Episode Transcript
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Fresco, Whisping Man, Marny Show, Welcome to the working week. It's
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Hang your whisby and then mess pickup your phone there line, you're
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the Big Man Morning Show nine eightfour six Oh k m o D can
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on Facebook, Facebook dot com slashb m MS six nine. That's where
you can hang out with us eachand every day. Good morning, Lindsay,
Good morning, Gorbyn, Good morning, Gimpie. Morning. I just
(03:07):
wanted to hear half of your morning. I didn't want to hear you say
good I get it, man.We got tickets to Hardy Who's gonna be
over to Walmart, Amphitheater and Rogers. By the way, I think there's
only one seats available for that now, yeah, or unless you want to
buy his VIP package. Oh no, looks four hundred and thirty eight dollars
each before tacks. Sure there's differenttiers. Is there a ten dollars tier?
(03:38):
We're gonna see what Lindsay wants totalk about. We got our top
five songs today. It's the topfive songs with one of the five senses
in the title from listener no nonsense, And we're still taking submissions for toast
our Troops. That Monday's gonna bethe last one. We want Monday's memorial
there right, So we're doing itTuesday now, okay either way. So
(04:05):
we want you to submit at kmoddot com and we'll pick someone, get
him on the air, and whenwe do, that's gonna get a case
of shinaback at dinner for two atMondo's Italian restaurant in the heart of Brookside
again kmod dot com. So thistrooper is in trouble in our state for
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he sure, for he allegedly pulledover a driver and forced them to have
sex with him. You can't dothat, man. It all happened up
near Big Cabin in March, wherethe trooper apparently pulled over a semi that
is accused of speeding. The driver, who speaks broken English, said that
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the trooper began to gesture towards thesleeper of the semi and she understood that
to mean he wanted a sexual encounter. It says after giving her a warning,
he got into the semi, rubbedhis jennies on her leg, and
after she got out of the cab, he indicated he wanted her to perform
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a sex act. It says shefelt afraid and thought about recording the encounter
or calling nine to one one,but was concerned that would cause more trouble.
Apparently in the video because his camhe can be seen pointing to his
chest and quietly saying the word camera. It says, even when the traffic
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was stop was over, he wentback to his patrol car, stopped the
in car recording, and repositioned hispatrol car so it no longer showed the
cab of the truck. So hewas trying to cover up his tracks,
according to the indictment. Now,how dumb you gotta be. You know
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you've got a camera on, youknow what's going to be recording. How
you gotta be like, there's acamera here, st say anything? Camera
right? Right? Come on,man, says the woman. Uh.
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The woman says he returned to thetruck and she felt pressure to perform the
sex act, and the Highway Patrolhas said that, uh, this is
disturbing behavior and that the investigation inCraig County District corpt. They filed two
felony charges against the trooper for forcibleoral sodomy and sexual battery. Wow.
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The indictment uncovered by an o HPsupervisor who was performing a routine check of
dash cam video. The video centeredaround him making a traffic stop while on
duty. When this unusual interaction withthe truck driver came to light in March
of this year, the department says, whoa, you know, you know
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what'd be good for these dash camson the on the police cruisers. What
was it called a jimbal? Gimbaljimble? Oh? So it doesn't bounce
around? Yeah, well no,so like and they have the software for
it. I see him, youknow, it follows you, your body
wherever you go, so it'll rotateand move so that way, that way.
Y. Yeah, you know theofficer decides he wants to move his
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car because it's still it will stillfollow him. Yeah, I think you'd
be agreed. Idea. Yeah,we just need to raise your tax dollars
per card and a cigarette right now, How do you feel right? His
lawyer, of course, has comeout in response and said that his twenty
five years of dedicated UH work towardsthe Oklahoma Highway Patrol should be noted.
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The charges filed today in the court. In the court are denied by the
trooper. The alleged victim did notreport any crimes to the OHP. Her
statements were made weeks after being contactedby the patrol. The case is based
on circumstantial evidence only there's no directevidence of these alleged crimes, and that
he is innocent of these allegations andwill vigorously defend these charges as he should.
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Yeah, so she did. Thedriver of the semi didn't even come
forward. They just happened to bedoing a routine check of the dash camps.
They're like, wait, waiting,something doesn't seem right, and then
they followed the trail from there andthen they call the truth the victim,
and the victim's like he hey,yeah about that. That's what she said,
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like he had happened. I wasafraid to get busted for it.
Did she actually get a citation fromhim? He says a warning? Oh
well yeah, how rude? Wouldthat be? No kidding to get a
ticket? And you have to sthe d Come on, if that's what
happened, there are many options available. True, he could have been in
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freaky allegedly. Huh. And tome, the most interesting part about this
is the OHP, on their owndiligence, discovered it. I think that's
huge. Yeah, it is absolutelyand in those twenty five years there weren't
always body cameras. This could justbe the first time he was caught,
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It's true, I mean yeah,but that's also like a giant leap too.
Yeah, it could have been theone time he did it, the
one time he got balls enough.No pun intended to go up to a
person that he has stopped and beenlike, hey, we'll let you get
off with a warning if you dothis for me, or just brazenly did
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it anyway. By the sounds ofit, he just brazenly did it anyway,
right, I still gave her awarning. God, what a dick
man. I'm just saying. Itdoesn't help the narrative that this happens a
lot. Do you think that happensa lot? No, I said the
narrative. Yeah, I don't thinkit happens a lot. I think there's
a misconception that it does. Oh, okay, okay, right, it's
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a misconception that every officer does this, right of course. No, No,
there's bad apples in every group ofeverything. Yeah. Yeah, that's
why when people are like, oh, he's a pastor or she's a teacher
or police officer. That makes themsuddenly a good person. No, right,
No, that's not standard issue.I know plenty of bad actors in
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many environments. To me, thething is, maybe they found something and
then they contact and went to contactthe victims, and there was nothing from
the victims, Like they didn't returnthe call, they didn't want to cooperate,
they didn't have their number changed,they died like I mean, numerous
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scenarios. Sure, and he ifhe quits, he can still go be
a tre somewhere else or cop somewhereelse. That is true. That is
true unless he's convicted or whatever.And then I think that might slow things
down a little bit. But Idon't know. Yeah, he's not fired,
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right, But even if you getfired, you can still become an
officer somewhere else. Right, Likeif I got fired from this job,
I can still go to another radiostation and get another radio job. Except
you're not in law enforcement. Youget fired in radio, they'll go,
that's circumstantial, Tata Patata. Ithink when you're a teacher, an administrator,
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a doctor, a police officer,a fireman, there are certain careers
that when you do something nefarious,you can't just cover it up and hide
and run from it. Yeah,yeah, yeah yeah. If I got
fired from radio gig, from thisjob because I did something terrible like that,
I don't see myself getting another radiojob anywhere. No, just let's
just get let's just say that yougot fired for sexual harassment. Let's just
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say that, right, and thenyou go get a job somewhere else.
They can't call and ask why yougot fired. They can't tell them it
was sexual harassment. They can justsay fired. But if they are suspecting
you of sexual harassment, and thenyou quit, that ceases everything. You
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weren't fired, you quit on yourown feelings, and now you can go
get a job and it's never evenan issue. Wow. I don't really
think of it like that, right, It's just shuffle. It's just moving
the coconuts around on the table.And a lot of people that have done
bad things do this all the time. Doctors who have been investigated for malpractice
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will quit and then go be adoctor somewhere else, and they'll do this
time and time and time and timeand time and time again, which I
guess that makes sense. Teachers justdo this. They get investigated for doing
something bad and anything, and thenthey leave before anything can come to light,
Well I won't let you investigate.I'll just quit, and then they
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move on short of criminal, they'llstop the investigation. Well that sucks.
Yeah, it happens all the time. That's why when they're like, well
I don't know, they have toput them on leave while they investigate because
they got to have cause because ofthe union. And then they can just
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quit in that time for him,and then everything's there's no big deal.
Right, So even if he getsin trouble, this trooper gets convicted,
right because it's just a charge.At this point, he can quit being
a trooper and then on his recordit'll show he quits, it won't show
he was fired. He may havea criminal charge later down the line.
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But who hasn't made a mistake.I'm just saying, right, yeah,
it's no plano noo. Yeah,I wouldn't know. I keep going back
in my head to that scene andwhere the Millers when they get pulled over
by who's the actor famous actors Guzman? Yes, yeah, yeah, I'll
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take my bribe now and just goabout my way. Yes, And he's
trying to convince this this person inon it, like and he's like or
three hundred dollars. He's like threehundred dollars. He's like no pesos,
and he's like eighty dollars. Comeon, you can do it unless you
got to do it. I can'tbelieve you're gonna do that, not from
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her, from you. Oh yeah, come on now, you can do
it all. Get out here.That's all I get to think about is
like, uh, I wouldn't knowhow to handle that situation, right.
Why I tell you what, I'mnot doing any favors. Just put me
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a Mexican jail. That's a toughone. That is a tough one.
What do you do. Do youdo the sexual favor which is worse Mexican
jail or doing a little oral flavors. I don't know, dude. I've
never been to Mexican jail. Idon't know anybody who's been to Mexican jail.
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I'm just making a giant assumption thatthe struggles you would feel in Mexican
jail would be dramatically different than thestruggles in American jail. Let's just start
with a language, yeah for sure. Yeah. We can then move on
to it's a third world country.I'm not clear how their prison laws are.
I feel like the embassy should beable to help you out in that
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situation. How so, okay,get a hold of the American Embassy there
in Mexican. Be like, hey, here's the deal. I got stop
for speeding. He wanted me toask the d I decided not to and
went to jail. Can't you helpme out? And so you think that
the and assuming depending on where youget, because the embassy isn't everywhere,
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right right, Let's just say it'sin Mexico City and you're in Tijuana,
right you, they'll be like,we're on it, and no, right
right, No, You call backhome to your attorney and you or you
know, family members somebody be like, I need to get a hold of
the American Embassy in Mexico. I'lltrust these guys to do the work for
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me, not these guys. Suresure, I love that. Everybody's got
an attorney on the ready. Getout of here, all right? So
I say, call a family member, call my brother up. Hey man,
I'm in Mexican jail right now.Oh my god, what'd you do?
Well? What's It's not what Idid, It's what I what I
wouldn't do here, Okay, let'ssay he does that. You're still twenty
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four hours out at best. Ohyeah, for sure. I mean,
yeah, it's gonna suck for alittle while, but just being in regular
American jail sucks, you know,for twenty four hours, forty two whatever.
Not all of us are Scottie Shuffler, I think. Yeah, right,
forty minute turnaround turntables there. Now, all right, we got tickets
(17:18):
to Hardy We're gonna give away.Hardy's gonna be at the Walmart Amphitheater and
Rogers on Thursday next Thursday. Well, we'll see what Lindsay wants to talk
about. And we got our topfive songs. So take a break and
we'll be back. Tell us thismorning Show, The Big Bad Boarding Show,
The Assaulting Continuous next ninety seven KMOD, Good morning, It's the Big
(17:48):
Mad Morning Show. Nine eight foursix oh KMOD can also text BMMS and
then what you want to say toeight two nine four five Go ahead and
do news quikies. It's time fornews quakies. World news, local news
and news that just makes you say, what the Here's Corbyn, Gimbi and
(18:11):
Lindsay with what's going on news quakiesfrom the Big Man the Morning showing nineties
on the FIBE. Wanted criminal pretendsto be deaf and mute for twenty years
to avoid prison. This happened inChina. On the evening of May twenty
second, two thousand and four.A young and quick tempered man named Choo
got into a heated argument with aneighbor in his home village. At one
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point, Chow allegedly picked up ashovel. Why didn't you read all that?
I'm wait now, I want youto try in his home village of
a meal Dang And where was thatlocated? In Chiang's chiang Chang district.
Not bad, not bad, soChinese baby, his neighbor, we're in
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this heated argument. He took ashovel and he hit him over the head
with it and he killed him onthe spot, just nailed him that night.
Knowing that he risked spending the restof his life behind bars or worse,
getting the death penalty, Chow decidedto abandon his wife and at the
time his eleven year old child togo on the run. He ran into
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the mountains of Anzai County in theFujin Province, where he became a scavenger
he sold scraps to survive and tomake sure that he never gave anything away
about his past life, he pretendedto be deaf and mute for the next
twenty years. He just smiled atpeople and he communicated through gestures. Time
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passed and police never gave up onfinding Chow and bringing him to justice for
his crime, but he never contactedhis family Over the last couple of decades,
they still managed to track him down. Last month, police and Anzi
took a seemingly deaf and mute scavengerinto custody for getting into a fight with
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some locals, and even though hewas released shortly after, he was still
processed and his photos ended up ina nationwide database. So earlier this month,
while running Chow's old photos against thosein the national database, police got
a match. A deaf and muteman in Fujin Province showed an uncanny resemblance
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to the wanted man, so apolice force was sent to investigate, and
upon finding the suspect, they askedhim point blank are you from Zingchang District
in Zinchang, to which he instantlyreplied yes, and I've been holding back
my words for twenty years and Ifelt that I was going crazy, and
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relieve, Chow told the police.When I left my son, he was
eleven, and now twenty years Ihave passed, and I wonder how my
family is doing. He has beensince taken back to his home village,
and despite being gone for so long, he showed them exactly where he had
the altercation with neighbors on that fatefulevening. So now he's got to serve
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the prison time he'd been running fromfor so long ago. The people who
knew him as a deaf mute scavengerstold police that they had never suspected him
of being a criminal on the run. He kept to himself and never talked
to anyone, so no one reallyknew anything about him. Hey, he
fooled him really good. Has somebodytext in? Should have just asked the
(21:34):
d Yeah right, you're right,no, kidd, because he could have.
He might get out in twenty years, right yeah yeah. Engineer uses
AI model for child porn. Thiscomes out of Wisconsin, where there's a
software engineer. He's forty two.His name's Stephen anderreg Now, apparently Steven
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had used the stable defuse us GenerativeAI model to make illicit images which showed
miners lisciviously displaying or touching their genitals. Wow, yeah, this all comes
to lie because he's having a conversationwith fifteen year old boy on Instagram.
Now that's a whole separate problem.But yeah, yeah, So apparently this
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guy here would use this AI modelto obviously create fake pictures of young prepubescent
boys wearing bondage clothing. And whatelse did it say? It says here
in instant messages that he discussed hisdesire to have sex with pre pubescent boys
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and said that he had a wifeand kids. In those instant messages as
well, it says here that heexplained that he doesn't publicly post fully nude
images of miners on Instagram because that'sthe legal Yeah, but it says during
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an online discussion with the fifteen yearold boy, old Stevie here allegedly asked
the child if he wanted any quotecustomized images, and then sent that fifteen
year old boy three images depicting prebebscentboys graphically displaying their erect penises, all
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created by AI. And you wouldthink that there's like, there would be
software prompts that will prevent that fromhappening, because are you sure right?
Apparently he used specific prompts to skirtaround all that and was able to create
the images and distribute them. Itsays here that if he is convicted of
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his charges, which are producing anddistributing, I've seen visual depictions of miners,
he is looking at a man toworry a minimum of five years and
that is so insane. It's onlyfive years, That's what I was thinking.
It should be a lot longer.And I don't know why there isn't
legislation passed at the state level thatif you use AI for a crime,
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it's an additional like a double penalty. Absolutely should be, should be.
I'm telling you, man, AIis good. It's going to ruin the
world. Man. If it's notjobs, it's people creating dirty, dirty
pictures of kids. I read anarticle this morning about how a scammers use
AI to write better phishing emails.Some will, even if they can find
(24:41):
a picture of you online, canuse AI to simulate a picture and put
it on their heads, and thenthey print it out and use it for
face ID so body of mine.He was very proud that he used AI
for the very first time to writecode for an app or whatever. He
said he was having issues with it, and he used AI until they exactly
what he wanted, and the AIwrote the code for him in a matter
(25:03):
of minutes, as to which Iresponded, why are they not using this
for a cure for cancer or AIDSor something to that effect. You know,
if AI one is so intelligent andit can do all this great stuff,
it should be able to be like, yeah, here's a cure for
cancer. Rate now No, Ithink that that's a good question. I
(25:25):
think I also was thinking when yousaid all that you used a phrase and
maybe he didn't. It's just whatyou used, but you said he stated
he wrote the code right right.He didn't the he was working on it,
but was stumped and asked, AIsaid this is what I'm looking for,
this is what I want. Makeit happen. So then is he
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did he write it? I guesshe didn't. A I wrote it all
for him, But he's taking credit. No, he's He told me straight
up that AI wrote the code forhim and wrote, you know, the
app for him. And that's whyI feel like they're not using AI to
cure cancer because they don't want togive the AI they want. I would
want the people, the creators inthe field of a I would want that.
(26:06):
So why they don't need the scientiststo do that. They can just
do it themselves. But there's nomoney in that. In the cure,
right, it's all about there absolutelyis money in the cure. There's absolutely
money in the cure because you wouldneed to what buy the cure of course,
of course, but you get moremoney out of treatments than you would
(26:27):
a cure. I see what Lindsay'ssaying. I think AI could have a
lot of really good in the world, but unfortunately there's so many bad players
in the world that it's you justshut it down. Flyer booted in dispute
over exit road duties, An airlinepassenger seated next to an emergency exit was
(26:48):
led off a plane in handcuffs afterreportedly saying quote she wasn't gonna save anybody.
A TikTok user recorded the footage ofthe Frontier Airlines of Course passenger arguing
with flight attendants and passengers as theplane sat grounded in North Carolina on May
ninth. According to the TikTok user, their woman didn't seem to understand that
(27:12):
passenger seated in the exit row neededto verbally agree to assist in operating the
exit door in case of the emergency. Though the woman claimed she'd verbally assented,
she was overheard saying she would prioritizeher own safety. Per the New
York Post, when she first goton the plane and acknowledged the exit row,
she said, Oh, I'm notgonna save anybody if something happens,
(27:34):
I'm gonna save myself. Then shehad an attitude with giving the verbal yes
because she thought shaking her head wassufficient and didn't realize or didn't want to
realize why she had to give averbal yes. The woman was seen arguing
with flight attendants before she was askedto get off the plane, saying,
what's the problem. We understand,we got to help people to get off
(27:56):
the plane. At one point,the woman told the flight attendant get out
of my damn face. Later,a pilot tried reasoning with her. Other
passengers also urge her to just getoff the plane, but she refused,
claiming she was calling her lawyer.Here we are again with calling the lawyer
thing. I don't I don't know. Let's go ahead and just do this.
(28:17):
When you say you are gonna callyour lawyer. They won't talk to
your lawyer. You're still gonna beapprehended. You're still gonna have to sit
in a cell. You're still gonnahave to wait. Yeah. Yeah,
it is a slow churn. Itbrings everything to it, and I'm not
saying don't do it, but itdoes. It is not an instant remedy
either. No, you're not gonnalike, they're not gonna let you off
(28:40):
the hook because you called your lawyer. No, the lawyers, I put
them on the phone. Right.So she refused to get a plane,
claiming call her lawyer. She saidshe was on her way to pick up
her four year old grandson. Hismama took a flight to Mexico, and
I'm not getting off this plane,she said. Per the newspaper, we
all agreed. Everybody can witness thatall passengers ultimately had to disembark before police
(29:03):
officers removed the woman in handcuffs.It's unclear she's going to face charges,
and Frontier had no comment. Wow, if it's so important for you to
get to your grandson, comply exactly, or say I'm not comfortable sitting in
this seat. Oh no, shewas She just said she wasn't gonna help
anybody exactly, and she wouldn't givea verbal yes. She thought just shaking
(29:25):
her head was enough. Right.So then as a frontier like ma'am,
then you're gonna have to switch seats. I'm not switching seat. I paid
for this. Yeah, and you'reeither getting up or getting one. I
don't know if that's where you're notcatching up. That's what happened. She
wasn't getting up, and it ultimatelyhad required everybody to get off the plane
(29:47):
so they could arrest her. Yeah. And all those people that are missing
connections and missing their grandson pickups haveno recourse, right none. Oh man,
Uh well, I'm gonna call mylit lawyer, call him, tell
him we said hi. All right. All these stories are on our Facebook
page at facebook dot com. SlashBMMS six nine which el says morning show,
(30:21):
Good morning, It's the Big MadMorning Show nine one eight four six
oh kmot can also text bmms andthen what you want to say to eight
two nine four five. See whatLindsay has for Balls to the Wall sports.
(30:47):
The Boston Celtics barely won the gameagainst the Indiana Pacers last night.
One thirty three to one twenty eightin overtime in Game one of the Eastern
Conference Finals at TD Garden, JasonTatum led the charge with thirty six points
and twelve rebounds to help the Celticstake a one to zero series lead.
Jalen Brown hit a game tying threeat the end of the fourth quarter to
(31:11):
send the game to overtime and finishwith twenty six points. The two teams
will return to the hardwood for Gametwo tomorrow night in Boston. The Western
Conference Finals begin tonight with the MinnesotaTimberwolves playing host to the Dallas Mavericks at
the Target Center. Tip Off isat seven thirty on TNT and True TV.
Minnesota is the favorite to win theseries. Aaron Rodgers is gearing up
(31:36):
for a big season. The Jetsstarting quarterbacks said following Tuesday's Ota practice that
if the team doesn't have success thisyear, everyone will likely be out of
a job. Gain Green has goneeighteen and thirty three under the leadership of
head coach Robert Sala and general managerJoe Douglas and have not made the playoffs
in thirteen years. The forty yearold signal caller also noted that if he
(32:00):
doesn't perform, then they will probablymove on from him. Rogers is returning
from a season ending achilles tear hesuffered during last year's opener. The idea
that they are like publicly saying they'llmove on from him, I think is
wild. Yeah, yeah, Imean he already knows he's he's gonna have
(32:21):
pressure. M h. You're notputting like is that a way to motivate
him? Maybe? So maybe it'sAaron Rodgers like, you're not gonna like,
hey, I'm hearing Aaron Rodgers isgonna half asset. Well, let's
tell him we'll cut him loose,right, because the Panthers would love to
have him. Any team would loveto have him, for sure. Just
(32:42):
don't hurt your special Panthers. Alot of teams would love to have him.
So it's a wild take to belike, if he doesn't perform,
we'll just have to move on.Are you stating the obvious or are you
motivating? I don't think anyone wouldbe happy to have him. I don't
think you just don't like him soand you can't see pass. I'm I'm
not a huge Aaron Rodgers fan.It's true, but I don't think he's
(33:05):
better than then half of them outthere. Oh my god, Look he
was hurt, he didn't play atall last season. He doesn't make him
a bad quarterback. We'll see howhe does, but I don't. I
don't know that he will. He'snot going to be what he used to
do. It is a wild taketo say he's half the quarterback field is
(33:28):
better than Aaron Rodgers. That's awild take. That's like out of nowhere.
He's he's forty years old. Idon't think he's got what he did
three years ago for sure. Likehe's he's just not what he used to
be. Obviously, not last season, but the season before he was an
MVP candidate. Lindsay, Yeah,did he win the MVP. Nobody was
(33:51):
a candidate, which means he was. He was good enough too. And
so you went from good enough tooto not half the field being better than
him. Yeah, I just Idon't he's he's not the guy. The
Jets' odds of winning the Super Bowlplus twenty four hundred, which is not
awesome. For comparison, the Chiefsare plus five hundred. The forty nine
Ers are plus five hundred. Soyeah, and he says. Aaron Rodgers
(34:15):
says he chose playing football over runningfor vice president. Talking to reporters on
Tuesday, he said he had twooptions, either continue his career in the
NFL or retire and be the runningmate for third party candidate Robert F.
Kennedy Junior. Rogers said he wantedto keep playing football. He added he
(34:36):
loves Kennedy Junior and they had acouple of really nice conversations. I think
that's another reason why people would passon him, because they don't want his
politics and his interviews. They don'twant that. They don't want that on
their team either. Anyway, that'syour balls to the wall sports. I'm
(34:58):
Lindsay in ninety seven to five KMOD. Good morning, It's the Big Mad
Morning Show. Nine one, eightfour six Oh KMOD. You can also
text BMMS and then what you wantto say to eight two nine four five
(35:22):
Good morning, Lindsay, Good morningCorbyn. We want to put a grand
in your hand at nine o'clock thismorning when you rock the bank, your
chance at one thousand dollars to spendhowever you want. When you hear the
nationwide keyword, enter it online atkmod dot com. You will have eight
more chances throughout the day to winyourself one thousand dollars. Good luck,
(35:46):
Good morning, Gimpie, Oh goodmorning. If you're a veteran, we
would like to hook you up atthe case of shiner Bach and dinner for
two at Mondo's Italian Restaurant and theHeart of Brookside simply for sharing the story
of your service. You can signup with the website that rocks kmod dot
com. Lenzen Lensen Lensen Lensen,l A n D sc Y Lindsey Lindsey
(36:10):
Lindsey U n D Sdy Lynsey.Where all right, I don't know if
you guys have been watching I knowGimpi doesn't have Netflix, but they are
killing it lately with their documentaries theirquick uh quick episodes and Baby Reindeer was
(36:37):
really good. And now that's notdocumentary, no, but based on a
true story and it's quick, uhlike seven episodes that flew by from me.
But now it's been topped by thenew docuseries Ashley Madison Sex Lies and
Scandal three quick episodes and basically itgoes through what the website is, how
(37:04):
it was established, and how itwas taken down and Ashley Madison. For
those that don't know, is it'sbasically a website that allows you to have
an affair. Their tagline is lifeis Short, Have an Affair. My
understanding, because I've not seen thisdocumentary, my understanding of Ashley Madison was
(37:25):
that they churched people into thinking menand women were both on the site,
and so a bunch of men signedup, they get hacked, don't address
it or deal with it, andall these names get released. That's pretty
much how I understand the arc ofAshley Madison pretty much. When they started
(37:49):
it, the founder of it,Noel Biederman. He was a lawyer at
first, and he took on AshleyMaddison and wanted to make it huge,
and they came up with Ashley Madisonbecause at the time Ashley and Madison were
the two most popular girls' names inthe country, and so they named it
(38:13):
Ashley Madison. And they could notadvertise it anywhere, like no network television
would place advertisements right exactly. Sowhat he would do when he was the
CEO, him and his wife wouldgo on to talk shows and talk about
it, and they would defend itand they would say, listen, people
(38:35):
that don't want to leave their marriagesbecause they're happy in their marriages. They're
happily married, but their sex livesare boring. We encourage them to have
an affair. They meet someone online, they wil yeah, I know exactly,
and they're saying how infidelity can actuallysave your marriage. And he loved
(38:57):
arguing it. And actually, bythe time that he ended up with these
interviews and stuff, Ashley Madison hadthirty five million subscribers in twenty fifteen.
So he did it right. Maybesure, thirty five million. Who thirty
five million men? Only thirty fivelegitimate users. It was mostly men.
(39:21):
Now, he did say he wouldtell people like, oh, no,
we have just as many women,when in fact they were using the company
knew that they had more men thanwomen. And what you find out in
this docuseries that they did use botsand yes, so they were tricking men
(39:43):
into believing that they were getting ahold of from women. Don't all those
sites do that use bots anything fromTenderhinge, Bumble, even Facebook Dating Match,
all of them, you know,just to plenty of fish just to
keep the click in and keep youon there. My understanding is that any
(40:04):
dating side I I don't know aboutlike Facebook or whatever. But any social
media social dating site does mess aroundwith the membership to keep you interested in
revisiting the app. There's data pointsof subscribers, there's data points on how
often those subscribers visit the app.There's data points on how often subscribers go
(40:25):
through profiles, there's data points onhow often they message, and they use
all those data points to try andincrease the numbers. How do we increase
Well, what if we had abot create a profile of female to interact
with the mail. It would makethe mail increase the amount of time they're
involved in the app. Yeah,so do you see what I'm saying?
(40:45):
It is much more than just membersAnd they didn't have like a monthly script
subscription fee. You sign up forAshley Madison and then every time you interact
with someone, that's how you pay. So you pay to play is basically
what they called it. And theylied about how secure their website actually was.
Everyone does yes, yes, soyou didn't have to They say,
(41:07):
you don't have to worry about yourpersonal information getting leaked. But as it
turned out, I mean, peoplewere using their real names, their credit
card information, their sexual desires.They promised their users that would protect and
wipe out their data for a price. However, they didn't even delete any
(41:28):
of their information despite people paying forthat type of protection. And according to
former employees, security was an earlyconcern at the company. They were growing
rapidly, but they had no ideaof the security measures that they had put
in place could prevent the site frombeing hacked. Top executives at Ashley Madison
(41:51):
were more concerned about growing the companythan if the sensitive information the members put
on the site was actually protected.What do use it? What? What
makes you think this is exclusive toAshley Madison. Yeah, it's definitely not
that stamy you just made about.They're more concerned with profit than the security
of information. That's every company heal. AT and T just had a major
(42:15):
data breach. Yep, And theycan say all they want that they care.
But if AT and T, whohas the money, resources and talent,
doesn't put enough effort into it,why would Ashley Madison, Truth or
any comparable low tier technology site.Right, as long as they're garnering customers
(42:37):
or users and those users are usingthe app or whatever service, Yeah,
that's it. That's all they need. Yeah. And then in twenty fifteen,
the site was hacked and it wascaused by a group called the Impact
Team. They demanded that the company. They weren't asking for money. They
(42:59):
just want the website to be shutdown. That's all they wanted. And
they said, if it's not that, they were going to put out the
list of people who are on thewebsite and using it. Yeah, I
remember that, yes, So theywere given thirty days to shut down the
website, and Ashley Madison the companysaid no, Actually it was Noel Biederman,
(43:23):
the CEO. He wanted the companyto go more public, so they
were like, no, I wantto keep this data breach a secret.
So they hired a team of hackerinvestigators to find out who the Impact Team
was, and they were going totry to bust them, right, because
(43:44):
they didn't know who it was thatthey didn't think it was just some Russian
group or something, right, Andthen seven days into the hack, the
media found out about the data breach, and the news caused a panic because
more than thirty five million people wereabout to have their private information made public.
(44:05):
So thirty days were given. Thirtydays past and the Impact Team released
all of the data on the darkweb just as they had promised. So
who exactly was on the list?Well, Sam and Nia Radar, they
are in the docuseries. They're afamous Christian YouTube vlogging couple. Their lives
(44:30):
were destroyed, they say, bythe data breach. He was a client
on Ashley Madison at first when hefound out that his name was on there,
because he said, I filled outall the information, like I was
enrolling in a credit card, Iput in my real name, everything,
(44:51):
my everything, And when he noticedthat his name had been leaked, he
told his wife about it, buthe did not say that he had had
any affairs. He just said thathe had signed up. That was it,
end up story, and she forgavehim initially wow. Yeah. But
then he got a phone call fromhis brother and he said, you need
to be really honest with your wifebefore this gets even more blown up.
(45:15):
And so he did, and heended up having like affairs in Vegas.
He had slept with like multiple,multiple affairs, even with some of their
friends, and so they had separatedfor a while and she eventually did take
him back. The thing that's crazyabout that is that's not an Ashley Madison
(45:35):
thing, right, That's where itstarted, though, if you have a
Yeah, but if you have affairswith friends, right, that's a that
is not an Ashley Ashley Madison didn'tstart that. Yeah, they were.
They were if you are if youhave a problem eating, it isn't the
plates right, right, you justfind the food for sure. Josh Dugger
(46:00):
was on the list. I wouldargue he's the famous most famous person on
the list. Hunter Biden was onthe He was the son of a vice
president. Sure. Yeah, uh, former Louisiana gop Jason Dorr, Jeff
Ashton for former Florida State attorney.Yeah, lots of hants. Snooky's husband,
(46:22):
Giovanni he was on there. Ohno, that's what I'm saying,
Like, I think Dugar is likethe most famous person on the list.
Maybe Hunter right. A New Orleanspastor and seminary professor. His name was
John Gibson. He was a memberto Ashley Madison. Now he was confronted
by his church leaders. He didnot deny it. He actually offered his
(46:45):
resignation right away. And his wifewas in the document documentary huh. She
told the story of coming home fromwork and she found her husband in the
garage that day and he had killedhimself carbon monoxide poisoning, and she it
(47:05):
was crazy because she didn't resent him. She was not upset. She was
he's dead. Yeah, he's deadexactly, I know. Yeah. And
then there was another breach. Therewas another leak of information where they leaked
Noel Biederman's personal emails. The guywho found the comment the the CEO of
(47:32):
Ashley Madison. And this guy endedup being a real sicko who claimed that
monogamy was part of him and hiswife's life. Like, he did not
ever cheat, but he was intoeighteen and nineteen year old girls according to
(47:52):
his email. Why is that ashot with them? Oh yeah it's not.
But he would preach about how it'snot for him, but if you
are in a bad marriage, trycheating it could save it. That's like
going, hey, cocaine, realgood, here you go. No,
I don't do drugs. Yeah,he didn't necessarily use Ashley Madison, but
he did use outside escort service.Yeah, he doesn't need to use Ashley
(48:15):
Madison, right, right, Buthim having a profile wouldn't be a big
surprise either. No, especially ifit's his company. Why wouldn't he any
This company makes us have profiles forthe iHeart app right right, sucks got
one? Remember Tom from MySpace?Yeah yeah, you know, yeah,
you use your own equipment. Ithelps boost the numbers. Yeah. And
to this day, no one knowswhoever was behind the Ashley Madison data breach,
(48:39):
the Impact team. And by theway, that's a pr thing to
call it the Impact team. Right, And despite the devastating effects that it
had on the company, it's stillup and running. Oh yeah, Noel
Biederman, he he left the company. He lives in Canada and runs.
(49:01):
He's the CEO of some other weirdyes, yes, it's ran now under
the Ruby company. And according tothe new ceo, Ashley Madison, reveals
that the number one hot spot forinfidelity now the biggest city is Columbus,
(49:25):
Ohio, followed by Miami, Florida, and Orlando, then Vegas, Atlanta.
Those are all the top five UScities for non monogamy. And let's
see here, I don't know aboutall that. Kind of shocked by Columbus,
Ohio. I'm not shocked by Miami, Orlando, Atlanta, but Columbia,
(49:49):
Vegas. Yeah, But when acompany puts out research that props up
their company, it's questionable because Orlando. Well, how many people go there
on vacation? Truth, right?Or how many? What do you think
the number one? This would bea fun thing to correlate that list with
the number one convention locations in AmericaVegas, Miami or Dando. Definitely,
(50:19):
maybe Columbus. But then you couldput a Columbus in there to validate the
data and make the average joes gooh right, because everybody expects all those
other cities. Yes, definitely,And if it was if the response was
Escatapa, Mississippi, right right?Or New York City or Los Angeles,
(50:39):
you go eh, yeah, ofcourse. Yeah. Boise, Idaho is
nineteenth on the list. Nineteenth,I know, right, Tucson, Arizona
sixteenth. Yeah. It's interesting thoughbecause now this they have over seventy five
million allegedly. Yes, any datanumber from a subscription site should be questionable
(51:06):
because how are they telling you?They should also have to tell you how
many they lost in the last year. How many unsubscribes? Are these actual
members? Are these people that signup for the free membership? Right?
Because you can also sign up tolook in any membership to just kind of
look around and how many are bots? But that's what I'm saying, legitimating
(51:27):
them, Yes exactly. They're ofcourse still using them, which is ridiculous.
And they say that anytime that theygot negative publicity there their memberships rose.
Of course after airing on Netflix,their subscriptions skyrocket, of course,
because there are people that are justfinding out that this thing exists. Yes,
(51:50):
right, I guess it's just moreproof that even bad publicity is still
good publicity. Ask Subway, Oh, is that it okay? All right?
Linsy Lindsen, Linsen, Linsen,l A n t s Y Lindsey,
Lindsey, Lindsey and the sky Mency. The Big Mad Morning Show returns
(52:24):
next Tulsa's Morning Show ninety seven KMOTGood Morning, It's The Big Mad Morning
Show nine one, eight four six, Oh kmo D can also text BMMS
(52:45):
and then what you want to sayto eight two, nine four five.
Let's play a game because Hardy isgoing to be over at the Walmart Amphitheator
in Rogers tickets available AMP tickets dotcom, and we're gonna play pick the
flip current rect is Well, itlooks like I'm gonna lead in this one
with seven. You have five andLindsay has a four last week's winter whole
(53:07):
bunch of nobody. So everybody's openfor playing today nine one, eight four
to six o kmod party tickets areon the line. Good morning, you're
on the air. What is yourname? That's okay, there's other people
that want to play. Good morning, you're on the air. What is
your name? Ed? What isyour name? Ted? Ted? How
(53:28):
are you today? Good? Areyou good? Ted? Who do you
want to give? Clues? Lindsey, Gimpy or Corbin go? Come on?
Sixty seconds are on the clock.Timer starts after the first clue,
Ted, are you ready? Yeah? We go Ted. This is a
movie about a British kid who livedunder the stairs and learned magic and an
(53:49):
aug Yes. Uh, this isa rocky movie. It's a recent one
about Apollo's kid. This is amovie where they go to vay Vegas and
you get a real drunk and youhave this effect the next day hangover.
Yes. This is a comic bookmovie about a group of superheroes. Not
(54:12):
three, No, not three,but Fantastic four. There you go.
This is a pass Uh. Okay, don't know this movie. But this
is where you go to swim andit's got sand on it. Yes,
this is a Stephen King movie aftera book where she kidnaps an author and
(54:36):
then smashes his legs with a sledgehary. Yes, this is the Cape
Crusader and his gay little sidekickman aRobin. Uh. A movie of time.
Seven is what we got? Mightbe good enough? Ted, Hang
on the line. Okay, okay, good morning. You're on the air.
(54:59):
What is your name, Chris?Chris? How are you today?
I'm doing all right, Chris.Who do you want to give? Clues?
Lindsey or Corbyn? Oh, let'sgo Corbyn, Chris. Sixty seconds
are on the clock. Timer startsafter the first clue. Are you ready?
Yeah? Here we go. Uh. If you were gonna put up
(55:21):
a poster because somebody committed a crime, would be what type of posters?
Correct? Double pointer? This hasuh? This movie has got Kevin Hart.
That takes play Emily Blunt. Ittakes place in Michigan and the University
of Michigan. Kevin Hart is init. I said, and it is
an amount of time that you aresoon to be married engaged? Correct?
(55:51):
And a number bigger than four fiveand not months? But I have no
clue follow me days, months,years, number bigger than four five years
correct, and when you're waiting toget married engagement five year engagement correct.
(56:16):
Uh, this is the every timea bell rings an angel gets its wings
black and white movie. Uhr onthirty fourth Street. No, no time,
not good enough, brother, wedid not get it done, man,
Thanks you playing man? All right, Chris, all right, brother,
(56:37):
you one man. You're gonna gosee Hardy at the Walmart Amphitheater in
Rogers, Arkansas. Handline man,so we can get your infoky geez and
Okay, this is the one thatgives me passed on. Yeah, this
movie has been remade many many times. You'd have to get him to say
(56:59):
the name of the movie. Idon't. I can't believe this isn't a
double pointer. Actually, if ahouse at Halloween is known as what yeah,
haunted? Yes, and this isa movie that does it aunt.
(57:22):
I don't know anything about that movie, nor do I I know it's a
take off The Haunting of Hill House. It was an older movie, but
I couldn't tell you an actor timeframe. Yeah, looking at the Haunting.
Lo's in it, Liam Neeson,O Wilson, have from Zada Jones,
(57:44):
Lily Taylor. Yeah, I've neverseen before, okay, and then
Lindsay I ended on, yeah,this is the Christmas movie where they show
the guy how things would be ifhe was never alive. It's black and
white, and uh yeah, Ithink you The most memorable quote is there
(58:04):
every time about rings and angel getsit's wings. But if you don't know
it, if you've never seen thisold ass movie before, then you're out
of luck. So with that beingsaid, I'm Louis Armstrong sang a song
about you know, blank world.It's a world, right, you can't
say it's yeah, yeah, yeah, all right. The record now,
(58:27):
well that moves me up to eight, keeps you at five, keeps Lindsay
dead last with four. If you'relistening to The Big Man Morning Show,
this is good morning. It's TheBig Man Morning Show. Nine one,
eight, four six, Oh Km O D. Can also text b
(58:52):
mms and then what you want tosay to A two nine four five see
what Gimpie has in his four forhell. Corman says here the Trump campaign
is preparing to sue The Apprentice filmmakers. DT's campaign is threatened too, soom
filmmakers of an upcoming biopic about theformer president The Apprentice is based on Trump's
(59:15):
real estate career in the eighties andincludes a scene showing him sexually assaulting his
then wife, Avonna. A Trumpspokesperson called the film garbage and pure fiction
and sensationalizes lies that have long beendebunked, and premiered at the Cans Film
Festival this week, where it earneda nearly eight minutes standing ovation. The
(59:38):
Apprentice is currently without a US distributoror release dates. Who's shocked that a
film festival had a standing ovation fora against him? Right says here that
a driver strikes a bear and thentakes its pause. Oh, California wild
album, Right, I'm looking forthe man who stole my paw? You
(01:00:02):
know you know, Paulus Bear agreat legend. California wildlife officials say a
black bear had its paw stolen afterbeing hit and killed by a car.
Now. According to the California Departmentof Fishing Wildlife, a driver struck the
bear over the weekend, and beforeauthority showed up to remove the dead bear
(01:00:23):
from the road, its paws werecut off. But he wanted a souvenir.
The bear was hit on Sunday,and maybe he wanted some gloves.
Hey, it's his right to beararms. Oh damn. It says here
that the bear was it on Saturdayand the Placer County community off Forest Hill.
(01:00:45):
Investigators did not speculate why someone wouldwant the bear paw. Pause.
Sometimes they get two bear claws juststuck right, dude. They're so good
though, with the cinnamon and theOh gosh, dunkin, don't. I
would steal them too, if they'rethat delicious, right, eating bear claws
(01:01:06):
with bear claws, that's terrible.Moving on, fish oil is linked to
problems and healthy people, So ifyou're a fish oil taker, this one's
for you. Healthy people who usefish oil supplements might be at higher risk
for heart disease and stroke. Thatmay seem counterintuitive, as fish oil is
(01:01:27):
often recommended to help people with highblood pressure and rheumatoid arthritis, but a
new study published this week in thejournal b MJ Medicine found that those with
no cardiovascular issues that took fish oilsaw higher risk of arterial art real fib
yeah, strokes and heart problems.Yeah. Sure. Basically take fish oil
(01:01:50):
in once in a while. Ido when it's convenient. Remember, I
mean, you take supplements and vitethem. That's right. Moving forward here.
The lastly, Tulsa Parks announced openingdates of pools and water playgrounds for
the twenty twenty four swim season.Starting May twenty fourth, water playgrounds and
splash pads will be opened daily fromten am to eight pm. Tulsa Park
(01:02:14):
pools will be open on June first, and all pools will have free admission
on June first from ten a tosix p. Lacypool, Reed Pool,
Whatside Pool, and Mcclurepool will beopen all this summer. So Lindsay has
for balls to the Wall sports.The forty nine ers do not have one
(01:02:45):
of their premier playmakers at practice thisweek. San Francisco wide receiver Brandon Ayuk
is sitting out the voluntary portion ofthe off season program as he awaits a
lucrative contract extension. Ayuk was notpresent as the Niners kicked off organized team
activities on Tuesday. The twenty sixyear old is entering the final year of
(01:03:06):
his rookie contract and is set tocount fourteen point one two four million dollars
against the salary cap. In twentytwenty four, he totaled seventy five receptions
for one thousand, three hundred fortytwo yards and seven touchdowns last season.
He's quoted as saying pay me.Yeah, he knows what he's worth and
(01:03:28):
he's holding out and hopefully it worksout because he's a badass and I don't
want to lose him. The Packersstar quarterback is at OTA's Despite his contract
status being up in the air,Jordan Love is attending all off season workouts,
even though he is slated to earnjust eleven million dollars this year.
He told the media yesterday that hedoesn't know yet if he'll play out the
(01:03:51):
year on his current deal. TheUtah State product is heading into his second
season as the starter in Green Bayand the lit up defenses from more than
forty one hundred yards to go withthirty five touchdowns and eleven picks last year.
I think that when that says,like, oh, only eleven million,
Yeah, he's got a rookie deal. Yeah, and he's given no
(01:04:13):
reason to renegotiate his deal, right, I mean he's good. Yeah,
But is he better than Aaron Rodgers? No? He is not. He
is. He is. He isthe person who was allegedly injured in a
Dallas night club assault where Kansas Citychiefs Wide Receiver Rashi Rice is said to
be a suspect, has reportedly askedfor no charges to be filed. Yeah,
(01:04:38):
this story is really interesting. Ina statement from police, the reporting
party has signed an affidavit of nonprosecution. Even with that, however,
police confirm that an investigation into thematter will continue. Though Rice has been
reported to be a suspect, nocharges have been filed related to the May
sixth incident. The story is isthat there's no evidence that this happened,
(01:05:01):
despite cameras being at the facility.Yeah, no evidence at all. Huh.
And now the person claiming it issaying that, well, I don't
want him to get prosecuted. Sothat means the only person that's spurned that
spawned this is the in this case, the photographer or whatever. What.
(01:05:24):
That's weird. It's not uncommon whenbad actors, right, let me phrase
it. It's not uncommon when somebodygets in trouble that other people try to
get them in more trouble. Okay, right, because it's an easy target.
Sure, it's easy for me tobe believable. Think about the duration
of time that went from when thepolice charged her, she Rice and the
(01:05:45):
lawsuits happened pretty fast, right,this happened what four weeks ago? Three
weeks ago? This guy hasn't fileda lawsuit against him. Oh, he's
trying to get a pay day man. No, he hasn't. He would
file it right away. You gotto get in line for your money,
(01:06:06):
right crazy, that's your balls tothe wall sports. I'm Lindsay at ninety
seven to five km o D.Good morning, It's the big Man Morning
(01:06:32):
Show nine eight four six, OKMOD. You can also text BMMS and then
what you want to say to eighttwo nine four five, Good morning,
Lindsay, Good morning Corbyn. Rockklahomais happening Labor Day weekend August thirtieth through
September First. It's an all agesshow, So do toddlers need a ticket?
(01:06:54):
Find out everything you need to knowand if toddlers need a ticket,
can we bring stroller? Find outwhat you can bring and what you can't
bring. Everything at the website thatRocks Lahoma kmod dot com and we've got
links to rock Lahoma's website as well. It is the loudest weekend of the
(01:07:15):
year. You do not want tomiss it. Kmod dot com for all
of the information and of course thelineup as well. Good morning Gimbe well,
good morning Corbyn. While you're therelooking at the Rock Oklahoma lineup and
seeing if you can bring strollers intothe festival grounds, you could sign up
to win free stuff at the websiteat the Rockscambody dot com right there on
(01:07:36):
a contest page, anything from corntickets, Ice nine kills or even Coheaton
Cambria when they played the Hard Rockin September. All right, listener emails,
you can always email us show atkmody dot com. We read an
email on the air and then youguys help give advice. A couple of
ways to do that texting bmmss andthen what you want to say to the
phone number eight two nine four five. It seems to be the most popular
(01:07:58):
way. You can also call itnine one eight four sixmod. This email
says I met this girl at aconcert here in town. Excuse me.
We went to a bar after withher friends and come to find out she
doesn't live here. She lives inNorth Carolina. She was here visiting friends.
It just happened to be at theshow. Since then, we've talked
(01:08:18):
a lot and I'm planning on drivingto see her over Memorial Day weekend.
My buddies think I'm crazy to driveseventeen hours to see any girl, and
that there's no way it'll work out. Is it worth it for me to
drive to see her? Seventeen hoursis a long drive? Also? Vagina?
(01:08:43):
Right, vagina? So yes,But when you subtract vagina, it's
really like two hours. Sure.When I was in college, I met
a girl at my school and shewas visiting a friend not from there,
(01:09:03):
and she lived in Duluth, Minnesota, Okay, And I went to school
in Maryville, Missouri. I liveMy parents lived in Cedar Falls Island,
so six hours south of Cedar Fallsis where I went to college. For
those geographically troubled, Duluth is northof Cedar Falls. And this was before
(01:09:27):
map quest and all that. Youused a thing called an atlas. Right,
it was an actual rather large bookof maps that had all the states
in it. If you were goingto drive, so you drove a lot.
And so I looked at and itdidn't tell you how long it took
to get anywhere. Right, youstid to highlight. Use a highlighter to
(01:09:49):
highlight your route, which highways aregoing to be taken and some guessing a
little math right, And so Ilooked at it, and when it's only
a few hour, like three hoursfrom Cedar Falls, it's not. It's
near seven. So here you areon a thirteen hour and embarkment to go
(01:10:12):
meet up with this. Well.I'd gone home for whatever for the summer,
and then was or whatever was goingon, and then was like,
oh, just jaunt up there.That's not the fartst like going to Oklahoma
City. No, it is not. And I remember being four hours in
because I didn't bring the atlas becausemy parents didn't know where I was going,
(01:10:33):
and I can't take the family's mapatlas, and so I was just
driving and it took forever to getthere. And to this day, I
don't remember this person's name. Ifthey came up and kicked me square in
the nuts, I wouldn't remember them. Do you remember the moments that you
(01:10:56):
have though? I mean, didyou get some while he was up there?
I remember two things. I butwe went to do stuff and went
shopping, and Alice in Chains hadthat CD with the neon green case.
I bought that's nice. And Iremember she stayed in this house like with
(01:11:18):
a I don't know if it washer mom or grandma or whatever, but
and I remember being in her roomand she went to school and her mom
or whoever this older woman was cominginto the room, I guess to clean
it up, pick it up.I don't know. It was quite shocked
that I was there. Who wereyou? Where's my daughter? So those
(01:11:39):
are the two pivotal moments that stickout in my mind. So I've been
in this situation, not seventeen hoursa third of what you will be doing,
but driving to go see girls asa long storied tradition in the chase,
(01:12:00):
H do just about anything for alipum tang. Have you ever had
a boy travel to see you along distance? Lindsay, Uh, yes,
The longest distance was six hours,which to me doesn't feel okay that
long. It was when I wasliving in Minnesota and he was in Indiana
(01:12:26):
and we were both he was hewas my high school sweetheart at the time
and I he was going to schooldown south in Indiana and I was going
to school in Minnesota, and wehappened to have broken up, but we
missed each other and it was literallyfor just one last weekend together. Yeah,
(01:12:47):
you mispronounced bang exactly one last bangpretty much gimbi. I have never
driven or had anybody drive a longdistance for me. The most that I've
ever done was I ran eight milesto get some ass, which is a
giant I feel like still in thesame arena. Absolutely might as well have
(01:13:11):
been might as well have been aseventeen hour car ride. This is when
I was just graduated and this girlthat I knew I had a crush on
or whatever, and we were friendsor whatnot. But that didn't you know,
I was still trying, you know, I something was anyway anyway.
Uh So I guess she booty calledme. She's like, hey, I
(01:13:31):
need you, and I'm like,I didn't bet, I'm there. I
didn't have a ride. I wasat a friend's house, lived way out
in the middle of nowhere in AASA, and the person that I was going
to go see lived in town.And I baked my buddy up. I'm
like, bro, give me ride? What why I need to go?
Give me ride? No way,dude, I'm like kidding up. Well,
(01:13:54):
I'm not missing my opportunity because I'vebeen chasing this one for a while.
Now right now, I finally gotthe time I got it on the
line, I'm bringing this into theboat. Oh yeah, oh yeah.
So I take off, I takeoff and it eight miles is no joke.
I was gonna I want to say. It was like maybe midnight or
shortly after midnight when I got thatcall, and I think I got there
(01:14:16):
as the sun was coming up likeit was. It was it was first
light when I come rolling up intothis house. Because a good runner can
do a five k which is threepoint two miles, in like twenty fifteen,
twenty minutes. A pisspoort runner likemyself does in about thirty five.
I walk and run, walk andrun, you know, you get that
(01:14:39):
cramp in your side, you know. And I'm just flipping along on the
on the side of the road orwhatever, trying to make my way.
Needless to say, I made it. Meanwhile, she's moved on to family
and kids since when he got there, right, I made it and things
worked out for me. It wasit was great. And then she lived
like right across the street from myhouse, right where I was living at
(01:15:01):
the time. So I just leftthere and went to my house and crawled
in my own bed, and boy, I just think I slip all day
after that. Yeah, probably havebeen iceer quads. Uh. You hit
something that I think is very interesting. What's the longest distance someone has you
like? You have to reverse it? So, lindsay you traveled to see
(01:15:23):
a boy or gimpie said he ranand no one's rand or whatever runs to
me the only one that I canthink of. I mean, I'm discounting
my marriage because that that worked out, I guess. But I had a
girl fly from LA to see me, and you were located where in Maryville,
(01:15:47):
Missouri? But I didn't know shewas showing up. Uh oh one
of those huh yeah, yeah,lindsay an hour for me to travel some
to see someone like in the sametown like the DMA. No, it
was from from South Dakota to backto Minnesota. I traveled from Sioux Falls
(01:16:14):
to Minneapolis. That was it textcoming in Ah. Yes, what are
the many things all men wish theycould tell their younger self. If it
takes you longer to travel and seethem than it takes you to have sex,
then it just isn't worth it.Ooh, I think it was worth
it, at least in my experienceit was. But what Yeah, I
love this text. I laugh everytime Gimbi tells this story. I picture
(01:16:38):
a young gimpy jinkoed up with chainsrattling and sweaty long hair running down the
side of one sixty nine practically howit was. Make the trip to see
her. One it will work out, or two it will be a good
vacation. It might be a goodvacation. It's definitely adventure and a story
(01:16:59):
that you have to tell. Yeah, and he could maybe if he's not
give advice, if he's been talkingto this girl a long time. I
rode my bike sixty miles to seemy girlfriend just to get broken up with.
I still won't ride a bike.Oh god, we should clarify.
I think they mean bassyckle right,Yeah, get ten speed? Reasonable answer.
(01:17:19):
Seventeen hours each way is not reasonable. Good point because I only thought
it was seventeen there. I didn'tthink round trip. Yeah, but matters
of the heart rarely are romance isn'tdead nuclear answer. You should probably go
for a little post sex clarity beforeyou decide to make this trip. I
(01:17:40):
bet there's a slag in the barnearby that will give it to you.
One no, also no check kmotdot com. For more local shows and
local chicks. Another one, Isay, why not look at it as
a road trip with benefits at theend. Farthest I've traveled, this text
(01:18:01):
says was five hours round trip worthevery bit of the forty seven seconds.
Forty seven man, you bragg herforever? The stamina on this guy?
Huh? Nothing is great sex leftlike after sitting in the same spot for
seventeen hours and then peeling those thingsoff. If you feel a strong connection
(01:18:21):
with her, then nothing is toofar. Are you supposed to grow up
in the same town you were born, settle down with a person from that
town, grow old and die.The perfect person is for you is out
there somewhere, just might not bearound the block. Get out and get
her, bro I mean that isone of the things about if you look
(01:18:45):
at the genetic arc ofahbor of communities, is you typically marry someone within your
community, right, and you don'texplore out so their point is well taken.
Yeah, but typically that's what peopledo, right because they're close.
You want to, you know,see him at any point in time that's
(01:19:05):
not FaceTime. Hey, let's gograb a cup of coffee. You can't
grab a cup of coffee with somebodywho's seventeen hours away, right, I
mean, but what with modern technology. Yeah, you could FaceTime and you
could do video chat and this andthat and the other, but is that
really the same? Another text?I went from Columbia, South Carolina to
Wheeling, West Virginia for a girlin high school. We me and two
(01:19:30):
buddies dated girls in Parkersburg, Iowa. I lived in Cedar Falls, Iowa.
Parkersburg i was about forty minute drive, just a small town, like
maybe four hundred people, right,And we just coincidentally were dating each dating
one of the girls from this town, and so we would make regular road
(01:19:51):
trips out there in my friend AaronBrindle's gray Ford Pamento Pimento Pinto been to
yeah with one light and the dashdidn't work. I get you the number
of times we got pulled over bypolice or got in fights in Parkersburg,
(01:20:12):
Iowa, because it's a small townand we were from the city, and
they didn't like we were dating theirgirls. Camera I think was one of
the girl's names. I don't remember, and I can't say it shaped me
in any way, good or bad. Yeah, Uh, I'm sorry.
(01:20:33):
I just remembered another flash of driving. We weren't supposed to go to Parkersburg,
Iowa. We were supposed to stayin Cedar Falls, Iowa. Well
yeah, but listen, highway patrolcalls and says Corbyn's died in a car
accident where Parkersburg, Iowa. Well, now he wouldn't have gone to Parkersburg.
(01:20:53):
Have a great day. Click uhlistener. Email from someone who says,
I met this girl at a concerthere in town. We went to
the bar and hit it off.Come to find out she doesn't live here.
She lives in North Carolina, andshe was visiting friends and just happened
to be at the show. Sincethen, we've talked and I'm planning on
(01:21:15):
driving to see her over Memorial Day. My buddies think that I am crazy
to drive seventeen hours to see anygirl. And there's no way it will
work out. Is it worth itfor me to drive to see her?
Lindsey so, I mean, Idon't know what's stopping him from taking a
plane says here you can find roundtrip flights for as little as two hundred
(01:21:38):
and fifty bucks. Hey, moneybags, and not everybody's got that.
That is true. That is true, But hey, I mean long distance
relationships can work better than what theyused to with like what Gimpika said with
FaceTime now so and that is ahuge accomplishment. I think if you can
make a long distance relationship work,but you know, if you've been talking
(01:22:01):
to her and you really feel likeyou have a connection with her, then
yeah, it's it's worth And ifyou've got the time and can do it,
you have a three day weekend atgo for it. Why not?
And life is too short, soyou may as well take in the experience,
especially if you've never been to NorthCarolina. Go see the world.
You only live once, you know. When Kevin and I were just dating,
(01:22:25):
I got a job and Tulsa,Oklahoma, and I said, hey,
do you want to move to Tulsa, Oklahoma with me? We were
only dating and he said, whatthe hell is in Oklahoma? I said,
I don't know. I've never beenthere, never been there, and
I just moved here and he said, check it out, and he said,
see if you like it, andin six months, yeah, I'll
come with you. I love youenough. He waited one month and here
(01:22:48):
he was. He came down soldthe house that he had just bought for
us and couldn't He couldn't handle it. So that's that, I feel like,
is a completely different scenario. Onealready had a taste of the medicine
too. You had bought a housetogether. Yeah, that is you're in
a committed relationship. Were definitely,So it feels a little different than I
(01:23:08):
just met somebody. Yeah, butit can work, So I say,
go for it. I mean,if it doesn't bother you to drive seventeen
hours, I mean, it isa long time. That is a long
ass drive. But if it's ifyou think it's gonna be worth it,
then go for it. I said, do it, Kimbi. Unless either
(01:23:29):
one of you plans on moving toone person's location or the other, chances
of this long distance relationship working isvery slim my opinion anyway. But I
am with Lindsey on the hell,yes, take this road trip and go
go. You've got a couple ofextra days, think about the adventure along
the way, you know. Yeah, sure, you've got this big golden
(01:23:51):
star at the end of this journeythere that may or may not pan out.
Come to find out. You know, she could be you know,
take in or just not interested orwhatever. You know, But hey,
if you can get some out ofit, go for it. But at
least you have one hell of anadventure along the way, traveling all those
(01:24:11):
areas, and you've got one hellof a story to tell your friends and
family later on down the road.So I said, go for it and
have fun, and just go fromthere and do a check in when you
get back, let us know whathappened. Sure, I don't think I
disagree with your friends. I don'tthink it's worth it. I don't think
(01:24:36):
you're gonna be like, this isthe person I'm gonna move to South Carolina.
It's gonna be amazing. You couldget there and she have a boyfriend,
or she be in the KKK oris it a knitting group. Or
I'm just saying, like, youdon't know. And I agree with lindsay,
(01:24:56):
like, you can do a lotof video chatting and that does help
relationships. I don't know any guyswho have been like, yeah, we
haven't had sex, but we havehad video sex a bunch of times.
Nothing replaces the actual sex. Withall that being said, absolutely go because
you live once. It's gonna endtomorrow. Man, you don't There is
(01:25:16):
no promise you are going to wakeup in the morning. None, So
you might as well go and experienceit and see what it's like. So
you can have a crazy story thatwhen you tell it on the air,
your wife will then text you andgo, what is he talking about?
Right now? Right? So Isay live your best life things. Life
(01:25:39):
comes at you fast. Man.One minute you're doing fine, the next
you know they're taking out your pancreas. You don't know what's gonna happen,
so go after it. If youjust know you it may go south pretty
fast. You could have car problems. You could have car problems, your
car break down in the middle ofyou know, Tennessee or northern Alabama,
(01:26:04):
and then you find someone there.Ever seen Doc Hollywood? Yeah? Right,
So you never know what's gonna happen, but you have to be up
for the adventure and knowing that theadventure is the payoff, not the end.
Because she could be bad at sex. Not a popular thing to say
on the radio, but she couldhave a stinky vagina that you traveled seventeen
(01:26:30):
hours to find out. Yeah,yeah, but that's part of the story.
Doesn't believe in shaving, yeah,or showering. I drove seventeen hours
to meet up with a stinky hippieor she's really close to her brother.
I'm just saying, you don't know, and you're gonna go and commit to
being around that person. Twenty fourto seven. Just go experience it,
(01:26:55):
but just understand it could go southa real fast, because life comes at
you fast, man. But yeah, absolutely go. If you think she's
hot and you think she's cool,go for it. Just no, it
may not work out, really,and I'm round that point. I just
think it's people go in with thisexpectation of it's going to be awesome,
(01:27:16):
and that's the wrong focus. Thefocus has to be the adventure part,
not the in the forty forty sevenseconds as you peel off your seventeen hour
underwear, because you know you're bangingright when you get there, right,
(01:27:38):
all right? You can always emailus show at kmod dot com. Tulsa's
Morning Show continues next The Big ManMorning Show on Telsa's rock station ninety seven
to five KMOT. Good morning,It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Lindy
(01:28:09):
Lindsay threw a grenade in that lastsegment's saying she applied for being on Wheel
of Fortune. Yeah, I wantto know more. Yeah, well I
told you yesterday I was. Itried watching the show, but then the
weather coverage was on, and soit was like the last two minutes of
the show, and it said,want to be a contestant. We're looking
for new contestants right now, Andso I thought, I do want to
(01:28:33):
be a contestant, and so Isigned up. And then it takes you.
It sends you an email, hey, thanks for signing up. Take
part in this quick, big moneygame. It takes less than ten minutes
to get people to play their gamethat they have online. Sure, and
(01:28:55):
yes, and so you play thegame and at times you and then then
you submit. I did three rounds, and it times you and you solve
puzzles and they put the clock onand if you can solve it under thirty
seconds, then you move on tothe next round. And I got all
(01:29:15):
the way through the end. Soso now what now you wait? I
guess you'll get a phone call oran email I guess from their producers,
because then they always have to gothrough an interview process. Yeah, I
mean yeah, but then you haveto fly out there on your own,
put yourself up on your own,and then that doesn't guarantee you'll be on
(01:29:36):
the show. Uh huh. Yougot to go out there like two or
three times. From what I hear, you got to go out there several
times, go through several interviews.Still, I think you got to pay
for yourself all those times. Andit's when you finally get picked that's when
they're like, okay, we'll fundthe bill on this one. I think
now with the zoom and like teams, they interview you through no no no
(01:29:59):
no, no no no no.Once you are a viable contestant, you're
right. But when you become aviable contestant, there's no guarantee you be
on the show. They go,great, you need to be out here
on next Thursday, right, soyou gotta take off work, You gotta
have money for a flight, toget out of hotel, hotel food.
This is you know, because Ilooked at it. I'm not saying that
(01:30:25):
I would join because I suck atthe game, right. I have it
on my PlayStation and I can't playvery well. That tells you anything.
But it says upload a video ofyourself, and it says here's your instructions.
Very video blah blah blah says smile, be yourself, and let the
unique shine that makes sense show usyour fun, excited fan energy. It
(01:30:49):
says, don't do not record itin your office cubicle. Do not look
like you've just rolled out of badDo not tell us that being on wheel
is on your bucket list. Pleasenote, one application is submitted, you
cannot edit and have fun. Ididn't submit a video, yeah, because
(01:31:15):
they didn't say it was mandatory.And that's also yeah bare well no,
but by the time that I filledout my thing, my phone was at
like five percent, so it wouldn'teven plug it in. That just makes
me wonder. I just sent thepictures, the pictures a picture of myself
a face. Oh you didn't tellus that. Yeah, well, you
(01:31:36):
have to send in a picture ofyourself that is one of them. You
upload a contesting photo, and whichphoto did you use? I used my
Facebook profile pic, which is uh, just a photo of me from the
neck up of me at a bar, saying at a bar with Kevin.
So a picture of you at yourold man? Or did you crop him
out of it? Just picture meand him? I didn't exactly, Okay,
(01:32:00):
I would have cropped him out ofit. Well, sometimes well,
and they ask you in the picturetoo if you liked their theme shows,
if there's a theme show, andI said sure, I can do the
couples show. So there there's becausehe and I will play this together on
the Xbox We rock. Yeah,No, I'm sure it's very similar.
It's fine. I love that youran out of battery power. How many
(01:32:24):
things do you think in life?People are like, wow, it's gonna
button phones dying. You potentially couldbe the best Wheel of Fortune contestant ever
but only had five percent power.All right, we'll take a break.
We'll be back. Telsa's Morning showcontinues next x The Big Bad Morning Show
on Telsa's rock station ninety seven tofive KMOT. Good morning, It's the
(01:33:04):
Big Mad Morning Show. So inIL is pretty controversial and there is a
lawsuit that just surfaced. I wasunaware of this. Yeah do you know
about this? Yeah? Okay,Florida. Former Florida quarterback Jaden Reshata is
suing Florida head coach Billy Napier anda bunch of others for thirteen point eight
(01:33:30):
five million dollars INIL deal that apparentlythey did not pay out on. He
says that the team had no intentionof delivering this. Ultimately, he chose
to play at Arizona State in asense transferred to Georgia, making that rivalry.
We should be pretty good. Thisis an active quarterback suing a rival
(01:33:53):
head coach, and they're saying thatit could have some pretty big ramifications.
They're saying that Florida's staff offered him, who was a top fifty quarterback recruit,
thirteen point eight five million dollars,including one million dollars and a job
offer for his father. He initiallycommitted to Miami with a nine point five
(01:34:16):
million dollar in aisle promise. Thenhe chose Florida, but the Gators never
gave the money or delivered on theirpromises. He retracted his letter of intent
to play there and lost out onboth offers before ending up over at Arizona
State and he played three games lastseason for the Sun Devils. Huh,
yeah, this part of the evolutionthirteen point eight five Like you told me
(01:34:42):
you pay me, you didn't.Yeah, he's money. And some of
the rumors are that this has todo with alumni being involved in the recruiting
process and saying, hey, yeah, we'll do this with the coach and
everybody else being like, we're notdoing that because there's infinite money available,
right, But if he was promisedthat money, isn't he owed that money?
(01:35:03):
And shouldn't he be able to sueand get his money? He absolutely
should be able to sue. Butwho is a representative of the team.
Who did the offer come from right, right, right right, whether it
was the coach or you know,administration or whatever. If he's at some
event with the coach, the coachinvites him to recruit him and let's just
(01:35:25):
say they're having sweaty meats and whatever, and an alumni it pulls him to
the side at a recruiting event andsays, yeah, what is it gonna
take to get you to play here? And he goes thirteen point eight five
million dollars a million dollars from mydad in a job and they go done,
done, done done. How's supposedto take that? Sounds like an
offer to me? I was like, Yeah, you're at a recruiting event
(01:35:47):
somebody who's associated with the school insome degree. Yeah. I think it
just shows how much of the wildWest the nil is is that are they
making deals by verbal? There's noon pay slid across you sign right right,
right, right right? But evenI mean, I guess that can
aunt Maybe it could be held upin court of law. I don't know.
(01:36:09):
Again, can a handshake deal beheld up in a quarter of law
like a no? Just because youthink you are receiving a deal doesn't make
it a deal, right right?If this person is not a representative of
the school, right, I thinkthat will be the debate is if an
alumni person made the offer, werethey Was it fair to him for him
to expect that this was a legalrepresentative of the school. Right? Is
(01:36:32):
it common practice for alumni who areon you know, red coats or whatever
the term is, making offers toplayers to play there? Right? I
would say no. It feels likeit must have been written out somewhere to
have that number. Where did thirteenpoint eighty five come from? If I
offer you thirteen points sixty seven milliondollars, you're gonna remember that number right
(01:36:58):
right? You don't need it writtendown? Who says thirteen point eight five?
Why not just even thirteen or aneven four? Because I'm being honest,
you know what I mean, I'llgive you all the money I got.
It's thirteen point eight five million.I could see that maybe, but
I think when it comes down tothat sort of thing, it's like,
what is it gonna take. I'llgive you fourteen mil. I mean,
I think you bringing up an interestrmpoint, But it hardly negates the what
(01:37:18):
he's saying, right right, rightright right. So here we go,
here we go, here the wego. Yes, I love it.
Lamello. Ball is at the centerof a controversy. According to w SOOCTV,
(01:37:38):
the Hornets guard is being sued afterallegedly driving over a and breaking the
foot of a child. Tomorrow.McRae is suing Ball and the Hornets on
behalf of her son after she saidthe star ran over the foot of the
eleven year old after the Hornets Purpleand Tell Day in October, the family's
(01:37:59):
lawyer said no claim was filed withballs insurance company to pay the medical bills
because the police report didn't include hisinsurer or name. The Hornets were also
named in the lawsuit since the familyfelt more safety measures should have been put
in place during the event. Sohe was at it like a parade or
something. Yes, yes, andthat's your Balls to the wall. Sports
emlyndsay on ninety cam O, goodmorning, It's the Big mad Morning Show.
(01:38:41):
Nine four six oh kmod. Nota lot of people are aware that
when you go see an artist thatthe person who's playing guitar somebody that isn't
really known for being in the band, like let's just say Madonna. You're
not aware that the guitarist might alsobe the guitarist in another band. And
(01:39:03):
in the Madonna example, Monty Pittmanis the guitarist for Madonna. He's also
the guitarist for Ministry Who Thought Right, and also Madonna's guitar coach. And
he's a giant fan of Pantera.And apparently Madonna was playing Pantera at a
(01:39:28):
show. And I have her playingPantera at a show. I have not
preheard this. We will discover thistogether. Boy, it's gotta be good,
does it. I mean, Panteraisn't exactly known as the Neil Purt
of music. I don't know,man, Dinebag is pretty good. One
(01:39:50):
hundred would be the Neil pert Ohof guitars. Okay, so here's Madonna
about playing some of pantas a newlevel. Okay, here you go.
(01:40:17):
Just listen. I'm gonna wait andlove you awesome. Yeah, the instruments,
(01:40:41):
that's her, that's her playing yesto me. I love when you
(01:41:04):
go see an artist and they holdtrue to who they are and their music.
But when then they do stuff likethat, I just think it's so
much cooler. Yeah, because they'reshowing they're a fan. I've I've always
been a fan of Maroon five,but I liked them when I was in
college and they went by a differentname, and then they came out with
(01:41:27):
Maroon five, had a massive blowup and saw them in concert a bunch
of times before they were popular,and they do like nine inch nail covers
during their set, and I waslike, this band's awesome. How do
people not love this band? Thiswas before they became massive world artists,
right, And because I felt likethey were being authentic to who they are.
They love that music, why notplay it for everybody and put do
(01:41:49):
our own little take on it?Right? And so for her to play
you know Pantera during a change session, it's like near the end of the
song, like at the encore,right, right, Pretty cool, you
go, ma'am. Most people probablydidn't in that crowd didn't even know it
was Pantera, right, right,right, right. I wonder how long
they had to wait for her tocome on stage though, right, three
(01:42:13):
hours of lattel? Yeah, buthey, they got to hear do Panta?
I actually have no problem. Ifyou're gonna make me wait, if
you're going to rock my face off, absolutely i'll give you that. Make
it worth the wait, but itbetter not be your normal show. I
don't think, I mean, andmaybe that's just my opinion. I don't
think Madonna is worth the weight.I don't know. I've never seen her,
(01:42:38):
right, nor have I, norwould you? Do you have a
good point. If I was draggedthere, I probably wouldn't. But I
ain't going on my own. Imean, I'm a huge Madonna fan,
and I don't think we waited maybe, I mean, I know we waited,
but maybe it was I don't thinkwe waited til I know it wasn't
like three hours though, it wastwenty twenty five minutes, and it was
(01:43:00):
worth it. I have obviously waitedfor shows, yeah, almost all them.
Starting on time is a recommendation forthose that don't know. But there
is a difference between being twenty minutesbecause of changes and timing and scheduling and
all that other stuff, getting whateverthe thing may be, right and hours
yeah, yeah, and when youstart adding sixty minutes to a when you
(01:43:25):
were supposed to go on and itisn't like the other band's playing, and
then you wait, right and you'reseeing the set change happen, right,
No, No, the set haschanged. Yeah, and it's just an
empty stage waiting, yes, waitingand the lights are on and all that.
Yeah, or you're waiting outside thevenue. I can only think of
one time that sticks out in mybrain that I have waited a long duration
(01:43:47):
of time for an artist to playand you were okay with it? No,
who was it? Then? Who'sgarth? Okay, it's like two
o'clock in the morning, you're socrazy thing yea with my pregnant wife.
Yeah, and roses for me atRock Oklahoma, waited almost an hour,
if not an hour, And Iget the anticipation, but there's a fine
(01:44:09):
line between anticipation and annoyance, right, and it quickly fought like thirty forty
minutes after like the stage hands areclearly done. Yeah, I'm like,
okay, come on, we gotit. You're a big deal, right,
And it's not like they play therelonger to make up for the wait
that you had. Right. Alot of venues have Curfewsey, like,
(01:44:30):
we're shutting you down at eleven o'clock. We didn't show up until ten.
Yeah, you get what you getto show up till ten thirty. Sorry,
Right, And then sometimes there's evena rift between the promoter and the
artist on why they do that punishingthe fans. We waited an hour and
a half for Maroon five once,and I was so disappointed because I thought
their show sucks. Yeah, man, well, how are you gonna you
got it? Abs like that taketime, Lindsay, Right, I'm saying,
(01:44:55):
well, when he was messaging allthose girls for after the show,
all right, take a break,we'll be back. Tulsa's Morning show is
coming right back, A big medmorning show, Tulsa's rock station. M
(01:45:30):
good morning, It's the big ninMorning Show. Lindsey, what'd you learn
today? I learned at best AaronRodgers as a backup quarterback. And California
is paying meth users to stay clean. And with the money they earned,
maybe they'll be able to afford somenew teeth. Ten to twenty seven dollars,
(01:45:51):
well five almost six hundred, bythe end of the year, jimp,
what'd you learn today? I'll learnshould have just s the d I
also learned from a listener that handbanging with a toothache is no fun.
I've handbanged with a toothache, withbelly, e with ache. It's all
good man. I learned a jobas a job and you get sick days
(01:46:15):
even if you're the tambourine player fora band. And I also learned,
uh, I learned a top tenquarterback of all time isn't as good as
Sam Howl, Gino Smith, DerekCarr, Bryce Young, Mac Jones,
Kenny Pickett, A and O'Donnell willleave us and many many others. Corbyn
say, make sure that dishwasher isloaded right? This is kimpy and I'm
(01:46:40):
sorry. Can I get a linterpassword? Corbyn New Messages. The Big
(01:47:09):
Mad Morning showould like to take aminute to thank truth from Oklahoma and all
over the United States. These soldiershave sacrifice. Give the Big Med Morning
Show before you to back like thetotal douchebags that they are total douchebag,
total bag sag a little incomplete douchebag. We honor and respect you. We
honor and respect you. We honorand respect you. Douglas Rocke, all
(01:47:30):
blessed Tulsa. We try boys,