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May 2, 2024 61 mins

C&R are observing New Yorkers (where Rich is broadcasting from today!) There's also a hotel toilet story that leads to the whole crew cracking up. America's (& MLB's) most famous beekeeper, Matt Hilton joins the show! 'OLD-SCHOOL WHEN 50 HITS' has a "dope" topic! The crew & callers compare today's slang with that of the 80s & 90s, including sports terms! So many great calls that the phone system starts "trippin'!" Plus, Luca trounces the Clipps, Game 7's & Ryan Garcia's response to cheating allegations!  

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
Hey, thanks for listening to the best of Cabino and
Rich podcast. Be sure to catch us live every day
from five to seven pm Eastern two to four Pacific
on Fox Sports Radio.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
Find your local station for Cavino and Rich at Foxsports
Radio dot com, or stream us live every day on
the iHeartRadio app by.

Speaker 1 (00:18):
Searching FSR.

Speaker 2 (00:22):
Rich. I know you had some stories. How does it
feel to be in New York Man, Yeah.

Speaker 1 (00:26):
Everyone's unnecessarily hustling around. I still got that vibe. I
lived most of my life here, and I look around,
I'm like, where's everyone going?

Speaker 2 (00:33):
You were wearing your shirt. You were wearing a shirt
yesterday that said hustle, false sanitizing.

Speaker 1 (00:40):
Maybe an irony for everyone that thinks they're on there
hustling grind. Get all over it.

Speaker 2 (00:44):
You know, it's just a lifestyle, and we lived it,
and you kind of get past it. You hit a
point in life. It's like that lame song you used
to play in your pop radio days.

Speaker 1 (00:54):
Rich.

Speaker 2 (00:54):
You know, you stay in New York too long, it
makes you hard, makes you too cold. You get sick
of that. And then you stay in La too long
it makes it a little soft. Right, what's that lame
song you talked about. You're quoting Neil Diamond, not a
pop song from my time.

Speaker 1 (01:09):
That's Neil Diamond, I am.

Speaker 2 (01:10):
I said, I know that's what the song's about. I
know that song.

Speaker 1 (01:14):
Oh well, are you talking about boz Lerman?

Speaker 2 (01:16):
Yeah, that corny song. There's truth to it too, because
you know, we're not hating on the East Coast, that's
where we're from. But I think I'm over that grind
as well, Buddy.

Speaker 1 (01:27):
I look around and someone once said this to me,
And you might say this is a BS statement, but
someone said, other than sports, do you ever see someone
important running around?

Speaker 2 (01:39):
You never see anyone who's running stuff running around. It's
usually someone less important. Yeah, yeah, have.

Speaker 1 (01:49):
You ever seen our boss like running to get something? No,
because guess what, he's the guy running it, right, she's
the woman running it. Like, So I look at all
these people, I'm like, where are you running through? You
must not be the important.

Speaker 2 (02:00):
That's well again, you could think that, but that's also
the lifestyle that's what got us to where we are
right now. That that sort of hustle, that sort of hunger,
that sort of pace, it's just a different pace in
New York City.

Speaker 1 (02:13):
We used to make fun of the tourists that would
stop in their tracks and look up at the buildings. Yeah,
and I don't hate him anymore, Cavino, because they're the
ones visiting a city like trying to take it all in.
I now look at the people bumping into them, like,
get out of here. What do you think you're doing?
I look at that out like, get out of here, loser.

Speaker 2 (02:30):
I'm trying to get to work over.

Speaker 3 (02:33):
You know what, though, neither of you have ever had
to produce the Covino and Rich Show and live commercials before,
because I've had to sprint from studio to studio. And
there was a day where Ramos was like, I didn't
know you could run that fast. I can't do it, Ramos,
do it, Ramos.

Speaker 1 (02:49):
I didn't know you can't run that fast.

Speaker 2 (02:51):
That's like a John Mullaney.

Speaker 1 (02:55):
It's very Mullaney. Like Mullany has that new special with
Letterman on that flip. I'll put that in tomorrow's Weekend Hobnobin.
But I do have one quick story before we get
into Mahomes and Ryan Garcia and let's be honest, a
couple uneventful playoff games. Last night. I felt like I
missed nothing by watching the highlights, like two thirty point differentials,
like that tonight's the game and that nine pm East

(03:17):
Coast start.

Speaker 2 (03:18):
Well we got wins. Yeah, we got some must wins.

Speaker 1 (03:21):
Comuno, that's got to hurt people that have an early
morning of work, Like the Nick sixer starts at nine o'clock.

Speaker 2 (03:27):
Right, All those people are gonna be running to the office.
I'm sure. Yeah, not so important.

Speaker 1 (03:34):
Before we get to NBA, your boy Ryan Garcia doing
drugs all that stuff. I get to New York and
I know that. You know how Comuna, when you went
to Hawaii, they think you're Hawaiian even though you're Mexican
and Italian. Apparently Mexican plus Italian looks Hawaiian.

Speaker 2 (03:50):
Yeah, I got that, you know, Mario Lopez looking vibe
about me where I'm sort of ethnically ambiguous a little bit.
You know how. I realized that I started getting discounts
on all my receipts, and I was like, I know,
I'm cool now, but I'm not that cool. I'm like,
why am I getting all these discounts?

Speaker 1 (04:08):
What does this mean? And I asked one of those
you're not an island boy.

Speaker 2 (04:11):
Yeah, and it's like, I forget the name of it,
but there's a local discount that you get, and I
would get it when I was in Hawaii and I
thought it was like a one time thing. I went
there again. I still got it. So they assume that
I'm Hawaiian and I'm cool, I feel one with the people.
I love it.

Speaker 1 (04:26):
So I pulled even though I am LA guy. Now
for the last man, we've been in La you and
I moved out with our show in twenty fifteen, so
it's a good eight plus years, man, which is wild.
But I went to the front desk of the hotel
I'm staying at and I'm like, I'm here to check in,
give him the credit card, ID, let's move this along.

(04:49):
And this girl gave me, of course, your typical New
York East Coast attitude, like we don't got rooms up
at until four o'clock, okay, And I'm like, whoa, all right,
East Coast customer service for route out the gate.

Speaker 2 (04:59):
Clearly a icy Latina that you're dealing with based on
the impression, yeah.

Speaker 1 (05:04):
Like Mansi on steroids, sponsy spicy Mansi. So this guy's like,
we don't got rooms at til four o'clock. I was like,
so four o'clock, dude, it was like one o'clock. I
had taken the Red Eye, Red eye meaning I got
on a midnight flight, got to New York at eight
a m. Got breakfast with a buddy that was kind

(05:26):
enough to pick me up at the airport, and then
I made my way to Manhattan. When you want to
check into your room.

Speaker 2 (05:31):
By the way, grown man, aren't you embarrassed asking for
rides all the time? Your poor buddy has to pick
you up. You can't get an uber.

Speaker 1 (05:39):
No, I would never I would never want someone to
go out of the way to pick me up. But
it was picked me up too, so we could go
have breakfast together.

Speaker 2 (05:44):
Yeah, sure you that, No, dude, I say, buy you
eggs if you pick me up at the airport, dude.

Speaker 1 (05:50):
The same way your family lives, same way your family.

Speaker 2 (05:54):
Rich Tom Sawyer's people into doing things for him and
he gives you like a slice of pizza as a
thank you. I know your tricks. I know your tricks.

Speaker 1 (06:02):
How far does your family in Jersey live from Newark Airport?

Speaker 2 (06:07):
They live fifteen minutes away and still don't want to
pick me up. And I'm sure your buddy doesn't want
to pick you up either. Well, you're growing man.

Speaker 1 (06:14):
He picked me up and we had breakfast, and he
showed me his new placeing bot on the water, and
I was like, look at you living the life. Drove
me in the city and all I wanted to do
was get my hotel room, lay down, take a little nap,
take a shower. I don't sleep well on the Red Eye,
even with two edibles and a glass of wine. I
was like, I was. I was just couldn't fall See.

Speaker 2 (06:34):
People need to wine, dude. That's and you couldn't fall asleep, dude.

Speaker 1 (06:40):
I just keep staring at my code of sleep, and
then in my head I'm like, why can't I sleep?
My goodness, So maybe I dozed off for like twenty
minutes at a time, three times. Maybe. So again the
woman goes, we don't got rooms at till far o'clock. Okay,
So I go, I know how this works.

Speaker 2 (06:58):
She's scarfaced.

Speaker 1 (06:59):
Now I go, ma'am, I know how this worked.

Speaker 2 (07:02):
Did she say you think you'll break time, I'll show.

Speaker 1 (07:04):
You time shot good night to the back guy. Yeah,
So I said to her, Hey, listen, I know how
this works. I'm a new Yorker at heart and I.

Speaker 2 (07:16):
Perhaps you know my friend George Washington.

Speaker 1 (07:20):
Though I was like, perhaps you know my friend Andrew Jackson.
So I go, hey, I'm not from Iowa. No offense, Sam,
I'm not from mom Boise, Idaho. You know, I know
New York. This is my town. I just don't live
her anymore. You got rooms? I threw a twenty and
she goes, well, do you know what I think I
do have something.

Speaker 2 (07:40):
I'm like, now you've got that. Wow. So I was like, oh,
but she's get this insulting. If they really didn't, though,
I would have took your money and be like, sorry,
we don't. But hey man, you got that off So no,
but but here's the thing.

Speaker 1 (07:58):
MANCI take a look at one of their phones, because
she goes, there is one thing. Though, I go, I
don't really care what the thing is. It's a New
York hotel. It was only a couple hundred bucks, so
I'm not expecting the four seasons. You know, it was
like a newer hotel. But I knew it was small.
I knew the rooms were small. She goes, no, no,
the one room I have. The toilet's got a problem.

(08:18):
I go, what do you mean the toilet's got a problem.
She goes, do you want me to tell you? I
go no, No, I'm fine. Give me the room. She goes,
it's tricky, I got I don't know what could be
tricky about a toilet. Give me the room. I'm not
waiting till four o'clock. That's three hours, bro. This is
one of those New York City small hotels where you

(08:41):
can't even sit on the toilet if you wanted. I
sent a picture.

Speaker 2 (08:45):
It's slanted, dude.

Speaker 1 (08:46):
I'm slanted and the bowl, the toilet bowl has a
pull in front of it, so you actually didn't want
to send a toy. You have to straddle the sink.

Speaker 2 (08:56):
What rich I'm looking at this now? What is that?
It's the it's the sink and poll it's the sink.

Speaker 1 (09:06):
You have to have your left and right leg on
opposite sides of a pole.

Speaker 2 (09:09):
You'd have to be a US gymnast, so you have
to sit on the side. He's sitting sideways. Who's saying that, Danny?
G Second, I feel excluded. Everyone's looking at their phones
and I'm just looking at you. Guys, look at your phones.

Speaker 1 (09:20):
Ye send it to Maasi and you know we'll post
it at coviing on rich.

Speaker 2 (09:23):
On, you have to sit like side saddle kind of no, but.

Speaker 1 (09:26):
You either do that or you have to straddle the
sink and Danny G let me tell.

Speaker 2 (09:31):
You sitting sideways like wall bro.

Speaker 1 (09:34):
Danny G. You're a little bit of a bigger guy
than me. I could promise you. There's no way you'd
be able to sit on this toilet.

Speaker 2 (09:40):
No way you need like stirrups or something. You'd have
to be like I'm going with the lobby. Wait, I've
never seen anything like this. I thought you were exaggerating.
I really did it sideways? Yeah, against the walls.

Speaker 3 (09:52):
I would camp out at the lobby bathroom. Bring my bathroom.

Speaker 2 (09:56):
Are you the picture now? Yes? Thank you?

Speaker 1 (09:58):
So that was my twenty dollars. I want my room now.
I guess you would say penalty.

Speaker 4 (10:03):
Listen, listen, Poppy, listen, Papa, I have the hookup.

Speaker 3 (10:08):
But yeah, just one problem, rich You should have asked
for ten of that twenty back.

Speaker 2 (10:12):
Yeah for real, Yeah, you should go back like. I
wan't to want ten bunths back I need. That's awesome.
By the way, you got to post this. Can you
post this now at Covino and Rich at radio.

Speaker 1 (10:23):
During our first commercial break. I'll post it.

Speaker 2 (10:24):
I don't understand how you didn't ask when she told
you. You should have been like, yes, what do you mean
does it not flush?

Speaker 1 (10:29):
Because I think she should have been like, you're just
not gonna fit man, Monty.

Speaker 4 (10:34):
When I tell you, listen, you have to say sideway.
You have to sideway, okay.

Speaker 1 (10:41):
Okay on the toilet. Yeah, I said sideway. Are you okay?

Speaker 2 (10:44):
I think I think I'm okay with that. That is impossible,
you know what. That's the one he just talked about.
The hustle and bustle of New York. That should be
the one peaceful moment you get. And that's a nightmare.
That makes me talk this New York even more. And
I say that expectfully.

Speaker 1 (11:00):
Committo. It was a small room. It's a it's a
midtown Times Square hotel. It's not thirty but a mid
before seasons. And let me tell you, they're like, it's
one of the smaller rooms and the bathroom has an issue.
And I saw it, when I tell you, I saw
probably twenty people in the lobby on the couches by
the little fireplace, like waiting because they were told the
same thing probably like no rom style far and I'm like,

(11:21):
I'm not waiting with the rest of these jibbronis. I
want my room.

Speaker 2 (11:25):
No, So that's hilarious. The penalty is so get what
you paid for you Yeah, you should have gave her
one hundred. Maybe we've got normal toilet. So wow, that's
that's terrible. I'm sorry to hear that. So rich. Now
that we know the story, why don't you tell us
why you're in New York and then we'll set up
this Ryan Garcia drama.

Speaker 1 (11:43):
All right, So not only do we have Ryan Garcia drama,
we're gonna talk to the most famous beekeeper yep in
North America within ten minutes, a guy that saved the day.
Are you serious?

Speaker 2 (11:54):
Yeah, well that's exciting.

Speaker 1 (11:56):
Danny Danny G. Danny G. You're pretty good slew. I
feel like you're like, you know how everyone's girlfriend could
dig up stulf on anyone's ex if they wanted. Danny
G could find a guest better than anyone. If it's
like the girl that caught the Dodger home run of Otani,
if it's the bee keeper, Danny G like tracks him down,
like as a sleuth.

Speaker 3 (12:15):
This is how I got India's most famous tiger hunter
on Animal Thunderdome back in the day.

Speaker 2 (12:20):
You just got to.

Speaker 1 (12:21):
That sounds like a fixed sentence, by the way.

Speaker 2 (12:23):
No, no, it's true. It's true. You mean you were
the legendary producer that made that happen. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (12:29):
No.

Speaker 3 (12:29):
Longtime Fox Sports radio listeners remember that interview because Klay
Travis at the end said, this is the best interview
I've ever done in my entire career.

Speaker 2 (12:37):
That's awesome.

Speaker 3 (12:38):
It was really cool. But it just, you know, you
gotta be magnum p I. I had to put a fake
mustache on yesterday after the show, and I spent an
hour tracking this guy down yesterday.

Speaker 2 (12:49):
Nice.

Speaker 1 (12:49):
So we will talk to the most famous beekeeper in
the world. We'll talk Ryan Garcia, We'll talk about Holmes.
But I guess the lesson we learned Cavino is it's
never I don't think it's ever bad idea to quote
grease someone, Like if you want to throw a little
twenty in your palm old School bought your gallop style, like, hey,
I think we can make it happen. I'm not above
greasing someone.

Speaker 2 (13:10):
It's kind of a slimy move. It's kind of shady behavior.

Speaker 1 (13:14):
Can can I tell you my slimiest grease move.

Speaker 2 (13:17):
I don't mind it when it's like a job well done,
you know, like like a tip kind of but like
the handshake, here you go. I appreciate you. But yeah, hey,
if that's what got it done, then you did the
right thing.

Speaker 1 (13:29):
Hey, Mancy, I know you worked in the Universal world
for a while. Correct, Yes, Jesz. You know on the
Universal Studio city Walk in Los Angeles there's a Johnny Rockets. Yes,
and I it was my most embarrassing greasing situation ever
because all those restaurants have like an hour wait on

(13:51):
a Saturday night. And I went up to like the
nerdy sixty year old kid that was like the host
at the host stand. Yes. I'm like, I was like,
I need a table at Johnny Rockets. Prompt though, and
I threw him like forty bucks and he's like, right
this way, sir.

Speaker 2 (14:05):
I greased Johnny Rockets.

Speaker 1 (14:09):
I know. I was like, I'm just saying. You might
think it's like a lay move, or you might be like, no,
that's how you get things done. I don't know. I'm
the game because.

Speaker 2 (14:19):
A lot of us don't do that enough, maybe right, yeap.

Speaker 1 (14:22):
My thought is, I know some people think it's awkward.
Some people will be like, oh, cringey, cringe. But I
think that if you don't like waiting and you want
a table, or for a hotel reservation, or hey, maybe
you want a little upgrade that press at the front
desk who's going through the computer trying to figure out
your hotel room, if you throw him at twenty cash,
you don't think to be like, let me see if

(14:42):
I have any better rooms. I think this is underutilized,
and I think at the end of the day, on
the rare occasion, you could do it. Grease someone.

Speaker 2 (14:54):
I'm gonna have more fun because we have a guest.

Speaker 1 (14:57):
You mean, the beekeeper of all beekeepers.

Speaker 2 (15:01):
You mean the most famous beekeeper in all the glory
and renown. It's our pleasure here on the Cavino and
Rich Show. You saw him at the Diamondbacks Dodgers game
the other night. Let's welcome Matt Hilton. Everybody, Hey, Matt,
what's up?

Speaker 6 (15:17):
Man?

Speaker 1 (15:19):
Hey?

Speaker 7 (15:19):
How you go?

Speaker 1 (15:20):
Now?

Speaker 2 (15:21):
Matt Hilton not only the most famous beekeeper in all
the nation, He's the branch manager of Blue Sky Pest
Control in Phoenix, Arizona and a lot of people are
calling him the real hero of the week, the real hero.
It was so awesome. It was so great. Matt. First,
I want to thank you for your time. Man, We
have lots of questions for you.

Speaker 5 (15:39):
Sure, thanks for having me on.

Speaker 1 (15:40):
Guys, Hey, no problem, Matt. So if you don't know,
Matt's the guy that you know went to Chase Field.
The Bees were foreman behind home plate, Dodgers Diamondbacks, and
the game was delayed for a couple hours. Matt. When
they call you and you're in traffic, knowing that nothing
could be solved until you get there, What was that like,
sitting in traffic knowing that everyone sort of waiting on you.

Speaker 5 (16:05):
It was pretty nerve wracking. I mean, I knew it
was a big deal when they when the head guy
that Jase Field called me said the whole game was
on hold. I mean I just dropped everything and just
jetted and luckily I didn't hear any traffic. But definitely
my mind was racing of all these scenarios that could
be wrong if I go wrong, if I ran into
some traffic, or you know, if the if these situation

(16:27):
went south. Because these things don't always go super smoothly,
especially in this type of scenario when you have a
ton of people around.

Speaker 2 (16:34):
What were you doing before you got this phone call, which,
by the way, I imagine you thought it was BS.
You're like, what in the hell, what's going on?

Speaker 1 (16:41):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (16:42):
What were you doing? Like you were having a regular,
ordinary day? I imagine, right, Yeah, I.

Speaker 5 (16:46):
Was just I had just got to my six year
old son's last T ball game of the season. Actually,
so I was there with my wife and four kids,
and yeah, if we were just starting the game with
him when I got the call.

Speaker 2 (17:00):
Now, was there any part of you that for a
second was like, no, I didn't plan on this, there's
no way. I'm sorry, Like, was there any part of
you when you got the phone call that just wanted
to go home and put your feet up, or did
you say to yourself, no, I'm the man for this mission.

Speaker 5 (17:18):
Yeah, there's a when you there's not a whole lot
of clients that kind of have us on speed dials
to react this quickly. Chase Field is definitely one of them,
and so there's always kind of that in the back
of your mind, it's like, yeah, I don't want to
do this kind of doing my thing. I fucked out,
but I knew that this is a big deal. And
when these types of clients call in, like we got

(17:40):
to rush out there, and it's not way often that
it happens, and oh yeah, I just I knew I
needed to get it done.

Speaker 1 (17:47):
Matt Hilton the number one bee keeper in all the lands.
We keep enhancing your title, Matt. When you weard taking
care of business at Chase Field, were there any Dodgers
or Diamondbacks that were particularly interested in what you were doing, Like,
did players show an interest? Like, oh, bees, tell me more, Matt.

Speaker 5 (18:04):
We've had a couple of them reach out afterwards, asking
some questions or wanting to chat. But while I was
there doing the treatment, I mean, it was all just
kind of a tornado and they were doing their thing.
They were finally able to get on the field and
start warming up and get going with the game, so
they were kind of preoccupied. I didn't really rub shoulders

(18:24):
with them, so I can't really speak for that.

Speaker 2 (18:29):
Well, we have audio of Mookie Bets. He was screaming
bees wait. So again, if you guys missed it, it
was one of the bigger stories of the week. The
bee Colony formed at the netting above home plate. Right,
So first of all, how does that even happen? Like
what caused that to happen? And then what did you
use to remove them? Like what were you spraying and everything?

Speaker 5 (18:53):
Yeah, so a lot of people aren't super familiar with
African ice honey bees. They're nicknamed killer bees. They are
honey bees, but the Africanized honey bees that we have here,
they're much much more aggressive type of bee, and they
are still important to our environment and ecosystem, so and so.
But beekeepers don't generally keep Africanized honeybees due to their

(19:17):
extremely aggres aggressive nature. But when a colony gets large enough,
they essentially a large chunk of them breaks off, has
a new queen, and the cruise along flying and then
they're just in this big cloud of bees here in Arizona.
Occasional we'll kind of be driving or walking in this
big old cloud of bees goes over, you will. When

(19:39):
that cloud decides to land, they just land within a
matter of minutes, and they have the queen there in
the middle, and all the workers are surrounding her, protecting her.
And that's what we saw there at the game that
night with a swarm.

Speaker 1 (19:52):
Hey, Matt, at what point when you knew, like I
got this under control. At what point did they say, Matt,
we'd like you to throw the first pitch.

Speaker 5 (20:01):
It was within just a couple of minutes of coming
down from the scissor lift, because on my descent on
the scissor lift, I knew I had about maybe thirty
seconds of my fame. So that's when I was kind
of trying to work in the crowd a little bit,
and so I figured once I got down, i'd do
a couple more fits bumps and be on my way home.

(20:21):
But man, it just spiraled out of control from there,
and they asked me to do the pitch and I
was like, I don't know who was scheduled before me,
but I'll take his place.

Speaker 2 (20:30):
Well, you know, I was going to ask you that
did you bump? You didn't bump somebody? What if you
bumped some little kid? I know, that's so funny.

Speaker 5 (20:38):
I never found out.

Speaker 2 (20:39):
So there was no hesitation. You're like, yeah, I'll do it.

Speaker 5 (20:43):
I was like I could not say no to that.
That's a that's a once in a lifetime opportunity. And
it was an awesome experience. Can't say I threw the
best strike in the world, but I gave him my
go and still a super special experience.

Speaker 2 (20:56):
And a standing ovation man like that must have been awesome.
Did you take your family with you? Since they called
you on such short notice, were you able to take
your kid on the field.

Speaker 5 (21:05):
No, because I mean I had to deploy so quickly,
and my twelve year old's done. He was asking if
he could go with me. But you know, it's not
something that it's just not something I can take him to, right,
I got you, and so, but yeah, they were. The
Dbacks have been awesome though. They've actually they're going to
have host my family out there for a game and
one of these night's.

Speaker 1 (21:25):
Great, that's awesome. Matt Hilton, the guy that saved the
day beekeeper, Matt, I got one last question. I don't
know about Covido I got on. My question is when
you get this great moment of just you know, timing
and fame and like, yeah, it goes viral and everyone's like, dude,
the beekeeper saved the day at the Diamondbacks Dodgers game.
Who is the most random person in your life that

(21:47):
reached out to you like an old high school classmate,
an old teacher, like an old neighbor like Matt was
that you like, who's the most random person that happened
to hit you up?

Speaker 5 (21:56):
There's been just a lot of people, like a handful
of people from gosh, like from my college days, I
mean fifteen years ago. That the people I haven't heard
from it a long time, and you know, everyone I
wondering what happened to that guy. There's actually been several
of those types of people that have reached out and
it's been kind of cool reconnecting.

Speaker 2 (22:17):
Yeah, a lot of random Facebook friend requests and you
own the moment, which made it even more special. You
leaned into it, had fun with it. You were the
hero of the day, you got the standing ovation. I
want to know if nerves kicked in at any point
when when doing your job right, because you know all
these people are watching you. There's almost twenty nine thousand
people there. You know it's televised. I don't know if

(22:38):
they put you on the big screen at any moment,
but like, did you feel like the pressure in that
moment and then the pressure throwing the pitch?

Speaker 5 (22:46):
I was feeling the pressure once I got to the
sizzor lift, you know, I'm sizzorl list certified and I've
done sizzor lift work a bunch, but a lot of
scizzor lists are different in like the controls. So I
get up there, Everyone's watching me. I'm trying to like here, Okay,
which buttons am I pushing to go up?

Speaker 2 (23:02):
I feel my arms would be shaken just doing it
knowing all those people were watching.

Speaker 5 (23:06):
Oh, I was taking for sure. But the guy next
to the to me that's worked out exactly did the
lift a bunch. He kind of coached me over and
once I kind of went up and I'm then I
start racing in my mind, like it, man, what could
what could go wrong here? If these bees start swarming
out and start singing people, or if I can't reach it?
That was another thing. So my mind was just racing like, hey,

(23:30):
how can this go south? But once I got up there,
I'm confident in my skills that I've done hundreds of
bees these be treatments before. So once I got up
there and knew I could reach it, then I was
Then my nerves started calming and I hear them blaring
the I Need a Hero song in the.

Speaker 2 (23:47):
Background, so amazing, and you're the hero, so again, after
a two hour be delay, Matt saved the day. He
removed the bees. He throws the first pitch, he gets
the standing ovation, the Diamondbacks win, and it was extra innings, right,
extra inning game. So everyone's like, Oh, it's all because
of Matt. And then the story gets even cooler because
Tops announced Tops, who didn't collect Tops Baseball cards, announced

(24:12):
that they're releasing a Matt Hilton autograph trading card. I
gotta know what that means to you. How cool was that?

Speaker 7 (24:19):
That was?

Speaker 5 (24:20):
When you asked about random people reaching out, That's what
I thought was you were gonna we were going to
get to was that was the most random thing that
has happened from this, Like you got all the press
and all that, and that's awesome. That's one that kind
of blew my mind because they reached out to me
and pushed the idea TOPS did yesterday morning, and in
my mind, I'm just thinking, like, that's super cool. But

(24:43):
who in the world's going to buy this card?

Speaker 2 (24:44):
Dude, I want that card. It's gonna be a rare
moment card. I love that. I think the idea is great.
I think that's so cool. Did you collect cards growing up.

Speaker 5 (24:52):
I did. Actually I collect baseball cards, me and my
brother Sam and Will. They both they collected a bunch
of baseball cards.

Speaker 2 (25:00):
The stats are going to say, like, what twelve thousand
bees in one scoop? How many? Hey to tell you
how many queens that you got in your career.

Speaker 1 (25:10):
By the way, he is by far now the coolest
dad at his kids t ball game by far.

Speaker 2 (25:16):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (25:16):
And well there's actually talk of the d facts hosting
the whole t ball team.

Speaker 2 (25:21):
Oh, that's so cool.

Speaker 1 (25:23):
That's awesome. I was gonna say, for all like the lame,
crappy stories out there that we see every day, it's
nice when a good story comes along. So, Matt, thank
you so much for being on the show Man and
continued success. And that's awesome, man. I'm glad your kids
get to see dad in his element too.

Speaker 2 (25:38):
Right, Yeah, and that card, congrats on that. Matt Hilton,
the branch manager of Blue Sky Pest Control in Phoenix, Arizona.
We appreciate your time here on Fox Sports Radio. And
you're right rich with all the crappy stories, that's like
a fun one, dude, And like he stepped up and
came through in the moment. So that was awesome.

Speaker 6 (25:58):
Fox Sports Radio has the best talk lineup in the nation.
Catch all of our shows at Foxsports Radio dot com
and within the iHeartRadio app. Search FSR to listen live.

Speaker 8 (26:10):
Hey, this is Tom Berducci from Fox Sports MLB Network
and Sports Illustrated.

Speaker 9 (26:15):
And I'm Joe Madden, and we're going to be around
to talk a little bit about managerial decisions and what
may have occurred to the dugout maybe in the nineteen eighties.

Speaker 1 (26:22):
It's the Book of Joe podcast. I can't wait for this, Joe.

Speaker 8 (26:25):
We're going to dive into what goes on in the
dugout and behind the scenes in Major League.

Speaker 1 (26:29):
Baseball, cars, wind whatever else we want to talk about.

Speaker 8 (26:32):
Yeah, well, there are no boundaries, right. Listen to the
Book of Joe podcast on the iHeartRadio app, on Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.

Speaker 2 (26:44):
I'm Steve Cavino with Danny g and Iowa, Sam and Monci.
We're here on the West Side, and of course Rich
Davis is in New York this weekend.

Speaker 1 (26:53):
You know what I said to that, what dead ass.

Speaker 2 (26:57):
Just stone out slang? Yeah, now check this out. Every Thursday,
Fox Sports Radio Nation, we go old school in fifty
hits on the clock, and we're talking old school slang,
primarily nineties slang. But if you want to incorporate sports
in any way or any sort of eighty slang, it
doesn't matter today's slang if you just want to chop

(27:19):
it up and talk about it, because we think it's
an important way to communicate as goofy as it is.
And we also got a nod to the hip hop community,
to the surfing community. Iowa. Sam was saying to the
younger kids, because they keep the slang going right, And
Danny G you wanted to shout out someone in particular.

Speaker 3 (27:38):
Yeah, E forty from the Bay area or the Yay areas.
He made very famous. I mean you're talking Captain Savaho.
He made things like broccoli known, and the list goes on.
And I mean, you look, there's a dictionary on E forty.

Speaker 2 (27:53):
One of the kings of slang for sure.

Speaker 3 (27:55):
Cat Catten Now, I mean he's got catting off. I
think about my family who moved from LA to the
Bay and within ten years they all sound like E forty.

Speaker 2 (28:07):
Yeah, you know that's that's funny too. You start realizing.
I guess maybe when you go to college, you start
meeting people from outside of the state you grew up
in that everybody uses different slang and you start incorporating that.
And you got a lot of it from music, So,
you know, props to people that kept it going. But
what were some that you used. Let's share some. Let's

(28:27):
reminisce a little bit eight seven seven ninety nine on Fox.

Speaker 7 (28:31):
Now.

Speaker 2 (28:31):
The reason we got to this point, Rich, that's is
because that is heavy, that's that's sort of eighties nineteen
eighty five background.

Speaker 1 (28:38):
So that's something wrong with a gravitational poll.

Speaker 2 (28:39):
Yeah, but it's a good one. Rich. There was a
video that went semi viral this weekend on social media.
How do I know that because I saw it. I
watched it and then Danny g was like, Hey, did
you see this one? And I believe it's Mark Goodman.
I'm not sure, Man, this is your friend from back
in the day, Oh, Mark Goodman. But he doesn't have

(29:01):
the afro in his clip. He has like his feathered
sort of look and he's going over like slang from
me from the nineties. And you gotta take a listen
because I don't know if it's true for everybody. Again,
this is a national show. We all use different slang.
Take a listen.

Speaker 9 (29:20):
Well, here are some other phrases you want to know
if you want to be sure to sound hip.

Speaker 1 (29:23):
In the nineties, hip yo, a greeting, who curb? What's up? Fucked?
In the eighties, it was just blasted. I don't know
how many I had the boy, did I get fucked?
I sure felt it the next morning. That was really
the worst thing I'd ever done.

Speaker 5 (29:38):
I hope you didn't drive home no way.

Speaker 9 (29:40):
Mcgiver is in the TV show where the impossible is
often accomplished.

Speaker 2 (29:46):
I can't believe you got off that speeding ticket. What
a mcguiver, Norville, what too secretly undermined?

Speaker 1 (29:53):
What?

Speaker 2 (29:54):
I can't believe you saw your job?

Speaker 9 (29:55):
You really the novel blackendecker or real tough assignment? You
get the analogy right.

Speaker 2 (30:03):
This job is a real glind It's just a blackened decker.
Some phrases may be around forever.

Speaker 1 (30:09):
Well, look, I got a run please by time yo.

Speaker 9 (30:13):
One last clip for words of the nineties is we
got to remember that hip slang changes rather quickly, So
if you want to use any of these phrases.

Speaker 1 (30:20):
You better use them in a hurry. I mean think
apart Simpson, Kwabunga.

Speaker 9 (30:24):
Is dreadfully out a day, hardly out of style. And
you don't want to appear by zotic, do you.

Speaker 2 (30:30):
Now. It's so funny because anytime you see people trying
to incorporate slang, these sound like cornballs. And I remember
it was from this movie. It's like when your parents
start saying things like blang blaying. You know it's gone
too far and it's corny, right, Like he hits a
point where it's corny and you're embarrassing your kids. Please
no now that clip. I saw it too, Danny g

(30:50):
And when I said to myself when I saw it,
was like, of course I said yo. Everybody said yo.
I still say yo. I don't know if I got
it from Yo, MTV raps or what, but we all
say yo, or maybe because I'm Hispanic and yo, sooy Steve,
what's up? But Yo, that's right Yo. My grandma was
saying yo. Now bucked. I never used in that term

(31:12):
in that way. Mcgiver we all used, but not in
that way as a verb. Right say we mcgivered it.
We mcguivered it. But it was something that you did
in a crafty way. You put something together and you
mcguivered it, norfold. I never even heard of that or
whatever they said in that clip. Black and Decker never

(31:33):
used that one, you dny G. All right, so let's
share some. Let's go over some, and which ones do
you like from today? You know, I'll tie some sports
into this because you think they're universal. The world's a
smaller place now, so thanks to social media, kids pick
up on things all over the place. Like I threw

(31:55):
one out the other day to rich and I thought
it was like a universal but it wasn't. I was like, dude,
that guy's throwing one hundred and two miles per hour.
He's throwing cheese, and Richards like, what does that mean?
I'm like, yo, bro, he's doing cheddar bro.

Speaker 1 (32:10):
He's I got the phrase, but we never use that.

Speaker 2 (32:14):
Yeah you understood, but you're like, you never used that.
That's to say chetta for money? Yeah, chatda Yeah same.
I only ad lib because he wasn't getting the cheese
that I was spilling. Like that dude was throwing cheese, right,
And how about this one? How about you remember if
you were playing junior legion baseball or or even a
little league, the first time you heard two ducks in

(32:36):
a pond. You're like, what does that mean?

Speaker 1 (32:38):
You used that one, right, Rich, two ducks on the pond.
I mean it's two runners on base.

Speaker 2 (32:42):
He got two runners on base. So there's baseball signing,
there's the boo yahs of the world. There's some great
sports slang that you could also know.

Speaker 1 (32:50):
Keith Hernando's on the Mets broadcast. He always calls an
rbi a ribbi, a ribbi steak. Yeah, Like, there's good
sports lingo. So if you want to throw that in there.

Speaker 2 (32:59):
So that's data, Grand Slam, Grand Saloon.

Speaker 1 (33:01):
Ran salami, the golden sombrero for strikeouts in one game.

Speaker 2 (33:05):
There's plenty of them, and sometimes you just don't like, I, brother,
aren't you aren't you wearing.

Speaker 1 (33:10):
A golden sombrera this weekend for a secle And of.

Speaker 2 (33:12):
Course every single to my own like one. I feel
like that's sort of sprouted, and again it's easy to
figure out and you know what it means. But I
feel like it came to be in the past six
to eight years. Was like winning that chip, winning that chip,
win that chip. He's got that chip, He's got that chip.
I'm like, what ship the tostito chip what chip? Oh

(33:33):
the championship? Oh that you know that became a thing
in the past few years to my knowledge. But let's
go over some nineties slang. And I have a question
for you guys. Growing up a lot of hip hop
kids in my hometown and even saying that sounds corny,
but you know what I mean. They got crunk, they
got they were getting crunked, and they would say, Yo,

(33:55):
word is bond, word is bond is born? Now see Danny,
you said it. Hold on all right, now, Rich, there's
been a discrepancy my whole life. Right, Danny g just
said word is born? Right, word is born. But the
slang I think was word is bond, meaning my word

(34:16):
is my bond. So word is bond? Bring it in,
my word is my bond. But then it turned into
like word is born. And I never got that. And
I always I knew, you know, I because you grew
up weird have you know? Also said as a little kid, nanny,
nanny poo poo. Dude, I did, but I grew yeah,
I grew up with a bunch of feign kids. So anyway,

(34:39):
was it word is bond or word is born? That
was my first question, because I used to hear both
growing up.

Speaker 3 (34:47):
I heard both also, and there's one that kids have
brought back now and they I feel like some of
them think they invented it. Yeah, because Mary, Mary, why
you bugging who works here now? On the board, she said,
I bet, and we've been saying that for decades.

Speaker 2 (35:03):
I bet that the best thing I'm out on McCarthy.

Speaker 3 (35:09):
But I heard one of our I heard one of
our teenagers say it the other day, and I was like,
you guys are saying that now. We said that back
in the late eighties, early nineties.

Speaker 1 (35:18):
Doesn't make Danny now. There's a there's certain Listen. We
always talk about how trends are cyclical, they always come back,
Yet there are things that will never come back, Like
to me, uh, guys, having a mustache not ironically is
tough for me to see it coming back right, like
in an ironic tipster way. But like, I don't think

(35:38):
the average guy's gonna rock a mustache like a mustache, Yeah,
I don't. I don't think women. I don't think women
are ever gonna be like, Oh, I don't think they're
let's just say, I don't think their favorite rock band
is gonna be uh, Bush, I think there's certain trends
that will never come back.

Speaker 2 (35:57):
You're not talking Gavin Rossdale, though, are you.

Speaker 1 (35:59):
No, No, I'm not. But I think there's a word
that I can't see coming back. And that was the
most popular word before we were born. In the seventies,
everything was groovy, and I feel like groovy will never
come back, Sam, Danny g.

Speaker 2 (36:13):
Can you see, Daniel, it is not coming back again.
It's generational. Your parents, like, think about the stuff they say.
He's cooking, that's so their generation. You know, they're rocking
and rolling every time they leave. All right, let's rock
and roll. You know, they're saying things from a different
generation at different time now in the nineties.

Speaker 1 (36:34):
I mean, your grandfather said things that were cool were
the bee's knees exactly.

Speaker 2 (36:38):
It's so funny to use those in an ironic way. Though.

Speaker 1 (36:40):
Oh, I was gonna say, that's what I'm saying. Sam.
I feel like, perhaps, maybe, Danny g when your kids
may put aside dead ass fire all these words, and
then what if your kid breaks out like, yeah, that's groovy, Dad,
Like it's possible. I just can't see it.

Speaker 2 (36:54):
Hey, I obviously know what cap and no cap means right,
like yeah bs or truth or what right? Yeah, where's
the where did that derive from? Anybody know that? I'd
love to hear that too, because that became a huge one.
Uh in the past five years or so, built different
the dead asses of the world, but in the nineties

(37:15):
rich because we throw it back on a Thursday. I'm
gonna give you some of the famous popular ones that
we got from movies. And they're all corny. I never
said these, but you know them. They're synonymous with the nineties,
Like if I said bogus is synonymous with the eighties,
like rad and awesome, Yeah right, kind of like maltalk.

Speaker 3 (37:33):
We're right across the street from the Sherman Oaks GALLEYA
bogus grody All that's girl talk.

Speaker 2 (37:39):
Yeah, Ted's bogus adventure. Yeah, like all right, I is
from the nineties.

Speaker 1 (37:44):
I Sam Sam, they had an excellent adventure.

Speaker 2 (37:46):
A bogus jersey never used. Yeah, I did say, I
now now that shirt you were wearing, Iowa Sam this
week was all that and a bag of chips. That's
an nineties that's a nineties never said it, but as
if was another nineties term clueless bling boo yah the bomb.

(38:09):
I still say things are bomb or the bomb or
just say bomb dot com dot com, Uh what a
sick sick? I still use man yeah uh fly.

Speaker 1 (38:23):
Said that Sam pulled out a good one because I
feel like Cavino. If you get like a new Yankees
had or a new Oh dude, I got the new
City Connect Jersey. It's sick like you say sick a lot.

Speaker 2 (38:32):
I do say sick home skillet bugging, let's bounce. These
were all These were all nineties ones. But here's a
sports related one, Rich, one of your favorites. When you
mess up, Yo, my bad, yep, my bad. Not everybody
knows the story.

Speaker 1 (38:48):
Brought to the mainstream by the Kembe Mutombo, who couldn't
say no my minow ball. To Kembi Mitomo went no
no no uh manoo ball. It was a language barrier thing,
and when he would make a mistake, he would say
my bad, like my fault, and my bad just became
lingo in the basketball community and then in every community.

(39:11):
Let's be honest, right.

Speaker 2 (39:12):
Dude, My bad is one that we all I think
still say, Oh snap snap snap, oh snap is a
nineties one. Shh, let me.

Speaker 1 (39:24):
Tell you that. You know, I'll tell you this, Cavino, beware,
and it's not a bad thing because I find it
funny when you do it. But Kavino said something in
the beginning of this conversation last hour. Yeah, when you
say things too much as a joke, they do become you.

Speaker 2 (39:38):
Yeah. I still say snap and like like.

Speaker 1 (39:40):
Like Cavino jokingly in a goofy way, be like, oh,
snap and but like in a funny way. But you
say it so much like is it funny or.

Speaker 2 (39:48):
It even though sniggoty in front of it? Sometimes? Do
you guys remember in the nineties when fat became a thing,
fat and cool. One of our callers that.

Speaker 1 (40:00):
Really let us a brand, no.

Speaker 2 (40:05):
Baby farm that farm. Yeah, so let's take the phone call.
Sorry about that. Let's talk to the guy that wanted
to talk about fat with a with a got Danny
Carlos in Indy. Carlos in Indy. Sorry about that. I
guess I was. I was reading your mind, Broy.

Speaker 5 (40:23):
What's going on yo?

Speaker 1 (40:23):
Man?

Speaker 2 (40:24):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (40:24):
That will start back in the day. You know, I
got a couple of mortal man.

Speaker 10 (40:28):
You guys remember ill same thing as sick.

Speaker 1 (40:30):
Yo, y'all.

Speaker 2 (40:32):
Course, one more bro one more.

Speaker 7 (40:35):
I used to love saying his word.

Speaker 5 (40:37):
Man, that's flame.

Speaker 2 (40:40):
Man, Yo, they ill I even came from the eighties
maybe into the nineties. You'll be Illen, You'll be Illen
Illen and that became a thing for sure. So thanks
for the call, Carlos. Who do we got next?

Speaker 3 (40:55):
Let's go to Mario and Oregon. He's in Eugene, organ
where we're gonna be so yo, we're on the streets, guys.

Speaker 2 (41:01):
We're gonna be in Oregon with Graduate hotels in the
next few weeks, the weekend of the seventeenth, and then
in Arizona the following weekend with graduate hotels. Again.

Speaker 1 (41:10):
Yeah, I was gonna say Friday, ohs and I expect
Mario to be there with all his friends. What's up Mario?

Speaker 7 (41:16):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (41:16):
And you guys know it, man, I'm a long time listerer,
first time caller.

Speaker 7 (41:20):
But I'll tell you why.

Speaker 2 (41:21):
That's mostly like a West Coast one. What about Hella, Yeah,
for sure, it's a really good call right there. I
don't want to take away, but again, regional, first time
you went to Boston, Like people really say, wicked in
front of everything, Hella, wicked, all those things, Northern California.

Speaker 3 (41:38):
You cannot talk to somebody without hearing them say hellay
in some of their sentence.

Speaker 2 (41:42):
And of course I know it, but I never used it. Really, No,
you're right, I'm with you.

Speaker 1 (41:47):
I feel like I think of Cartman on South Park.

Speaker 2 (41:50):
You're Hella East Coast. That's why.

Speaker 1 (41:52):
Yeah, what you got Iowa?

Speaker 2 (41:53):
Sam, So, I've spent a lot of time in Philadelphia.
Families connections to the city. What's funny. So they there's
a regional term.

Speaker 1 (42:00):
There is your Wait, your uncle is the Philly fanatic, right.

Speaker 2 (42:04):
That's right. And my sister, my sister, she might be
one of the people getting the free ticket tonight, Doctor
Martha shout out to my sister. So but no, she's
not going to game. But so there's a term there.
You guys probably know it because you grew up, you know,
nearby Ish. But John j A W N John is anything.
Pass me that John. You'll throw me that John. You'll
turn that John on. So when Cooper Dejene got drafted

(42:25):
by the Eagles defensive back out of Iowa, a bunch
of guys on Twitter started changing their Twitter profiles to
Cooper Dijon. Hilarious. I didn't know that John Tasty.

Speaker 1 (42:35):
Ji, I feel like, is it Pennsylvania?

Speaker 2 (42:38):
Also, yinns insers are like natives of the state of Pennsylvania.

Speaker 1 (42:43):
Yeah, it's another one, but hey, regional sports, pop culture.

Speaker 2 (42:48):
But you know what's crazy, You make a big part
of it to spread the conversation a little further out.
And I touched on it before. You know, it was
regional back in the day. Now with the Internet, these
kids are again, they're they've developed their own language at
this point, they're all speaking the same thing because of
social media, because of Riz Bigtok and the Rizzlers.

Speaker 1 (43:09):
Yo.

Speaker 2 (43:09):
Yeah, you don't even just have Riz anymore, meaning charisma, right, like, Yo,
hit him with the Riz with your charisma. That dude's
just straight a rizzler. And then it is a real
famous one. Now you know, you know.

Speaker 1 (43:21):
That's that's my that's my alter ego.

Speaker 2 (43:23):
Right, do you guys know, like Sam, do you know
what yacht is?

Speaker 1 (43:28):
Yacht?

Speaker 2 (43:29):
G apostrophe, wild t is g.

Speaker 1 (43:32):
Y a a t yacht? You know what it is?

Speaker 2 (43:36):
No, it turned into if you see your girl to
find booty walk by right the yacht? Right, But now
it's like it's like a nown almost they almost use
it like, Yo, she's got a yot you know. But
but it's like it's just a yacht for a look
at that.

Speaker 1 (43:52):
But yeah, I mean I.

Speaker 2 (43:56):
Have a channel.

Speaker 1 (43:58):
Yeah, yacht rocket, Yah, you know what that is? That's
that play.

Speaker 2 (44:02):
Let's starts a juvenile back that assu but body is
all kids from this younger era, all kids are using that.
You know, well it was regional for us growing up.

Speaker 1 (44:12):
Could I tie it into sports? Which is what we
love to do to We like to take dumb stories
and somehow tie it into the sports world. This is
why it is so important for different generational players to
stay in the loop on things, to connect with teammates
in the locker room, in the clubhouse. Do you remember
the story last year where it got blown out of proportion,
but Matthew Stafford's wife was like, yeah, he really can't

(44:35):
connect with these young guys, Like you gotta think about
the guys that were just drafted a week ago. Those
guys are twenty twenty one, twenty two, twenty three. Maybe
they're sharing a locker room or a clubhouse in baseball
with guys that could be thirty five, forty years old.
There's a generation gap, and if you guys are speaking
a completely different language, including lingo. I don't know. I

(44:59):
feel like the older guys got to lean in and
goofer out the young guys, and the young guys have
to like I feel like those yeah, cross generational things.
That's that's positive.

Speaker 2 (45:08):
Just embrace it. Like when I hear my teenage daughter
saying things, I'm like, what did you say?

Speaker 1 (45:13):
What is that?

Speaker 2 (45:13):
That's funny? That doesn't mean you need to say it.
You're just bridging that gap. Like we said, and by
the way, we like to think we started that. Dude,
if you look it up, because Rich and I have
talked about this. You know, we've been doing a show
for twenty years, so we've talked about slang before. I
remember looking up.

Speaker 1 (45:30):
By the way, it's hard to it's hard to think
of something we haven't talked about. But I'll tell you what.
We've never had a beekeeper on the show until today.

Speaker 2 (45:37):
No, we haven't. They but they were using slang in
the nineteen twenties, the Roaring twenties, not the twenty twenties.
The nineteen twenties, and probably before that. They were probably
using slang in Biblical times.

Speaker 1 (45:47):
I don't know, Danny G. There's one slang from the twenties, again,
not the twenty twenties, the nineteen twenties that Cavino till
this day, he jokingly says, and I find it hilarious
incorporated one it once stood out me. Yeah, see, no, no, no, it's.

Speaker 2 (46:02):
Like, let you know, like, let's say there's a stuffy
woman in the you know, she doesn't laugh at your
at your sophomore humor. Right, she's a regular missus grundy.
That's what they used to say. She's a missus grundy.

Speaker 1 (46:14):
See, I don't know, but it sounds a woman, if
a woman, if a woman was up tight, I was saying,
but if a woman was uptight and she didn't laugh
at your dumb jokes, so she was or she was
like pretentious? Eah, what is she? She's a regular missus grundy.

Speaker 2 (46:29):
Sounds sounds like a stiff. She's a stuffy, buttoned up woman.
Was the opposite of that. That cats me out? Oh man,
So that's what I'm saying. Like, slang's been around forever.
There's a lot of things that we don't even know
was slang. It just actually just became a part of
how we speak. So let's wrap it up with your
phone calls at eight seven seven ninety nine on Fox,

(46:51):
Who do we got go to our boy trip in Vegas?

Speaker 1 (46:54):
Trip? Trip? What up? Trip?

Speaker 6 (46:56):
What's up?

Speaker 10 (46:57):
Gentlemen? Good afternoons? Hey, but I got it a quick
one in a really fun story about what you're talking about? So,
I think no due came up in the nineties, Is
that right?

Speaker 2 (47:06):
No, that's I have like a list of goofy nineties.
I mean we lived it, but no, duh and not
that's all nineties stuff.

Speaker 1 (47:15):
I think, you know what. I enjoy the trip. For
the record, I still enjoy a good not every so often,
or psych, a good psych.

Speaker 2 (47:22):
You know why, Rich, there's there's there's a there's a
method like sometimes it's corny, but if you waited long enough,
you could bring it back like winning. Remember Charlie Sheen
and Danny G.

Speaker 1 (47:34):
Danny G. Did you see that the Danny G? You
see the Raider signed a new quarterback.

Speaker 2 (47:39):
Psych Psych is good? I like, I like psyche.

Speaker 3 (47:43):
Yeah, but guess guess what our boy Gardner Minshew is
gonna do?

Speaker 2 (47:48):
Winning?

Speaker 1 (47:48):
When winning winning.

Speaker 2 (47:51):
Like if you could bring some back in a sarcastic oh,
I heard you say the other day, Cavino answered his phone,
and he jokingly that was that you catch somebody off guard.
It's fun. You know who else do we got? All right,
let's go to Jason in Missouri. Jason and Missouri talking
old school slang.

Speaker 10 (48:11):
Hey, you guys stole my lead. I still say this
to this day. My wife hates me for Oh.

Speaker 2 (48:16):
Snap, snap is a good one. Man snaps. It's yeah,
it's just a part of me.

Speaker 1 (48:24):
Now.

Speaker 2 (48:24):
As stupid as that sounds, I'd say dope is probably
if I had a I have this fantasy, guys that
when it doesn't involve women, it's a totally different fantasy.
I have this fantasy that when you pass, when you die,
you enter the pearly gates and God hands you a
box of all the things you lost. It's like your
personal love.

Speaker 1 (48:43):
That's where that Yankees hat went.

Speaker 2 (48:45):
Yeah, oh my day for getty T shirt. I'm finally
gonna get my Yo MTV rap shirt, right you? Oh man,
those are the sunglasses I lost a vacation. You get
it back. You're lost, and then you get a DVD
with all your stats right and your highlights, and it's
you that I use the word. I use the phrase
dope more than any other slang, probably on my DVD

(49:07):
of highlights and yeah, god, here you've used dope forty
eight thousand times. It's on my DDD highlight. Yeah. All
the lines are ringing, so I'll reset them. Okay, we
break all right, Well, you know what, we'll wrap it
up with your phone calls old school slang, old school
and fifty hits, and we got to talk about Look,

(49:29):
we're in the middle of the NBA playoffs, you got
baseball heating up, but this Ryan Garcia story is pretty big,
and we got to talk about that too.

Speaker 1 (49:36):
Yeah. No, we're gonna talk about Ryan Garcia. Do you
believe him and what he did? Is it worth you
saying well, you didn't win fair and square? Then are
you being a stickler? Or as Devin Haney? I think
I think I saw him put out there Cavino, like,
you know, people's lives are on the line, and like
when you cheat like that, it's people's health and lively.

Speaker 2 (49:57):
Yes, not a joking matter.

Speaker 1 (49:59):
Yeah, So I mean, are you team Haney? Do you
believe Ryan Garcia?

Speaker 2 (50:04):
All Right, Welcome back Cavino and Rich on Fox Sports
Radio Live from La Riches in New York. Thank you
for hanging with us wherever you are. I was just
in the hallway. I was like, and it was just Manzi,
I take it back, Hi, Manzi.

Speaker 6 (50:20):
Yea.

Speaker 2 (50:22):
We got Danny g on the phones at A seven
seven ninety nine on Fox. Iowa Sam the Rizzler, Iowa
Sam always hitting you with the rizz which, by the way,
is one of my favorite new ones at the kids Us. Yeah,
it was a good one, Like, wait, what is that all, Charizma?
You gotta give credit words to the kids are really
good with the slang nowadays. That's what we're talking about.

(50:42):
And we're wrapping it up old school slang on a
throwback Thursday, Old school and fifty hits and then we're
talking Ryan Garcia Rich. I got two sports ones more
like expressions but slangs in sports. Yeah, tomato can yo?
Are you kidding me? That dude fought nothing but a
bunch of tomato. And I don't know where that thrives from,

(51:02):
but I know it means he fought a bunch of
bums that were easy to hit. Yeah, now here's another one,
and I found tomato can see. Yeah, he bought a
bunch of tomato cans. He's a nobody from Nowhereville. Now
did you know that one MANCI like, if you have
no resume and all you fought was a bunch of bums,
all you beat were tomato cans, you don't have real
skills in boxing. And everyone I learned this week I

(51:25):
knew the expression like he caught a can of corn
and I was a can of corn. I know what
it means in baseball, But do you know where it
arrives from?

Speaker 10 (51:33):
Rich?

Speaker 2 (51:36):
You know what I learned it this week?

Speaker 1 (51:37):
I feel like you told me, and since I don't
ever listen to you, so I forgot. You know the way?
It has to do with like something at a grocery
store and someone knocking a can of corn off a
shelf or something.

Speaker 2 (51:48):
Right, Yeah, so if someone in baseball catches a lazy
can of corn, I've never heard that. Okay, so it's
a lazy fly ball. I learned something. A lazy flyball
can corn is a can of corn. Right, I'm a
corn guy from the corn but I never knew what
that meant. And apparently back and back in the days
he they would keep the corn on the top shelf. Yeah,

(52:10):
and they go and they would not get down with
a stick and then they would catch it in their aprons,
like catching a can of corn.

Speaker 3 (52:17):
I still want to know why everyone spoke like that
back then the trans Atlantic.

Speaker 2 (52:21):
Actually don't care. I don't know because James Cagney didn't
want to Robinson. Yeah, because Robinson did, uh huh. Yeah,
it's gangster because Caitlyn Jenner does. That's what I do.
So let's go to the phones eight seven seven ninety nine,
O Fox and wrap it up old school slang, and
then Garcia, who do we got?

Speaker 3 (52:39):
By the way, the phones have been so hot that
the screener, the screen in front of me was tripping.
There's one I love tripping, and the whole thing sizzled up.
I had to start over man smoking Randy, Yeah, Jimmy
and Texas said that that's what you guys get for
having a good topic.

Speaker 2 (52:53):
Love are you saying?

Speaker 1 (52:54):
Are you saying? The segment's fire?

Speaker 3 (52:57):
He said flame? The college said Flame is Randy in Vegas.

Speaker 7 (53:03):
Hey, guys, hey, I just want to say, Matt love
your show. I'm a la guy. Danny g love you Man,
I love your knowledge, Monty, love you.

Speaker 6 (53:12):
You guys are awesome.

Speaker 7 (53:13):
I grew up forty nine so everything you guys talk about,
I love it. Mine goes to basketball and I forget
the name of the rat group.

Speaker 2 (53:22):
But when the guy gets dunk on, we used to say, hey,
you get the gas face. I'm on third base poster.
Third base has become a big one.

Speaker 1 (53:30):
Yeah, yeah, third base.

Speaker 2 (53:32):
You get the gas space.

Speaker 1 (53:34):
My buddy Sean, who you get the face? Los Angeles?
He goes, Danny G may agree with this, but you
you were from northern Cali, he said when you brought
up Hella. Yeah, he said that was a northern Kelly
thing that Southern Californians would roll their eyes at like
that was like, was that a big like Bay area?

Speaker 2 (53:51):
That very true?

Speaker 3 (53:52):
Yeah, that's like a northern You would know if somebody
was visiting from northern California because they would say that
word constantly.

Speaker 1 (54:00):
Hella.

Speaker 2 (54:01):
Who else we got?

Speaker 5 (54:02):
D G?

Speaker 2 (54:02):
All right, let's go to Jimmy in Texas. Hey, Jimmy, yo, Jay,
you on a Yimmy?

Speaker 1 (54:12):
What's up?

Speaker 10 (54:13):
And I gotta say first, the one that I love
trolling my kids with is that that's dog water, bro,
and I only use it with them.

Speaker 2 (54:24):
It's so funny. You know what's funny?

Speaker 1 (54:26):
Yimmy?

Speaker 2 (54:26):
Is the kids use that now, like if it's trash, Yeah,
it's dog water, right, it's not trash, trash, dog water, doga.
But you use it to piss them off. And that's
why it's funny, because your kids hate when you say
something your headwork is dog water. I just looked at it.
It's dog water, act exactly. That's the fun part about it.
So what else, Yimmy?

Speaker 10 (54:48):
Before I dip? But before I dip, I didn't want
to say that, you know, before I go to the
crib and I want to clean by and and maybe
fill the beans on what's going on, or you're gonna
be bucking and dip out.

Speaker 2 (55:00):
It's always good man. That was great because you know,
spilling the beans always hurt my feelings as a Mexican guy.
So now that it's the tea, I'm okay. Has been
the replacement. What's the team? I'm okay. That's funny. I'm
gonna bounce.

Speaker 7 (55:14):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (55:14):
We still will say some people say dips. I will
say peace out. Still peace out. That's so funny.

Speaker 1 (55:20):
Peace out is definitely like peace out.

Speaker 2 (55:23):
All right, let's go to Georgia and Mississippi.

Speaker 7 (55:26):
Hey, George, Hey, guys gonna gonna go baseball on you
coaching my my, he's nineteen now. But anyway, five years
ago doing the twelve and thirteen year old baseball team,
and here I'm coaching now, I'm like, okay, us on
the fund.

Speaker 2 (55:40):
Mm hmm.

Speaker 7 (55:41):
We're down by my two runs in the last inning. Hey, guys,
fat lady hadn't sung. And guess what years and they
ran me out of the league.

Speaker 1 (55:50):
Well that's because there was some fat mobs of the crowd.

Speaker 3 (55:53):
Yeah, some idioms. I just recently heard uncle Charlie. You
guys know that one? That baseball term. What's uncle Charlie? Arlie?

Speaker 2 (56:00):
That is?

Speaker 3 (56:01):
I think it's a pit Let me see, I'm gonna
look it up. But if you call somebody he's an
uncle Charlie, He's an uncle Charlie. What does that mean?

Speaker 2 (56:08):
Oh no, I got a look now, Charlie and Vietnam
had you know, it's like oh yeah for Charlie, yeah, yeah, yeah,
the enemy.

Speaker 1 (56:14):
Oh you know what, let me let me give you
one that I use in baseball Comino and it's I
said it when I'm coaching the girl's t ball and
they all looked a him like, coach rich, what are
you talking about I'm like, oh, yeah, that makes no sense.
I go, look at you hitting ropes, like hitting ropes,
you know, frozen ropes like you know, he's just yeah
as a kid.

Speaker 2 (56:33):
Oh I get it. Oh you figure those things out
and you roll with them.

Speaker 3 (56:37):
I think Uncle Charlie was a curveball thrower, Like he
threw like a curl a junk he threw Uncle Charlie
a big one is.

Speaker 1 (56:46):
Jimmy said it in his call and I'm surprised Danny
or you didn't say more, but especially more so in
the hip hop community. You know, people did not say
their apartment, their house. You know, my crib was huge?
Crib was that? That's like a top and an answer.

Speaker 2 (57:00):
I think that was. I mean there was an MTV
show about it.

Speaker 1 (57:03):
Yeah, yeah, sure, exactly. Can you know you're feeling headly good?

Speaker 2 (57:12):
Yeah, let's just keep on dancing like Ted Covino and Rich.
It's a Thursday that feels like a Friday, don't stemio.
I'm excited for the fiesta. By the way, join us tomorrow.
We're gonna have a fiesta here on the show. Cavino
and Rich, Yeah, I can't wait. Get your greetos ready.

(57:34):
Practice your Greeto, Iowa, Sam, sound like you need some
practice here there? What do you like doing? Bought the
Loco plus weekend hobnaming what you need to watch on
tomorrow show. But right now we're live from the tyrack
dot Com studio and it's time for this week's Pro
the Week. You slap that belly. That's our drum roll.

(57:55):
The Express pros Pro the Week goes to Monsi's gonna
hate this. Luca don Jake went off against Monti's Clippers.
He always goes off against Clippers. Yeah, but he had
a bum knee. Still went off, and your Clippers lost
in the MAVs by thirty points. Sound salty, That's right.
He scored thirty five of them, seven rebounds, ten assists.

(58:15):
So congrats again to Luca for being our Express Pro
of the Week.

Speaker 3 (58:20):
Monsey, you're fellow Clipper fan here at the network. Ben
Mallor on his show early this morning, he called that
a gutless performance by his Clippers.

Speaker 2 (58:31):
Gutless. I think they thought it was game four of
the regular season, like they had all these other games left.

Speaker 1 (58:36):
I don't understand with him.

Speaker 3 (58:37):
MAVs were playing like their life was on the line.
The Clippers were just kind of lolling back, and Norman
Powell played like it was something Harden disappeared.

Speaker 1 (58:47):
No more down for them was coming out out in California.
So now you gotta go win in Dallas and then
hope to get back home. So they you know, I think,
you know, when you don't have a horse in the race,
you always, uh, you always rooted for Game Seven's Like,
I'm in New York and I know tonight I'm meeting
a friend for dinner and everyone at the bars are

(59:07):
gonna be watching the Knicks sixers. I to be honest,
like I ends I'll be like fake rooting with them,
like yeah, I wait to go Broson. But in my mind,
I'm like, who does it want to see a Game seven? Right?
Tell you if your team's not in it, everyone's always
rooting for Game seven in basketball and hockey. That's what
it's all about.

Speaker 2 (59:26):
Game Seven's well, big nights for the MAVs and the Celtics. Tonight, Bucks, Pacers,
Nick seventy six ers, enjoy it again. We're Cavino and
Rich and Ryan Garcia got in trouble yesterday. Is it
a witch hunt? I think it is. Apparently he failed
his doping test, and they're saying they found osteen and

(59:47):
his urine and the tests were taken prior to the fight,
but the results weren't known until later. How's that even
possible before a big fight like this. Here's what he
had to say about it. Take a listen to Ryan Garcia.

Speaker 11 (01:00:00):
Yeah, what's up, everybody? I came on here to address
this claim that I cheated. Everybody knows that I don't cheat.
What can I say? You know, why didn't they come
out with this before, you know, the fight? If they
found it before, why would they let me step into
the ring as a cheater and they come out with
the victory and then they post this.

Speaker 1 (01:00:20):
You know again, these.

Speaker 11 (01:00:22):
Are people that are trying to attack me for whatever reason,
but no weapon against me shall prosper. I never taken
a stereoid them. I don't even know where to get
steroids at the end of the day, I barely you know,
take supplements. They're saying it's coming from the ostragonda.

Speaker 2 (01:00:38):
Yeah, apparently ostereen was found. That's the band substance. He
has ten days to request his B sample to be tested.
But here's why I believe him. I believe him because
there was so much shadiness even leading up to this point.
That referee, remember the referee, come on two knockdowns. I

(01:01:00):
feel like he tried to cheat in that moment. There
was judges who had a majority draw. The judges were shady,
and it was a clean, unanimous decision. Victor Kanti is
one of the guys involved in the testing. He's sort
of known for being shady here. And let's remember what
Ryan Garcia did. He bet two million dollars on himself

(01:01:21):
to win twelve. I don't think people are happy about that.
People aren't happy about his Trump clip that went viral
this week either. A lot of people didn't like him
hanging out and buddy chummy with Trump, and now he's
talking about exposing elites. People didn't like that either. As
I'm saying, there's more to be left here in this story. Okay,

(01:01:42):
so I think it's more of a witch hunt and
I kind of do believe him. We'll talk more about
it tomorrow. There you want to promise Land goodbye.
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