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March 20, 2025 106 mins
Gimpy is out, alot of people lose teeth. Top 5 Celebrities that died too young you wish you could bring back. Deals to watch basketball too
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Eight times last year. Good morning, It's the Big Man
Morning Show nine one, eight four six, oh K M
O D. You can also text bmms and then what
you want to say to eight two, nine four five.
Listen online the website that Rocks kmod dot com. Past

(00:26):
shows are available on iTunes search underbeat MMS. Listen with
your cell phone. Get the iHeartRadio app, available from the
app store of your cell phone provider. More on that
at iHeartRadio dot com. And we're on Facebook, Facebook dot com,
slash bmms six nine that's where you can hang out
with us each and every day. Good morning, Lindsay, Good morning.

Speaker 2 (00:49):
Corbyn.

Speaker 1 (00:51):
Gimbia is out today. I know, I know. I was
just shocked, as you not feeling well, so he is
not coming in today. Hopefully he'll be back tomorrow. We've
got tickets to Kevin Hart we're gonna give away. Kevin
Hart is going to be at the pay Comm Center
in Oklahoma City on April tenth. Get your tickets ticketmaster
dot com. We got our top list today, top five

(01:14):
celebrities that you'd bring back to life that died too young,
and our crawl Ford Cancer is coming up on April fifth.
Registration ends on Monday. Sign up on the contest page
at kmod dot com if you would like to day
drink with us all for a good cause for cancer

(01:35):
research and don't forget Ockaholma's Labor Day Week and prior
USA Shine Down, five Finger Death Punch, three Days Grace
and more. Get your full lineup and link for tickets
at the website that rocks Slahoma kmod dot com. Uh have,
this is dumb, but do you know what a You're

(01:56):
a fishing person? Right?

Speaker 2 (01:57):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:59):
On a scale of undertend, how much of a fishing
person would you say you are?

Speaker 2 (02:03):
I mean, I enjoy it a lot, I would say.
On an enjoyment level, I would say it, no, call
it nine.

Speaker 1 (02:11):
What kind of fishing person would you say? You're an
expert in this room? You definitely are.

Speaker 2 (02:15):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (02:16):
Do you know what a blobfish is?

Speaker 2 (02:18):
A blobfish? No, I would guess it's not edible.

Speaker 1 (02:27):
This is a blobfish.

Speaker 2 (02:30):
That is hideous and looks like a blob of goo.

Speaker 1 (02:35):
It looks like a cartoon from the eighties or nineties,
like a car. It looks like a cartoon from like
the eighties or nineties that was in newspapers. I can't
remember the name of the cartoon, but this just one
the ugliest fish.

Speaker 2 (02:49):
Yeah, it's pretty ugly. Actually, I wouldn't say it's the
ugliest fish. I've seen uglier, like fish with actual teeth
like yeah those, yes, absolutely, that looks more like a
dunce fish like kind of if it were a no cartoon,

(03:10):
he'd be like the idiot of the bunch.

Speaker 1 (03:15):
New Zealand had their Fish of the Year competition, once
voted the world's ugliest animal. The blobfish beat out the
orange rouffie by about three hundred votes as the ugliest fish.
Ah or ruff looks like a fish. This looks like
somebody who is waiting for their burger to be delivered.

(03:35):
As Popeye's eating spinach, perfect blue dish. Yeah. The Fish
of the Ear competition is voted by the public and
aims to highlight and promote conservation if native water species
in New Zealand. The organizers shared the blobfish had been
sitting patiently on the ocean floor, mouth open, waiting for

(03:58):
the next fish to come by to eat. He's been
bullied his whole life, and we thought, stuff this, it's
time for the blobfish. To have his moment in the sun.
It is an ugly fish. Yeah, compared to second place,
it's not even close. How this hasn't won before, I

(04:20):
don't know.

Speaker 2 (04:24):
And it beat out the orange. They said that orange
ruffy is them. I I'm not saying orange ruffy as
that ugly, not even.

Speaker 1 (04:33):
Close it delicious. Blobfish are passive predators. They just sit
and wait for food to come to them.

Speaker 2 (04:44):
Yeah, potato.

Speaker 1 (04:48):
The diet consists of edible matter that floats, including crustaceans
like crabs and lobsters, as well as sea urchins. Blobfish
don't have teeth, so they swallow their prey whole and
they're considered an endangered species and their population is declining
due to overfishing and deep sea trawling. Do people eat blobfish?

Speaker 2 (05:11):
Yeah, that's what I want to know. The first question
that pops up, why do you blobfish look human?

Speaker 1 (05:20):
Because the ocean's terrify terrifying. Uh. It's uncommon to eat blobfish,
mostly because they're deep. Deep sea habitat makes it very
difficult to catch, so they're not commercially searched for. Not
a viable source for food, it.

Speaker 2 (05:40):
Says you, But if you do you need to blow
torch it before eating it?

Speaker 1 (05:45):
Blow torch?

Speaker 2 (05:46):
Yeah? Was that?

Speaker 1 (05:48):
I don't understand. Is there any fish you blow torch
before you eat? Why this cook? Yes?

Speaker 2 (05:54):
Right? It says the world's ugliest fish is also the
most delicious. Top ex experts says, though, blockfish tastes better.

Speaker 1 (06:02):
Than delicacy, right, delicacy?

Speaker 2 (06:05):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (06:08):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (06:10):
It was also voted the world's ugliest animal back in
twenty nineteen. Huh, yeah, I think that some pictures. In
some pictures, it's it's definitely uglier than some.

Speaker 1 (06:32):
When I was in Aruba, I think it's called a lionfish.
There was a yeah, that is a lionfish. It was
like overpopulated, right, people get them as pets or whatever,
then they dump them, they populate, they overtake environments, and
they serve it in restaurants. And I was like, yeah, whatever,

(06:54):
I'll be I'll help the process. Sure is not good.
It's not good. So but people were saying, Oh, it's
a delicacy. Oh it's a sweetfish. Oh it's the it's
not good. So if it was so good, we'd be
eating it or it would become a thing.

Speaker 2 (07:12):
Yeah, it said that it was accidentally picked up in
a lobster net, and so they said that they cut
away just a piece of filet from the fish and
decided to blow torch it. It was rich and sweets
like butter poached lobster.

Speaker 1 (07:32):
So it wasn't that you don't need to blow torch
it to eat it. No, these individuals who captured it
decided to slice some of it off its endangered species
and then eat it. I've never worked on a fish
fishing boat. I don't really. I can't think of anybody

(07:55):
I know that has worked on a fishing boat. I
don't know if this is a common thing. They catch
unidentified species on a fishing boat. Do they take part
of it and eat it?

Speaker 2 (08:07):
I don't think so, especially if they're out still on
the water, in case they get sick. If they don't
know anything about the species, that's a that's a risk.
I wouldn't be willing.

Speaker 1 (08:17):
To working on a fishing boat's a risk. Well, it's
pretty dangerous, yeah, for sure, especially lobstering. And why did
you blow torch it? You didn't have.

Speaker 2 (08:26):
The right cooking Yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (08:29):
If lobstrings in and out same day, or you're out
for a while. Yeah, you know, like tune of fishing
and stuff, and if you're out for a while, I
would think you have I don't know, a skillet, right right.
Blow torching doesn't make food taste good.

Speaker 2 (08:46):
I wouldn't know. I've never tried that method. Maybe that's
how he prepared his lobster tail. So he thought, eh,
I'll just try this. And if he said he just
he just cut a piece off, easy enough, I'll just
blow torch it and cook it that way?

Speaker 1 (09:02):
Whatever, what is he cutting metal that he just happens
to have the blow torch here by? Right? Yeah, it
makes that makes no sense at all. But it is
an ugly fish hell of a mascot though. Absolutely it
would be a great mascot for like a debate team,
an e gaming team, your role playing game team. Maybe

(09:27):
we need this for our team for our Crawl for Cancer.
Might be a good name to use.

Speaker 2 (09:33):
Blobfish just that on a on a hat. That's what
you feel like after a day of drinking a long
day of.

Speaker 1 (09:40):
Blobfish, right, Definitely the next day you might feel like
a blobfish after day drinking with us for Crawl for Cancer.
All right, get you out, we're gonna move forward. We're
gonna have tickets to Kevin Hart. We're gonna give away.
Plus we got news quickies when we come back.

Speaker 3 (09:52):
Four of The Big Mad Morning Show is next is
the phone.

Speaker 1 (10:00):
Remember you can also text bmmss and then what you
want to say to eight two, nine, four five give
you his outle. We've got news quakies. It's time for
news quakies. World news, local news, and news that just.

Speaker 4 (10:12):
Makes you say, what the Here's Corbin Gimbean Lindsay with
what's going on news Quakies from The Big Man Morning
Show in nineties on the five AMoD.

Speaker 2 (10:21):
Woman in her stranger's home puts on owners clothes. This
happened in Boone County, Arkansas, where a woman is being
arrested after she walked into a home and started putting
on the homeowner's clothes and telling the cops who are
trying to arrest her, don't come in here, I'm naked.

(10:42):
Forty nine year old Ellen Ann mcgeehey of Alpina was
arrested on five charges, one of them a felony for
the incident. According to the probable Cause Affidavid from the
Boone County Sheriff's Office. The ordeal all started and when
deputies responded to a business in Alpina where mcgeehee was

(11:05):
hitting a building with a ten foot piece of PBC pipe,
a deputy tried to make contact with her, but she
walked away. She told the deputy her clothes were wet
and she needed a change, and she went into a
house which was just a short distance away. The deputy,
of course, followed her to the house, knocked on the door,

(11:28):
and another female came to the door and said she
was the homeowner. The deputy then spotted mcgiehee behind the homeowner.
The deputy asked mcgie to step outside, but she refused
and kept on walking further into the home. The deputy
then followed her into the bedroom and discovered her that

(11:49):
she had locked herself in the room of the residence.
The deputy knocked and McGee said, don't come in here,
I'm naked. The deputy noted in his report that she
had removed her clothing and was changing into the homeowner's clothes.
The deputy then turned to the homeowner and asked if
she lived here, and she said no, she just walked in.

(12:11):
The homeowner told the deputy then that numerous times this
woman has come to her home and in the past
she has told her she is not welcome here and
do not come into my house. So then another deputy
arrives on the scene. They struggle, but after several attempts,

(12:32):
they were able to take McGee into custody, and on
the way to the jail, she was able to slip
one of her hands out of her handcuffs. Now she's
facing a felony charge of residential burglary and misdemeanor charges
of criminal mischief, resisting arrest, fleeing on foot, and disorderly conduct.

(12:52):
She was also ordered to have no contact with that homeowner.
She's free after posting a twenty five thousand dollars bond.
She has eight previous felony arrests in Boone County.

Speaker 1 (13:03):
Damn, Yeah, totally sounds like something you'd expect to happen
in a place called Boone County.

Speaker 2 (13:10):
Welcome to Boone County.

Speaker 1 (13:13):
Mother says teacher tape daughter's mouth shut. This happened in
Miami Dade County in Florida, and a teacher's under investigation
has been removed from the classroom. The Laura Park Elementary
School pre K teacher allegedly taped a five year old
girl's mouth shut Latana, Latonia. Sterling is the girl's mother,

(13:33):
and she says the teacher apologized, but that's not enough.
Sterling says she filed a complaint with the school district
and police department. Miami Dade County Public School says it's
investigating and has reassigned the teacher. Sterling also tells a
TV station she plans to remove her daughter from the school. Well, yeah, well,

(13:53):
I mean they removed the problem. That teacher's not there anymore.
It's like going to a different amusement park.

Speaker 2 (13:58):
But they just reassigned her, right Like that should be automatic.
You're out of here.

Speaker 1 (14:04):
Yeah, you should lose if you tape a child's mouth shut. Yeah,
and that's not protocol, right, sop, Then I think you
should no longer be a teacher a five year old child.

Speaker 2 (14:16):
I can see taping a teenager's mouth shut. I give
that a pass.

Speaker 1 (14:22):
I don't. I don't think you should be taping another
individual's mouth shut.

Speaker 2 (14:26):
I agree with that. However, if a teenager is going
off on a teacher, cussing, being disrespectful, you know this
that I could see where I could see where one
might say, you know what, I don't have to take
this and put duct tape over the kid's.

Speaker 1 (14:45):
Mouth, but the kid could just remove it right right.
And also you shouldn't do that to people, I know.

Speaker 2 (14:52):
But like I feel like as I just you know,
I got something for that smart mouth of yours. I
don't know, like I can just see it. But a
five year old, it just makes no sense to me,
no sense.

Speaker 1 (15:08):
I mean, they can be tenacious, yeah, yeah, you know
the whole mom, mom, mom, Right, when are we going
out for resas? When are we going on for resas?
When are we going on for when's not done, when's
not time, when's not done, when's not done, when's not done,
when's not done, when's not time?

Speaker 2 (15:23):
But also they are the most loving. When I walk
into a classroom full of five year olds, they're like
missus a, like they just want hugs. It's so it's.

Speaker 1 (15:33):
In the beginning, sure, when they first see you, one percent,
But when it's not snack time and they want to
know when snack time is right.

Speaker 2 (15:45):
But again, they are simple that teach shame on her.
Florida man threatens to pop woman with baby gun when
she parks too close. This happened in uh Cape Coral, Florida,
where a man thought a driver park too close to him.
So what he's doing is he's standing on the third

(16:07):
floor of his apartment balcony and he sees this woman
come into the parking lot and parks next to his car.
So Louis Mazero, who's forty two years old, he has
a problem with it. He sees how close she is
parked to his car. And this is around eleven o'clock PM,
maybe maybe a little bit before on Saint Patti's Day.

(16:33):
So he yells down to her, Hey, you're part too
close to my car. I want you to move it.
Don't make me come down there. I don't care if
you're a girl. I'll send my daughter. And she's like,
excuse me. He's like, this isn't a threat, it's a promise.
I will come down there and pop you. The woman

(16:53):
told police. He stepped away from the balcony came back
with a long barreled gun that he said was a
BB gun. He said, I'll pop you right now. Move
your car. The woman recounted she moved her vehicle to
a different area of the apartment complex because she was
afraid for her life, then called nine to one one.
When officers arrived at the man's door, he told them

(17:14):
he had grabbed the BB gun and started pretending to
load it. Then he showed them a long barrel rifle.
The woman identified him as the person who threatened her
and said she wanted to press charges. Attorney information for
Masera wasn't available in Lee County records on March eighteenth.
But Cape Coral is part of the Fort Myers metropolitan area. Apparently,

(17:41):
so they're going they're going to court this dude. Really,
Come on, man, Come on, man. Was she within the
lines of the parking spot.

Speaker 1 (17:55):
It's a parking lot. There's plenty of parking, yeah, or.

Speaker 2 (17:58):
Maybe that was just her spot where she normally parks.

Speaker 1 (18:02):
There's just plenty of parketing the just walk. Yeah. People
get so bent out of shape of parking spots. Unless
you're handicapped, right, there should be no reason for you
to get mad about parking.

Speaker 2 (18:13):
She had a bunch of groceries she had. Doesn't matter
you needed to be closed. But doesn't matter.

Speaker 1 (18:16):
You don't need to be close.

Speaker 2 (18:17):
Who doesn't have a life. They're standing on their bellcony
just watching the parking lot the whole time.

Speaker 1 (18:25):
Maybe they were filming it for online Right crime novelists
charged with robbing more banks. A serial bank robber was
sidelined as a crime who sidelined as a crime novelist
could be back in federal prison before the next book
comes out. Dorian Scott Sykes, who completed his most recent
sentence in February last year, is accused of robbing two

(18:45):
banks in the Detroit area. NBC News is reporting the
forty one year old made off with ten and sixty
nine dollars from the Credit Union one in Sterling Heights
on March six and stall thirty four hundred dollars from
the Chase Bank in the Laythrop Village on March twelfth.
And the Chase robbery, Sikes allegedly handed the teller a
note quote give me all the money. I have a gun.

(19:08):
I will kill everyone in here. In quote for those
who't anything about bank robbery that escalates the crime dramatically.
Sikes has written numerous crime novels, including The Good Life,
King of Detroit and Born to Die, which is due
to come out in May. Carl Weber of Urban Books
Publishing House in New York told The Detroit News that
Sykes's books tend to sell around twenty five hundred copies.

(19:30):
Asked if he was a big success as a writer,
Weber said he's a pretty small fry, to be honest,
he wouldn't be in this situation if he wasn't. Police
say Sikes flood the Credit Union won robbery in his
black Mercedes and used a rented Rolls Royce as a
getaway car. After the chase robbery, he was arrested Tuesday.
In twenty twenty, Sikes was sentenced to five years in

(19:51):
federal prison for two bank robberies he carried out in
twenty nineteen. In a sentence memo, US attorney Francis Carlson said,
Sikes robbed the banks quote just six weeks after being
released from a seventeen year prison sentence for the same
type of behavior.

Speaker 2 (20:05):
Wow, it's just research, Yeah, from my next book.

Speaker 1 (20:10):
There's a couple books out there right now about Like
there's one about a podcaster who lets people call in
about people they've hurt or killed, and then somebody calls
in anonymously and says I know your secret, and the
podcast host has killed somebody, and that kind of unfolds
the story. So, yeah, you never know Mine Yeah, that'd

(20:31):
be a good one. All these stories are on our
Facebook page, Facebook dot com, slash bmms six nine More of.

Speaker 3 (20:36):
The Big Men Morning Show is next ninety kmod.

Speaker 1 (20:44):
Good morning, It's the Big Man Morning Show. Nine one
eight four six oh kmo D. You can also text
bmms and then what you want to say to eight
two nine four five See what Lindsay has for Balls
to the Wall Sports.

Speaker 2 (21:09):
Mount Saint Mary's made easy work of American University with
an eighty three to seventy two win in the first
four of the NC DOUBLEA tournament from Dayton. The Mountaineers
secured the sixteenth seed in the East Region and will
play top seeded Duke in round one. Jeff Sprouse led
the Eagles with eighteen points after leading score Matt Rogers
left with an injury. American University ended its season twenty

(21:33):
two and thirteen.

Speaker 1 (21:34):
Yeah, that yesterday's game was not nearly as exciting. I
don't think you that the Xavier one was.

Speaker 2 (21:42):
It was okay, but yeah, Xavier came from behind for
an eighty six to eighty win over Texas, more exciting
than the first Texasses in the first four of the
NC DOUAA Men's basketball tournament in Dayton. The Musketeers trailed
by as many as thirteen in the first half before
storming back to claim the eleven seed in the Midwest Region.

(22:03):
Marcus Foster paced Xavier with twenty two points in a
game where five players finished with double digit scoring numbers.
The Musketeers will challenge six seed Illinois on Friday. Trey
Johnson led Texas with a game high twenty three points.
The Longhorns finished the season at nineteen and sixteen, and
the best game last night for me. Jalen Williams scored

(22:26):
a career high nineteen points, had seventeen rebounds and eleven
assists for his second career triple double. In the Oklahoma
City thunder cruised passed the injury depleted Philadelphia seventy six
ers one thirty three to one hundred last night with
Shay Gilgess, Alexander and three other starters sidelined. Sga, the

(22:48):
NBA's top score thirty three points per game, and a
leading MVP candidate, sat out for Rest, while lou Dorts,
Isaiah Hertenstein, and the other Jalen Williams got the night
off because of injuries. Aaron Wiggins scored twenty six points
for the Western Conference leading Thunder, who clinched the Northwest
Division title and moved closer to wrapping up the number

(23:09):
one seed in the Western Conference. Isaiah Joe added twenty
one points. Chet Holmgren scored nineteen and which led seventy
to fifty six at halftime and one oh three to
seventy four after three quarters. The teams combined to shoot
one one hundred and nine three pointers. Philadelphia set a
franchise record with fifty seven attempts, with the reserves getting

(23:31):
more playing time. Seven players scored in double figures, including
Brandon Carlson with sixteen, Kenrick Williams thirteen, and Dylan Jones
with eleven. A key moment for Okase went on a
thirty three to fourteen run stretch. It's lead to twenty
nine points by the end of the third quarter. On Friday,
the Thunder host Charlotte and that is your Balls to

(23:51):
the Wall Sports. I'm lindsay on ninety seven to five KMOD.

Speaker 1 (23:56):
Good morning, It's the Big Man Morning Show nine one
eight four to six ozh KMOD can also text BMMS
and then what you want to say to eight two
nine four five Goodbrding Lindsay.

Speaker 2 (24:07):
Good morning Corbyn. Our annual crawl for Cancer is coming
up on Saturday, April fifth, and it is the most
fun you will have a day drinking, I promise. It's
one of my favorite events that we do all year.
Registration ends on Monday, so sign up today to join
our team or you can start your own team. There's
ten people to a team, and by joining just simply

(24:31):
go to the contest page at the website that rocks
kmod dot com.

Speaker 1 (24:35):
As you mentioned, we have a couple of teams too,
so it's not just like five people, all right. So
Gimbeia is out today not feeling well, so hopefully he'll return.
You know, that's a unicorn, so he should be back
very soon. And I was just perusing through things and
the number of weird things that have washed up on
shore is really bizarre. Okay, I'm always fascinating when feet

(24:58):
wash up on shore. It is a shoes and they
have feet in them. Like it's pretty common, right, It
is pretty common, believe it or not more common than
you would think. But this is a list of some
of the weird things that have washed ashore. A bag
of severed heads. Wow, I'm sorry. Severed human hands. A
fisherman in Siberia was starting to discover a human hand

(25:21):
poking out of the snow on an island on March eighth,
twenty eighteen. He soon discovered a total of fifty four
severed hands, which had somehow washed ashore in a bag
at the popular fishing location. Authorities were quickly summoned amid
rumors of organized crime involvement in speculation about the work
of a vicious maniac, the Investigative Committee of the Russian

(25:45):
Federation soon told the popular or the population not to worry.
The hands likely came from a local forensics lab, the
committee said, where they'd be They were kept as a
form of identification and then improperly dis bosed of.

Speaker 2 (26:01):
Or they were thieves they chopped off their hands.

Speaker 1 (26:05):
You make a statement like, okay, so this lab had
these hands and then they were just like hmm, just
throw them out the window.

Speaker 2 (26:15):
Right.

Speaker 1 (26:15):
That just feels that's the only time they've ever been.

Speaker 2 (26:19):
Reckless with their body parts, right exactly.

Speaker 1 (26:22):
Hey, just as one time, just go ahead and pitch
it out the window. Not let's save some money and
not use our bio waste people. Yeah, it feels a
little reckless.

Speaker 2 (26:30):
No, you're one bag too many. We're gonna have to
charge you for this one. Actually, well we don't have that.
Well I don't know what to tell you. All right,
we'll just dispose of it ourselves.

Speaker 1 (26:40):
If that wasn't weird enough for you, how about tons
of lego bricks? Oh? Now, for this to have any importance,
you got to know some context. And sixty two shipping
containers full of four point eight million Lego pieces fell
off a boat in nineteen ninety seven. Pieces have been
washing up in the UK. And they're not regular square

(27:04):
bricks either. Many of the legos in the container were
nautically themed. It's estimated that in the years since that spill,
the pieces could have drifted over sixty two thousand miles,
meaning they could be virtually anywhere in the ocean. Fines
have only come from parts of southern England, Wales and

(27:24):
one site in Ireland.

Speaker 2 (27:26):
That would be like hitting the lottery finding that many,
getting that many lego pieces?

Speaker 1 (27:30):
If you got four point eight million, sure, yeah, and
I want to know, like how many, like just like
a handful?

Speaker 2 (27:39):
Yeah, because they're bundled when you buy a package of
if they're still one set. Yeah. Yeah, they're usually wrapped
individually in the plastic bags. Yeah, little bags. So I
mean even the cheap sets, Like if you go into
like a Dollar General, the cheapest set you can get
is like ten bucks.

Speaker 1 (27:58):
Oh, we just bought one for my kid, my youngest.
That's like maybe the size of your laptop. Yeah, it
is one hundred bucks.

Speaker 2 (28:04):
Yeah, they are not cheap at all.

Speaker 1 (28:07):
No, my kid wants me to buy them, like you know,
we're getting bread. I'm like, now, I know, you save
half all payhlfs.

Speaker 2 (28:13):
Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 1 (28:15):
A life size Et has washed ashore. Margaret Wells was
robbed in twenty eleven. She lost one particular irreplaceable item
from her England home, a life size ET replica made
by her daughter as part of a stage makeup course.
Several months later, a beach goer in Portsmouth saw ET

(28:37):
floating in the surf, but didn't realize what it was.
At first, the pedestrian called the police, fearing it was
a body, but the police quickly realized it was just
this alien model.

Speaker 2 (28:48):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (28:49):
So when someone's like, hey, ET's washed ashore, you can
be like, oh no, it has for sure. Thinking of
this when they reported a body I was watching and
was peruising through channels and that M Night Shyamalan movie
Old was on. Have you seen this movie? Yeah, it's
a Here's the thing about m Night Shyamalan movies, rarely
are they great the first watch. When you watch them

(29:09):
like a second or third time, you go okay, like
you get it. It's almost like knowing what's happening makes
the movie better.

Speaker 2 (29:17):
Yeah, yeah, I can see that. I feel like his
movies are hit or miss. You're either gonna like them.

Speaker 1 (29:22):
Or or you don't. I don't. I can't think of
a movie of his I don't like. And again there's
a lot of them. I didn't like first pass, but
second or third pass I think they're great. And Old
is one of those.

Speaker 5 (29:34):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (29:34):
First time I watched it, I was like, ah, this
is fine, But I found myself really enjoying it yesterday.
For those who don't know, this is a movie where
these people go to a resort and the people at
the resort are like, Oh, we've got this very exclusive
beach you can go to. You go to this beach
and unbeknownst to the people at the beach and it's
very secluded very private. There's maybe maybe like eight ten people. Yeah,

(29:58):
and they age rapidly and you see anything from dementia occur,
to the children aging to getting pregnant, to a woman
having a tumor growing dramatically. And the spoiler in the
movie is that it is a testing facility for a

(30:19):
pharmaceutical company that they're in coutes with at the resort
to bring these people and be a part of this,
And I mean it's really one of the guys gets
dementia at one point and really goes crazy and ends
up stabbing and killing somebody on the beach. The children
their children at the time they go they are children, yeah,

(30:42):
and at one point they're no longer children. There may
be teenagers post team maybe like twenties, maybe eighteen, get
pregnant and have a baby within minutes. It's a wild movie.
These are weird things that have washed on shore. Love
letters from World War Two.

Speaker 2 (31:00):
That would be incredible to find tragic.

Speaker 1 (31:04):
That too tragic because I think a lot of them
would be from either getting shot down or from being
from a beach invasion.

Speaker 5 (31:12):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (31:14):
Just days after Hurricane Sandy ravaged the East Coast in
twenty twelve, Kathleen Mullen made a discovery near her Jersey shore.
A stack of fifty seven letters bound with a pink
ribbon had washed up in the storm. She took the
letters home, dried them by the fire the power was
still out from the storm, and realized she had stumbled
upon love letters written between Dorothy Fallon and Lynn Farnham

(31:37):
between nineteen forty two and nineteen forty seven, while Lynn
was in the military. It's unclear where the letters came from,
but Mullen was determined to get them back to the couple.
Through research online, she was able to locate a niece
who lived in Virginia. Dorothy and Lynn had gotten married
after the war, had two children. Lynn and the couple's
son were deceased and the daughter had lost touch with

(31:58):
the family, but ninety one year old Dorothy was still
alive wow, in a nursing home in New Jersey. I'm
a sucker for stories like that, when like a tornado
happens and somebody finds pictures and they show it online
and they're like, I found them, Yep. Just incredible stories
when that happens, of people trying to reconnect people. A

(32:21):
Harley Davidson washed on shore. Whoa the Kuu. Yokoyama lost
his home and three family members into devastating twenty eleven
Japanese tsunami, so he hadn't given much thought to the
fact that he also lost his motorcycle and everything else
that was in the van that he was using as

(32:42):
a storage shed until it washed up on shore a
year later in British Columbia. Wow, for those not keeping
trap track of what's happening, that's on the other side
of the planet.

Speaker 2 (32:52):
It wouldn't just sink more.

Speaker 1 (32:54):
Than three thousand miles away from where this happened. Peter
Mark stumbled upon the storage unit while in a remote
beach on Graham Island. The bike was a little rusty,
but after the story went public, a Harley Davidson representative
in Japan tracked down Yokoyama and offered to pay for
it to be transported back to him and repaired to
its glory. Wow.

Speaker 2 (33:15):
That's awesome. Yeah, I wonder how much that would have
cost to repair it back to its glory, because I
mean a little bit of rust. I would think a
lot of russ being in the salt water and the elements.

Speaker 1 (33:28):
Like that, soll corrosion. That would be corrosion. But yeah,
I hear you. The Saint Augustine Monster has washed on shore.
This is news to me. The Saint Augustine Monster is
one of the earliest examples of a globster, a delightful
term referring to an unidentified animal mass that washes up
on beaches and results in cryptozoologists speculating about a sea monster.

(33:53):
This particularly, a large carcass, was discovered by a couple
of young boys playing in Florida in eighteen night. The
boys assumed it was a whale, but a doctor, the
founder of the Saint Augustine Historical Society and Institute of Science,
concluded that it was the remains of a giant octopus
and sent photos and a specimen to the Smithsonian label

(34:14):
as such. Over the next century plus, various tests claimed
to prove at one time or another it was a
whale or an octopus, depending on which test was run.
In two thousand and four, it was conclusively proven that
the Saint Augustine Monster was a whale. H wow, so
like this glob the ocean's wild No. I was asked

(34:39):
whether I liked the ocean or the mountains more. Yeah, recently.
And I love the mountains. I think they're super peaceful.
I love the ocean. I just don't like sand. Yeah,
and I don't like salt water, right, And I don't
get in the ocean because I think the ocean's terrifying.

Speaker 2 (34:56):
Sure even up close, I mean, sharks do come in close.

Speaker 1 (35:00):
Glob monster or the globfish, and then this thing is
enough for me to be like no thanks. A giant
eyeball washed on shore.

Speaker 2 (35:09):
Ooh.

Speaker 1 (35:09):
This happened in twenty twelve when a Florida man found
an eyeball the size of a soft ball on a
beach and previous airs. This likely would have kicked off
decades of sea monster speculation, but the eye was quickly
handed over to wildlife officials and identified it as belonging
to a very very large swordfish.

Speaker 2 (35:30):
Okay, so maybe some fishermen were out and the swordfish
got stabbed or caught on the line and when they
spirit to get it back into the boat, gathered in the.

Speaker 1 (35:41):
Eye or it got stabbed by another swordfish.

Speaker 2 (35:44):
Sure, yeah.

Speaker 1 (35:46):
A naval training mine. This happened in Miami Beach and
twenty eleven when they noticed a five foot long mine
had washed on shore. The police were called and the
beach was evacuated, but the Navy quickly assured the public
it was simply an hurt mine that had somehow broken
free from an offshore training zone. One hundred live World

(36:07):
War two bombs.

Speaker 2 (36:09):
Oh my.

Speaker 1 (36:10):
This happened in Hampshire, England, in twenty eleven, and they
were actually dangerous. Some people speculated that the supermoon the
previous week was responsible, possibly because it caused very low tides,
while others speculated that fishing nets had pulled them up.
A British naval team blocked off the beach and detonated
the bombs while they were submerged in high tide, one
hundred of them.

Speaker 2 (36:31):
I'd go with the fishing nets bringing them to shore,
not on.

Speaker 1 (36:36):
Purpose, right, this is one. A dog named Madge noticed
this smelly, yelly lump of something on a beach in England. Initially,
the owner of the dog had no interest in it.
Quote it smelled horrible. I left it, came back home

(36:57):
and looked it up on the internet and I saw
how much it was worth. I went back and grabbed it.
So Ken Willman and his dog Mage or Madge, stumbled
upon a six pound glob of amberigus, which is worth
up to one hundred and eighty thousand dollars dam. The
waxy substance is produced in the intestines of sperm whales

(37:20):
to protect their digestive tracks from sharp squid beaks. It
is likely excreted rather than vomited, into the ocean, where
it floats for untold years before occasionally washing up on shore.
So why is the whale excrement worse so much? High
European perfumeries use it as a fixative that allows the
scents to stay on the skin for much longer.

Speaker 2 (37:43):
But you have to find the right buyer.

Speaker 1 (37:46):
I mean those companies would buy it. Yeah, you buy
it from the people that hunt for it. You probably
pay market. You buy it from ken Yeah, you might
only have to pay one hundred. I'm pick stuff that's
stinky on the I don't care what it's worse.

Speaker 2 (38:02):
I don't know one hundred and eighty grand? I mean
put a mask on? Where do I put your nose?

Speaker 1 (38:07):
Where do I put it? While I'm waiting for them
to get it?

Speaker 2 (38:09):
Yeah? And does it have to stay a certain temperature
or does it have to stay mois like what.

Speaker 1 (38:15):
We constantly as people choose to be involved in drama.

Speaker 2 (38:19):
Yeah, how heavy is it? Do you have to put
it in a cooler? Do you have a cooler big enough?
Or a fridge?

Speaker 1 (38:24):
What if a cooler contaminates it and ruins it? Because
the gig gig, gig.

Speaker 2 (38:27):
Game, I hear you.

Speaker 1 (38:30):
Obviously, lots of drugs have washed up on shores many,
many times. According to Gabbleston, Texas Police packages similar to
the sixty six pound bundle of cocaine. We're three point fillion,
five million dollars found on a local beach in twenty
fifteen wash Ashore every couple of months.

Speaker 2 (38:48):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (38:49):
But what made this one unusual was that it was
the sixth bundle of drugs discovered on the beach that week.
My goodness. Police run sure of the reason for the
increased but speculated that heavy storms had restricted access to
the Houston ship channel, which led to increased scrutiny by
the coast Guard and traffickers throwing a least illegal drugs overboard.

(39:13):
I love walking the beach. Yeah right, seeing the ocean crash,
I'm not picking it. I'm definitely not picking up drugs.

Speaker 2 (39:20):
No, are you calling?

Speaker 1 (39:22):
I'll call, but I'm not picking. I don't want no smoke,
no andy, my drama, so I don't want to be
in it.

Speaker 2 (39:29):
We like to collect sea glass along the beach.

Speaker 1 (39:32):
Sea glass, sea glass.

Speaker 2 (39:33):
So when bottles and things like beer bottles, any glass
rush and ron into the ocean. Yeah, and it comes
back and it gets smoothed out, it's called sea glass.
And blue bottles make the prettiest sea glass, bright blue.
And my husband, are.

Speaker 1 (39:53):
You referring to the beach like in Michigan, like that beach.

Speaker 2 (39:56):
Or the ocean. I mean wherever there's beach, Okay, you
can find sea glass. But along Lake Michigan. Over the years,
he's collected so much that you can buy like empty
bodies of a lamp and he's filled it with SeaGlass
and made a lamp out of sea glass. It's pretty cool. Yeah,

(40:17):
it's fine, but but it is trash. Yeah it is,
it is, but it's pretty trash, pretty trash.

Speaker 1 (40:23):
Sure, all right, we got to take a break. We
come back. We got tickets to Kevin Hart. We're gonna
give away.

Speaker 3 (40:28):
Telsa's Morning show. Oh yeah, he's coming right back, a
big mad morning show. Telsa's Rock Station ninety seven five KMOD.

Speaker 1 (40:38):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Nine one
eight four six oh KMO D. You can also text
BMMS and then what you want to say to eight
two nine four five. Let's go ahead and play a game.
We play ship option. Current record is I have four

(40:59):
gimp four and Lindsay has won. Last week's winner was Gimpe,
but it doesn't matter because he's not here, so it'll
be Lindsay and myself nine one eight four six oh
K m O D nine one eight four six O
KMOD call up, decide who's going to be the clue giver.
Whoever gets the most ride is gonna win a pair
of tickets to see Kevin Hart down in Oklahoma City

(41:20):
on April tenth at the pay Com Center. Tickets available
ticketmaster dot com. Good morning, you're on the air. What
is your name? Ryan? Ryan? How are you today? Good?
Thank you? How are you good? Man? Ryan? Who do
you want to give clues? Lindsay or Corbyn? Let's go
with Corbyn, Ryan. Sixty seconds are on the clock. Timer

(41:40):
starts after the first clue. Are you ready? Yes, Here
we go. Breweries are where they make beer. This is
where they make spirits. That distillery correct. Uh, A butterfly,
but this is different and they fly to a flame. Correct.

(42:05):
When you owe money on your house, it's a loan,
and that type of loan is called a correct. This
is what you do when you open your mouth and
carry a tune thing. Correct. Uh, not private but blank property? Correct.

Speaker 2 (42:27):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (42:27):
A type of knife a meat. Sure. This is a
type of liquid at the front of a church. You
tap your fingers in it and maybe touch your chest
and your throat. Correct. Uh. This is what you get
from your doggie in there in your lap.

Speaker 3 (42:47):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (42:47):
Cuddle kind of like cuddles, but a different word.

Speaker 5 (42:51):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (42:53):
Yes, seven is what we got. Pretty good, Ryan, hang
on the line. Okay, okay, excellent job. Good morning, you're
on the air. What is your My name's James.

Speaker 2 (43:08):
Good morning, James, James.

Speaker 1 (43:09):
Okay, James. Uh, you and Lindsay have sixty seconds on
the clock to beat seven. Are you ready?

Speaker 6 (43:16):
I'm gonna do my bess.

Speaker 2 (43:17):
Here we go, James. Put the lime in the coca nut? Yeah, blank?
The leader follow. Yes. Uh. This is a type of bird.
Also spit don't Also what uh a bird? A type

(43:38):
of bird or spit don't.

Speaker 7 (43:45):
I can't understand what you're saying I'm sorry.

Speaker 2 (43:47):
Spit don't hold on now try spit don't.

Speaker 3 (43:54):
Fallow?

Speaker 2 (43:55):
Yeah, yeah, if you're this is another word for nerve
business or I know some people take medication for this.
If you yes, oh I have a stomach blank or
a leg blank? It hurts. A Charlie horse could be

(44:16):
considered this if you have if you have bloat, it
might hurt stomach what, Yes, it hurts. It's a pain.
Another word for a Charlie horse.

Speaker 1 (44:36):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (44:39):
Okay, what's another time?

Speaker 1 (44:41):
Time time? I'm so sorry, man, you did not win,
but thank you so much. James. You're not doing it
all right, buddy, see you later. That problem where he
couldn't hear your so I paused it to give you
more time to try and make up for it. Ryan, congratulations, man,
you're getting tickets to see Kevin Hart at the pay
Comm Center in Oklahoma City. Hang on the line so
we can get your info and you'll be going to

(45:02):
that show. Okay, that's awesome. Uh yeah, the one you
you're blanking my style. Yeah, we're to use for a
muscle tightness you get when you're dehydrated. Cramp is the word.

(45:24):
And then I got mine right at the end. All right, the.

Speaker 7 (45:27):
Record now is I am kicking ass because that's pretty
much what I do. Alright, And Gimpy has four and
Lindsey has one.

Speaker 1 (45:38):
We'll be back turns next.

Speaker 3 (45:42):
Elsa's Morning Show.

Speaker 1 (45:45):
K M O D. Good morning. It's the Big Man
Morning Show. Nine one, eight four six. Oh k M
O D. Gympia is out, but I'm going to see
what he has in his four by four says here
the Social Security Administration will require in office visits to
verify identity. The SSA website now says that to start

(46:08):
a benefits claim, an individual's identity must be confirmed in person. Previously,
people could have done so over the phone. Meanwhile, Elon
Musk's Department of Government Efficiencies website says it plans to
shut down at least forty seven Social Security field offices
in areas with large rural communities.

Speaker 2 (46:26):
Okay, I don't hate the fact. I don't hate the
fact that you have to be in person to make
a claim because that keeps the people. We read the
stories all the time of people, you know, keeping their
dead parents in freezers so they can claim their Social
Security benefits. However, it does hinder those with disabilities getting

(46:47):
to the office or whatever. Now the second part of that,
where he's firing people instead of shutting office, shutting down offices,
people will be losing jobs. Why not take those people
and say, all right, you will be a mobile unit
that goes to these people's homes who can't make it
into our offices for face to face visit. You will

(47:08):
go those that need to make claims, the elderly or
whomever that need to be in person and can't make
it to our offices. You'll go and see them.

Speaker 1 (47:17):
We'll see Pope off nighttime mechanical ventilation. Pope Francis is
no longer in need of mechanical ventilation at night. The
Holy ce Press Office said at Wednesday night's update that
the Pope has suspended non invasive mechanical ventilation and also
has less need of high flow oxygen therapy. The update
added that is motor and respiratory physio therapy is continuing

(47:40):
to make progress. Pope Francis has been at Rome's Jimmell
Lee Hospital since February fourteenth, receiving treatment for bi at
lateral pneumonia. Federal court rules AI created art can't be
copyrighted a federal Appeals Court is ruling art created entirely
by artificial intelligence can't be copyrighted. Copyrighted this week's rulings
as there must be initial human authorship in order for

(48:03):
a copyright to be issued. This means that in order
for an AI generated work to be coperated, a human
must be the one directing or using the AI, and
the AI can't be operating autonomously. The ruling upholds a
decision made by the US Copyright Office denying a copyright
to Stephen Thayler, the computer scientist and creator of AI
platform Creativity Machine, had challenged the office decision not to

(48:26):
issue a copyright for an AI generated painting. And finally,
firefighter whose home was destroyed and wild Flat wildfires starts
donation drive. Wildfires destroyed ninety three homes in Tarleton area,
including the home of Jackie Davis, a volunteer firefighter. Davis
was fighting the fires when he learned he lost his home.
He's dedicating his time to helping others in need through

(48:48):
donation drive at the Arrelton Auxiliary Center. Jackie Davis is
a proud father of two boys. He and his wife
are expecting a little girl in June. While most would
be overwhelmed with losing their home. Davis is responding with
action and he and the others are hoping people who
lost everything get supplies they need. They turned to the
Tarlton Fire Auxiliary into a donation center if you would

(49:09):
like to help. The auxiliary center is taking things like
wheelbarrows and shovels as people start the difficult job of
cleaning up.

Speaker 2 (49:29):
We did mention this yesterday, but in case you missed it.
The Vikings are uninterested and moving past their discussions with
free agent Aaron Rodgers. Minnesota is prepared to start second
year quarterback JJ McCarthy after he missed his rookie season
with a knee injury. Rogers preferred to join the Vikings
after he got released by the Jets, so his future

(49:52):
is still up in the air. And that's your Balls
to the Wall sports. I'm lindsay in ninety seven to
five KMOD Bows.

Speaker 8 (49:58):
To the Wall Sports is power the award winning service
of Groundworks Tulsa.

Speaker 1 (50:02):
More of The Big Mad Morning Show is next Tulsa's.

Speaker 3 (50:06):
Morning Show, The Big Bad Morning Show, The Assaulting Continuous
Next ninety km.

Speaker 1 (50:13):
O D Good Morning. It's the Big Mad Morning Show.

(50:38):
Six km O D. You can also text BMMS and
then what you want to say to eight two nine
four five give B is out. But good morning Lindsay.

Speaker 2 (50:49):
Good morning Corbyn. Make kmod your number one preset on
the iHeartRadio app. You can even make the Morning Dump
podcast a preset. That way you never miss a show.
Plus you'll have easier access to all of our contests
and promotions on kmod. So if you haven't already, download
the iHeartRadio app from your Apple or Google App store.

Speaker 1 (51:10):
All right, conspiracy theory Thursday, I had this other one
I wanted to do, but no joke, I've been working
on it and the computer I can't find it now.
So we're moving on to something. My kids are losing
their teeth currently, yeah, going through their baby teeth, and

(51:30):
I recently my oldest had to get in visil line
and they I got to see the imagery and the
X ray and the baby teeth that are you know above,
you know below, and then the adult teeth moving in
just a wild photo right, and that I was explaining
to her that when you lose your baby teeth, that's it. Yeah,
short of some molars or maybe some dental problems. That

(51:51):
that will be the last time you go through all that.
And people lose teeth all the time for whatever reason, Yeah, rotten,
don't take care of them accidents, yeah, hockey whatever, right,
And scientists, because they're not they figure cancer doesn't need attention.
They have figured out that they may be able to

(52:13):
regrow lost teeth within five years. Now. Again, I don't
didn't know that this was a giant problem worth solving.

Speaker 2 (52:21):
No, because for veneers and crowns and whatever else dentures.

Speaker 1 (52:28):
The people I know that have veneers, they don't complain
about them. No, they're beautiful that they don't like I've
not heard like this was a problem to solve, Like, yeah, goveneirs.
But right, it's not like my grandma where I would
go visit her and she'd have a butter tub on
the counter and you go to the bathroom in night

(52:50):
and you'd look in the buttertub and there would be
her teeth. Oh yeah, there's a girl on TikTok that
she has no teeth and she appears to be a
very attractive person and then she takes her teeth out
and she looks like, you know, she's chewed on rocks. Yeah,

(53:11):
Japanese researchers have already begun human trials using an experimental
drug they believe may help people who have lost teeth
regrow them. The goal is to be able to have
the drug available to the public by twenty thirty. The
clinical trials are running from September of twenty twenty four
to August of twenty twenty five. Quote. We want to

(53:32):
do something to help those who are suffering from tooth
loss or absence. The head of dentistry and oral surgery
at this hospital said. While there has been no treatment
to date providing a permanent cure, we feel people's expectations
for tooth growth are high.

Speaker 2 (53:50):
So that means that we are born with more than
what we are already given. So we have our baby
teeth and then we have our adult teeth, and that's
what we are made to believe. That's what we are
born with, and that's what we have. So what they're
suggesting is no, we can help you to grow more.
That doesn't make sense to me.

Speaker 1 (54:09):
Like.

Speaker 2 (54:10):
Or is this a drug? Like say some Like I've
had friends who whose children have lost teeth and then
the new teeth have just not grown in yet. Like
what's taking so long, Like, they lost their tooth eight
months ago and we're still waiting for it to grow in. Right,
we can't even see it down there. So is it
that kind of drug, like it's supposed to help the

(54:32):
process along to grow in faster.

Speaker 1 (54:35):
I'm just trying to think of people I know that
don't have a tooth that want the salt.

Speaker 9 (54:39):
Right, Gimpy he lost his Yes, yes, yes he did,
but he's choosing not to spend the money.

Speaker 1 (54:50):
Right.

Speaker 2 (54:51):
He did say one of his goals this year though,
was to get it fixed, but again not with a drug.
He'll go and get of an ear.

Speaker 1 (55:00):
Quote. We knew that suppressing USAG one benefits tooth growth.
What we did not know was whether it would be enough.
According to the head of oral surgery at this research
part of the hospital, said the after the discovery ferrets
are diphooidant animals with similar dental patterns to humans, they
applied the drug two ferrets. They grew an additional seventh

(55:22):
front tooth as the new tooth grew in between the
existing front teeth and were of the same shape. The
medicine is thought to have induced the generation of third
set teeth in animals. They also, can you imagine if
humans had like another set of teeth behind your other teeth?

(55:42):
People already don't do a good job brushing their teeth
like they're supposed to. I know you think you do,
but statistically they say that people don't do a good
job brushing their teeth. They also claimed the new drug
prompts the growth of third generation teeth in humans, following
baby teeth and then permanent adult teeth, that in many
cases human's ability to grow a third set of teeth

(56:03):
was simply lost over time. The idea of growing new
teeth is every dentist dream. I don't know about that either.
I've been working on this since I was a graduate student.
I was confident I'd be able to make it happen.
The doctor said, we're hoping to see a time when
two three growth medicine is a third choice along with

(56:24):
dentures and implants. Last year, another group of scientists at
Toft's University reportedly were able to successfully grow humanlike teeth
in pigs. The professor at Tough School of Dentistry and
lead researcher of the study wants to study how pigs,
which have many as five or six sets of teeth
that grow throughout their lives, grow their teeth, and then

(56:47):
try to figure out how to replicate the process in humans.
In the research, the doctor and her team took soft
living tissue from both human and pig teeth, combined them
in a lab, and then transplanted them into a mini
pig's mouth. Materials from pig jawbones and human teeth extracted
from for orthodonic reasons. In a few months, you can
get pretty good sized bioengineered teeth. I don't know if

(57:12):
I want a tooth that was in a pig's mouth, right,
I'm sure she's a nice lady.

Speaker 2 (57:15):
But I like this text. So how do you control
where the teeth grow exactly?

Speaker 1 (57:22):
That was the other part I was thinking, is if
you want to be a part of the study, our
hope right, hey, welcome to the study. Everyone. You'll get
fifty dollars every day for doing this. If and the
hope the plan, the idea is that teeth will grow
in your mouth right, not around your anus.

Speaker 2 (57:41):
Yeah, I can't wait to see the side effects of
this drug or in your nose?

Speaker 1 (57:46):
Right?

Speaker 2 (57:47):
And will insurance cover this? Probably not? Probably not?

Speaker 1 (57:55):
I mean, I don't know it cover there's a lot
of dental stuff that they cover, of course, depending on
the plan, and then there's stuff they should cover that
they do not, so I who knows. One hundred and
seventy eight million adults are missing at least one tooth. Okay,
I was wrong. Apparently it's a problem. And forty million

(58:17):
are missing all their teeth.

Speaker 5 (58:20):
Forty million them holy in the United States, one hundred
of course, if this is accurate, one hundred and seventy
eight million adults are missing at least one tooth, and
forty million, almost a little.

Speaker 1 (58:37):
Less than a third, are missing all their teeth. Wow,
more than thirty six million Americans do not have any teeth.
I gotta tell you, we've done some things on the
show that are astounding, like put me on my heels.
That number shocks the hell me. That's insane. It's a

(59:02):
lot of hockey players that hockey players one tooth. This
is all your teeth? Where did they go wrong? I
don't think I know anyone that doesn't have I don't
no teeth.

Speaker 2 (59:16):
My aside from my grandparents who just had dentures.

Speaker 1 (59:20):
I'm going with that. I don't even know if I'm alive.
I don't know anybody who has dentures that replaces.

Speaker 2 (59:27):
All their tastes. I don't either.

Speaker 1 (59:28):
I know plenty of people that have bridges. I know
some people that have just like a front.

Speaker 2 (59:34):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (59:35):
I know some people that have like a one like
one yeah. But I don't know anybody who has no teeth.

Speaker 2 (59:41):
I don't either.

Speaker 1 (59:42):
Forty million feels like a lot.

Speaker 2 (59:43):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (59:46):
Tooth loss happens from decaying gum disease and as a
result of injury. Cancer are simply where Okay, cancer, I'm
totally I get two point two percent of adults have
no teeth between the ages of twenty and sixty four.

Speaker 2 (01:00:02):
I'm trying to think I have all, but my I
have two wisdom teeth left and two are gone, So
two missing teeth in my mouth, you have your wisdom teeth.

Speaker 1 (01:00:14):
No, clearly, did you know that by the age of fifty,
Americans have lost an average of twelve teeth. Wow, I
don't know if that includes baby teeth that can't be
baby teeth. Adults from thirty five to forty four, sixty
nine percent have lost at least one permanent tooth. By
age fifty, Americans have lost an average of twelve twelve teeth,

(01:00:38):
including wisdom teeth, and adults sixty five to seventy four,
twenty six percent have lost all their teeth. Wow, I
had no idea know me either. Usually missing one or
more teeth is due to injury, disease, or tooth decay
and become a candidate for dental implants.

Speaker 2 (01:01:01):
This tech says, I'm fifty with no teeth, but I
do have dentures.

Speaker 1 (01:01:07):
I'm curious three two seven, I'm curious why why do
you have your no teeth by fifty? Was there because
some people, like when they're younger, I think they've pretty
got much got this manage now, But when you're younger, they,
depending on what medicines you were given as a kid,

(01:01:28):
damaged your teeth.

Speaker 2 (01:01:29):
Right.

Speaker 1 (01:01:29):
I have a good friend who when he was a baby,
they gave him penicillin or something before he was of
age and should have had it, and it made his
teeth gray. Oh okay, like dark gray.

Speaker 2 (01:01:42):
Yeh, yeah, I've seen that. I've seen that gray teeth
in Toddler's This guy here says, I pretty much lost
most of my teeth by twenty five years old. I
have one left, just simply didn't take care of them.

Speaker 1 (01:02:03):
Okay, thank you for being honest. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:02:04):
Absolutely.

Speaker 1 (01:02:06):
When I was sixteen, I got my front teeth knocked
out in a miniature golf incident. That's a funny line.
I've had the same bridge ever since, and I'm fifty four.
I don't know that i'd want to regrow those teeth
unless it wouldn't be painful and take a long time.
Hey Corbyn, I'm thirty nine. I have a full set
of dentures. Why Corbyn, I need new teeth. I have

(01:02:30):
no insurance and can't afford to pay myself, so I
would love to take the drug to grow new teeth.
I'm a disabled VET and don't have dental coverage. Uh,
the drug won't be free. No, and I don't know
anything about the VA. Does the VA pay for dental
guess not. I work with a guy whose daughter had
no adult teeth. They had to be extra careful with

(01:02:53):
their baby teeth to keep them from falling out until
she was sixteen. Then she had implants put in.

Speaker 2 (01:03:01):
She was like born with no adult teeth.

Speaker 1 (01:03:05):
Apparently, Wow, the person texting that. By fifty drugs and
tobacco in my younger years, Yeah, no, I'm bad genes. No,
teeth probably has a lot to do with mes in
some instances, I think that that is fair, but not
in all That's like saying all homeless people are addicted
to drugs.

Speaker 2 (01:03:24):
Now, if you're born without adult teeth like this the
instance with the guy's work buddy and his daughter, I
wonder if insurance would cover that because she had to
get implants. So I wonder if insurance would cover that
because it was a medical issue.

Speaker 1 (01:03:42):
I don't know. First says, I know a lot of
people who have had to have their teeth because of
bad hygiene or drugs and just have a few left
and then get dingers. Yeah, that makes sense, but again,
I don't know very many people that don't have no teeth. Yeah,

(01:04:04):
and maybe there's some shame that goes along with it,
and that's why they don't share it or talk about it.
I got to be honest, I've never asked anybody are
those your real teeth? When I started to dating my wife,
I never asked her if those were her real teeth.

Speaker 2 (01:04:19):
Same. I was embarrassed by my teeth growing up because
I had a calcium deficiency and so I had two
like whiter than normal spots on my two front teeth,
and so I was always very embarrassed by it. I
didn't want to smile showing my teeth, and so I

(01:04:40):
did get them not bleached, but I got them like
covered almost. I guess they put like some sort of
dye over them to cover those those spots up to
make it look more natural. So, I mean, but other
than that, never had to have them remove. We've removed

(01:05:02):
in one of the twins, we had a couple of
baby teeth pulled earlier than what they would if they
had just fallen out naturally, only to make room for
more teeth that were coming in sooner than expected, just
so to prevent from having to have braces in the future.

Speaker 1 (01:05:23):
Especially says VA only covers dental if you were injured
or messed up during service. So is that but only
with dental any other thing you have that comes up
medically they take care of. That seems wild, Yeah, it does.
It feels like a more important issue than some other
things we're dealing with right now. This person says, I
was born with gingervitis. Here's the problem. I see statements

(01:05:45):
like that. I I don't you can be prone to it,
but I don't think you can be born with gingervitis. Yeah,
how is that possible. I'm probably wrong. I'm probably wrong
on that. But only you can be born with gingervitis.
You could be prone to it, like can be part

(01:06:06):
of your genetic makeup.

Speaker 2 (01:06:09):
I'm gonna look it up.

Speaker 1 (01:06:10):
But like you could be born with a lot of things.
Genetically doesn't mean you get it. That's wild. My mom
lost all of her front teeth after she gave birth
to me. She took care of them, but she was
told that her pregnancy took so much nutrients from her teeth,
from her and her teeth they were destroyed. She has
only had her molars my whole life. She has a
top and bottom bridges for almost forty years. I have

(01:06:33):
heard of that. I have heard of women his teeth
go bad because babies are soul sucking.

Speaker 2 (01:06:39):
Yeah, that's why you got to take more calcium. No,
it says you cannot be born with gingivitis, but genetics
can play a role in your susceptibility to developing it
later in life. Gingervitis is not a congenit old condition.
It's an inflammatory condition of the gums caused by bacterial
plaque build up, not something you inherit at birth. So

(01:07:02):
we're being shown how common it is to not have teeth. Yeah,
and when.

Speaker 1 (01:07:07):
You hear forty million people have no teeth in America,
it's wild. Yeah. All right, we got to take a break.
We'll be back.

Speaker 3 (01:07:16):
Tulsa's Morning Show continues next The Big Man Morning Show
on Tulsa's rock station ninety seven five KMOT.

Speaker 1 (01:07:24):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show nine six
o KMOD. You can also text bmms and then what
you want to say to eight two nine four five
all right for conspiracy theory Thursday. The other thing I
have is they released the JFK files, like a big dump,

(01:07:45):
if you will, of JFK files, and I would argue
that there was nothing that news. Some people are going
on saying that it was this group or it was
that group or whatever, and more than one person has
said that this is the same thing we saw a
while back, and the they've only taken where you could

(01:08:07):
see like addresses and social Security numbers and things of
people who testified and things like that. And you're seeing
some photos and stuff that we haven't seen before, and
some documents that have been released. And going through all this,
I saw a joke that somebody posted, and the joke
said that a conspiracy theory person went to heaven and

(01:08:34):
gets there and is like, before we go in any question,
you can ask any question you want. And the conspiracy
theorists who died said, I would like to know who
called or who killed JFK. And the person goes Lee
Harvey Oswald from the observatory loan shooter, no one else.
That's it, And the conspiracy theorist went, wow, this goes

(01:08:59):
higher than I thought. Do you get in the tower? No,
I don't get it that God was involved.

Speaker 2 (01:09:11):
Ah, okay.

Speaker 1 (01:09:15):
Point being that there's gonna be no data out there.
There's nothing that's gonna make anybody believe one way or another.

Speaker 2 (01:09:22):
So all like sixty four thousand documents, it was just
a way of releasing them as just a complete waste
of time.

Speaker 1 (01:09:28):
Anyway, it did not provide any new info. And I
know some of you type in right now saying it
it said this person was involved or it was a CIA,
or was this And that's fine, you can believe that.
I'm not here to convince you otherwise. I'm just saying
of people that are researchers of this and have for

(01:09:49):
many years and not Carl from the shop. I trust
them more than I trust the guy who has done
zero research ever their whole life.

Speaker 2 (01:10:01):
Right.

Speaker 1 (01:10:02):
That's just the way I operate. I'm not telling you
it's the way to operate. It's just the way I
run my life. It's to validate its that I did
see some papers. I'm gonna post some here in a
minute that I thought people would want to see on
her Instagram from the GfK files. There's about five or
six and so it'll be on our Facebook page at

(01:10:23):
Facebook dot com, slash bmms six nine, and it'll be
on Instagram for you to look at as well. We're
gonna take a break and we'll be back.

Speaker 3 (01:10:29):
Tell USA's Morning Show, The Big Man Boarding Show. The
assault continues the next thirty seventy five JMOD.

Speaker 1 (01:10:41):
Good morning, It's The Big Man Morning Show. Nine one,
eight four six oh kmo D. You can also text
bmms and then what you want to say to eight
two nine four five. I don't know if many people
watch the Minkum car Auction. I watch it occasionally and
some of my friends do, and I've always watched it

(01:11:01):
on like Discovery or an auto channel. And it is
reported that ESPN has picked it up and the multi
year deal kicks off Thursday today, three days of auctions
from Glendale, and it will have been televised on Discovery
since two thousand and eight, and then it got rebranded

(01:11:24):
as Velocity Channel in twenty fourteen, and then it moved
to the NBAC Sports Network and so now it's going
to be on ESPN. It is anything always super cool cars.
I don't know a guy who likes cars who doesn't
watch and go I want that. I always love it

(01:11:45):
when I see an El Camino roll across the carpet
on that it's pretty cool. The other thing that's out
there that's pretty interesting is the NFL rules meeting. The
rule changes have been proposed, Tush put on there now.
This doesn't mean nothing's going to change. It just means
that it is on the proposed conversation for the conversation

(01:12:08):
and whether they do something to know. Some other ones
that are really interesting. A legal contact and defensive holding
no longer resulting in automatic first downs. I don't hate this.
I don't hate this. If it happens within the ten yards,
it shouldn't be an automatic first down. If it adds

(01:12:30):
twenty yards down the field, the ball would move to
where the the infraction happened. I'm okay with that being
a first down, but it shouldn't be an autumn if
it happens, you know, if you're twenty yards back and
it happens on the you know, at the seven yards
from the line of scrimmage, that shouldn't be an automatic
first down in my opinion. Another one overtime period lengthened

(01:12:52):
from ten minutes to fifteen, with both teams guaranteed a
possession regardless of whether the first team scores a touchdown.
I like that too. It makes sense to make it
even because if you kick a field goal, that hardly
means you're the better team. I just ya, it feels
like we've done all this work and everybody's worked their

(01:13:13):
ass off for it to come to that feels unfair.

Speaker 2 (01:13:16):
Absolutely. I don't know if they need to make it
fifteen minutes necessarily.

Speaker 1 (01:13:21):
I think you would need to to ensure both sides
get the ball, Okay, I would.

Speaker 2 (01:13:24):
Think then sure.

Speaker 1 (01:13:26):
And then the other one that's interesting is playoff receding
based on record rather than division winners. Under the rule,
the Vikings would have hosted a playoff game this season
and Rams would have been on the road. In the AFC,
the Chargers versus Texans wild Card game would have been
in La instead of Houston. I think that makes sense

(01:13:49):
based off record. If you win more games, you should
be seated higher. Yeah, I understand in your division, yes,
but we're no longer talking about divisions when we're in
the playoff part of it. It's about the conference at
that point, So that makes sense. We'll see if that
makes any sense. Some people are saying that you don't

(01:14:12):
reward winning a division. What's the point of having a division?
So I think that should be the only asterisk. If
you win your division but you have less of a record,
you should get to host automatically, Yeah, for sure. But
if you don't win your division, you shouldn't because you
came in second. That should mean nothing. But it should
be based on record after that.

Speaker 2 (01:14:31):
Yeah, Like the Lions record was fifteen and two, Minnesota
fourteen and three, Green Bay eleven and six.

Speaker 1 (01:14:38):
Yeah, right, Detroit one, so they got to buy so
they were number one automatically. Yeah, but that makes more sense.
I'm glad. I'm glad they read look at rules. I'm
okay with it changing every year. Absolutely, it's a very
complex game that people put a lot of work into.
I think it's completely fine for them to try and
evolve it and make it better each time.

Speaker 2 (01:14:59):
Out of all of those rules that we that you mentioned,
I think that they should forget about the banning the
tush push, leave it alone. I think that teams are
just jealous that their team can't do it as well
as the Eagles.

Speaker 1 (01:15:14):
I don't love that argument. I don't think there's jealousy.
I think that if you want to ban it because
it's dangerous, there's no way to defend against it without
putting yourself in danger like neck injuries and stuff, then yeah,
it makes no sense. But if it is, you're like,
that's not fair. I'm on board with you.

Speaker 2 (01:15:34):
Yeah, And that's what it feels like if one.

Speaker 1 (01:15:38):
Only because a couple of people do it because they
go it's too dangerous.

Speaker 2 (01:15:40):
Right right, But it's it's like inter at your own
risk type thing.

Speaker 1 (01:15:46):
But but that we don't do that with concussions, right.

Speaker 2 (01:15:51):
So I mean, yeah, but it's the same thing. I mean,
they're playing a sport that could cause a concussion.

Speaker 1 (01:15:56):
Yes, but they're doing they've made adjustments to try to
avoid that is the point. It isn't a play at
your own risk type of thing.

Speaker 2 (01:16:03):
And and Philly has has perfected the tush push to
where they're not getting hurt doing it.

Speaker 1 (01:16:11):
No, defending it puts you at risk. Well, they're the
only way to defend it. No, Green Bay has had
some success with it, Buffalo's had some success with it.
I believe the Steelers did it a couple times with
the fields.

Speaker 2 (01:16:27):
Yeah, I just don't think it's that big of an
issue had. The Commanders are rewarding one of their recent acquisitions.

(01:16:49):
According to ESPN, Washington has reworked the final year of
wide receiver Deebo Samuel's contract. The Commander's guaranteed seventeen million
dollars and added three million in incentives. Samuel has signed
nearly six thousand yards are gained nearly six thousand yards
from scrimmage through his first six seasons. He was acquired

(01:17:10):
from the forty nine Ers in exchange for a fifth
round pick, and the Texans have made a pair of
moves to strengthen each side of the line of scrimmage.
Houston is signing free agent offensive tackle Cam Robinson to
a new deal that has agreed to a contract extension
where with defensive end Daniel Hunter. Robinson is signing a

(01:17:32):
one year deal that holds a max value of fourteen
and a half million dollars. The twenty nine year old
has started one hundred and one games throughout his eight
year career. Hunter is set to sign a one year,
thirty five point six million dollar extension that keeps him
with the team through the twenty twenty six season. He
had a dozen sacks during his first year with Houston

(01:17:52):
in twenty twenty four. Stanford head football coach Troy Taylor
is under fire for his treatment of female athletic staffers.
ESPN reports through a pair of investigations that Taylor bullied
and belittled female staffers, attempted to have an NCAA compliance
officer removed after she warned him of rules violations, and

(01:18:16):
repeatedly made inappropriate comments to another woman about her appearance.
In a statement released yesterday, Taylor said that he would
be using the investigations to improve how he interacts with others.
There were more than twenty former and current Stanford athletic
staffers who cooperated with independent investigators.

Speaker 1 (01:18:37):
The problem. I hope they investigated fully. Oh yeah, he
shouldn't be saying a word. Nope, let the investigation play
itself out. If you are, you can't control what happens
at this point.

Speaker 2 (01:18:48):
By speaking makes them look guilty.

Speaker 1 (01:18:50):
Yes, and I know some people are going, well what
if they're false accusations, Well, then that's not the place
for him. They don't have his best interest at heart.

Speaker 2 (01:18:59):
Just by I'm using the investigations to improve how I
act with others. Interact with others.

Speaker 1 (01:19:06):
I mean, I think that there is some truth that
in the interview process, assuming he did nothing wrong, you
might find out some things that you could be better.
We as people could be better in every shape. Sure,
and there's nothing wrong with wanting to be better. You
shouldn't have to have an investigation as nefarious as this

(01:19:27):
to trigger you to want to reach those goals exactly.

Speaker 2 (01:19:31):
And that is your Balls to the Wall Sports I'm
lindsay in ninety seventy five KMOD.

Speaker 8 (01:19:35):
Bimbos to the Wall Sports is powered by the award
winning service of Groundworks, Tulsa. More of The Big Mad
Morning Show is next.

Speaker 3 (01:19:43):
The Big Mad Morning Show returns next Tulsa's Morning Show
ninety seven KMOD.

Speaker 1 (01:19:53):
Good Morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show nine four six, okmod.
You can also text bmms and what you want to
say to eight two, nine four five.

Speaker 2 (01:20:05):
Good morning Lindsay, Good morning Gorman. Happy thirty second birthday too,
Maria Jade. She makes the Sunshine State proud in Babes
on Fire, seven, Intense, Wedgy War and Protein Fix. She's
been nominated for Best Indie Clipstar and Best Butt.

Speaker 1 (01:20:24):
Ghibee is out and it's time He'll be she she
should be back soon. He's just not feeling well. Uh,
let's go ahead and do top list.

Speaker 4 (01:20:31):
It's hyperbic Mad Morning Show's top list, random topics, randomly
drawn with random results. Now here's Corbyn, Gimpie and Lindsay
with this week's top list.

Speaker 1 (01:20:41):
This week gets top five celebrities that you'd bring back
to life that died too young. What do you got
for number five?

Speaker 2 (01:20:48):
Lindsay Tupac died at twenty five years old, assassinated. I
still remember where I was the night a happened. I
was at a high school football game and a friend
of mine was listening to his radio on a Sony Walkman,

(01:21:12):
and it was sprinkling outside was very cold, and we
were underneath the blankets and umbrellas, and he was like,
holy s. Tupac Shakur was shot in a drive by shooting,
and we all like crammed underneath this giant blanket, and

(01:21:32):
he held out his little headphone so we could all
listen together for the updates until they announced that he
had died in the hospital. And it was crazy to
think that someone that we all were listening to at
that time. That was probably like the biggest shock of celebrity,

(01:21:57):
the first time big time celebrity had died. And I was,
I think a sophomore in high school when it happened.

Speaker 1 (01:22:05):
I was a senior in college and it wasn't in
my rotation of music, so I obviously knew who Tupac was.

Speaker 2 (01:22:12):
Yeah. Number four Corey Haim. I know he died at
thirty eight, so he wasn't that young, but still I
grew up watching the two Corey's. I thought that they
were an awesome duo in the eighties. And he died
of pneumonia complications from pneumonia. But I feel like if

(01:22:36):
he hadn't died, maybe Corey Feldman wouldn't have fallen off
and gotten so weird.

Speaker 1 (01:22:43):
Yeah, I mean the pneumonia, I think was a subside
of his addiction.

Speaker 2 (01:22:46):
Right, Yes he did have a prescription pill addiction. But yeah,
I remember licensed to drive and dream a little dream.

Speaker 1 (01:22:57):
Like Lucas Lucas.

Speaker 2 (01:22:58):
Yes, all of I was lost boys and the movies
that they did together. They were a great little duo.
Number three on my list. And this might seem weird
because it was way before my time, but watching the
movie of this and listening to the music, I grew

(01:23:22):
up in kind of an old soul, So number three
is for me. Richie Valens died at seventeen years old
in a plane crash, and watching Le Bamba the first
time I watched, I cried, and then when his mom
not my Richie, I mean, I cried then, and I

(01:23:42):
just thought, what a tragic story. The kid thinks he
wins a bet or wins to go on the airplane
instead of being stuck in a bus with no heat
and ends up dying. Very tragic, had his life in
front of him.

Speaker 1 (01:24:01):
This, Uh, I just like reading about things they get
wrong in movies. The plane crash. In the movie, they
depict the radio announcement of the plane crash as a
dramatic event, but it was actually a real event. That
was not just for dramatic effects, so like it was
just part of the thing. It wasn't like people stopping
in their tracks obviously the people that cared about him. Yeah,

(01:24:25):
that says that it portrays Richie as being sick. He
was not ill during his career, which at the fine fascinating.

Speaker 2 (01:24:32):
Yeah huh. Number two Heath A Ledger, twenty seven years old.
He wasn't my favorite actor. I did enjoy his movies.
An accidental prescription drug overdose, sure it could have happened

(01:24:52):
to anyone. I just found it very sad because he
was a great performer and he had a great future
ahead of him, and he had a life with Michelle
Williams and they had a baby girl, and you know,
no child should have to grow up without their their parents.

(01:25:14):
It was sad, and he was pretty remarkable and just
on his way, you know, he just was on his way.
And Number one for me, I think you already know
it's Whitney Houston because her pipes. I just feel like
she would still be making bangers of music.

Speaker 1 (01:25:39):
Singing other people's songs real.

Speaker 2 (01:25:41):
Well, absolutely one percent, And even after she died. When
the Steve Wynnwood song Higher Love came out and it
was her on the track. We were like, where did
this come from? And it was so amazing, so good?
Can please just get more of Whitney? And of course
or she wasn't young, but she was. It was she

(01:26:02):
went before her time, before she was expected, forty eight
years old, found submerged in a bathtub.

Speaker 1 (01:26:11):
Yeah, we're doing top list. Top five celebrities that you'd
bring back to life that died too young? Number five?
For me, I tried to not like, I didn't pick
a Heath Ledger because I feel like we may have
seen his good his already his best stuff. He had
a lot of great movies, so maybe he would have,

(01:26:32):
but he already had some really great stuff, so I
feel like there was full Whitney Houston. I tried to
pick nobody that was too old because I don't think
you died too young at fifty Matthew Perry or Whitney Houston,
like you lived a while, yeah right, not tragically taking
from us too soon. Prince is another one that comes

(01:26:52):
to mind. So I tried to pick people that were young.
So Anton Yelkin, now you're gonna go, who's Anton Yelkin?
He is an actor, He was in Star Trek. He
played Pavlov Pavlov he played a Pavel the Russian and
Star Trek with Chris Pine and he most I think
he's most famously known for the kid who gets kidnapped

(01:27:16):
in the movie Alpha Dog, which is one of the
most underappreciated movies of all time. It is a fantastic movie,
star studyed cast. Everybody kills in that. It is a
true movie. They played it to the t so much,
in fact, that the family suit and I think they
even did the movie before it was done, before the

(01:27:38):
trial is even done. Okay, if you don't know the
movie An Alpha Dog, this young guy played by oh
the names escaping me. But he is a drug guy.
He thinks he's a really tough, big drug guy and
he kidnaps somebody's brother Ben Foster. I believes brother and
is a real badass in the movie, and they kill him,

(01:28:03):
the young brother in the movie. It's a really crazy,
trippy movie. Bruce Willis is in it, justin Timberlake is
in it. Who's the actor Emil h Meial hirsh is
the is the pseudo drug bad guy, but he's not. Yeah,
the grandpa is in it. Who tried to meal Hirsch
go into hiding it's it's a great movie. So he's

(01:28:26):
really great in that movie, and the other stuff he
did was really good too, So he died to you.
Number four Selena M hmm. President of a fan club
shoots her, kills her too young right as she's like
killing it. You think she here's a big deal. I
think Selena would have been even bigger.

Speaker 2 (01:28:45):
So I I do. I thought about putting Selena on
my list. However, I felt like Selena wouldn't if Selena
hadn't died. I felt like she might not have been
as big in American music. I felt like her death
made her even more popular.

Speaker 1 (01:29:06):
Maybe hearing. I mean, I mean, you could say that
about any anybody, right, Yeah, you could argue the Tupac
stuff went bigger because of his death, But I think
we we would have seen more cross over from her
sidebar Her killer is up for parole this month. At
the end of the month, she has a parole hearing,
and she could go out for I don't think she's
going to, but they're saying that there's some interesting things

(01:29:29):
already in play that would make it an interesting probation hearing.
Number three for me, Kurt Cobain, I think that him
dying so young, would we have seen alternative music continue
to grow, or when he died it kind of bring
it to a halt and it kind of fizzled out
from there from the way we knew it. Number two Belushi.

(01:29:58):
I don't know if Chris Farley would have been as
successful if Belushi was still alive. Not that I don't
like Chris Farley. Chris Farley's funny, yeah, but Belushi. And
maybe even if he would have died twenty seven, maybe
he would have died at twenty eight, right, because he

(01:30:18):
was such such a partier.

Speaker 2 (01:30:20):
Yeah, twenty seven is that magic number?

Speaker 1 (01:30:23):
Yeah? And then number one for me, he just released
a new album even though he's been dead for a while.
I get in these kicks where I'll listen to his
music for months and go through all of his music,
every catalog, the whole catalog. And that's Mac Miller. I
think we could have heard more Mac Miller. If you're

(01:30:44):
unfamiliar with Mac Miller and you like rap music, you
should listen to Mac Miller. Rat Miller. He is awesome
in a different way than other rap artists, different in
a different way. Than eminem Is in a different way
than inserta rapper here, right, make a statement like that,

(01:31:04):
I'm not diminishing other rappers. Sure he's he's awesome, and
you get to hear how troubled his mind was in
his rap stuff. And he was a kid when he
got big, a kid.

Speaker 2 (01:31:20):
He wasn't even was he at a high school.

Speaker 1 (01:31:22):
He wasn't out of high school when he made it big.

Speaker 2 (01:31:24):
He died twenty six, yeah, okay.

Speaker 1 (01:31:27):
Twenty six overdose of fittanyl cocaine and alcohol in twenty eighteen.

Speaker 2 (01:31:35):
Honorable mention. I had Paul Walker.

Speaker 1 (01:31:40):
Paul Walker hadn't made anything good in a while.

Speaker 2 (01:31:43):
It's but he was so great to look at. And
Jonathan Brandis. Now if you don't, you're like, who's Jonathan
brand Is? Jonathan Brandis? I had posters of Jonathan Brandis
in my room because he used to be on Beat
magazine all the time. He died at twenty seven, hung
himself in two thousand and three. He was bastion by

(01:32:04):
from Never Ending Story to Pastion. And he was in Ladybugs,
the soccer movie, and also he played Stuttering Bill in
the mini series It Stephen King's It when it was
on television the first time around. Yeah, he was a

(01:32:27):
young child actor, my first blonde hair, blue eye crush.

Speaker 1 (01:32:32):
Somebody put us it in their list and they said
Cameron Boyce, Paul Walker, Chadwick Boseman, at Anton Yelkin, Heath Ledger.
You cannot put Cameron Boyce and Paul Walker on the
same list as Chadwick Boseman and Heath Ledger.

Speaker 2 (01:32:46):
I mean, Cameron Boyce was a good child actor who
probably we probably would have seen a lot more more
from as he got older. He had talent. He was
on Nickelodeon, then he went into movies. Adam Sandler used

(01:33:06):
him a lot.

Speaker 1 (01:33:08):
He was in Grown Ups one and two, Okay, but
he didn't use him a lot. He was in the sequel, Okay,
it wasn't like it wasn't like he's in every Adam
Sandler movie like all of Adam Sandler's friends. Yeah, and
he was in Descendants.

Speaker 2 (01:33:23):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:33:26):
But I I gotta be honest, I didn't I decides
Grown Ups. I was unfamiliar with who he was. Yeah,
And Anton Yelkin funny story about him. They found him dead.
He was backing out of his driveway and pinned himself
against a brick, a brick column.

Speaker 2 (01:33:45):
Yeah, yeah, his jeep right.

Speaker 1 (01:33:48):
Yes, his cheap wagon ear or something like that. Yeah,
not that that's funny, it's just odd. It's most of
these people are self induced deaths. I mean that Anton
could have been self induced, I guess.

Speaker 2 (01:33:59):
But oh, Heather O'Rourke, that's a good one. From the
Poultergeist movie, the Little Girl Caroline.

Speaker 1 (01:34:06):
Yeah, but name anything after that, no, because that was
her only movie.

Speaker 2 (01:34:10):
She died after that movie.

Speaker 1 (01:34:13):
How old was she when she did that movie? What
year did Poltrygeist come out?

Speaker 2 (01:34:17):
Oh, in the early eighties. I think she was like
five or six.

Speaker 1 (01:34:22):
So she died at twelve, so it was seven years
after I remember. I do remember on Happy Days. Oh okay,
I do remember seeing her own Happy Days. Poultergeist came
out in eighty two, so six years later, and she
what I mean, she would have lived, so what we
could have seen her die at twenty because she's a

(01:34:43):
child actor.

Speaker 2 (01:34:44):
And I would have liked to have seen who was
the little pageant girl Jean Bonnet Ramsey, Not that she
was a celebrity, but media made her a big celebrity.
I would have liked to have I've seen her grown,
grow up people. Some people say, and it is conspiracy
theory Thursday that she is Oh gosh, who's the American

(01:35:10):
Idol judge married to Orlando Bloom Katie Perry.

Speaker 1 (01:35:16):
We've discussed that's there's so not even closer.

Speaker 2 (01:35:19):
I don't think so either, but I would have she
definitely died too soon. Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:35:25):
People texted in Britney Murphy. I put her in that
same camp of I think we saw her best stuff.
I don't know what more. They started all feeling like
the same movie after a while with her. All Right,
we're gonna take a break and we'll be back.

Speaker 3 (01:35:38):
If you're listening to The Big Mad Morning Show, this
is Tulsa's Morning Show ninety seven five.

Speaker 1 (01:35:46):
Good morning. It's the Big Mad Morning Shown six kmod
can also text BMMS then what you want to say
to eight two nine four five. It is mark Madness.
And people are going to be out doing some watching games,
maybe not going to work, taking a longer lunch. And

(01:36:09):
these are just some of the things that you can
take advantage of today. Freebees discounts Applebees between March eighteenth
and the twenty first, customers can get fifty cent boneless
wings on to go orders through the app or website
nice and they can be purchased in increments of five
wings with a maximum of ten. Orders not valid with

(01:36:34):
third party delivery. Buffalo Wild Wings will beat Up is
offering bogo deal on boneless Wings dine in, takeout and
delivery orders on March twentieth, so today only. Dave and
Busters twenty wings for twenty dollars and five dollars drafts
valid with twenty two ounce domestics for today and tomorrow

(01:36:55):
and on April seventh. During the games throughout the tournament,
customers can also eat, drink and play combo that starts
at nineteen ninety nine per person, and they can add
unlimited gameplay for ninety minutes. Nice Insomnia Cookies. We have
one of these here. Pretty Good Rewards members can redeem
a one dollar Deluxe cookie the day of the game

(01:37:17):
day after a game goes into overtime. From now through
April seventh, customers can also enjoy the following Sweet sixteen
pack that includes sixteen classic cookies for the price twelve
plus for instore purchases. Customers who Sports school are fan
apparel receive a free classic cookie.

Speaker 2 (01:37:36):
Nice Where's that at? Uh?

Speaker 1 (01:37:38):
Downtown. If I'm not mistaken, uh, KFC dunke It bucket,
gotta say that a special way. The Fried Chicken chain
is offering a new dunke It bucket which includes two
original recipe tenders, one individual size of secret rest fries,

(01:38:00):
five mashed potato poppers, and your choice of three KFC
sauces four seven dollars.

Speaker 2 (01:38:07):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (01:38:08):
They're also offering a double dunket bucket that has ten
Oregin original recipe tenders, two individual sizes of secret recipe fries,
ten mashed potato poppers, four biscuits, and your choice of
six KFC sauces. What in the heck are mashed potato poppers?

Speaker 2 (01:38:24):
I don't know, I'm intrigued. Sound awesome?

Speaker 1 (01:38:28):
Okay, they're okay. These are exactly what you think they are.
They're little balls of mashed potatoes, fried yum like little
if you know what an air genie is.

Speaker 2 (01:38:44):
So when I think of a popper, I think of
like a jalapeno popper. So I thought maybe mashed potato
something in some maybe spicy.

Speaker 1 (01:38:52):
Creamy mashed potatoes golden fried with the perfect crunchy bite.

Speaker 2 (01:38:57):
Sounds delicious?

Speaker 1 (01:38:59):
Yes, that might be the best one. We have I
don't know if we have a shake shack still. From
now through April seventh, fans can score free avocado baconburger
with any orders over ten dollars made via the in store, kiosk, online,
or using the Shake app. Smashburger has exclusive food delivery

(01:39:22):
service deals with doort Ash. You can save nine dollars
off a purchase of thirty dollars or more. Non users
can save seven fifty off thirty and Uber Eats, grub Hub,
and smashburger dot Com, Wendy's Lindsay Here you go. Wendy's.
They announced on Monday that it will sell Junior Bacon
cheeseburgers and Deluxe I'm sorry and double stacked cheeseburgers for

(01:39:46):
one dollar from now through Sunday, April thirteenth, Wow, with
additional purchase. The offer can only be redeemed exclusively in
the Wendy's app. And I don't think we we have
one of these yard House, but I'm going to tell
you about it anyway because it's pretty cool. Uh yeah,

(01:40:06):
we don't have one of these, Bomber. I'm looking to
see the closest one to us, and because I think
it might be one in Oklahoma City. Yeah. The closest
one is in Kansas Dallas, and they are doing Ipa Madness.

(01:40:26):
Purchase a beer flight of four IPAs and a full
pint of they're choosing for fifteen dollars.

Speaker 2 (01:40:32):
That's a deal.

Speaker 1 (01:40:33):
Customers you take part in the event will earn a
five dollars pint pass, which gets them free beer refills
once a day when they purchase a food item.

Speaker 2 (01:40:43):
That is huge.

Speaker 1 (01:40:46):
It's the only reason I'm telling you is because he's
a free refills Wow.

Speaker 2 (01:40:50):
Yeah, but even a flight and a pint for fifteen bucks.

Speaker 1 (01:40:55):
Yeah a flight, yeah, because the flight committing where between
nine and twelve. Yeah, and then a pint can anywhere
between five and seven, depending on where you're at.

Speaker 2 (01:41:04):
Yep, it's a great deal.

Speaker 1 (01:41:06):
Yeah, that's got my attention for sure.

Speaker 2 (01:41:10):
How do we get a yard house here?

Speaker 1 (01:41:14):
I have no idea. I don't know if they'd let
you do the free I don't think I've ever been
anywhere that is an establishment with free beer refills of
any type.

Speaker 2 (01:41:23):
Nope, Nope, sign me up.

Speaker 1 (01:41:29):
Okay, assuming you were out of place, how much would
you pay to get free refills? Like, say, we have
no plans to do this. I don't even know if
we would be allowed to do this, but if we were,
Let's say we were doing a remote at a bar okay,
and while we were there it was free refills of
a certain beer. How much would you pay?

Speaker 2 (01:41:49):
Ooh maybe? I mean I like that the fifteen bucks
if it works for them fifteen bucks.

Speaker 1 (01:41:59):
But there may can you buy another food item to
get the free refills and it's once per day, it's
one refill. Yeah, so I'm telling you, I'm saying in
how many refills? I mean, you could in two hours.
Let's say it, it's like a solo cup. You could
probably fill it. I know some of you probably would start.

Speaker 2 (01:42:21):
Strong right in two hours. You could easily fill that.

Speaker 1 (01:42:26):
You could easily float a keg. Yeah, I'm going to
talk to some people we know and see if we
can't do this.

Speaker 2 (01:42:33):
Yeah, that would be awesome. And I would even it
could even be with the purchase of a food item,
because when I go I like to eat.

Speaker 1 (01:42:40):
Yeah, but I that's not because not every place that
could do it would have a food situation.

Speaker 2 (01:42:45):
That's true.

Speaker 1 (01:42:47):
I think twenty dollars twenty bucks is good. Yeah, twenty
bucks for the two hours are there, you get to drink,
but it's that cup you can't get too. You have
to get one of it. You can't be like, hey
go fill our cups for us. Uhuh huh.

Speaker 2 (01:43:02):
It's a great idea. I'm on board.

Speaker 1 (01:43:07):
H Yeah, I want to see if we can't work
this out because that would be pretty awesome. Scary, but awesome.

Speaker 2 (01:43:17):
Who's the driver that night?

Speaker 1 (01:43:18):
Because you'd have to have some logistics in place, right,
you'd have to make sure you have an extra keke.
You got to make sure you have a separate line.
You can't be in the normal you know, because there's
gonna be a lot of it's gonna be busy. Yeah, absolutely,
and probably there might be a health code of like
you can't use the same cup. So like we'd have
to figure out some logistics on that. But okay, I'm

(01:43:40):
a little impromptu survey. How much would you guys pay
if you could do this bm mass whatever that is?
So two hour window drink beer free refills. How much
would you pay? Twenty dollars is what I'm proposing. Twenty dollars, yes,
twenty dollars, no bmms and whatever that is to eight

(01:44:01):
two nine four five, We'll take a break and we'll
be back.

Speaker 3 (01:44:03):
Tulsa's Morning Show is going right back, the Big Mad
Morning Show, Tulsa's Rock Station ND.

Speaker 1 (01:44:13):
Good Morning. It's the Big Mad Morning Show. There's no debate.
I kind of knew what the answer was gonna be.

Speaker 6 (01:44:20):
But some people feel like that's a lot of money,
and because two hours is gonna go fast.

Speaker 2 (01:44:30):
Oh, absolutely well worth it.

Speaker 1 (01:44:34):
And you know when you sometimes there's a little bit
of a thing happening where you go, oh, it's twenty
dollars all you can drink, but there's one feeble old
lady pouring the beer right, you know, and she's blind
and the kegs foaming, you know what I mean? Like yeah, so, uh, lindsay,

(01:44:56):
what'd you learn today?

Speaker 2 (01:44:57):
I learned that if the blobfish, known just lounge around
the bottom of the ocean looking sad and deflated, can
win an award, there's still hope for the couch potatoes
of the world. And I also learned that some people
have thirty two teeth and some have ten. It's just simple, meth.

Speaker 1 (01:45:16):
Uh. I learned The first documents released from the JFK
files are on the Facebook page and Instagram and wow,
you will. You will not believe them. They are unbelievable.
Uh and I also learned there's a picture of me
sitting on the couch watching watching the Boys, and it

(01:45:37):
just won Ugliest Fish. It's the reflection I see of
myself when I'm masturbating in their TV screen. It's corporate
to saying, make sure that dishwashers loaded right.

Speaker 2 (01:45:50):
Excellently, stop tracking my cyclecause Andrew Schultze's there's nothing more
sad than seeing your own reflection of your TV when
you're alone with yourself.

Speaker 1 (01:46:00):
Call you what that time I need?

Speaker 5 (01:46:05):
John B.

Speaker 2 (01:46:07):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:46:08):
Now what lay mean?

Speaker 2 (01:46:11):
It to be?

Speaker 1 (01:46:12):
No time to make some noise.

Speaker 6 (01:46:18):
Interpassword Corbyn new messages.

Speaker 1 (01:46:22):
The Big Mad Morning Show would like to take a
minute to thank troops from Oklahoma and all over the
United States. These soldiers have sacrificed. Did the Big Mad
Morning Show.

Speaker 2 (01:46:29):
Before you to back like the total douchebags that.

Speaker 4 (01:46:31):
They are total douchebag, babag, total incomplete douchebag.

Speaker 1 (01:46:35):
We honor and respect you.

Speaker 3 (01:46:37):
We honor and respect you.

Speaker 9 (01:46:39):
We honor and respect you do.

Speaker 1 (01:46:40):
Bless rocking All, I blessed Tulsa.

Speaker 9 (01:46:45):
We try boys

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