon as it got dark. Some of the protesters,
you know, the other people that had families, they went home.
(04:12):
The protesters that were there to be agitators attacked the
ice officers at night. So and now they've finally moved
people off the street and the Newark police have gotten involved.
But they allowed this to happen, Make no mistake about it.
They allowed this to happen because they were feckless and
they weren't sure what to do. Shame on them for
(04:33):
now acting like the heroes.
Speaker 3 (04:35):
Now, let me ask you a question.
Speaker 4 (04:36):
Cory Booker was getting his face time yesterday, like len'slice,
which he is. He doesn't know what camera he doesn't
want to.
Speaker 3 (04:44):
Make love to. What is up with that guy's eyeballs
popping out of his head.
Speaker 4 (04:50):
I walked into the newsroom this morning and it was frozen.
I think he was on ABC this Sunday morning and
his eyeball, oh wid, I'm like, yo, calm down, you
don't understand all your Democrats who felt it was your
responsibility to be in solidarity, that even Democrats from New
(05:12):
York joined them.
Speaker 3 (05:14):
Antifa hates all politicians. They don't believe in government. They
are anarchists. So they used you like tools, and you
were fools.
Speaker 4 (05:24):
Enough not to understand that these Antifa demonstrators that you
had so apply mentioned Larry, they traveled from city to
city demonstration dejure. You know, you can look at them,
one hundred two hundred. Some locals will show up, but
it's really the hardcore. So last night curfew is imposed
finally by raz Baraka. Right nine o'clock comes. Then all
(05:46):
of a sudden, now you have the Newark Police Department,
you have the Essex County Sheriff's Department, you have state troopers,
you have New Jersey National Guardsmen. No more ICE, no
more immigration officers. They've been told we'll handle it now.
They should have handled it from day one, and so
they isolate the demonstrators with the media. The media decides, okay,
(06:10):
it's time for us to pack our banks and leave,
and so twenty of them got arrested. Now they're finally
going to process them through federal court downtown North where
the penalties are a lot more horrific and locally which
they would have gotten a swap on a wrist to
come out and do it again. And as you saw
we pointed out the other thing, they set up a
(06:31):
tent with all their weapons and supplies right there in
public view, and nothing was being done to stop them.
Speaker 1 (06:41):
Right And if you you should go on social media
and watch some of this, there were people in the
neighborhoods that were going, wait a second, A truck just
showed up in my neighborhood blocks away with piles of stuff,
and the protesters knew where it was going to be,
and they went and picked it up and then brought
it to that tent.
Speaker 4 (06:57):
It was.
Speaker 1 (06:58):
It was amazing. This is well orchestrated. I love that
the FBI is now going to go after the funding
of these because they're going to they're going to try
to trace this down and see who's paying for all
of it. Also, remember the guy we played him the
other day and he's been all over the news, the
guy that said I've seen your face, I'm coming after
your family. I'm going to kill your fa He was arrested.
(07:20):
He was arrested. He's from New Jersey. By the way,
he was arrested and they're going to prosecute him. There's
like five federal chargers they're they're throwing at him.
Speaker 4 (07:28):
Now. I think he was the only one from New
Jersey because everybody else has the pointed out it was
from Pennsylvania. There was the one guy from Pennsylvania. See,
obviously Antifa doesn't do any vetting. Apparently he had been
busted previously for pedophilia for his collection of young sexually
(07:49):
charged photos of children.
Speaker 3 (07:52):
This is just one.
Speaker 4 (07:54):
I think it is incumbent now, not for the Feds
to do this, but local authority to actually post who
they are, where they're from, what their backgrounds are. You
may have remembered there was something similar down in Fulton
County and Georgia. Remember they wanted to put up a
public safety campus that would incorporate all the public safety groups,
(08:16):
the training you know for police officers, both in the
county and city, and Antifa stormed it. Remember Antifa took
it over and then finally they moved in and arrested them.
Speaker 3 (08:26):
Almost all of them were white. None of them were.
Speaker 4 (08:28):
From Georgia or Atlanta or Fulton County or any other surroundings.
They were all from different parts of the country, and
they all had one thing in common. What was that
They were proud members of Antifa who don't believe in
any government. They don't go at Democrats Republicans. They believe
in anarchy.
Speaker 1 (08:44):
Antifa doesn't exist. Haven't you heard the Democrats? They don't exist.
Speaker 3 (08:48):
Larry, they broke my jaw.
Speaker 1 (08:50):
I was saying that sarcastically. I've been to their headquarters
down in Philly. I saw their parade.
Speaker 4 (08:56):
Yes, by the way, remember it was Gerald the will Nadler,
thank god, finally not running for reelection, and say, oh,
it's just an idea, and then puppeting that response was
President Joe Biden at the time. Remember, oh no, it's
just an idea, it's not a reality.
Speaker 3 (09:13):
Oh yes, it is a reality. These are hardcore radicals.
Speaker 4 (09:18):
They trained to create mayem, to attack police. They know
how to work the criminal justice system. You know, everything
has its root somewhere else. Remember after Chicago, the riots
in Chicago, the DNC convention, there was a split in
SDS students for a Democratic Society. Half of them wanted
to peacefully protest against the Vietnam War, where two thousand
(09:43):
men a day, were being killed and brought back to
America horrific. And one group of SDS Society, no, we're
gonna have our days of rage. We're going to attack
the police in Chicago. And guess what. They came with
football helmets, bats, stakes chains. They thought thousands would show,
oh it's five hundred and then they would do it.
Speaker 3 (10:03):
This is not a large group.
Speaker 1 (10:05):
Let me make a quick correction, really fast. It was
a Brooklyn man, not a New Jersey man. And I
want to give his name too. He's being charged with
several federal charges. His home was rated over the weekend.
His name is Nick Skelfoe. Nick Skelfo. If he ever
shows up to get a job at your place.
Speaker 4 (10:22):
You want to not hire this, well, let me, like
Karnak the Magnificent, give you an idea. He's probably even
from Bushwick, William spur Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn Heights. I would say,
one of those neighborhoods. Let's see if it turns out
it I'm accurate, because they're all clustered that.
Speaker 1 (10:40):
You know, there's a scientific study that you weren't shocked
by at all. They could have just asked you instead
of spending millions of dollars on this study about pigeons.
Turns out pigeons have a reason internally biologically that they
know where to go instinctively. If they've been there once,
(11:00):
they can always go there again.
Speaker 3 (11:01):
How much did they spend on that study?
Speaker 1 (11:03):
Millions of dollars.
Speaker 4 (11:04):
I could have given to that that information and free
of charge.
Speaker 3 (11:07):
I'm the pigeon man.
Speaker 1 (11:08):
We'll get into the details when we come back. Plus
your chance to see the guess who at a twenty
five bally. So if you have ever wondered, and I
know that Curtis hasn't wondered this about pigeons as to
why they are so good at finding places. You know,
(11:29):
they if you put them in a place one time,
they're always going to be able to make it back
to that very same place. So why does that happen? Well,
they spent millions on a study and they have finally
come up with the reason. It has to do with
their liver yep. And what was amazing this is that
(11:50):
I thought this was stunning news. And I came in
this morning and I said, you know, you've heard this
about pigeons. They had this big study. You know how
they always know where they've been and they can always
make it back then, and Curtis said, their liver. Now
I'm thinking of myself.
Speaker 4 (12:04):
All this money was spent on this study, I could
have given it to them for bubbkiss, oh gods, for nothing.
Speaker 3 (12:11):
You see.
Speaker 4 (12:12):
As a ut my job at the house that I
was raised in at eighty ninth and Jay and Canarsie
was to go up to the roof where my uncle
Vinchens Vincent had a pigeon coop. There were a lot
of pigeon coops back then, and these men would raise
these pigeons for money. There was Homer's Boston Baldies. And
(12:34):
I would ask my uncle all kinds of questions because
my job was to clean out the coops and make
sure to make it rat proof because the rats would
always try to come get the pigeons. And he said
to me, oh, it's right in their liver. They have
a homing device. So these men would spend hundreds of
dollars on bets. They would truck down their pigeons to
somewhere in Florida release them all the different coops. You know,
(12:57):
they had a time stamp around their leg and whoever's
birds came back first would win the pot. Well, sometimes
the birds were blown out to sea and they still
would come back. They have that homing look. During wars
when we didn't have communication, you got your messages by pigeon.
They have served society for so many years, and then
(13:20):
all of a sudden we discarded them.
Speaker 3 (13:22):
We had no further use to them. What do you
think they just went away?
Speaker 1 (13:25):
Well, they're still pretty cool, and nobody's gonna be able
to track them, you know what I mean, if they're
going to be able to track what you do online.
Let me get into this study. The researchers found out
it's the liver. The liver could be acting as a
compass of sorts, helping pigeons align themselves with the Earth's
gravity and giving them directions. And because of this, scientists
(13:45):
say that navigation was always better on sunny days. This
is after studying them for a year, and that overcast
days can disorient them so much so they'll just take
a break, Like if they don't know where they're going,
they'll just take a break.
Speaker 5 (14:01):
You know.
Speaker 4 (14:01):
They basically copp a squat until the conditions get better. Look,
this is what used to happen out at sea, you
know before we had all the latest technology in that
in Mapida. No, no, we'll stay here. There's going to
be a storm coming through. We're not going to challenge
the storm. So the birds they have that instinctually, and
they are so bright they can recognize you, like they
(14:22):
recognize me. On my street where I live with Nancy,
and we found hop Along, who unfortunately is missing a leg.
I don't know how he lost the leg, so I'll
be bringing him to the wild Bird Fund, which is
on Columbus between eighty seven and eighty eight. They do
amazing work with all kinds of injured birds, and hopefully
(14:42):
hop Along will be made whole so he doesn't have
to hop Along anymore.
Speaker 1 (14:46):
And then he'll fly back to you. If he ever
gets everywhere he could fly again, he'll come over.
Speaker 4 (14:51):
They recognize people who are friendly to them, and they
avoid people who are unfriendly because there are some people,
you know they try to poison the pitch.
Speaker 1 (14:59):
Yeah, well they're smart. We give them credit for. Let's
get to some talkbacks. People want to talk about the
bi centennial celebration.
Speaker 6 (15:05):
Larry, So I remember I shared with you a Toby
Keith song called Made in America. You had never heard
it before you know, he'd be the first one to
perform at that concert for America two fifty and he's
quoted saying, never apologize for being a patriot.
Speaker 1 (15:23):
Yeah, I made this song part of my playlist. I
have another one on there. I love Brought to you
Courtesy by the Old USA by the Red, White and
Blue is the name of the song. No, Toby Keith
is a proud America.
Speaker 4 (15:36):
There's a lot of artist out there who would perform,
So please trump before you call a manga rally, put
the call out.
Speaker 3 (15:43):
They are artists out there.
Speaker 4 (15:45):
Performers who will come and perform on the mall for
our two hundred and fiftieth anniversary.
Speaker 1 (15:50):
Yeah, the Toby Keith song Brought to Your Courtesy by
the Red, White and Blue was about retaliation against a
rock for bombing US on nine to eleven. And there's
a great story that Peter Jennings got was sent all
of these requests, you know, please play the song, Please
play the song on the one year anniversary, and he
(16:10):
refused to, and then he said on the air, I
got at least three hundred boots, just one, not a pair,
with instructions of where I should put them.
Speaker 4 (16:21):
Now I don't think they said that it was a
rock who bombed us in nine to eleven. You mean
al Qaida? Yes, because that's what Cheney was trying to
convince us.
Speaker 3 (16:30):
Oh, it was sadomble Shane and yeah, you should burn
in hell for that, Cheney.
Speaker 1 (16:36):
Yeah, it was al Qaeda in a rock.
Speaker 7 (16:39):
Is an end to all this nonsense? In this garbage
in this I don't think you can put that on
a radio.
Speaker 8 (16:45):
Is there an end?
Speaker 5 (16:46):
Where?
Speaker 1 (16:47):
Is it just gonna get worse?
Speaker 4 (16:48):
Is it just simply gonna get worse?
Speaker 2 (16:50):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (16:50):
It's you guys.
Speaker 5 (16:51):
Say I love to listen to, and nobody else seems.
Speaker 1 (16:55):
To understand or hear it. It's just crazy.
Speaker 4 (16:59):
This is insane and it makes me disgusted with this country.
Speaker 1 (17:05):
I almost interrupted the most important part. Thank you so
much for those kind words. But it is disgusting, and
I'm sorry to say it's gonna get worse. This is
part of a political campaign. It's not just organic. This
is anti Ice, anti America, anti Trump, and it is
one of the Democrats' political strategies. All right, one more.
Speaker 5 (17:32):
It's so funny you're talking about baby alligators. I remember
when we used to drive down to Florida from Long Island.
We'd be in the station wagon sitting in the back
looking at the cars coming towards us, and my dad
and mom would pull over on the side of the
road and get us a baby alligator were on the
way home. Oh, that brought back memories. Thanks.
Speaker 3 (17:54):
Yeah, I remember an old Dixie Highway.
Speaker 4 (17:58):
In fact, you know Warner Wolf coming up next probably
remembers old Dixey Highway. Well, first she took Tobacco Road
down an old Dixiy Highway. They didn't have the super
highways then, and boy, they'd be shelling little gators all
along the route going up until you hit like Jacksonville,
and then you start heading into Georgia and people would
bring them home.
Speaker 1 (18:18):
Do me a favor and call back and tell us
how big any of those gators got and what you
ended up doing with them. Now, let's get to Daria
Albinger with the seven thirty News direa.
Speaker 7 (18:27):
Morning, guys. One person is dead and another is in
critical condition after a fire this morning in Queens. Firefighters
say it started about two forty this morning on the
second floor of an apartment building on fortieth Street, and
the Sunnyside firefighter was also hurt, tensions arising after Sentcom
says it struck Iranian military sites over the weekend in
response Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards as it's targeted a US
(18:50):
military base in the Gulf region. At least twenty people
were arrested over the weekend at New Jersey's Delaney Hall,
most of them protesting conditions at the private Ice Attention
Center over the alleged mistreatment of detainees. They also broke
a curfew that's now an effect outside the facility. Governor
Cheryl says some of the demonstrators were throwing things and
lighting them on fire, and she says that will not
(19:11):
be tolerated. Southwest Airline says it'll no longer require plus
sized customers to book an extra seat in advance gate
agents Instead will now assign an extra seat for free
if it's available, or will work to get the customer
on a later flight. Next News eight o'clock bulletins at
once I'm Daria Albinger on seven to ten wor.
Speaker 4 (19:32):
Oh up next one to Wolf his predictions Now that
we know it's the Spurs and the Knicks will be
playing for the NBA Championship, But as we've been talking
about all morning long. America is turning two hundred and
fifty bet you winning only station talking about that right now,
and WR is celebrating with two hundred and fifty thousand
(19:52):
dollars in cash. But we partition it up starting today Monday,
listen for your chance to win two thousand, five hundred
so you can take the ultimate American getaway and visit
the state cities, landmarks and national parks to make our
country amazing. Win your share of two hundred and fifty grand.
(20:13):
Just listen for the keyword and enter it at SEVENTENWR
dot com starting today at eight am.
Speaker 3 (20:20):
The spring Well Warner Wolf right on, right on time.
Speaker 4 (20:24):
San Antonio took out the Thunder Saturday Nights. So here
it is Game one san Antonio Wednesday versus the Knicks.
Speaker 3 (20:34):
What says you.
Speaker 9 (20:36):
Wanna well, I'll tell you what Before you automatically give
the championship to the Knicks and expect some more blowouts.
Wait a minute, the Knicks will not be playing the
ill prepared Hawk, seventy six ers or Cavaliers. The Spurs
have the home court advantage because they had a better
(20:57):
season record than the Knicks and the Spurs lost only
eight home games all year. Splitting the two games with
the Knicks, the Spurs are four and a half point
favorite in Game one Wednesday night, and one of the reasons,
of course seven foot four twenty two year old Victor Rimbianna,
who can shoot, rebound, shoot from the outside, and was
(21:21):
named Defensive Player of the Year now twice, the Knicks
have been off for a week a week now that
if the Knicks win the championship, people will say, you see,
they were well rested. If the Knicks lose the championship,
the same people will say they were rusty. That's right.
(21:45):
As a sports fan. The first game, I'm gonna give
to the Spurs one hundred and nine to one hundred
and eight.
Speaker 1 (21:55):
Really that point? Yeah, I'm I'm taking the points. I
don't think it's gonna be that close.
Speaker 9 (22:04):
Oh, you're gonna take the four and a half with
the Knicks.
Speaker 1 (22:07):
Ye, No, no, no, no, I'm taking the four and
a half with the Spurs.
Speaker 9 (22:11):
Oh you're gonna give No, the Spurs are four and
a half point favorite.
Speaker 1 (22:15):
That's what I just said, And so I don't think
it's gonna be that close. I'm gonna give the four
and a half points.
Speaker 9 (22:20):
Oh you think the Spurs will win by more than
four and a half.
Speaker 1 (22:24):
I do, I do, And I haven't gotten one wrong
in this whole playoff.
Speaker 9 (22:28):
Oh well, I'll tell you what. If I'm right, you
bring it you guys, bring it up tomorrow.
Speaker 1 (22:34):
I will. I promise, I will, I promise.
Speaker 9 (22:37):
If I'm wrong, don't mention it. I was never wrong.
This is a recording. I was never.
Speaker 3 (22:48):
You sound like a politician. I was never wrong. I
was wrong. I was never wrong.
Speaker 9 (22:54):
All right, changing the sport man, come on, give him
some glasses. Last Wednesday's Mets Reds game home played umpire
Emil Jimenez and no less than nine balls and strip
challenges calls against them, and was wrong in seven of
the nine challenges, including six in a row. Get this
(23:19):
guy another job, All right, I've got two Boozes of
the Week. One has to go to Margaret Brennan, the
host faced the Nation who last week on Memorial Day,
took the time to actually ask two American winners of
the Congressional Medal of Honor for combat in Afghanistan about
(23:43):
our countries. She called being dark in a lot of darkness. Hey,
how about some respect? Here's two Congressional Medal of Honor
winners who risked their lives in combat just so people
like you and others would be free to ask even
a dumb question.
Speaker 1 (24:03):
I watched it. It was embarrassing Warner, and she even
had the gall to say, how do you survive these
dark times? They survived Afghanistan, they survived incoming fire. What
are you talking about?
Speaker 9 (24:16):
Oh my gosh. You know, if she asked the same
question on Russian TV or Chinese TV or Iranian TV,
she would be sent to parts unknown, if not worse.
She told you that would be her last show.
Speaker 5 (24:34):
Now.
Speaker 9 (24:34):
Another bull of the week has to go to John McEnroe,
who criticized thirty two year old former tennis player Jeannie
Bouchard for playing that damn stupid pickleball. No, John, you're stupid.
Pickle Ball is the number one fastest growing participating sport
(24:56):
in the country twenty four million, not tennis, pickleball, and
you're a phony. You played pickleball matches with Andre Agassi
and Michael Chang and Maria Sharapota and you got paid
for it. The reason is it's popular because where else
could an eighty eight year old like myself play an
(25:20):
eighteen year old or a twenty eight year old or grandchildren.
It's because the court is half the size as a
tennis court.
Speaker 3 (25:28):
Well, there is one other sport you could do that.
It's called chess. Chess. How did you do in those games?
Speaker 5 (25:39):
Water?
Speaker 1 (25:39):
Did you beat them?
Speaker 9 (25:41):
No?
Speaker 3 (25:42):
I always lose, always lose, always tells the truth. One
always tells the truth.
Speaker 9 (25:48):
But it's great. You can move or don't move. I
have one rule. I tell my partner if it's over
my head, forget it. I'm not running backwards. That's it. Well,
that's how people get hurt and kick. Yeah. Hey, tear
(26:08):
down that cage, mister president. Next week, President Trump will
hold a UFC Mixed Martial Arts Championship match on the
White House Lawn, surrounded by a steel cage where fighters
are allowed to continue to pound out their opponent while
they're down. Medical reports show that it has caused this
(26:32):
is a mixed martial arts matches. Thirty percent of mixed
martial arts matches ending concussions head injuries, the highest rate
in all sports. Mister President, play volleyball or bowling or
pickle ball. Tear down that octagon caage, mister President.
Speaker 3 (26:54):
Well, I concur with you.
Speaker 7 (26:55):
Want.
Speaker 4 (26:56):
I've been in my fair share of fights, But I
believe when you have somebody down, that's it, that's it.
Speaker 9 (27:02):
That's it, count him out, that's all. Now I've got
the quote of the month Texas football coach Steve Sarkisian,
who said, while we at Texas make sure that transfer
students who want a degree, we check out and take
(27:24):
into consideration a student's credit transfer list right where he
came from, accept the credits or we don't. While at
Mississippi football, all you have to do is take basketball
weaving and you can get a degree. URTIs, wasn't wasn't
that your major in college? Oh?
Speaker 3 (27:45):
What a loone blow? I didn't go to college, wonder
and you know that?
Speaker 9 (27:49):
Yeah? Yeah, all right, I've got this here? Is this serious?
The stooge of the week has to go to New
York Times writer Thomas Friedman, who wrote, even if the
(28:10):
regime in Tehran gives up its uranium, it will emerge stronger.
What if Iran keeps stalling just like Hitler did while
he built up his army, Man, you won't you won't
take away Iran's uranium and the certainly their nuclear capabilities.
(28:34):
You won't have to worry about it. The first four
targets of Iran will be Israel, New York City, and
Wall Street, London and Paris. You can't stall anymore. They'll
just use the time to build a bomb. That's the
way it is now. I'm going back to something you
(28:56):
said last week, Larry about the Knicks. You said the Knicks.
You asked if there was another team that ever moved
the ball around like the Knicks. You know, they don't
have one huge star every game. Well, if you go
back to the Boston Celtics in the fifties and sixties, man,
(29:22):
that's all they did. They moved the ball around. You
didn't have guys scoring twenty points or more Russell. They
had Russell and Sharmon and Kouzi and Heinzen Sam and
Casey Jones. That's the way they did it. They moved
the ball around. And that's what the Knicks are doing.
Speaker 3 (29:39):
And wanna off the bench was Havelchek.
Speaker 4 (29:41):
So we're going to have to bid you ad right
now and send you back to the bench.
Speaker 9 (29:48):
Frank Ramsey the best six man in basketball.
Speaker 4 (29:52):
Oh, same time, same place up next week. One of
the what you know what a corker he is. I
wonder if anybody knows what the meaning of colker is.
I know Warner Wolf does, but hope to hear that
in talk back meantime.
Speaker 3 (30:08):
Up next we found out where all.
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Speaker 1 (31:21):
Well, I'm hoping they're investigating now. I'm hoping this was
just a horrible mistake. It happened over the weekend at
Newark International Airports. It was about six o'clock that a
plane in a United flight was taking off for Spain.
And then they, you know, at a certain point they
say turn all your devices off, especially if they hit
(31:41):
some turbulence, and the devices were turned off except one
person's device stayed on. It was a sixteen year old
boy and his Fitbit stayed on, and it was everybody's
Bluetooth and including they monitor the Bluetooth up in the cabin,
and he named his fitbit bomb bomb.
Speaker 8 (32:04):
They have a security everyone's evacuating. Now someone decides to
name their Bluetooth devices.
Speaker 9 (32:08):
Are and four letter words, so they're evacuating the aircraft.
Speaker 1 (32:11):
How about the fact that they wouldn't even say the
four letter word over aircraft or control. I thought it
was like a curse word. When I first heard the audio.
Speaker 3 (32:19):
So let me get it straight. Newark International Airport.
Speaker 4 (32:22):
The United Airline flight takesha off Fushpain across the Atlantic Ocean.
So they stopped somewhere over the ocean and come back.
Speaker 1 (32:30):
They didn't get back till nine thirty, so they took
off at six so they were far out over the ocean,
and then they said, no, we're going to turn around
and come right back. Wow, because they weren't halfway yet.
You know, they was closer to get back to the
Newark International Airport. This is a sixteen year old kid.
He's not identified. You know. You just have to hope,
(32:52):
and I think it is. I think it's just a
horrible mishap. But he's I'm sure. I don't think you
got on the flight to go back.
Speaker 3 (33:00):
Named the bomb. Yes, I bet you. The kid ain't
paying for that phone.
Speaker 4 (33:07):
The parents are, no question they have any idea about this.
Speaker 3 (33:12):
You think we should name him? And shaman?
Speaker 1 (33:13):
What do you think, Clary, I have no idea. I'd
love to get his name, but no, he's sixteen that
I could have release.
Speaker 4 (33:20):
It all right now, remember before that it was Saturday,
by the way, before the start of the Memorial Day weekend.
I took off for Stamford University to speak there about
the dangers of AI.
Speaker 3 (33:30):
And I said to you, I said, where did all.
Speaker 4 (33:33):
The Spirit Airlines customers go, who of having fights and struggles?
I didn't see it that weekend at any of the airports.
And yet we've found it. We found it in the
badger of state of Wisconsin. Right, yes, exactly.
Speaker 1 (33:47):
And this is a This is another United Airlines flight,
and it was a Chicago flight taking off from Chicago.
It was supposed to go out to the West coast,
but it had to make an emergency landing at Madison, Wisconsin.
So it was pretty quick after takeoff. Somebody tried to
breach the.
Speaker 8 (34:06):
Crockpit for the law enforcement. So United two thousand and
five were more communicated with the flight attendants. Man is
under control. The flight attendants are working with the FBI
that are sitting on the other side of him. We'll
let you know if we're going to need to take
him off here or.
Speaker 1 (34:22):
Move to a gate saone Rogers, thank you. Yeah. They
didn't know they were landing the flight, and they didn't
know whether they were going to have to cuff him
and just take him off the plane. In the middle
of the airfield because he was such a problem, or
they could make it to the gate at that time.
Nobody knows exactly what happened. Here's here's the question I have.
(34:44):
They had FBI on that flight, and they had five
personnel police personnel on that flight. What the hell? I mean,
I would love that on my flights. But I don't
know where they were all going that You had two
FBI agents and three other security off officers, police officers,
they said.
Speaker 4 (35:01):
And remember with a lot of flights, you still have
the marshals who are like undercover, who just go on
like they were a normal passenger. Nobody talks about that
any longer. Remember how the US Marshals would have undercover
officers just book a flight as if they were a
normal passenger and sit there, particularly at the height remember
(35:22):
of the hijacking of planes. And then the person would
take you to Cuba to Havana, only the flight would
be released to go back and that guy would end
up in Castro's gulag at the time, remember those.
Speaker 1 (35:33):
I do, I do remember Aaron Marshalls man.
Speaker 3 (35:36):
Whatever happened to that?
Speaker 4 (35:37):
But anyway, up next we got to talk about Iran.
What's transpiring But first, let's get the news at eight o'clock.