Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
You are about to witness amazing Emo has comes in
living Man's property of all times. Yes, my bow suck
on you bow down to your master. Then you did it,
(00:33):
Then you did it?
Speaker 2 (00:36):
Where you did?
Speaker 3 (00:43):
Allowed to play, Allowed to play, Come out to play,
Come to play.
Speaker 1 (01:01):
For Crystal wos.
Speaker 4 (01:02):
The sun is rising. God, Oh wake up, wake.
Speaker 5 (01:10):
Up now, don't worry.
Speaker 6 (01:13):
We're all here to.
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Show you how jan Witz horses.
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Raw station k and bo g Homeric listens is a
family bee. Don't turn downtown, just wait.
Speaker 7 (01:25):
And say.
Speaker 6 (01:28):
Are you ready?
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Are you ready to jove in time to start to
show Crapsticks a.
Speaker 4 (01:34):
C about Bresco, Whisping Man, Marny Show, Welcome to the
Working Week. It's on such a bore kick back, makes
up the offing and make it hardcore.
Speaker 1 (01:54):
Hang your whisby and then mess. Pick up your.
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Phone there line you're on the air.
Speaker 5 (02:05):
Dot time dot s.
Speaker 1 (02:25):
Good morning, It's the Big Man Morning Show. Toll free
eight three three four six O k M O D.
You can also text BMMS and then what you want
to say to eight two nine four five. It's an
online the website that rocks k M O D dot com.
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(02:48):
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on that at iHeartRadio dot com. And we're on Facebook,
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That's where you can hang out with us each and
every day. Good morning, Lindsay, good morning, Good morning, gimpe weel,
good morning. You got tickets that we're gonna give away
(03:11):
to see the Toads over at Kaine's Barroom at the
end of August. At your tickets Kainesbarroom dot com. We
got best and worst of the weekend. Who got our
listeners are awesome. Jeff Hinsley will join us. We'll talk
about divorce and custody and guardianship and how you can
navigate that. And you can get your question to us
right now email show at kmod dot com. Show at
(03:33):
kmod dot com. And we're qualifying people for kmo d's
fifty for fifty. Someone's gonna win fifty pairs of concert
tickets and qualify every hour with us and Sean Heller
of Kowita got it, so Sean is in the running.
The thunder have taken the NBA by Store for the
(03:55):
first time. The NBA champion presides at Alkohola. The story
book season it's complete now easily the biggest story in
the States. Yeah, oh, if not the sports world, or
should be the sports world. I watched half of it
and I was TT NIGHTE night, OK, But I watched
the rest of it this morning and fourth quarter when
(04:18):
they pulled away, it was a it was a different game.
That was it after that? Uh huh yeah, I mean
it was after when Tyree's Helberton went down. Yeah, it
was over.
Speaker 8 (04:26):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (04:27):
Seeing that leg just pop, man, I was like, ooh,
that's not good. Yeah. And he's twenty five, twenty seven, Like,
he's so young for that to be happening. It's not
like Aaron Rodgers. Like, let's take those two examples, right,
Aaron Rodgers much older. The body's got a lot more
wear and tear on it, right, that type of thing.
This Tyr he's so young. But when you're playing one
(04:48):
hundred and you're on your one hundred and tenth game
of the season, right, the wear and tear is wild.
And he's out next season. Yeah, he's missing a whole
nother season. Yeah, it didn't help that he went into
the game, you know, on the men he was laugh injury,
that's what they said, right, But still, and if you're
in a play, I mean, if I'm going to jeopardize
my achilles, I'm going to do it when I'm playing
(05:10):
for the championship. Oh for sure? For sure. So he's
out all next season, he's out regardless. Huh wow, it
looks like an achilles from the video, right the snap.
But yeah, but if it's not, maybe not. Maybe he
might come back if they make a run. But right, right,
so how much is I going to nder the year
or after? It depends if he's the same guy. Typically
(05:31):
you can come back and still be pretty agile, right,
But once you have it, there's when you're off that long,
you get an injury, you there's some traumatic memory. Yeah,
and so you're like, oh, I just went through all that.
I don't know if I want to take that chance
again or maybe before you were fearless, right right, And
now It's like when you get a correct in an
(05:52):
intersection and then the next time you drive through the internet,
it takes you a while to get comfortable to drive
to that intersection without slowing down, taking your off the
accelerator looking making sure like, right, you learned your lesson.
Speaker 2 (06:04):
I'll get a little from it. Yeah, for sure.
Speaker 1 (06:06):
So now maybe he'll overcome that. Everybody's different. But uh,
whether he'll be the same killer that he was, I
don't know, right, he may not have that dog in
him anymore. True thatd it sucks, But I'm kind of
glad that he went down. Sure, I mean it did
benefit but but the only downside of him going down
is it gives the whole NBA and the Pacers this well,
(06:30):
right if.
Speaker 2 (06:30):
We did, Yeah, if Haliburton hadn't gone down, would have
been different that Maybe.
Speaker 1 (06:36):
It's a stupid argument to me. He did, it's over right, right, Uh,
And the thunder win, And you know that's pretty awesome
for our state. You know, we make a joke every
time like, oh, they always go seven games, they always
go seven games. It hasn't happened in nine years. Wow,
there hasn't been an NBA finals go seven games in
nine years. And here we are, all of us are
(06:59):
always like they're trying to get their money, the right
TV money, damnit. And so they're gonna have a parade
on Tuesday down in Oklahoma City. Oh, damn it starts
at ten thirty. I knew that was going to happen.
What do you think was gonna happen? I'm figuring them out,
wait a week or whatever. Oh no, these guys got
to get to the Dominican and to the to their islands. Yeah,
(07:22):
because I always want to go. I'm like, oh, that'd
be fun to ride down there and be part of this,
you know, festivities or whatever. And I was like, they're
probably gonna do it while I'm on vacation, bastards. I mean,
we can ask if we could get from down there.
You don't mind, Oh, we can absolutely ask.
Speaker 9 (07:39):
See if they can like just postpone until you know,
I get back from vacation.
Speaker 1 (07:45):
Oh no, no, no, I mean we can go tomorrow
and do the show from down there. Oh okay, Oh
they're doing a parade tomorrow. Yes, tomorrow. Oh if that's
the case, then all right, fine, I still make I
thought it was like next week. No, these guys. Have
they get it done and over with quick? Yes, there's
they've just done one hundred and ten games. They want
to be done. That makes good sense, makes for good sense.
(08:07):
Well then all right, taking a trip to Okay, see tomorrow.
Do we know when it's tart. I'll be leaving early tomorrow,
right right, That's what I'm saying. Like, that's why I'm saying.
We could do the show from there tomorrow. And I
don't even know, Like, yeah, we're on the parade route, yeah,
and still nothing. The people are up.
Speaker 6 (08:29):
I see some people who whoo whoo wolf some excitement.
Speaker 1 (08:32):
They're setting up barrels, guys, they'll be set up.
Speaker 2 (08:36):
Yeah, they're setting up today.
Speaker 1 (08:38):
On my own. Like if we did it for work,
that's one thing. But on my own, I got no
desire to go. No, no, to be part of the festivity.
Speaker 8 (08:46):
No.
Speaker 1 (08:46):
Do you know how? Like first of all, parking is
going to be wild? Oh yeah, for sure wild. They say, uh,
what was the number? Fourteen percent of the state will
be there. That's fourteen percent of the state.
Speaker 2 (08:57):
And I have a feeling it'll be even higher.
Speaker 8 (08:59):
I don't know that.
Speaker 1 (09:01):
I don't know. I don't know where you're gonna park.
Speaker 9 (09:05):
So all right, that's fun. You are a huge Kansas
City Chiefs fan. If you lived in Kansas City, would
you go to their parade like after the Super Bowl parade? Okay,
so this is a little different because the parade would
be in February's.
Speaker 1 (09:22):
Fair hard No, okay, okay, hard, No, it's too much.
You gotta wait around. By the way, it ain't that
great a right, I seen it a couple of times,
but like it'll be on TV. Man, I'm sure it will.
But it's different being there in it than watching it
on the television. This is how I know I'm getting old.
(09:43):
I'm like, Park, there's be a lot of people. What
are all these people also being here? Like? This is crazy?
Speaker 8 (09:53):
Right?
Speaker 1 (09:53):
What if something happens, I gotta drive home, all right,
that's fair. That's just me. That's just me. I'm not
saying people shouldn't go. If you're a diehard thunderfan or
you want to raise the flag, go do it. Yeah.
I think it'll be interesting. It's a very proud moment
for sure, state, you know, and just to be part
(10:15):
of that energy down there, I think would be pretty awesome.
Twenty year old me done. Yeah yeah, if it's that
ten thirty, I mean I can't It's not a bad drive.
I just did it this weekend, right, Like, it's not
a bad drive. That's only it's not that bad now.
By the time I get down there that pray it
will be over and I'll show up and they'll be
(10:35):
you know, paper plates, you know, flowing across the street
like tumbleway. You missed it, man, Yeah, damn it a movie. Sorry,
it's all over. Sun sweep, sweep, sweep, sweep, taking up
some confetti put in your pocket. At least I could
say I was there. Yeah, I never mind, man, I'll
(10:58):
just I guess I'll stay in word, but I'll say
that like if they if they're like, hey, we can
do the show from down there, I'll gladly do that.
Speaker 8 (11:04):
Yeah.
Speaker 9 (11:05):
Fair, But I mean yeah, it would be fun, I guess.
But there ain't nothing going on between six am and
ten am down there.
Speaker 1 (11:12):
Right ah, I mean people would be lining up still
early risers down there, get a good spot, whirling around
their noise makers. Yeah to me, the I and right
there will be things to do. Right, we'll figure it
at six. I mean, I'm a still gonna come up,
(11:34):
you know, but then you gotta drive back. This is
why we need a train to Oklahoma City.
Speaker 2 (11:39):
Yes, I thought that was happening.
Speaker 1 (11:40):
No, they've killed that bomber. They've killed that something about them,
what was it? Money? There's that cost a lot of
money to do that. Uh yeah. So the parade's at
ten thirty and it will be on TV locally. Okay,
so you can watch it on TV, and I'm sure
it'd probably run toll what eleven thirty noon maybe. I
don't know how long those sort of things last. You know,
(12:03):
I've done some parades in the marching band, and it
seems like they go on forever. Yeah, when you're in them.
So it's two at least when it's the Super Bowl,
it's two things. It's the parade where you see them
on top of a bus or something, usually intoxicated, waving,
holding the trophy, people cheering, and then you know, basically
(12:24):
you get to wait for the bus and like here's
here's the marketing department. Here's a social media department, right,
here's the owners, here's the practice squad, here's this, and
then there's the you know, the bus with the people
you really want to see, right, and the trophy. And
then they go to a staging area and then they
go up on stage and they're like we did it. Yeah,
(12:48):
they said it couldn't be done, and we did it.
It Tulls Glahoma City. That would be great. But I mean,
it would be cool to see the trophy. It would
be cool to be a part of that, for sure. Yeah,
I just feel like I also experience it from my
Oh for sure. You can make yourself a nice little
(13:09):
cocktail in comforty growing home watching on TV watching one
be great, you know. And if you want to stand
up and wave your noise maker around, how about it? Now,
if the Chiefs were an hour and a half away,
I would probably even in February. Yeah, yeah, but eight
hours round trip, Yeah, that's a lot for a silly
parade where you may or may not get shot at
(13:30):
for to see these guys I see on the field
like without gear on, and then like that's what they
look like. You're a little smaller than yeah. Yeah. I've
been lucky to be on the field only a couple
of times, and I'm always like, these guys are massive, Yeah,
because they're wearing pads and helmets right right right now.
You wouldn't feel that way in the NBA, though. No,
these guys are avatarsh what's his nuts? Yeah? Good god man,
(13:58):
and Vegas already has them as the favorite for next
next year's finals. Two Thunder or just check Thunder Aha,
because they're so young, they're and they're they're gonna get
least two to three years out of these guys. Yeah,
very nice, or they have to trade them.
Speaker 2 (14:09):
Off to imagine that it wasn't. But you know what
five ten years ago that these they were kids dreaming
of something. They are still kids, Yeah, they are, They
really are still kids.
Speaker 1 (14:21):
It's more impappressive to know that just two years ago
they went to forty two and forty or forty and
forty two, and this year they won eighty four games.
By the way, the regular season's eighty two games. Yeah,
wait to step it up. So we know that the
players both practice squad and the people who actually played
get a ring. Does everybody that works for the Thunder.
(14:44):
It's up to the owner, okay, right, who buys the rings.
Usually if you are on the team, you get a ring. Yeah,
and typically people that are support get a ring, Like
the broadcast team gets a ring, and the marketing department
gets a ring, and the social media team gets a ring.
Kind of work. Just is a different ring, right right.
If you don't get a player's ring, right, not as fancy,
(15:05):
but you still have an NBA championship correct, an official one. Yeah,
even though you were just in charge of you know,
social media, right, tweeting, Yeah right, sorry, xing whatever, But
it's it is to you, and I would be like, yeah,
they look like okay, yeah, but it is not the
same ring compared at least at the NFL level. I
know that that's still cool though. Yes, we don't get
(15:26):
fancy rings for doing good work around here. No, no,
we get no AC for real, we get to walk
into a swamp. I was thinking about sending an email
to some people be like, hey, just see you know, man,
it's a swamp in here. Ain't nobody give me warnings?
Speaker 2 (15:48):
Right?
Speaker 1 (15:49):
I almost did to you, guys, I was like, I
let him find out the same way I did. As
soon as you open up that door. As long as
the air conditioning works in our studio, I don't care,
that's it. That's it. Yeah I will. I don't care.
Now you have everybody in this one building crowded an
hour studio just to keep cool because it's the only
working AC in the building. No, they won't. There's plenty
(16:14):
of other spaces that have AC they can step into.
And I've come in here all right. Tickets to the
Todies We're gonna give away we got best and worst
that we can I want to hear from you with
the best and what the worst part of your weekend
is get it to us BMMS and what that is
to eight two, nine four five The Big Man Morning Show.
This is Tulsa's Morning Show, ninety km out. Let's go
(16:35):
and do news quikies. It's time for news quakies. World news,
local news and news that just makes you say, what
the Here's corby Gimbi and Lindsay with what's going on
news quakies from The Big Man Morning Showing nineties.
Speaker 2 (16:49):
On the five. Small town mayor steals expensive machine from
recently deceased man. This happened in Saint Mary, Missouri, where
the mayor of a small town there arrested after police
claimed he stole an expensive machine from a man who
had died. According to a probable cause statement, the mayor
(17:12):
of Saint Mary, Missouri, Adam Baquett, was arrested and charged
with tampering with a motor vehicle and stealing after an
alleged incident in which he stole a skid steer from
a man who had recently passed away. The skid steer's
owner reportedly died back in March, and although the machine
should have gone to his two adult children, when they
(17:35):
went to his property to pick it up, it was
nowhere to be found. So the kids reported the missing
skid steer, worth an estimated eighteen grand and police began
an investigation that led them to city workers that claimed
they were instructed by Mayor Baguett to move the machine
since it was blocking access to water lines. The mayor
(17:58):
claimed that he had contacted the deceast man's family to
notify them about the moving, but police said they found
no evidence of that to be true or that the
skid steer was blocking the water lines. Police said they
eventually found the skid steer inside a city facility and
returned it to the family. I didn't know what a
(18:19):
skid steer was, Oh you do.
Speaker 1 (18:21):
You just don't know what it's called the skid steer exactly. Yeah.
And it doesn't sound like he was like dead end,
dead end, dead end. It sounds like he just had
it moved and then it landed on his desk as
deep as the It doesn't tell like he got in
it and moved it.
Speaker 2 (18:36):
No, he didn't. He had his his minions doing.
Speaker 1 (18:38):
Not his minions. He's the mayor. Yeah, minions get that skids.
But the headline made it sound like he stole it
off somebody's land. But if they were trying to, if
it was sitting in an easement spot, he had all
the right to move it.
Speaker 2 (18:53):
But they're like, no, no, it wasn't ny nay, it
wasn't blocking any water lines. You just took it from
the man's property.
Speaker 1 (18:58):
How do they know that if they if they hadn't
if they took it in March, it's damn near July. Yeah,
so there was in March, April, May Jude. That's four months.
So how do you know exactly where it was?
Speaker 2 (19:14):
Well, my guess is when the kids came to clear
out the old man's property, they're like, hey, where's his
skid steer.
Speaker 1 (19:20):
I'm sure that's what it was, But how do you
know where it was? Maybe right before he keeled over,
he was he moved it and was like eh, and
then it just landed right now. The mayor's taken the
heat for it. Yeah, Mayor's is supposed to get stuff
done and they need to work on the water line. Yeah,
it makes sense. Yeah, sorry, he died. If if you
(19:40):
were parked in a fire zone and your car gets towed,
the fireman didn't steal it, right, and I would think
if they were, did they go to him and go, hey,
can we have our skid steer back? And he was
like no, that's a different story. But if if they
moved it or confiscated or put it in pound or whatever,
(20:02):
they then yeah, they'd have to go through the normal
procedure to get it out. I would think, we.
Speaker 2 (20:06):
Need a skid steer. Well, I know where we can
get one.
Speaker 1 (20:09):
I just love the idea that the mayor's working in
Saint Mary's, Missouri, which is a small river town outside
of Saint louis treating it like he's the joker. Yeah,
and he's got those little minions running and you know,
uploading it. It all starts somewhere. That's the truth. Half
Naked woman caught burning stolen American flags. This comes out
(20:32):
of Iowa, where police were called out to the scene
about four twenty five in the morning last Monday. They
got calls that there was a naked lady lighting American
flags on fire, so of course they go check it out.
When they get there, they found a twenty one year
old gown named Brianna layered. She was totally porky, pigging it,
(20:54):
didn't have any pants on, no panties, just wearing a
T shirt with an American flag wrapped around her head. Oh,
they start questioning the woman. She gave them a false
name at first, and they were like, all right, we're
gonna have to cuff you and figure out what the
hell is going on. So they do try to anyway,
(21:14):
that's when she ended up kicking two of the cops there.
They did eventually get her wrangled and coughed. Still don't
have any pants on though at this point in time,
and come to find out the flags that she had
were stolen from the city. And now she is in
jail on a lot of stuff. She's in jail on
(21:34):
arson and assault and decent exposure, theft, possession of drug
paraphernalia because when they searched her they found a bag
of paraphernalia. It is just what they said. They didn't
say what it was. Also, they got her for desecration
of a flag. I had to look because I didn't
even know where Bucy, Iowa was as someone who grew
(21:55):
up in Iowa. It is a tiny a tiny town
in between a Tumua and Des Moines or near Oscaroosa.
Oh yeah, I've vacation there one if you care. Former
employee suing bankover Chucky doll. A North Carolina woman is
(22:18):
suing her former workplace overclaims a supervisor intimidated her by
leaving a Chucky doll on her desk. For those that
don't know, Chucky is the murderous doll from the Child's
Play movies franchise from the eighties nineties. Uh yeah, late eighties,
early nineties. The woman is suing Trust Bank, saying she
(22:39):
suffers from a fear of dolls and was traumatized in
the needing treatment. She's since been let go from the
bank and is seeking an unspecified amount of damages. She
will absolutely win if she can prove he put a
doll on her desk. Also, huh, how can you be
scared of a Chucky doll? Well, maybe she took that
(23:01):
movie serious. Yeah, you know, then she thought it was
a documentary and not a I mean, if she's got
a mental disorder, Okay, if she's got a mental disorder,
does she need to be working at the bank. I mean,
people have mental disorders can work anywhere saying it messing
up your money. Now, it's not like she's counting money.
Just because she worked at a bank doesn't mean she
was going a one, two three. She had a desk,
(23:23):
so she was really mopping floors. But I get what
you're saying.
Speaker 2 (23:25):
Yeah, right, And maybe they had a discussion, maybe they
were talking about some of their phobias or things that
have traumatized them as a kid. And she said the
movie Chucky or Child's Play, Well.
Speaker 1 (23:36):
It's even more of a dig move. Yeah, that makes
him even more of a problem. There's only one way
to get over your fears, and that's to face some
head on. Did he say, did the Chucky did go?
Here's Chucky? No, he was like.
Speaker 2 (23:50):
I'm your friend to the end, I'm Chucky. You want
to play?
Speaker 1 (23:53):
Well, that's what he said when he wasn't evil.
Speaker 9 (23:55):
I don't think Chucky had a catchphrase, to be honest
with you, I really don't think he did.
Speaker 1 (24:02):
I can't vision it for the life of me. I
can see his face and holding the knife. Yeah, yeah,
there's gotta be what was this phrase? Ah, Hi, I'm Chucky?
You want to play in that way? That's what it is.
I want to play. Other notable lines include honey, no,
that's what it says, give me the boy and I'll
let you live. This is what the Internet tells me.
(24:25):
See if this, if this plays it correctly. Here, she's
reaching down to grab the doll. It's just sitting there.
He looks innocent, holding it up like you would a baby.
She's taking turning it over like she's gonna spank it.
(24:47):
I hope she's gonna try to remove the batteries. Hi, yeah, Chucky,
you want to play around? Yeah, I had my buddy
dog rolling up. Yeah, dude, that's a giant wind from
a guy who feels I feel like your parents didn't
get you. A lot of stuff like that is a
(25:07):
that is a big get My mom worked for the
toy cott. She got out of the military, so I had, Yeah,
I had my buddy, I had that Teddy ruck spin
as a deal.
Speaker 9 (25:18):
But after that yet all went to s after that, nonetheless,
So having my buddy doll at the same time. The
child's play, that's what it's based off of. Me the
f out, that's what it's based off. The idea was,
that's what they were.
Speaker 1 (25:35):
Yeah, Heidi, oh is what the the dude the poop
said in uh yeah, mister hanky, Maybe that's where they
got it from. I don't know.
Speaker 9 (25:43):
Again, that's just what the Internet tells me, it says.
Other notable lines include.
Speaker 1 (25:47):
How he says like that, but maybe he does and
then give me the bullet. I'll let you live. That
feels like that's the range thereof.
Speaker 2 (25:58):
Yeah, it's something howdy it something howdy because who was like.
Speaker 1 (26:02):
A, yeah, maybe it's not Heidi Ho like howdy hoo. Yeah,
maybe howdy ho. Maybe there's a comm a strategically placed
comma right in a prostitute across the right, right howdy hoe,
Like that's the movie version that Lindsay's gonna promote at nine.
All these stories are on our Facebook page at Facebook
dot com slash BMMS six nine. Tulsa's Morning Show is
(26:24):
gotting right back The Big Man Morning Show, Tulsa's Rock
Station ninety seven.
Speaker 2 (26:31):
Mary Lindsay, Good Morning, corbyin Free Money is back Rock
the Bank at eight o'clock this morning, all the way
up until eight o'clock tonight, thirteen chances to win one
thousand dollars again at eight o'clock. Listened for that nationwide
keyword and when you hear it, enter it online at
kmod at dot com.
Speaker 1 (26:52):
Good luck, good morning, can be oil a good morning, Corbin.
If you're a fan of all the small things, well
Blink one eighty two is going to be the Walmart
Amphitheater in September. You can sign up to win free
tickets at the website the Rocks kmode dot com. Right
congratulations or an order. We qualified another person for kmodes
fifty for fifty. Mike Bentton of Bartlesville heard the queue,
(27:13):
So now Mike could be winning fifty pairs of concert tickets,
all to celebrate fifty years of Miller Lite. Qualify every
hour at the Big Mad Morning Show. Another chances coming
up right at the top of the eight o'clock hour,
so be listening for that. Let's do best and Worst
of the weekend. What's the best part of the weekend
and the worst part of the weekend? BMMS and whatever
that is to eight two, nine, four, five, lindsay what's
the best and what's the worst.
Speaker 2 (27:36):
So the worst part of the weekend I would have
to say is I did not realize how claustrophobic I
was until I had to get into an MRI machine
for two hours.
Speaker 1 (27:48):
You've never done that.
Speaker 2 (27:50):
Yeah, I've had an MRI. Yes, not for two hours.
Speaker 1 (27:53):
It's one of the worst feelings ever. I'm not a
very claustrophobic kind of guy, but getting into that some bitch.
I was like, get me out of here. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (28:02):
So I got a call that said I needed I.
You know, back last month, I had ACT scan. I remember,
I thought I had diverticulitis. I was like that wasn't
feeling great. And I had a colonoscopy and I'd found
that I had pockets and they're like, oh, yeah, those
are signs of it. Well after that and they had
blown my vein and because it was a a CT
(28:28):
scan with contrast with die yes with die yes, And
that was back in May, and the only thing I
had heard was now, we're we don't think it's diverticulitis,
but we're going to be treating you for acid reflux
and put you on prilosec. Okay, So I take that
(28:49):
now forty milligrams a day every day. Okay, so far fine.
I'm not eating popcorn anymore either, which triggered it initially.
My my check up anyway, Well, then I got a
phone call on Friday and said, hey, you were your
doctor wants to schedule you for another CT scan in
(29:11):
the morning and an MRI. And I thought that was weird,
but I went had it done and they were both
with more contrast, got another vein blown great. But I
had no idea that the MRI would be that long,
and I had no idea that claustrophobia would kick in,
(29:31):
and it sure did.
Speaker 1 (29:32):
Did they give you earbuds or headphones? Yes, okay that
makes a big difference.
Speaker 2 (29:36):
It does. It helps a lot. Yeah it does, for sure,
but just after that time, you just you get antsy.
Speaker 1 (29:44):
Yeah. No, they're they're rough, especially if you're you know,
one of three of us that can't sit still. And
I've done it. Where when I had when I thought
I broke my, when I broke my cracked my pelvic
bone and I had to have an MRI. They I
was sitting still because it was at the end of
the day and so I was already really tired. So
I was like drifting off and like twitching, twitching, and
(30:08):
it took him like four times longer than it needed
to because I kept having to had to reset every time.
So yeah, it's not easy. It's not easy. So did
you get the results?
Speaker 2 (30:17):
Not yet? No, so, but I'll be calling today.
Speaker 1 (30:21):
So that's the worst.
Speaker 2 (30:23):
Yeah, I will be a thorn in the doctor's offices.
But until I find out what the hell's going on?
Speaker 1 (30:27):
Good news that always works.
Speaker 2 (30:29):
Yeah, yeah, no, I guess. And the best of the weekend.
Yesterday we bit the bulletin. We said yes to the
Anatolian shepherd and Great Pyrenees dog.
Speaker 1 (30:46):
I know, shocked, I know, Are you shocked, Gimpie, Not really, No.
Speaker 2 (30:52):
He's so cute. Sure, he's so sweet.
Speaker 1 (30:57):
Bring everybody back on board to what you're referring to.
Speaker 2 (31:00):
So we we were presented with the opportunity to get
this dog. Uh friend of ours had a litter of
I think seven or eight of these puppies and we've
we've been thinking about it until since June tenth, and
ultimately we had thought, no, we're not going to do it.
(31:21):
But it seemed like every day this one of these
puppies got brought up in conversation and just kept getting
brought up. And then yesterday we got a phone call,
I can bring I can bring them by so you
can see them, and we fell for it. I guess
you could say, and instantly fell in love and said,
(31:47):
how can we say no? So we didn't. We said
yes and went to the uh pet store and bought
the things that we needed. And this dog, I mean,
he may just made himself right at home.
Speaker 1 (32:01):
Sure, yeah, crazy how they do that family.
Speaker 2 (32:05):
Bruce didn't care for him too much at first, like
he just kind of was like, eh, whatever, There's been
no like fighting between the cat the cat. There's been
no you know fights. But I'm waiting for it. You know.
Bruce has his murder mitten still, so if yes, okay,
(32:26):
so if the dog does come too close and Bruce
doesn't like it, I'm sure he'll just wop him a
couple of times in the face and that'll be it.
Speaker 1 (32:33):
A cat's too fat to get in a fight, he
he hat fat. It's really weird that in the next
three weeks you will have grown your family by forty percent,
right by adding a dog and another human.
Speaker 2 (32:48):
Yes, yes, because of July fifth, we have the exchange
student coming from Australia.
Speaker 1 (32:53):
Oh yes, I forgot about that.
Speaker 2 (32:55):
Yes, we're all very excited about that too.
Speaker 1 (32:57):
Yeah, but one of those gets to leave after a while. Ye,
he's got to hold onto the dog. It ain't cool
to give it up exactly. Hey, mate, will you like
and take his puppy home? Would you?
Speaker 2 (33:11):
I don't know. I think by then, I mean at
eight weeks this dog is already I think sixteen pounds.
Speaker 1 (33:18):
And the kid that's the exchange student is going to
be here until win.
Speaker 2 (33:21):
He'll be here for an entire school year.
Speaker 1 (33:24):
So till May. Yes, yeah, yeah, that's one word to use. Yes,
best and worst of the weekend? What's the best part
of the weekend and the worst part of the weekend?
Bmms and whatever that is to eight two, nine, four five?
Give me what's the best and what's the worst? Uh?
The best and the worst. We're on the same day,
I guess the best part of the week and will
(33:46):
be Saturday. Saturday, my lady and I celebrated our first
Anniverse read again, what haud on you? Right? So we
hopped on the bikes and with a couple of friends
rode down to Turner fur right. I ain't never been there.
She's been there. She's like, it's awesome, you love you
go swimming. Blah blah blah. It was a great ride.
(34:06):
It was fantastic.
Speaker 9 (34:08):
Now turner falls itself is not exactly motorcycle friendly, to
be quite honest with you. You know, we get up there
and they're like, hey, where would you like to park
Level two or level three? And I said, well, what's
the difference? She said, well, level two is about a
fifteen minute walk. Level three is free. Why I like free?
(34:29):
Send me up to level three?
Speaker 2 (34:32):
Say along the walk class.
Speaker 1 (34:33):
Side of a bit.
Speaker 9 (34:33):
What the walk isn't a big deal because they have
shuttles for you, right, load up on this truck and
we'll haul you back down to the bottom.
Speaker 1 (34:41):
Right. It's just it's uphill, okay, and the hills are
pretty steep, all right. And when you're dealing with these
slow ass shuttles along with people in their cars, stop
and go, stop and go. When you're on a hill
and a motorcycle, it doesn't really fare that well, you
know what I mean. Damn burn up my clutch just
(35:03):
trying to get up the hill there. And and then
there's parts where the road the water spills over the roadway, right,
so you kind of have to drive through it. And
not a big deal for me. I've driven through many
of large puddles before on the bike. It's not a
big deal.
Speaker 9 (35:18):
But my gal, she's a pretty novice passenger. Ride her
on a bike, right, She and never been on a motorcycle.
Speaker 1 (35:24):
So she got with me. So of course she starts
freaking out. God bless her, you gonna make We're not
gonna make it. We're not gonna make it. We're not
gonna make We're gonna die. I says, We'll be fine.
Don't freak out, because you freaking out does not help
me any at all whatsoever. So she's freaking out, and
I'm trying to navigate this waterway. We made it across,
(35:48):
not a big deal. Get up the hill, oh all right,
finally get these other cars out of the way because
they paid for parking. And I'm like, no, I'm a
cheap ass. I'm going to the free style. So I
finally make it up there to the top. Everything's cool.
Gotta love this gal. She is probably the nicest person
I've ever met in my life. Because we are on
(36:08):
the shuttle, there's four of us and then the guy
that's driving. Right. We spent the last three hours on
motorcycles in the heat. We're exhausted. We want we want
to cool off as the shuttle is pulling away, she
hears the faint screams of somebody hey, so she stops
(36:28):
the bus. She stops the bus, tells the driver, hey, wait,
there's some people back there trying to catch ride. We
were already moving though, and it's like, God, I love you.
I love you because you're such a nice balance. Yes, balance,
very much. So the rest of us are like, keep moving,
(36:50):
it's okay. She's like, now stop. What if they were
in trouble. I'm like, maybe they were getting by mountain lions.
Who knows what we could already know anyway, So God
bless you. It was awesome. We had a great time.
We had a great time swimming and whatever. And we
stopped at Smoking Joe's rib branch on the way back
and I got way more barbecue than I've ever had
in my life. It was awesome. The worst part of
(37:14):
the weekend is we're down there. We're in this little
swimming area. She's like, hey, let's go over here to
this little tabletop shelf sort of thing, a little rock shelf,
and it's deep enough right there you can jump in.
I was like, well, all right, then let's do this.
And I got to thinking the responsible meat kicks in right.
(37:37):
Very rarely does that happen, but I'm like, hey, before
we jump in, I'm just gonna I'm gonna get in there.
I almost see what the depth is like there's not
a branch rocks. Maybe I get in there and I'm like,
all right, rock rock rock rock, rock rock rock, and
little deep right here. I'm up to my neck. All right,
(37:59):
still some rocks down there. Fantastic jump on in. So
she jumps right on in, has a great time. All right,
you do it. It's your turn. Okay, Okay, here I
am in my crucks on this rock about to jump in.
(38:22):
I didn't shoot far enough, I don't know, but I
jump in right, maybe because I was a little apprehensive
and nervous because I know what's at the bottom of
this thing, and I know that's not that deep or whatever,
but deep enough I could anyway. So I jump in,
and I'm not trying to cannonball into this little lagoon
(38:44):
that has rocks at the bottom of it, because I
don't want to break my tailbone in Davis, Oklahoma, which
is three hours away from where and I've got to
ride a motorcycle back because she can't. Right, I jump
in and my foot hits one of those rows. My
croc slips, I blew out the strap. Now one of
my crocs is constant too. Will drive. I will never
(39:06):
get a four will drive in that crock ever again. Uh,
it didn't I didn't break my ankle my heel, right,
but it sure did hurt it. You know, it's one
of those.
Speaker 9 (39:21):
Yeah, I just sat it kind of, you know, make
my way over to where she's sitting.
Speaker 1 (39:27):
I sat there for a little while. I made sure
I wasn't bleeding and everything's fine, and I was only
sore for like maybe thirty minutes or whatever. The newest
version of a newer version of you would have probably
been okay, it would have been just fine fine. But yeah,
that was the worst part. I busted a croc and hurt.
Speaker 2 (39:45):
Yeah, you have bad luck jumping into bodies of water.
Speaker 1 (39:47):
You added too much to that sentence, right, best and
worst of the weekend? What's the best part of the
weekend and the worst part of the weekend. Best part
of the weekend is we decided to go down to
Oklahoma City and see some friends and have dinner with them,
and we went to a brewery I like to go
to down there and and hung out there and uh
(40:09):
just went for like twenty four hours. And the worst
part of the weekend is we stayed in a hotel
and it was I was trying to decide. They kind
of lived near Frontier City, and so I was trying
to decide what hotel we wanted to stay in because
I didn't want to stay in a hotel where trafficking
was happening, right, which seems to be all those hotels,
And so I found one a little more north and
(40:30):
it was Hampton in I was like, ah, this is
those a breakfast all good?
Speaker 8 (40:35):
Right?
Speaker 1 (40:36):
And it was not all good. The sink wooden drain.
Oh no, the air conditioning wasn't working in the building. Yeah,
it sucked. You picked the worst Hampton I did. I did.
And then we go down for breakfast and the breakfast
is like little egg sou FLEs with green peppers and
onions in it. Damn Yeah. The coffee was it was
(40:59):
just like damn it. Kids didn't care though, they thought
it was awesome. We got juice fox a cereal, So yeah,
it was. It was fine. It was fine. It was
no blown out crock. Best and worst of the weekend. Bmmss.
And whatever that is to eight two nine four five
that says best thunder is the champs worst I was
on call for work. Another one. Best I saw def
(41:22):
Leppard at Summerfest in Milwaukee. They put on a really
fun show. Totally worth seeing them. Worst in that phase
of life when teenagers and aging parents, not for the
week right. I saw a comedian tell a joke and
he was like my kid's teenager and he was standing
in front of me. I was sitting on the couch
and I was just reflecting on how much he's grown
(41:44):
and how big he's gotten, and it can I throw
him across the room. Best of the weekend breaking the
bed with the woman. Worst of the weekend having to
replace the bed frame, get it man, Worst of the
weekend cutting bailed Hay finally, and everyone in my house
(42:05):
is slinging snot from allergies. Best of the weekend, thunder up, Dude,
I have done. I have bailed Hay. It is not awesome,
Oh it is. It is one of the I was like, yeah, no,
I'll stand on top of the cart. For those that
don't know, they throw the bails up and then you've
got to use hooks to pull them it sucks. It's
(42:25):
the absolute worst. Best slam Fest twenty twenty five was crazy.
People were washing and slipping and sliding all over the floor.
Worst turned twenty seven, finally moving into a new home.
Best Slam fan we did the best. Rob Schneider was
very entertaining. Loved it. I don't say worst vacations over
(42:48):
back to work with the sunburn. Best week not weekend.
Spent a week in Vegas and got married. Worst smacked
face on the bottom of the pool. I've been there before.
I don't know if you're still talking about getting married
or that literally happened. Uh yeah, did you do the
(43:11):
drive through Elvius thing? Best was getting hardwood floors done
in the living room. Worst now the house smells like
a meth lab. Best of the weekend was getting child
free evening with my wife for the first time in
three years.
Speaker 2 (43:25):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (43:26):
Worst had to shave my two oldest sons heads to
Uh oh, why sounds like somebody got lies. Oh, it's
the only thing I can think of. Is that something
you have to do? Now you don't have to. They
have the shampoo.
Speaker 9 (43:42):
It's just a giant pain in the dog to dig
lice out of each individual strand of.
Speaker 1 (43:48):
Care that is on your head. But if you shave it,
you don't have. For boys, it's easier, you know. You
just shave their head, you know, put the medicine on
them that burns any kind of like eggs that might
be on their left and you're done. You're done. Little
girls not so much though, because they don't want their
end right. No, it is kind of an inconvenience to shave. Yeah.
Best of the weekend, got to move out of my
(44:08):
slumlord apartment. Worst I moved into my worst part. I
moved into my car. Hmm. I don't know if living
in your car is a great thing to do. Right now?
Speaker 2 (44:18):
It's hot, right.
Speaker 1 (44:20):
I mean, as long as the runs you can turn
the AC on. You just have to, you know, fuel
up your home every you know, a couple of hours. Yeah,
I don't know how long you could sit there idle
with your car running AC. Is that is that something
they even recommend doing? Probably not, But hey, you know,
free rent. I'm gonna make a jump and say, if
you have to live in your car, I don't know
(44:43):
if your AC works great in your car? All right,
we got to take a break. We got tickets to
the Toty's We're gonna give away. You're listening to the
Big Mad Morning Show. This is Tulsa's Morning show. Ninety
kmod see what Gimpie has for his four by four.
It is here that the State Department issues worldwide caution
(45:04):
Security Alert. Yeah. The State Department said the conflict betwixt
Israel and Iran has resulted in disruption to travel and
periodic closure of airspace across the Middle East. If it's
it's excuse me, and it's alert. The State Department advised
US citizens worldwide to exercise increased caution.
Speaker 9 (45:25):
It follows the Department of Homeland Securities issue ins of
a National Terrorism Advisory System bulletin or any officials have
warned about retaliating against the US after this weekend's ear
strikes on their nuclear facilities.
Speaker 1 (45:38):
I saw something that people were doing videos of the
B two bombers taking off from Whiteman, and please tell
me there's a better system, Like it doesn't rely on
some guy going there. They go, yeah, right, I feel
like we got to be better with our coverage. Right, Well,
(45:59):
welcome to America. What else we got here? Bong Geno
Bong Geno announces FBI predator sting is a success. F
UBI Deputy Director Dan bong Gino announced that during his
and Cash Hottail's first three months in office, the agency
has conducted large scale sex predator operations. In a post
on x.
Speaker 9 (46:20):
Dan said that the two child sex predator stings resulted
in rees and the rescues of hundreds of children. In
a post, he wrote, Operation Restoring Justice apprehended two hundred
and five child sex predators and seven hundred and sixty
four purveyors while rescuing one hundred and fifteen children. A
separate operation Sonteroria Shield Soteria resulted in the apreation, apprehension
(46:46):
of Tootaria Soturia, Sure Sociia Sociria, Soturia sot Aria and
another operation and resulted in the apprehension of two hundred
and forty for child predators and one hundred and nine
children rescue.
Speaker 1 (47:03):
I'm fascinated by this. I want more information. Where who
are the people they apprehended? Right? Let's see their mugshots? Right?
Two hundred and forty four isn't five. That's a lot
of people. That's a crazy I want to know more
about that. I got to give them do process first,
and we'll get their pictures here later. Either way, you
can still tell. I mean, they just told us how
they launched bombs, all right, I feel like theyn give
(47:25):
us a little more details on this. This is incredible.
Speaker 9 (47:28):
Keep up the good work, though. What else we got here?
Ten Commandments Law signed by Texas GUVNA. The new law
will require a copy of the Ten Commandments to be
in a size and typeface that is legible to a
person with average vision from anywhere in the classroom. A
similar bill is passed in Louisiana has since been found
unconstitutional by a courts. And then, lastly, here Roote sixty
(47:51):
six Commission announces plans for a massive centennial parade. The
Tulsa Route sixty six Commission announced plans for the parade
for the centennial anniversary of them other road. Tulsa Root
sixty six Capitol Cruise World Record Classic Car Centennial Parade
that's the entire title, has been planned for May thirtieth
of next year. Organizers said the parade would take place
(48:14):
along Tulsa's stretch of Root sixty six, with a goal
of more than three thousand entrants and hopefully set a
record with its size and scope.
Speaker 1 (48:22):
Details of the parade are still being finalized, but organizers
said they hope to entice two hundred thousand spectators along
the parade. We all agree wearing shoes as part of
like the social contract, right, Like, oh yeah, we should
just kind of expect everybody to wear shoes, foot coverings
of sorts, yes, yeah, so, sort of pant covering, leg
covering if you will, maybe not full leg, but something
(48:43):
covering the mid section, and pretty much short of being
at the beach or the pool, wearing a shirt covering
your top is expected, at least to the point when
you see somebody running down the road and as a
male and they don't have a shirt on, you're like, ah,
good for you, bro, right right, it is an anomaly.
(49:04):
It sticks out and you're You're more than welcome to
show your moves. It's fine, but we kind of those
are some social contracts we kind of accept, right. So
the state this article states that because of the warmer weather,
that maybe we should make deodorant a part of the
social contract. That you should that's that's that's something you
should do, especially with the hot weather and the the
(49:27):
heat wave we're about to get. Like that you should
when you go out, you should wear a deodorant.
Speaker 2 (49:35):
I don't know that.
Speaker 1 (49:36):
I Oh, no, I don't know. I feel like that's
kind of crazy, to be honest, because we don't expect
people to brush their teeth. You should and expect are
not the same thing. You should brush your hair, people don't. Yeah,
I see where you're going with on this, and you can't.
Speaker 9 (50:00):
You can, but it doesn't stick out as much. Smell
people's hair, you can, but it doesn't stick out as
much unless you talk of face to face with them.
Smell somebody's dirty breath because they didn't brush their teeth.
If somebody is a showering or putting on the odorant,
you can smell that from the other side of the room.
Speaker 1 (50:18):
BO is pretty subjective, is the point I'm trying to make,
because even we even kind of go with the idea
that musk oh, I can smell their musk like that
to turn on, right, that's BO, that's your body odor.
Yeah right, So we even subject it that way where
it's like, oh, it turns me on, So it's okay,
(50:41):
and not everybody stinks. You may have BO, but it's
not an automatic whoof and a good shirt covers it up, like,
keeps it contained anyway. So I just feel the reasons
why it shouldn't It shouldn't be a thing. It's because
it's pretty subjective.
Speaker 2 (50:56):
Yeah, but if you know that, you're offensive without it.
Speaker 1 (50:59):
I I don't think people do, right. I don't think
people do nose blind to it. Yeah, they just go
a it's part of life because people have they have
stinky feet, and they definitely don't do anything about it. Yeah,
but your shoes are on, and that's keeping it contained.
You know. When people take their shoes off, then it's like,
(51:20):
oh God, it smells like feet in here we are.
I mean when people wear Colonne or perfume, there's a
lot of smells y'all wear that. You're like, God, God,
some of them can't be overpowering, Oh show or definitely
too much because you can't smell it. So you put
on enough so you can smell it, and now everybody
within three counties can smell it. If I'm sitting in
(51:42):
a booth and you walk by, I shouldn't smell your
perfumer clone, Okay, you have too much on? Okay, I
disagree with that. I think it's pleasant. Sure beats them
walking by and smelling they ass don't. I don't agree
that it is pleasant. I mean, that's of course, that's
an obvious but I don't agree that it's pleasant to you.
It's pleasant. It's a smell you think smells good. But
(52:05):
most of the time, and there's always like one distinct,
over the top male smell that men put on, and
it's just so much like yah, right, it doesn't you
don't need that much cologne. See, And that's why they
should make bacon scented colonne and perfume. Everybody loves bacon.
Everybody loves the smell of bacon. There's a small group
(52:27):
of people that don't really eat bacon, but whatever. For
the most part, everybody likes bacon. So I think you
walk around smell like bacon, you're good. Even people that
don't like bacon do like the smell of it. Right,
just saying cotton candy was ruined by strippers, right right
and vape companies, Yeah, cotton candy is a pretty great,
(52:49):
great smell. And then now if a girl wears you like, ah, girl, right,
just working to you know, get through college. Huh. Yeah,
if we're sitting there in the boot that somebody walks
by and you can smell cotton candy. You're like, that
smells good. Somebody in your party's gonna go, does it?
Does it smell good? You just have a natural trigger
(53:13):
of pulling out once right, she walks by, you just
make it rain. Doesn't help that there's some fake fish
swimming around in her heel. Right, that's where that smells
coming from. Oh, I don't even know do they sell
it by? Like, I don't even know where you get
(53:35):
cotton candy perfume. I don't know what the name of
cotton candy perfume is that distinct smell that strippers wear.
Do they tell each other? Is it in the manual?
Like how do they know to get that smell? Or
is there some study that says it's got to be
a sweet candy smelling perfume. I'm thinking that when you
(53:56):
start your first day as a dancer at a gentlemen's club,
they say, okay, here's your locker. All right, this is
kind of the house mom. She'll take care of you.
And here's your bottle of cotton candy perfume. And it's
really just left over stock from like nineteen seventy six.
(54:17):
It's just self like, they make it right. They got
you got a giant barrel of it and there they
scoopy some up and say welcome to the club. Okay,
there's a couple options. There's ones called Aqualina, pink sugar,
smells like cotton candy, caramel or caramel, vanilla and berries. Oh,
(54:41):
there's a product one called candy.
Speaker 8 (54:43):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (54:45):
Body Collogy is well known for their high end smells
cotton candy, a body spray. Okay, I didn't know that
that was like, there was a lot of them. Yeah,
and maybe it isn't the manual may They're like, listen,
I don't care what kind of perfume you wear outside
of work, but and here in this establishment, you're wearing
(55:09):
this cotton candy body spring. I don't hate it. I'm
not dogging. I think they've made the solid choice. I
think cotton candy smell is pretty universally accepted as Okay.
The only downside that I have with it, and I'm
gonna probably ruin it for a lot of you, is
that cotton candy typically has like a bubblegum connection. And
(55:33):
some of y'all like your women to dress up in
schoolgirl outfits and then bubblegum added to it makes them
dare I say younger right, No, no, that's child So
you want them to have a bubblegum smell and that
(55:54):
makes them hug That's weird that that connection exists. But
I can't imagine them using like I don't know, red
door or some other overpowering perfume. You can't have different
perfumes in there because it would just be too much,
(56:17):
of course, So yeah, it makes sense to have everybody
smell the same. Everybody's got to be rown in the
same direction with the perfume. And do they have a
thing like you know when you go to get your
car washed or the automatic it just kind of sprays
like before they hit the button they walk through and
it just kind of coats them before they leave the
locker room. That's brilliant. Or I don't know about Whereby
(56:37):
gets his haircut at the barber shop, but they have
this like they don't go like manual. They have like
a gun thing now where like they're spraying for bugs
or something, right, kind of like those cooling mysteries you
get at Rocklahoma. Yeah, but it's got Colonne in it. Yeah,
it's weird. It is weird. It's almost too much for me.
But if they had something like that that would make
(57:00):
makes sense. I don't know why the idea we see
all we see these shows on like HBO. Uh when
when they did the the Prostitutes on the Corner Taxi
Cab Confessions Bunny Ranch, Why don't we get the the
locker room story. Yeah, that'd be fantastic. It's just a
(57:22):
show of life in that locker room.
Speaker 9 (57:24):
Yeah, behind the scenes of what you don't see the
real lives, Yeah, of Tulsa strippers or wherever. Right, we
just starting Tulsa.
Speaker 1 (57:32):
Yeah, and we never see them go on stage. You
see them at their like maybe human beings. Maybe every
now and again they should flash like a scene of
them dancing just kind of entice people to continue watching,
because just watching them in the locker rooms not fun. No,
hear me out. You need to see a nipple, dude, here,
hear me out, b roll right of them when they're
(57:54):
like seeing transitions or whatever, because there is conflicts and
things like that that happen. Yeah, in the backstage area
of a gentleman's club. But then you would definitely see
nips because they're changing and doing whatever.
Speaker 2 (58:12):
Yeah, okay, and the regulars that come in, they don't
have to be.
Speaker 1 (58:16):
No no no no no no is strictly for the dancers.
Just the backstage. Ayeah, because guys, some guys are like,
I don't want people to know, right, Like that's but
I don't want any front my vision here, lindsay, because
I don't want any front of house.
Speaker 2 (58:29):
We don't have to add, right, But what I mean
is is that they would tell the story of the
types that come in their regulars and why and what
they get from their regulars.
Speaker 1 (58:39):
Like, yeah, they get to share the whole story. But
like putting any of the people in the front of
house on no, yeah is not. Guys are like, guys
are weird like that. It's just like you'll watch porn
and they'll show the girl's face completely and then he's
got to wear some zoro mask or something like that.
Not that I need to see his face, but I'm like,
come on, you pussy. Right there, I was wearing like
(59:03):
some weird ski mask and You're like, why can't you
show your face? I don't know who he is, but
he left his mark on the wall. Wow, whole different
definition of the gay blade. All right, we got to
take a break. We'll be back. Tulsa's Morning Show is
coming right back, a big bed morning show, Tulsa's Rock Station.
Speaker 2 (59:23):
Ninety Lindsay, Good morning Corbin, and Happy twenty ninth and
holding birthday to porn star Christina Savoy. You can see
this Barbie clone in Baddie needs a daddy, free the
nipples and oil all over. She figured she is always horny,
so why not do it on camera?
Speaker 1 (59:45):
Good morning, gim Be Well, Good morning Corman. Do you
like Zach Wilde? Well, Zach Sabbath is going to be
at the Tulsa Theater in December, and sure you go
to Tulsa Theater dot com and you can buy your
tickets right now, or you can go to the website
at the rocks Kmoody dot com sign up to win
them for free. Join us in the studio right now
(01:00:06):
is Jeff Hensley of Hensley and Associate. It's good morning, Jeff.
There we are, and Jeff is here to answer. Are
your questions about Famila law, anything that has to do
with custody or guardianship or name change, any family law scenario.
He can answer those questions right now. A couple of
ways to get your questions to him. You can call
it eight three three four six O K M O D.
(01:00:26):
You can email it show at kmod dot com, or
you can text bmms and whatever that is to eight
two nine four five. This one came in last week.
It says my ex hasn't paid child support in six months?
How long before something something actually happens to him?
Speaker 6 (01:00:42):
Well, I mean that's completely up to you. And what
I mean by that is is that whenever you want
to file a contempt, we can do that. I mean, technically,
even if you're one month behind, you're now in contempt
of court, indirect contempt of court simply because you now
have failed to follow the order of the court. File
for that at any point. You don't have to wait
(01:01:02):
six months. Now, if you're having money collected through DHS,
you could wait for them to file a contempt. Although
I will tell you remember DHS is, while it's a
state entity, it doesn't have the man power it used
to have ten fifteen years ago, and so you've got
a limited number of people dealing with For example, you
know you could have one DHS attorney alone handling ten
(01:01:25):
thousand plus cases, which means getting around to filing for
something is going to be hard, time consuming and it's
something they just don't have the manpower to do. So
that's why you want to give us a call so
we can help with that. When people aren't paying, I mean,
especially when they're six months behind, that tells me they're
probably not going to pay going forward, at least not
much of anything. So please give us a call. We'd
love to help you with that.
Speaker 1 (01:01:44):
Yeah, there's no trigger system. You have to react to
it and engage with your attorney.
Speaker 6 (01:01:49):
Right and let me let me just say this for everybody, Okay,
And I'm glad you. I'm glad you said the word reactionary.
The entire legal system in the entire United States and
many many other places, it is a reactionary system. Okay.
Something has to happen before we can file and do
something about it. Okay, otherwise we're Tom Cruise and minority
Report and pre cogs and all that garbage, and that
(01:02:11):
just doesn't that's not real life and that's not how
it works. So you know, again it's reactionary.
Speaker 1 (01:02:15):
Jeff and from Hinsley Associates is here and he's here
to answer your question. You can text bmms and whatever
that is to eight two nine four five. You can
email show at kmod dot com or you can call
at eight through three four six, Oh, KMOD. Vince is
on the line. Hi, Vince, how are you great?
Speaker 8 (01:02:31):
How you doing? Sir? Good?
Speaker 1 (01:02:32):
Sir? What's your question for? Jeff Heinsley of Hinsleyan Associates.
Speaker 8 (01:02:36):
Yes, if adoption gets out of hand, did they go
into genetic testing? Seems you?
Speaker 6 (01:02:44):
Well, what do you mean when an adoption gets out
of hand? Can you give me a little more detail?
Speaker 8 (01:02:49):
Well, like it doesn't really matter, but I feel like
an orphan sometimes I'm talking to myself.
Speaker 1 (01:03:03):
Right now, right, But when it comes to the adoption
getting out of hand? What what is the question you
have for Jeff in regards to that.
Speaker 6 (01:03:12):
Yeah, I just don't understand your question. I'm sorry. Maybe
maybe asked the question again and let me try again.
I'm sorry.
Speaker 8 (01:03:17):
Sometimes i feel like I'm on the run.
Speaker 6 (01:03:21):
From what.
Speaker 8 (01:03:24):
Well, uh, I just have I'm in a trust system
and I'm on SSI and F the FBI and and
Charles benefit checks.
Speaker 1 (01:03:39):
Yeah, yeah, it sounds like you're dealing with kind of
a different issue. I'm gonna put you on the whole
GIMBI is gonna get your info.
Speaker 6 (01:03:49):
Okay, right now, I'll give you a call later today
and we can talk more on it, because it looks
like it's going to take well to discuss.
Speaker 1 (01:03:54):
Yeah, Star is waiting.
Speaker 8 (01:03:56):
Star.
Speaker 1 (01:03:56):
What's your question for? Jeff Hensley of Hensley and Associates.
Speaker 10 (01:04:00):
Hi, My question is, I was married to one gentleman
with whom I believed, who told me that our marriage
was annulled. We'll come to find out I married somebody
else in the future. And then I got served divorce
papers from the other gentlemen and that marriage was never annulled.
So my question is, is my second marriage even valid
(01:04:20):
because I was technically married to two people at once.
Speaker 6 (01:04:23):
Technically it's not valid. You're gonna have to do that
divorce first and get rid of the first guy, and
then you'll have to technically get remarried if you want
to make things as cope assetic as possible. And this
is I'm glad you call it because a lot of
people they always listen to the other side and they'll say, hey,
this is done, and we find out that it's not done,
(01:04:45):
and so I'm sorry you're going through that was done
here in Oklahoma? Or is that another state.
Speaker 10 (01:04:51):
Well, the first marriage was done here in Oklahoma. I
don't want to be married to the second person anymore anyway.
So if it's a nol and boyd, that's actually wonderful news.
But I had already married the second person in Arkansas,
and then I got served divorce papers from the other
gentleman after that done.
Speaker 6 (01:05:09):
Yeah, so if you were married during the time of
the other marriage, then your second marriage is considered null
and void because it is not. It was not allowed
under the law simply because you were already married. So
you're off the hook on both of them. It sounds like,
so go enjoy life.
Speaker 1 (01:05:23):
Is there anything she has to do?
Speaker 8 (01:05:25):
No?
Speaker 6 (01:05:25):
No, I mean there's really nothing. I mean there's not
really anything marriage. I mean there's not really anything. I mean,
your divorce decree from your first marriage is going to
show that you're essentially that the divorce happened during the
marriage to the second individual, which under law makes it
automatically null and void. To me, you don't go filing
something saying that this is null and void. It just
it just is, so to speak. So you know that
(01:05:48):
that's kind of how that is. Yeah, So you know, again,
you know, go have a celebratory breakfast and enjoy, enjoy
my mosta or something.
Speaker 1 (01:05:56):
I want to ask you a quick questions. I want
to ask you a quick question. You said that you
your first marriage you thought was annulled. How long were
you with that individual in a marriage capacity before you
decided to get an annulment.
Speaker 10 (01:06:10):
It was about four and a half months. And then
we separated and he sent me what turned out to
be fake annulment documents. And then fast forward to three
years later, I just got married to someone else, and
then I got served divorced papers from him because I
guess he needed them to get remarried because he had
given me fake papers.
Speaker 8 (01:06:29):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (01:06:29):
See, and annulments. Everybody thinks it's about time, and it's
not about time. It's about proving fraud or deceit. I mean,
when you get something annulled, you're saying that there was
a fraud or a deceit of some sort that wouldld
require the marriage to be terminated because it was you know,
not real, or it was made up, or you know,
someone presented something and said it what you know said
was true and it wasn't. Those kind of things. It's
(01:06:50):
not about time. A lot of people think it's about time,
and it's really not.
Speaker 8 (01:06:54):
Now.
Speaker 2 (01:06:54):
She said that she changed her name after she got married.
Speaker 6 (01:06:57):
She'll have to get you'll have to get your name changed.
I mean that. That's the thing is, if you've done
a name change, then you will have to get a
name change done. But you know we if you give
us a call, if you live here in Oklahoma, we
can help you with that for sure. So if you
give your name.
Speaker 10 (01:07:09):
A number, I'll definitely do that.
Speaker 6 (01:07:11):
Yeah, give your name a number to gamping. I'll call
you and we'll get a time set up to talk
about that.
Speaker 1 (01:07:14):
All right, start hang on the line, so gim we
can get that from you.
Speaker 6 (01:07:17):
Name changes are like the one thing that you can't
really control much of because that at that point they're
on all your legal documents. You know, you're on your
you know, your Social Security card, your driver's license, all
this stuff. We can get that change though.
Speaker 1 (01:07:29):
All right. Brian is on hold. Brian, what's your question
for Jeff Hensley of Hensley and Associates.
Speaker 7 (01:07:34):
Oh, yes, I have a case. It's been carrying it
on for a long time with child support. The child
support itself is already paid for and it's a non
tent of case because she never received any kind of
assistance and they have me on back interest.
Speaker 6 (01:07:55):
Yeah, okay, what can I do for that? Nothing? I mean,
here's the thing saying. The only person has the right
to waive any interest owed is the person that the
money is owed to. So if you've got it and
this is yeah, absolutely, the person who's receiving that interest okay,
(01:08:17):
from the order the lady on the person on the
other side, all right, they have the right to write
to DHS and say I hereby wave any and all
interests owed to me by so and so. All right,
Now most people don't do that, but it does happen. So,
you know, do you talk to the I assume it's
the lady. Do you talk to the mom and at all?
Or you guys hate each other or haven't talked or what.
Speaker 7 (01:08:40):
No, my son is thirty two years thirty three years
old and I haven't seen him since he was six.
Speaker 6 (01:08:48):
Yeah, so the chances of getting the interest wave are
pretty slim at this point. The only person has the
right to do that is her, And if she's not
going to do it, or you can't get a hold
of her to do it, then they're going to keep
taking money from your check until that entire bill is paid.
Speaker 7 (01:09:05):
Okay, right, they've done to.
Speaker 1 (01:09:07):
Brian, have a question, do you still owe money?
Speaker 6 (01:09:11):
Not only child's forty silk, but don't just he's paying
off the interest, just the interest. And it's a common story.
I mean, this is one of the reasons that they
change the interest rate from ten percent down to two percent,
because nobody was ever beating the interest ever, especially when
you're working out. You've got these small amounts that you know,
two three hundred bucks a month or whatever, and those
are not even beating the interest rate on the tent
(01:09:32):
on the ten percent that you were paying. So this
is one of the reasons they dumped it down to
two percent. But even then, you still got thousands of
people that owe tons and tons and they literally spend
the rest of their lives paying it off until they
die unless they get a big, you know, loan or
something and pay it off. How much do you owe
an interest?
Speaker 7 (01:09:51):
I think it's right around fifteen thou right now.
Speaker 6 (01:09:54):
And how much are you paying per month? But fifty Yeah,
you're never gonna beat that. You're gonna have to up
that amount to get that fifteen thousand gone.
Speaker 1 (01:10:04):
Man.
Speaker 6 (01:10:04):
I mean, it's just you're never going to beat the
interest on.
Speaker 1 (01:10:07):
Her, and he has no recourll Like, there's nothing you
can do.
Speaker 6 (01:10:09):
I mean, the law is the law on that issue. Again.
The only person that can wave that fifteen thousand is
the mom. And if you've not heard from her in
thirty years then or almost thirty years, then you know
the chances of her waving at her slim. But you know,
if you can find her and reach out and ask her,
she may very well not care about it and wave it.
Speaker 7 (01:10:29):
Yeah. About ten years ago I had actually offered her
ten thousand dollars cash and she turned it down. But
Rada actually they said that. She said she told DHS
that I'd never paid any child sport whatsoever. But I
paid it every month religiously and I kept all my receipts.
(01:10:52):
But then my house burnt and.
Speaker 6 (01:10:55):
You lost your proof. Yes, yeah, I'm so sorry.
Speaker 7 (01:10:58):
And as soon it's my as soon as my house
bart She went to DAHS to say, well, he's never
paid to die.
Speaker 6 (01:11:05):
Mus be a special circle of hell for people like that. Awful.
Speaker 1 (01:11:08):
I don't know anything about her. I don't think she's
going to write a letter on your behalf.
Speaker 6 (01:11:11):
No, I don't think so. I don't think so.
Speaker 1 (01:11:13):
Yeah, all right, Brian, thanks so much man, Good luck brother.
Speaker 6 (01:11:15):
It's very common, and it's very common for people to
get these situations where you know the other side, you
ask them to do something and they don't, and then
of course they come in and say, well, he or
she never paid me to child support even though they've
got receipts, and then stuff like this happens. So you know,
I guess, I guess. For today's world, just remember to
put everything in the cloud.
Speaker 1 (01:11:36):
Rich is on Rich. What's your question for Jeff Hensley
of Hensley and Associates.
Speaker 11 (01:11:41):
Listen, anybody, So I got a DUI in twenty eighteen
and it's an aggravated misdemeanor. Okay, I've got my CDL
now and I'm wanting to see if I can get
it off of my record.
Speaker 6 (01:11:54):
Yeah, we should be able to get that expunge. If
you give your name and your number to Gimpie. I
will have my paralegal who specializes enough for or she's
the one that handles all of them. Give you a
call and we'll get that going for you. So give
your name a number to get Pea and we'll give
you a holler.
Speaker 1 (01:12:06):
All right, hanging them a lot? Is there anything, What
is the reason that you feel confident you can get
it exposed?
Speaker 6 (01:12:12):
Well, I mean, most misdemeanors you can get you can
get expunged. It's when you get into felonies that you
start having issues on that, depending upon what it is
and how long ago it's been and and all that stuff.
Speaker 1 (01:12:22):
So because usually hear the word expunge, that feels like
I'm giant hill you have to climb.
Speaker 6 (01:12:26):
It can be at times, you know, but again, uh,
there are recourses for that. And if you've got any
ever got any questions about any charges where they can
be expused or not, give us a call at Hinsley
and Associates and we can help you with that.
Speaker 1 (01:12:37):
All right, Houston's on. He's got a question about child support.
Go ahead, Houston. You'r hom with Jeff Hensley of Hensley
and Associates.
Speaker 12 (01:12:44):
Hey, Jeff, I was wondering if I get some advice here.
I'm gonna be marrying my girlfriend. She has a child
from a previous relationship. They ever never married, but she
has not gone after child support. And he's thirteen years old.
Speaker 6 (01:13:02):
Now, Okay, so she is wondering. You're wondering if she
can go for child support.
Speaker 7 (01:13:07):
Now, yes, yes, I think you get married.
Speaker 6 (01:13:11):
Well, you can do it before marriage or after marriage.
It doesn't matter. Getting married doesn't negate the fact that
the person because when you get married, that kid is
still not yours. I mean, I don't want you to
think that just because you get married the kid automatically
becomes yours. That's not how it works. So in the
state of Oklahoma, when you get married, that becomes your
step child. And unless you adopt that child, the child
(01:13:33):
is just your stepchild. Now, with that being said, she
can go for child support in any point. And luckily,
what will happen is is, even though the kid's thirteen
years old, if there was no existing order before, we
can get an order in place. Plus it'll go back
two years, all right, it'll include interest and all that
unpaid stuff, and we can get that taken care for her.
So you know, if you give your name number to
(01:13:55):
get p I can give you a call and we
can get that set up for her.
Speaker 1 (01:14:00):
Appreciate that, all right, Hang on the line, Jeffy. We
get a lot of calls this way, and I'm curious
if it happens inbound for you guys too. Of people
calling on behalf of another person, absolutely, it takes. In
a lot of instance, people are nervous to call an attorney.
They think it puts them on the hook automatically, and
I want you to dispel how that works.
Speaker 6 (01:14:19):
I mean, it doesn't put you on the hook automatically.
It's just you seeking out information. I mean a lot
of times what we have is we have what I'm
gonna call grandparents calling on behalf of their adult children
because their adult children at work or something like that
and can't get off. You know, they've got those kind
of jobs that don't give more than ten minutes break
for lunch, all day long kind of thing whatever. So
we get a lot of those calls. You know, you
(01:14:40):
don't have to be afraid about calling an attorney again,
it doesn't put you on the hook for anything. You're
just trying to get information and we're happening. That's why
we do the fifteen minute free consultations for all CAMO
D listeners, is because we want to be able to
reach out and help people answer their questions, help them
get that maybe that misinformation dispelled, and so we can
help you right.
Speaker 1 (01:14:59):
Do rely on your friends or Google as the response
on what you should.
Speaker 6 (01:15:03):
Do right despite the fact that there is AI and
Google now, don't listen to it. It's just not always correct.
Speaker 1 (01:15:10):
Jeff is here from Hinsley and Associates is here to
answer your questions about anything has to do with family law, guardianship, adoption,
name changes, divorce, of course, custody. He can answer those questions,
but you've got to contact us with that information. A
couple of ways to do that eight through three, four six, Oh, KMOD.
You can email show at kmod dot com or you
(01:15:31):
can text BMMS and whatever your question is to eight
two nine four five. So this is it true that
moms always get custody unless they're totally unfit asking as
a dad who's trying to stay involved.
Speaker 6 (01:15:43):
No, that's not true. So the law in Oklahoma right now,
when you're talking about a divorce, right, judges have to
start at joint custody in halftime. Okay, that's just where
they have to start understatute. In case law, that's where
they have to start. So the fact the old nineteen
fifties idea of mom always gets custody sole custody and
dad gets every other weekend. That doesn't exist, not anymore.
(01:16:05):
They did. They actually made laws about this, okay, So
the judges have to follow that statute in that law set, Okay,
that applies to divorces. Now in paternities, they came out
and said that the judges do not have to follow
that for paternities. But I will tell you in my practice,
that's where most judges start in paternities these days. So
you know the main thing is staying involved and not
(01:16:27):
letting her do everything and expecting her to take care
of all the issues and all that. You know, you
want to be an involved individual and an involved parent,
whether your mom or dad. Okay, the roles are reversed.
But at the same time again you know that just
doesn't exist anymore. Okay, those nineteen fifteen mentalities I've gone away.
(01:16:47):
Even in the smaller counties, we're seeing younger judges come
in because the old ones are retiring, and so we're
seeing an ideal change because they're following the law and
starting with you know what the law requires, which is great.
Speaker 1 (01:16:59):
Jeff frim Minsley to see it says with us you
can call us at eight three three four six O
KMOD text BMMS and whatever your question is to eight
two nine four five, or you can email show at
kmod dot com. This says we're not married, we've been
together eight years and have two kids. What rights do
I have? Zero?
Speaker 6 (01:17:17):
Unfortunately, that's just the law. I means, since November first
of twenty eleven, the law on Oklahom has been that
if you have a child at a wedlock, all right,
and you're a dad, you have zero rights. Mom's got
sole custody until you file something in the court of law.
So that's just the way Oklahoma is. And we've been
living like that for almost fourteen years now. And you
know that's why if you're in a attorney situation, if
(01:17:39):
you're a dad, give.
Speaker 1 (01:17:40):
Us a call.
Speaker 6 (01:17:40):
We'd love to help you, you know, assert your rights
there and to get what you deserve. I mean, that's
they're not saying that you can't have it. They're just
saying that's what the law is until you actually file
something to do about it.
Speaker 1 (01:17:52):
We initially, when we started doing this, there was this
thing about dad's rights, and it feels like that is
a go to thing. You hear dad say when things
don't go their way, meaning I guess, well, there's no
dad's rights. It's not because I'm a.
Speaker 6 (01:18:07):
Dad, right, I mean, the law is the law. And
I have said this a lot since we've been doing this.
If you don't like the laws, contact your legislator. You
have state congres you have state representatives, you've got state senators.
All right, contact them. They have offices in their home districts.
(01:18:27):
They have phone numbers, they have email addresses, they have
all those things. They have staff you can talk to.
I mean, if you don't like a law. Again, they
don't listen to us. All right, attorneys And understand remember
that there are less than one percent of attorneys in
the entire legislature in Oklahoma. Okay, so most people are
not a lawyers that deal with stuff on a daily basis.
These are, you know, regular people doing other things. So
(01:18:50):
with that being said, if you don't like a law,
call your legislator. They can help you change that. But
that's the way it's been for dads since you know,
almost fourteen years now, and it can make things difficult,
it can make things frustrating, and that's why you want
to give us a call so we can help you
with that frustration.
Speaker 1 (01:19:05):
All right, Last two here landon is on Land And
what's your question for Jeff Hensley of Hensley and Associates.
Speaker 13 (01:19:11):
Yeah, So I have a divorce case with my most
recent ex wife. I have two believe it or not.
So she has been claiming some sort of abuse in
my household and she's been trying to keep my three
year old away from me. And most recently we tried
to schedule pickup and everything, and she told me she
wasn't gonna be there for pickuper her advisory. So that
(01:19:37):
all happened. I had the police show up. She still
refused to lect them let me take her. So I
filed for a motion to force visitation. I guess that's
the only thing I can do without legal representation in
Oklahoma pro se.
Speaker 6 (01:19:56):
That's the only thing any of anybody can. I mean,
when you're denied visitation, you file emotion to enforce that
visitation and it has to be heard within ten days
under oakemal law. That's true for whether you're an attorney
or not an attorney. So what about DHS or what's
going on with DHS?
Speaker 13 (01:20:10):
So I guess she called DHS and is trying to
say we're abusing her somehow, physically or emotionally. I'm not
really sure. And DHS wants to come to my house now, yeah,
which is fine. I'm just wondering what my next steps
are if she decides to refuse this order too well.
Speaker 6 (01:20:29):
I mean, the thing is is, first of all, you
want representation, So give your name in Armerdigampi. When we're
done talking, i'll give you holler and we'll talk about.
Speaker 1 (01:20:35):
You explain that part to him because I can only
imagine he's going pro say because he says he's got
two divorces going on. But like, explain why it's important
in this situation to make sure you have.
Speaker 6 (01:20:46):
You're dealing with DHS, and you're dealing with these allegations
and all these other things. You want someone who knows
the ins and outs of the laws, what the judges
will rule, and how they're supposed to rule case law,
all that kind of stuff. And that's what we do.
I mean, at my offices, we've got to combine almost
eighty years of experience at people's disposal because we do
this day in and day out. So you know, it's
one of these things that when you're dealing with DHS,
(01:21:07):
first of all, let them in your house, you kiss
their feet, you say yes, ma'am, no, ma'am, yes, sir, no, sir.
And the reason I phrase it that way is because
if you make their life, if you're rude to them
and cause problems, they will mike your life a living hell. Okay,
they really truly will. So I always tell people, you
want to be compliant, all right, you want it to
(01:21:28):
answer their questions. You don't want to be rude, you
don't want to be defensive. You just want to tell
them the truth and answer their questions honestly and be polite.
So you know, if she denies another order again, there's contempt,
citations to file, there's motions to modify. I mean, you've
got all sorts of options should something be dealt with.
You know, she decided to violate an order. What county
(01:21:49):
is all this happening in?
Speaker 7 (01:21:52):
Oh?
Speaker 13 (01:21:52):
That's Locus Grove, Oklahoma?
Speaker 10 (01:21:54):
For you.
Speaker 13 (01:21:54):
I'm lost signals. So I've heard everything you've said thus far.
I thank you for letting me on.
Speaker 1 (01:22:00):
All right, all right, good luck with everything. I know
what the problem is. Let's go ahead and go to
this next one. Joe Lynn is on Jillian, go ahead.
Speaker 14 (01:22:10):
He's an adult child and shortly after both his father
was child support and was so old to the child
sport and child support in person agency. Right, but we
never really care anything. I can think about the child
supports an adult.
Speaker 6 (01:22:31):
Yeah, well, first of all, how old is the child?
Now he's twenty eight, we can file to enforce the
back support, all right. Just understand. One of the arguments
that somebody might try to argue against it if he
hires an attorney is to say, well, she waited ten
(01:22:51):
years to try and collect this child support. There's something
called equitable estoppel, and that's just a fancy word that means,
you know, the person asked looking for something should be
stopped from getting what they're asking for because equity says
you waited too long, you had all this time. And
it really just depends on the judge and the county
or what county do you live in, or what county
(01:23:12):
would we be filing the child support in so smaller
counties a little more.
Speaker 14 (01:23:18):
I'm sorry, Okay, it's not to say so it was
nineteenth because that's when he graduated, so I.
Speaker 6 (01:23:25):
Mean it's still nine years. But no, if you give
your name number to gimpee, we can definitely look at it.
Smaller counties and more compliant with getting back support on
these issues as opposed to some of the bigger counties.
But yeah, give your name a number to gimpy. Let's
I'll call you and we'll talk and we'll figure out
a game plan.
Speaker 1 (01:23:40):
Okay, all right, hang on the line. Make sure you
guys call Jeff and talk to him. You can definitely
do pro say it's within your rights, but you will
get probably steamrolled. You will get lost quickly. And you
want to make sure you owe to yourself and to
whoever you're fighting for, whether it's custody or adoption or
just your own name. To make sure you've got legal
representation in the family law courts with the folks from
(01:24:02):
Hensley Associates and you can call them get a free
consultation over the phone three nine eight five six nine
three nine eight five six nine two for hensleyan Associates.
If you find yourself in other areas of the law
and need help, Jeff and the folks at Hensley and
Associates can help with.
Speaker 6 (01:24:16):
That absolutely so through our office in pa Huska, Okay,
we can help with anything in addition to in addition
to Famiel so if you've got a criminal issue, doesn't
matter what county it's in. If you've got you know, probate,
wills and trust, if you need a prenup drafted, if
you have a contract issue, if you've got a piece
of land that needs to be sold or bought, we
(01:24:37):
can help you with all that kind of stuff up
there in Pahusca. Now, the name of the firm up
there is the Shoemake Law Firm. Yes it is a
different name, but it is our firm. We just left
it because it's been there since the nineteen seventies and
everyone knows it up there. Now. Storm came through last
week in Pahuska and rip the roof off our building,
completely destroyed the inside of the building. We're having to
(01:24:57):
start from the stud take it down to the studs
and start over. But we have moved across the street,
literally one hundred and fifty feet across the street, to
a new office. It is open, it is booming, and
everybody is there working. And so give Sam Allison a
call up there again. We're just across the street from
our building. We've been in for at least six months
until they get ours fixed. But Sam can give you.
(01:25:19):
Sam and Penny are the two people up there. They
can help you with any issue you've got. In addition
to family.
Speaker 1 (01:25:23):
Lawn six nine two for Hensling Associates mentioned KMOD get
that free consultation of the phone nine one, eight, three,
five six Jeff, have a great week, Hey too, Thanks,
we'll be back. The big Man Morning Show returns next
Elsa's Morning Show ninety KMOD