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June 6, 2024 132 mins
HAPPY FRIGGIN' "A" FRIDAY EVE!!! Flava Flave Tries To Save The Day, More Machete Madness, You Just Don't Know What They Do With Your Luggage At The Airport, Gimpy Got An Interesting E-Mail, Conspiracy Theory Thursday, Top List, & D-Day Facts!!!!
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Episode Transcript

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(00:04):
You are about to witness as amazingEmo has comes in living Man's property of
all times. Yes, my bowsuck on you bow down to your master.

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Then you did it. Then youdid it? Where you did?
Allowed to play, Allowed to play, Come out to play, Come out

(00:56):
to play. The crystal wos.The sun is rising God, Oh wake
up, wake up now, don'tworry. We're all here to show you
how jan Witz horses Raw Station km o G. Home of the Listens

(01:21):
is a family be don't turn downtown, just wait and say are you ready?
Are you ready to jove in timeto start to show crapstick apl about
Fresco, Whisping Man Marny Show,Welcome to the Working Week. It's on

(01:47):
such a bore kick back, makesup the offing and they get hardcore.
Hang your whisby and then mess pickup your phone there line you're on the
air, dot time dot s goodmorning, It's the Big Man Morning Show

(02:25):
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(02:49):
app store of your cell phone provider. More on that at iHeartRadio dot com.
And we're on Facebook, Facebook dotcom, slash b m MS six
y nine. That's where you canhang out with us each and every day.
Good morning, Lindsay, Good morning, Gimby, Good morning. Got
a pair of tickets to Rock theRiver Fest June thirteenth through sixteenth. That's

(03:12):
Sparrow Hawk Campgrounds in Talaquah, Texasto be coalition. Others are playing hit
Rockdriverfest dot Com are a WUK.We'll see what Gimby wants to talk about.
Conspiracy theory. Thursday, Mike Milagalwill join us talk about drillers baseball.
We got our topless today. Whatare the top five things you hated

(03:35):
as a kid but love is anadult. Top five things you hated as
a kid but loved as an adult. We'll get to that coming up in
a little bit. You might rememberwe've talked previously about Red Lobster and how
they are the victim are I guessmy perceived situation where they are the victim

(04:00):
of vulture venture capitalism and other businessesare coming out that are kind of under
that umbrella, which is a wholenother day. But and then Flavor Flave
came out in support you, andhe has taken his first step to save
Red Lobster, which we are sograteful for. We have this man truly

(04:25):
doing God's work for real. Man, we need them cheddar biscuits, We
need the scrimp, we need whatis it the Captain's Admiral's platter? Right,
I don't know what most massive mealliver the week. Well, you

(04:45):
gotta get it in before they closethem all, you know. Well,
Flavor Flave went to a Red Lobsterand ordered everything on the menu as an
effort to save Red Lobster. That'sgood for the one restaurant, right,
No, it's not good. It'snot good. You would argue it might
be more of an inconvenience. Doyou think so? I mean, yeah,

(05:06):
they got to cook a lot offood, but I mean at least
they're getting a good chunk of changecoming through the registers. Right, one
person ordering the whole menu. Youthink the kitchen's equipped to do that while
maintaining everything else. Everybody's pissed,Yes, this bitch, you ever been
working out. You've worked at restaurants, gimpy, you've ever been in the

(05:28):
back when someone you know orders seventyburghers? Oh? Absolutely, Or you're
close to closing time and a busfull of high school football players rolls up.
Ah, surely you couldn't have eatenit all at once, so he's
like, bring it out one ata time. Or maybe he was there.
You tell me what that picture?Oh my god, yes, that

(05:50):
was a feast of a feast ofa feast. Really, he stayed and
did some photo ops with other patronsin the restaurant. Maybe, how is
that awesome Flavor flav day? Howwas that awesome? Oh? Good god,
man, I'd want my photo takenwith Flavor Flave if I knew he

(06:11):
was gonna be at the local RedLobster and show up. No, you
wouldn't. If you were at RedLobster and he showed up, sure,
but you wouldn't revolve your day aroundit. No, right, clear your
schedule. I wanna go get mypick taken with Flavor Flav with the Red
Lobster. Yeah, there are probablysome things on the menu that don't get
made that often, right, andthey were forced to make them, and

(06:34):
he didn't eat all that. Maybehe's just doing some research before he puts
off of his no eggs in abasket quote. No, the quote your
boy minute when he said I wasgonna do anything and everything to help at
Red Lobster and save cheddarbaby biscuits.Comma Kama, comma ordered the whole menu

(06:54):
Comma exclamation mark, exclamation mark,three thumbs up. He really thinks he's
open. Dishwashers pissed, of course. Of course, I'm sure you know
the road to hell was paved withgood intentions, right, and I'm sure
he had intentions here. But whynot just cut a check or something,

(07:19):
you know, or do something forthe employees, start a fund so if
and when it closes, or graba bunch of you know, Today's d
day, a bunch of World Wartwo vets are people that are veterans,
and bring them in and serve them, right right, But no, this
greedy ass gets everything and then doesn'thelp clean up. He not back there

(07:41):
helping him do dishes for the messthat he created. Dick, my right,
right, yeah, uh well,nice trifleve How much do you think
the whole menu costs? Because someone'slike one hundred thousand dollars. I'm like,
no, no, maybe ten oneof everything? Would that be,

(08:03):
you know, like their cocktail menu. I mean, I don't see any
beverages on there, right, soI'm gonna say no. But I mean,
I guess it's even if you didthe best, you're not doing all
those beverages. No, I'm surethey have a Hey, we can't serve
you thirteen different glasses in a lighthouse, right, I would say one of

(08:26):
everything on their entire menu, justfood, probably around thirteen hundred bucks.
Really, is there a menu thatbig and market I'm sure they have some
market pricing ricing. Sure, I'msure the lobsters, whatever the market price

(08:46):
is. Yeah, their menu isnot that big, is it. Sure?
It's like it's pretty the three pageseleven by seventeen's right? And did
he get everything? Did he getevery thing off the kids menu as well?
Excellent points and desserts, right,desserts, all the sides, all

(09:07):
the extras that go with it?Maybe fifteen bucks, right, I'm not
seeing much soup. Okay, there'sa bowl one bowl of soup on the
picture. Looks like they've already duginto it, though, because there's on
the on the left hand side.It looks like they won two, three,
four, five six plates stacked uplike look or maybe loser. I

(09:28):
don't know. Maybe it looks likeit looks like they've been eating off of
Maybe they haven't. And did hedo the three for thirties? So?
Did he order like popcorn, shrimp, trimp scampy and then like crab but
then also did a three for thirty? Seems like a waste. I'm not
believing he's doing all that. Didhe do crab your Way, crab lobster

(09:50):
duo, snow crab and crab andcrabtop sirloin right CREAMI crab Carbonara, snow
crab and crab topped fil a,and a crab mac and cheese. Did
he do all of those? Idon't think so? Did he do all
the family meals? Dude? Thecrab top fil a? That sounds delicious.
Sure we can't lose red lobster.Okay, there will be another seafood

(10:15):
restaurant pomp up that'll be just asgood, if not better, and that
will probably go wonder after a while. And you can probably get that at
any steak seafood restaurant. True statement, They don't have the corner market Cheddar
bay biscuits. End of sentence.And even then, Haldo's Cheddar biscuits are
way better in my opinion anyway,fair point. So Red Lobster ain't the

(10:37):
only folks in town with some Cheddarbiscuits come out. Yeah, I don't
think he saved the day. Letit go. He didn't let it go.
He did not for sure, letRed Lobster go. Let him fail,
let him go, Let's start overagain with something better. And who's
eating with him? Because he's noteating any of that. No, No,

(11:01):
that's a publicity thing. That's allthat is. I think his intentions
are well, h this is likenot buying gas on a certain data.
Teach them a lesson, right,right, do this every day for a
year, Flave, you might makea difference. Offered to buy out part
of the company, right, That'swhat I said earlier. Just cut a
check, man, cut a checkdirectly to the company. You want to

(11:22):
save Red Lobster. Find out howmuch it's gonna cost to save I'm gonna
keep him around, and then nohe cannot. I know that's the problem.
Well, and the other part ofthis, this is feeding the monster.
You're not stopping the monster. Right, you're used. If they if
everybody goes Red Lobster and a bunchof people buy in the shrimp or whatever,

(11:46):
the crab top sirloin, and I'msure they're doing high quality, then
they're just gonna stay in business.And this company is then just gonna do
something. They're gonna keep making moneyand then buy another restaurant and do it
somebody else. Right, you're feedingthe monster. You've got to stop it
at the source, right, right, So what would be the best way

(12:09):
to do that? Just stop going, Just stop going. Everybody just stop
going to Red Lobster, right,And eventually they shut down, and then
the venture capitalists lose their money andthey have they have no choice but to
pull out, right. I thinkthere's two choices, two options. One,
be an advocate for legislation to stopthis type of venture capitalists. Yeah,

(12:31):
that's probably the best. So makesure you vote for the right person,
not just somebody because they like thecolor blue or red. And also,
don't go there, right, yousaid it don't go I don't want
it to go away. I thoseemployees that work there that they're just happy
they found a job that sucks forthem. Yeah, but they'll find another

(12:52):
job maybe yeah, maybe not immediately. Yep, maybe not immediately. These
aren't people that have a cushion.I'm sure that can go weeks without a
job. True. True, SoI hear you, and I do enjoy
that argument of they will find anotherjob, but they're not equipped or prepared
to do that financially. So thenthey're like, oh, my kids got
to eat. What am I gonnado? And they got to resort to

(13:16):
some things that people, you know, frown on understandably, uh huh.
Not everybody is honest. So that'swhere I'm at, is like, yeah,
they'll find another job eventually. Yeah, that that's just life. That

(13:37):
is just life. Sometimes you loseyour job and it takes a little while
to find another one, but youknow what, you keep your head up
and you keep on going and everythingwill be all right. Motivational speaking by
GIMMI was that motivational? Yes,I mean it was definitely a sentence.
I don't know if I feel motivatedor more or less. Listen, you'll

(14:00):
be all right, thanks for comingto my ted talks. Right, that's
right. Put that on a posterwith a cat hanging from a tree.
Give these give Bee's latest Ted talk, get up, thanks for coming,
see you later. Stop being abitch. Peace, But did you die?

(14:24):
I'm give me thanks for showing upexactly. Man. Sure, Yeah,
I have vivid memories of Red Lobster, and we'll always have those.
With that being said, I wouldnever take my children there. They're too
picky. Oh waste of my money? My kids request it, congratulations.

(14:48):
Yeah, it's expensive. All restaurantsare expensive, whether it's Red Lobster,
Lone Star logans, geez. Whenyou take a family out to eat,
it is all has been expensive.Yeah, especially if you get a large
family. My kids, I don'tthink. I can't even remember the last
time they eat something off of thechildren's menu. Yeah, those days are

(15:11):
long gone. Do they eat solike? When they order something? Do
they eat the whole thing? Ohyeah? Oh yeah, big appetites on
those boys. How often would yousay that you, as a family of
five go out to eat? Maybeonce a month? Okay, that's about
what we are. Yeah, okay, does that count ordering pizza in no?
I think it does. Yeah.Yeah. When you're buying food from

(15:35):
somewhere and you're not making it athome, I think that's considered eating out.
If you're having a pizza delivered,or if you're going to a brick
and mortar restaurant somewhere, you're stilleating out. You're not making dinner at
home. You may get it fortakeout and take it home and eat it,
but you didn't make it there.Does that count fast food? We
no, because we don't really doa lot of fast food anymore. Okay,

(15:58):
yeah at all? Really, Ifeel like I just heard you tell
me the story about going to getfast food with one of them. One
of them, that's still count.But I'm pizza If you include pizza maybe

(16:18):
twat two to three times, yeah, okay, But going out to a
physical restaurant maybe once. Like I'mgoing to lunch with my mom today.
It's the first time I beat outat a restaurant probably since we went Okay,
that's like, I guess it doesn'tcount with my mom because that's not
the family, right, But it'sstill you eating out. You know,

(16:41):
well, you had a day date. We just went to the bar,
though, did what did they havesnacks? Did you order food there?
Did you order it that? Butthat's a date that feels like a different
thing. I hear I know thequestion that, yeah, it's well,
it's just not like we didn't goout to eat at a restaurant, right
right, I still feel accounts maybebottom of the last. Maybe it does,

(17:02):
sure, but I'm with you.Like going as a family out to
eat, especially with two picky eightand six year olds, ain't doing it.
It's more of an inconvenience than itis a pleasure. I'd rather go
home, make you what you want, and the kids eat fast food,

(17:23):
like I'll get them Chick fil aor whatever. But I usually pass.
Yeah, just because it's good.I like it, but it's too good.
Absolutely, Yeah, all right.We got tickets we're gonna give away
to see Texas Hippy Coalition when theyplay Rock the River Fest June thirteenth through
sixteenth at Sparrowhawk Campgrounds in Talaquah.We're gonna see what Gimby wants to talk

(17:45):
about. We got our top fivetop list, which today is Top Things,
Top five things you hated as akid but love as an adult.
We'll take a break and we'll beback. The Big Med Morning Show returns
next Tulsa's Morning shown Good Morning.It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Nine

(18:22):
one eight four six oh kmod canalso text BMMS and then what you want
to say to eight two nine fourfive. I think my favorite text about
Red Lobster was Red Lobster's owned bya tie based company. Let it close
and support Americans. Then throw awayyour TV, right, your your computer,

(18:48):
your car, your clothes, getout of here with all that,
most of your appliances. All right, let's go ahead and do news quickisies
are stories you may have missed inthe news. It's time for news quakies.
World news, local news, andnews that just makes you say,
what the Here's corby Gimpion Lindsay withWhat's going on news Quakies from The Big
Man Morning Show in nineties out offive. Naked Florida man chops off victim's

(19:15):
hand with machete. Naked Florida manchopped off another man's hand with a machete,
then told the cops is dead.I tried to kill him, According
to authorities, Police in Miami Gardensdiscovered the victim around four am on Monday
with a severed hand and profusely bleedingfrom his head following a nine to one

(19:40):
to one call. According to thepolice report, a blood covered machete was
found nearby. Witnesses told police theysaw Ryant, the man in question,
sprinting from the grizzly scene, completelynaked. Around the time of the attack.
Cops found fifty four year old TyroneArthur Ryant, lounging on a sofa

(20:03):
not far away from the victim.Described his attacker. Is he dead?
I tried to kill him? Ryantof Opa Laca allegedly confessed to police as
he was being taken into custody.The victim was taken to a local hospital
for treatment, and Ryan is chargedwith attempted murder, causing injury and domestic

(20:25):
violence and violation of injunction. He'sbeing held without bond at the Turner Goldford
Knight Correctional Center. Police didn't releasea motive, but said that Ryan's estranged
wife, who has a restraining orderagainst him, lives close by. Well
that's good information to know. Well, I'm wondering if it was an a

(20:47):
fair situation sleeping with the victim maybein and Tyrone did not like it so
much. Ah, you know,so he's like, I'm going to kill
this dude, It's possible, andthen went and took a nap. Yeah,
well, you know, chop somebody'shand off and then you know hitting
him in the head with a macheteis quite tiring, very physically demanding.

(21:08):
Here, Yes, flyer tracks downmissing luggage at airport employees home. This
comes out of Fort Lauderdale Hollywood InternationalAirport with his gal. Her name's Palea
Paula Garcia, and she set acarousel four for two hours waiting for her
luggage. Oh two hours. Shesat there and watched to go around and

(21:33):
around and around, and it nevershowed up. That's quite the patience.
What was in her luggage that wasso important? It was her computer that
she needed for work, very important. She had a MacBook in there and
Apple Watch and various other items,but she really needed her MacBook for work.
It doesn't matter what's in it.If it's my luggage, I want

(21:53):
my luggage. But I'm not waitingtwo hours. I agree, one hundred
percent. So she goes to customerservice, right and reports it missing.
Naturally, that's what you would do, Hey, my luggage isn't here.
And they're like, that's what theydid, right, We sent it to
your house, ma'am, is whatthey told her. Roh, right,
right, which I thought was weird. I'm like, you already sent it,

(22:15):
Okay, that's a little strange.But nonetheless she's like, all right,
fine, whatever, And then shegoes home and then she gets a
little notification, a little pin thather Apple watch location has been located,
right, and she looks it upand she's like, this is not the
airport. My apple watch is notat the airport. And come to find
out, it was at a housethat was like fifteen minutes away from the

(22:37):
airport. So she goes over thereto the house to see, hey,
is my apple watch? Is mystuff here? Because that's where her Apple
watch had pinged where it's at.And when she gets to the home of
a twenty nine year old dude namedJunior Bazil, she notices there's luggage everywhere,
everywhere, And when she says everyonewhere, I'm thinking, it's goddamn

(23:00):
more than fourth right. You gotluggage in the yard, you got luggage
on the port, you got luggageprobably sitting on the roof of your house.
Luggage everywhere. So she calls thepolice. The police do their investigation,
They go to the airport, theyget the surveillance footage, they find
Junior Bazil here in the back ofthis retail shop that he runs at the

(23:22):
airports, going through her luggage.So he doesn't even work like for the
airline. No, he's selling trinkets. Uh huh inside it's a retail shop
inside the airport. And they gotthe surveillance footage shows him going through,
taking the MacBook out, taking theApple watches out, and various other items
as well, and then placing theluggage inside a clear plastic like trash bag

(23:45):
sort of thing. I don't knowif that's standard protocol to put it in
a clear plastic bag and then sendit, you know, to wherever it
needs to go, but nonetheless that'swhat happened, and so the police went
ahead and arrested him with felony grandtheft. All right. The airline did
cut her a reimbursement check, youknow, as like an oops mobad sort

(24:07):
of thing. But old Paula shethinks that this is bigger than just Junior
doing the thing. She thinks thatother people are involved as well. I
don't disagree. I got to thinkingabout it and I was like, you
don't know when you put your luggageon the thing, you know, because
it gets stored under the plane orwhatever. You can't carry it on with

(24:29):
you. You don't know who's messingwith it, right, You just assume
that they're picking it up and puttingit on the cart, and they're loading
it on the plane, throwing iton the plane, whatever. But people
could easily be going through your stuff, taking whatever, and you would never
know. Yeah, I don't understandpeople who have luggage. They don't lock
it, Yeah for real, that'snot that's right, Yeah, not that

(24:52):
there. It would be a superstrong lock that wouldn't be hard to break,
but it would be a deterrent.Right. And I also think everybody
should have They should make air pods, AirPods, the little trackers so much
more accessible. They should everybody shoulduse these. Yes, we have some
for our luggage just in case,right, right, And you don't ever

(25:15):
know you'd be able to track itdown to some airport employee's house who has
luggage everywhere. Apparently he been doingthat for a while. Two hours though
I'm not standing at a careself.Oh how long are you waiting? How
long you wait? Thirty minutes?I don't know if I can put a
certain duration of time on it.Uh, it is has all the luggage
come like you know, you're standingthere, they go be be beep and

(25:36):
Spirit Airlines fourteen fifty seven from dollarswhatever, and then all the luggage comes
out and you don't see yours.I'm then going to the counter. That
makes sense. I'm not going togo well, even though it's not moving
and no more luggage is coming,I have hope you never know, sure
happened, sure, yeah, no, Once the all the luggage is dispersed,
I will go to the counter andthat has happened to me. Yeah,

(25:56):
But then I go they're like,oh, it's over here, like
for some reason, it didn't makeit on the carousel and it's just sitting
right for whatever reason, adjacent tosome spot. But you was able to
get your stuff back. Yeah.Picking up luggage at a luggage carousel is
one of the more amazing psychological socialexperiments we do because people will stand right

(26:18):
there as close as they can totry and get at the moment, and
most of the time your luggage istoo heavy for you, right and you're
like trying to get it and you'relike knocking people over and I don't know
people know this. Maybe you guysknow this. I don't know, it
comes back around right right. It'sa carousel, like people will run and
chase it. If they're like,oh, that's mine and the run,

(26:40):
I'm like, why you two choices? One you don't have one, you
don't chase it. Two you couldgo around the other way right, meet
it halfway right, or you juststand there right. Sure. I think
people just don't trust other people,and they're afraid that are gonnap someone else
is grab their We just demonstrated wetrust people dramatically by putting through the thing

(27:02):
and it miraculously ends up on theplane right and back at your destination.
Yeah, so we trust people.We don't just trust these people that I've
been on the tin can in theair with right, Yeah, funny uh.
Dog travels four miles to get helpafter crash. Last he traveled four

(27:25):
miles to get help after his owner'struck crashed in remote parts of Oregon.
The truck missed a curved and wentinto a steep, brushy ravine. One
of the man's dogs left the scenefound the camp where family members were staying.
They contacted police. Deputies, locatedthe truck and provided first aid until
medics arrived. Search and rescue crewsused chainsaws to reach the vehicle, and

(27:45):
he was brought out using a roperescue system. I'll just wait for the
cat story that does that, right, right, doesn't happen? No,
and don't send me one from twothousand and four, right, one every
twenty years. Yeah, that savesthe day. Pretty awesome story, right,

(28:07):
And the dog's just like going.You think the dog's got to be
running like as the crow flies,right, you think you think, now,
how many times did the dog goup to somebody? How many people
did the dog have to go toyour point till it finally found somebody was
like there's something wrong, boy,take me, you know, because I
feel like a lot of people belike, get the hell out of here,

(28:27):
going, I get right, likeignore that dog. Strange dogs,
strange dog, right right. I'mcurious of the breed of the dog.
Yeah, I didn't say in thestory it's fake news then, probably because
it's a pit and they don't wantto give pits any like good press.
Right exactly, Yeah, right,all right, we gotta take it.
I hope it was like a likea chihuahua or a docs in right,

(28:51):
dragging its belly the whole four miles. All right, we got to take
a break. All these stories areon our Facebook page, Facebook dot com,
slash, bmms six nine listening toThe Big Mad Morning Show. This
is Tulsa's Morning show. Good morning. It's the Big Mad Morning Shown six

(29:17):
okmo D. You can also textbmms and then what you want to say
to eight two nine four five.Let's see what lindsay has. Four Balls
to the Wall Sports. The Soonersare one went away from a fourth straight

(29:45):
softball national title. Oklahoma took downTexas eight to three in Game one of
the Women's College World Series Final inOklahoma City. T r A Jennings was
two for four with a home runand three RBI. Kinsey Hansen and Cassidy
Pickering chipped in with homers of theirown. Kelly Maxwell got the win,

(30:06):
allowing just one earned run and strikingeight in a complete game. Mia Scott
homerd in the loss for Texas.Game two of the series is tonight.
The dates for the expanded College FootballPlayoff were announced. Twenty twenty four will
be the first season of the twelveteam Playoff. The four first round games
will be played on December twentieth andDecember twenty first on campuses. ESPN and

(30:32):
ABC will have the lone December twentiethgame as a afternoon games on December twenty
first. The afternoon games will competewith the Chiefs Texans and Ravens Steelers NFL
games. The quarterfinal games will bethe Fiesta Bowl on December thirty first,
the Peach Bowl on January first,the Rose Bowl on January first, and

(30:56):
the Sugar Bowl on January first.The semi finals are the Orange Bowl on
January ninth and Cotton Bowl on Januarytenth. The National Championship Game is on
January twentieth in Atlanta, and onemember of the Colts is opposed to making
the NFL regular season longer. Veterancenter Ryan Kelly, who is also a

(31:17):
vice president on the NFLPA Executive Committee, is not in favor of expanding the
regular season to eighteen games. Kellycriticized comments made by Commissioner Roger goodeut regarding
the league pushing towards an eighteen gameseason. The union reluctantly agreed to expanding
from sixteen to seventeen games back intwenty twenty one, with fifty one and

(31:38):
a half percent of players voting infavor. The current collective bargaining agreement expires
after the twenty twenty three season,but changes and renegotiations can be made.
Have you seen the video of themchanging the stadium where the Colts play for
the US Olympic Swim Trials, wherethey build two swimming pools inside this football

(32:00):
stadium. How long does that take? Well, you can watch the video,
but it's pretty impressive and it looksso bad ass. So they showed
this. They show them building it, and then they show them walking into
the stadium. One of the coolestthings that happens when you go to an
NFL game is you going through thesetunnels and then boom there's this you know,

(32:21):
stadium, right, and so sameeffect this is it's indoor you go
in, but the pools lit upso it's glowing. It's so bad ass.
It looks it makes you go,yeah, I want to go watch
this. I didn't know there wassuch a demand for the Olympic Swim Trials
to build two swimming pools inside afootball stadium. Yeah. Cool. So
it's a pretty cool video. Iguess it's a cool place to have it

(32:45):
because they need the room big enough, do they? Yeah? I would
assume, I mean there's that muchdemand for people to go watch because they
already have swimming pools. Yeah,but I mean yeah, I guess it
would be a place that you wouldwant to see, and you need a
place big enough to hold that thousandpeople, all right, And I'm guessing

(33:07):
what their capacity is at that stadium. Yeah, And that is your balls
to the Wall sports. I'm Lindsayin ninety seven to five kmod Good morning,
it's the Big NN Morning Show nineone, eight four six oh kmot

(33:30):
can also text BMMS and then whatyou want to say to eight two,
nine four five, Good morning,Lindsay, Good morning Corbyn. Our iHeartRadio
Music Festival is back and you canwin your way there before you can actually
buy tickets. It's happening on Septembertwentieth and twenty first at the T Mobile
Arena in Las Vegas. You'll gettwo nights there and we're hooking you up

(33:53):
with the airfare hotel plus one thousandbucks. Your chance to win is happening
at nine o'clock this morning, oneo'clock this afternoon, and again at five
o'clock and the pre sale starts onWednesday, June twelfth at twelve o'clock in
the afternoon, So listen at nineo'clock this morning for your chance to text

(34:16):
in and when. All the detailson our website kmod dot com. Good
morning, Gimpy, Well, goodmorning Corman. I want you to hop
on your bikes and join me forthe annual Rumble enrold Of Benefit to Make
a Wish Foundation. It's going ontoday in Brookside. We're gonna line up
at tu Reynolds Center at like fivesix o'clock and then you can do all
your registering at rumblinroll dot com.Yeah, it's gonna be gorgeous. All

(34:38):
right, let's see what Gimpy wantsto talk about. Crown no world,
take my strong hand, Get givetrain, Molma, give train, the
real world, take my my shrumhand, get alive. You are my
kind of cripple. Gimpy recently gota listener email sent to me about a

(35:04):
conspiracy or two about the shoe.Oh, and I figure it's conspiracy theory
Thursday. I don't think that.I don't think this is anything that you've
ever covered before Corba ever will cover, So I figure why that I love
it? All right, So hereit goes conspiracy number one. It says
Corbyn is actually a very dirty personand possibly a horder. It says Corbyn

(35:28):
claims to be clean, neat andtidy, but I think that's the front
he puts on to hide his filth. Think about it. He never wants
anyone coming to his house. Whywould that be? Because it's dirty,
af and probably packed full of stuff. He's a hoarder. Yeah, one
hundred percent, it says all that. It says also, if a person
who claims to be so clean andsuch a neat freak and his family seems

(35:52):
to get sick all the time,if he kept it such clean quarters,
I don't think they would be gettingall of the time. Okay, well
that's a stupid one. Why yousay that? Because people get bacteria infections
at hospitals right when there are oneof the cleanest places. Bull So we'll

(36:14):
get through this and then we canwe can dissect it enough, it says.
Also for a person who claimed alreadybeen all that, It says most
people tend to hide their true colorsby voicing the opposite. Think of cheaters.
They've always accused their partner of cheatingwhen it's them who are doing it,
it says here to debunk my theory. You and lindsay you being me
sure, GIMPI should force Corbin totake you to his house right after the

(36:37):
show before he would have any chanceof cleaning it up, or if his
wife is home, make him FaceTimeher and show you the current state of
the house. You don't have toshow what's common. Folk will take your
word for it. So let's breakthat down a little bit of it.
Okay, I get what that person'ssaying. You know, the person that
screams the loudest usually is the guiltyone. Think allah are Kelly when he

(37:00):
got popped for you know, allthe bad stuff that he did, Yeah,
went on TV, started yelling andscreaming it was bad. I didn't
do it, yeah, And thencome to find out he really didn't.
The thing about getting sick, though, that's kind of piqued my interest a
little bit. All right, Ikind of get where that person's at because
people who do live in filth andsqualor do typically have poorer health issues than

(37:23):
other people. Would you agree?No? Why is that? Uh,
that's like saying a healthy person can'tdie of a heart attack. Right,
I get that. And when thatworks out every day, I can't have
a heart attack. Yeah, yougo jogging every day, try to stay
healthy, and you di have aheart attack on the drugon pail. I
get that. My thought is onthat is that you are so clean,

(37:50):
you guys get sick because there's nogerms for your immune system to beat off,
right, right, So therefore it'slike the immune systems like a week
and frail. Think of like gallumor schmiegeling. I got now what to
do with this sickness. So whensomething does come in, it attacks you
guys because you are so overly cleanthat your immune system just can't handle it.

(38:16):
It's just my thoughts that could be. But also his children are still
very young, so there's always germsat school, so they're always going to
get attacked by other kids with thegerms at school, because I went through
it too when my kids were thatage where they were always being attacked by
the other kids. They're always continuouslypassing around. Yeah yeah, he's yeah,

(38:42):
yeah, that's it. But mostlyI think my kids were actually younger
when they were sick so much whenthey were in daycare, and because I
remember, it's better that they're sicknow while they're in daycare than sick later
when they're in school having to missschool. But it's the same thing.
You know, kids are petrit dishesof germs no matter where you're at or

(39:05):
how old you are, you know, they're always out there, you know.
Just they're germs with the building thatimmune system exactly exactly. You need
to get germs so your immune systemhas something to work on. Sure,
what is it atrophy sets in yourimmune system's like whatever. Now here's the
thing when it said the part aboutCorbyn doesn't want anybody at his house,

(39:31):
right, Okay, which is true? You say that so right, you
say that true? It's my preference. Yeah, yeah, yeah, But
I've been to your house before.I haven't been to your new house.
I haven't been to the McMansion onthe hill, right, But I have
been to a house that you havelived in. Yeah, and it may
be only once or twice, butI have been there, okay, And

(39:52):
it was clean, it was veryit was up. I walk in.
I'm impressed I didn't walk in,you know. And this is when the
kids were young, and it didn'tsmell like dirty diapers. Because I've walked
into places, people's houses who haveyoung children, and it smells like s
because dirty diapers happen. But itwasn't like that. Now, on the

(40:13):
other side of that coin, itwas a birthday party or two those right,
I knew people were showing up exactly, so you could have easily right
exactly. So maybe you could stillbe just a front, but I highly
doubt it. Yeah. Well,I think the thing about people that yell
the loudest are the ones the mostguilty. Usually it is after allegations.

(40:40):
Okay, one who just says theydo something doesn't mean they're guilty. The
person that no. Here's my twoexamples, CrossFit and vegetarians. Those two
groups of people who won't shut upabout it do those things. Yeah,
so the argument there zilch. Buton the other side of that, you

(41:05):
could be like an eight mile sortof situation. You cut them off at
the pass before they can really,you know, get in and find out.
That's fair if that makes sense,right. You know, I'm really
a dirty, disgusting person, butI'm gonna tell everybody I am before anybody
can accuse me and see me ofbeing a dirty disgusting person. I love
that yeah. So that was thefirst conspiracy. I love that they had

(41:25):
sent in. Do you want tohit The last thing, which was remind
me real quick the showing up atmy house. We'll just go to my
house after the show today. Yeah. Yeah, that's not gonna happen.
That's not happening. No, Imean, i'd be I can pull up
a video, I can look intomy house right now if you'd like.
Yeah, I mean that's fine.I mean that's cool. I mean,
how do I know that you don'thave the Maid over there right now trying
to hurry up, you know,the maid, right, because how do

(41:47):
I know you don't filter my emails? Right? The maids sitting right here
right right. I get this emailthat comes through and and and it's like,
you know, you get a hitbecause you've got some kind of you
know, code on my computer orwhatever that sends my over to you.
All right, put your foil hataway. You're like, hey, gimpy,
got this in. I need toget Consolweila in here real quick so

(42:10):
she can clean everything up before hestarts talking about this in the morning.
Right, it's just conspiracy theory Thursday. Now, Yeah, I love it.
That's your alter ego, No no, uh so, yeah, I'm
not going here house all right.You know you're a good guy. I

(42:31):
got stuff. Listen. I'm sureif when I have an event that's worthy
of you guys coming over. Absolutely, But just because it's a Saturday,
ain't happening. You don't want toget together and play cards or something.
I mean, Lindsay's into playing cards. I don't like games, but you
know that's you know, I'll sitback and watch you guys play, you
know. I mean. I canalso be very confident you're not going to

(42:52):
come to my house to do somethingthat Lindsay or gimpye want to do.
It's in my house. Huge statements. So if I had, like you
have see watch party or something likethat, I would one hundred percent invite
you. Mm hmm. But Idon't do those things. I get it.
If I had a pool, allright and had people over, I
would invite you. I don't dothose things. You do have a community

(43:14):
pool, a neighborhood pool, yeah, yeah, you can be like,
hey, you guys, which Ido not like going to because I'm such
a dirty, filthy person. Youdon't want to infest everybody else with your
disgustingness. As soon as you jumpin the pool, the water time around.
Yeah, I get it, man, I get a pig Ben,
It's all good, all right.The second one here says conspiracy theory.
I love that number two. Itsays here that you guys have a secret

(43:36):
phrase on the show when you're debatingabout a topic and trying to end discussion.
Oh said topic. Oh I lovethis. That happens sometimes, you
know. Okay, It says herethis one drives me absolutely insane and says
every time Corbin says this phrase,you or Lindsey will never push back on
it and simply go huh okay,and then you move. The phrase I'm

(44:00):
referring to is, do you guyswant to take a guess, Take a
guess, Take a guess. We'llbe back to take a break. That's
a good one too, Lindsey,you want to take a guess of what
the magic phrase is that shuts downthe conversation when it's time to start debating.
Right, we do say that alot, We do say that a

(44:22):
lot, but that is not thephrase. The phrase that this person is
referring to is I know plenty ofpeople that X. All right, Well,
listen. That's usually a starter statement, right, it says, but
but but buh, but but andwe'll get into it here and the rest
of this body of this email here. But there's times it's like, you

(44:44):
know, we'll be talking about somethingand it's like, you know, somebody
will say, like, you know, I know somebody who catches fish three
times a week, you know,not using any bait, you know whatever,
da da da da, and thenyou will refer to it as well,
I know plenty of people that sells. So it says here, it
says, no matter how crazy thetopic y'all are debating, he'll throw out
that phrase at some point. Well, Lindsey, I know plenty of people

(45:07):
with dogs who can smoke cigarettes andbalance plates on their head. At the
same time, this person says,I'm sitting here listening, I'm like right,
And then Lindsey or you will belike, well, okay, I
guess and then go on instead ofcalling him out and being like, really,
Corbin, who are these people thatyou know? Name two and says

(45:30):
also again, Corbyn claims to notlike hanging out with many people, but
he sure as hell seems to quoteno plenty of people. So because you
guys never pushed back on him whenhe says that. I just figure it's
a phrase he uses to tell youall, we need to wrap this segment
up. I love the attention todetailing it. I love that one.

(45:51):
Yeah, that is impressive. Wedo say that phrase a lot. Yes,
we do say that phrase a lot. We I say this with love
and include myself in it. We'retoo stupid and unorganized to have a code
word true statement. We'll forget thecode word. We'll jumble up the code
word somehow it's not pineapple and changedit. Remember, well, listen,

(46:17):
Corbyn, I know plenty of people. Yeah no, you know code words
to get at the shut up soso so to debunk all of this,
especially the second one here. Sometimesit's easier when and it's not just you,
Corbin. I deal it with anybodyand everybody, you know, because
I'm not one really to sit andargue and debate. I think debating is

(46:39):
pointless. I really think it is. You got two people who were just
headstrong on their beliefs and they're notgoing to budge anywhere, and eventually you
gotta throw your hands up and sayit is what it is. Right.
So I don't disagree with that.I think that debate is good and healthy.
That's how you expand and be opento other ideas that aren't you,

(47:00):
even if you've been setting them forsuch a long time. Maybe so right.
And also, this is a showwith time constraints, right, So
sometimes you hear us say that becausewe one of us have looked at the
clock and are trying to get theother to shut up without saying shut up,
because we will sit here and rambles. I know I will, because

(47:22):
that's what we're paid to do.Goddamn. Anyway, I know plenty of
people, so only on me.There's conspiracy. That's it. That's that's
what this particular you actually think,I'm going to take the time to type
all this up and send it tomyself. No, sir, Yes,

(47:45):
if you want, if you weredone, when you want to be diabolical,
I can be. You will definitelygo to an innth degree. This
is way too much for me,way too much. Now. Now,
who's crying too loud? It isway too intricately put together? Now,
who's yelling I'm not gay? Plentyof people that would do that, Lindsey.

(48:07):
I'll tell you this, I tellyou this The email did come from
a guy named Mike Brown. Noworld, take my strong hand, get
on, give train, Molma,give train hand round the world, take
my strong hand, Get on thedamn You are my kind of crippled GIMPI

(48:35):
tremendous. You're listening to the BigMad Morning Show. This is Tulsa's Morning
Show. Ninety seven km O.Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning

(49:02):
Show. Nine one eight four six, oh k m O. D Let's
play a game because we have ticketsto give away. See uh, This
little band called Texas Hippy Goldition isgoing to be playing Rock the River Fest
June thirteenth through the sixteenth at SparrowhawkCampgrounds in Tallaquah. We've got a pair

(49:24):
of tickets for you right now.Nine one eight four six oh KMO.
Duh. You've got to win singsing current record is well, it looks
little. This isn't sainsing this sorryschnip nipkin. Thank you. Yeah uh.
But nonetheless, I am leading withnine. Lindsay has eight and you
have half of that. You gotfour. I have plenty of people that
say this is sings last week's winner. That would be me. So Corbyn

(49:47):
and Lindsay at nine one eight foursix Oh KMO D nine one eight four
six O KMO D. Call up, decide who's going to be your clue
giver? We're going. Whoever getsthe most right is gonna win those tickets
for Rock the Riverfest nine eight eightfour six Oh K M O D.
Good morning, you're on the air. What is your name? Daniel?
Daniel? How are you going tohave yourself? Good buddy? Who do

(50:09):
you want to give clues? Lindsayor Corbin? Let's good, Lindsey,
All right, Daniel. Sixty secondsare on the clock. Timer starts after
the first clue. Are you ready? The ore? We go? Another
word for gasoline, also the nameof the band. Also the name of

(50:29):
the bandel. Yes. This isalso name of a blue jean coat.
Uh huh Yes, blank up whenplaying a video game Level up? Well

(50:49):
drop? Okay, go to theblank bin at a store. Yes,
Oh, I don't want to doanything today. I'm feeling very blank depressed.
No kind of Yes. Girls wearthis form of makeup on their cheeks.

(51:15):
Yes, walk the blank on Hollywood. It's premiere night. It's a
color you put Yes, you're soblank? Not chocolate, but time time,
time, time, yeah, time, So seven is what you got.

(51:36):
That's pretty good, sir, Hangon the line. Okay you all,
good morning, you're on the air. What is your name? Lucas?
Lucas? How are you buddy?Not too bad? But are you
good? Man? We got tobeat seven? Are you ready? Yeah?
Here we go. Uh. Youwill log into your bank to check

(51:57):
your daily what the amount of moneyyou have left? Correct? This is
a place where you go to getgas station. Yes, but you're it's
the physical act you're doing. Yes, there is another ver a verb of

(52:19):
that. Oh god, there usedto be a restaurant down town called Ford's
Blank Station. Why am I growinga blank all of a sudden? Yeah,
if you go to the buffet,you're gonna put as much on your
plate as you can because you're tryingto blank up. Yeah is all I

(52:44):
can think of that. Another variationof that word. Oh noo, yeah,
I need another variation, my man? Oh no, yeah, fill

(53:04):
yeah, times up? Man.We did not I failed you. No,
you didn't feel I failed. That'sme. I failed. I didn't
fail. I failed. No,I'll take the blame on that quote.
No plenty of people. That's allgood, brother, man, thank you
so much for playing man. Greatday. You too much later, Daniel,

(53:25):
congratulations, Man seven was the magicnumber. You got the win you
got Texas Texas Appy Coalition thirteenth throughsixteenth at Rock the River Fest, man
Alrad congrats. I mean he hadthis really no, he did not.

(53:45):
He didn't really have it. Thatold timey word for the gas station.
He had station. He had station. So how do you get him to
say the first word? Pipe pie? Pipe pie? What kind of word
is that? The inerds of apie? Okay, maybe all right?

(54:08):
When you have a cherry pie,it is known as what, Yeah,
the inerds. Yeah that's a toughone. Yeah, that's a tough one.
What would you do give me forthat one? I was thinking of
pie as well, you know,the the the insides of a pie.
I'm still just stuck on pipe piethough. I like the generic. It

(54:35):
is a little brown bean. It'sthe number one flavor ice cream vanilla.
Yeah, all right. The recordnow tis Lindsay and I with nine keeps
you with We'll be back good morning, and it's the big nin Morning Show.

(55:02):
Four six oh K M O D. We're doing our topless today.
Pre psyched for it. Top thingsyou hated as a kid but love as
an adult. Get that coming upright now. We gotta see what's in
ghippies four by four well coming ofsays here that Mexican man dies from a
new strain of the bird blue.The World Health Organization or WHO, said

(55:23):
yesterday that a man in Mexico recentlydied from the H five N two strain,
which is different from the strain thathas caused an outbreak amongst livestock in
the US. The WHO says thefifty nine year old man died in Mexico
City in late April after developing symptomsincluding nausea, diarrhea, shortness of breath,

(55:44):
upset stomach, Get some peptol,no shortness of breath, and that
the source of his exposure is stillunknown. Mom Trump calls on Israel to
quote finish the job against a mass. Gave an interview with Hannity yesterday and
when he was asked about the boarand the Gaza, Trump said, Israel

(56:06):
doesn't have the backing of Congress andthe Senate majority leader Chuck Schumer has become
quote like a Palestinian, which hecalled a baby dang beous thing. The
former president said, Israel has tofinish the job in Gaza, and finish
it quickly and strongly, because it'staking too long. Boeing star Liner finally
launched it. Did it did fixthat toilet? Somebody calling plumber Boeing.

(56:31):
They have to penguin walk to thedoor to open up. Let him in.
We gotta got so bad holding itfor three days. Boeing's historic style
star Liner mission has launched its firstcrew to test flight crude as in like
you know, people not like rudeand Cruiseberti oil. Yeah, yeah,
first crew to test flight in aspace Veteran NASA astronaut Butch Wilmore and Sunny

(56:57):
Williams are part of the crew andthe star Line or capsule on a mission
to the International Space Station. Thestar Liners mission is Boeing's effort to compete
with SpaceX crew Dragon Capsule for ferryingastronauts to the ISS. There's a special
this is doing this. This Starlineris doing something no other ship is done,
going where no other place has gonebefore. Well, coming back to

(57:21):
someplace no other place has kind ofOkay, it's gonna land in the desert.
It's they're gonna it's gonna use notinstead of the ocean. Huh.
Yeah, I'm not joking when Isay this a series of airbags okay,
so boop and then parachute dund okay. Yeah. Are they just trying to
keep from dirting up our oceans orI mean dirty that they get it?

(57:42):
They're going to retrieve, right exactly, So what's what what's the deal?
I don't know. You've got moreocean than you do desert, I think.
But yeah, but so the reentrywe may see the re entry.
Well that's fun. Well, that'sfun. That says here that this marks
just the sixth inaugural launch of acrude spacecraft in US history. Up and
down, and there's only two peopleon it. Yeah, we're you expecting

(58:02):
more? Usually it's like four.Okay, but this is a cap sewel,
not like a plane type sort ofthing. That makes sense, I
guess. I mean a capsule canbe pretty big. It can be I
guess, I don't know. I'mnot a rocket sign. It's bigger than
what those freaks tried to take downto the Titanic. Yeah. Right.

(58:27):
Lastly, here opening date announced forTulsa Premium outlets for the shoppers out there
Oklahoma soon to be complete. Newestretail destination, Tulsa Premium Outlets, has
opened Its has announced its opening date. Retailers include Boss and Lacoste and Michael
Coore's Spade. Yeah that's still athing. Huh Yeah, thanks nineteen you're

(58:50):
gonna have one to go to.So yeah, Boss Lacoste, Michael Coore's,
Kate Spade, Vineyard Vines, andTaylor Abercrombie and Fitch Audi Das America
an Eagle. By the way,Gimp should get credit for saying that correctly.
Right, Well, that is thecorrect way to say it, Thank
you very much. It's I'm notjoking. Yeah, that is the correct

(59:12):
way to say it. It's notAdidas, we American. It's Adidas.
Kind of like chef Boyardy is cheffbeing said? Please say it the way
everyone knows. How to which whichwhich of those that are you the most
excited for it? Well, letme finish the list and then I'll tell
you. All right, we gotAiry Carhart Coach, Crocs, Coach Janey,
and Jack Levi's New Balance, PumaAlta and under Armour. For me,

(59:37):
I am most excited for Adidas andprobably Crocs Audidas and Crocs. Those
are the two. I'm most excitedCrocs all day. Yeah, okay,
so I just found out that CROsactually makes cute crocs. They're all cute.
No, not the ones that youalways wear. I can't. I
can't get behind those yet still listen, stub your toe on everything. Then,

(01:00:00):
right, I know plenty of peoplethat have fought against it and then
they get them and they love them. Almost everyone. Everyone we included,
Yes, we were against them andthen got a parent. They're like,
these are amazing. Yeah, they'rethey're my wife. Even what's that store
there with the whale, picture ofthe whale on it? The vineyard vine

(01:00:21):
place, any of the others.You'd like me to decide that. Yeah,
yeah, so Adeta's a Crocks.How about you, guys, what
did you be most excited for acoach? Okay, yeah, because you're
a big purse person, I am, Yeah it Crocs. Listen, I'm
I think this is great that they'rebuilding this over there right Outlet malls are
not what you think they are.They're just malls. They're not what they

(01:00:43):
used to be. Yeah, you'resupposed to get everything out of cheaper price,
but anywhere else. Yeah. Yeah, went down to the outlet mall
in Oklahoma City, went to theLevice store, ended up still paying sixty
dollars for damp pear jeans. Soyeah, that one down in Texas on
the way to Dallas. Same thing. You're getting a good deal and you're
like, no, this is notthat great. Hey we got one and

(01:01:04):
one was the opening. Well,the center's grand opening celebration will kick off
on August fifteenth. But as faras like for the community for that area,
I think that's I think it's gonnabe awesome and there'll be some good
restaurants in there. I'm sure we'llprobably end up having to do stuff there.
It'll be awesome. I'm down sendus to the croc Store. One.
I'm in on the croc Store.I cannot wait. Is it the

(01:01:24):
croc Store? It would be theCroc Shot. I like Croc Shot.
Yeah. You just gotta make surethat that you don't get a nation in
there. Right. All of thedrama of the twenty twenty three to twenty
four NBA season comes down to thefinals. Tonight. Game one starts things

(01:01:45):
off as the Dallas Mavericks to visitthe Boston Celtics tip off isolated for seven
point thirty and all the action canbe seen on ABC going into the best
of seven series at Boston. Isthe favorite to win this and that is
your balls to the Wall Sports.I'm Lindsay on ninety seven to five kmod

(01:02:15):
Good morning, It's the Big MadMorning Show. Nine one eight four six,
Oh kmo D. You can alsotext bmmass and then what you want
to say to eight to nine fourfive, Good morning Lindsay, Good morning
Corbyn. Your chance to text inand a win your way to the iHeartRadio
Music Festival is less than an hourfrom now, and you'll have two more

(01:02:38):
chances throughout the day to win.For all the details, head on over
to the website that rocks kmod dotcom. Good morning Gimpie, Well,
good morning. Rock Klahoma is justeighty something days away Labor Day weekend.
Prior USA disturb slipknot have been sevenfull times mortgage full lineup link for tickets
at the webs at the Rockslahoma kaymodiedot com. All Right, conspiracy theory.

(01:03:01):
Thursday, This came across my emailand I dug deeper into it and
found out that there's this organization calledDrone as first responder and police stations across
America are utilizing drones more and moreand sending them on calls as first responders.

(01:03:25):
Wired did an in depth on itand they say that the police departments
are looking to use the unmanned aircraftto go on more calls. And in
true La Vista, the police departmentthere uses a lot the flight data and
eyewitness counts help with fighting crime,and the police say it's a very inexpensive

(01:03:54):
effective technology. I think I thinkpolice get a bad rap when technology gets
involved. They almost like they're notallowed to use it. Those cameras flock
cameras around town are amazing. Thepolice work that they can do quickly and

(01:04:16):
catch people is it's insane. Andthere are a lot of people that don't
like it because it's just filming anopen public and Flock is a third party.
It's not the police. It's aservice that they pay for. The
police pay for and they say theydon't keep video longer than thirty days.
But friends of mine who are policeofficers say they can be on a call

(01:04:41):
and they're if I'm understanding correctly,their cars can be connected to the flock
system, and if their cars nearand like a stolen car shows up,
they can in that camera system,they can dispatch, they can alert car
that cop car, and that copcar can then go to it. Wow,
right right immediately quicker than somebody callingit in. Somebody's like, hey,

(01:05:04):
I think this car has been stolen. It expands their eyes or they
can track a car backwards to seewhere it went or where it came from
or its path. Like it ispretty impressive. There was a murder up
in Chicago and the car that theyleft in got flagged in Catoosa and they

(01:05:24):
pulled them over and caught them.That kind of to me, that's so
insane. How cool that is whenit comes to amber alerts, Yeah,
things like that, right, It'san extremely effective tool. So what people
are like is an evasion of pricebecause it's filming in public. Okay,

(01:05:45):
yeah, and so police get akind of a bad rap and I think
drones kind of fall under that categoryas well. The way it works is
dispatchers decide during nine to one toone calls to send a drone from headquarters
before an officer. And they startedusing these in twenty eighteen and it's escalated
from the air. The FAA approveda beyond visual line of sight flights within

(01:06:09):
three mile radius in twenty nineteen,and then the distance limitation was lifted in
twenty twenty one. The city widedrone coverage has impacted the city of Truela.
Vista flight paths trace a map ofthe city's problems, with poorer residents
experiencing far more exposure to drone camerasand they're rotors than in the nicer neighborhoods

(01:06:34):
okay, which I think is probablytrue in general of police work in poorer
areas, there seems to be morepatrols, more presence because there is either
a perceived or actual increase in crime. I don't see an issue with police
using drones for this situation. Itallows them to see what they're getting themselves

(01:06:58):
into before they get there, andthey can better prepare themselves for whatever situation
or maybe even you know, it'llget the get them into places where a
normal person couldn't. You know,Let's say there was an accident and a
car rolls off of a cliff,right, you know, you send a
drone down there to kind of investigateand see what's going on as to where

(01:07:20):
if you're using, you know,human bodies, it's not as easily accessible,
or just keep track of the subjectif they lose sight. Yeah,
there's a lot of different reasons Ithink this could be used for the Denver
has announced that they're expanding their droneprogram, saying it's the future of law
enforcement. Miami Beach says it's beeneffective, very effective for public safety,

(01:07:44):
from search and rescue operations, tocrash and crime scene documentation to everyday calls
for response from service. A Virginialaw enforcement drone caught a man just this
last week who was trying to avoidbeing stopped by police driving speeds well over
one hundred miles per hour. Thereis a constitutional law question about oversight and

(01:08:06):
that the increased deployments will lead toexcessive and potentially inappropriate drone usage and unwarranted
surveillance. The ACL you did astudy and found that while police departments were
using serious in situations fires, accidents, gun violence as the basis for drone
deployment, many were also using dronesto investigate more mundane incidents as well.

(01:08:32):
My old thing is like, soif you call and they send a drone,
like, let's say an accident andthey send a drone and then I
see the drone with its blinky lightsand stuff and then it takes off.
So like, are they deciding ona visual that is whatever distance away on
whether we need assistance or not.I would imagine that'd be used for Well,

(01:08:57):
that doesn't feel very accurate, okay, because of picture sometimes doesn't tell
the story. It's an interaction,right, but it gives you an idea
of what you're going to have todeal with if there's a danger. But
usually when there's a car accident,you are I'll give you a great example.
This is a long time ago.I was in a car accident and

(01:09:18):
we were hit from behind by acouple that had a baby in their car
and they never stopped and we gotout of the car and I was Okay,
the car didn't really have any damage. They didn't have any and they're
like, or, no, wehad damage they didn't, and uh.

(01:09:39):
I was like, we're going tocall the police. And they didn't like
that. Yeah, they wanted Theydidn't think that was necessary. They just
want to exchange information, and Iwas like, now we're calling. The
more they pushed, the more Iwas like, no, we're definitely calling.
The police now and the mom waseven was singing to the baby that

(01:09:59):
we wanted to payday, like I'mmaking a song up. So if a
drone showed up and just saw anaccident, no interaction, not talking to
us, lah, it would havebeen like, this's just an accident,
not knowing that that was going onpolice. When the police finally showed up,
there was some information. They talkedto us, they talked to them,
then they arrested both those people,right right. So with that being

(01:10:21):
said, using your particular example,yeah, if the drone has audio capabilities,
has a microphone that can send theaudio back to the police or whatever,
I think that would that would solvethat problem. But they're not what
they're gonna hear her singing. They'renot gonna know that these people have warrants
or whatever the reason was that theyobtained them. But you got to think

(01:10:44):
about like this too. I mean, this isn't your normal everyday drone that
you'll get from Walmart or some hobbyshop, right. These are sophisticated technology
drones used for law enforcement. Soit's going to be equipped probably And this
is just speculation of my part becauseI don't no s from f okay,
but it's going to have facial recognition, right, so it recognizes and again

(01:11:05):
I'm just using the example of thatyou have with these people. It shows
their face facial recognition. Okay,it pops up John Smith over here has
warrants or his wife does, orit might even be where it is a
dispatcher, like a nine to oneto one dispatcher is controlling it, so
it could say you might be ableto communicate with it. A dispatcher is

(01:11:26):
a police officer. I realized that, but it might but it might be
something like that, well what doI need to show me your identification to
the drone? But that might runyour license. That makes no sense,
especially if it's going back to anine one one dispatcher or something like going
off of speculation, right, It'snot the same as citing an actual event

(01:11:48):
that happened, right right, Like, yeah, I hope it all that
all those things are true. Thefacial recognition sauce stuff has been proven to
not be accurate, Okay, SoI just don't know, Like, if
there's a disturbance, like a louddisturbance, are they going to send a
drone and the drone just be likeAh, it's okay, I'm not listen.

(01:12:11):
I'm all for trying to figure outa way to not bog down police
officers with mundane calls like loud disturbances. But to me, sending it where
you can't get the whole story,you can't get the whole story just from
a drone. No, to me, it makes sense to use it for
let's say an accident and it showsup, and the officer shows up,

(01:12:33):
he can deploy the drone and itknows to do a whatever. Three hundred
and sixty around the scene of theaccident, takes footage. You know.
It's like almost a visual another assistancevisually where the officer doesn't have to worry
about it. I think is highlybeneficial. Yeah, Like you know,

(01:12:55):
some guys that ride they have thosecameras that you can't really you can't the
video. You can't see the stickor anything like that, but it's a
pretty it takes video of everything.Yeah, yeah, it's very cool.
They're very expensive. It's like fivehundred dollars three sixty go pro thought always
that what it is. Yeah,that's what they're' that's what they're called.
They don't have the price on them. But it's three sixty go pros what

(01:13:15):
it is, and they're amazing.It's awesome, and I agree with you
in that sense. Uh, youcould also use it for let's just say,
SWAT team's got to get dispatched outsomewhere. They're going to raid somebody's
houses, gangsters or whatever. Yeah, you know what I mean. They
can send that drone in, youknow, get an idea layout of the
property. How many people we've gotgoing on here? Are they armed?

(01:13:36):
Not armed? You see what I'msaying. Like, I don't know if
you've been watching the new season ofMary Kingstown just started up on Sunday,
and I watched the first episode,and they get to this little compound area
because you know, they got togo after these guys or whatever. And
so instead of sending in a teamof like five guys that end up in

(01:13:58):
a shootout, okay, and thenthe one guy comes through with the grenade
launcher and blows everybody up, insteadof doing all that, they could use
these drones to kind of survey thearea and see what we've got going on
here. All right, there's sixguys in this building. Here, there's
two guys over here, there's threeguys, you know, walking the perimeter
and they all have guns. Ithink that would be a very beneficial use

(01:14:20):
of said drone. Yeah, I'mall. I can think of many reasons
why it would be beneficial. Iagree with the hostage situation things one hundred
percent. Things where the officer doesn'thave to go into danger and they can
send a drone one hundred percent.But I'm all for those. And this
isn't a question of I'm not forit. It is I don't understand the

(01:14:43):
logistics of how it would work whenon a on an accident, on a
disturbance call, on a deep domesticviolence, and I think that's I think
that's where human judgment has to comeinto play. You know, you use
the drone to get out there,go and get a basic idea of what's
going on, and you have touse your basic human judgment to be like,

(01:15:03):
all right, so this is whatwe're gonna have to do to complete
this. This is a great textI can tell you. As a Tuls
police officer, we get inundated everyday with tons of calls for check on
well being of a homeless person thatis sleeping on the side of the road.
I have ever yet to go toone of these where somebody actually needed
help and they actually they're usually justsleeping. A drone like you're talking about

(01:15:26):
would help alleviate the heavy call loadwith things like this hundred percent. How's
the drone going to find out ifthey're dead or not? Well, it
might take. What I'm saying isthere are certain calls that require a human
interaction, right exactly. But youknow, let's just say you're a hobo
sleeping on the side of the road, right, and then you hear this
buzz because drones aren't quiet, right, drones aren't quiet at all, but
also neither of sleeping on the sideof the road, So I don't know

(01:15:47):
if the drun's gonna be a well, I mean, let's just say you're
sitting there, snooze and and thenlike you feel like this buzz coming by.
I feel like the hobo would likeraise up a little bit and be
like, what the hell is goingon over here? Shoot? Right?
I don't think so, because peopledrive by and go with these stupid uh

(01:16:08):
glass packs motorcycles, so they don'tyou know what I'm saying, like,
maybe maybe maybe the limb in thisparticular case with the sleeping hobo. The
drone could be flown up, maybebump them in the ass a little bit,
you know, assault them. Sure, we're not assault. It's just
like when your mom nudges you towake you up to your mom. Either

(01:16:30):
way. Either way, they couldwork out drones for law enforcement school.
Imagine one day having a drone thatcan hear you, hear ink, you
can speak through hostage situation. Manon a ledge, send a drone,
gets eyes in there to see itall. I don't know about man on
a ledge. Right here, youare thinking in life, nobody cares about
you, and they send a robot. Yeah right, they don't want to

(01:16:53):
send a real person to help me. I'm not even worth a real human
interaction. So again I don't know. I'm just saying there's some incidents that
I think require human interaction. Ialso agree the police get over inundated with
mundane silly calls that they that aretaking it away from calls that are actually

(01:17:15):
where their their skill set is actuallyneeded. Right, I don't think it
would take it away completely, youknow, I think it's there to help.
And again, this is where it'slike our wait guide eyes on it,
and then it takes human judgment afterthat to go in there and all
right, we're gonna go help thesepeople. If they could get like the
robot that would come to the mall. When I was like eight, I

(01:17:40):
had like a TV screen and likea human face. That might make me
feel at least I feel like I'mtalking. I can see somebody, right,
maybe you know speakers of microphones onthese drones. You're you're communicating back,
sir. Why are you on theledge? You know it's just somebody
back there in the back pushing ab You know, why are you on
the ledge? Because I want toend my life? Well, it's not

(01:18:02):
that bad. You don't have tostir. They're talking to a drone.
But I mean they're talking to areal person. On the other side,
somebody's like, just make a dronethat squirts them with water. See,
here's the thing is that you haveto it'll be treated like an officer.
Right. So if an officer justshowed up and was like like, that's
not okay, right, But eventhen, where does it stop. It

(01:18:24):
starts with water guns, ends withnine millimeters or les source. This is
a great text too, and Ihave seen this and it is fantastic.
I have the YouTube channel for youguys, Hobo's attacking drums. It's not
just a YouTube channel, it's ona lot of social media. It's fantastic
because you see these but the hoboesaren't sleeping like they're doing something. And

(01:18:45):
the drones hovering over and these encampmentsthat some of these people are in usually
you could tell might be dealing withsome sort of mental crises and this drug.
They already feel like governments, youknow, watching them, and then
the drones hovering over them and they'retrying to throw things, and the drones
teasing him by like getting close andthen pulling away really fast. It's it

(01:19:09):
is embarrassing. All right, wegot to take a break. We'll be
back. More of The Big ManMorning Show is next ninety KMO, Good
morning. It's The Big Man MorningShow nine six soh KMOD. You can

(01:19:34):
also text bmms and then what youwant to say to eight two nine four
five. A survey was done withsome people about the future and what the
next decade will look like. Andthis is some predictors of things that will

(01:19:58):
happen in the next decade and therenot. They're not like, uh,
They're not silly, right, flyingcars, robots, rold on not silly
like Brad Pittangela Njolie will get together. These are like serious things like flying

(01:20:18):
cars and robot maids. Yeah,okay, Like as an example, the
first one less than seven percent ofthe world will be under the international poverty
line, which you and I probablydon't really some of us may think we're
in poverty, yeah, but whenyou look at some of these other third
world countries Africa, Mexico, whatever, Yeah, yeah, yes, And

(01:20:42):
a lot of the people that arein poverty are in other continents than the
United States. And so they're sayingthat it will by twenty thirty, it
will fall to six percent, whichis currently at six point eight. So
again not one that I'm not thebasis of this conversation, but as an
example of no, they're talking aboutthese are serious predictors. Level four autonomous

(01:21:05):
vehicles will be for sale in theUnited States to ordinary customers. Now,
most people don't know the difference.So level one means that there is at
least one element, like the speedof the car, that is automated,
think of adaptive cruise control. Okay, okay. Level two means that multiple

(01:21:25):
elements like both speed and steering arecontrolled by a computer. Think of the
autopilot and Tesla that's they don't actuallycall autopilot. Level four is where things
get interesting. It signifies the carcan self drive all the time, provided
it only used in certain environments,like in the city or on paved roads.
And this is where it goes tobecoming like a big deal. Okay,

(01:21:50):
I would love to just get inmy car and say take me home.
Yeah, yeah, absolutely, orput in the address of where I
want to go, or tell ityet we know, you know, take
me to the the resars on eightysix Street in alasit right, and it
just goes. You still don't haveto you don't have to be behind the

(01:22:11):
wheels still, just in case somethinghappened, think of road trips. Oh,
that'd be great, yes, youthe driver could be sleeping in the
backseat. Yeah. There are someLevel four vehicles already on the road.
A company called Waimo is considered theindustry leader for operating Level four vehicles.

(01:22:31):
They have a series of taxis inSan Francisco. Would there still be a
need for a driver's license at thatpoint, It's a great question. I
have no idea. And if youget a vehicle like this is there,
like, can you tell the carto evade like take like get me to

(01:22:58):
if think of the old time countyborder okay fast, okay, yeah,
to evade police if possible. Andthen I'm not doing any of the driving.
And if we get an accident,you're gonna have to have a driver's
license. Somebody has to be heldresponsible. Well, I think you just
being ownership of the vehicle would beenough to hold you responsible, But then

(01:23:21):
that creates a whole other thing.So like I own my mom's vehicle,
but she drives it. Am Ifinancially responsible? You would be Yeah,
sucks. Tell your mom to stopbeing so reckless. Yeah, right,
So anyway, so they say thatthose are definitely impossible in the next decade.
This one's fun. The life expectancywill exceed seventy five in the next

(01:23:45):
decade. Now, just for alittle illustration, if you were if this
was eighteen sixty five, you wouldhave the life expectancy was thirty five.
Yeah, okay, And in nineteenoh five the life expectancy was fifty okay,
And in nineteen seventy five the lifeexpectancy was seventy one. So things

(01:24:11):
are making it better to live,which I think is cool to think about
when you talk about things like Idon't know, ending measles. It's kale,
right. The obesity rate will dropfive percentage points. Okay. They

(01:24:33):
say that drugs like ozembic and otheranti obesity medications will help and will grow
exponentially to help reduce obesity. Yeah, but aren't there like a lot of
side effects from stuff like that.I don't know. I can't speak to

(01:24:54):
the I don't know. I thinkall the drugs that people take scrips have
crazy, weird side effects. Loosestool. Yeah, yeah, doesn't that
just help you to lose more weightthe loose stool. I know a lot
of people that have taken simon gluetide and it has changed their life for

(01:25:16):
the better. Yeah, okay,And I don't know anybody that's taken it
that's destroyed their life, right right. I know people that have maybe had
a conflict with it their body,had a conflict with it, But overall,
I don't know anybody that has takenthat drug and not had a revolution

(01:25:41):
in their life, right right.Ozimpic it's safer than meth yeah, keep
your teeth easily more easily acceptable too, right, right, this is an
interesting one. The US will slaughtereleven point five billion more land animals per
year within the next decade, willslaughter more land animals. Yeah, I

(01:26:04):
mean like for food consumption. Andin twenty twenty two, the US hit
a milestone. It was the firstyear the country had slaughtered more than ten
billion land animals for food. Andthey're saying that the US Department of Agriculture
published its meat, dairy, andegg production projections and they didn't project the

(01:26:27):
number of animals that would that'll beraised for food each year, but rather
the amount of meat, eggs,and dairy that will be produced by weight,
which got converted into the number thatwould be slaughtered. And they're saying
that it'll jump in a decade onebillion, okay, which is a that's
a big number, billions, abig jump. They also project projected that

(01:26:51):
the US per capita consumption of redand white meat combined will rise from two
hundred and twenty six pounds and twentytwenty two to two hundred and thirty five
pounds in one year. That's fourpercent, which is a big increase.
I wonder why Yeah, especially withobesity going down huh, right, and

(01:27:12):
the price going up so much,and they're saying that I read recently that
our population was decreased, like lesspeople were having kids, and so they
were saying that there was going tobe more By twenty thirty, there was
going to be more sixty five yearolds than I don't know if that's an
actual statu Okay, I don't knowif that's true. Now. People may

(01:27:34):
be choosing to have less kids,but that doesn't mean there's less people,
right. Those two numbers don't alwayscorrelate, And just because this year people
are having less babies doesn't mean thatis the trend. Sure, that would
be a monster stat if people werehaving less kids. Yeah. Do you

(01:27:59):
know, do you know anybody that'slike, I'm not going to have kids?
Yeah? Yeah, really, yeah, say more. I mean they
just choose because of the well,of course they choose, and personally,
I think that you will end upchanging their mind. Then they haven't decided,
right, right, Well, youthink of like the gay couples,
Right, they're not having kids,they're adopting kids. But I see what

(01:28:23):
point they're getting. They're getting kidsfrom people who had kids that don't want
their kids, you know what Imean. So, uh, but I
do, like lindsay, I knowa few people that, you know,
they just decided, I'm I'd rathernot have children, not I'd rather live
my life the way I want tolive it and have more money and blah
blah blah blah blah. And tothem, I say, well, that
sucks because you're really missing out onehundred percent. Yeah, but that's their

(01:28:46):
prerogative. It's their choice. Theycould do whatever they wantred percent. There
was a guy I worked with inKansas City who did sales, and him
and his wife they didn't want kids. And every time we talk about it,
because it's such a it's a it'snot calm, all right. So
when you both are like, ohyeah, I know plenty of people,
there's a differestween saying it in yourtwenties and thirties and then living it in
your forties and fifties. Right right, I'm with Lendsey. I think everybody

(01:29:12):
gets to a point to where like, ah, maybe we should, maybe
we should have kids. But Ifeel at that time, well, now
you're starting late. You're behind aneight ball on that one. Hey,
next thing, you know, you'resixty years old when your daughter's graduating.
Don't even get me started. Iwent down that rabbit hole and my niece
just graduating. I'm like, myniece, get the walker out. Come

(01:29:33):
on, Graham. Well I'm goodparking right right, So mean I'm gonna
be like, I don't know whyI have this vision of a sixty year
old decrepit. It's like cripkeeper typeof thing. Right. Well, it's
because you're so cleaning your immune systemthis week, you know, So it's
it's just shutting your body down slowly. Another thing predicted that will happen in
the next decade, implantable brain computerinterfaces will be used for human augmentation,

(01:29:59):
not just from need. I amjust flabbergasted by the number of people on
board with this. Say that again, human augmentation like breast and plants and
stuff like that. No, no, no, like you will have it
for us to do whatever you want, Okay, Right, it's the idea
that people are so on board withthis and they think it's so cool.
Are the same people who don't wanta camera watching their car drive by.

(01:30:23):
I remember when they're talking, they'retalking about putting chips and people to like
scans and you're like, now,now, but this you're on board with.
Yeah, I'm not on board withit at all. What's me?
I find it intriguing because you know, Musk did that one implant on the
guy and he can't do anything,but now he controls everything with just his
brain. Get on the computer,blah blah blah ah that stuff. I

(01:30:45):
find it interesting, but I thinkas stupid as hell because computers get hacked.
You see what I'm saying, Justlike your smart home. Oh man,
I've got my door locks to whorls. I gotta do is get on
my phone, hit the app.Boom, my doors are locked. That
stuff can get hacked. People canstill get into your house. What happens
when your brain gets hacked? Howdo you think they do updates on that

(01:31:06):
cat that muscus so he can playchess. It's all wireless. Maybe it's
wireless. I don't know, it'swireless. It has to be done.
But he gets an update when theywant to change the software. And what
if, you know, he getsan update that he doesn't necessarily want.
You know, they could change It'sa silly, silly idea. Not only
that, but how many of thesame iPhone or an Android. You've had

(01:31:30):
the first one, you don't,you gotta upgrade it, right, because
processors get better, chipping gets better. Huh So then what you're gonna have
a surgery to have an old chipremoved? And then you know you're bumping
into walls and you can't play chessbecause you're like, sorry, I just
got a new one. I'm stillfiguring it out right now. For people

(01:31:50):
like the gentleman that they're they're testingit on game changer, right, good
for him. Soldiers that come backcan lose the ability to do things percent
all. I'm all for that,but just to do it because you're a
lazy turd, right, But that'swhy people are going to live to be

(01:32:12):
seventy five. Dude, you'll bea robot, absolutely right. A nuclear
weapon will be used. I don'tdoubt that at all. I don't know
if a nuclear weapon will be used, but I think there will be one
detonated. And I think the differenceis is that one would be one country

(01:32:36):
against another rather than a nefarious groupmishandling right, right, right right,
kind of like what we did indirt World War two. I don't think
that it was on one country usingit on another one, and it shut
things down quickly. The Pope,this is really fascinating. The Pope made
a statement today because for those whoknow it's d Day, everybody should go

(01:32:59):
down a rabbit hole and read aboutit. It is easily one of the
most insane days in American history.From logistics to loss of life, to
what it meant everything it's it iseasily one of the historically the most fascinating
days in America in the world.But he said, he goes, I
people are forgetting what that was likeeighty years. People are forgetting. They

(01:33:26):
don't understand, and so they thinkit's okay to be crazy and that wars
are okay, and and they're forgettinghow bad it was. Yeah, And
I'm like, that's a really interestingtake. History is circular, circular,
so like, yeah, yeah,it will happen again. Uh, the
number of people forcibly displaced around theworld will exceed two hundred million, So

(01:33:53):
by conflicts, wars, politics,whatever, that'll increase too, but exceed
by two hundred million. Global energyemissions will peak. I that should just
be part of the evolution of life. I think the US car fleet will
be ten percent electric vehicle. Okay, I'll buy that. Yeah, it's

(01:34:17):
a big number. It is abig number, but I mean there's ninety
percent that are still gasoline fuel exactly. So sure, thank you for the
math the logistics to keep those vehiclesoperating. We're not prepared for the electric
vehicles. Yeah, right, right, so I don't it can't handle it.

(01:34:42):
Electric filling stations are becoming more common, but they're not readily available.
You still have to take a roadtrip and plan where you're stopping to get
fuel based on where these places are, and if there's a line. You
just see what I'm saying, Like, we're just logistically not there yet for
it to be a ten percent.But again, this could be in a
decade. So I don't know howlong it takes to build those, but

(01:35:06):
I thought those were early to me, the age one is the most fascinating
when you think about the life expectancywas thirty six. How many are we
at now with electric cars being built? I wonder what the percentage is.
It's it's small, yeah, smallnumber. If it's If it's more than
three percent, I would be shocked. All Right, we got to take

(01:35:27):
a break. We'll be back Tulsa'sMorning show is coming right back, a
big bed morning show, Tulsa's rockstation ninety KMOD. Good morning, It's
the big Man Morning Show. Nineone, eight four six oh kmo D.

(01:35:50):
You can also text BMMS and Danwhat you want to say? Eight
two, nine four five Join usright now. Is our friend Michael from
the Tulsa Drillers. Hey, buddy, how are you? I'm doing great?
Good morning, Quarby, Good morning. Drillers are on the road this
week, but you guys, we'llbe back in action on the eleventh at

(01:36:13):
one Oak Field. And we're abouta month out from the halfway part of
the season right exactly. I thinkwe've got three series left, including the
one we're in right now, soa little bit left than I think.
We got sixteen games left in thehalf, and the Drillers have gotten hot.
We've kind of caught our way backinto it. At least. We're
five games out of first and we'vegot a bunch of important games coming up,

(01:36:34):
including against one of the teams aheadof us here next week when we
come back to town against Arkansas.Yeah. So make sure you go to
Tulsa Drillers dot com to get yourtickets so you can see the Drillers in
action at One Oakfield. The futurestars of Major League Baseball, not just
for the Dodgers, but for allMajor League Baseball pass through one Oakfield.
So go down there and make sureyou see some great action, fireworks,

(01:36:56):
lots of family entertainment, and greatfood happening at one Oakfield. So Drilleries
dot com to get your tickets.All right, let's talk some sports.
We have the NBA Final starting tonight. Do you have a predictor? Are
you an NBA guy? Yeah,I mean, to a degree, I
am probably more this year than Ihave been a long time. I'm a
Knicks guy, so I've been.I really enjoyed it and I've been following

(01:37:16):
it pretty closely. I mean,I'm I can't see the Celtics going down,
but the MAVs have been pretty damnimpressed, so it should be a
good series. Yeah, And they'realso announced the NBA is on the cusp
of a new deal. They sayit's gonna be like seventy six billion dollars
that's going to change the the landscapeof TV rights. Do you have an

(01:37:38):
opinion? I know your sports guy, but do you have an opinion when
we get into some of the nutsand bolts of the media side of it.
No, I love it. Itry to keep up with it,
you know. So you know,I think the NBA is certainly the very
attractive package that they've got. Andnow with all the competition in the marketplace,
you know, you can't you knowyou can. You can't fault them

(01:37:58):
for going to get more for theplayers and for the club. So I
mean, that's why these teams areall work like two billion plus now yeah,
uh, all right, let's moveon to baseball. The White Sox
continued. I think they're going togo for the title of maybe the worst
team in the history of baseball.But they are on a thirteenth Street losing
streak. They blew a six tofive lead the other day. If you're

(01:38:23):
the if you're in the leadership there, do you make a change? Like,
how do you shake the team up? I mean, they just have
a horrible roster build right now.I mean they're they're terrible. They've got
they've got nothing. They really don'teven have that much tradeable you know,
They've got a few players I thinkthat are tradable commodities. I think that's
what you got to do at thispoint. I mean that they need to

(01:38:44):
start from scratch. So I wouldprobably say they need to come in,
bring somebody in there, deal whateverasset they have that have value before the
trade deadline and and start to stockpilesome young talent and build it up through
the minor league system again, becausethey're they're they are just terrible. Yeah,
the worst record inn and one hundredand sixty two game season belongs to

(01:39:04):
the two thousand and three Tigers,who went forty three and one hundred nineteen.
Right now, the White Socks areon pace for thirty nine wins.
I did not even realize that that'sthat's that's horrible. I mean, and
yesterday they were up five to nothingin that game. I think they hit
a rain delay and then and thenall of a sudden they lost. So,
you know, they just they can'tget out of their way. And

(01:39:28):
here's kind of a bizarre nerdy question, but has there has there been a
player that's been a part of ateam like let's say, the two thousand
and three Tigers that left and wenton to a really great career, or
does being on a team like thatjust break your morale and you were heard.
You know, you were part ofthat team, so nobody has faith
in you. No, I don'tthink that's the case at all. I

(01:39:48):
think I think there's great players onhorrible teams. You know. I mean,
baseball is is definitely not a stardriven I mean, obviously stars help
you, but like you know,they're not going to get you to five
hundred just because you have a fewsuperstars. You could still lose one hundred
games and have you know, AaronJudge on the team type of thing.
So no, I mean, Ithink there's great players on that team,

(01:40:09):
they're just not enough of them tomake the team than he could. Speaking
red hot, the Yankees twelve ofthe last fifteen, and last night they
busted up the Twins and probably oneof the better fashions and they're even chasing
a shutout. The Yankees are redhot. It's unbelievable. I mean,
the pitching has been the thing forthe Yankees. For any Yankee fans out

(01:40:30):
there, you know what I'm talkingabout. They've been without the best pitcher
in baseball. Garrett Cole has beeninjured a whole season. He's on a
rehab now, so they're about toget him back probably in the next two
or three weeks. But their pitchingstaff one through five is just kind of
dominated. And they went on avery very long stretch gave up like less
than two or less runs, andstarters had thrown at least six innings and
gave up two or less runs forsome ridiculous like ten or twelve games in

(01:40:51):
a row. So you know,you pitch like that, you really don't
even need that much offense. Butthen the Yankees have all the offense in
the world with Soto and Judge andof those guys kind of getting it done.
So it's been kind of quite aturnaround in the Bronx. And then
I wanted to bring this up becauseunless you watch maybe Sports Center, or
you're a nerd for one of thesetwo teams or a baseball nerd, you

(01:41:11):
might not be aware of the lastnight was a massive pitching battle between two
studs for the Pirates and the Dodgersand Shoyotani and Paul Skeenas is that right?
Did I say? They're right?Schemes and the the Pirates won last
night, but they and they wonwith a three pitch strikeout, all fastballs

(01:41:34):
over one hundred miles an hour,and it was insanely how crazy it was
with these two pitchers. Yeah,I mean, Schemes is incredible, Like
he's probably the best pitching prospect Ithink hit the big leagues in the last
ten years. I mean, hejust busted in. I think he's had
five starts something like that, andhe averages over one hundred miles per hour

(01:41:55):
on his fastball, and it lookslike you throw on a whipple ball.
You remember when you played in theback, you already played whiffleball buddies and
dude freaking would throw things with likeall sorts of crazy movement on and you're
like, that's impossible to hit.That's what this guy's doing at like ninety
eight to one hundred and two milesan hour every time out. And he
just basically, you know, whippedthe Dodgers incredible lineup for five inning last

(01:42:15):
night and the Pirates got the win. So Pittsburgh's got something special with this
kid. They got another picture namedJones, who's who's you know right there
with him, like a one Btype of young guy. So things are
looking up in Pittsburgh, which isa rare thing to say. Nonetheless,
just great baseball being had in themajors and down at one Oak Field.
Make sure you go to Tulse Drillersdot com get your tickets to see the
future of baseball happening down there.Tulsa Drillers dot Com. Mike, have

(01:42:38):
a fantastic week. Appreciate it Man, Thanks you guys too. Yeah,
good morning, It's the big ManMorning Show. Nine one, eight four
six oh kmod can also textmms andthen what you want to say to eight

(01:43:00):
two, nine four five, Goodmorning Lindsay, Good morning Corbyn. Happy
thirty third birthday to porn star JadaKi. She spreads the love in girl
Scout, Goodies, horny yoga andlesbian gamer girls. Now, before porn,
she was a gold medal winning figureskater. Her folks must be real

(01:43:27):
proud an Olympic gold medal winning skateror just a gold medal, because those
aren't the same. It doesn't saillimb. Yeah it would if it was
right, wouldn't you think? Probably? But either way, I mean,
that's a pretty big deal. Noit's not. It's not. You must
be good at it. If youknow, gold Eye, I'm the eighth
grade PEPSI bowling champion that does notmake me a good bowler. It does,

(01:43:48):
though it does not have a trophyfor it somewhere. I do not.
It doesn't. It's not. Ithink if you won it was good
in the eighth grade. Yes,yes, she could have been good there
at one bowling alley. She couldhave been the best. She maybe could
have gone to the Olympics. I'mjust no, that's not necessarily true.

(01:44:08):
Maybe she just won a gold medal. I would think if you win an
Olympic medal, you will start everysentence of the medal sentence with Olympic.
Oh for sure. Yeah. Goodmorning, Ghippie, Good morning Corbyn.
Hey, Rock the Riverfest is goingdown next weekend at the Sparrowhawk Campgrounds in

(01:44:28):
Tallaquah. We've got some more ticketsfor you to win, but you can
always go to Rockthriverfest dot com.That's r Awk Theriverfest dot com and see
the full lineup and get your ticketsthere. Let's go ahead and do our
top list. We do it Thursdaysat this time. It's typerpic Mad Morning,
Soo's top list random topics, randomlydrawn with random results. Now here's

(01:44:49):
Corbyn, Gimpie and Lindsay with thisweek's top list. This week's top list
is things you hated as a kidbut love as an adult. But he
got for number five Lindsay cigarettes.My parents were smokers when I was a
child, and I used to say, I hate cigarettes. Stop please stop
smoking, Please stop smoking. Andthey would light up in restaurants and oh,

(01:45:13):
my gosh, I know right,you're smoking hospitals and stuff. It
would drive me crazy, and theywould get so annoyed because I was so
annoyed with them, and I wouldsit there and wave my hand in front
of my face, blowing their smokeaway from me, and oh, it
would drive me nuts. And then, of course, as I got older,
I started smoking cigarettes and I lovedthem, and I mean, I

(01:45:36):
do miss I miss it too.Since you still smoke, yes, do
you get to get credit for sayingyou quit smoking? No? No,
I'm still sweating exactly. Number foursad movies. My mother would make me
watch them with her, and Ihated them. I didn't appreciate them.

(01:45:59):
Huhm. Hated that though I couldnot. I was so bored. What's
a movie you remember? She forcedyou to? In terms of endearment,
that was the first one. Andnow I love that movie, and every
time I watch I'll call her justto say I love you. Yeah,
it's it's a father mother daughter movie. She thought she was bonding with you,
yes, and I was, soI was like through this and I

(01:46:23):
remember, I remember like every chance, where are you going? I'm going
to the bathroom. Now, whereare you going? I'm going to get
a snack. Like, I justdid not want to sit through this movie,
But come on, watch this withme. It's really good. You'll
like it. Same with like Lifetimemovies. Oh my gosh. She would
make me sit through those two withher. Yes, I know number three

(01:46:45):
on my leg. By the way, you just stole gimpies Lifetime movies.
I had to change three. Beer. I my my dad would when we
would fish, he would let metry beer good old days, and I
again, yeah, I didn't likethe taste of it, but that was,

(01:47:06):
you know, kind of a traditionalthing. If you're out fishing,
you're gonna have to drink a beerwhen you go get one from him for
him, Yeah, reward to get. Absolutely didn't like the taste. And
I remember, I'll never drink beerwhen I get older. That's not going
to be something I like. Oh, but as an adult, oh my
gosh, become a bit of aproblem. Yes, I love it.

(01:47:28):
I wonder how many times you couldgo back to those references, not just
you, but in general. Andthe person that was giving you taste was
trying to get you to become theirfuture drinking buddy. Yes, yeah,
damn it. I wish you werehere or not if you were an addict.

(01:47:48):
Right. Number two Jello. Hedidn't like jello as a kid inside
bar. You like it now,you know, really very picky about it.
I like it in jello shot form, of course I don't. I
don't eat jello. But you don'tlike jello. You like the novelty of

(01:48:11):
how you're kidding your alcohol. Sure, but I will have it with if
it's in a certain dessert, likeyou know, if it calls in recipe
a pot luck. You had achurch, You had a church potluck.
Jello? Huh? What's your favoriteflavor? Strawberry? Yeah? And how

(01:48:33):
do you like lemon? Lime?And how do you like it as a
dessert? Yeah, like frozen orfrozen, like the frozen jello, yeah,
like the like the jello pudding pops, Like that's putting, that's pudding.
Yeah, but there's I don't know, gelatine. There's always some sort

(01:48:54):
of dessert with a gelatine in therecipe. You're making this up right now,
right. You can't name one ofthe top or how you would like
it. Just plain strawberry jello withsome ripped Yeah, maybe put some grapes.
No, not grape or lettuce.I don't want any. I don't

(01:49:15):
want any chunks of anything in it. M yeah, but jello shots in
that form. Again, the alcohol, the novelty of the alcohol consumption,
Yeah, all day. And numberone is Brussels sprouts and my we my

(01:49:38):
parents would make those with almost everymeal because my parents loved them, and
we had a Saint Bernard until Iwas nine or ten years old. We
had to put Bernie down and hewould he would lay underneath our dining room
table at dinner time, and Iwould if there were Brussels sprouts on my

(01:49:59):
plate, I would throw them underneaththe dinner table. And I remember my
dad saying, you need to eatyour Brussels spruce like I don't like them.
And he would get up. Onenight he got up to answer the
phone rained during dinner, and whenhe came back and he goes, oh,
you ate your Brussels sprout, it'sgood for you, And I said
mm hm, and I didn't.I'd thrown them underneath the table. And

(01:50:21):
he happened to look underneath the table, and he said, you didn't eat
your Brussels sprouts. You threw themunder the table. And I thought for
sure that the dog would have atethem for me. And I said,
see, they're not good. Eventhe dog won't eat them. And he
liked that answer so much that hegave me a pass, and I never

(01:50:42):
had to try them again, thankfully. But now as an adult, I
love them. They're my favorite vegetable. Brussel Sprouts are one of those things
that they are not always good,depending on it. Sometimes they're good,
sometimes they're bad, depending on howyou make them right steamed with salt and
pepper, hard pass parmesan, orwith balsamic vinegar on them or something,

(01:51:04):
they're pretty good. I'll take themeither way that you just mentioned. But
number one Brussels sprouts, I lovethat for you. All right, we're
doing top list things you hated asa kid but love as an adult.
GIMPI I put down as number fivecleaning. I hated cleaning as a kid,

(01:51:25):
and I think a lot of kidsdo that, but I have an
exception here. I feel because Igrew up as an Air Force brat and
we moved a lot, and whenit was time to move, it was
time to clean that house and makeit look like it was brand spanking new.
Right, and my parents, I'mtraumatized from this, would have us
boys scrubbing walls, base boards withpure ammonia, see right, cleaning this

(01:51:51):
stuff, and I hated it.Now as an adult, I don't use
pure, but I do keep mystuff really clean and tidy. When I
want, you know, people arecoming over, I don't want them to
say like, oh God, thisguy lives like a slob. I don't
have trash all over the place ordishes piled up. You know. You

(01:52:14):
may walk in and be like,oh, it smells like dogs, But
that's what happens when you have abunch of you know, indoor. That's
like I do. Nonetheless, Ikeep my as clean. Number four,
it's classical music growing up. Man, what the hell is this crap?
And God, no words, thisis boring. Put me to sleep.

(01:52:35):
I love it. I love itnow, and I think a lot of
that has to do with being aband in high school, in middle school
or whatever. And now there's alot of times that, especially if I'm
in my car, not so muchif I'm on the bike. If I'm
on the bike, I'll play itjust to mess with people at a stoplight.
It because you know, you're blastingGridthoven just to be a dick.

(01:52:57):
But I put it on and justdrive because it's just better that way I
feel. You know, there's nota lot of words to clutter up.
It's relaxing, it's it's just kindof all right, we're we're jamming,
you know what I'm saying. Doesthat make sense? Yeah? Maybe maybe
just to me a music nerd.Number three. I have brussels on mine
as well, and I wouldn't touchthem as a kid. They smelled like

(01:53:23):
farts and they look like little babycabbages, right, And it wasn't until
four three four years ago that Ihad some and I was like, okay,
these aren't bad. Got them througha Hello Fresh kit and you know,

(01:53:43):
they round them up and toasted themup right exactly and roasted them.
I'll agree with you. Boiled frozen, boiled brussels or whatever fresh ones boiled
up with just salt. No,no, maybe not so much. Honestly,
I haven't tried them, but becausethat's because that's all I do is
roast them. Put them in theoven, some olive oil, some salt,
you know, that pink camel,lay in salt, and that good

(01:54:06):
crushed pepper, you know, andthen you know, roast them up real
good. I like to get thema little extra roasty to where there's side
kind of crispy, you know whatI mean, maybe almost a little burnt.
But it's such a good. It'sgood. They're good. They're good,
they're good. And hell, Ihad some just the other day for
dinner, and I've got, likeI'm not gonna lie, I've got like

(01:54:27):
two other packages in my freezer readyto go for another meal. So there
you go. People can't change numbertwo, which these next two could easily
probably be in or switched. Butnumber two I put down whiskey whiskey because
when I took that first shot ofwhiskey at the ripe old age of thirteen,

(01:54:48):
right, that son of a bitchslammed my throat shut and I couldn't
breathe, and I said, thisis horrible, and I am never going
to try that ever again, thegoddamn jim Bean got me right. And
now look it's my favorite. Thisis my absolute and I like all whiskeys.

(01:55:10):
I I will sit there and gothrough and buy different kinds of whiskey
and try it in different ways.And I have found recently that just simple
whiskey on the rocks man or whiskeyneat is the way to go for me.
You know, some people are like, oh, you might have a
problem. I don't care. I'mokay with it. I drink my whiskey
straight. I'm not a pussy,you know. I put I put the

(01:55:31):
ice in it to kind of chillit out a little bit. Sometimes it
does water it down. But youknow, if you don't put a whole
bunch of ice in there, you'renot drinking water down whiskey. So so
whiskey. If someone gets whiskey neator just on the ice with ice.
People have said you might have aproblem, yeah, because you know you
can't. You don't put it incoke or whatever something like that. You

(01:55:54):
know, you just you just yougot to have your liquor hard, right
now, give it to me hard, So whatever. I think those people
are dumb they don't know. Theycan't appreciate good alcohol when it's in front
of them. Now I will bepicky about it, you know. I
think the lowest I go on theshelf is probably Jim right. But I've

(01:56:16):
learned to really appreciate Woodford Reserve isnow. It's become a staple in my
house. That's a really good one. Johnny Walker's always been my favorite.
That's a Scotch whiskey. Then,you know whatever. But like when it
comes to like Kentucky Deloxe or somethinglike that, I'm not twenty anymore and
I'm not broke af so I don'thave to buy your terrible bottom shelf whiskey.

(01:56:44):
Going down the rabbit hole of whiskeysand you find out how many different
varieties there are, even regions youcould easily travel the universe. I have
found that Irish whiskey I'm not ahuge fan of, right Rye whiskey,
not a huge fan of but Imean it's it's if that's all you got
and you're offering me a shot,I'll take it. Japanese whiskey is that's

(01:57:08):
supposed to be ridiculous. I haven'ttried any yet, and I don't really
like it so much. Really them? Huh? Is that all of them?
I don't know, not all ofthem. But I'm not a huge
fan. And I've tried. Imean, I do enjoy whiskey a lot,
but the Japanese whiskey is not forme. I haven't tried any I

(01:57:30):
see it on the shelf and I'mlike, Okay, it's a little pricey
right now, so maybe I'll cometo you later, you know. But
again, I learned that, youknow, if you want something good,
you're gonna have to pay price forit. So I'm not going to buy
ten dollars whiskey, you know.I'll buy ten dollars wine all day,
you know, but not not tendollars whiskys and oother people going ten dollars?
Yeah right, Walmart? What up? Number one? Naps? Naps

(01:57:56):
right, Oh my goodness, gracious, naps show a sign of maturity.
You don't see maybe five year oldsout there going I could go for a
nap right now? No what itwas nap time. I didn't want to
do that. I wanted to play. I wanted to do everything. Butt
take a nap. Now, Iwant to do nothing. Butt taken nap?
You know, it's like you crankoff a good nap. Whether it's

(01:58:16):
an hour, two hour, threehours, it's usually my camp. Anything
over three hours, I'm just sleepingat that point, you know. But
you know I get up, I'mlike, all right, we're good.
I'm well rested, I'm refreshed.I'm ready to take on the rest of
the day. So naps number oneall day. I seriously love this list.

(01:58:38):
It's so funny. Then once peopleare texting in well top things.
You hate it as a kid,but love is an adult Number five for
me. Spankings number four, Yeah, it's being honest. Number four being
boored. I hated being bored asa kid. Now I beg for it.

(01:59:00):
Please. My kids we were playingand my kids were joking. They're
like, if you continue that,you'll go to your room. I'm like,
really, can I please? Do? I have to shut the door?
Yep, and you'll get no dinner. I can go to bed good.
I could stand a skip a muleor two. Yeah, I was
like, this sounds awesome, Canmom join me? Number three closed captioning.

(01:59:27):
You've talked about that a lot lately, and I've got my oldest trained.
You can't understand them. Why notjust have the I can just read
it when I need it. Idon't have to read it all the time.
I have a British person on therewith a Welsh accent. It's makes
it just easier to read and belike pause in it and rewinding. What
is it when drunk people or something. It makes it so much easier.

(01:59:53):
I don't have to have the volumeso loud. That's number three. Number
two going to bed early. Ihated going to bed early. I beg
to stay up late, please,And like, right now, our kids,
we are crossing our kids in theuniverse. They want to stay up
late. We want to go tobed early. They're not old enough to

(02:00:15):
stay up by themselves, so weend up having to stay up late.
Number one unequivocally the best. Ilove when I'll be sitting on the couch
holding the remote, waking up withdrool on my face, going how did
that happen? A nap is thebest in my house. I don't like

(02:00:39):
nap it in public, like you'reat the waiting place and you're like,
I'm not that old yet right atthe doctor's office. Yeah, But napping,
even if you like just laying downand cuddling up and like, okay,
turn on a little a little uhchopped, Like, hey, let's

(02:01:00):
see what the first You know howmany shows I've had to start over at
the ten minute mark? Yeah?Oh yeah. Yeah. My wife when
she's like he needs a nap,she'll put on a certain show and we'll
lay down to watch a show andI'm like, you think I'm tired,
don't you. She's like, Sbeing cranky, you need a nap,

(02:01:23):
and she'll turn the close captioning off. I'm like, what are you doing.
I can't hear it? Oh God. Some texts coming in beer,
liver and onions. Okay, thesmell of a skunk mmmm, because the
smells like weed, olives and thenweed. So I don't maybe maybe you're

(02:01:45):
right? Uh? Another text stayinghome, rainy days, saving money okay
okrah, Chinese food huh girls okay. Scary movies another one black coffee,

(02:02:14):
thunderstorms, spicy food, food varietiesand they're napping sleeping. Another one really
old movies Okay, yeah, I'mnot. I'm not that old yet.
We try to watch the old movieand you're like, I got yeah.
I find myself getting into some blackand white so nothing to make your blunts

(02:02:40):
right, I'm not you know,going so far back, isn't it like
silent films? Whatever? Did notjudgment another one meat loaf. I don't
love meat loaf, but I havehad some good meatloafs lately, so maybe
that I'm in an art. Myart's changing, right, all right,
that's our top. Let's take abreak and we'll be back. Show returns

(02:03:00):
next Tilsa's Morning Show, ninety KMOD. Good morning, It's the Big nine
Morning Show. Nine eight four sixoh KMOD. Can also text bmms and

(02:03:21):
then what you want to say toeight two nine four five. We'll see
in the news a lot and youshould. And that is that today is
d Day, eighty years ago.Today, storm the Beach of Normandy.
Right. They weren't supposed to stormthe Beach of Normandy. They had a
big misinformation campaign to go to anotherarea. Even the Germans even thought they

(02:03:43):
were going to come across Norway atone point, and all the way they
did this public radio transmissions to tryand throw them off and inflatable tanks.
It's pretty great, right, inflatabletanks. And they landed on to Normandy
because they could get there with theirplanes, and there was a port there,
and even though there was obviously alot of death, they Germans had

(02:04:06):
pretty much left Normandy unprotected and that'swhy they picked Normandy for that. Right.
D Day doesn't stand for what youthink. It's not doomsday. It
is not doomsday. Oh, alot of people think it stands for disembarked
Day. Eisenhower was asked about thatafter he retired, and so everybody thought

(02:04:29):
there was disembarked day. No.D Day stands for day, day,
day, day, like the guyfrom Friday. Yeah, it just stands
for day. So it's day day. They tands Blacky complain. It is
mostly known as Operation Overlord, isthe technical term for what it was called,
which is a fantastic name. Right. The largest amphibious attack in military

(02:04:57):
history happens on D Day, whichis pretty cool. Uh, Hiller was
asleep when it happened, taking alittle nap. Uh. I don't know
if he was taking a nap.I think it was you know, middle
of the night. Right, hedidn't go to bed till three am,
So three and a half hours laterthe land invasions of Normandy began and he

(02:05:20):
was asleep. Paratroopers landed about midnight. He was finally roused at noon when
an aid informed him about the massiveassault that was underway in Normandy. You
think that's something you would get wokenup for, like immediately, right,
But I guess news travels slow atthat point in time. And have you

(02:05:44):
ever woken up a dictator? Ican't say is that I have. But
I bet you they're really mean whenthey get woke up. I bet they
don't like it. Yeah. Eisenhowerand met at a bar in England repeatedly
days before d Day to plant makesure everything was in line. They just

(02:06:06):
went to a pub. Yeah.I don't ever suspect us here, which
is to me the craziest thing.Easily they knew the Germans. The Germans
knew the Americans and the Allied forceswere going to attack, and here they
are just meeting in public. Uh. Knocking out communication was the key that

(02:06:30):
day, and that Nazi forces hadhigh powered machine guns and fortified positions,
not just in Normandy but Omaha Beach, and so before dawn on June sixth,
British and American paratroopers landed behind enemylines to take out the communications,
which would explain well Hitler didn't knowright away. And if you just read

(02:06:57):
about the parent the parachute in they'rein this massive plane, massive to them,
not for our current military situation,massive to them. Just sitting there
kids, Yeah, kids sitting there, backpack gun right, knew they what

(02:07:18):
they were going knew knew what theywere going into kind of right, but
we're unaware they were about to enterthe longest day of their life, some
of them the shortest day. Right, And here they jump out. They
missed the spot. They're sleon allover the place. They're kids, they

(02:07:39):
don't they don't know which ways upright, see somebody shoot them. Just
that one fact is so insane.Yeah, because that was you know before
he had to be eighteen, right, I mean, and still even eighteen,
you're still kids. But I feellike I've heard stories of like people
lying about their age and joining whenthey're like fifteen sixteen to get in,

(02:08:03):
just to go. I mean,I think there was there may have been
some people that lied, but alsothere probably wasn't a real strenuous checking.
Right right, you're good, yougot all your limbs all right, go
on, I get right, orif you say you're you write down your
age. They just go, okay, right, you know what I mean?
So, yeah, they were lying, But there are plenty of kids

(02:08:26):
today that wish they could just leaveschool, right. Meteorologists played a massive
part in D Day. Really,they were part of the planning process.
Matter of fact, D Day wasn'tsupposed to happen on the sixth, okay,
because the storm's coming. It wasthe day before they thought they were
gonna do it, and there werestorms. They're like, eh, pause,

(02:08:50):
we're gonna have to come back tothat. Right. Yeah, this
wasn't the easiest option. They hadother choices they thought would work, but
they decided this made the most sense. And, like I said, inflatables
and fake news easily the biggest helpersin D Day, right right, When

(02:09:13):
you think about like how much peopletalk about then how about how much they
talk about fake news being a badthing. Well, it kind of worked
out in this position, it did, right, pretty crazy, man.
I implore everyone to go and tryand learn something about D Day today.

(02:09:33):
It is easily one of the mostemotional days of history when you realize the
impact it had on humans, muchless Americans, much less Britain people France.
That's what I love about going toEurope. As you walk around,

(02:09:54):
you're like this city almost didn't exist, right, crazy to think about.
All Right, we got to takea break. We'll be back here.
Tilsa's Morning Show, The Big BadMorning Show, The Assaulting Engenius next nine
kmod I'm a good morning, It'sthe Big Bad Morning Show. Lindsey.

(02:10:33):
What'd you learn today? I learnedthat today is D Day, the Normandy
Landings don't send any inappropriate pictures toanyone. And I also learned that Corbyn
enjoys a good meat loaf, naps, closed captioning, and going to bed
early. Sounds like he's already livingin a retirement home. What my ask,

(02:11:00):
Oh my god, I don't cookclean, No, someone does it
for you. I love a goodjoke to deter from the fact that you
like Jello gimpy. What'd you learntoday? Well, I learned that we
went from putting fruit in our jelloto vodka. Nice trade. I also
learned that if you need a motivationalspeaker, I'm for hired. Uh.

(02:11:20):
I learned the fact that Jello madeit on Lindsay's list. Took a while
for it to set in, butnow it just makes me jiggle. Uh.
And I also learned I'm grateful noone had sex on today's top list.
It's Gordy saying make sure that dishwashersloaded right. It's stop snippy,

(02:11:43):
can I gets annoying interpasswort Corbyn newmessages. The Big Mad Morning Show would

(02:12:09):
like to take a minute to thanktroops from Oklahoma and all over the United
States. These soldiers have sacrifice.Give the Big Med Morning Show before you
to back like the total douchebags thatthey are, total douchebag, baggag,
total in complete douchebag. We honorand respect you. We honor and respect
you. We honor and respect you. DoD Blas Rocke all blessed Tulsa.

(02:12:30):
We try Boys,

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