Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
All right, welcome back everybody. Yeah, it is the Woody Show,
Roland right along here on this Tuesday morning, we welcome
in our official tech corresponding here on The Woody Show,
Rich DeMuro. He's a tech reporter. He hosts a Rich
on Tech radio show on radio stations across the country.
You can subscribe to Rich's free newsletter at rich on
Tech dot tv. You can find him on social media.
(00:26):
He posts a lot of stuff there at rich on Tech,
things that you should know about. And he's KTLA's tech reporter,
Rich Demurro Rich on Tech Go morning.
Speaker 2 (00:34):
Rich, thanks for having me back.
Speaker 1 (00:38):
As as always now we try to do the it's
always ironic that for the Tech segment that we try
to do a better dial in situation right, uh, you
know where we can we can get like where it
sounds like Rich would be like in the studio with us,
and it always goes back to the phone. Is the
only thing that works? Ye'd be done? Isn't that weird?
Four times for the.
Speaker 2 (00:56):
Tech Yeah figured out one day is when we first
started doing this, we had it perfect and it never works.
Speaker 1 (01:03):
We did, we know, that's just the tech gods. Well,
what we like about Rich's coverage of tech. It's not
like super geeky. You don't have to be like. This
is consumer tech, as we call it, so stuff that
we can actually use. And I think one thing I
want to start with because a lot of people were
talking about it. You know that I heard over the
weekend hanging out with all these other radio people, and
a lot of people seem to be paying attention to
Instagram's new map feature for the privacy aspect, what can
(01:26):
he tell us about that?
Speaker 3 (01:26):
Rich people are freaking out.
Speaker 2 (01:28):
So Instagram came up with this new map that shows
you where your friends are, and people started freaking out
because they were showing up on the map, even though
Instagram said this is an opt in feature, so they're
not sharing your location by default. But when people saw
themselves and their friends on the map, they said, wait
a second, why am I showing up here? You know,
Instagram is sort of this public private place, right. We
(01:49):
use it with our close friends, but we also use
it for a bunch of random people to see. And
so I think that's why this feature is really tricky
for the average person to use, because you're never really
sure what you're sharing when you're on Instagram, so it's
better to kind of like leave this off. For most people,
i'd say.
Speaker 4 (02:05):
Well, I don't even understand what's exciting about this feature
as a user, Like what what do I eaven care
right now? Like that's what Grinder's for, you know, Hey,
what what.
Speaker 1 (02:15):
Could the purpose be?
Speaker 2 (02:16):
Yeah, okay, I'll give you my use case because I
love this idea. So I travel to a bunch of
different cities all the time. I've got friends everywhere around
the world, people I've met, you know, over the you know,
twenty years I've been reporting, and so I would love
to land in a city and say, oh, yeah, Jim
lives in Tampa. Let me you know, I see him
on the map. Let me go have a drink with
Jim and hang out and catch up. This happened to
(02:38):
me when I was in Seattle a couple of months ago.
I tagged my location somehow or I posted a picture,
and an old friend happened to be in Seattle at
the same time, and he, you know, rang me up
and he said, hey, let's let's catch up. And we
ended up having drinks for like hours, and we talked
for hours on end, something that never would have happened.
Speaker 1 (02:57):
But rich, if he saw social media. Sure, but I'm saying,
like he sees that you're posting from Seattle, yeah, and
oh you're there, he hits you up. But like, why
would it be important for him to be able to
see you on a map in real time? In real time?
Like that's that's the part I guess I don't understand
because you already have that ability with your phone. Uh
you know, friends or family, your kids or where they like,
(03:17):
you can see exactly where they are at any given time. Like,
why would you just want that in general activated for
your Instagram? I I don't know, but it's important. You
just go into your settings, you go to Instagram and
then you you'll see it says, uh what whatever whatever
that it's right, it's right at the bottom. So I
just I just looked at it the other day. Hold
on allow location or I'm just making sure I have it. Yeah,
(03:41):
it says right allow tracking.
Speaker 3 (03:44):
And somebody put on Instagram. Rest in peace, Ted Bundy,
you would have loved this new Instagram feature.
Speaker 1 (03:51):
We're talking to Rich on Tech at rich on Tech
on social media. What else do you have for us
this week?
Speaker 2 (03:56):
Rich? Let's see, Oh my gosh, you gotta you got
to pour one out for AOL. This is you know,
they're they're ending their dial up internet service, which I
can't believe people were still using after all these years.
The wild thing about this what a run I mean,
I know that we've all, you know, at some point
in our lives used this and you know, you know,
(04:17):
remember that you dial up on the Internet and then whatever.
Speaker 1 (04:20):
God forbid, somebody else in the house pick up the
line and the knock you off runing.
Speaker 2 (04:25):
Remember when they didn't have enough lines, Like you would
dial in and it would be like a busy signal.
I mean, we went, we went. We take so much
for granted now with our internet and always on and
this and that, but like there was a time when
internet was very like on demand, Like you you sat
down at your computer, you waited for it to connect.
So anyway, I just thought it was interesting that they're
shutting down their dial up service completely on September thirtieth.
(04:48):
If you have email with AOL or anything like that,
I know a lot of family members might have that
that will still continue to work. But they're retiring the
standard dial up service, which I guess people were still
using even in twenty twenty.
Speaker 4 (05:02):
Yeahs. So my theory on this is what killed it
is starlink because the people that were using remote dial
up still were people that were in remote areas and
didn't really have access to it. I think like about
like five years ago, they were still pulling in like
twenty eight million dollars a year off of dial up.
But now everyone has Starlinks And then Rich, did you
(05:24):
see that Amazon's going to come out with their own
version of starlink.
Speaker 2 (05:27):
Yeah, They've got Project Kiper, which I think they just
launched some new satellites today. They're they're hoping to have
that up and running for the public by the end
of the year, they say, and they say it's going
to be cheaper than Starlink and faster.
Speaker 3 (05:40):
Damn.
Speaker 2 (05:41):
So I am I love Hey, look, I love this
competition between Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos. You know, they
both have those penis looking spaceships. So now they've got
the yeah, the satellite service to compete with that as well.
Speaker 1 (05:54):
They say that on the radio or sure, I'm on
this show. You certainly if you were talking to you know,
one of our other friends. I'm not. I'm not quite
sure when it comes to the Starlink. I have the
Starlink Mini and I think it's cool. Man Like, it
works really well. I've just I haven't used it any
like official application, but I've like taken at random places
just to see how well work. Oh what happens if
I just set it up here?
Speaker 4 (06:14):
Yeah it's great?
Speaker 1 (06:15):
Now, how big is that one?
Speaker 4 (06:16):
Because the Amazon thing that I saw it looks almost
the size of a coffee cup, right, Rich or coffee cup?
Speaker 1 (06:21):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (06:22):
Pretty small? Really?
Speaker 2 (06:23):
Yeah, Amazon's going to have three sizes. I saw them
at CES this year, and yeah, the smallest one is
smaller than the Starlink Mini. Apparently I haven't compared them
both side by side, but yeah, they're basically Amazon's just
advertising this slowly but surely, saying we're going to be better
than starlink. But here's the deal. They got to launch
a lot more satellite to compete with starlink because the
(06:45):
whole name of this game is that in the old days,
we've always had satellite internet, but it was like one
or two satellites, you know, in the sky. Because starlink
is putting so many satellites up there, that's what makes
the signal better and faster and more reachable quickly. And
so Amazon has to do the same thing and get
all those satellites up there. It's only about our time.
(07:05):
So they crash, one of them crashes into each other.
Speaker 1 (07:08):
That the Starlink Mini is about the size of laptop,
you know, it's it's it's pretty small. Okay, it's pretty small.
And then I'm also getting Starlink for the house. They're
installing an effect tomorrow.
Speaker 2 (07:21):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (07:22):
Yeah, Well, because I figet like I have everything else.
I have everything else where. I'm kind of off the grid,
you know, like I have solar which power up. I
have Tesla. They call them power walls, like the whole
house batteries. I have all that stuff. Now, all that
stuff has been great. Like the power in my house
has not gone out. I can't remember the last time
at all, not even for a blip. But what does
(07:42):
go down if the powers out in the neighborhood is
the internet, because the substation down the street, the powers,
all that crap that goes out. Now it's like I
will always have Internet, my security and my phone, like
you know, any kind of communication. All that stuff will
always work. It's prepper behavior and I love it behavior.
Speaker 2 (08:00):
For it.
Speaker 1 (08:00):
Yeah. Anyway, So there's that awesome.
Speaker 2 (08:02):
I love it.
Speaker 1 (08:03):
Let's talk about some discounts something everybody I'm sure can appreciate.
There is a website that helps you find the biggest
discounts on all kinds of things, including men's your favorite
gift cards. Whoah, yeah, what is that?
Speaker 2 (08:15):
So I got into this over the weekend with my kid.
We were ordering Jersey mics of all things, and I said,
you know what, I wonder if there's a way to
like buy a discounted gift card and use that to
pay at checkout. And so I found this website called
cardcash dot com. Card go on there and they card
cash dot com. They list all the different gift cards
(08:35):
that they have. Basically, the idea is that let's say
you get a gift card from your grandma right for
one hundred bucks to this place that you never go to,
and you're like, huh, I'd rather have seventy five dollars
cash right now in my pocket, and I'll sell that
gift card to this place. So they buy the gift
card from you, they Paypalue the money, and then they
resell that gift card still at a discount, so someone
(08:57):
can buy it for less than that one hundred dollars
face value you and they make some money as well.
So everyone wins in this situation. And I used it
twice over the weekend. I did Jersey Mikes and I
did door Dash. Jersey Mikes was a much bigger discount,
was almost like twenty percent off door Dash, so I
only saved like five bucks, but still it was more
like proof of concept. Yeah, and it works. The only
(09:18):
thing is you have to be aware of make sure
if you're buying discounted gift cards online that it's from
a reputable site.
Speaker 4 (09:24):
They also have kiosks for this kind of like where
you go to sell your cell phones, they have them
for gift cards. They're not everywhere, they're super rare, but
if you want to be, you know, more comfortable going
to a physical location, you can do it.
Speaker 1 (09:38):
Yeah, speaking of discounts and getting everything figured out, you know,
football scenes is about to begin. I've seen you rich
You've been on your Instagram at rich on Tech talking
about you're trying to get the whole NFL Sunday ticket
thing figured out? Did you did you figure that out?
Did you get signed up?
Speaker 3 (09:52):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (09:53):
I did good, I did. I ended up buying it
through a Verizon for two hundred and seventy six dollars,
which you know typically it runs about four eighty. So
if you're this is this is what's wild. If you're
a returning customer, you have to pay four hundred and
eighty dollars. New customers get it for two eighty.
Speaker 1 (10:12):
I say, it makes so unfairly. I've been loyal to you,
so screw me.
Speaker 2 (10:17):
They know you're not going anywhere, understand that. Yeah, okay,
but the best deal out there, so you can. If
you're a best Buy member like my best Buy Plus,
you can get it for two fifty eight, which is
pretty good. That's good YouTube. If you're a student, you
get it for one nineteen. That is the best price
out there. The other thing is military first responders, nurses, teachers,
and medical providers can get it for one ninety eight
(10:40):
through the website I d dot me if you're already verified.
I didn't do that even though my wife is a teacher,
because they wanted her social Security number and I said, no,
I'm not giving that to some random website on the
extra seventy eight bucks.
Speaker 1 (10:53):
Yeah, the NFL Sunday take it like one of the
big misconceptions that you have to subscribe to YouTube TV
in order to get it because it is a YouTube product.
Now they bought the rights to NFL Sunday Ticket. That
is not true. You could just buy it buy itself,
and just access it through your YouTube app on your television.
Speaker 2 (11:11):
All right. Yeah, so you guys a great point.
Speaker 1 (11:13):
Yeah, you don't have to sign up for YouTube television
if you don't want it. You can be perfectly happy
with whatever else you got. You could just sign up
for NFL Sunday Ticket completely on its own, and then
you just access it by signing in to your YouTube
app on your TV.
Speaker 2 (11:28):
Good to know. Yeah, they add like an NFL premium
channel on your YouTube app and you just go there
and all the games. You're right there.
Speaker 1 (11:35):
We're talking to you rich on Tech and you can
find them on social media at rich on Tech. You
subscribe to his free newsletter at richontech dot tv. Just
go there, all right, So Rich gadget of the week.
Speaker 2 (11:50):
Let me tell you about the Asus Chromebook CX fifteen.
I know it's back to school. People are looking for
a simple way for their kids to connect to the internet.
If you do most of your stuff online like through
a web browser. A chromebook is a super cheap and
easy way of doing it. And the best part is
it doesn't get any viruses or malware. That's the main
(12:10):
advantage of a chromebook. Yeah, and the software is always
up to date. You don't have to do these like
massive you know, Windows updates every week or so. This
chromebook specifically is typically two hundred and twenty dollars. It's
on sale right now for one hundred and sixty. I've
been testing it. It's got a big screen, it's got
all the ports you need, and it's great. I mean
(12:32):
for a basic computer you just want to go online
and check your email and watch videos.
Speaker 1 (12:37):
Kids make what they need for school.
Speaker 3 (12:38):
That's amazing.
Speaker 2 (12:39):
Exactly one hundred and sixty bucks Walmart dot com.
Speaker 1 (12:42):
I think, yea sixty bucks. And then you I saw
you on TV talking about the new Beats Pill bluetooth speaker.
Speaker 2 (12:49):
Yeah. I was very impressed with this speaker. I brought
it on my recent vacation and I didn't know what
to expect. I didn't even look at the price tag
because I figured it was super expensive. Well, no, no,
I don't like to look at the price tag on
certain items until after I test them because I want
to be surprised, like, oh, is this a good value
or not? Okay, And so for this one, I couldn't
(13:11):
believe the sound off of this thing. It sounds incredible.
I mean it's Beats, it's water and sweat resistance, so
you can bring it by the pool. It's got up
to twenty four hours of battery life. I don't think
I charged this thing all week when I was on vacation.
You can also use it as a speaker phone as well.
It sounds really good. It's called the Beats Pill. It
just came out in blue and pink, and it's only
(13:32):
one hundred bucks on sale right now, which incredible if
you use Apple stuff, this is a really nice compliment.
Even though it works with Apple and Android, it just
works very nicely with the iPhone as well.
Speaker 1 (13:43):
All right, well, check it out the new Beats Pill
Bluetooth speaker just ninety nine bucks, and then the super
cheap Chromebok one hundred and sixty bucks. Could back to
school living there, Rich DeMuro rich on Tech everybody, Yeah again,
check out the rich on Tech radio show. You can
find it on the I hard Radio app and also
where you find a podcasts, you can subscribe to his
(14:04):
free newsletter. Just go to Rich on Tech dot tv
at rich on Tech. On social media, check him out
KTLA entertainment reporter and official tech correspondent of The Woodie Show.
Rich thank you very much for your time. We appreciate
as always talking to you.
Speaker 2 (14:18):
Thanks for having me.
Speaker 1 (14:19):
All right, there he goes, there's a there's Rich everybody,
you're Rich wood Show. All right, Well, we were talking
about this guy and he's wanted for murder. He's a
(14:39):
a guy who's working as a handyman and then stabbed
the people he was working with. He had already been
in prison and for decades. Yeah, and then you know,
but Greg saying, but ladies, before you go judging, he's
six to you, guys about one and nine.
Speaker 3 (14:58):
All right, you make it a solid.
Speaker 4 (15:00):
He can't take care of you, but he looks get
in pictures.
Speaker 1 (15:02):
Yeah he might stab you. Yeah, yeah, totally Megat, I'm
gonna bring Morgan in on this one. Gina, Sammy and
any of the ladies listening to the show this morning,
this morning, right now, this is an agree or disagree
(15:23):
Why women are attracted to chaos? The truth behind the
bad boy obsession. Why do so many women lose interest
in good men and gravitate toward bad boys? Now, this
woman's name is Karen Sites. She runs something called the
Happy Wife School. Oh, and she's not a doctor of
any kind. She's not a therapist, she's not a doctor.
(15:46):
She just runs this thing online called the Happy Wife School.
And she's not like one of these little lipstick bimbo
types or whatever. She looks like. She would be a therapist,
like the stereotypical kind of therapist looking. And it keeps
popping up online. Let's see if you agree again for
the ladies, do you agree or disagree with what she says?
Speaker 5 (16:06):
In general, good men are steady and consistent and predictable.
It's why as women we think you're boring. As women
in general, we like chaos and drama and disruption of routine.
That's what makes us feel alive and engaged in life,
because we want to do what we want to do.
Structure holds us accountable, and we don't want accountability. So
we want to do what we want to do when
(16:27):
we want to do it and thrive on that instability
because again, it makes us feel engaged in alive, ergo
why we are attracted to bad boys because they're chaotic
and we think that's exciting and it adds drama and
passion to our lives.
Speaker 1 (16:43):
Agree or disagree, ladies, text over to two two nine
eight seven.
Speaker 3 (16:47):
Yeah, she's not wrong.
Speaker 1 (16:48):
Yeah that's very accurate.
Speaker 6 (16:49):
I totally agree.
Speaker 3 (16:50):
And I think it's an age thing at least for
most of us. Like I one hundred percent get it.
I was in relationships with all these yahoos and now
I'm like, eh, yeah, and you.
Speaker 1 (16:59):
Grow out of it. You grow out at what point
does that happen? So what you're saying is is so
what you're saying is that is true for most women
up until what age you mature.
Speaker 3 (17:09):
I mean it's different for everything. I say, it is
different for everyone.
Speaker 7 (17:13):
I agree because I think that girls are chaos too,
and we want someone more chaotic than us so that
we don't feel like we're the chaos. So it has
to do with your own maturity as you become less
chaotic as a person as well.
Speaker 3 (17:27):
And it's ironic because you're trying to show everyone how
together you are comparatively from this umpire.
Speaker 1 (17:33):
Because I know it's it. It's a thing that people,
oh nice, guys finished last, right, but there seems to
be something to that because people get dumped for being
quote too nice or he want nice guys. Right.
Speaker 6 (17:45):
Well, I'm at the point of my life where I'm
kind of debating in my head will I ever grow
out of wanting a bad guy?
Speaker 1 (17:51):
I think I just like Cabo a bad guy. Are
you still what's not?
Speaker 2 (17:54):
Yes? We are?
Speaker 1 (17:55):
Okay, I got to keep asking.
Speaker 6 (17:56):
But he's really really not like the nicest guy I've
ever messed because never talked about it. But I'm I
think I'm just I think I'm this way forever. Like
what age do you change, Gina, because I don't think
I'll ever mature.
Speaker 2 (18:08):
Out of that.
Speaker 3 (18:09):
Oh honey, I didn't get married until I was in
my forties.
Speaker 4 (18:12):
Okay, So yeah again, like they said, I think it's
different for everybody.
Speaker 5 (18:17):
Thanks Greg.
Speaker 4 (18:19):
It's like how much how much you can handle, you know,
until you're just over it.
Speaker 6 (18:23):
But I'm also not looking for like a partner for life,
you know. I truly like just think that I'll be
by myself, which I choose, and I want that. So
I don't think you know, I'm looking.
Speaker 3 (18:34):
The same settle down, I said the same Okay, Okay, Yeah.
Speaker 1 (18:38):
It's not a rebellion, it's biology behavior and a need
for pasture. That's according to Karen Sites.
Speaker 3 (18:43):
I think she's right.
Speaker 6 (18:44):
Yeah, yeah, she's definitely right.
Speaker 1 (18:47):
So when you were in that phase, no names obviously,
but like the guy that you went for, like what
made him the craziest or the like, the the most chaotic?
Speaker 3 (19:00):
Uh well, I dated two alcoholics back to back and
I'm not a drinker, and one of them is super
genius smart and was just constantly crapping on everybody around him.
Does that so not like anyone. But the sad thing
was I was so young and immature. I was like, well,
he's really mean to everyone and he's so smart, but
(19:21):
he chose me, so I must be special and just
put up with all.
Speaker 1 (19:25):
His crap is part of it. The fixing thing absolutely
items to even if they're gay, the like I can
turn them. How many offers have you had, Greg? I
mean we hear, we hear from those women all the time.
Just think they can flip, Greg, You can keep trying until.
Speaker 3 (19:46):
I finally matured and I was like, I don't want
this anymore. This is no this is me putting my
life on exhausting exhaustinated, and I until I realized I'm
putting my life on hold to join somebody else's chaos.
I'm wasting my time.
Speaker 4 (19:57):
My question, though, is like at the point where he
reach okay, I'm just over it. Are you settling though?
Speaker 3 (20:04):
Absolutely not. I was settling for these idiots that I
was going for and wasting my life.
Speaker 1 (20:09):
But that's that exciting. So what you have now is
not necessarily exciting.
Speaker 3 (20:12):
No, but it's yeah, and we choose our excitement together.
It's not thrust upon me by a crazy part.
Speaker 1 (20:18):
It's thrust upon you. Okay, it's always thrust upon you.
It's just usually the way that works, usually a thing,
and then it's thrust upon him.
Speaker 3 (20:27):
No, it's always thrust upon it.
Speaker 1 (20:28):
I think you're right.
Speaker 2 (20:28):
It's probably an age thing, because why would you want
chaos and drama as an adult?
Speaker 3 (20:33):
You don't because life is like that anyway. You need
your anchor, You need somebody who's stable, and that's what's
so much more fun.
Speaker 4 (20:41):
Some love talking on the phone with their friends because
there's some.
Speaker 3 (20:44):
New drama and they've never matured there.
Speaker 1 (20:47):
Mine lived in his car and relies on me for everything,
but still had the audacity to cheat on me, dude.
Imagine that. Wow, my god. Another one says there's no
mystery here. Nice guys just aren't as good looking as
bad guys. Bad guys are bad because they know they're
good looking and get away with treating women like crap.
Mystery solved. She's kind of like that bad guy look Yeah,
(21:11):
like scruffy, kind.
Speaker 3 (21:11):
Of Yeah, I like scruffy. That's why I made my track.
I made Sammy God, I made my husband. I wouldn't
let him shave for our wedding because I like the
scruffy beer. And he was like, everyone's gonna think I'm
such an ahole. I was like, I like it.
Speaker 1 (21:26):
Sammy and Gina always have the dumbest opinions. They definitely
don't represent most women. That therapist is describing a certain
type of woman definitely can't be applied to all women.
Well nothing, nothing, It's applied to all. It wasn't it
wasn't about all, But.
Speaker 3 (21:39):
Just talking about me doesn't count.
Speaker 1 (21:42):
Just in general. That's why. In general, that's why I'm
asking the ladies who are listen now, if you're just
tuning in, off, I'll play it one more time and
then again you can text your agree or disagree over
to two to ninety seven.
Speaker 2 (21:53):
Again.
Speaker 1 (21:54):
This woman is name Karen Sites. She runs something called
the Happy Wife School. And why women are attracted to chaos?
The truth behind the bad boy obsession and why do
so many women lose interest in good men and gravitate
toward the bad boys?
Speaker 5 (22:09):
In general? Good men are steady and consistent and predictable.
It's why as women we think you're boring. As women
in general, we like chaos and drama and disruption of routine.
That's what makes us feel alive and engaged in life
because we want to do what we want to do.
Structure holds us accountable, and we don't want accountability. So
we want to do what we want to do when
(22:30):
we want to do it, and thrive on that instability
because again, it makes us feel engaged in a life. Ergo,
why we are attracted to bad boys because they're chaotic
and we think that's exciting and it adds drama and
passion to our lives.
Speaker 1 (22:45):
It's a ladies a text Just text agree or disagree
over to two two nine eight seven, so you show
returns right after these messages.
Speaker 2 (22:54):
This is.
Speaker 1 (22:58):
As bad like a plea plea plea please. All right, ladies,
we asked you agree or disagree with this?
Speaker 5 (23:03):
In general, good men are steady and consistent and predictable.
It's why as women we think you're boring. As women
in general, we like chaos and drama and disruption of routine.
That's what makes us feel alive and engaged in life,
because we want to do what we want to do.
Structure holds us accountable, and we don't want accountability. So
we want to do what we want to do when
(23:24):
we want to do it, and thrive on that instability
because again, it makes us feel engaged in alive. Ergo
why we are attracted to bad boys because they're chaotic
and we think that's exciting.
Speaker 1 (23:36):
Yeah, so agree or disagree is mixed on the text.
We asked ladies for your take on that. In Gina
and Sammy and Morgan all tolls what they thought. Oh please,
Samy and Gina are exactly right. When you are young,
you look and thrive on the chaos. It's definitely an
age thing. If not, those women are just immature idiots
who like the drama. I think that sounds right. Women
(23:59):
make no sense, will choose a bad boy over a
good boy, but also choose to be alone in the
woods with a wild bear than any guy. You have
to think they're the smart ones. Yeah there, Hey, what
a show. I was always the nicest guy until I
was twenty four, got tired of rejection and started to
be an a hole with ladies. It was a one
(24:20):
and eighty degree change. I was getting laid with an
average of three different chicks a week, and that lastly
about three or four years. Just good jerk, nic run.
Yeah you had a good run, you know. Let's see
this one. I disagree. I think that women are attracted
to bad boys are attracted to immature men because most
bad boys act like children. I think it's more maternal
(24:41):
than anything. Oh, there are a lot of good guys
out there that are masculine men and that women are
attracted to. They're attracted to masculine men, and bad boys
give the appearance of being masculine, but their mental capacity
is not there. I have to disagree with that woman, right,
all right, So just some random.
Speaker 3 (24:58):
Thoughts on itally gets people think.
Speaker 1 (25:00):
Game on the text over two two ninety seven give
us a call eight seven seven forty four Woody the
Woody Show will be right back. That's all I needed
to year