Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
I just need one Disney producer to be driving somewhere
in for one day and go that dude's voice. Yeah,
he should be the voice of a turtle.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (00:09):
Fred's show is on day, April seventies. The Freend Show. Hiklin,
Good morning, Jason Brown, Good morning Bell. I mean he's
here on the phone in the text eight five five
five nine one one three five. You can hit us
up any time. We'll get to headlines the biggest stories
of the day in just a second. The Entertainmer Report
end blogs this hour. What are you working?
Speaker 3 (00:30):
Okay, we are talking SNL because it is definitely Saturday
Night Live. And also, even Mariah Carey's kids get embarrassed
of her as a mom.
Speaker 4 (00:40):
Okay, I got you there.
Speaker 1 (00:43):
There you go. Even Mariah Carey can embarrass her kids.
Speaker 4 (00:46):
Hey, that's what I'm saying. It doesn't matter if you're
Mariah Carey. Your kids are like, get out of here, mom.
Speaker 5 (00:50):
But to be fair, she does stuff that I'd be
embarrassed about too, but that was my mom.
Speaker 4 (00:54):
But she does the most yeah for no reason. Yeah, yeah,
it really does.
Speaker 5 (00:58):
You know, like every year we get it, you're defrosted,
like you got it for Christmas.
Speaker 4 (01:01):
Well, that that's her making her money. She's in her
bag hunt.
Speaker 5 (01:05):
Yeah, but like every area this sit through this meeting
and like, how are you doing the rollout?
Speaker 4 (01:09):
Yeah, everybody else is the consumer. It's annoying.
Speaker 1 (01:11):
Yeah, it would be embarrassing just to have a famous parent.
But she didn't do anything too terrible. I mean, it's
not like you know, Pamela Anderson growing up and everyone's
seen your mom's stuff because it's on the Internet or whatever.
I don't think Mariah doesn't. She doesn't have a sex
tape or anything like that. I mean, you know, she
was famous in the nineties and she had a perm
so there's that. I guess they could make fun of
the pictures, but then you know, she's Mariah freaking Carrie. Yeah, legend.
Speaker 5 (01:34):
No, but like I feel like exactly, she's a legend.
Speaker 4 (01:37):
She's you know who she is.
Speaker 5 (01:38):
But we're not her kids, and I'm sure they see
a different side of her. She's probably on the phone
arguing with like whatever the Internet bill, you know what
I mean, how like you embarrassed, You're.
Speaker 4 (01:46):
Like mom, like stop.
Speaker 1 (01:48):
I think she probably has people for the Internet bill,
we don't, probably has people to raise the kids too,
But I mean, you.
Speaker 4 (01:52):
Know, yeah, nanny here there.
Speaker 1 (01:54):
I'm sure she's around. Yeah, two hundred bucks. Shelby's keek
even showdown today at Tywood, I said, guess as she
is back, You're feel all right?
Speaker 6 (02:01):
No, I'm scared.
Speaker 1 (02:02):
You had to sit there all weekend. Yeah, I know
that's what you did. You just sat and you thought
about the tie.
Speaker 7 (02:07):
No, I really I really did. Like I don't know
how Shelley does this on a regular like that. This
is wild.
Speaker 1 (02:13):
Why do you think I don't get any to you?
Speaker 6 (02:14):
Yeah, I'm learning now.
Speaker 3 (02:15):
You know.
Speaker 6 (02:16):
I thought you liked me.
Speaker 1 (02:17):
Well, I do like you, but I like myself better.
I guess so I like me better. Waiting a bout
the phone. He's new this morning, Kiki's court button.
Speaker 7 (02:26):
Bump girl, you better save the last dance. Ooh, I
know that's rip. Yes, I'm here to actually.
Speaker 1 (02:36):
My emotion from p today.
Speaker 4 (02:39):
Real excited about today.
Speaker 1 (02:40):
Aren't even watching Severance?
Speaker 4 (02:42):
No, but like I feel like I should because everybody
talks about it.
Speaker 1 (02:45):
Could somebody tell me about Severance? Please? Eight five five
five three five. I feel like there's usually somebody in
the room who's watching, you know, one of everything. Someone
in here covers all of it. You know, do we
have any Minecraft people?
Speaker 4 (02:56):
I like it.
Speaker 1 (02:58):
You like Minecraft or the or the like the movies
that kind of stuff, because it was a movie. Of course,
it was I think the biggest movie in a long time.
Speaker 4 (03:05):
Yeah, the Wee records.
Speaker 1 (03:07):
But did you go No?
Speaker 4 (03:08):
They sent me a nice PR box that was cool?
Speaker 1 (03:10):
Oh yeah, yeah, okay, so you're a Minecraft girlcraft. I
had no idea I'm going this week because you know,
we got the housewives people, we have the dateline people, me,
you have the we have the sports people Jason, team Mom.
We have a team Mom, Peky, we have.
Speaker 5 (03:27):
Right like we don't afford them, but we haven't like
I really do you do?
Speaker 1 (03:31):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (03:31):
Before where do I have a story for you? That's
why I came to work today and that will be
in the second port. So you're gonna have to hang around.
Speaker 1 (03:37):
Exciting week and we a fortune. I know. That's I'm
clucked in why I bring this up because I don't
I'm not watching okay, And you know sometimes I just reject.
I just say no, no, moss is what I say.
Sometimes when everyone's talking about something, what do you mean?
You know how that goes? Are you watching Severance? No,
what do you mean? You know the thing that people
do when you're not watching the show that everyone else
(03:59):
is watching. And I, I don't know. I haven't watched it,
and now at this point I might just not watch
it out of principle, just I'm just not going to.
But so, I don't really know what it's about, Tony
someone who explained this to me. But there's a big story. Today,
over a third of real life employees would willingly undergo
the procedure to sever their work memories from their personal lives,
(04:19):
like Britt Lower did as Helly on Apple TV Severance.
Among eighteen to twenty five year olds, the figure rose
to almost fifty percent. Among workers age fifty five and over,
only one in five would want to be severed. One
expert says the fact that so many employees relate to
the characters in Severance shows just how blurred the lines
(04:39):
between work and personal life have become. The research is
a stark reminder of the stress and pressure people face today.
No one should feel the need to completely forget about
their work lives just to cope. Rather than employees feeling
the need to disconnect entirely from work to protect their
mental health. Leaders should build cultures where people feel able
to bring their whole selves to work without feeling overwhelmed
(05:01):
or burns out. Okay, so I guess I don't know
if I need someone to explain this to me, Like, okay,
so that's what the show is about. The show is
about that you don't remember work when you're at home.
I guess that would be nice for something, I guess. Yeah, Okay.
Speaker 3 (05:18):
So Mark leads a team of office workers whose memories
have been surgically divided, like you said, between their work
and personal lives.
Speaker 4 (05:25):
So yeah, you don't you don't have any memories of
it when you're at the other.
Speaker 1 (05:29):
I don't know. That's amazing.
Speaker 7 (05:30):
Yeah, I feel like that would be good for everyone's
mental health, correct, you know, like you can really clock
in and enjoy your family without checking email, worrying about
like Sunday scaries. I don't know if you guys get that,
but girl, yeah, like Sunday scaries, you can really just
enjoy without thinking about what's what's facing you on Monday.
Speaker 1 (05:50):
I love the people that think that that's what this
job is for a lot of people like like oh, Fred,
you just you just go in there and talk and
then you go home and like take a nap and whatever.
It's like, yeah, this is not well, not for Jason
up in the.
Speaker 8 (06:04):
Middle of the night at least three or four times
freaking out.
Speaker 1 (06:07):
Well, you have four full time jobs, so there's that.
Speaker 8 (06:09):
It would be amazing to not think about that.
Speaker 1 (06:11):
But don't you think more about the other crap than
you do this, Like oh yeah, yeah, because it's like
you've got actual jobs once you leave here, Like you're
the moron who decided during COVID to come in here
and give yourself another job, and I'm so glad you did.
You were my favorite moron for that because you've made
this show so much better. But at the same time,
you also made yourself So it was like, I remember
(06:32):
when you know, COVID started and you you were doing
promotions in marketing for a couple of radio stations, and
you had the forethought to say, you know what, I
don't think we're gonna be doing a lot of events,
and so you came in here and decided I'm going
to start learning how to do morning show stuff. And
we were like great. And then when COVID was over,
I remember the suits at the time We're like, great,
so Jason's going back to work now, and I'm like, uhhhh,
(06:55):
that's exactly how I responded professionally. I go, O, no,
y'all better figure it out because my boy's not leaving.
He's ours now, you know. And then so here you are.
But you know what, they did figure it out. They
just gave you this and all that. They figured it out.
Speaker 8 (07:10):
Yeah yeah, yeah, I mean I just sit here in
the app so yeah, No, it's definitely the stuff after
this show that well, you do more than that.
Speaker 1 (07:16):
But or yeah, I'm not saying this is a hard
people driving to work. I'm not speaking for myself. People
driving to work right now work a lot harder than
I do. That's that's not what I'm saying. But for
those who think that we just get could come in
here and talk and then there's like nothing that happens
after that, that would be silly. You would be silly
for thinking that. It's silly. But I don't know, I
(07:39):
don't think you could do that. You couldn't do this
job and preteling you you couldn't do it, I don't
think you could. I don't think you could have a
radio show and and you know, have a personality radio
show and then no personality well and your life doesn't
come into it. Yeah, we wouldn't be able to do
this job that way.
Speaker 9 (07:58):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (07:58):
I read an article recently that was talking about, like,
you know, when you're at work, you know you should
never over share, you should never tell your call workers
about your life, keep things separate. And I'm like, honey,
with this job, like I wouldn't have a job because
like I got it, I got to talk about a reporter,
right or right one or the other.
Speaker 1 (08:14):
Yeah. On Severn, someone texted this seven and eight on sevens.
You don't even recognize the people you work with outside
of work. It's a complete separation.
Speaker 4 (08:21):
Magic.
Speaker 1 (08:22):
You could go to work hungover and feel bad but
not know why because you don't bring your personal life
into work, and then you don't bring work into your
personal life, so it's completely divided.
Speaker 4 (08:33):
Well, that'd be terrifying to feel crappy and not know why.
Speaker 1 (08:36):
Yeah, I don't know if this would work.
Speaker 3 (08:39):
And we see each other like we like basically live
together out right as well, so I don't think it
would work for us.
Speaker 9 (08:45):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (08:45):
I mean cameln Gosh, she hogs all the covers like
every day I wake up.
Speaker 4 (08:48):
We are the grandparents in willy Wonka. We all share
a bed. We see each other more than I see
my family times.
Speaker 1 (08:55):
Absolutely really Yeah, and GG needs to keep it down
at night, okay, because because Uncle Fred needs some sleep
in this freadhouse that we live in together on the
Real World Fred Show, True Stories. And if you don't
know that reference, you don't know, you don't know nothing. Hey, Lana, Hi,
Lana high. Okay, So thank you for trying to explain
(09:16):
Severence to us. So what is the premise of this
show and why should I watch it?
Speaker 4 (09:20):
Okay?
Speaker 10 (09:21):
So Stubbance is basically like a corporate sci fi So,
like you heard, like the premises that people undergo this
surgical procedure to divide their workplace memories from their personal lives.
But it's a procedure that only exists at this one
giant corporation, essentially to keep their secrets. But part of
(09:44):
what's scary about that is you don't know what the
corporation is doing, and also you create this entirely different
version of yourself with none of your personal memories that
only exists at work, so they know nothing about anything else.
Accept what it's like to be at that office and
you don't know how the office is treating you when
(10:07):
you're like outside, Like they can do anything to you,
and they can just give you a random explanation for
what happened to you, but that's usually in severance at least,
not what actually happened to you.
Speaker 1 (10:18):
Is this a good thing? Like it? Do you watch
this and go I would want this? No? I'm guessing
that the premise or the idea is that people and
the reason that people in this survey wanted is because
they wish they could just leave work and not have
to think about it anymore. So I guess that would
be the upside, right, is that you don't have to
(10:39):
you know, like Kiki's been worried about the show this
Kiki Showdown on Weekend. Well, I guess if she were
on severance, then she'd walk out of here and she
wouldn't even know that she had worked here, right, wouldn't
worry about it?
Speaker 7 (10:49):
Yeah?
Speaker 10 (10:49):
That's true. I mean, well that's part of like the
they have an ethical debates. Like in the show, there's
people who are like, no, severance is bad. You're treating
like a slaver of yourself. And then there's people who
are like, actually, I would really want this, Like a
lot of the characters who like undergo the procedure had
like personal dramas that they were trying to forget, Like
(11:12):
the main character's wife died and so he went undergoent
the seferance p eature because of he went to like
separate morning time.
Speaker 1 (11:21):
I guess, but isn't life kind of managing all the
different things and trying to figure it out? I mean,
I guess I'm making this a little bit more existential
than it needs to be. But I get it. I
get the idea that people would like to leave work
at work and then go live their personal lives and
then come and then work starts again and then they
can leave, and you know what I mean. And I
think it's true A lot of businesses don't allow that
(11:43):
because now we all have email on our phones and
you know, the full internet everywhere we go on like
twenty years ago, where it was like, oh you sent
me an email, I don't know. I didn't have dial
up internet where I was, so I couldn't see it,
Like you could really only do the work stuff. And
even though this place will say like, well, don't email
after five or whatever. Everybody emails that to five and
there's no way that I'm gonna wait to email you
(12:04):
back until nine am the next day. And even though
they say that's what you're supposed to be allowed to do,
you're not allowed to do that. Everybody knows that. So
I don't know. Lana, Hey, thank you, have a great day,
Thanks for listening.
Speaker 10 (12:14):
Yeah, no problem, big fan.
Speaker 1 (12:16):
Yeah, oh, thank you so much. I don't know, big
fan of you, Lana. I don't know. I just don't know.
I don't know. I don't know this. This job wouldn't
work because you got to be able to bring that
in here and whatever. But at the same time, I
guess if I had a job that was a little
it was different. You know, like if I had an
accounting job or something, and you're paying me forty hours
(12:37):
a week or something, and I do that and then
I leave and then you're texting me about accounting at
eight o'clock at night, that would be annoying because well,
there's nothing. I'm not gonna account for anything until tomorrow,
Like there's gonna be no accounting happening now, Like we're
gonna account tomorrow. But then I think there are probably
people listening now going. But I throw all of myself
into the job. That's why I'm good at it, you know,
(12:57):
That's why I excel. That's why I make more money
than other people, because I'm willing to not have that divide.
I don't know, because how do you how do you
how do you separate yourself from everybody else? If you
just if you just walk out, it's like you were
never there. True, Now you're just like a cog in
the wheel this I'm you know what, Now I'm interested.
Now I may watch the show. I mean probably not,
(13:18):
but I may.
Speaker 9 (13:18):
I may.
Speaker 1 (13:20):
I think I just sums up what it is for
everyone who isn't watching it. So headlines the biggest stories
of the day after Gracie abrams in two minutes on
the frend show.
Speaker 9 (13:28):
Fread Show is on Friend's Biggest Stories of the day.
Speaker 1 (13:33):
Somebody said on the Texas a child protection services worker, Yes,
it would be nice to forget, but as a human,
I'd have to have that reminder of how vile other
humans are. Can I believe that? Like if you're in
that field, or law enforcement, or maybe even as a
(13:53):
healthcare worker, I'm sure there are things that you'd like
to forget, I'm sure, but I think you'd become robotic
if you didn't forget about the human part of your life.
Like if you forgot about the human part of your
life and then you want to do your job. The
only way that works, I think is if you have
a job that's robotic that doesn't require any part of you,
because that's empathy, that's relatability, you know what I mean.
(14:15):
Like if you're a nurse and you're just a robot,
you're not going to be I don't think as effective
of a nurse, or as effective of a doctor, or
effective of this if you don't have if you can't
bring some of yourself to it.
Speaker 4 (14:28):
I agree.
Speaker 1 (14:29):
So I don't know. I don't know if that I
mean it would be nice, I guess, but I don't
know if it would work.
Speaker 5 (14:33):
It'd be nice to like not take that home like
police officers are like nurses, you know, the stuff that
they take home and they have to sleep with and
think about and stuff like that during the day.
Speaker 4 (14:42):
But I don't know.
Speaker 5 (14:42):
Maybe if you go in there robotically, but that's even
a word, maybe you're more efficient at your job, like
you're thinking more with your brain than your heart, you know,
even though you need both.
Speaker 1 (14:50):
I think in that field, yeah, maybe you're right, But again,
that would be good if you were like a factory worker,
you did something where you didn't necessarily have to put
yourself into it. I'm not minimizing that role. I just
think if you work maybe as a I don't know,
do you think. I mean Mike the Mechanic. I realize
he owns the place, he owns the gay Raage, so
he has to relate to the customers, But as far
as like wrenching and stuff like, you would probably get
(15:12):
a lot more work done if he didn't have to
talk to anybody or have to or if he didn't
have it to bring any of himself to it. But
then he might get a lot less business because people
probably come to Mike the Mechanic because he's Mike the Mechanic.
Speaker 4 (15:22):
Right, and he does payment plans and.
Speaker 1 (15:24):
He or he just doesn't charge you at all. At
the g he says all the time, he's like, all
I'm working so hard.
Speaker 8 (15:30):
Well, every time I go there, he's just yapping with
some customer and talking about this and that.
Speaker 1 (15:34):
Well, I'm like, you could get so much more work done.
But I'm not saying nothing. Oh yeah, I'm not saying nothing.
Let me see what else here? Oh, someone wants an
update on Kaitlin's grounding blanket. What are you feeling grounded?
Speaker 11 (15:49):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (15:49):
I think I feel it.
Speaker 9 (15:51):
I don't know how.
Speaker 3 (15:51):
I mean. Some people said that it takes them a month,
and honestly, I was lagging on putting them on my bed,
you know, because I didn't know how to wash them,
and I was being lazy.
Speaker 4 (15:59):
But I think I feel it.
Speaker 1 (16:00):
How many times you've been electrocuted? Just like two or three?
Speaker 4 (16:03):
Couple?
Speaker 1 (16:03):
Yeah, yeah, a big deal.
Speaker 4 (16:05):
A couple?
Speaker 1 (16:05):
Yeah, all right. Biggest stories of the day. Yukon overwhelmed
South Carolina eighty two to fifty nine to win its
record twelfth NCAA women's basketball national championship, and the men
played tonight. The Houston Cougars rallied past Duke, which I
turned that game off because I didn't see any way
that Duke wasn't going to win. And then they didn't
win in like Houston won in heroic fashion, came back
(16:27):
from down to over ten, I guess, and then one
I think they were down seven with a minute and
a half to go, and they won the game, but
you know, typical me. I'm like, eh, I don't even
watch this anymore. Duke's gonna win. Oh, Duke, here we
go again. Always Duke, Duke, do you know whatever? And
then they lost.
Speaker 4 (16:42):
They did.
Speaker 1 (16:44):
Yeah. I may have just mentioned that you came in
hot this morning, and now you're not paying attention. So
I don't you use all your energy? Are you wanting now?
Get out of here? Trump has extended the TikTok deadline
yet again, the deadline for TikTok to divest at US
operations for a second time, saying a potential deal to
(17:05):
avert a band requires more work. The owner Bike Dance,
which is based in China. It faced at April fifth deadline
to sell it US business, which was also an extension
from a January nineteen. The target day didn't go anywhere, though.
We didn't do the whole thing where it went away
and came back. No, so there's that, yep. So we
didn't play with your emotions in that way, right, which
it played with me a little bit too, to be honest.
(17:26):
Oh yeah, when it went away, there was a moment
of sadness. Yes, I'm like, oh.
Speaker 6 (17:31):
You're still recovering from that moment?
Speaker 1 (17:33):
What am I going to do with the hours and
hours of free time that I get back And where
am I going to get steth to talk about on
the show if I don't have that anymore? Like how
did people do this job in the old timy days?
Like what do you have to do? Get up at
you know, in the in like the seventies, Like how
did Eddie and Jobo do this? They had to like
breathe the newspaper, you know, I think that was the nineties.
But whatever, how did they do it? They had to
(17:53):
get up and they probably well they probably had money
for like staff.
Speaker 4 (17:57):
And a writer's room, probably would pay.
Speaker 1 (18:00):
People to tell them when they would show up and
you know, at six oh one, and it would be like, hey,
Eddie and Jobo say this, okay, God, bless God, bless
Eddie and Jobo radio legends. I tell you so. Fire
Festival two point zero. So this is this is probably
the least surprising news of the day. If you're not
familiar with fire Festival. Fire Festival, there's a whole documentary
(18:21):
about it. Shout out to the guy who had to
secure the heavy on water from the airport. What a hero.
But this was this was supposed to be like a
Lalapalooz Coachella, you know sort of thing on an island
that was all these musicians and and and you bought
tickets where you were supposed to be able to like
camp out, and I mean it was it was supposed
(18:45):
to be this whole like lifestyle experience week of whatever,
and it tried to be a total disaster. People in
FEMA tents and eating bad sandwiches. And then the artist
showed up and it was just this complete and Billy McFarlane,
the head of the whole thing, he went to jail
over this because he took everyone's money and then didn't
fulfill any of what you know, he said he was
(19:05):
going to and then it was a whole scam. Well,
this guy gets out of jail and decides he's going
to do it again, and predictably, we're having problems with
Fire Festival two point zero. They're having venue issues a
month before the event. Oh so, TMC got a hold
of text messages that claim that the town of Plato
Carmen in Mexico is backstabbing them. One message reads they
(19:26):
the government posted on ex Instagram et cetera, giving their
blessing and support, and then yesterday they say we've never
heard of them. It's hilarious. Another one read and at
this point we're not doing any event there and we
plan on making it very public and showing all the evidence.
This comes days after Billy McFarlane stated online he was
working with the town to make the festival happen and
shared a timeline of paperwork being signed and fees being paid. Okay, now, Jason,
(19:52):
as somebody who's been involved with many at production, we
are a month out and they haven't booked a venue,
which means they don't have any artists. Yeah, because there's
no one who's gonna First of all, I don't know
an artists who are gonna sign up for this after
all the bad press before. But even if they were,
I don't know any management who's going to be like, sure,
no venue, fine, will be there, just let us know where.
Speaker 8 (20:12):
That's not how this works, right, Like every artist needs
certain things in order to perform, and you don't even
have a venue yet, not even a stage or speakers.
Speaker 1 (20:20):
Or migrant insurance or any of the other stuff. I mean,
there's so much that goes in back. He served time
for throwing a festival? Why is why why are.
Speaker 4 (20:29):
We talking about this? Like you think you're gonna get paid?
Speaker 12 (20:32):
Right?
Speaker 1 (20:34):
Well, I would have been damn sure. If I'm this
guy and I'm doing this again, I would have been
damn sure it's really gonna happen. Yes, if I'm doing
it again.
Speaker 4 (20:41):
It might the situation they were in there together, he
might be going back.
Speaker 1 (20:46):
It sounds like cause and then what was it a
Good Morning America or somebody they they tried to book
the like the hotels using the code on the website,
and the hotels like we've never heard of this, like
they've made it all up, like it's other disaster. And
it's just like, dude, if you're I get it, like
you really want to throw this thing, like let's hit
(21:06):
it right at this time.
Speaker 7 (21:07):
Then it is don't you need a permit or something
like what?
Speaker 1 (21:10):
I guess that's what he says he's signed up for,
but like, I don't again, we're doing this a month
in advance.
Speaker 8 (21:17):
And supposedly they have receipts of like confirmations of permits
and stuff, and all of a sudden, the city's like, no,
I don't know you.
Speaker 1 (21:24):
I've never heard of this, man, I mean Danny's Pizza
with Jimmy. You know you had to plan that at
least a month.
Speaker 5 (21:30):
In advance, I mean three weeks.
Speaker 1 (21:32):
But you could think Billy McFarland didn't plan it. We
would have all showed up and it would have been
like you know, some other party in the room. Yeah,
would have been terrible.
Speaker 4 (21:40):
Don't trust Billy.
Speaker 1 (21:41):
Texas Roadhouse has replaced Olive Garden as America's top casual
dining chain. Olive Garden, which held the top spot since
twenty eighteen, came in second uh this year. Last year,
Texas Roadhouse on increase of fourteen point seven percent in sales,
making five point five billion dollars. There's seven hundred and
twenty locations. Olive Garden saw about a one percent increase.
The rest of the list included Chili's, Applebe's and Buffalo
(22:04):
would Wings. I don't know if I've maybe once I
even a Texas Roadhouse, and for no reason, I just
have never been in the proximity really of a Texas Roadhouse.
There isn't one near my home.
Speaker 8 (22:17):
But as a regular, I will say to both options
that Texas Roadhouse, it is packed all the time.
Speaker 9 (22:26):
Like a minimum hour. Wait.
Speaker 1 (22:27):
Whenever you go, it always looks good, like in the
TikTok videos I see or whatever. But I there just
isn't one really around here, So I don't ever get
to go, and you're not gonna get that delivered, in
my opinion. I'm sure the Texas Roahouse people are upset
with me for saying that. But there are certain restaurants.
I don't know. I'm not ordering a steak from Outback delivered.
I'm gonna go down Back. If I'm gonna go, do
out Beck correctly. Just you to go. I don't even
know if you can't deliver a Texas Roadhouse. I think
(22:48):
it's just you have to go get it.
Speaker 4 (22:49):
You have to get it. No, I picked it up.
Speaker 1 (22:52):
I don't pick up anything, trust right, Yes, how do
I know? I know? Just trust me on that. One
Michigan school district issued a letter to parents and goans
asking him to stop smoking marijuana in the school parking
lot during drop off and pickup times.
Speaker 4 (23:06):
Hell yeah, Michigan.
Speaker 1 (23:09):
So you're waiting the pickup line, which can be very
long at times. You know, it could be an hour
forty five minutes. It's like, well, but here's the thing.
You're in a car that you drove there, and you
have to drive the car home as you.
Speaker 4 (23:21):
High contails.
Speaker 1 (23:24):
You can get a dui for being high. So like,
let's maybe not right, that's a good idea. The superintendent
of the Orchard View School District made it clear that
smoking marijuana in school property is against the law. He
also expressed concerns about parents driving under the influence. He
said that while the district respects personal choices made outside
school grounds, the proximity to students requires stronger restrictions. The
(23:45):
letter didn't indicate how many smoking incidents occurred or whether
law enforcement had been involved, and emphasized it under Michigan
state laws, the legal for anyone to smoke marijuana inside
a vehicle, for miners to be in a vehicle where
the driver may be under the influence of marijuana, and
to drive of well under the influence of marijuana. A
delivery driver and I don't know why this is news,
but it is on an electric bicycle, was caught on
(24:07):
video in New York putting a pizza back in the
box after it fell on the pavement. The woman who
showed it so the pizza was face down on the pavement,
which I suppose is worse than face up. I don't
know when the man picked up the pie. The woman
tried to get him to stop, but he didn't listen
put it back in the box. The video was posted
(24:28):
to a New Yorker's Instagram page, and it has over
one hundred and forty thousand likes, or has been viewed
that many times. It's not knowing what service the delivery
driver worked for.
Speaker 9 (24:36):
Now.
Speaker 1 (24:36):
We don't know if the dude put it back in
the box and threw it away right, just leave it
on the ground. Yeah, I mean, I guess the assumption
is that he had it delivered or like that he
still delivered it to the people. But I'm assuming that
he just picked it up and then not to make
a mess even more of a mess, and then threw
it away somewhere right business. Yeah, I'm hoping nobody ate that,
(24:58):
but I do have to wonder. And I know you
moon you moon lit at one point Jason as a
door dash delivery driver. Yeah, and I do wonder sometimes
Now they seal the bags and all the stuff, but
I wonder, like, you know, we have stuff falls out
and they're like, who you know or whatever, you know,
that kind of stuff where you just take a fry,
(25:18):
just one, you know, just reach in there and just
grab one. Girl.
Speaker 8 (25:22):
Oh there was one time it was five guys, and
you know how good those smell, and it fills up
your whole car. And I was hungry, and I was
so close to just reaching in and taking them, but
I didn't do it. I was very proud of myself.
But it was close.
Speaker 1 (25:34):
I was.
Speaker 6 (25:34):
I was right there.
Speaker 1 (25:35):
Hot take from a door dash aficionado. Five guys. While
I do order it from time to time, is much
much much better in the restaurant. Does the even exist
when you get it? Or is no iterates? The fries
don't deliver well. The burgers are fine, but the fries
are a little sog, yes, because because you know, they
pour the like if they put them in the cop
(25:56):
and then they like the fries go in the cup
and then they pour more on top of that, which
only just coach the inside of the paper bag that
they deliver it in. And finally, the woman who has
the world's longest female tongue says that people screaming shock
when they see him. It measures three point eight inches long.
I don't know how many times she's sticking her tongue out,
But it's three point eight inches long from the tip
(26:19):
to her lips, so that doesn't include the party inside
her mouth.
Speaker 4 (26:22):
Wait, how long from the tip to the list?
Speaker 1 (26:24):
Almost four inches three point eight inches, so it's about
this far from here to here. It looks like that, which,
of course everyone can see. You know when I say
it looks like that, because we're on the radio, the
people screening shock when she shows her lengthy organ same
come on the California resident. Chanelle Tapper reveals that she
(26:45):
enjoys seeing people's reactions. There's a variety of bizarre tricks
she can perform with her extravagantly long tongue, raging from
flipping cups to removing Jenga blocks and holding up soon
by curling her tongue around the utensil. Girl, it's like
an elephant tusk, it sort of. So, yeah, there's anybody, Yeah, well,
(27:08):
I was gonna say if this were gonna dude, everyone
would be like, Oh, what's the gay looked like? Well,
it doesn't matter, it doesn't matter what he looks like.
It's National No housework Day, National ber Day, and National
Coffee Cake day today as well. The entertainment report, Kaitlyn
has that next we'll get some blogsart audio journals. Waiting
by the Phone is brand new one, and somebody get ghosted.
We'll get to that too, all in the next twenty
(27:31):
minutes or so in the Fred Show.
Speaker 9 (27:33):
Kaelyn's entertainment report is on the Fread Show.
Speaker 3 (27:36):
SNL cast member Egomodem had the audience swearing on live
television during her appearance on Weekend Updates over the weekend.
And I was just talking about this off the air
with Jason. He was cracking up about it. She joined
hosts Colin Jost and Michael Ja to pitch herself as
the new comedian for the White House Correspondence Association Dinner,
and as she was workshopping her material, she engaged in
(27:58):
like a call and responds a bit with the audience,
and her joke was Corey Booker out here with his filibusters. Shoot,
I've had my fill of busters because these many what
And she held her mic out to the audience, who
answered in enthusiastic unison spit. They all said the S word,
but they said the real word. Colin, Michael, and Ego,
(28:19):
for some reason, all looks surprised. I don't know what
this is supposed to say? Like, what did you think
we're going to self censor ourselves? I don't understand what's
the what's any other answer?
Speaker 8 (28:30):
Something else?
Speaker 4 (28:30):
After I forgot what it was, I don't remember what
she thought.
Speaker 3 (28:33):
The answer yeah and like she then joked, Okay, well,
you guys are gonna get us fined.
Speaker 4 (28:37):
Well, girl, you can't leave it open ended, because.
Speaker 1 (28:40):
I was thinking about it this morning. What else were
you supposed to stay there?
Speaker 13 (28:43):
Right?
Speaker 4 (28:43):
These many in ish?
Speaker 9 (28:44):
Like?
Speaker 1 (28:44):
What else?
Speaker 4 (28:45):
What else are we saying? The word means.
Speaker 2 (28:48):
Right?
Speaker 14 (28:52):
That was on you.
Speaker 3 (28:54):
The swear made of past censors in the East Coast
broadcast and on Peacock, but it was muted entirely in
Pacific and Mountain time zones. Speaking of SNL, Morgan Wallen
was the punchline of a couple jokes one week after
he left the stage before the credits even finished rolling.
The first joke was in the weekend the episode's cold
open sketch, when they referenced his Get Me to God's
(29:15):
Country story post, which is you know, all sorts of
viral online.
Speaker 4 (29:19):
He also has merch.
Speaker 3 (29:20):
They also poked fun at his exit on Weekend Update
when Colin Joe said that the money was leaving the
stock market faster than Morgan Wallen at Good Nights.
Speaker 4 (29:29):
Which is pretty funny. Of course, they were going to
make fun of him.
Speaker 3 (29:32):
Mariah Carey's surprise son Moroccan and his friends when she
crashed his gaming session with his twin sister, So she
not only brought herself but the twin sister with and
the teen said, sorry, Chap, my mom is here, and
then he muted himself talked to Mariah, and then she
popped her head into view, stood over his shoulder with
one of their dogs and his sister, and he looked
(29:53):
so frustrated, and he's like, okay, y'all need to get
out now, just everybody get out.
Speaker 7 (29:57):
Mom.
Speaker 4 (29:57):
They can see you now. They're saying, Hi, Mariah, I
love you, Oh my god.
Speaker 3 (30:01):
And then he pleaded with his sister and his mom
like I love you, get out of my room, which
is hysterical, Like you could be Mariah Carey, but you
are still out here embarrassing your children, which we you know,
it doesn't matter, you know, you're not famous to your children.
If you missed any part of our show, The Fred
Show just search The Fred Show on demand and also
set us as a preset on the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 1 (30:22):
Please I'll let you guys wrestle amongst yourselves and who
wants the blog? If somebody gets a blog after Chapel
Run Chapel Pig Pony Club, we're really gonna do it.
We're doing is that.
Speaker 9 (30:35):
The buck?
Speaker 1 (30:36):
Yeah?
Speaker 9 (30:36):
They talk better than they tell me about. These are
the radio blogs on The Fred Show.
Speaker 1 (30:42):
Like for writing in our diaries, except we say them aloud. Paulina, Yes,
take it away. Thank you so much, dear blog.
Speaker 5 (30:50):
I just want to say thank you so much to
my Fred Show family here, the Loyal thirteen and family
everybody in between for celebrating my daughter's first birthday with
me this weekend. So she turned to last well, I
guess last week right on on Wednesday, which is crazy.
Speaker 4 (31:06):
She turned one years old. I'm sorry she's turned.
Speaker 1 (31:12):
About it?
Speaker 4 (31:13):
Can you tell my brain?
Speaker 1 (31:14):
It's just like, but it's when does she get.
Speaker 5 (31:17):
To she feels too sometimes like she is, you know,
a little miss satty lady. She's walking, she's running, she's everywhere.
But she Yeah, she turned one, so that means it's
my first year of like motherhood, which has been phenomenal.
Speaker 4 (31:31):
It's the best year of my life.
Speaker 5 (31:33):
And you know, through everything, and you know, I's gonna
say again, thank you guys, all to everyone always checks
in on Gigi and my family here who's made you know,
being able to like be a working mom and then
you know, have my family and everything work out really well.
Shout out to the village because it can't do without
the village. And that is you know, Grandma, and that
is Bopcha who is my mother. We call her Bapcha
and and Auntie Ariel and everybody truly like, you can't
(31:55):
do this alone. I'm gonna just say it again, you
cannot do this alone.
Speaker 9 (31:58):
So thank you.
Speaker 5 (31:59):
So this weekend we selllebrated at the infamous Danny's Pizza.
Speaker 1 (32:03):
I was still mad that I didn't get to meet
the owner, Jimmy. I know, I was very upsetting. I
walked out, like where I need to meet this with
this Jimmyanny's. I wasn't there, No, he wasn't there.
Speaker 9 (32:13):
No.
Speaker 1 (32:14):
I almost left. I almost saw I.
Speaker 4 (32:16):
Know, I saw you storm out. We had to bring
it back in.
Speaker 1 (32:18):
But then I saw Gigi and I said hi, and
then she she waved but she waves it herself.
Speaker 4 (32:23):
It's like facing her so instead of waving.
Speaker 1 (32:25):
It's like, you know, she goes, you know, it looks
at me and it's like Uncle Fred's here. And then
she waves it herself and I was like, okay, you're here,
I know, for me make some noise.
Speaker 4 (32:36):
Yeah, that was a good party.
Speaker 9 (32:37):
It was.
Speaker 4 (32:37):
It was a lot of people.
Speaker 9 (32:39):
You know.
Speaker 5 (32:40):
Shout out to Jimmy for letting us use the back
room because oh my god, it was a lot of people.
Speaker 4 (32:45):
He also scrubbed the tato all those people. Yeah, yeah,
very much.
Speaker 1 (32:49):
So there's a lot of people. I was like, who
are all these people?
Speaker 4 (32:52):
I don't Yeah, it's a lot of people.
Speaker 5 (32:54):
I mean friends, family, and then now to I've got
my mom friends, you know what I'm saying. Who've got
like babies who are close to my daughter's age, and
I know them like through grammar school whatever. We reconnected
because of motherhood. So I invited them because I'm like, well,
I want you guys to like be a part of
our lives since our kids are like, you know, a
couple months apart and stuff.
Speaker 4 (33:11):
So that was really cute. They came by. We missed
tt Kaylin and t TK you know. It's okay.
Speaker 5 (33:17):
They had their parties and stuff, and I understand. I
appreciate you guys, still, you know, giving gifts to her.
I'm gonna shake my fist at you. I need to
see her in that dress, and I got her. It's
the cutest dress, by the way, the cutest flower crown
I know. But I do have a question though, for
people in the room, and you can be honest with me, okay,
because I was wondering about this real quick.
Speaker 4 (33:34):
It's not bad, I promise. It's just a question while I.
Speaker 5 (33:37):
Have you, while I have you out here, no for real,
because I feel like I got a lot of text
messages the day of the party. But and it's not
anything bad. I just want to know why people ask this,
because it's like one of those things where I'm like,
you're asking because like you're just genduingly like hey, I.
Speaker 4 (33:49):
Want to help out.
Speaker 5 (33:50):
Or is it because you're like I know you, Paulina,
you don't got your ish together, Like we gotta step in.
Speaker 4 (33:55):
And help you make this happen.
Speaker 1 (33:57):
Well, what is the thing?
Speaker 5 (33:58):
So I get asked every time I have any kind
of a venture party, people are always like.
Speaker 4 (34:02):
Hey, see you tonight. Can I help with anything? Do
you need anything? Do you want me to run to
the store for you? And I'm like, how are you guys, mixture?
Speaker 1 (34:10):
I think those are empty Those are empty promises that
people always make. Yeah, I think that's what people do. Hey,
can I do it? And they don't really want to
do anything, but they want to be on record.
Speaker 5 (34:19):
Is offering and I love that and please continue to
be the great people that you are.
Speaker 1 (34:23):
But then it's also you, So yeah, that's.
Speaker 4 (34:24):
What I was thinking, like it because it's me. Jason
didn't like to.
Speaker 8 (34:28):
I would have actually did it if you want to,
because I knew that you were working this job in
the afternoon. Yes, I was not working and I was
running around doing errand so said, I'm like, hey, I'm
running errand I'm going to the store.
Speaker 4 (34:40):
You need me to pick up anything? You did say that?
Speaker 1 (34:42):
Well, he was also your defective wedding plannery.
Speaker 4 (34:44):
And I'm used to working your events.
Speaker 1 (34:46):
You're my boss, so no, no, I wanted to make
sure it was on top of my game.
Speaker 4 (34:51):
Yeah, for my wedding. I held you like my kidney, dude,
because like I threw you in and you you threw throw.
Speaker 1 (34:56):
Thrive, I mean throve, which is the past.
Speaker 4 (35:03):
Yeah you, Without you, we'd still be all by the way.
Speaker 1 (35:07):
Don't try and tell me that every time you say
I'll help you out if I if you need it,
don't tell me every time you throw that out there
you want to do that. I'm not saying because I
would if you if I had texted you that, which
I didn't. But if I had and been like, you know,
and then you said to me, actually, yes I need
you to go, I would do it, but I would
resent you. Come on, Kaylin, don't ever say that. You
(35:29):
don't say let me help you with this, and you
don't actually want to do it. You don't really want
to love language. But to each their own.
Speaker 8 (35:36):
Know, there are things when I'll be like, Mike, Gene
help with that, and he'll be, don't you going.
Speaker 1 (35:40):
I'm like, I don't want to.
Speaker 9 (35:41):
Come on it.
Speaker 1 (35:42):
I'm just being honest. I'm being situational. But yes, I
would say eighty percent of the time when I offer
my help, I'm really hoping they say no. Now, if
they said yes, I would do it, but I'm not.
I don't really want to do it. And that is honest.
And I think that is most people. I love honesty, Kiki,
don't tell me that you have texted somebody. You'll be
(36:05):
having to go get in. It's like, please say no,
please say no, please say't no.
Speaker 6 (36:08):
Yeah no, I don't even why why even text?
Speaker 12 (36:10):
Bro?
Speaker 6 (36:10):
You know what I'm saying, because if.
Speaker 1 (36:13):
I'm being even more honest, then I get credit for
offering to help. But I didn't have to help, so
that you know, because what you offered to help. But
I did offer to help. I don't really want to.
Speaker 4 (36:20):
I do think it's nice because, like you said, you'll
still do it. You could resent me in private.
Speaker 1 (36:24):
But if you were to say to me like, hey, okay,
actually yes, can you go pick up the cake or something,
I'd be like chee. But I would do it. I
would do it and I would help you do it.
But the whole time I would be like, it's her
freaking party.
Speaker 5 (36:36):
With mad the kicks in the backseat right yeah, Hey, listen,
I'm not mad at that. I was just curious if
it's because it's me, And I'm like, is this everybody
reaching out? Because I know that I don't have my
stuff together today?
Speaker 1 (36:51):
But you very much did though for one hookie easy,
I saw that people have t shirts.
Speaker 4 (36:56):
Yeah, we all had matching shirt. Yeah right, and married
into that kind of family.
Speaker 1 (37:00):
Very well done. It was already it was. I showed
up and it was it was. Everything was done. You
did a great show.
Speaker 4 (37:04):
Thank you, Thank you for once in my life I
felt good and ready. That never happens.
Speaker 1 (37:08):
Well, and I'm sorry I didn't pick up the cake.
More Fred Show Next, he is The Fred Show. Good Morning,
one O three five Kiss FM, Chicago's number one hit
music station. Gets you into the Cubs game. That's next weekend.
We're all hanging out with Amy Witherright. We got one
of those like porch things at Wrigley and we're having
a party beforehand, a rizzos, and we got food and
(37:30):
we got drink and all this stuff. I we'll hook
you up with that. This week gets you in Tacos
and Tequila Festival tickets at seven fifty five J Balvin
the countdown. So it's fifth row today all the way
up to front row on Friday eight forty. You win
those and then I guess more Tacos and Tequila Festival.
We had lots of tacos in Tequia Festival. Ticket totos
totos totosos of the tickets. Yeah, I want to thank
(37:55):
everybody who came out on Friday to the Onion Roll.
That's the name of the place, right, Honey, Yes, I
don't know. I got I got a lot of different
places on my mind because we will go to Maple
Butter now or Maple and Bacon. There was maple butter
is another place. Did we go to maple butter? We did?
Speaker 4 (38:12):
We did in Plainfield.
Speaker 1 (38:13):
That was in Plainfield. All the places this is called
Maple and Bacon and it's not in Plainfield. It's definitely
not in Plainfield because it's in Valparaiso. So it is
it is. Yeah, do not go there. I mean go
there to see us because we won't be there. No,
but I want to thank Ryan and the whole crew.
And that food was legit. The bagel was He talked
(38:34):
up a big game about the pH balance of the bagel,
but the bagel delivered. Yes, he had to change the
pH of the water, he said in the building to
New York pH so that the bagel would taste right
and it was delicious.
Speaker 4 (38:49):
Get consultants or something right, like the whole team.
Speaker 1 (38:51):
Yeah, to make it a bagel. Consultant he said, which
he could be one.
Speaker 2 (38:55):
I know.
Speaker 4 (38:55):
I wish I had known that when I was in school,
That's where I would be.
Speaker 1 (39:00):
But I want to thank him. I want to thank
everybody who came out. I know it's you know, for
everyone got their routine and so to take the time
to stop buying and see us and and and all
the things. We really appreciate that. But it's going to
be maple bacon. How many times am I gonna say
maple butter? I don't know. Mabel Bacon on Aberdeen Drive
(39:20):
in Valparaiso this Friday from six to nine thirty Free
coffee and doughnut holes if you come by and sold out.
Kendrick Lamar tickets with SIS at Soldier Field got tickets
to That's brought to you by Making in Illinois. Visit
make it in the Illinois dot com to find training
and careers and manufacturing in the state of Illinois. Also
thank you to Nikiki and Jason and p for coming
(39:42):
out on Friday to the Pause. Animal Magnetism event raised
a bunch of money. The auctioneer guy, I think his
name was Chris. I don't know what kind of natural
I'm assuming it's natural whatever kind of natural substance he
takes or whatever, But like I could use that kind
of I don't have that kind of energy. But my god,
(40:02):
he the auctioneer man. He was really good, raised a
lot of money. But boy was that he was. I
don't know if iolent, what kind of gin sing or right?
Speaker 4 (40:09):
He was jumping off the things, he was staying on
a chair like he was.
Speaker 1 (40:13):
Yeah, he was extracting money from people. You yeah, you're raised,
give me money, Yeah, to get people. But it worked,
raised a bunch of money. So thanks for coming out.
Thanks to Pause for all the incredible work that they
do saving homeless pets. And Gecko that I think pitple mix.
I don't know what Gecko was with one eye. He
only had one eye because he took one out because
(40:34):
he had a lot eye infection. But I wanted him
get His name was get Go. I wanted him, I
really did. I almost I almost did. But he's going
to be a big boy, and I don't think that's
you know, I live in a bit of a shoebox,
so I didn't think that was going to be all right,
but I almost. I hope somebody adopted him, though I
hope so too. He was absolutely per He really was perfect.
(40:54):
It was But anyway, thank you for coming out. We'll
see Friday and Valco. It's the freend Show. Ye morning.
Speaker 4 (41:01):
We got to recharge your crystals.
Speaker 1 (41:02):
You recharge your no wonder my crystals have been empty
for my whole life. I never recharged.
Speaker 9 (41:07):
Come on, Fred's show is on.
Speaker 1 (41:10):
Hello, Good morning, Monday, April seventh. It's the Fred Show.
Hi Klin, good morning him, Jason Brown, Hi, Paulina Hikiki,
good morning, Oh Bella. I mean it's here on the
phone of the text eight five five five one oh
three five. We were talking about how in Michigan, one
school district said stop smoking weed in the pickup line,
and people have been texting all morning. I'm an elementary teacher.
(41:32):
Staff members nearly get contact ties from helping kids in
and out of some of the parents' cars. And then
someone else texted the amount of kids who come to
school smelling like weed is crazy.
Speaker 4 (41:44):
No, no, no, of course I hate it so much.
Speaker 1 (41:46):
I mean, but it's legal. So people are at home
smoking and stuff, you know, and you shouldn't kids cigarettes
and stuff.
Speaker 5 (41:53):
That's what my mom did though, like growing up, man,
like the cigarette smell my clothes. Like in high school,
people thought that was me and I was like, no,
like all my close smell like that.
Speaker 4 (42:00):
So I don't parents. Get it together, No get it together,
no inadible.
Speaker 1 (42:05):
Like the rest of us civilized people. Two hundred bucks
show Bey is Kiki versus Jessica tiebreaker. This morning you
are fourteen to two. Yeah, man, feeling in for Showbi
Shelley and our five question pop culture game Waiting by
the phone is brand new, and next why does somebody
get ghosted? The Entertainment Report is on the way to
what are you working on? Kke?
Speaker 3 (42:25):
Terrence Howard has entered the chat on this diddy stuff
My goodness. Also, an airport is maybe going to be
named after one specific singer. There's a petition and we
got to talk about it.
Speaker 1 (42:35):
And we're commercial free for the next forty minutes. You
don't have to go anywhere waiting in two after Emushi here,
it's the frend Show.
Speaker 9 (42:42):
Good morning. You've ever been left waiting by the phone.
Speaker 1 (42:46):
It's the Fred Show. Hey, Mike, good morning, Welcome to
the show. How are you hey?
Speaker 9 (42:51):
Good morning?
Speaker 1 (42:52):
Okay, Hey, you sound distraught. I mean people call in
here sometimes you're waiting in there like all up eating stuff.
It is like you got ghosted.
Speaker 12 (42:59):
Man.
Speaker 1 (43:00):
Yeah, I'm so happy about but Mike didn't sound that happy.
What happened with this woman, Becky? We want to hear
about how you met, about any dates you've been on,
and then kind of where things stand now.
Speaker 15 (43:09):
Yeah, I mean I thought it went well and I
feel like I have a good read on this kind
of stuff.
Speaker 9 (43:15):
You know, but I went on to two dates and
met at a bar.
Speaker 15 (43:19):
Turned out I went to the same uh college, and
you know WHI chatted it up, went out, got some
drinks with this mescal place, and then met.
Speaker 4 (43:28):
Up for dinner a couple of nights later, and.
Speaker 1 (43:32):
They even went back to their place. Okay, and and
then what happened then, like PG, but what happened then
like good stuff, all the good stuff, some of the
good stuff, would say, all the good stuff.
Speaker 6 (43:44):
But uh, And I feel like I did.
Speaker 1 (43:46):
A pretty decent job if you do, as far as
I'm concern, I did a great job. It was a
great effort for me.
Speaker 12 (43:57):
Uh.
Speaker 9 (43:59):
There was a couple like weird moments. There's a couple
of weird moments where I.
Speaker 16 (44:03):
Felt like there was a reset.
Speaker 1 (44:05):
But you know, okay, But overall, you meant in the wild,
So that's a good start. So you saw each other
in person, you were able to gauge chemistry, you have
some stuff in common. You went on two dates. These
are all usually good signs you're hooked up. This is
all usually good stuff, except you have not heard from
this woman, Becky since the second date. Correct, okay, And
(44:25):
you want to know why, of course, and I would too.
So here's what we're gonna do. We're gonna call Becky.
You'll be on the phone. We're gonna ask these questions.
At some point. You're welcome to jump in after we
get you some info. And the hope, as always is
that we can set you up on I guess the
third date in this case and pay for it. Sound good?
Speaker 9 (44:41):
Yeah, yeah, sure, that sounds great.
Speaker 15 (44:43):
Do I need to like shut up throughout the whole
time you guys are chatting or like she says something.
Speaker 1 (44:48):
I mean, just jump in at some point if you
want to. But we'll get there. We'll get there. Okay.
Let's play a song and regroup and we'll come back.
All right.
Speaker 4 (44:55):
Sounds good.
Speaker 6 (44:55):
Thanks.
Speaker 1 (44:56):
Let's see what's going on in Part two of Waiting
at the phone after sabring a carpenter back in two
minutes on the Fred Show, and we're commercial free. It's
the Fred Show on the radio on the iHeart app
live and catch up anytime starts. Put a Fred Show
on demand and make us a preset please and thank you.
Hey Mike, welcome back, Mike. Let's call up Becky. You
guys you met out, you went on two dates. The
(45:16):
dates went really really well. You haven't heard from her
since the second date, and you want to know why?
S sure. I mean that's what we're doing, right, That's
what you asked me to do. Yeah, you called us. Okay,
all right, Mike, let's just I gotta talk to Becky now,
so just good luck. Hello. Hi is this Becky? Hey Becky,
(45:50):
good morning. My name is Fred. I'm calling from the
Fred's Show, the Morning radio Show. I have to tell
you the whole crew is here and we are on
the radio right now, and I would need your permission
to continue with the call. Can which have for just
a second?
Speaker 9 (46:01):
Oh my god? Yeah?
Speaker 1 (46:02):
Sure, well, thank you very much. We appreciate that we're
call on behalf of a guy that we just met,
a fascinating young man named Mike. I guess you went
out with Mike. You met him out, he was at
the same college a couple of dates. You remember this guy,
I hope.
Speaker 13 (46:15):
Oh yeah, I do.
Speaker 1 (46:17):
Okay, Well, he reached out to us and he told
us that, you know, kind of how you met and
about going to the same college and a couple of
dates that he thought went well. But he says he
hasn't heard from you since the second date, and he
feels like you're ghosting him. I mean, is that what's
going on back here? Are you ghosting him? And if so, why?
Speaker 9 (46:32):
Oh?
Speaker 4 (46:33):
I don't know.
Speaker 16 (46:35):
Yeah, and Mike was very nice. I just I'm not
I don't think I'm really interested in seeing him again.
Speaker 1 (46:41):
Okay. So he's a nice guy that you went on
two dates with and you met in the wild, which
is a big deal. I think that makes a difference
because again, you know, you kind of got it. You
saw what he looked like, he had a vibe for
the chemistry, You had a kind of a pre date conversation.
So I think there's a little more, you know, a
higher chance of things going well. But why isn't it
going to work? If he's a nice guy and there's
(47:01):
all that. Then, then why don't we want to go
out with him anymore?
Speaker 16 (47:05):
Okay, you really want.
Speaker 4 (47:08):
Me to say yeah?
Speaker 1 (47:10):
We want you to say oh yeah, Okay.
Speaker 16 (47:14):
Well I was.
Speaker 17 (47:14):
I was very excited to meet him. It is really
rare to meet somebody in the wild like that. And
I had a really nice time on our dates. Basically
on our second date, we went back to my place
and just some things happened, some things legis things.
Speaker 4 (47:33):
And well, okay, he.
Speaker 17 (47:39):
He waxed from like eyebrows to the tips of his
toes like bald as a newborn baby.
Speaker 13 (47:48):
Seal.
Speaker 1 (47:50):
Every everywhere, like every like.
Speaker 17 (47:53):
Every not just hardwood floors like armpits, arms, fingers, toes.
Speaker 4 (48:00):
Legs, fingers like wow, wow, we watched the toes.
Speaker 1 (48:04):
We're waxing toes. You work your toes.
Speaker 4 (48:08):
You never watched your toes? No good And it's once
we flip up season.
Speaker 1 (48:13):
I guess I don't know. I got harry legs to
go with my hairy toes here. Wow. Okay, so this
dude made a concerted effort to make sure that like
everything was gone, and I mean, you have an appointment
for that. You got to get me. You've got to
contort yourself I mean, there's a lot going on there.
I can't even imagine the pain and the expense. And
I've heard of people waxing, you know, certain things, but
(48:34):
not everything. Let me bring you yeah, no, go ahead,
go ahead, no please.
Speaker 17 (48:41):
Well, you know, I appreciate the certain things, right or
like a little bit of like trimming or some sort
of uh huh, manly effort to be tidy. But this
was something else I've never I it's a lot of
my girlfriends, aren't.
Speaker 1 (48:54):
That yeah, right, not that conscious about it. Well, I mean,
Paul clear, but let's bring Mike in. I forgot to
mention that Mike is here. I'm very forgetful. Mike had
to tell huh had to tell all right, well yeah,
for the most part.
Speaker 15 (49:11):
Sure, yeah, but you know, my eyebrows, I don't wax
my eyebrows, okay, like they just never.
Speaker 11 (49:16):
Grew in that.
Speaker 1 (49:16):
Well okay, Well, and you don't wax the hair on
the top of your head. It sounds like so. But
everything else, I mean, yeah, yeah, I mean it's that
like a monthly appointment, a weekly thing, Like how often
do you have to attend to that?
Speaker 16 (49:29):
I'm usually every couple of months.
Speaker 1 (49:31):
Huh, Okay, and you just that's just sort of you
feel like that's I don't know, you look better, you
feel better when you do that. I mean, I'm not
judging it seems aggressive, but.
Speaker 15 (49:41):
You know, I mean hey, I mean yeah, it's an
element of like, you know, I got you know, look
a little bit better. But there's also I have this weird,
you know, kind of unique theory about it where like
too much like hair on your body, like you know,
it attracts like germs, like it gets sick easier.
Speaker 1 (49:59):
What I don't know about that. We'll have to look
into that scientifically.
Speaker 4 (50:03):
But no, your hair has a purpose on your body.
Speaker 1 (50:06):
Actually, yeah, you're right, it's supposed to be Yeah, most
doctors would tell you that the hair where is supposed
to be there and that we have decided as a
convention to remove it in some cases. But so Becky,
for you, this was what it was, just like it
was just a little off putting. Are you looking? You're
looking for someone like you're in Some people are into
the hair, they're into like you know, Matt that they
think that that's masculine. I don't know if that's right
(50:27):
or wrong, but that's just is that kind of what
where you're at.
Speaker 17 (50:31):
Yeah, I'm embarrassed because I don't I don't want to
hurt his feelings.
Speaker 4 (50:34):
But yeah, it was a lot.
Speaker 1 (50:37):
It was.
Speaker 16 (50:38):
It made me self conscious that like, am I going
to be am? I not smooth enough for you. I
made an effort, but oh my god, I mean you
to go with him.
Speaker 1 (50:47):
You know, he knows the person and y'all could just
you know, babe in wax and whatever. God.
Speaker 7 (50:53):
Yeah, me torn because I feel like we're giving him
a hard time, like we what's wrong?
Speaker 6 (50:58):
You want to be clean? He wanted to be you know,
like you think that should be a deal breaker.
Speaker 4 (51:04):
Okay, So so it was so smooth. It was like incantile.
Speaker 17 (51:08):
It was like it was like if you've ever like
overexfoliated your skin, and it's like off puttingly smooth.
Speaker 16 (51:17):
I got a guy that's good.
Speaker 15 (51:19):
I'm not going to offer up the guy that's not
going to do a great job.
Speaker 1 (51:22):
Like he knew that it was date night, and so
maybe he just went to the guy, you know, in
anticipation of the date night. All right, but I'm not
convinced that if Big Tim came home head to toe.
Speaker 6 (51:38):
And Victim came home and Jason was his guy.
Speaker 1 (51:42):
Yeah, apparently Jason's voluntary to be the guy and she
runs off to Astetian school right now, figure out to
do this. Okay, Look, that's his choice. He feels good
about it, that's what he wants to do. Becky, you're
saying that you weren't attracted to what you thought it was.
I don't know it was abnormal for you. You went
(52:03):
into it exactly.
Speaker 17 (52:05):
I've never met a straight man do that in my life,
and so it's it's a path for me. But I
know that somebody is gonna appreciate all of that effort.
Speaker 1 (52:16):
Okay, all right, hey, Mike, look you do you You
know they call you smooth on the streets. I heard. Yeah,
she's the dude his time. He saved some seconds minutes
off the time. The guy can swim so fast like lightning.
(52:38):
All right. Like, I don't know, Mike, she's not into it.
It can't make her be into it. I'm sure someone
will appreciate this, and and I wish you both the
best of luck. I don't even have to, I assume,
just to be sure. No second date, Becky or.
Speaker 16 (52:49):
Third I mean, would you ever consider not being sole
hair with I mean, so.
Speaker 1 (52:56):
Now, all of a sudden, you'll grow your Wait a minute,
you're so yeah, you Wait a minute, you say, now,
you're like, I'll just grow it out for you. Right.
Speaker 6 (53:04):
What about the appointment with the guy.
Speaker 1 (53:07):
He's gonna go out of business?
Speaker 9 (53:08):
You still do AI Man and Becky?
Speaker 1 (53:12):
The guy thought Becky he would understand. Oh, okay, you
know what, I don't know. I'm gonna let you two
work this out because this is I don't know if
you If y'all want to talk, then y'all talk. But
we did our part here and if you decide to
go out, let me know. I'll send you some Chili's
gift cards or something I don't know, or maybe European
wax I don't know. I don't know. But they're not
a sponsor, but they should be now, I guess, guys.
(53:33):
Thank you, best of luck to both of you. Thank you,
Thank you to the Entertainer Report, and Shelby is Kiky
a tiebreaker for two hundred bucks our pop culture game book.
Speaker 9 (53:42):
Next Fresh show Calin's Entertainer Report. He's on The Fred Show.
Speaker 3 (53:47):
In a new interview, Terrence Howard shared it, this is
crazy that Diddy, I guess, tried to hook up with him.
He said that did he hired him to be his
acting coach, and he went to the rappers house or
weeks of work on acting material. However, when he would
go to Ditty's house, he said that the rapper would
just sit and stare at him. Tarren said that when
(54:08):
he was asked to play music for him, Diddy would
also continue to just stare at him.
Speaker 4 (54:13):
He was so confused by how Diddy was acting.
Speaker 3 (54:15):
He asked his assistant for some clarity and he was told,
I think he's trying to f you. So he cut
off all communication with Diddy moving forward and never spoke
to him again. Speaking of Ditty, his ex Cassie is
set to testify against him in his upcoming trial and
use her name. An emotion filed Friday, Prosecutors stay that
Victim number one would be testifying using her name Cassie,
(54:39):
not anonymously. She of course is victim number one and
really filed that lawsuit that kind of started got the
ball rolling.
Speaker 4 (54:45):
She is very, very brave.
Speaker 3 (54:47):
Victim two, three, and four have all asked that their
identities not be revealed to the press or public, so
she's going to have to go through I'm sure a
lot more when she does do that, switching gears to
something really hap be. A petition on change dot org
was started to rename Nashville's BNA Airport after Dolly Parton.
Forty seven thousand people have signed the petition and there
(55:10):
have been over a thousand monetary contributions made to the campaign.
The petition in part reads, as proud citizens of Tennessee,
we are motivated by our deep rooted admiration for the
national treasure and Tennessee legend Dolly Parton. They went on
to talk about how she's not only given the gift
of music, but tons of philanthropy, not only just to Tennessee,
(55:30):
but to the whole world.
Speaker 4 (55:32):
They ended it by saying we could all be.
Speaker 3 (55:34):
Departing from Parton, which I think is adorable. And you know,
she of course lost her husband. I think that that
would be a really awesome thing to bless her. They
need to do it, don't I don't know if there's
anything that could There's no reason to not do it,
not a reason out there.
Speaker 13 (55:50):
Sign it.
Speaker 3 (55:50):
Its right, So I mean, I think we probably can
sign it, unless I don't know if we have to
be it's changed dot org. So if you want to
get behind that. I think we need to be departing
from parton they have I'm just.
Speaker 1 (56:01):
Looking at up right now, but the not to get
too nerdy about it as a pilot, but they have
arrival procedures that only pilots wouldn't care about. But they're
named after the artists. So they have the Chesney to arrival,
the Paisley four arrival, the Ryman two arrival, and the
Swift to arrival in Nashville. Yeah, you wouldn't know that
as it like the pilots would know that. It's like,
(56:22):
you know, the sort of how the roadway in the sky,
how they get to the airport. But then I'm trying
to see if the points are named after the way
points are named after songs like the Swift. That's just
the last fix is this Swift sw I F T
T or something. I don't know anyway, it's really cute.
Speaker 7 (56:40):
No.
Speaker 1 (56:41):
Yeah, so like whenever I go to Nashville, it's like
I forget which one it is. I think it's the
Ryman from from this direction down to the Rymann Theater.
But yeah, a lot of airports do that. We have
one here into Oher It's called the fight arrival and
it's like Blackhawks. It's named after Blackhawks, and it's like
the the fixes. They're like GPS points in the sky,
(57:02):
but there I forget what it is. It's like b Hawk,
Stanley st n l Y, Stanley Cup Champs on the
like as you move down the each point finger is
by Dallas the finger. Yeah, yeah, yeah, Kaelin liked that one.
Speaker 3 (57:16):
Oh okay, well your air traffic control mesty told you
to speed up to finger and I just yeah, there's.
Speaker 1 (57:23):
A there's a point. So these are like imaginary points
in the sky that the computer that GPS knows what
they are, and so it's like a so that every
so they tell you like for example, I think it's
the finger of five arrival into Dallas Love, which is
what the f I N g R is the point
five fingers. Nobody wants that. No, that's but anyways, if
(57:43):
they clear you on that, then everybody who's on that
will be going like it would be like if you
were on an expressway. Everybody's on the same path going
to the airport, and the computer knows it, and the
airplane knows it, so it flies it. But yeah, it
was so Calin and I were going to Dallas, and
it was I don't know why you were going only
knows I was going to see my I don't know why.
I have no idea what yeah, well, oh you know what.
Speaker 4 (58:05):
I was going to Austin and it was easier to
catch a flight, right.
Speaker 1 (58:08):
Right, That's what it was.
Speaker 4 (58:09):
And Austin.
Speaker 1 (58:10):
But the air traf Sokayla sitting there, and the air
traffic controller says, you know to me, uh your clear
clear direct finger and go oh no, it was it.
Speaker 4 (58:19):
Was speed up to finger.
Speaker 1 (58:20):
It was, yeah, it was clear direct finger and maximum
forward speed to finger. So and Caylen looked at me like,
what are we doing? We're going fastive finger baby?
Speaker 2 (58:34):
You know.
Speaker 1 (58:37):
Anymore?
Speaker 3 (58:37):
Right, by the way, if you miss any part of
whatever the hell this is the Front Show, you can
search the Front Show on demand and please set us
as a preset on the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 1 (58:48):
Like in Wyoming, somewhere there's a waypoint or a v
O R whatever. It's called crazy Woman or Crazy Crazy.
Oh damn, I wonder who that's app. They get really
clever with some of these. They're into h vague. There's
one that's all hangover references. It's just called the show Arrival,
and it's like, mister yeah, so it's like that's hysteric,
forget what it is. And then there's a Nintendo arrival
(59:10):
into Vegas because it was invented there, so like there's
a Tyson arrival into Vegas. So yeah, I forget what
it likes. Whatever. They get really clever with them.
Speaker 4 (59:19):
It's like ways in the sky for people that don't
have a pilot brain.
Speaker 1 (59:23):
That's how I think of it exactly. Yeah, but the
Swift so that Ansil name the damn airport after Dolly.
Pardon I like it?
Speaker 6 (59:29):
Yes it is.
Speaker 4 (59:30):
Nobody dislikes her.
Speaker 1 (59:32):
No, it's impossible. It's impossible. Okay, nerdy moment over for now.
At least kick you ready.
Speaker 6 (59:40):
About that?
Speaker 1 (59:41):
All right? Well you had to sit with this all weekend.
You tied with Jessica. Two hundred bucks is the prize
you're fourteen into in the show Biz Kiki showdout filling
in for show Biz Shelley and we shall have the
tide Breaker next.
Speaker 9 (59:54):
Do you have what it takes to battle.
Speaker 1 (59:59):
With the cake in I look at you keep mouthing herself.
She's mouthing herself thing. Man, let me see here can
my daughter get a shout out. Her name is Abigail
and today her nineteenth birthday, Eavy Birthday, Abigail. All right,
(01:00:20):
Jessica is back. Hi Jessica, Hi Jessica. And now you
had to sit with this all weekend to your little
thie situation. How are you feeling about it?
Speaker 4 (01:00:32):
Hopefully good?
Speaker 1 (01:00:33):
All right? Two hundred bucks a surprise, fourteen and two
very impressive show biskiky and for show Misch, Shelley, you
had a baby.
Speaker 9 (01:00:40):
Do you know when?
Speaker 1 (01:00:40):
When's she coming back? Next month? How long has it been?
There's been long enough you June? Yeah, June. Oh, you've
got ways to go then months, she's taking six months.
I guess I don't know. All good, So let's play
the game. Five pop culture questions against our filling pop
culture expert. Wow, congratulations, Okay, well you do gotta go bye?
(01:01:04):
She over here byes and I'm like, no, you gotta
go actually, gotta get out. So you get to play
the game often the sound boof poof, she goes. Okay,
here we go, Jessica. Question number one, Brooklyn and Romeo
Beckham are reportedly fighting over a girl. Who are their
famous parents.
Speaker 4 (01:01:24):
David Beckham and judge three, Oh my god, what's her name?
Speaker 1 (01:01:32):
Would ask for both?
Speaker 7 (01:01:35):
I don't know?
Speaker 1 (01:01:35):
We did say parents? Okay. Bad Baby performed her Alabama
Barker disk track at an l A nightclub where am I?
Which talk show made Bad Baby initially go viral?
Speaker 4 (01:01:49):
Doctor phel Machine and.
Speaker 1 (01:01:50):
Kelly and Megan Fox's ex husband are exchanging insults online
name her ex husband? She doesn't get Megan Fox's uh three?
Speaker 9 (01:02:03):
What if you?
Speaker 11 (01:02:04):
Did?
Speaker 1 (01:02:04):
They get?
Speaker 4 (01:02:04):
Marriican Machine Gun?
Speaker 2 (01:02:05):
Kelly is that her.
Speaker 1 (01:02:08):
Officials in Mexico say that they that was my response.
Officials in Mexico and say they will not be hosting
a second installment of this infamous failed music festival in Mexico,
despite numerous attempts name the festival, which was initially held
in the Bahamas. I don't know. And Ed Sheeran and
Wheezer have been added the Coachella lineup. Where does Coachella
(01:02:30):
take place?
Speaker 4 (01:02:33):
California, California.
Speaker 1 (01:02:37):
I'll give you, I'll give you a two point five,
but I think we'll see what happens.
Speaker 4 (01:02:41):
I love her though she's funny.
Speaker 1 (01:02:42):
We'll see what happens. Okay, you ready? No get two
point five?
Speaker 16 (01:02:47):
Kind of.
Speaker 1 (01:02:49):
Yeah? No, nocenan against Kiki question number one. Brooklyn and
Romeo Beckham are reportedly fighting over a girl who are
their famous parents Victoria and David. That's right. Bad Baby
performs her Alabama Barker disc track and an l a
night club which talk show made Bad Baby initially go viral.
(01:03:11):
Doctor Fiel Yeah, Machine Gun. Kelly and Megan Fox's ex
husband are exchanging insults online namer X husband.
Speaker 6 (01:03:18):
Oh Man, he always wants to smoke?
Speaker 1 (01:03:21):
Huh Tom Oh Tom want to smoke? Yeah? Okay? Or
Brian Austin Green also three names. Officials in Mexico said
it will not be hosting a second installment of this
infamous Field music festival, despite numerous attempts named the festival,
which was initially held in the Bahamas Fire Festival. Yep
(01:03:44):
and Ed Shearon and w Weezer have been added to
the Coachella lineup. Where does Coachella take place? Kelly all Right, Indio,
Palm Springs, California. Boom, that's a whim. Jessica Cub, you
did a great job, but you're gonna have to say
my name is Jessica. I got showed up on a
showdown and you can't hang with the kanky all right.
Speaker 6 (01:04:01):
My name's Jessica.
Speaker 4 (01:04:03):
I did not show up on the showdown and I
could not.
Speaker 10 (01:04:06):
Hang with Kiky.
Speaker 18 (01:04:08):
You Jessica, can't hang with keeky Cat Cat Cat boot
Cat Boo boo boom cat Cat Boo yeahoo boo boo
boom cat Cat.
Speaker 6 (01:04:18):
Shout out to Brian Austin Green whatever.
Speaker 7 (01:04:20):
His name is, booooo can't cat and Tom and Tom Yeah,
Bryan Austin Green and Tom Jessica, hang on one second,
have a great day, Thanks for listening.
Speaker 1 (01:04:31):
Thanks you too, all right, you stay right there. So
we're up to two fifty and what do we said it?
One game, a couple game, win streak and win number fifteen.
All right, now, so you're fifteen into two fifty and
will play again tomorrow? Could Joe say, June, huh, you
better hang on and tell you my Kiky's cordage.
Speaker 9 (01:04:52):
I got more freadh show.
Speaker 6 (01:04:54):
Next, Hi am not falty, okay, I am single and sweet.
Speaker 1 (01:05:01):
You should listen just to see what's gonna happen. Next.
Speaker 9 (01:05:05):
Fred Show is on.
Speaker 1 (01:05:06):
Good Morning everyone, Monday, April seventh. Hi Kaylin, good morning,
Hi Jason Brown, Hi Kiki, good morning. Who just won
again yay in the showdown bellaheminas here on the phone
of the text eight five five five three five Kiky's Court.
He's at two minutes away. Bought umpa girl. You better
save the last dance. And you guys are the jury,
(01:05:28):
so we'll need you in just a minute. Yes, headlines
and the biggest stories of the day. The fun fact
is coming up, and the entertainment report. What's in there?
Speaker 3 (01:05:36):
Kve Eminem's daughter honored him, honored grandpa with her baby,
her newborn baby, and Carrie Underwood and Papa Roach together.
Speaker 1 (01:05:47):
I can kind of see it, though, you can. I
just I sort of just do yeah, yeah, yeah, We'll
get to that interview. Back into Kieky's court. All right,
is here, judge Kiki Yae. It's your courtroom. Take it away, all.
Speaker 6 (01:06:04):
Right, let's step into the courtroom.
Speaker 7 (01:06:06):
It says, hey, Kiki, am I wrong for preventing one
of my senior students from attending prom I've been a
teacher for ten years now, and this is the first
time I've had this issue.
Speaker 6 (01:06:17):
One of my students has.
Speaker 7 (01:06:19):
Been a constant problem and pain in my behind since
this school year started. He's a senior and this is
his last chance to attend prom. While I understand how
important prom is to him and his family, I can't
understand why it hasn't been so important to him and
his parents that he passed my class. Our school has
a very strict GPA requirement for all students, and unfortunately,
(01:06:41):
he's been failing my class all year. I repeatedly contact
his parents and asked for their support to come up
with an action plan to help him. They've missed every
meeting that we've scheduled, and they've ignored my emails and
calls until now. Now his mother is sending me emails,
leaving nasty voicemails, and even calling our principal to pressure
(01:07:02):
me to adjust his grade in my class. He did
a huge prom proposal, secured a date, and has been
telling everyone that he's actually going.
Speaker 6 (01:07:10):
However he's not.
Speaker 7 (01:07:12):
I feel bad that I will be the cause of
him missing out on his senior prom. I feel bad
for his date, But what kind of example would I
be setting if I let for my other students if
I let him go?
Speaker 6 (01:07:22):
Am I wrong?
Speaker 1 (01:07:24):
Judge, Kiki? What say? You?
Speaker 12 (01:07:26):
You know what?
Speaker 6 (01:07:27):
I'm always for the teacher, I am. I'm on the
side of the teacher.
Speaker 7 (01:07:31):
In this case, I feel like, what can not only
what kind of example are you setting for the other
students if you tweak his grade, but what are you
setting him up for in life? Because you cannot just
fail all of your responsibilities and then still think that
you get to enjoy the reward.
Speaker 6 (01:07:46):
That's insane.
Speaker 7 (01:07:47):
Like, if you've been failing my class, you've been a
pain in my butt, so you've probably been very disrespectful.
I've been trying to contact your parents and work on
an action plan to help you get ahead, to help
you graduate, to help you get to prom, and they've
made no effort. But now that it's prime time, you know.
Now your mom is calling. Now she wants to email.
You know your parents have failed you, and you failed yourself.
(01:08:07):
You're a senior at this point, and if you're not
holding up to your responsibilities, there's the consequences to that,
and I don't think she should feel bad about it.
Speaker 1 (01:08:15):
I agree, Judge Kiki, how wise, thank you, wise and sound.
Here's a song forget about Let's go home. It's over
eight five five one oh three five. You can call
him text the same number. I mean, you could make
the argument that this is a once in a lifetime thing,
and he'll go the rest of his life without ever
having gone to his senior problem. Now, you also have
(01:08:35):
to get good grades or passing grades at least, you
know what I mean. Like you and that was the thing.
It's like, you either meet this level, this minimum requirement,
or you don't get to go. So you're right if
you just say, now, well that thing I said before,
I didn't really mean that right, right? Then why did
everybody else work so hard?
Speaker 7 (01:08:53):
And I've seen teachers get this type of pressure, not
even just from parents but from other administration at the school,
especially for students who are our sports players play you know,
the star basketball player, the star football player. It's almost
like to the teacher like, come on, man, you know
we need him, so give them the grade. And it's like, no,
these they need to earn their grades. You can't just
(01:09:14):
be us in class and not do what you're supposed
to do and then still think that you should be
allowed to go to prom or allowed to play play
in the game. That's not how it works. And I
feel like when we allow kids to do that, we're
setting them up for failure.
Speaker 1 (01:09:25):
Yeah, you do them in disservice because in the real world,
nobody cares, nobody can know. It's like, if you don't
get the work assignment done, then you might get fired.
And that's your fault. There's nobody else's fault. That's what
you're supposed to do. Mm hmm, yeah, yeah, I mean,
and let me see all these texts. That's his fault.
And he failed his date by not being truthful with her,
(01:09:46):
and she probably already bought an expensive dress. That's it. Yeah,
that sucks for the date, right, And I'm sure the.
Speaker 7 (01:09:51):
Mom was like helping him play the Prome proposal, but
you're not helping him get his grades.
Speaker 8 (01:09:55):
That's the difference for me is that the parents weren't
cooperative from the beginning. Like, so now I'm almost feeling
bad for him because, like he may not have the
support system at home to push him to be able
to catch up to everyone else, to be able to
go right. If you were, you know, if the parents
were involved right from the beginning, when the teacher said, hey,
(01:10:16):
there's a problem, and you're kind of getting, you know,
the push from home and school and you're still not
doing it, then I might feel a little bit different.
But I feel bad that he might lose out on
like these memories just because you know, he might not
have the most.
Speaker 1 (01:10:29):
I've This happens a lot of I mean it happens
a lot because I bet teachers go home feeling bad
about what they weren't able to get their students to achieve,
when really it while it is their job to a
certain extent, it's the parents' job to back up the
you know, the what the teachers to try and do
instill because it's not a teacher's job to raise children,
(01:10:49):
even though I think a lot of teachers are doing it.
But that must be really frustrating because you feel like,
I'm sure this this teacher feels like she's failing the
kid and she gets to well she is feeling the kid,
but he's failing.
Speaker 6 (01:11:01):
It's a class.
Speaker 1 (01:11:02):
But like she gets to be the bad person here,
but she's going above and beyond to try and get
him to succeed. So I feel bad for the teacher.
Uri howry, how you doing?
Speaker 9 (01:11:15):
Hey guy?
Speaker 2 (01:11:16):
Something good?
Speaker 16 (01:11:16):
How about yourself?
Speaker 1 (01:11:17):
Hey? Good morning? Hey, thank you thanks for listening being
part of the show.
Speaker 2 (01:11:22):
Thanks Eddie and Jumble.
Speaker 1 (01:11:24):
Oh wow, wow, I didn't know they worked here, but
God bless you. The other place without business. So yeah,
so what's going on? What do you think about this
this court case? I mean, the teacher is trying to
save this kid in a lot of ways and get
him to perform, and he's not. And and there was
(01:11:46):
a there were there were guidelines. There was you know,
you had to meet this requirement or you can't go
to prom. He didn't meet the requirement, so he's not
going to problem, and now the teacher feels bad about it.
Speaker 2 (01:11:56):
I agree with the teacher with Kiki as parents and
as its teacher. I helped peatures before. You trust them
so much for them to do their own work, and
if they cannot man up or do their job as
an adult, technically he's an adult already. He should be
responsible for his ownself. And if his parents are sugar
coating him not able to do his job, then there's
(01:12:16):
no point out her letting him. She's trying to let
him go regardless, because if she lets if she lets
him past and just let him go like that, she's
sugarcoating his grapes like oh it's okay, don't worry about that.
Feel bad. No, there's no such thing as feeling bad
or no excuse it at all. I was just saying earlier,
like my daughter myself. I have a daughter, she's a
summer and having her swect sixteen this year. So I
(01:12:37):
told her, I know I haven't been there to help job,
but if you don't make up your grace, I will
cance your party and you're done. I know it works
for fort first, I argue, and then the parents not
doing the part either. That's therefore also so there's always
a teachers part, but the parents do nothing that should
have been done the first place, because you're playing for everything.
Speaker 1 (01:12:59):
Right, I agree, Thank you, have a good day, Thanks
for listening.
Speaker 6 (01:13:03):
Keep standing on business man.
Speaker 1 (01:13:04):
Yeah, I mean that's the thing that you what about
all the other kids, all the other kids that performed
and worked hard, and then so now if this one
kid gets to show up to prom and the rest,
and then the teacher looks like, you know, she's a
pushover exactly, and she loses credibility with the whole room
over one kid because it was like, well, wait a minute,
so I guess I didn't have to do well. I
guess the rules don't apply. Hey Darien, good morning, good morning.
(01:13:29):
How's it going, Hey, man, what do you think.
Speaker 12 (01:13:32):
I think this teacher shouldn't feel bad at all.
Speaker 4 (01:13:35):
This student made the decision themselves.
Speaker 13 (01:13:39):
They had plenty of time.
Speaker 9 (01:13:40):
It doesn't even sound like the student is trying.
Speaker 6 (01:13:43):
Yep.
Speaker 13 (01:13:44):
Maybe there's a little bit of time and he could
beg or try to get all work done in a
few weeks or something.
Speaker 1 (01:13:52):
Yeah. Well, well, the other thing is she's holding his
hand as it is. Yeah, you know, and that's something
else that's not going to happen in real life, is
that she's already sort of like nursing him through this,
like I'll give you extra help. I mean, I'll do
whatever I can, like I'll go I mean, this is
more than should have to be, you know what I mean,
as far as the kid has an obligation to do
(01:14:14):
the school work, and the teacher shouldn't have to go
step by step by step by step to get you
to do it, because that doesn't exist in the real world.
No one's gonna do that for you. And so he
already has an advantage and he's failing at that too, right,
So yeah, hey, Darren, thank you man, thanks for calling.
Have a good day. So already he's being coddled.
Speaker 7 (01:14:34):
Yeah, and she tried even with the parents, like I've
been calling and emailing you all to set up an
action plan to just work with me here, like, let's
do whatever we can. Let's be a team to support
this child. And they won't even make the effort. So
it's like and now, but now when we get close
to prom and you want to buy a dress, and
I mean, it's sucks. And then you know the whole thing.
Now you have all the effort in the world. Now
(01:14:54):
you know my number, now you know my email address.
Speaker 1 (01:14:56):
That is unacceptable, teacher, And so the parents doing him
a disservice on a number of levels. Hey Kathy, Hi,
good morning.
Speaker 18 (01:15:04):
Yeah, Hi, how are you?
Speaker 1 (01:15:06):
Hey Kiky's court, what say you?
Speaker 11 (01:15:09):
Yes, I'm just I know he maybe seventeen or eighteen. However,
you know, maybe he's you know, I don't want to
see a learning disability, but maybe he has you know,
my lady HD or some type of issue that's holding
him back or maybe not able to focus as much.
Maybe his parents never looked into that either. Yeah, that's
a tough one. I don't know, you know, because it
does think that his parents never you know, came to
(01:15:32):
any meetings or tried to talk to the parents, you know,
I mean they did. What I'm saying is the parents
never reached back out to the.
Speaker 1 (01:15:40):
Teacher like like you said, until now.
Speaker 11 (01:15:42):
So well, that's pretty much my outlook on it.
Speaker 1 (01:15:44):
Yeah, Kathy, maybe he does have a learning disability, but
he has the teacher's full attention. In fact, probably more
than most other students are getting so right and all.
Speaker 9 (01:15:53):
That's true.
Speaker 1 (01:15:54):
That so there. Again, it's not as if she's saying, hey, hey, y'all, y'all,
you're on your own. Here's this. You better get an
A and I'm not going to help you. And if
you don't get an A or B or a C
or whatever, then you can't go to prom. And I'm
not even going to assist you in this. No, she's
right there alongside him and he's still not getting it done.
Speaker 2 (01:16:13):
Well, that's true. Yeah, it was like maybe something's undiagnosed.
Speaker 1 (01:16:17):
It could be, could be, you know, but I mean
he's got he has support. So Kathy, thank you, good day,
Thank you you too. Glad you called. Oh I'm saying
I think she was saying something nice. Whatever you said,
it was nice. Thank you. Hey, Sevanie, good morning, good morning.
Speaker 11 (01:16:33):
Hi Fred Love you guys.
Speaker 1 (01:16:34):
Hey, love you two. What do you think.
Speaker 2 (01:16:37):
I think?
Speaker 14 (01:16:38):
You know, prom is a once in a lifetime experience,
so it would be really sad for him to miss
out on it. But totally understand where the teacher.
Speaker 4 (01:16:46):
Is coming from.
Speaker 14 (01:16:47):
In my opinion, the saddest thing about this entire story
is the lack of support at home.
Speaker 16 (01:16:51):
I mean, that's where it all starts.
Speaker 1 (01:16:53):
Yeah, yeah, agree.
Speaker 14 (01:16:55):
My thought is, maybe throw the kid one last pail mary,
maybe some extra and see what he.
Speaker 9 (01:17:01):
Does with it.
Speaker 14 (01:17:01):
Hopefully he doesn't stumble the ball. But if he performs,
then maybe allow him to go. Just give him kind
of that one last opportunity.
Speaker 1 (01:17:09):
Yeah, maybe maybe, So thank you Stephanie, have a good day.
Speaker 2 (01:17:12):
Thank you guys, you.
Speaker 1 (01:17:13):
Too, because nobody wants to see a kid miss that
on that. But again, you're doing you're doing the kid
a long term disservice, right if you just keep making it,
you know, Okay, we'll forget about that that expectation. How
about this one. Oh, you're not going to meet that.
We'll forget about that because no one's gonna do that
for you in the real the rule, right, no one's
gonna do that for you.
Speaker 5 (01:17:31):
And we mentioned too, like support coming from home, and like,
for a minute, maybe I'm thinking maybe there isn't support
at home, right, and that's where my mind kind of went,
and maybe like that's another place that you know, he
needs more supported and I totally agree. But then Kiki said,
the parents are coming up here for prom and doing
promposals and getting tuxes. So I'm like, well, then the
support's there, it's just in the wrong place exactly, you know, Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:17:50):
They need to back the teacher up. And that's what
I feel bad for this teacher, and for a lot
of teachers who, yes, who feel like we've had him
on the air before, we've we've helped with you know,
class from Wishless and stuff, and it's like they feel
inadequate because they can't provide the experience for their kids
that meets their standard. But it's not necessarily their fault.
(01:18:11):
I mean, they it's not if they don't have the
budget or they don't have the parental support or whatever.
Then they're doing the best they can and they don't
need to feel bad about their efforts because other people
aren't supporting them. But they do. Many do. We've heard
them on the show before. Hey, Delilah, Hi, Hi, hey,
so Keny's court. Just to recap here quickly, the teacher,
(01:18:34):
a teacher has written in takiki saying, hey, look, I've
got a student who's not performing. I'm trying to help
him perform. He didn't meet the minimum expectations, so he
can't go to prom. His parents have been nowhere to
be found. Now all of a sudden, it's well, wait
a minute, parents are here, going I want my kid
to go to prom? What are we going to do
about this? And so, you know, does she let it
slide or does she stand out? Business I am.
Speaker 12 (01:18:57):
It's a tough situation because teachers like you saying like
they kind of have not a lot of control of
the education system that we have for kids. And I
think that the prom should not be tied to a students'
grades because students, I think are being failed by the
education system we have. I'm a big proponent for like
(01:19:20):
Montessori style education, where teachers you have to master something
before you can move on. So what's to say that
this student has not It has been failed long time
ago by the school system, where he's not at a
point where he can catch up and.
Speaker 16 (01:19:35):
Get his grades up because.
Speaker 12 (01:19:37):
Maybe he's lost interest and even like the opportunity to
excel in school because he was lost along the way
years ago.
Speaker 1 (01:19:48):
So I think, but isn't the parents to manage? Like
shouldn't shouldn't As a parent, shouldn't you be watching the
education that your child's getting and if they're falling behind
or or if they're if in fact they're being u
the school district or the processes is negligent, then shouldn't
the parent be the one to step up and either
supplement or change the school or do something about it.
(01:20:09):
I mean that may be, but like you had the kid,
it's you set the standard.
Speaker 12 (01:20:14):
It's your job, right, that's true, But it depends what
levels they're at, Like what what if both parents work,
you know, full time jobs, or they don't have that
kind of support at home, or maybe they don't speak
the language, or maybe they just you know, maybe they're
from a different country and they don't even know how
(01:20:34):
the school system works here, or you know, they're kind
of putting it up to the student to carry on
on his own. So I know it's a very different opinion,
but I think I think the school system has to
change to where students can they have to master something
before they could learn something else instead of everybody learning
the same information, not everybody is going to excel the
(01:20:57):
same way.
Speaker 1 (01:20:58):
Well fair enough to llolence. Thank you, a good day.
Speaker 12 (01:21:01):
Thank you one of the thirteens.
Speaker 1 (01:21:03):
Thank you, appreciate you.
Speaker 15 (01:21:07):
Coach basketball coach, I know who you are.
Speaker 1 (01:21:13):
Well yeah, yeah, you passed Paulina and I got some questions.
They have a good day. Thank you, Dela. I'm not
going to blame this on the school. It's not the
school's responsibility, you know what. There are issues with the
and I'm sure teachers would say the same thing that
there are issues, But I'm not blaming this on the school.
And I think I think that this would be doing
(01:21:33):
a kid at disservice on a number of levels.
Speaker 7 (01:21:36):
Oh yeah, and I see it happen so much. I
hate to keep bringing up with student athletes. I feel
like I've seen this happen a lot of times. And
then they get in the real world and they go
to college, right, and then somebody's doing their homework in college.
But the moment they get injured, now it's they have
no meaning to the school, you know. They they're not
they can't play because they injured themselves, they tore their
acl or whatever, and now they're just out in the
world lost because if somebody passed them all these years
(01:21:59):
and they don't know anything.
Speaker 3 (01:22:00):
Yeah, and parents like they're focused on their child. But
I have so much compassion for teachers because they're trying
to focus on all the children. So you know, these
pushy parents come in and it's like you're worried about
one kid. These teachers are trying to be empathetic and
you know, care about all these students and all these
different situations. There's got to be some compassion for the teachers.
Speaker 1 (01:22:19):
And she would appear she's already gone above and beyond
to try and say this kid, Adam. So this happened
to you, Yeah, good morning. Are you doing Hey, good
morning man, thanks for calling. Of course.
Speaker 11 (01:22:31):
Yeah.
Speaker 13 (01:22:31):
I was this student, and I was very appreciative that
the teachers and educators around me actually pushed me to
not go to prom and didn't let me go because
I was I was fooling around in school and I
wasn't doing my best, and me being a parent, now,
I definitely wouldn't I wouldn't do that for my child,
wouldn't want my child's teachers to do that. I mean,
(01:22:52):
the biggest thing that my principal said to me. You know,
I took it to like my pro the provosts and
the dean and the principal and try to fight it.
And my principal looked at me and just said, listen, man,
the prom is a privilege.
Speaker 16 (01:23:04):
It's not a right.
Speaker 13 (01:23:05):
Like that's something that's something that you've earned at the
end of the year from all the good work that
you've done. It's not a right to go to prom.
That's something that the school puts on to celebrate all
of the great you know, accomplishments that the students and
you all have done and to commemorate the year and
all of that, and that's that's a privilege.
Speaker 1 (01:23:23):
And and yeah, so it's not.
Speaker 9 (01:23:25):
It's that's not what it's for.
Speaker 13 (01:23:26):
And then also it kind of set you know, because
I did have people in my life it was like, no,
you got to go to prom, man, you got to
go to prom.
Speaker 9 (01:23:33):
We got to fight this.
Speaker 13 (01:23:34):
But you know, I have people tell me like, you're
setting the wrong example. You're teaching him that it doesn't
your education is not the most important thing.
Speaker 1 (01:23:43):
Yes, well, it's interesting, Adam and I bet you would
agree with this. But if you had put as much
effort into school as you did into fighting their decision,
then you or these parents, if they had put enough,
if that same energy into trying to get his grades
up as opposed to now complaining that the teacher, then
you may not have been in that situation. I would
imagine you look back and you see it that way.
Speaker 13 (01:24:04):
Oh one hundred percent, And no disrespect to the young
lady who just got off the call. But I do
believe at the end of the day, there's the responsibility
of the parents and tandem with the teachers and the
student to make the priority of the education first. That's
the whole purpose of going to school. That's the whole
that's that's what we do. So you know, yeah, I
think I know for a fact I was not trying
my hardest and I was not doing my best. And
(01:24:24):
I loved my parents. They were great parents, but like
she said, they were busy, they were doing a lot
of other things, and the focus wasn't on that and
it wasn't on my education. So but it was it
was totally my fault, and I was happy that they
decided to for me not to go to prime. So
I ended up, you know, hanging out with my friends
after the fact.
Speaker 1 (01:24:41):
But yeah, well I'm.
Speaker 4 (01:24:44):
Still out there.
Speaker 1 (01:24:44):
Hey man, I appreciate this perspective. And the truth is, Adam,
I don't know if if you'd gotten to pass on
all this, I don't know if you'd be calling saying
this maybe now you're growing up and more mature. But
the fact that you can now see that, I think
probably that decision and others like it played into that. Right,
someone just didn't let it go and said no, this
is the rule and you didn't meet the standard, so
(01:25:05):
you can't do it. That had to have helped you
as you grew.
Speaker 13 (01:25:09):
Oh absolutely, And to Kekey's points set the proper perspective
moving forward in my life, because, like she said, when
you get out here in the world, the world's not
gonna treat you like that. You have to, you know,
take responsibility for your accents. So so yeah, right, you
right on board.
Speaker 1 (01:25:23):
You, Adam. I appreciate you. Man. Have a great day, No,
friand y'all have good day. Look at that Look ki
ki I have that man? Yeah, heave it real, Yeah
he did value a lesson case. Close seat your standout business.
That's right, I got your back. The entertainment report in
headlines fun facts All next frend show Back into Kailyn's
entertainment report is on the Freas Show.
Speaker 3 (01:25:44):
Actor and comedian Russell Brand responded to being wow convicted
or excuse me not convicted?
Speaker 4 (01:25:51):
Jesus?
Speaker 3 (01:25:51):
Where am I accused of rape and sexual assaults in
London over alleged attacks on four different women between nineteen
ninety nine and two thousand and five. The four forty
nine year old now faces faces five separate counts ranging
from indecent assault to rape. Remember allegation surfaced against him
in twenty twenty three after an investigation by UK media outlets,
(01:26:12):
and he has consistently denied them. After the story broke,
he was spotted on a beach looking unbothered with his
wife and then posted in part saying I was a
drug addict, a sex addict and an imbecile, but I
never was a rapist. I never engaged in non consensual activity.
I pray that you can see that by looking into
my eyes. He is due to appear in court in
London on May second. On a much lighter note and
(01:26:35):
happier note, Eminem's daughter Hayley welcomed her first child, sharing
the news on Friday on Instagram with a photo of
her baby boy in front of a sign that read
Elliot Marshall McClintock three fourteen twenty five.
Speaker 4 (01:26:46):
Elliot's middle name is, of course, in honor.
Speaker 3 (01:26:48):
Of first time grandpa Eminem, whose real name is Marshall Mathers.
Speaker 1 (01:26:52):
How old are wee? Is a grandfather?
Speaker 2 (01:26:54):
I don't know?
Speaker 1 (01:26:55):
And like this last grandfather?
Speaker 4 (01:26:56):
Does he lose his street appeal? Are we still scared
of Grandpa Marshall? Sounds so sweet?
Speaker 3 (01:27:02):
But yeah, I do feel very old. A Minecraft movie
Fredi brought this up earlier, raked in one hundred and
fifty seven million in ticket sales at the box office
over the weekend. Not only is it the biggest opening
of the year, but it broke the record for a
video game adaptation of a movie previously held by the
Super Mario Brothers movie at one hundred and forty six million,
so this was bigger than that.
Speaker 4 (01:27:21):
Rounding out the top five.
Speaker 3 (01:27:22):
A working Man, The Chosen Last Supper, Part two, Snow White,
and The Woman in the Yard.
Speaker 4 (01:27:27):
I know what one of those are, which is crazy?
Speaker 3 (01:27:30):
Carrie Underwood was on hand in Vegas Saturday night to
perform a few songs with Papa Roach. The rock band
fans got treated to a due out of last resort
staff Oka Shan No Breathing, as well as a live
version of their recorded duet Leave a Light On, So
Rock On Girl. And lastly, it is iHeartRadio Week only
on Wheel of Fortune Tonight welcomes multi platinum winning artist
(01:27:52):
Keith Urban who we love and viewers at home, it
is your chance to win a VIP trip to Iheartradios.
Let Freedom Sing July fourth celebration in Nashville. Watch Wheel
of Fortune and check your local listings for all of
that info. And then if you are looking to catch
up on the show type the frend Show fread.
Speaker 9 (01:28:09):
Show is on Fred's Fun Fact Fred.
Speaker 1 (01:28:12):
Fund learn so much? Did you know that ravens the birds?
Ravens know when someone is spying on them. They know
who's spying on them other Ravens. Oh, and don't they
(01:28:36):
like hold grudges too?
Speaker 11 (01:28:37):
You?
Speaker 1 (01:28:38):
Yes?
Speaker 4 (01:28:38):
Wait what's going on with ravens?
Speaker 1 (01:28:40):
And first, I don't know how they did, Like does
someone speak to a raven her?
Speaker 12 (01:28:45):
Like?
Speaker 1 (01:28:45):
How do we know this? For sure? But Ravens are
notoriously clever creatures, so much that they're aware of when
they're being watched. A twenty sixteen study published in the
journal Nature Communications I Get every one of Them found
that the super smart birds display what's called theory of mind,
which is the ability to attribute mental states to others.
This is a bird that means that ravens can tell
(01:29:07):
when someone or something else can see them in the study.
Research has put the idea to the test and found
that ravens acted as if they knew they were being
watched when there was an open people available for other
birds to spy on them. So they got birds look
at their peoples now. Yeah, So they took a couple
of ravens, took them to steamworks. Yeah, they said, who
(01:29:30):
are looking at you before?
Speaker 4 (01:29:33):
Your beat doesn't go in there?
Speaker 1 (01:29:35):
And if you know, you know, and if you don't know,
you don't need to know.
Speaker 9 (01:29:40):
More Fresh show