Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
You are about to witness amazing Emo has consing living
man's property of all times.
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Yes, my bow suck on you bow down to your master.
Then you did it.
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Then you did it?
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Where you did?
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Allowed to play, Allowed to play, Come out to play,
Come to play.
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For Crystal wos.
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We're all here to.
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Show you how jan Witz horses raw station k M
bog Home of the listens. It's a family bee.
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Don't turn down time, just.
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Are you ready to jove?
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It's time to start to show.
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Crapsticks are going about Prescot, whisping Man, Marny Show, Welcome
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Dots eight time Dot show, Good morning, It's the Big
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(03:19):
tickets to Say Santa are up for grabs.
Speaker 9 (03:23):
I think we're having technical airs. Yeah, yeah, yeah, let's
get on my side.
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Compare our tickets to Say Santa two point zero, Primus,
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dot com. We've got best and worst of the weekend.
What's the best thing that happened this weekend? And the
worst thing that happened this weekend? How does that work?
(03:57):
But nothing else? That's fine. You stay in there, just
talk to us via sound effects the rest of the morning.
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Suddenly he's uploading a ton of sound effects. We're gonna do.
Speaker 1 (04:12):
Our listeners are awesome and Jeff Heinsley's gonna join us.
If you've got a question about divorce, custody, guardianship, name change,
any of those things, then you should get you a
question to us, because he will be in the studio
at nine to answer those questions. And we qualified somebody
for see them all. Twenty twenty five fifteen, Thomas Moffatt
(04:36):
of Glenn Pool heard the Q and is now qualified.
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You just got to.
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Listen to that qu every hour with us, and you
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say to every concert KMOD is a part of for
the rest of the year, including VIP tickets for rock
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Speaker 9 (05:00):
I'll get the best and worst coming up in a
little bit.
Speaker 1 (05:02):
But we were at Smoking Guns on Saturday night and
I was actually worried it was going to be like
stormy and all that, and I hate being in big
like arenas and I just don't want to run into
a bathroom, right, I don't.
Speaker 8 (05:16):
Like to be anywhere. But my house wanted stormy and
nasty and just crappy outside, and.
Speaker 1 (05:22):
So the thing that I wanted to bring up, which
I hope he'll comment on it is, so, you know whatever,
it turned out to be fine. We were there, it's
a good time. I'm sure we'll get into a little
bit later. But I was like, I got a pee,
and so I got up to go to the bathroom.
And the thing I always forget when I go to
(05:44):
fights is the men's line is always super long, always, always, always,
and women go right in, and so you know, you're
standing in line, and guys don't like chit chat. We
don't maybe like, hey, no, there's always some very white
person going had the line. Huh And you're like, yeah,
(06:06):
we're in line two p And so I'm standing in line.
It's not super long. It's moving along. That's one of
the good things about guy bathrooms is they move along
pretty fast. And I'm standing in line, and I see
this guy with a shorthand go up, come up the
(06:26):
steps and then look at the line and just go
into the exit and go in to go to the bathroom,
like cut the line completely.
Speaker 8 (06:42):
This person who's got it like that?
Speaker 9 (06:43):
Huh. I I don't get it. I don't get it.
Speaker 1 (06:49):
So like he goes in and I never see him leave,
so I'm assuming he did his business.
Speaker 9 (06:53):
And moved on.
Speaker 1 (06:54):
And then I'm in line and I've made the turn
and I'm waiting, and then there's another guy that comes in,
and so I guess what I'm asking is do we
not do the line thing for bathrooms and we just
do whatever we want?
Speaker 8 (07:06):
No?
Speaker 1 (07:09):
Do we stand in line to go to the bathroom?
Speaker 9 (07:12):
Nope? So we cut line?
Speaker 1 (07:19):
So if everybody's cutting, I guess I don't understand the
logic on that. Do you cut line for food? Why
is that not okay? Why is it not okay to
(07:41):
cut line for food because everybody's it's still a line
or a queue, everybody's queuing up. Do you cut line
to enter the building when there's a line?
Speaker 2 (07:53):
Build the road bitches?
Speaker 1 (07:55):
Do you cut line?
Speaker 9 (07:57):
H for beer?
Speaker 8 (08:02):
No?
Speaker 1 (08:03):
I just I don't know why the bathroom is the
one that we just don't listen. It worked out, I
got to be, but I just don't why is that
the line that one chooses to cut and listen?
Speaker 9 (08:15):
I'm not seeing out Gimpie. A lot of people did it.
Speaker 1 (08:17):
I just saw him do it, So it made it
prodent to talk about it on the show with him,
especially behind glass where he can't communicate with us and
tell us exactly what's going on and communicating via sound effects.
But I just why is that line the one that
everybody's okay with with cutting? Hey?
Speaker 9 (08:35):
Man, hey, what's going on? This is what a sir mark?
I'll fix that, man. So I'm a staller. I've always
been a staller, not like stall is like I'm trying
to buy my time to get something done. Like I'd
rather use a stall than a urinal or a friggin trough.
You know, it's just two close. I need walls, I
need divitor, you don't need peepers. Right, So I did
(08:58):
stand in line, but not you know, the first couple
of times that I go up there, right, I'm with
you get a line with everybody else, right, but uh
you know I noticed, well, hell, there's a door right there,
and the stall's right there, and nine times out of
ten there's usually a stall open. So yeah, bypass all
the rest of the jive instead of waiting in line
and having to.
Speaker 1 (09:18):
Look all the work.
Speaker 9 (09:19):
You see any feed in there? You see what I'm saying.
I know I don't. Yeah. I was like, okay, cool,
we got one open, boom, were ready to go, you know,
so go in, use the bathroom, and then out the door.
Speaker 8 (09:30):
I go, Yeah, I was gonna say, maybe they thought like, oh,
he must have to go number two or something.
Speaker 9 (09:35):
There's still a line, question.
Speaker 1 (09:36):
Yeah, it isn't a line for peers and a line
for poopers.
Speaker 9 (09:40):
Yeah, it's still a line. A line as a line
is a line, which you know, whatever it is, what
it is. You're all just mad because I broke the system.
I figured it out.
Speaker 1 (09:48):
I guess I don't know if mad's the right word,
but I just I saw you do it, and then
I saw another person and I was like, that's kind
of weird. Yeah, and so the logic is is like, uh,
there's usually an open one. Yeah, so therefore that enables
me to not follow the system.
Speaker 9 (10:06):
That we all standing here waiting for a urinal. I'm like,
I'm not standing here waiting for a goddamn journal. There's
all open I'm gonna use it now. I can't say
for you because I didn't see you go in. But
the guy that I was, you know, like the next
guy or whatever, and a guy came in.
Speaker 1 (10:23):
He there was no open one. Somebody came out and
then he went into that one, okay, which you know,
didn't give the chance for people in line to figure out,
you know, to even get in on it. Yeah, yeah,
I discovered and he kept he kept like walking, like
to see if there's like he was clearly not caring
about the lines at all, because he was like, yurnal,
no okay, and then I'll just stand here by the
(10:44):
sinks right way.
Speaker 9 (10:46):
Then I'll go to whatever opens. Yeah. Yeah, I discovered that.
And it's like that. I'll let a lot of places.
It's not just the be Okay Center. And it wasn't
that long ago when I was just like, why am
I standing here waiting screen? Guys, I'm going right on through,
you know, and it seems to work every time, so.
Speaker 2 (11:04):
You do it a lot.
Speaker 9 (11:05):
Yeah, within the last you know, I'd say within the
last couple of months. I've been to quite a few
events in the last couple of months, and that's when I've
discovered that little hack. You know, not everybody is in
for the stall and I'm like, well, I am bye,
it's yeah, eh do girls do this?
Speaker 1 (11:21):
Do you see girls come in through the exit and
take I guess you guys don't have jurnals?
Speaker 8 (11:25):
No, yeah, we have to wait. That's why I was
so surprised when you said that there was never a
wait for the girls line, because normally there is a
huge long wait for the women's bathroom because we only
have stalls.
Speaker 1 (11:37):
Yeah, well, for some reason, at like football games, right
and fights, the guy's line is always super long. There's
always a line out the door.
Speaker 9 (11:46):
Right, we've been pre partying like for a while. Yeah,
that's probably one or there's more men. True, they should
totally have like troughs in the ladies room tross for
the ladies. Every lady just kind of hunkers up. It's
their ass over the trough and lets it go, so
they know what us guys have to deal with when
it comes to trough use.
Speaker 1 (12:07):
Somebody text in maybe they had to go really bad.
Typically at an event, you're you don't. You're like, it's
time for me to go.
Speaker 10 (12:14):
Right you did?
Speaker 9 (12:15):
Yeah, right, that was me. That's gotta break the seal.
Speaker 1 (12:19):
When that last fight, where before I went, I was like,
I'm gonna go when this fight's over, Well that could
be thirty seconds, that could be you know, fifteen minutes,
and it was a fifteen minute and I was like, okay,
well we need to go. Somebody said they had the
same thing happened to me. It to be okay. It
was next in line to Pete and a stall opened up,
and someone waltzed right in the exit and took it.
(12:41):
Should you get into like hey, man, like what yes,
one hundred percent kick the door in, kick the door
and say hey that not just not just not just
a stall one, but like, hey, should you be the hey?
Speaker 9 (12:52):
I wouldn't be the hey. I wouldn't like whatever, dude,
you gotta go, you gotta go. Apparently it's more important,
so have at it.
Speaker 1 (12:59):
Ah or people are doing that, banking on the idea
and nobody gonna say nothing right right right now. If
I'm sitting in line doing the peepee dance, I maybe
the hey, hey, hey guy, You know, depends on how
bad I gotta go. If I'm crossing legs and bouncing
up and down like I'm about to piss myself right now?
Speaker 9 (13:16):
Yeah, hey, hey, back in the line.
Speaker 1 (13:20):
What if he's just a stall guy and there's always stalls.
Speaker 9 (13:23):
Available, Well, then I guess I'm stock and use the
trash canner or sink or something like that. I don't know.
Speaker 1 (13:31):
Yeah, I kind of feel like people do that because
they don't think anybody's gonna say anything, and then I
feel like it ain't worth saying anything over all. Right,
it's just the bathroom exactly. It's maybe fifteen seconds exactly.
But that doesn't warrant cutting in front of all the
people that are waiting.
Speaker 9 (13:50):
It totally makes it fine.
Speaker 1 (13:52):
It's a dick move. I don't know if it's a hack.
Speaker 9 (13:54):
It's a dick move just a bathroom.
Speaker 1 (13:56):
Yeah, but it's also a dick move to all the
people that are waiting. Y'all should have done the same thing.
Then there's no line. Then there's just chaos.
Speaker 8 (14:04):
Absolutely well, Also it's on. It's on, y'all because if
their stalls open, then they should just go use it.
Every way to house the bathroom should.
Speaker 9 (14:14):
Be absolutely Again, I didn't see when he did it.
Speaker 1 (14:16):
The person I saw just waited for something to open
and then took it. Never gave a chance to the
people in Q, just kind of went around everybody.
Speaker 8 (14:24):
I feel like that's.
Speaker 9 (14:25):
What it felt like.
Speaker 8 (14:26):
Yeah, I feel like it's an ego thing. Like if
a guy has to go in there and just has
to pee, he doesn't want to use the stall because
he doesn't want people to think that he has.
Speaker 9 (14:34):
To poop or something or or this is another take.
Speaker 1 (14:38):
Maybe the people that are in line to peeople are like, hey,
I'm going to leave that for people that have to douce.
Speaker 8 (14:42):
That is that's true too, But like you said, it's
only fifteen seconds, so you're in and out, and I
think it would just keep the line moving.
Speaker 1 (14:49):
If you're in a wheelchair and you come around and
you're like, hey, sorry, I gotta cut him, like yeah,
that makes sense, you're in a wheelchair. He's great spots too,
like just go ahead, right. I feel like I know
people you would get, people would help you row.
Speaker 9 (15:07):
So many doors open up. All you gotta do is
week week week week week. You get elevators. Yes, people
might even offer to push you. People would stop, people
would to push me. Yeah yeah, people you're with, yeah,
hey man, you want to go ahead, get up here
and get your beer. Man. You've been through enough in life.
Speaker 8 (15:26):
Thinking about right now wheelchair for next year's event.
Speaker 9 (15:29):
I don't know what you're talking about.
Speaker 1 (15:30):
I think if you're suddenly in a wheelchair, riding your
motorcycle and in a wheel chair feels a little miss
message now try.
Speaker 9 (15:38):
Yeah right, okay, yeah, oh no, no, no, I'll totally
strap that thing to the back of the bike. Just
some ratchet straps would be fine.
Speaker 1 (15:46):
All right, we've got tickets to say Santa we're gonna
give away. That show is going to be at to
be okay Center, We got best and worst of the weekend.
Speaker 9 (15:52):
Our listeners are aw some.
Speaker 1 (15:53):
Jeff Finsley's going to join us plus more qualifying for
See them All twenty twenty five.
Speaker 2 (15:57):
Will be back.
Speaker 12 (15:57):
If you're listening to The Big Man Morning Show. This
is Telsa's Morning shown kmton.
Speaker 1 (16:18):
It's good morning. It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Make
sure you have us saved as a preset with the
iHeartRadio app. That way, when you hear the queue, you
can open the app and listen right then and get
to qualified for See them All twenty twenty five. Another
chance coming up very soon. Let's do news quickies. These
(16:40):
are stories you may have missed in the news, but
we cover them here and put a link on our
Facebook page, Facebook dot Com slash BMMS six nine.
Speaker 9 (16:47):
Are we good? I think we're okay.
Speaker 13 (16:52):
It's time for newsquikies, World news, local news and news
that just makes you say, what the Here's Corbin Gibb
and Lindsay with What's going on news quickies from the
Big nine Morning Show in ninety seven.
Speaker 8 (17:05):
Passenger allegedly strips naked, poops on seat as plane lands.
So there was this female passenger on a Southwest Airlines
flight headed to Chicago, and I'm not sure why, but
she allegedly stripped down, naked, hopped right up on a
(17:26):
seat as the plane was landing, and pooped.
Speaker 9 (17:30):
Duty.
Speaker 8 (17:31):
Yeah, police officers were called to Chicago's Midway Airport on
Saturday as flight four eighteen from Philadelphia arrived with one
passenger shocking the cabin. The Southwest Airlines crew that our
teams are reaching out to those on board to apologize
(17:53):
for the situation and any delay to their travel plans.
Nothing is more important to Southwest than the safety of
our customers and employees, and we appreciate the professionalism of
our flight crew. It wasn't It wasn't clear what happened
to the passenger. The plane was taken out of service
for cleaning. Get ross.
Speaker 9 (18:17):
What is with people?
Speaker 1 (18:18):
I mean alcohol, alcohol in the airport, People over indulge
in the airport.
Speaker 9 (18:24):
True that I've been drove.
Speaker 2 (18:31):
Like drum.
Speaker 9 (18:32):
Yes, I have never wanted to take a cramp on
anything really besides where it needs to go.
Speaker 2 (18:40):
You know what I mean?
Speaker 1 (18:41):
Yeah, again, you're applying your morals true to a situation.
True that, And to me, I always think of when
I hear these stories of what would I do if
I was on that flight?
Speaker 9 (18:56):
Uh huh?
Speaker 1 (18:59):
This person walks up and down the aisle and then
at some points defecates. I mean, I might give you
might that might warn a hey, hey, how far.
Speaker 9 (19:12):
Into it before your first Hey, hey, hey taking clothes off?
Hey what are you doing? Sit down? See humble to
take your clothes off? I guess it looks like no, no,
but it's like once you start squatting and pushing, that's
when it's like, hey, hey, hear me out.
Speaker 1 (19:36):
I understand the direction you're going with when you're common
of what they look like. But however, if someone's taking
their clothes off in a place that is not where
people take their clothes off, you are about to see trouble.
Speaker 8 (19:54):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (19:55):
Rarely does someone get naked and it's a good thing
right in a place where you're not supposed to get
in exactly right.
Speaker 9 (20:03):
Right, Usually something bad has is followed up by that.
Speaker 1 (20:07):
Yes, So regardless of what they look like I don't
want to see you know, Sidney Sweeney or whatever.
Speaker 9 (20:16):
God, you know making dice right.
Speaker 8 (20:21):
I didn't know this was a bachelor party on the
plane today.
Speaker 1 (20:24):
It's no, because there's no way they're like hey, and
then no, they were probably like just tell you.
Speaker 9 (20:33):
It's the thin air and altitude is what gets them, right.
Speaker 1 (20:36):
No, cabin's pressurized time, damn it. It's got to be
some sort of altering product that they took or didn't
take right that caused their behavior. And were they traveling alone?
Speaker 9 (20:49):
Right, where's their partner, you know, wherever? It's like, hey,
keep your clothes on their travel buddy.
Speaker 1 (20:55):
Even if it's a business trip and someone loses their mind,
that's in your group. I would think you would get involved.
Speaker 8 (21:03):
Yeah.
Speaker 9 (21:05):
I was just thinking if like, let's say you and
I are on a flight together and you strip down
naked and then you're gonna douce on the.
Speaker 1 (21:14):
Seat, I'll probably let you strip.
Speaker 9 (21:17):
Down naked, But it's once you start squatting and push,
and that's what I'm like, bro, Bro, come on.
Speaker 8 (21:25):
No, you wouldn't let them get naked.
Speaker 9 (21:27):
Oh that's kind of funny.
Speaker 1 (21:29):
I think you typically when you're traveling with the group,
there's a sense of family quote unquote or brotherhood, so
you feel like a responsibility for the group. Yeah, and
so I would think you'd be like, hey, man, chill
this plane of land, just like the other ones have, Right, know, how.
Speaker 9 (21:45):
Many chills do you get before it's like, all right, fine,
you're gonna act a fool, act a fool. I'm still
getting to the Bahamas. You might end up getting arrested
before we even leave the airport if we're traveling to
the Bahamas together. Weird, it's for the show.
Speaker 1 (22:02):
Sure, Okay, Now Lindsay's taken a later flight. Yeah, something
come up.
Speaker 2 (22:08):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (22:09):
Then then if I get arrested, you better be there
to help me get out of jail.
Speaker 9 (22:16):
Right, that's very good.
Speaker 8 (22:17):
But he's not.
Speaker 9 (22:18):
But you know, yeah, yeah, it's like how many times,
like even just anybody, it's like how many times you say,
come on, man, hey, get your stuff together before they
you realize they're just not listening at all, and they're
going to do what they want, regardless whether it's you know,
taking a clothes off or crapping in a seat or
whatever the case is. Yeah, you know, when we tell
(22:40):
somebody stops, so many times before you're like, let's out
of my.
Speaker 1 (22:43):
Hand, right, But then afterwards I see.
Speaker 9 (22:46):
This is ah.
Speaker 1 (22:48):
I'm torn because if we have to go on a
work trip, a convention, whatever, like I signed up to
go learn how to put sprockets together. I didn't sign
up to be a babysitter.
Speaker 9 (23:00):
Right exactly. So the all you could do is can
let let whomever get in trouble? Yeah, listen, I told
you several times already. Stop you ain't listening. Fine, I'm
gonna go ahead. We're going to learn how to do
better at our job in the Bahamas. And I come
back and tell the boy why what happened? What happened
(23:20):
with Corbin? Yeah? I tried. I tried really hard. Try
is a very subjective word. But he wasn't listening. So
sometimes you got to learn a lesson. But I tell
you what, this is what I learned at the convention.
Job still done.
Speaker 8 (23:36):
You call for the flight attendant to bring over the
duct tape so you can.
Speaker 1 (23:41):
I think they got away from doing that. I think
the flight attendants won't do that. I think a passenger might.
But I think there's some liability with that. Remember the
lady who was like and that mfor right there, and like,
we just no explanation. Ever. She had to have been
(24:01):
either we're in a simulation, she's an alien, they were
an alien. Or she was induced by alcohol or a
hallucinogenic or some sort of mental clarity drug, right right.
Speaker 9 (24:16):
Maybe took a xanax because she's a little you know,
nervous about the flight. And you mix that with a
couple of screwdrivers and the next thing you know, you're
seeing shape shifting aliens on the back of the plane.
Speaker 1 (24:28):
There you see you see her do interviews now and
you're like this.
Speaker 9 (24:32):
Person was that person? Right?
Speaker 1 (24:34):
Like they're like, that's a weird flex for clout.
Speaker 9 (24:39):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (24:41):
If I see Gimbie Gett naked and squad, I'm like, right.
Speaker 9 (24:47):
Why because we're put to go to the Bahamas and
I'm not gonna let you run by vacation.
Speaker 1 (24:52):
Spoiler he don't listen now, so why would he listen
on a plane?
Speaker 9 (24:55):
Right? Right? A woman busted for SCO crash. So there's
this eighty eight year old gal. She her name's Carolyn,
Carolyn Secreast, and she's at the local Sam's Club like
eight thirty in the morning last week. She's driving through
the parking lote. She ends up smashing into this other woman,
a seventy seven year old named Laverne Laverne Hampton. Laverne
(25:19):
Hampton was in her scooter and Carolyn smashed Laverne with
her buick. So Laverne goes flying out of the scooter,
lands under the parking lot all right, and then old
Carolyn just do dude, drives right off. Didn't ask her
if she needed any help, didn't try to exchange any
information or nothing, just kept don cruising well. Laverne gets
(25:41):
taken to the hospital for her injuries full osta. The
police finally caught up with Carolyn and they arrested her
for leaving the scene of a crash involving serious injury,
which is a felony.
Speaker 1 (25:57):
Let poor lady look at her hair.
Speaker 9 (25:59):
All right, she shouldn't be driving, but like she apparently
did get bosted earlier. It is like last year twenty
three plead guilty to careless driving that resulted in a crash.
Speaker 1 (26:11):
Dude getting older and not being able to drive is
a massive ask, right. It is one of the few
things in life we have that gives us autonomy. And
when you go, hey, we're going to take this away
from you. We're going to take this away from you.
Not you don't want to anymore. Now you don't want
(26:32):
to pay for a car. We're going to take your
autonomy away from you. Some people have a hard time
doing that. Oh yeah, yeah, when you become a danger
to yourself and others. But you don't see it that way.
Maybe she didn't know.
Speaker 9 (26:46):
I don't know. I think if you smash into somebody
in a scooter with your buick, you know, you hit
them again.
Speaker 1 (26:53):
I think there are sometimes you get to an age
where things don't really really feel like and crash, Like
did she go flying off her scooter?
Speaker 9 (27:03):
That's what it said. It launched her out of her
scooter onto the parking lot ground where she was seriously in.
Speaker 1 (27:10):
If I bumped the scooter, it's falling over and you're
falling out of the scooter out to the ground, So
that hardly constitutes cannipulted across a median.
Speaker 9 (27:20):
I think that Carolyn was doing, you know, just circling
the parking lot, doing about forty five round and round
around dune. Donut's right saw Laverne and her scooter. They
have a rivalry from Bunko. Yeah, and she's like, I'm
not gonna let her get that dude on Texas toast
and then smashes into or launches her off fifteen twenty
(27:43):
feet off the scooter.
Speaker 1 (27:45):
Anything that had to have been at the gas station
because Sam's Club isn't open at eight thirty.
Speaker 9 (27:51):
I don't know. Maybe maybe so maybe this one in
Florida is open at eight thirty. I don't know.
Speaker 1 (27:58):
Uh, We've got a lot of skepticism on our stories.
Speaker 9 (28:01):
This morning.
Speaker 1 (28:02):
Thirteen year old boy attacked after plato incident in Florida.
So this thirteen year old boy was assaulted, and not
just assaulted, but apparently he Deputies say the driver turned
around and chased the boy after the thirteen year old
boy accidentally threw his plato into the street and it
hit the car. The man, like I said, hunted him
(28:23):
down stomped on his head during the attack. The incident
was caught on video, and authorities are asking the publish
for help when identifying the attack who fled in a
blue Honda. Now, should he stomp on the kid's head?
Speaker 4 (28:37):
No?
Speaker 2 (28:37):
Should he pursue the kid?
Speaker 9 (28:42):
No?
Speaker 2 (28:42):
No?
Speaker 1 (28:43):
But also the kid didn't accidentally throw plato into the street.
Speaker 9 (28:47):
No, no, but it's Plato. It's not like it's a
rock or an egg or it's a bold Yeah. Yeah,
how much damage could it really do? Speed car? Who knows? Right?
Speaker 8 (29:02):
And the driver of the car that the kid was
in was probably like, get that Plato out of this car,
and he probably just you know, threw it out the window.
Speaker 9 (29:09):
No, Lindsay, the thirteen year old was in a yard.
Speaker 8 (29:13):
Oh oh oh, yes see. Plato is first of all,
I hate it in my house.
Speaker 2 (29:20):
I can't stand it.
Speaker 8 (29:21):
It's in the carpets or that line.
Speaker 9 (29:23):
Yeah, and thatkinetic sand get lost.
Speaker 8 (29:26):
Oh, kinetic sand is the worst. But yeah, no damage
is done. That dude just had a big chip on
his shoulder and he took it out on the wrong person.
Speaker 9 (29:36):
I mean, I don't know if he had a chip
on his shoulder.
Speaker 1 (29:38):
I think it more of he was like, I am
a man, how dare you violate my property?
Speaker 9 (29:45):
I am the king.
Speaker 1 (29:47):
But also the thirteen year old he like accidentally through
Plato in this You accidentally through Plato in the street.
Speaker 9 (29:53):
All right, I give it to him if he was
like three, but right six thirteen year old? Eight?
Speaker 1 (29:59):
Right, thirteen, you're why are you playing with Plato because.
Speaker 9 (30:04):
It tastes good.
Speaker 8 (30:05):
Maybe he was special?
Speaker 9 (30:09):
Does that make it okay?
Speaker 10 (30:10):
Now?
Speaker 9 (30:11):
If he's a special.
Speaker 1 (30:12):
Then he shouldn't be unsupervised night. All right, we gotta
take a break.
Speaker 2 (30:16):
We'll be back.
Speaker 3 (30:17):
Tulsa's Morning Show is coming right back. The Big Mad
Morning Show.
Speaker 14 (30:21):
Tulsa's Rock Station ninety Good morning.
Speaker 1 (30:37):
It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Tell free eight three
three four six O K M O D. Let's see
what Lindsay has for Balls to the Wall sports.
Speaker 8 (30:57):
According to ESPN, it was another wild NFL draft with
some clear winners and losers. Some of the winners include
a Shadeur Sanders. Despite everything, Sanders gets a spot on
the winners list since he wound up in a good spot,
he'll have a realistic chance to win the Browns starting
job over the competition, and with Joe Flacco starting the
(31:17):
year at forty, it's safe money that some backups will
see game time this season.
Speaker 1 (31:23):
I think it's like, it's not like the Browns have
a great history of developing quarterbacks, right right.
Speaker 8 (31:30):
Well, He's also on the losers list because while his
slot on the winners list needed some explanation, by sliding
to the fifth round, he lost out on roughly thirteen
million dollars.
Speaker 1 (31:42):
I don't love the stat because that's true. If you
get drafted in the first round, you make more money. Yes,
but he's flat right. Yeah, he made about four point
five four point nine in nil at Colorado. That's pretty
much what he's gonna make. Yeah, as a fifth rounder,
and he's gonna get endorsement deals and he has a
(32:04):
chance to prove himself. I hope his attitude is like, good,
now I can earn that contract. And if he becomes
the Golden Boy and saves this franchise and takes them
to the playoffs, he's going to get a ridiculously huge contract.
Speaker 8 (32:18):
The Jaguars are on the winner list, with James Gladstone
rocking a lot of worlds with the deal that gave
the team the second overall pick, and as a result,
they got Travis Hunter.
Speaker 1 (32:28):
This is so wild to me, the fact that Tennessee
passed on Travis Hunter.
Speaker 9 (32:33):
It's crazy.
Speaker 1 (32:34):
He is a generational talent once in a lifetime, right,
and they went, nah, we're good, We'll take a chance
with a quarterback, which they did need. But you have
a generational talent that can be around for a while.
And you let him go to another team.
Speaker 8 (32:56):
Crazy cam Word is on the winner's list as the
number one pick. He's a winner by default. But the
fact that the Titans did their best to give him
some weapons with the rest of their picks, taking two
receivers and a tight end. Bonus winter status for Ward
was Warren Moon gave him permission to wear his retired
number one in Tennessee.
Speaker 9 (33:14):
Yeah, that's cool.
Speaker 1 (33:15):
Yeah. The thing that's always awesome too about the draft
is that when it's over, every team, every fan.
Speaker 9 (33:22):
Goes, yes, we got it.
Speaker 5 (33:24):
Yes.
Speaker 1 (33:25):
Now when no, no, no, no, injuries can happen, they
can just not be good. Chemistry can be messed up. Yeah,
but you're like, yes, finally they put.
Speaker 8 (33:38):
Quinn Ewers on the loser list. The Texas QB had
a year of eligibility left, but entered the draft as
a projected mid round pick. In the seventh round, he
was selected. The salt in the wound is that two
kickers and a punter all got taken before him.
Speaker 9 (33:52):
All. Yeah, because he's not he doesn't stay healthy.
Speaker 8 (33:54):
Yeah, and that's your balls to the wall sports. Len's
you on ninety seventy five km.
Speaker 15 (33:58):
Moody, Good morning, it's the Big Mad Morning Show.
Speaker 1 (34:10):
Call us toll free eight three three four six oh
K m O D eight three three four.
Speaker 9 (34:15):
Six oh kmo D.
Speaker 1 (34:17):
Can also text BMMS and then what you want to
say to eight two nine four five. Good morning Lindsay,
Good morning Corbin.
Speaker 8 (34:23):
We want to hook you up with one thousand dollars
when you rock the bank in less than an hour
from now, you'll hear that nationwide keyword at eight o'clock
this morning. Enter it online at kmod dot com, and
you'll have twelve more chances throughout the day to win
all the way up until eight o'clock tonight. Payoff some bills,
do whatever you want when you rock the bank.
Speaker 9 (34:44):
Good luck, Good morning, Gimby, Well, good morning Corbin. Hey,
Lincoln Park's gonna be at to b Oka Center tonight.
Mmm mmm that's right. And if you ain't get your tickets,
you still got a chance. Hit up Bokayscento dot com
get your tickets, come party all right.
Speaker 1 (34:57):
Uh, let's do best and worst of the weekend. What's
the best thing that happen this weekend and the worst
thing that happened this weekend?
Speaker 9 (35:03):
BMMS and whatever that is to eight two nine four five.
Speaker 1 (35:05):
Are toll free at eight three three four six five
six six three, lindsay what's the best and what's the worst.
Speaker 8 (35:13):
The best was I think you hit on it. When
we Saturday went to the UH Smoking Guns. It's always
a great time. This year, my husband actually got to
try it out for the first time and see what
it's all about. His company was a sponsor as well,
and they invited him to tag along and he loved it.
(35:35):
Me and Marcus go every year and we always brag
about it and tell him how much fun it is,
and he was like, oh, it sounds like a good time.
And then he got to experience it and he was like,
oh my gosh, I've never had so much fun at
the Bok Center. We told you so. It was just fantastic.
And the worst part of the weekend, I would say
(35:58):
would be the weather. Saturday afternoon, we sat in my
car waiting and waiting and waiting for rain delays for
Marcus had a lacrosse game, and there were games before
him that just kept getting delayed delayed. I'm like, come on,
you guys, just look at the damn radar already and
(36:19):
call it. There's plenty of time. We can make up
for this, and Marcus and I kept thinking to ourselves
like we got placed to be tonight, like we cannot
be stuck here all damn day. So they finally did
cancel it. And then what makes it even worse though,
is now that game is rescheduled for tonight and I
hate missing a game. I got to do it. So
(36:44):
that's the worst.
Speaker 1 (36:44):
Beast and worst of the weekend. What's the best part
of the weekend and the worst part of the weekend? Gimpie, Oh,
best part is definitely Saturday smoking guns fight. We've been
doing this for the past ten years. It's always a
good time.
Speaker 9 (36:55):
My girl's never been to anything like that before. She
had never had that experience of sitting down on the floor,
and she's never seen a live fight any of that stuff.
So it was really a cool experience for her, which
I think was was awesome and get to see her enjoy.
She was up screaming and hooting and hollering, and then
all that energy wore down. It's like getting towards the
(37:16):
end of the end of the match, right and I'm tired. Okay,
we still got three more fights before we leave. Walk
around with me. I'm not gonna walk around wonder one
watch which, by the way, it's the first time I
stayed till the very very end, like watching everybody else
leave in a long time, So that was kind of cool.
(37:38):
The worst part of the weekend was probably Friday. Friday.
So Friday, I get with some some buddies of mine.
We go on to Mohawk Park and uh, they've got
three disc golf courses out there at Mohawk, right, so
we're gonna go play one black Hawk. We get up
there to the first tea pad and it ain't nothing
but water. Okay, well, let's go over here to Red Hawk.
(38:00):
They recently redid it. They shortened a lot of the teas, right.
I ended up finishing even, which is great. I haven't
finished even on a round of golf in for yandamn. Ever,
the worst part of the weekend is, though I ain't,
I got into a mess jiggers or skeeter bikes or something,
because like, I'm like, I got these bug bites on them,
(38:20):
Like where the hell did this come from?
Speaker 1 (38:23):
Right?
Speaker 9 (38:24):
And I was sitting at a table waiting for my
friend right to show up, and uh, I'm rolling one
up and I see some chiggers around, and I'm just like, Okay,
there's one squish, there's another one squish. But there wasn't
like a whole lot of them all over the place.
So I don't think I sat down in any of them, right,
But I did. I did had to beat off a
(38:45):
couple of mosquitoes while I was outres. I think that's
what got me, because I got I got them on
my arm, I got one on my ass. It's just
I got them everywhere. It's not good.
Speaker 8 (38:57):
I didn't know that you could see chiggers. I thought
they were almost too small to even see.
Speaker 9 (39:03):
I've never little red takes. Oh no, what they is,
I don't know.
Speaker 8 (39:07):
I've never experienced them.
Speaker 9 (39:10):
You don't want to they sew Yeah, best and worst
of the weekend?
Speaker 1 (39:13):
What's the best part of the weekend and the worst
part of the week and BMMS and whatever that is
to eight two nine four five or you can tech
or you can call it eight three three four six
kmod best was Yeah, Saturday wash was fun. We went
to dinner before we ate at Malfi. This new Italian
restaurant was good. Probably one of the best espresso Martinez
I've ever had. Sorry too, uh. And then uh went
(39:37):
to the fights. Of course they were awesome. I tell
my wife that's the furthest away I've ever sat from
the cage. Yeah, yeah, for a fight, Okay, and uh
yeah that was it was far's I'm just used to
you can see everything happening right in front of you.
Speaker 9 (39:56):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (39:56):
And there were some some good fights and there were
some not some good fights, but yeah, it was. It's
fun watching that. And you know, when you have somebody
lose that you hope to win or to just hearing
some of the people make comments is really funny to me,
Like do something, it's really hard. Just the idea that
(40:20):
you decided to get in there and let somebody close
the door and I'm gonna whoop your ass or You're
gonna whip my we'll see what happens, is just like
tons of respect to do that. That is not an
easy feat to do, not knowing if you're gonna be
able to walk tomorrow because your leg's been kicked so
many times, or you're gonna be able to see out
(40:42):
of both eyes like wild. But that was the best.
The worst, for sure was buying two beers for thirty dollars.
Speaker 9 (40:50):
That's the absolutely. Worst that is highway robbery. Yeah, got
a it was a double jack and tonic m old
Lady gotta ultra, Oh, like forty eight dollars. She's like
forty eight dollars for these two drinks. I'm like, well, yeah,
it's okay, So what do you expect?
Speaker 1 (41:11):
Yeah, wild yeah, I was like, yeah, but have you
heard the price of eggs?
Speaker 10 (41:17):
Right?
Speaker 1 (41:19):
Best was I hit five hundred miles on the motor
I rebuilt. Worst was changing the oil in the rain Saturday,
only to have to be such a beautiful day Sunday.
Best won tickets through all to smoking Guns. Worst, I
didn't go, You missed out. Best had a big interview,
job interview, was offered the job three hours later. I
(41:41):
start next week. Worse my mom is moving to Alaska
soon and she holds what's left of my family together. Oh,
my youth basketball team coach finally wins a game after
four losses in a row. Worst part about it we
lost the next game right after that. Best was going
to Smoking Guns. Worse my boy Bobby Winfrey got getting
(42:02):
knocked out in thirty seconds. Still a great event. Best
part of the weekend My wife and I were invited
by Patrick Kinnison to be his guest for the upcoming
Leedo Ford Show, and I feel like I should know
who that is. Okay, he is a oh he's with Union, Okay, guitarist.
(42:30):
That's still a pretty big deal. I guess absolutely. Worst
spent too much money on eating out. Best thing is
watching the thunder sweep the Grizzlies. Worst out or worst?
I found out my mom is losing her leg.
Speaker 2 (42:43):
Below the knee.
Speaker 1 (42:43):
Oh no, uh, GIMPI get a thermo cell for your
bag or your cart, or hang it on and keep
the mosquitoes off you. Okay, sure, what is a thermo?
Speaker 9 (43:00):
I have no idea. I have never heard of. GIMP's
not buying this. That's too expensive.
Speaker 1 (43:06):
Uh it's thirty dollars, so it's not too expensive. Too bad,
but I'm sure you have to pay for the refill.
Speaker 9 (43:12):
Yeah, I'm good on that. I forget on that is
it could bring some off. I didn't bring any off.
I didn't think it was going to be that bad
until I got out there.
Speaker 1 (43:23):
What you should do is you get some cinterronilla. Oh yeah, yeah,
rub it all. Get a cent vranilla plant.
Speaker 9 (43:29):
Rub it all over.
Speaker 2 (43:30):
Actually, just put the.
Speaker 1 (43:30):
Plant in the bag, right, carry it around them and
then before you you know, go to the t box,
put it on the ground.
Speaker 9 (43:38):
Right, Do I have to light this candle first? No?
Speaker 1 (43:40):
No, it's a plant. Oh, it's an actual plant carrying
a whole day of plant with there's centronilla plants, and
then there's sin vanilla candles, which is made from the
oil of the plant.
Speaker 9 (43:48):
I don't know. I think it would rather carry a candle.
We're out.
Speaker 1 (43:51):
They say it's just not good for it to be
on fire in your bag, right.
Speaker 8 (43:55):
Dryer sheets in the pocket is supposed to help keep
mosquitoes away too.
Speaker 9 (43:59):
Yeah, that's also supposed to keep static from shocking things.
Obviously that doesn't work.
Speaker 1 (44:04):
Right, Right, that's clearly not working very well. All Right,
we got tickets to say Santa we're gonna give away.
That show is Tuesday at the Bok Center. Get your
tickets to see Primise pussfer in Perfect Circle all on
WEDNESDAYE at the same time at Bokcenter dot com.
Speaker 2 (44:18):
We'll be back.
Speaker 3 (44:19):
You're listening to The Big Mad Morning Show.
Speaker 12 (44:21):
This is Tulsa's Morning show ninety km o D.
Speaker 1 (44:44):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Tell three
eight three three four six, Oh kmo D. That's the
phone number, and also text BMMS and then what you
want to say to eight two nine four five. It's
time to play a game, because we got tickets to
say Santa. That's gonna be at the Bok Center, Say
Santa two point zero. Actually post a for a Primus
(45:06):
perfect Circle all on stage at the same time. Ill
to celebrate Maynard's birthday. Show is Tuesday, and we're gonna
play note you Yes, and the show's on Thursday. I
thought it was May first, Yeah, which is Thursday?
Speaker 9 (45:23):
You said Tuesday? Oh okay, yeah, Thursday, that's what I said. Yeah,
I just don't want to showing up tomorrow.
Speaker 1 (45:30):
We're like, where's per Well's See, I had to go
look for it myself, so I had to write it
on there all right, So either way, we got a
pair of tickets for you and toll free eight three
three four six O K m D.
Speaker 9 (45:44):
Good morning, you're on the air. What is your name, Ronnie?
Speaker 1 (45:47):
Ronnie?
Speaker 2 (45:48):
How are you today doing day?
Speaker 9 (45:51):
Ronnie. Here's how this is gonna work.
Speaker 1 (45:52):
I'm gonna play one note from a famous song if
you guess it correctly. We're getting those tickets to say
Santa right here is the note.
Speaker 9 (46:04):
H we played again for you?
Speaker 7 (46:09):
M hm, what is it?
Speaker 1 (46:13):
Sounds like, Uh, Santeria Santoria is your guest.
Speaker 9 (46:21):
Yep, it is.
Speaker 1 (46:23):
Man, congratulations, you're getting those tickets, say, Santa is yours.
Hang on the line, so gimp you can get.
Speaker 9 (46:29):
Your head Okay, yeah, thank you, man, appreciate you. I
finally watched uh the Last of Us.
Speaker 1 (46:38):
Okay with the uh the.
Speaker 9 (46:41):
Death h yes, the old death of Joel. Yes. Uh.
Speaker 1 (46:47):
It was definitely much better than the first episode. It
was definitely much better than the first episode. I felt like,
we're gonna get be bored the rest of the season.
Speaker 9 (47:01):
I think so. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (47:02):
I think they're gonna get a ton of backstory. They
jumped five years, so they've got to fill five years
of information.
Speaker 9 (47:08):
Right in which I think that's what yesterday's episode is about. Okay,
because I haven't watched it yet, just based off of
the title, you know, it brings Joel up in the
title or whatever, So I think they're gonna flash back
five years Ellie remembering her time with Joel. I don't know. Again,
(47:29):
I haven't watched it yet. Oh, okay, so we don't
know if that happens. I haven't watched the most recent
episode yet.
Speaker 1 (47:34):
No, I think they can drag that out for the season.
Sure where I would have and the girl that kills him,
I would have much rather they dragged that out, maybe
shown a time where she got close, like you know
it's coming, and the anticipation you're just not sure which
episode it's gonna happen at. I think would have been
better because now I've got to not saying there won't
(47:56):
be any great episod you know episodes, but I don't
know how you get much better than that.
Speaker 9 (48:01):
Yeah, it was pretty intense.
Speaker 8 (48:02):
It was so soon. It reminded me of The Walking
Dead when he took was it Lucille? Is that his.
Speaker 9 (48:08):
Bat Megan's bag?
Speaker 8 (48:10):
Yes? Yes, and and just went crazy on everybody.
Speaker 1 (48:15):
I don't I like the comparison because somebody compared it
to Red Wedding, and it is not Red Wedding, Oh nobody.
I don't think it's getting introduced to Lucille. I don't
think it's.
Speaker 9 (48:28):
It's its own little thing. But yeah, I get it.
Speaker 1 (48:30):
Because that one, so many people got killed and it
was so intense and you didn't know it was going
to happen. Like there was so much like build up
in two in that episode.
Speaker 8 (48:41):
Yeah, I thought for sure she Ellie was going to
walk in and be able to save him in the
right in just in the nick of time, and that
did not happen.
Speaker 1 (48:51):
Yeah, he's still gonna be on the show, right, of
course because the flashback, Yeah, flashbacks for sure.
Speaker 9 (48:57):
So so he's not going to be gone from the
show show, but he's gone from the main storyline, that's
for sure. They could have dragged that out, done it
at the end. Maybe come back third season, you know,
all right, Joel's dead. Now, Ellie's looking for the small
batch of fireflies that you know killed her friend or whatever,
you know, and and then make the whole third season
(49:20):
off of that, her hunt for these people or whatever.
Speaker 1 (49:25):
We'll see. We'll see, all right, we gotta take a break.
Speaker 2 (49:28):
We'll be back.
Speaker 12 (49:31):
On Telsa's Morning Show continues next AXT The Big Mad
Morning Show on Telfer's Rock station ninety seven KMOT.
Speaker 1 (49:52):
Well, good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Col
Still free eight three three four six oh k.
Speaker 16 (49:58):
M O D.
Speaker 1 (50:00):
It can also text bmms and then what you want
to say to eight two nine four five Cody lair
of Okemolgi heard the queue and got qualified for SEAMAL
twenty twenty five. You have another chance to get qualified
coming up very soon. Be listening for that. Q qualify
every hour with us and then throughout the day as
well from yingling and kmod for small twenty twenty five.
(50:21):
Let's see what Gimpi has in his four x four.
Speaker 9 (50:25):
Well, hollup going to say this here that New Jersey
wildfires are now over fifteen thousand acres and sixty percent contained.
Officials now say the Jones Road fire has scorched over
fifteen thousands of acres fifteen thousand acres As of yesterday,
the blaze is now around sixty percent contained. In a
post on X, officials said the rain that's expected to
(50:48):
hit the area Saturday night was light and did not
provide much help putting the fires out. Nineteen year old
Joseph Klein has been charged with aggravated arson, as officials
a lie he left burning pallets unattended, sparking the wildfires.
Speaker 1 (51:05):
Why but the idea of New Jersey on fire sounds dangerous.
It seems like I don't supposed to be. Yeah, I
guess I was unaware. I thought it was all densely populated, right.
I guess not what little bit of wooded area they
have it's on fire.
Speaker 9 (51:22):
Yeah. Survey finds more Americans are financing groceries. New data
from the Lending Tree shows a growing number of Americans
relying on loans to buy groceries. The survey found of
two thousand consumers ages eighteen to seventy nine, that half
reported using the credit to help cover the cost of food.
(51:45):
Lending Tree said twenty five percent of those surveys said
that they used to buy now, pay later loan. They
used buy now, pay later loans to buy groceries.
Speaker 2 (51:55):
That's wild.
Speaker 9 (51:56):
That is wild. This shouldn't be like it. No, you
should have to get a payday loan to see what
else we got here.
Speaker 1 (52:02):
Measles cases near nine hundred.
Speaker 9 (52:05):
The CDC says the nation has already tripled the number
of cases seen in twenty twenty four. Most nearly six
hundred and fifty, are in West Texas. States with active
outbreaks include Indiana, Kansas, Michigan, Montana, New mex School, Oklahoma, Ohio, Pennsylvania,
and Tennessee. And In somewhat related news, a measles case
(52:26):
is confirmed in Cherokee Nation Reservation. The Oklahoma State Department
of Health identified a case of measles within the Cherokee
Nation on April twenty fourth. Officials contacted the individual who
may have been exposed during April fourteenth through the seventeenth.
Cherokee Nation recommends that the Cherokee citizens contact their primary
care provider to ensure they are up to date with
(52:48):
all vaccination.
Speaker 1 (52:50):
Listen to this because I thought I knew what measles was,
Like what to look for, right, I think it's a
rash or something, right? No, No, no, that's you get
that after that's like towards the end. Yeah, fever, cough,
running nose, red, watery eyes happens with a lot of sicknesses.
Speaker 2 (53:07):
But here's the the asterisk.
Speaker 1 (53:10):
And I didn't know this about measles, the appearance of
couplic spots. These are red spots with white sinners in
your mouth.
Speaker 9 (53:20):
Yeah, I didn't know.
Speaker 1 (53:23):
I didn't know that that was a sign of measles.
I didn't know that that was a sign of anything.
Speaker 9 (53:28):
Right, she thought it was canker showers.
Speaker 10 (53:30):
Right.
Speaker 9 (53:31):
I gotta be honest. Of all the sicknesses short of like.
Speaker 1 (53:36):
Strap strod or something I don't really look at my
kid's mouth when they're not feeling well.
Speaker 9 (53:40):
No, you don't think about it.
Speaker 8 (53:43):
Maybe if their glands or swollen or something. I don't yeah, no.
Speaker 1 (53:51):
Yeah, no, all right, let's see what lindsay.
Speaker 2 (53:56):
As for balls to the wall, sports.
Speaker 8 (54:09):
Jacks Olbrick, the twenty one year old son of Atlanta
Falcons defensive coordinator Jeff Olbrick, admitted yesterday to making a
prank call to quarterback Shadeur Sanders during the second day
of the twenty twenty five NFL draft. Olbrich impersonated New
Orleans Saints GM Mickey Loomis, falsely telling Sanders he would
(54:32):
be picked soon. Olbrich reportedly got sanders private number from
an open epad at his parents' home. The Falcons confirmed
Jeff Ulbrick was unaware of the incident and issued an
apology to Sanders and his family. Jack's publicly apologized, calling
his actions inexcusable and childish, and confirmed he had personally
(54:55):
apologized to Sanders.
Speaker 1 (54:57):
This story and they did to someone else too, by
the way, Uh wild, Yeah, And I think they should
get in I think the Falcons should get in trouble.
I think so too, Okay, they left it. The coach
left an open with personal information of a prospective employee.
Speaker 16 (55:16):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (55:17):
The video of Sanders getting the call and he's like,
you know, hinge of excitement.
Speaker 8 (55:22):
I know, I've been waiting for your call, man.
Speaker 2 (55:24):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (55:25):
And then and then like they hang up on him,
and he's like, what happened? I don't know.
Speaker 9 (55:29):
I don't know what's happening.
Speaker 8 (55:30):
He's like, no, what I don't know? Yeah, that's song.
Speaker 1 (55:37):
And I'm sure somebody's gonna have him on a podcast
and fawn over all hilarious it was, or what a
dick move?
Speaker 9 (55:47):
It was? No him, They may go out of dick
moving him here. Yeah, how old was the kid?
Speaker 8 (55:54):
Twenty one?
Speaker 9 (55:55):
Okay, you do dumb stuff at twenty one, for sure?
For sure. This, however, feels crazy. You're messing with somebody's
livelihood out there.
Speaker 8 (56:04):
But I don't I feel like he can't go on
a podcast and take credit for it in like, yeah,
it was a duke move, haha, ha, you know, because
he already made a public apology, and the game then
if he.
Speaker 1 (56:16):
Goes on is like is not an honest apology? So
everybody is on board that that's not a thing. Everybody
knows he only did that to try and save face
with his dad, right, and get the dagon?
Speaker 9 (56:29):
What's the dagon do? You can't punish him, right, he's
a grown adult.
Speaker 8 (56:33):
Write him out of the will.
Speaker 9 (56:36):
Mm hm.
Speaker 1 (56:37):
And and what you should the should the guy whose
tablet it was, should he get in trouble? Should he
get fired? I find it hard to believe the tablet
was open with the phone number right there.
Speaker 16 (56:50):
Right.
Speaker 9 (56:51):
I think the kid probably dig in, probably knew his
dad's past. Yeah, he started digging around and he was like,
let's play a prank on your door.
Speaker 1 (56:58):
You just did something really interesting, you said, kid. Oh,
I mean he's younger than me, so he's an adult
though technically yeah, he is an adult just trolling. Yeah,
it's such a wild story of your like, come on man, yeah,
because some people probably think that looks cool.
Speaker 9 (57:18):
I didn't find it that funny. No, you're just like, ouch, bro,
Like we're still.
Speaker 8 (57:23):
Making prank calls in twenty twenty five.
Speaker 9 (57:27):
I mean, prank calls are a thing.
Speaker 1 (57:29):
But when you have somebody who's hope, like they've worked
with their whole life for this, it's a part of
their family's legacy.
Speaker 9 (57:37):
Right right, So was this prank called before or after
he was picked in the before well bit round, yes,
right right, right right?
Speaker 8 (57:46):
Yeah on day two, early early.
Speaker 1 (57:50):
Giant douche move. Yeah, and everybody's like, wait till she
do or sees them and sees the Falcons in a game.
Speaker 9 (57:57):
Okay, maybe not probably not.
Speaker 1 (58:02):
Yeah, wild story. I kind of feel like the dads
you get in trouble. I don't know if you get fired. No,
you love sensitive information out be reprimanded.
Speaker 9 (58:13):
Listen, man, don't believing your tablets out on the open
for your little bastard kids to go through. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (58:22):
The other thing about the shud Or Sanders thing that
people are like, oh he went fifth round, keep in
mind Tom Brady went one hundred and sixty six or
something like that. Right at heart rock Purty, Well, that
has yet to be proven.
Speaker 9 (58:35):
But I hear what you're saying.
Speaker 1 (58:37):
There's a reason that contract ain't locked up yet with
the forty nine ers, Right, there's a philosophical difference going
on there.
Speaker 9 (58:46):
We want you to do better, he wants more money. Yeah,
we need to.
Speaker 1 (58:49):
We need more out of you, and he's like, hey,
you're not bad enough.
Speaker 8 (58:54):
The first round of the NBA Playoffs continued yesterday, with
four teams taking commanding three to one series leads. The
defending champion Celtics defeated the Magic one oh seven to
ninety eight in Orlando. The Knicks took down the Pistons
ninety four to ninety three in Detroit, while the Pacers
crushed the Bucks one twenty nine to one oh three
in Milwaukee. Out West, the Timberwolves down the Lakers won
(59:16):
sixteen to one thirteen in Minneapolis, and the action rolls
on today with a pair of Game four contests. The
Heat will play host to the Cavaliers in South Beach
at five point thirty and they lead. The Cavaliers lead
that series three to nothing. And at eight o'clock tonight,
(59:36):
Houston is at the Golden State Warriors, where Golden State
leads the series two to one. The Bucks are going
to be without their star guard for the remainder of
the postseason. Senior MBA insider Chris Haynes is reporting that
the fear is that Milwaukee is Damian Lillard suffered a
left achilles tear during Sunday's Game four loss. Lillard returned
(59:59):
for the playoffs after working his way back from a
blood clot diagnosis that sidelined him for over a month.
The thirty four year old average twenty four point nine
points through fifty eight games this season.
Speaker 2 (01:00:11):
He's a stud too.
Speaker 1 (01:00:12):
I mean, if you remember he had that high blood
clot issue thing where they made him sit and he
was like, well, I'm coming back for the playoffs, and
maybe I wonder if that spurred the chance of this
injury that he's potentially.
Speaker 8 (01:00:27):
Has an achilles tear.
Speaker 2 (01:00:29):
Yeah. That crazy. The guy's a stud though, so if
anybody can come back.
Speaker 9 (01:00:35):
It's him.
Speaker 8 (01:00:35):
Yeah. The basketball world is mourning the loss of a
Hall of famer. The Nicks announced yesterday that former guard
Dick Barnett has died. He was eighty eight years old.
Barnett played for both of New York's title teams in
nineteen seventy and nineteen seventy three, and was inducted into
the Hall of Fame in twenty twenty four. He was
also a member of Tennessee A and I, the first
(01:00:58):
HBCU to win an national championship in basketball, and members
of the Philadelphia Eagles are going to visit the White
House today, a tradition for the Super Bowl champions to
spend time with the President of the United States. After
their big win, running back Sakwon Barkley met with the
President on Sunday took a ride on Marine one. The
(01:01:20):
Eagles didn't visit the White House for their twenty eighteen
victory during President Trump's first term, with Trump claiming he
withdrew the invitation, calling the team was disrespectful because they
stayed in the locker room during the national anthem as
a protest. After beating the Chiefs. This year, the team
said it would be an honor to visit.
Speaker 1 (01:01:40):
I think I I was shocked when I heard that
Saquon roade Marine one. I didn't know that they just
let anybody on Marine one.
Speaker 9 (01:01:47):
Right, I think you got to have an escort. But yeah,
here are your points taken.
Speaker 1 (01:01:52):
I think you need to be an official business, right,
or at least invited. I I don't even take official business.
I think space is at a pre and they don't
just let Maybe I'm wrong, but I feel like this
feels like such an an outside thing.
Speaker 9 (01:02:08):
I mean, good for.
Speaker 1 (01:02:10):
Not very many people get to say they rode in
Marine one. Yeah, he's a big deal, and he's and
he's like, you you.
Speaker 9 (01:02:20):
Want to ride? We go around the monument. Yeah, come back.
Speaker 1 (01:02:26):
Like, okay, yeah, you want to go to I want
to go to the beach. I'm just curious about, like
where did they go?
Speaker 9 (01:02:34):
They talk about pick up a couple of burgers, came back.
Speaker 1 (01:02:37):
I think is a golf guy too. He's a big
golf guy. But either way, cool, Good for them.
Speaker 8 (01:02:44):
Yeah, and that's your balls for the Wall Sports. I'm
Lindsay in ninety see.
Speaker 1 (01:02:58):
Good morning. It's the Big Man Morning Show. Toll free
eight three three four six oh kmod toll free eight
three three four six oh five.
Speaker 9 (01:03:10):
Six sixty three is the phone number.
Speaker 1 (01:03:12):
Can also text bmmas and then what you want to
say to eight two nine four five. Good morning, Lindsay,
Good morning Corbin.
Speaker 8 (01:03:18):
Hey, I will be broadcasting live today from eleven into
one at quick Quack car Wash at eighty first and
Garnet in Broken Arrow. You can get a free car
wash and stop by and see us eleven to one.
Speaker 9 (01:03:31):
Good morning, Gimpie, Well, good morning Corbin. We're gonna do
some more qualifying for see them all twenty twenty five
coming up. Your chance to score pair takes to every
Kbody concert for the rest of your including VIP tickets
to Rock Oklahomo, which is that in itself is worth it.
Keep listening for the cues with us every hour and
then throughout the day as well.
Speaker 1 (01:03:52):
All right, time for our listeners are awesome. We chat
with the listener, they share part of their story with us,
and on the line with us right now is David.
Speaker 9 (01:03:59):
Hey, David, how are you? Dude?
Speaker 2 (01:04:02):
It's good to talk to you.
Speaker 9 (01:04:03):
I know you're a long time listener.
Speaker 1 (01:04:04):
I was just looking at your Facebook and saw a
picture from back in the day, so I know you've
been listening for a long time.
Speaker 9 (01:04:09):
So thank you.
Speaker 16 (01:04:11):
You're welcome.
Speaker 1 (01:04:12):
Tell me, uh it says here you just got married yep,
just Saturday. Wow, congratulations man, thank you, thank you. What
was the best part of the ceremony?
Speaker 16 (01:04:26):
Ah, there's a lot. There's a lot of them.
Speaker 9 (01:04:28):
Mann.
Speaker 16 (01:04:28):
It was a it was an emotional ceremony.
Speaker 9 (01:04:30):
If you asked me, did you cry?
Speaker 16 (01:04:33):
I was, if I'm being honest with you, Yeah, did.
Speaker 9 (01:04:36):
You cry when she walked out? Or cry later?
Speaker 16 (01:04:39):
I tried not to shad it to you when she
walked out, It was hard not to y at that
point in time. I think she was the most beautiful
woman on earths.
Speaker 1 (01:04:47):
Yeah, and were you because it says you have two kids.
Speaker 9 (01:04:51):
Were they a part of the wedding.
Speaker 16 (01:04:52):
Too, Yeah, they were a big part of the wedding.
Speaker 2 (01:04:55):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:04:55):
That's always cool to see, uh because you know, some
people get married before they have kids and their kids
a part of it. When you can have your kids
be a part of it, it always makes it feel extra special.
Was that true for you?
Speaker 16 (01:05:06):
Yeah? Yeah, Uh so my daughter kind of she's my
stepdaughter for the time being. You know, her dad's not
no longer on this earth anymore. That's a different story,
but uh, you know, she she took it to heart.
You know, I've been with her ever since she was
about two years old. And you know what, the ceremony
(01:05:29):
goes on and everybody's laughing and talking and giving toast,
and she decided to stand up on herself and made
me as we try again whenever she asked me to
adopt her.
Speaker 1 (01:05:39):
Oh uh, that's awesome. Did you guys do like a honeymoon?
Did you go or did you just go back home?
Or do you guys have a place you went to
for to uh you know, celebrate the marriage.
Speaker 16 (01:05:52):
Uh yeah, we celebrated that way, but uh, as of
right now, the honeymoon. We're waiting till about September. I
think we're gonna make our way down to Florida.
Speaker 9 (01:06:02):
Okay, was there anything unexpected that happened at the wedding, like,
besides your daughter popping up be like hey, I want
you to adopt me? Blah blah, nothing nothing. No X
came out of the woodwork or whatever, or something caught
on fire. Huh.
Speaker 16 (01:06:18):
No, I don't know how our day got roomed with
the weather, which we didn't think was We knew might
have happened, but we wouldn't. We was hoping the weather
wouldn't come through, and it did, so we kind of
had to move venues. But other than that, everything went
pretty good.
Speaker 8 (01:06:31):
Well, they say rain on your wedding day is good luck.
Speaker 16 (01:06:34):
Yeah, isn't it ironic?
Speaker 9 (01:06:36):
Don't you think?
Speaker 1 (01:06:37):
I was just looking you playing a Do you play
in a professional softball league?
Speaker 16 (01:06:43):
Not professional? No, I'm just a beer league.
Speaker 9 (01:06:46):
It's just a beer league.
Speaker 1 (01:06:48):
Yeah, okay, because I saw the logo and I was like,
I think that's a professional softball league. Go ahead, tell
me about playing softball.
Speaker 16 (01:06:55):
I've played a long time, you know, probably fifteen six
years and I have probably seven to eight different states
and played as far as I can go up and
played as far as I can go down. But you know,
there's there's a big family that belongs in that part
of the group. Since you know, I'm getting older, I
don't travel as much anymore. The kids play their sports.
(01:07:17):
That family of the softball family that I've met over
the years, and you know, me and my wife now
have became really close friends with all of them. All
those guys showed up at the wedding and kind of
helped her along and maybe the big day for So
softball is a big part of my life. It has
been for a long time.
Speaker 1 (01:07:34):
Did you play Did you play baseball as a kid?
Speaker 16 (01:07:37):
Oh?
Speaker 9 (01:07:37):
Yeah, and so this was the natural progression to get
into softball.
Speaker 16 (01:07:41):
Yeah.
Speaker 9 (01:07:43):
Do you have a nickname in the league?
Speaker 5 (01:07:46):
Everybody?
Speaker 16 (01:07:47):
All my jerseys and everything that I've ever owned, my
nickname is boy Gina.
Speaker 9 (01:07:52):
Okay. Is there a story associated with that?
Speaker 16 (01:07:56):
Yeah, so a couple of years ago. You know, I
don't know if it was a couple of years or
a couple of months. This whole it's been time flies
when you have fun, you know. So my dad, he
has a man Dinah tattooed on his leg. So the
story behind that, as far as I understand all this
(01:08:16):
is his friends. Also the reason why he was called
Mangina's because he's a big pussy. And actually, when we
was talking about this a couple of years ago, you
called him a big pussy too.
Speaker 9 (01:08:33):
I mean, that's not out of the Roman possibility.
Speaker 1 (01:08:35):
That feels like that tracks and so it just felt like,
again the natural progression that you'd be called boy Gina.
Speaker 16 (01:08:42):
Yep. We was somewhere in the middle of the night
one night when I was younger, after I met my
dad and all that stuff, and his friends were trying
to figure out the nicknames that you know, it's kind
of like a or initiation of softle family out there,
I guess is everybody has to have a nickname, so
they couldn't come up with one, and finally they came
up with that one, and it's kind of just stuck
(01:09:03):
ever since.
Speaker 9 (01:09:04):
So if your dad's man Jina and your boy Jina,
what's your son going to be? What kind of Jina
is he going to be?
Speaker 16 (01:09:12):
Uh, We've tried to figure that one out and I
can't come up with the one that really goes off
the tongue.
Speaker 8 (01:09:17):
Boy Jina Junior.
Speaker 9 (01:09:20):
Junior Jina China.
Speaker 1 (01:09:23):
Uh, well, you said your dad, and it's interesting because
it says here that your dad you were abandoned by
your parents at a bowling alley. So I guess we'll
circle back to your relationship now. But how old were
you when you got to abandoned by your parents at
a bowling alley.
Speaker 16 (01:09:39):
I was less than one year old, so I didn't
have no hair like I do now, and still in diapers,
poop in my pants, so I don't really remember all
that stuff. So these are the stories that was told
to me by my grandma, the one that raised me.
Speaker 1 (01:09:54):
Dude, that has to be confusing. Even now that you
know that still has to be a weird thing to
say out ou.
Speaker 16 (01:10:01):
Yeah, more and more we talk about it. Yeah, it
does kind of sound a little bit weird, and it
seems like it was hard. But I guess I can
say I had it easy, but I didn't really have
it easy to an extent. Uh, you know, my grandma
and my grandpa, you know, obviously my dad and my
mom at that point in time, nobody really knew what
was going on. It just it happened. So I mean,
(01:10:25):
at the end of the day.
Speaker 1 (01:10:26):
I guess it doesn't happen. People getting left at places.
That doesn't just happen, does it? Have you heard of
Is there like a support group or something that you
that happens a lot?
Speaker 16 (01:10:36):
No, not that I know, I love to be honest.
Speaker 8 (01:10:39):
So were your parents like in some sort of bowling
league and maybe you were just real fussy that night
they couldn't find a sitter. I mean, how did that happen?
They just left and forgot about you or purposely left
you at a bowling alley.
Speaker 16 (01:10:53):
So from what I was told, like I said, I
was there, but I wasn't there, So the story that
was told of me whenever I was. When I've asked
about it, I guess they let the note in my
car seat and some older couple with the bowl, And
now I had picked me up for a couple of
days and they were supposed to come get me, and
(01:11:14):
they never did, and my grandma had actually left her
number and stuff in my car seat, and they ended
up calling my grandma after three or forty days of
not seeing what my mom and dad are, and OH
came and got me. And I've been stuck with her
ever since.
Speaker 1 (01:11:30):
How old were you when you found out this happened
to you.
Speaker 16 (01:11:35):
I want to say I was like thirteen, fourteen fifteen
around whenever I we was at baseball practice or you know,
this was going on between baseball practice in school. At
this point in time, everybody walks up to their mom
and dad. You know, hey mom, hey dad, you can
navigate it or can I have this? You know, And
if I started coming into my mind, you know, well
(01:11:55):
how came everybody else was asking them mom and dad?
You know, why are they calling them my dad? Whenever
I had to call my people over here with granny
and grandpa. So I went home and asked my grandma
about that, and she didn't She wasn't trying to keep
it away from me by any means. She would just
didn't want to, you know, maybe hurt my feeling or something.
So whenever I finally asked about it, she told me
(01:12:16):
everything that I needed to know and didn't really hide
nothing from me. She just was waiting on me to
figure it out on my own. She was afraid of
hurt me.
Speaker 1 (01:12:25):
I guess, yeah, because that's a lot that's pretty heavy.
Speaker 2 (01:12:29):
Did yeah, did you did you.
Speaker 1 (01:12:32):
Like retaliate or like, you know, be like I don't
like this and ran out of the house. Or was
there any type of like retaliation that happened because of
just the weight of that information.
Speaker 16 (01:12:46):
No, no, I wasn't really. I never got mad about it.
I still don't get mad about it. The only thing
I can think that I remember whenever I did that was,
you know, my first thought was why?
Speaker 9 (01:12:57):
Why?
Speaker 5 (01:12:57):
Me?
Speaker 16 (01:12:59):
Why does that have to happened to me? And I
thought about that my whole life ever since that's happened.
You know, why why did I have to go through that?
You know, I'm glad I did so. I kept that
from somebody else, but it did happen to me. I
try to make the best of it the best I
can and make sure I'm better than what that ever was.
Speaker 8 (01:13:16):
Do you have siblings? Did your parents have any other children?
Speaker 16 (01:13:20):
So my dad has, well, not my dad, my mom
she has two daughters. I talked to one of them,
but I don't talk to the other one. Whenever I
first met my mom and dad, I've seen them from
six months to a year before they finally split up
and went on about their days. And that's about the
most I've ever remember seeing them. It was about six
(01:13:41):
months out of my life. I met about where they've at,
and I talked to the one I talked to. Anyway,
we were trying to get the relationship back together, so
it's working out in our favor on that one.
Speaker 1 (01:13:52):
How old were you when you finally met them?
Speaker 16 (01:13:56):
I would think I was close to fifteen years old.
Speaker 1 (01:13:59):
And did they come to your granny grandpa's house or
did you see him meet up at a like together
at a restaurant or so?
Speaker 16 (01:14:08):
Actually, my uncle he knew about what mom and dad
lived at that moment, and he lived down in town
in Texas. So my uncle picked me up one weekend
and I chose to skip us a baseball tournament, and
we went down there that weekend, and then we kind
of just stayed there for the weekend with them and
hung up with him for a while. And I want
(01:14:29):
to say it was maybe three or four months later
he moved back up to Oklahoma and kind of started
getting back into the the gist of things.
Speaker 1 (01:14:37):
I guess you can say, yeah, do you remember that
day meeting them and what you were feeling and the
thoughts going to your head?
Speaker 16 (01:14:44):
Yeah, yeah, I remember that one pretty well. You know,
as a kid, I didn't want to overstep boundaries and
say things that I probably shouldn't say, which I didn't
play on saying nothing wrong. I just I didn't know
what to say. I was kind of speechless. I was nervous,
that was for sure. The first thing that happened is,
(01:15:05):
you know, we walked up and everybody was just kind
of quiet. So it kind of just it kept going
in a way of you know, like it was building
that momentum. You know, we're finally getting to be back
around each other and all that stuff, and it it
worked out that day. It worked out pretty good after.
You know, it's like you're meeting somebody knew for the
first time and you had a couple of drinks after
(01:15:25):
become an adult and you start getting the your your
liquor feelings start coming in and you start speaking.
Speaker 1 (01:15:32):
Better, right, less inhibited. I understand what you're saying, and
so that you're there with you with them for a
couple of days and then you'd leave.
Speaker 2 (01:15:41):
Did you walk away or leave.
Speaker 1 (01:15:43):
In the car to come back feeling like, Wow, I'm
going to have a relationship with them.
Speaker 16 (01:15:48):
Yeah, I did. The way the way it endedn't it was?
It felt better after we left, and what happened. Like
I said, six months or so goes by and he
ends up moving. I think it was up the fan Springs,
if I remember right. And you know, after that, we
kind of started going over there better. It was a
(01:16:10):
weekend or so, and my grandma and grandpa would drive
me over there and drop me off, and Sunday morning
he'd bring me back. You know. It started looking pretty good.
And then some things happened between him and my mom
and she ended up leaving and going wherever she went.
I still don't know where she's at. I know her name,
you know, I know of her, I don't really, like
(01:16:32):
I said, I've only known her for maybe six seven months,
so that's six seven months. I thought it was the
best time of my life, and then it all got
pulled away, and now she I don't know if he's alive.
I don't know if she's dead. She's if she's it
somewhere in Oklahoma, she's I know that. But other than that,
the things that happened between them is something that I
(01:16:54):
really don't want to be a part of, so I
pretty much choose myself not to go take the adventure
of trying to find her. I don't feel the need
to anyway, if you ask me.
Speaker 1 (01:17:07):
And and so did did did you have any so?
Did you have any relationship with your mom?
Speaker 9 (01:17:15):
Did you at all?
Speaker 16 (01:17:18):
Like I couldn't say I did Really?
Speaker 1 (01:17:24):
Did they give him a reason why they left you?
Speaker 9 (01:17:27):
No?
Speaker 16 (01:17:27):
They never told me. Did you honestly never thought about
it even asking that. Oh, I really don't know if
I want to ask you?
Speaker 9 (01:17:36):
Right? Did are your grandparents still alive that raised you?
Speaker 16 (01:17:40):
My grandma? My grandpa had passed away five years ago
from Alzheimer's.
Speaker 9 (01:17:46):
Wow, I'm sorry. Did that when he died? Did that?
Speaker 1 (01:17:53):
I mean, obviously it hurt because this is the person
that raised you, But it did it feel different because
of what him and your grandma did for you?
Speaker 9 (01:18:01):
Yeah?
Speaker 16 (01:18:01):
A little bit, well a lot of it, if I'm
being honest. Yeah, it sucks. You know, it always sucks
losing anybody, but when it's somebody that took place of you,
or took place for somebody for you, it kind of
hurt a little bit more.
Speaker 9 (01:18:16):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:18:17):
I think as anybody who has kids, here's that someone
else stepped up to be the parent is always like
you go, man, good for them?
Speaker 16 (01:18:25):
That takes a lot, Yeah, or does not much I
can think for them. Yeah, you know, I'm trying to
step in that spot myself too, and I have as
well to an extent, I guess you can say. And
now that I've become a part of that in my life,
I've seen what my grandma and grandpa ought to go
through to try to help raise me. So I kind
(01:18:48):
of may raise me pretty well, if I can say that.
And I kind of take a lot of their older
values that they have and bring it in to what
we're doing with my kids, and me and my wife
are doing with my kids now, and I try to
be the best thing that they can't have if they
need it. You know, that's what my grandparents showed me,
you know, just just show up. So all you gotta
do is just show up for them.
Speaker 1 (01:19:08):
Even though they left you at the at the bowling
Alley and you don't really have a relationship with them,
you still have part of their DNA in you. And
you got some health problems from your your dad, it
says here.
Speaker 16 (01:19:23):
Yeah, I don't know if it's from a dad or
if it's more of just the bloodline that we have
in our family. Our whole bloodlines messed up with health issues.
You know, I got a bunch of stomach problems, and
it kind of weighs me down a lot some most days,
some days I can't sleep, some days it can. It
just depends on if I try to poop my pants
or not. I guess that's really what happens.
Speaker 1 (01:19:46):
On average in a week. How often do you poop
your pants?
Speaker 16 (01:19:50):
I'd go more like on average of a month. It
don't happen every week, okay, but it's at least twice.
Speaker 1 (01:19:54):
A month, no kidding, Like enough that you keep an
extra pair of of undies in the in the truck.
Speaker 16 (01:20:02):
I got the emergency pair on me. Yep. You never
know when you might need to throw something on.
Speaker 1 (01:20:08):
Right, and when that happens, do you just wherever you
can change and then ditch whatever in the trash?
Speaker 16 (01:20:15):
Yeah, yeah, you got to. You know, you got to
improvise and change. I've I've changed in addicts, I've changed
in portapodies. Just you gotta do what you gotta do.
Speaker 2 (01:20:23):
Pause.
Speaker 1 (01:20:25):
You said you said addicts, as in like, uh, you're
working at somebody's house.
Speaker 16 (01:20:31):
Yeah, I'm an electrician, so every once in a while,
you know, we got to get up there in the
aic and rent some new wires or find something might
be covered up. So it has happened on a hot
summer day.
Speaker 1 (01:20:43):
So they're not like in the truck. They're like on
your person, like in your kit.
Speaker 16 (01:20:48):
Yeah. I have a big old roll around the pack
out and I got some pairs hidden in there somewhere
where nobody to find them.
Speaker 2 (01:20:55):
Dude. Good for you, man.
Speaker 1 (01:20:57):
Yeah, you get crutched over in an attic, you never
know what's going to happen.
Speaker 9 (01:21:00):
I could hear it.
Speaker 1 (01:21:01):
Nope, dude, where's the Is that the most an attic
in some customers home?
Speaker 9 (01:21:08):
Is that the most uncomfortable place that's happened?
Speaker 16 (01:21:12):
Yeah? Yeah, that was. That was pretty pretty embarrassing. The
homeowners is leaving at that point in time, so I
kind of got to slide away with it, right.
Speaker 9 (01:21:24):
Slid right on out and nobody knew huh.
Speaker 16 (01:21:26):
Nope.
Speaker 1 (01:21:28):
Well, dude, it's been awesome talking to you. Thanks for
sharing your story with me. Congratulations on being a newlywed,
and good luck with everything, buddy.
Speaker 16 (01:21:37):
Thanks man, I appreciate it.
Speaker 9 (01:21:38):
All right, good talking to you, David.
Speaker 1 (01:21:39):
That's our listeners. We're gonna take a break and we'll
be back.
Speaker 3 (01:21:43):
More of the Big Man Morning Show. Is next nine.
Speaker 9 (01:22:01):
Good Morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show.
Speaker 1 (01:22:06):
Toll free eight three three four six o.
Speaker 9 (01:22:08):
Km D is the phone number. Tammy Boyd heard the queue.
Speaker 1 (01:22:12):
To call Tammy's from Chelsea, and she heard the queue
and got qualified for See Them All twenty twenty five.
Now the chance is coming up very soon, so be
listening for that que to get qualified for See Them
All twenty twenty five. Tell me if you think this
story is a bunch of fooie. Woman claims she got
herpies by holding a karaoke mike too close to her mouth.
Speaker 9 (01:22:34):
Well, that depends who was using the microphone before. Do
you guys do a lot of karaoke? You ever seen
them clean the microphone?
Speaker 8 (01:22:44):
I've I have seen that.
Speaker 1 (01:22:47):
I have seen, really I have.
Speaker 8 (01:22:49):
But I've also seen like a mike condom, yeah, placed
over that's what phones, Yes, but it's more of like
disposable clothy right.
Speaker 9 (01:23:03):
I know they did that during uh COVID. But Rick
Berry at least that's who we do a lot of
karaoke with Lindsay and I. Yeah, he continued that on
after after the pandemic. He's like, well, because he used
him way back in the day. Apparently and people are like, ah,
this condom is no good. It just doesn't feel the same.
So he stopped using him, and then COVID comes around
(01:23:26):
and he starts using him again. And then he's just
kept him, kept doing the same thing, not using the
same ones, but he kept doing the same thing. It
makes sense, Yeah, it sure does so far as like
have I seen them clean them, not with like life
sool or anything like you would imagine it would be.
And that my condom.
Speaker 1 (01:23:44):
I wonder how much it really works, you know, kind
of like the the butt ring thing for the toilet seats.
Speaker 9 (01:23:49):
Right, it doesn't really work, right, It just makes you work. Yeah,
that sense of safety.
Speaker 1 (01:23:54):
Yeah, and would it stopped you know, a virus.
Speaker 9 (01:23:58):
That's a good point. I don't know. Well.
Speaker 1 (01:24:00):
This woman, she says that she caught the herpes virus
by holding the mouth to close to her mouth. She
went on the tiki talkie to share the story how
she got infected with HSV dash one, which usually causes
cold sores around the mouth, eight years ago. She says
this happened twenty seventeen. She visited a karaoke lounge, got
(01:24:20):
a bit carried away during her performance, holding the microphone
much closer to her mouth than she should have, she said. Later,
tiny blisters appeared around her mouth. She said they were
painful and itchy, but she didn't pay too much attention
to them. Eventually they went away. Only they came back
(01:24:40):
in a matter of days, and this time the woman
went to the doctor. She's like, I have to carry
this virus for life. There's no medication available to treat it.
There's only medication to relieve the pain. The price we
pay to be a crooner. This woman said that she
was certain she had become infected with the virus from
(01:25:02):
the karaoke microphone, adding that she had never had herpie
blisters before. She had been struggling with herpes for the
last eight years, and cold stars started appearing on cheeks
this year. It went viral on social media, but termatologists
have yet to confirm that her story makes sense and
one can actually get infected from the herpes by touching
(01:25:24):
a microphone that is tainted.
Speaker 9 (01:25:26):
Uh, okay, couple of things. They're the only way I
think that could happen is if the person that used
it before her was chrindofball mark, you know what I mean.
And she was throw to do the same thing, just
got it so close to her mouth to where it
actually touched you know, the microphone touched the herpee sore
from the previous user, and then she's just you know,
(01:25:49):
crying to cram it down her throat.
Speaker 8 (01:25:51):
It says here, according to the Internet, that you cannot
get herpes from a microphone because because direct contact is necessary,
herpe's transmission relies on the virus entering through the skin
or mucous membrane.
Speaker 1 (01:26:10):
Yeah, but if there's I think what the implication here
is that there's saliva on the microphone and.
Speaker 9 (01:26:16):
Then you put touch in the microphone then her lips.
But the saliva's not what gives you the herps. You
gotta have the herb juice to give you the herbs.
Speaker 1 (01:26:23):
Right, But when you transport through saliva or herb juice
on the microphone, now my thought is is like when
you've got a wheeping.
Speaker 9 (01:26:32):
A herpe sore, right, that's oozing the herb juice, as
I'm going to put it, that herb juice will touch
the microphone because you got it super close because you
can't hear yourself and you don't know how to sing,
and then you know, so that person gets their HERB
juice on the microphone, and the lady doesn't know about it,
and she too can't hear herself, so she cribs the
(01:26:54):
microphone super close up to her mouth to try so
she can hear herself singing. And then that where she
got the herp juice from the mic onto her her lip.
I don't think it's traveled through well.
Speaker 8 (01:27:07):
And it also says that the herpes virus is not
hardy enough and will likely die off quickly if it
gets on a surface, like, hey, we don't have to
cut down right, It's fine, it's fine. It's a normal virus.
Speaker 1 (01:27:21):
This says there's four ways sexual contact. I think we're
all aware of that, right, Yeah, kissing again. I think
we were all on board with that one. Sharing personal
items like towels, toothbrushes, drinking you tenseils.
Speaker 9 (01:27:36):
That makes sense. Towels I think is a little weird.
But yeah, if you got fresh out the shower and
you got this oozing, weeping cold sore on your on
your lip, and you could dry your face off, and
then somebody else goes and does the old dental floss thing,
ye know, I could see how you could get get
the herbs from a towel.
Speaker 8 (01:27:56):
In Now interesting is this site that I found says that,
but it cannot be contracted through the sharing of a towel, toilet, glasses,
or a microphone objects like that.
Speaker 9 (01:28:11):
Did you add microphone or no?
Speaker 8 (01:28:12):
It just objects like microphones, glasses, towels or.
Speaker 9 (01:28:15):
Toilets, right, glasses, Like, I don't know. That's why, like
he said, with drinking stuff, you know, that's why you
don't drink after somebody if they got a cold story,
You're like, sorry, I don't I'll want the herpes.
Speaker 1 (01:28:30):
The other one was from mother to child. But I
think most people understand that right from birth, right from birth.
Speaker 9 (01:28:38):
Not Yeah, came out and my face was covered with herpies.
Speaker 1 (01:28:45):
And I gotta be I don't know if I have herpes.
I don't know if I've ever had any sores on
my face.
Speaker 9 (01:28:52):
And that's a fun thing. Like this woman could have
gotten a year's years because it lies dormant for you
may never have an outbreak, right, you could be lucky
and never have one. So she could have had it
for years, never had an outbreak, got a little stressed
out at work, you know, went to the bar, you know,
to unwind, to do some karaoke, and she's still stressed out,
(01:29:15):
and the stress is what caused the virus to say.
Speaker 8 (01:29:18):
Hi, Hi, how you doing.
Speaker 9 (01:29:21):
I'm here your second evil head popping out of your lip?
Speaker 1 (01:29:26):
You Yeah, I want to I want to know see
if I can find this. The most commonplaces people get
herpes genitalia.
Speaker 9 (01:29:36):
Oh oh, Number one is kissing. Yeah, that makes sense.
Speaker 1 (01:29:40):
The number one place, number one way people get herpies
is from kissing.
Speaker 2 (01:29:45):
Then it says oral sex.
Speaker 1 (01:29:50):
I mean, yeah, you can get that on your mouth,
all right, maybe on the bridge of your nose, maybe
even in your eyes. I'm I'm not gonna sit here
(01:30:11):
and try to imply that I'm an expert.
Speaker 9 (01:30:13):
Oh yeah, but I don't think if it's in your eyes,
we have some questions. Should get that giant cold sore
on your eyelid?
Speaker 1 (01:30:23):
Never you mind, Then says vaginal sex, of course, or
the other kind of sex, and then skin to skin
contact with an infected area is the least common.
Speaker 9 (01:30:35):
Yeah, it's just like touching it.
Speaker 1 (01:30:37):
Yeah, yeah, just like brushing up against it.
Speaker 9 (01:30:38):
We hug.
Speaker 1 (01:30:39):
Yeah, you've got a giant puss pocket on your face,
pulsating and oozing to the beat of the rhythm's gonna
get you, and we're like, good to see you, Chang
because it took place in China.
Speaker 9 (01:30:56):
Okay, yeah, okay, you kind of you go around that.
I'm not taking any chance. I don't want your hurt
juice on my skin. Bottom line the number of that.
Speaker 1 (01:31:09):
Yeah, her peace, her peace, her peace. Yeah, I don't
know if I have her piece? Do you have herpees?
Speaker 8 (01:31:20):
Lindsay, I've never had a cold, sore or anything on
my mouth like that to say, oh you.
Speaker 9 (01:31:28):
Killed it, gimpe you have her piece? Oh I've got herpes.
Oh I've got I've got space herpes. No, Oh you know,
I don't know. Be honest with you. Yeah, I don't know.
Nothing's ever I've never looked down and been like, oh
that is big and pussy and weeping. I should get
that checked out.
Speaker 1 (01:31:48):
Short of your partner having only been you've been their
only partner, and you've had no one but your partner,
I don't know if you can say with certainty one
does not right.
Speaker 9 (01:31:58):
And even then you wouldn't know, because what if you
got to pass from your mom and Darren birth, you
wouldn't know it. It's an excellent point, you know, you
could think, well, I've only been with them and they've
only been with me, and then something pops up. You're like,
you're cheating whore, and they're like, your cheating horror will
come to find out your mom's a cheating whore.
Speaker 1 (01:32:17):
Imagine you get harp, like your hairpiece flares up, and
you've been married for whatever. You're like, no, you can't
defend that, right, No, I'm looking.
Speaker 8 (01:32:28):
At this picture of this girl. If this is her,
the Chinese woman who's claiming she's got it from the microphone,
and if this is the picture, it looks like it's
on her more of her like jawline Insteade of her Cheek.
Speaker 1 (01:32:40):
I said in the story that it moved to she
got started showing up on her face.
Speaker 8 (01:32:44):
Yeah, it looks more of like a rash or just
acne rather than like I'm thinking, like cold sores right
on the mouth.
Speaker 1 (01:32:54):
Herpes can move to different parts of your boty, like,
it can show up more than just on your lips
or your tongue, which go down that rabbit hole. Especially
if you're about to eat some lunch. You're not you
got herpees in your mouth. You're not eating anything with mustard.
Speaker 9 (01:33:09):
Ow it stanks. You're not eating anything with hats. Yeah,
you're not having hot wings that day. Hey, we're gonna
go eat hot wings. I pass to pass some Thai food. No,
I'm good. Good. Is there a difference between cold soares
and herpes?
Speaker 8 (01:33:25):
I don't know.
Speaker 9 (01:33:27):
I believe they're the same. I believe a cold sore
is a form of the herb. I could be wrong.
I've always been told that though.
Speaker 1 (01:33:36):
Just when Lindsay said that it could be just a
cold star, I was like, I think that's herpes.
Speaker 9 (01:33:40):
What it is. Yeah, we got somebody.
Speaker 2 (01:33:41):
Cold stars are herpies.
Speaker 9 (01:33:43):
Period. There's somebody that works here that gets an outbreak
every you know, a couple of months or whatever. And
you can you see him when you go talk to
him really yeah, Oh, I'll put it in the screen
or you don't know exactly, be like, h yeah, I've
seen those before. Uh uh, I guess I don't look
(01:34:03):
close enough.
Speaker 1 (01:34:04):
All right, we gotta take a break. We'll be back.
Speaker 3 (01:34:08):
Te USA's Morning Show is coming right back. A Big
Mad Morning Show.
Speaker 1 (01:34:24):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show full free
eight three three four six oh kmod can also text
bmms and then what you want to say to eight
two nine four five. Let's see what lindsay has for
Balls to the Wall Sports.
Speaker 8 (01:34:49):
A former five star football recruit is transferring back to
the school he left earlier this offseason. Wide receiver Michah
Hudson announced that he is rejoining the Texas Tech football
program after transferring to Texas A and M following his
freshman campaign in December. Hudson left the Aggies soon after
he arrived on campus in January and re entered the
(01:35:10):
transfer portal earlier this month. He was ESPN's twenty second
ranked recruit in the class of twenty twenty four and
finished his freshman year with eight catches for one hundred
and twenty three yards. One person is dead after getting
hit by the Purdue University mascot train, The boiler Maker Special.
Is a truck.
Speaker 1 (01:35:29):
Is that it's nine? What's that is the already nine?
Speaker 8 (01:35:34):
Is it already nine? Joke over your hand, Yeah it is.
It's a truck shaped like a nineteenth century locomotive and
is the official mascot of Purdue University. And on Thursday,
the boiler Maker Special was traveling north on US fifty
two near Lafayette, Indiana, when apparently blew a tire and
hit a southbound car. The Tippecanoe County Sheriff's Office says
(01:35:57):
the driver of the southbound car was pronounced dead at
the scene. Deputy Say, a twenty year old produced student,
was driving the boiler Maker Special at the time of
the accident. And that's your boss with the Wall Sports.
Speaker 7 (01:36:08):
I'm Lindsay A ninety.
Speaker 1 (01:36:26):
Good morning, It's the Big Man Morning Show. Costall free
eight three three four six oh kmo D. You can
also text BMMS and then what you want to say
to eight two nine four five, Good morning, Lindsay, Good
morning Corbyn.
Speaker 8 (01:36:39):
Happy thirty fourth porn star birthday too, Tina Lapolghino. You
can see this perky blonde in I Love Lesbians too,
Beauty and the Booties and Guardians of the Gagasy. She's
from Saint Petersburg, Russia and loves nature.
Speaker 9 (01:36:58):
Good morning, Gimpie, Well, good morning. The drillers are back
in action this week as they're going to have a
thirsty Thursday for you. Hey, This Thursday, it's hornsby Bobblehead
giveaway night for the first thousand fantasy go in and
you get your bibblehead. Watch the game by Britain. Tickets
online Atolstreuler dot com.
Speaker 1 (01:37:15):
Join us in the studio. Now is Jeff Heinsley of
Heinsley Associate. It's good morning, Jeff, Hey.
Speaker 10 (01:37:19):
Good morning.
Speaker 1 (01:37:19):
Jeff's here to answer any question you have about custody
or guardianship, or name change or divorce, any family law scenario.
Jeff is in the studio to answer that question. A
couple of ways to get your question to us ahead
of time. You can email it show at kmod dot com.
You can text BMMS space whatever your question is to
the phone number eight two nine four five or in
calls toll free at eight three three four six.
Speaker 9 (01:37:41):
Oh KMOD Jeff.
Speaker 1 (01:37:43):
We had a listener on earlier whose parents left him
at the Bowling Alley when he was a baby, put
a note in the car carrier and for the grandmother's
phone number, and then high tailed it out of there.
Obviously there's a criminal situation with abandonment, but when uh,
(01:38:05):
well can.
Speaker 10 (01:38:06):
With the exceptions. But go ahead ask your question and
I'll fill that in.
Speaker 1 (01:38:09):
I was curious to the grandparent whoever would take the
child would then also have to go to court to get.
Speaker 2 (01:38:16):
A gardening ship.
Speaker 1 (01:38:17):
Correct, it's not just automatic because your number was in
it right exactly.
Speaker 17 (01:38:21):
And just to clarify, stepping back just a second, there
are states Oklahoma is now when maybe they have been probable,
but I know they definitely have one. Now there are
states where you can drop your child off at the
fire station. They have these baby like a better terms
of baby drop off things.
Speaker 2 (01:38:39):
I mean, it's called a baby box.
Speaker 10 (01:38:40):
It's a state box.
Speaker 16 (01:38:41):
It is.
Speaker 10 (01:38:43):
I'm not really sure what they look like. In my mind,
they kind of look like kind of a mailbox. Well
is it that?
Speaker 9 (01:38:47):
Or is it it's bigger than a mailbox.
Speaker 17 (01:38:49):
It's a really big mail but I mean, is it
like I'm wondering if in my mind is kind of
like you know, the big shoot thing that you can
drop your laundry off in or something like that.
Speaker 10 (01:38:57):
I mean, I know that's terrible.
Speaker 9 (01:38:58):
There's the thing you drop it into.
Speaker 10 (01:39:00):
I know, I know.
Speaker 17 (01:39:00):
But but anyway, so, but my point of telling people
out there is there is no criminal liability when you.
Speaker 2 (01:39:07):
Do it that way.
Speaker 17 (01:39:07):
Okay, now, dropping off at a bowling alley different story.
But no, Grandma's it's not automatic just because Grandma's numbers
in there. Whoever is going to take that child has
to go and get a guardian ship now on those
children or on that child, so that they can be
their legal guardian and make legal decisions and take them
to school or enroll them in school, and take them
to the doctor and all those wonderful things that are
required for children growing up. So you know, that's a
(01:39:30):
really sad story. I hope it turned out okay in
the end. But at the end of the day, guardianship
is what's needed in that case.
Speaker 1 (01:39:37):
Yeah, and you need to pursue that in a court
of law. By the way, the baby box is just
a box with a bunch of phone numbers on it,
and it is a door that opens up and you
set the baby in it, okay, And then the other
side is plucks a glass with air holes so they
can see that.
Speaker 9 (01:39:50):
There's okay, get to pick up the baby out correct,
check the mail. Well.
Speaker 17 (01:39:57):
I would imagine at some point there's a microphone or
something so you can hear the screaming when they're upstairs.
Speaker 10 (01:40:01):
I don't know. I mean, it's just I'm glad we
have those things for people that need that.
Speaker 1 (01:40:05):
But man, that's I'd be curious to how often they're
actually utilized, right, and not just yeah anyway, Jeff's here
to answer any question you have about custody, guardian, ship,
name changes, divorce. Family law is what Hinsley Associates Associates
specializes in, and he can answer your question. Now, this says,
I think my ex is hiding money in a separate
(01:40:26):
account or with family members to avoid dividing it during
our divorce. He's self employed, so it's hard to track
his income. What steps can I take to uncover hidden
assets and make sure I get what I'm entitled to?
Speaker 10 (01:40:40):
Well, you can do it.
Speaker 17 (01:40:41):
You can have a forensic evaluation. Obviously there's a cost
involved with that to see exactly where the money's going
and how it's being used and things like that. I mean, obviously,
you know, cash is the hardest thing to follow, and
unless it's put in a bank account somewhere, it's super
hard to track. I mean, that's one of those things
that when we're dealing with child support, if someone's getting
(01:41:02):
paid under the table, unless they're putting it in a
bank account or you know, cash app or you know
something like that, where it's it's fall you know, readable,
where you can see what's going on, it's really hard
to prove I mean super is so yeah, I mean
it's one of those things that you would need a
forensic evaluation to see exactly where it's now when you're
(01:41:22):
dealing with a business, you know a lot of times
and again there are businesses that are paid in cash too,
you know, and while the government expects them to do
the right thing, that doesn't mean that every business own
out there.
Speaker 10 (01:41:33):
That is paid in cash is going to do the
right thing.
Speaker 17 (01:41:35):
So forensic guy, excuse me, forensic accounting evaluation is what's
needed in this case to track down all the money
and where it's going and who it's going to.
Speaker 1 (01:41:44):
And how long does that process take? Usually, no, it varies.
Speaker 17 (01:41:47):
I mean some forensic evaluators are fairly quick and getting
done in a couple of weeks. Some take a couple
of months. It really just depends on the case simply
because you know, how big is the business, how much
money do they do, how many you know, how much
digging needs to be done, those kind of things. So
it's going to vary from from excuse me, from case
to case, just like we say with every case, every
(01:42:08):
case is different, just like every case with businesses is
different as well.
Speaker 1 (01:42:13):
And whatever the conclusion is is of the forensic evaluation.
Speaker 2 (01:42:16):
That is it right?
Speaker 1 (01:42:17):
That is the final well determination.
Speaker 17 (01:42:20):
That's what's determined by one particular side that's doing the evaluation.
Speaker 10 (01:42:23):
Obviously.
Speaker 17 (01:42:24):
Now typically when we have those evaluations done, sometimes there'll
be both sides doing their own evaluations. But yeah, typically
if the court orders it and says I have a
point so and so to do this, then yeah, that's
the number that's going to be used in the evidence
that will be presented to the court.
Speaker 2 (01:42:39):
Jeff Finsley's in the studio to answer your question. Eight
three three four six.
Speaker 9 (01:42:43):
Oh. KMOD is the phone number.
Speaker 1 (01:42:44):
You can text BMMS and whatever that question is to
eight two nine four five, or you can email show
at kmod dot com. It says, while I was in prison,
my mom was given temporary guardianship. Now she's not giving
them back. What steps can I take?
Speaker 17 (01:42:58):
Well, you don't automatic get whether you're in prison or not.
When when there's a guardianship, you don't automatically get the
kids back once you're done with whatever has caused the
guardianship to be in place.
Speaker 9 (01:43:10):
Right, you don't just to show up and go I'm ready.
Speaker 10 (01:43:12):
I'm done.
Speaker 17 (01:43:13):
You know, it doesn't work that way. Basically, what has
to happen whoever this is, you know, give me a call.
We need to do a motion to terminate. Now, the
bigger issue is, you know, did you finish everything that
the court requires you to do? For example, when a
guardianship is put into place, so in Oklahoma, there's supposed
to be what's a called a list of standards. Okay,
it's nothing more than a list of things that must
(01:43:34):
be completed before the court can even begin to consider
to terminate that that guardianship for whatever reason that it's
in place. Now, some counties like Tulsa and others are
proactive and they enter the list of standards immediately when
the guardianship is granted. We have other counties we've discovered
throughout twenty years of practice that aren't proactive. Basically, they
(01:43:55):
grant the guardianship and then wait for the person to
get more motivated enough I guess to get in front
of back, in front of the judge and say okay,
I want to try and get my kid back, and
then that's when they give the list of standards. Either way,
a list of standards must be completed. I mean, judges
are not going to just say, okay, terminated, take a
kid back, doesn't work that way.
Speaker 10 (01:44:15):
I mean, their job is to make sure that kid
is safe.
Speaker 17 (01:44:17):
And if there's a guardianship in place, and all of them,
most well most of them make a claim that say
the parents are unfit in some way, Well, how are
they unfit and what caused that unfitness?
Speaker 10 (01:44:27):
What do they need to do to resolve that? And
then the child might be safe.
Speaker 17 (01:44:31):
I mean the biggest thing is if if this person's
been in prison hasn't even seen the kids, there's no
way a judge is going to just let him go back,
even at a motion to terminate.
Speaker 10 (01:44:39):
Again.
Speaker 17 (01:44:39):
There needs to be a list of standards, which one
of which is going to be a certain amount of
time of visitation with these kids to get them reacclimated
to that parent. I mean, unless they've only been gone,
like you know, two months or three months or whatever,
I mean, that's not really needed. But let's say you've
been in the prison for two or three years or
four years or more. That's going to require reconciliation because
your kids aren't going to know.
Speaker 3 (01:45:00):
Who you are.
Speaker 1 (01:45:02):
And the person who has temper a guardianship, they could
just hand the kid over right, they they could.
Speaker 17 (01:45:08):
I mean the thing about a guardian is the guardian
is allowed to do whatever they want to do when
it comes to the custody of the child and where
they go and who they see. Could the guardian do that, yes,
but just understand and remember that anything that happens to
those kids, you're responsible for us the guardian period. So
if you give them over to the parent who's not
(01:45:28):
been around and has made bad decisions and may or
may not have changed their life, and something happens to
the kids, you, as the guardian, are responsible, not that parent.
Speaker 1 (01:45:37):
Jeff Hensley from Hensley Associates is in the studio. Get
your question to us. You can call tell free eight
three three four six zero KMOD, or you can email
show at kmod dot com. Or you can text like
these bmms and whatever your question is to eight two
nine four five. What if you have guardianship and the
child becomes way too much for you to handle, what
do you do?
Speaker 9 (01:45:56):
Then?
Speaker 17 (01:45:57):
Well, I've had these cases pop up sometimes at happen.
I mean typically what we'll do is we'll do emotion
to you know, you can do several things. You can
do emotion and terminate the guardianship and give the child up,
at which point, more than likely the judge's going to
if the parent is still unfit, the judge is going
to send that kid into DHS custody. I've had those issues.
You can find somebody else that is willing to step
(01:46:19):
in as the guardian and say, okay, I'm willing to
now become the guardian. So we just do a substitution
of guardian and switch to a different guardian. But you
do have options, and it does happen, I mean, unfortunately,
that does happen, but you have options on how to
deal that, So please give us a call.
Speaker 10 (01:46:34):
We'd love to help you with it.
Speaker 1 (01:46:36):
This is an interesting question about division of assets, and
I've never thought of this being something that has to
be handled, but it says, my friend is going through divorce,
there's a big friends group going on a cruise that
was already paid for, no refunds. Can one side of
the party ask for those tickets as part of the
division of assets.
Speaker 17 (01:46:53):
Absolutely, And I've actually had that happen in a case
where the plane tickets were a bought ahead of time.
There's a I think it was an all expenses paid
resort kind of thing, and uh yeah, we ended up
using that in the mediation.
Speaker 10 (01:47:06):
So yeah, you can do that.
Speaker 17 (01:47:08):
Sure, Absolutely anything's on the table when you're when you've
got ascid, because that's considered it an asset, it's already
money spent, it's something that's sitting out there.
Speaker 10 (01:47:16):
Anything like that you can use.
Speaker 1 (01:47:18):
It depends on what is a couple could be a
couple thousand dollars.
Speaker 17 (01:47:20):
Yeah, exactly, and what mean it could be even more
than that. Just depends on where you're going and all
that stuff.
Speaker 1 (01:47:25):
Patrick is on the line, Patrick, what's your question for
Jeff Hensley of Hensley and Associates.
Speaker 5 (01:47:30):
All Right, I went to prison and I gave my
mom a temporary guardianship so that she could bring my
kids up to see me. It was not done for
any reason. I was not proven and fit. But now
that I'm out of prison, my mom is refusing to
relinquish her temporary guardianship.
Speaker 9 (01:47:48):
Yeah.
Speaker 17 (01:47:48):
I think we were just talking about this. If you
sent in a text quick quote, I'm glad you called
out because I've got a quick question. So was there
an actual guardianship granted by a judge?
Speaker 10 (01:47:56):
Yes or no?
Speaker 5 (01:47:59):
Yes, I had to sign a piece of paper and
everything else so that she could get temporary guardianship.
Speaker 17 (01:48:05):
Okay, so you nominated her as a guardian and there
was not a finding of unfitness correct, Yes, okay, so
we simply in that case, when there's no finding of unfitness,
we're basically going to need to file emotion to terminate
the guardianship. Now, how long has it been since you've
seen your kids?
Speaker 5 (01:48:23):
But it's been cool ordered for her to give us
a visitation, and it's been since January about end of generations,
I've been able to see my kids.
Speaker 16 (01:48:31):
Okay, it's not that I haven't wanted to know.
Speaker 10 (01:48:34):
I know, I get that.
Speaker 17 (01:48:35):
What I was asking what I was getting for or
getting at, was is you know, has it been several years?
Has it been just a couple of months? That kind
of thing. So if you give your name re number
to Gimpe, I will give you a call and we'll
talk about terminating that guardianship for you.
Speaker 2 (01:48:47):
All right, thank you, Patrick.
Speaker 1 (01:48:48):
I have a quick question. How long were you in jail?
Speaker 5 (01:48:52):
I'll have improven for a week's shot of over the year.
Speaker 10 (01:48:57):
All right, give us a call.
Speaker 1 (01:48:59):
Hang on the line, man, because you've said that before,
like you're how long you are away can delay getting
custody back back.
Speaker 17 (01:49:06):
I mean, if you've been in if you've been whether
you're in prison or just not there for a number
of years. I mean, a judge is not going to
just throw a kid back in the deep end of
the pool and say here, surprized mommy or daddy's home.
I mean, obviously in cases where you've been away for
a long time, there's gonna have to be some reconciliation therapy,
which is therapy that basically reacclimates the child to you
(01:49:28):
very slowly over time to make them make sure they're
they're comfortable and they don't suffer, you know, major psychological
effects of all of a sudden you're back in their
life kind of thing.
Speaker 9 (01:49:38):
So Jeff Finsley's in the studio.
Speaker 1 (01:49:39):
You have a question about family law, he can answer
it nine one, eight four to six, oh KMOD or
you can also text bmmss and then whatever you want
to say to eight two nine four five or email
like this one to show at kmod dot com. Can
a person get child support back if they found out
they're not the child's father?
Speaker 17 (01:49:58):
Okay, so this is happens more often than most people think.
All right, but the answer is maybe. And I answer
that way is because if you've gone an existing order
in place where you have been adjudicated as the father,
all right, all of a sudden you find out you're
not the kid, you're the kid's parent, whether it be
through a I mean, you have to do it through
(01:50:18):
a DNA test obviously to no one hundred percent that
the kid is not yours. The problem is is that
when you're adjudicated. First of all, if you're going to
have this argument, you've got to make you have the Yeah, sorry,
it's been that one of those mornings. The statue specifically says,
if you're going to argue and deal with paternity, it's
got to be done with in the first two year
(01:50:39):
of the child's life.
Speaker 10 (01:50:40):
All right.
Speaker 17 (01:50:40):
After that, you start running into problems because unless you
can prove that somebody else has held that child out
as their own, basically we would be switching the buck
over to that individual rather than you. You know, that
takes care of child support moving forward. As far as
back support is concerned, if there was an existing order
in place, the answer is no. Now, if you've just
(01:51:00):
been paying child support with no court order in place
and all that we might be able to look at something,
but typically that's why you want to make sure that
you're actually the parent before you start doing things or
being forced to pay things. I mean, in this situation
that we're talking about, how did you end up on
that responsibility? I mean, did you sign in acknowledgment at
(01:51:22):
the hospital? Are you on the birth certificate? I mean,
is that why dhs SA adjudication? Assuming there's an order
the DHS adjudicated to.
Speaker 10 (01:51:29):
You as dad.
Speaker 17 (01:51:30):
I mean, there's all sorts of missing holes here, but
the basic gist of it is is more than likely
we're not going to get that money back.
Speaker 10 (01:51:36):
It's just gone. And it sucks. It's horrible.
Speaker 17 (01:51:40):
I wish our legislature would deal with this issue and
put a new statute in place that deals with these things. Unfortunately,
I can tell you I've seen the legislative list of
existing things they're trying to deal with down Oakama City
just recently saw read about it last week. Read all
the new laws that they're trying to get into place,
and this is not one of them. This is a
much bigger issue than most people realize. And again, if
(01:52:03):
you are a legislator for the state of Oklahoma, especially
in the Tulse area. Please please listen to me, all right,
do the right thing for your constituents and do something
about this, because it is a much bigger problem than
I think our legislature realizes.
Speaker 1 (01:52:17):
What is your advice to men who find have a
surprised to find out that their partner is pregnant and
whether to get a DNA test or not.
Speaker 17 (01:52:31):
I mean, if you're surprised and you don't think you've
been with that person to get them pregnant or whatever
it may be, or you have any suspicions that that
she's cheating on you or whatever it may be, as
soon as that baby.
Speaker 10 (01:52:42):
Is born, do a DNA test. Period.
Speaker 17 (01:52:44):
If you have any doubts whatsoever, in any way, shape
or form, please do it, all right. I know it's
it's not you know, it's not the great conversation to say, hey, baby,
I think you cheated on me. I want a DNA test.
That's not the easiest conversation. It's obviously not the most
romantic conversation. But it is a conversation that you should
(01:53:04):
have if you have any doubts whatsoever, because remember, if
you're stuck on this, you're stuck now for eighteen years
of that kid's life, paying child support. And obviously you
have the choice to whether or not to be have
a relationship with that child, whether it's yours or not.
Speaker 10 (01:53:20):
And you don't know.
Speaker 17 (01:53:21):
I mean, there's a lot of ins and outs, but
the basic just is, if you have any doubts, please, please,
for your own peace of mind and your own problem
solving down the road, get a DNA test, even if
it's just something from CBS or Walgreens.
Speaker 9 (01:53:37):
Do it.
Speaker 17 (01:53:37):
It's just a quick swab of your mouth, the kid's mouth,
send it off in a box and it comes back.
At least you'll know, at least you'll have an inkling
whether this kid is yours or not.
Speaker 1 (01:53:47):
Well, that's going to fallow into this next text question.
With a bankruptcy of twenty three and me another DNA
company's falsifying results, what are my options for reliable testing
without hiring a lawyer or getting a court order. I
don't need this touch for legal purposes. It's just for
peace of mind.
Speaker 8 (01:54:04):
Okay.
Speaker 17 (01:54:04):
So, first of all, twenty three and me and those
companies that are going bankrupt, all right, which for those
are you that did it?
Speaker 10 (01:54:10):
How big brother has your DNA.
Speaker 17 (01:54:12):
Congratulations, But bigger issue is is that we don't use
you know, twenty three and me, we don't use any
of those companies for DNA testing.
Speaker 10 (01:54:21):
That those are not DNA testings.
Speaker 2 (01:54:23):
Okay.
Speaker 17 (01:54:23):
Those are so you can do family history, genealogy kind
of stuff. That's the whole reason they were set up.
They were not set up to say whether the child
is ninety nine point nine nine nine nine percent yours
or not.
Speaker 10 (01:54:33):
Okay, there are other companies that do those.
Speaker 17 (01:54:36):
Now, the boxings that I was talking about, CBS Holgreens,
they will actually say DNA test, all right, That is
a test to see if the child is yours genetically,
all right. If you have any doubts whatsoever, go and
get one of them.
Speaker 10 (01:54:51):
Now. Again, there are companies here in Tulsa and all
over the state and most states that will test for
just DNA. All right. Those are way more expensive.
Speaker 17 (01:55:02):
The difference is is you can't use a box test
in a legal situation because chain of custody issues. Once
you mail it off, we don't know who touches it.
But slight peace of mind if you're wanting to use
it in a legal situation, we're going to have to
do it at a local testing facility, so we know
exactly who's touched it, where it's gone, and who's dealt
(01:55:22):
with it. All that, and they are more expensive, but
again they can be used in courts.
Speaker 10 (01:55:26):
So did I answer his question? I think I did?
Speaker 2 (01:55:28):
Think you did?
Speaker 17 (01:55:29):
Yeesh, So you know it's don't look at twenty three
and meters in those genetic companies. Those are for genealogy purposes.
They are not for testing whether or not the child
is yours. That's not what they were ever set up for.
Speaker 1 (01:55:40):
Uh, this text says, I'm having a kid with a
woman that is still married, if her husband is willing,
how hard is it for me to get custody?
Speaker 17 (01:55:48):
All right, so first of all, you, as a biological father,
will need to sign an acknowledgment of paternity. The husband
will need to sign a denial of paternity to get
him off the hook for this child. That puts you
on the hook for the child. I would make sure
you get a DNA test before you do this, especially
after what we just talked about. But that's what you do,
is you know, denial from dad, from husband, acknowledgment from dad.
(01:56:13):
Obviously you're going to have to use some sort of
agreement with mom. You have some sort of court agreement
with mom that says you're going to have custody of
this kid. I mean, I don't know why mom wouldn't
want her child.
Speaker 9 (01:56:24):
You know.
Speaker 17 (01:56:25):
Obviously there's more details there, but basically denial acknowledgment, and
then we'd need to file a paternity action so that
we can get that child dealt with as far as
custody and visitation and child supporting, those sort of things.
Speaker 1 (01:56:37):
Every situation is uniquely different, not just with family law,
but really any law scenario. That's why you need legal
representation to help you navigate the court system to know
where you can be benefited. That's why you should hire
hensleyan Associates. And they'll give a free consultation if you
mentioned KMOD when you call them, and the phone numbers
nine eight three nine eight five six ninety two for
(01:56:58):
Hensley Associates eight three nine eight five six nine two
for Hensley Associates. And if it's outside of family law,
hinsleand Associates can help with that as well.
Speaker 17 (01:57:06):
Absolutely so through our office in Pehuska. Don't worry about
the location. Obviously, we can do things outside of Bohuska,
but it's the Shoemake Law Firm. It's a different name,
but it is Hensley. We just left the name when
we when we took the took over the practice. But
give Sam Allison a call up there. He's the attorney
that tailing that office for us. He does a great
job in anything in addition to family law. If you've
(01:57:27):
got a criminal issue, if you've got a probate issue,
if you need a will or a trust, if you've
got any contract issues, oil and gas land issues, please
give Sam a call up there. He'd love to help
you with those and anything in addition to family la
up there, So give him a call.
Speaker 1 (01:57:43):
Heinsley Associates VEX nine two mench of KMOD get that
free consultation.
Speaker 9 (01:57:48):
Jeff, have a great week you too, We'll be back.
Speaker 12 (01:57:50):
The Big Man Morning Show returns next Elsa's Morning Show
ninety seven KMOD.
Speaker 1 (01:58:14):
Good Morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Toll free
eight three three four six oh KMOD eight three three.
Speaker 2 (01:58:20):
Four six oh K m o D.
Speaker 1 (01:58:22):
Jennifer Thompson Neboska heard the Q and is now qualified
for cm ALL twenty twenty five. Mel's gonna have a
chance coming up at eleven thirty when you hear Pink
Floyd's have a cigar. Right after that, she'll play the
que So be listening to get qualified for CM All
twenty twenty five brought to you by Yingling Flight. They
released some more information about Gene Hackman's autopsy, and there's
(01:58:43):
a really sad thing that they found that he had
acid tone levels that measured at five point three, which
is indicative of extreme fasting, which means he starved to death.
Speaker 9 (01:59:01):
Yeah, he didn't eat for a long time. Wow, But
I guess if your caretaker's dead in the bathroom.
Speaker 1 (01:59:08):
No, I know, but that that's still sad. When you
think about how your life will end, especially with money,
you don't think starvation is going to be that. Or
somebody you care about, you don't think that's going to
be that for them. I think even if he was
a strange from his kids, I can't imagine they thought
(01:59:30):
that's how he would pass and they wouldn't make him
a peeb and J.
Speaker 8 (01:59:34):
And did he have dementia?
Speaker 2 (01:59:37):
Yes, so he in Alzheimer's Yeah.
Speaker 9 (01:59:42):
Remember forget Yeah exactly.
Speaker 1 (01:59:45):
I mean he must have been thoroughly confused, but just
to starve to death.
Speaker 9 (01:59:51):
You're absolutely right about the kids, man. I mean, no
matter how estranged you are, I feel like you should
step in. And when you're dad is that close to death,
step in a little more, you know, when they're healthy.
I kind of get it. Yeah, but it's like, come on,
at any point in time your your parent can die,
(02:00:14):
you figure you'd want to be there.
Speaker 1 (02:00:17):
Short of abuse, yeah, I think you'd throw a life preserver.
Speaker 9 (02:00:23):
Just go check on them. Maybe if there's more than one.
I don't know how many kids he had, but let's
say you just had three of them. You know, take turns,
you know something, Go check on dad. He go make
sure that he ate today. You don't have to stay
that long, just you know, make sure everything's fine.
Speaker 8 (02:00:39):
Or even send food.
Speaker 9 (02:00:41):
Right, it's not that.
Speaker 1 (02:00:42):
Hard adore to to somebody else's house, right, I mean
put him in a home.
Speaker 9 (02:00:46):
Yeah, Yeah, for sure. I think this really.
Speaker 1 (02:00:49):
If there's anybody's fault here, I think it's his.
Speaker 2 (02:00:51):
It's his wife. She did not prepare for her demise, right.
Speaker 9 (02:00:57):
Because nobody really knows when it's gonna happen. It just happens.
Speaker 1 (02:00:59):
No, And by secluding herself off from everyone, she therefore
not only ended her life and no one to help her,
but also him right.
Speaker 8 (02:01:09):
Well, and we don't know what their circumstance was either.
We know that he left Hollywood to live a more
secluded lifestyle, and maybe that's maybe he was controlling. Maybe
he said to her like, no, this is the way
it's going to be.
Speaker 1 (02:01:23):
Yeah, But again, his takers do go a lot of times,
of course. But even if he said those were his instructions,
you still have to know and have the clarity that
you will die and that you you still have to
make sure that person's taken care.
Speaker 9 (02:01:43):
Of, right, right, I have that forethought enough to be like,
all right, I'm not going to be here forever. Have
a backup of some kind.
Speaker 1 (02:01:50):
Hey, I'm not surely there was somebody they trusted that
she could go. I'm not feeling well. I need to
let Sarah know, right, so Sarah will come by and
check on Jeanne. Even like at her worst, she didn't
call somebody to come feed him.
Speaker 9 (02:02:09):
Right, There's no way she was doing everything right there
got there had to been times where she couldn't prepare
a meal.
Speaker 1 (02:02:17):
This or whatever the story is is that she did
everything they did not love people in the house right right,
and that if she got this this sickness thing, whatever
this was, it could have come on fast.
Speaker 9 (02:02:30):
Okay, that's fair. They could have come on and gotten
bad in twenty four hours. That's fair. I'll give you that.
Speaker 1 (02:02:35):
But I don't you still call nine to one one
if you're like and like you can't breathe, right, I would,
I would hope one wouldn't be like I feel like
I'll get over the hump either that or you know, uh,
all right, well, if this is it, I'm out. Fine,
But you again, you have someone else, right, that's relying
(02:02:56):
on you, right that?
Speaker 9 (02:02:57):
I yeah.
Speaker 1 (02:02:59):
Wild story to think that he starved. Enemy of the
State was on last night. I was watching part of
the movie So Good Still So Good, and I'm.
Speaker 9 (02:03:07):
Like that he starved to death? Wild great actor. This
is a really interesting question.
Speaker 1 (02:03:18):
A kindergarten teacher went online and said, there's one thing
kids should know before they enter kindergarten.
Speaker 9 (02:03:24):
What do you think it is? Oh?
Speaker 8 (02:03:28):
Man, it could be anything nowadays.
Speaker 1 (02:03:33):
Their colors one thing. Okay, colors, that's not correct, gimpy.
Speaker 9 (02:03:37):
How to use the bathroom, body training?
Speaker 1 (02:03:40):
Man, Nope, really, that's not what this person devolves. I'm
not saying you're not right. Some schools require that you
should know how to go pepe even poo pooh?
Speaker 8 (02:03:49):
Yeah, how to can, how to contain their outbursts.
Speaker 9 (02:03:56):
How to control yourself adults? Uh no, gimpy, Uh mom
and dad's name? No address? I mean typically kids don't
learn that till kindergarten. In kindergarten first grade, Uh no,
that's not correct either. One more lindsay mmmmm uh napping snapping?
Speaker 8 (02:04:26):
Napping?
Speaker 9 (02:04:28):
You said snapping?
Speaker 8 (02:04:30):
Snapping breaking them from nap time?
Speaker 9 (02:04:32):
No, kimpy.
Speaker 1 (02:04:38):
Kindergarten learning, Uh, gimpy a.
Speaker 9 (02:04:45):
Phone number?
Speaker 1 (02:04:47):
No. This teacher says the number one thing kids should
know when they entered kindergarten is that the word no
is a complete sentence.
Speaker 8 (02:04:57):
Hm hmm.
Speaker 1 (02:05:00):
It says if kids can't understand no, they're basically unteachable. Okay,
whose job is it to teach kids no? The parents
or teachers by kindergarten?
Speaker 9 (02:05:14):
Yeah, your parents, absolutely? The parents.
Speaker 8 (02:05:19):
No means no shouldn't have to give an excuse. I
get that.
Speaker 1 (02:05:26):
This says that not showing five year olds how to
tie their shoes, open their snacks, or wash their hands.
Speaker 9 (02:05:31):
These are all normal.
Speaker 1 (02:05:34):
It's okay for them to not know this, but telling
your kids no not the same no is not a
bad word. The teacher says, do not teach them that
telling them no invites them to argue with you, because
if I can't tell your child no as an adult
and they don't respect the no, they're basically unteachable. The
(02:05:56):
thing is, if a kid can accept hearing no from
their parents, are not going to accept it from their teacher.
And she says that makes it really hard to help
them learn. Mom or dad may have to have time
to explain why they're say no to a child. A
teacher doesn't always add that luxury and shouldn't have to
spell out their reasoning me, my whole job is explaining.
(02:06:18):
The teacher jokes. Think of logistics. If we're lining up
for a fire drill, No you may not stay inside
of the building is on fire, or no, you may
not climb on the table because it's not safe. Learning
to accept the word no is an essential life skill,
and one kid should be working on when the kids
should be working on when they start elementary school.
Speaker 9 (02:06:41):
That makes sense.
Speaker 8 (02:06:42):
Yeah, I agree with it.
Speaker 9 (02:06:43):
Never thought about it, but it makes sense. It does
make sense.
Speaker 1 (02:06:51):
However, I have never been in a school setting of
elementary kids definitely under the third fourth grade and not
seeing the teacher have to explain. That feels like that's
part of the gig.
Speaker 9 (02:07:06):
Yeah, on certain things, but not sit here and tell
you why, explain why I've said no to you. No,
you can't get up and go you know. No, you
can't pull people's hair. No you can't eat the paste. Yeah,
what I'm saying so so like certain things. Yeah, I
get they should probably be explaining. People don't love this take.
(02:07:27):
Teachers are pretty much co parents. Yeah, they spend more
time with their kids than.
Speaker 1 (02:07:31):
We do, so I think explaining is kind of part
of it. But I hear your point saying no. Yeah,
a lot of people should learn why no is a sentence. Yeah,
but I know a lot of people that don't know
why because I said so, and my kids do okay
(02:07:52):
with no. To a degree, I think it depends on
where the emphasis of the O is.
Speaker 16 (02:07:58):
No.
Speaker 12 (02:07:59):
No.
Speaker 9 (02:08:00):
Oh Yeah, Dan brought back some stuff.
Speaker 1 (02:08:08):
Yeah, it's just at the beginning you kind of you know,
tail off on the O.
Speaker 5 (02:08:12):
No.
Speaker 9 (02:08:14):
It's not that big a deal.
Speaker 1 (02:08:15):
But if I'm drawing it out and really hitting the.
Speaker 9 (02:08:18):
O no, that means they've asked you a million times
and you're.
Speaker 1 (02:08:24):
Oh, I don't do that. I go asked and answered right,
and they're like, huh, I'm like you asked, I answered.
Do you think asking me more is going to change
my opinion?
Speaker 9 (02:08:34):
We're gonna wear them down?
Speaker 1 (02:08:38):
Well, then I'll just go ask mo oh you want
to see me get lit up? Like, I'll hear it
and I'll go in there. Did you just ask your mom?
Speaker 16 (02:08:48):
Well?
Speaker 2 (02:08:48):
I just I forgot.
Speaker 9 (02:08:52):
Mm hmmm, it's still no. Well why can't they good?
Good get? We can talk about this without them, but
we can't be going back and forth. I said, so
I laid down the law woman.
Speaker 1 (02:09:07):
My wife goes, you did what you lay cable? You
don't lay the law. You as long as you're in
that bathroom, you ain't.
Speaker 9 (02:09:18):
Okay. I didn't know if we were having a boy's
moment where he's like, she's like, I want you to
come over and lay some cable, and he's like, I
think you mean pipe.
Speaker 1 (02:09:26):
Yeah, no, no, she doesn't say that. What you said
means you want me to come over and take a
big old no, replying that I'm in there going to
the bathroom.
Speaker 9 (02:09:34):
I laying down law.
Speaker 1 (02:09:37):
If my if I ever heard the word pipe come
out of my wife's mouth, I'll be like, what's happening?
Speaker 2 (02:09:44):
We gotta take a break, We'll be back.
Speaker 3 (02:09:46):
Tell says Wooding Show The Big Bed Warning.
Speaker 12 (02:09:49):
Shows next nine km.
Speaker 1 (02:10:05):
Good morning, it's the Big Man Morning Show. Make sure
you're listening to Mel eleven thirty Tekfully, I'd have a
cigar right off that I q apply for see them all.
Twenty twenty five brought to you by Ying Late.
Speaker 9 (02:10:16):
Lindsay. What'd you learn today?
Speaker 8 (02:10:18):
I learned that GIMPI had a hard time beating off
the chiggers at the park. And the all new quick
Quack car washes open and until May fourth they're giving
away three car washes. And I'll be there live from
eleven until one today at eighty first and Garnet NBA.
Speaker 9 (02:10:35):
Good morning, Gimpye. What'd you learn today? Well, I'll learn
that Corbyn does lay pipe, he lays stir sticks. Also
learn that if I got to ask rick Berry to
put a condom on before I sing, things are gonna
be a little awkward.
Speaker 1 (02:10:49):
I learned groovy, miss Smith, I'm ready for the nap.
And I also learned go to Walgreens for a DNA
test to know if they are from you get a
twenty three AE meter to know if you can make
fun of them. It's Corbyn to say make sure saying
make sure that dishwashers leave it right.
Speaker 8 (02:11:05):
It's lindsay stuff tracking my cycle.
Speaker 9 (02:11:07):
This is Yamy and.
Speaker 17 (02:11:12):
Maddy.
Speaker 1 (02:11:14):
Can I get a call?
Speaker 16 (02:11:23):
Yeah?
Speaker 9 (02:11:25):
Lay me, it's no.
Speaker 10 (02:11:29):
Make noise.
Speaker 2 (02:11:34):
Interpasswords Corbyn new messages.
Speaker 13 (02:11:37):
The Big Mad Morning Show would like to take a
minute to thank troops from Oklahoma and all over the
United States.
Speaker 5 (02:11:41):
These soldiers have sacrifice.
Speaker 9 (02:11:43):
Give the Big Med Morning Show before you to back
like the total douchebags.
Speaker 1 (02:11:46):
That they are total douchebag bag, little incomplete douchebag.
Speaker 5 (02:11:51):
We honor and respect you. We honor and respect you.
Speaker 16 (02:11:54):
We honor and respect you.
Speaker 5 (02:11:56):
Bass Rock and Roll Le's Tulsa.
Speaker 17 (02:12:00):
We try to boys,