Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's a very special guest.
Speaker 2 (00:01):
Today is a National rubbert Ducky Day.
Speaker 3 (00:03):
What sound does a duck meat?
Speaker 4 (00:05):
I have all my ducks in a row, squeaky clean
like the rubber duck.
Speaker 5 (00:09):
National rubber Ducky Day today.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
Go on give him a squeeze.
Speaker 3 (00:13):
Come on we radys dot the show you ready to
do this involve a rubber ducky?
Speaker 6 (00:16):
No, no, wait, sort of seriously, Oh only if you
bring your rubber ducky has showtime.
Speaker 7 (00:22):
In this present crisis.
Speaker 3 (00:25):
Government is not the solution to our problem. Government is
the problem.
Speaker 1 (00:32):
This is Charlotte County Speaks.
Speaker 8 (00:34):
Your chance to let your voice be heard on local, state,
in national issues and now broadcasting live from a dumpy
little warehouse behind a taco bell, the host of Charlotte
County speaks, Ken love Joy, Thank.
Speaker 3 (00:50):
You, Johnny News Radio fifteen eighty one hundred point nine FM,
WCCF Radio dot Com. Charlie County speaks on the air,
Ken Lovejoy with you at ten oh eight. Phone lines
are open for whatever you wish to discuss at nine
four one two zero six fifteen eighty toll free eight
(01:10):
eight eight four four one fifteen eighty. You can email
us the address. CEC speaks at live dot com.
Speaker 7 (01:17):
Miss the show.
Speaker 3 (01:18):
Find them all at our homepage WCCF radio dot com.
Scroll down to the podcast section.
Speaker 7 (01:23):
Uh yeah, good to see.
Speaker 3 (01:26):
Good to see that you've and it looks like they
all showed up from the clip I just saw. Well
the top of the hour news, over five hundred veterans,
a whole bunch of former Navy Seals, Green Berets, various
branch service members are all up there in DC supporting
(01:47):
Pete heggsas Hegsath's nomination for Defense Sector.
Speaker 2 (01:53):
I love, I.
Speaker 7 (01:54):
Love to hear that top of the air news.
Speaker 3 (01:56):
Well, some people are going to be focusing on his
alcohol abuse and an allegedly you know, of course, the
rumors of abusing women. Everything again the projection from the left,
it's pretty rich. You're gonna talk to me about alcohol, really,
senator really, you want to go down that road. You're
(02:18):
gonna talk to me about abusing women? Senator really? Again,
he's gonna be your defense secretary. I'm loving it because
we need somebody with some nads to take charge and
get our military back in line and fire the wokies.
(02:48):
How about you want to bet we get a whole
bunch of really good officers who maybe got processed out
because of the JAB wanting to come back and we
can replace a lot of those wokies with them all
for that. And that ugly dude with the long hair
(03:10):
in the dress. I don't know if what was that army?
Speaker 7 (03:14):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (03:15):
Yeah bye two six fifteen eighty toll free eight eight
eight four four one fifteen eighty.
Speaker 7 (03:31):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (03:32):
Okay, so what do we got? What's this deal in Venezuela.
I mean, we all know Maduro is just a complete
freak show, but this was kind of under the radar.
I've all I've read a couple of stories. I haven't
seen any follow ups. This came out last week. Uh,
(03:55):
Maduro down there in Venezuela is claiming that one of
the American citizens that his regime took hostage recently on
allegations of being a mercenary is a quote senior FB
high official working to topple his regime. Really, how about
(04:16):
a name and a picture. Venezuelan forces recently arrested two
yet to be publicly identified American nationals, described by the
dictator on Tuesday as quote important American mercenaries, alongside two
Colombians and three Ukrainian men. The group of seven foreigners.
(04:39):
What is this bey of pigs?
Speaker 7 (04:40):
Two?
Speaker 3 (04:41):
The group of seven foreigners stands accused of allegedly being
part of a mercenary group seeking to generate violence in
the country ahead of Friday, January tenth, the date Maduro
is slated to be inaugurated for a third illegitimately obtained
six year presidential term. On Wednesday evening, Maduro, during an
(05:02):
official event with members of the regime controlled National Assembly,
claimed that one of the two detained Americans is a
quote senior FBI official, while the other is a quote
high ranking military official. Nothing yet, I mean, we don't.
Speaker 7 (05:20):
Know this is a coup d'etat.
Speaker 3 (05:27):
You know that one hundred and twenty five foreign mercenaries
of twenty five nationalities have been captured, Maduro said. Yesterday
three Ukrainian mercenaries were captured. They come from the war.
Two Americans were captured, one a senior FBI official, the
other a senior military official. Two Colombian hitmen were captured
in two different places, and they confess to what they
(05:49):
came for. And in the course of yesterday, in the
early hours of this morning, the captures have continued, because
one chain leads to another, Maduro said, one piece of
information leads to another. There is good information to dismantle
what we are dismantling, a foreign mercenary aggression financed by
the outgoing government of the United States. Well, Maduro, you
(06:14):
actually kind of deserved to have that happen to you. Nonetheless,
it would not surprise me. That's what he's saying is true.
I mean, come on, we're talking about Biden in the
FBI just saying they they're never able to find the terrorists,
(06:35):
but they're always able to facilitate them. So I guess
we'll have to h no comment from anybody on our
side of the aisle other than a denial by a
state department spokesworson, So we'll have to wait and see
on that one. Interesting though, huh yeah, maybe no, it
(06:56):
is something else.
Speaker 1 (06:57):
The worst thing that could happen to a show like
this is that it would ever become predictable.
Speaker 3 (07:01):
I think we're going to have a real hunding, hilarious,
witty and inspired, very great show.
Speaker 4 (07:07):
We'll be right back with Charlotte County Speaks News Radio
fifteen eighty WCCF.
Speaker 6 (07:14):
Oh, let the politics begin it's confirmation week. We got
thirteen appointees facing hearings this week. Pete hegset Secretary Defense,
Doug Bergham, Secretary of the Interior, Doug Collins, Veteran Affairs,
Marco Rubio.
Speaker 1 (07:33):
Ah John Ratcliff Christin.
Speaker 3 (07:36):
No, I'm listen.
Speaker 5 (07:38):
I go all through this thirteen this past week, and
there's going to be fireworks, no doubt about it. The
one that I think is going to draw the most
attention is Pete Hegseth. There is opposition on both the
left and right for Pete, and some of the points
that are made by people on the right aren't exactly wrong. Again,
(08:04):
We're going to see h how this works. We're going
to see whether or not Trump is going to stick
by his guy. Let's say a lot of politics this
week Watchdog on Wall Street dot com.
Speaker 9 (09:10):
Getting close to midnight, some call which an hour I
could not say that I'm hauted but feel uneasy.
Speaker 7 (09:36):
Got a dime.
Speaker 10 (09:46):
Like a cold wind blowing through me.
Speaker 9 (09:51):
Go from a killer's bad. Won't let it me, try
to move it, push it out, Sam all for me back.
Speaker 7 (10:22):
Then come see seeds of down.
Speaker 10 (10:28):
Like a missed drifting down the side there's a cool
wind blowing through me.
Speaker 2 (10:45):
Gos from a can of bass.
Speaker 9 (10:48):
Won't let me be.
Speaker 3 (11:01):
News Radio fifteen eighty one hundred point nine FM, WCCF
ten twenty three Tuesday, hegg Seth confirmation hearings underway in
the Senate. Already several interruptions from whining, whiny little leftists
(11:24):
out in the hallway that are going to whine and
bitch because they can't get their way. Well again, once again,
you lost.
Speaker 7 (11:33):
So get nothing, you lose. Good day, Sir.
Speaker 3 (11:40):
Twoh six, fifteen eighty toll free eight eight eight four
four one fifteen eighty Over to Sunday. It's conservative tree house.
And a commenter asks a pretty good question here, makes
a pretty good point two. As these Senate confirmation processes begin,
(12:07):
Lion Tiger Bear commented, quote, If I understand this correctly,
the Senate Intel Committee will only approve Trump's nominee for
office of the Director of National Intelligence if she Tulsey
agrees to support an unconstitutional provision that permits the government
that none of US trust, to illegally surveil American citizens
(12:31):
without a warrant, but a provision that also makes an
exception for members of Congress or their staff who presumably
value their privacy and don't want to be illegally surveiled. Meanwhile,
President Biden is preparing to issue a blanket pardon of
all the bad actors who illegally surveiled, wiretapped, sued, imprisoned,
(12:54):
and tried to assassinate his political enemies so that no
one can legally surveil Why tap, sue, or imprison them
and they get off scott free? Do I have that right?
Speaker 4 (13:07):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (13:10):
You are CORRECTSA. Additionally, the discussion of Joe Biden's pardons,
both meetered and predicted, outlines the ideological mindset behind those
who believe that they rule over us, because if you
step back and look at it, none of the FISA
(13:30):
justifications align with any reality at all and make any
sense at all. The PISA system is a designated secret
court system that is said to only pertain to foreign nationals.
All right, So, if we accept the premise foreign nationals
don't have US constitutional protection, so why does the surveillance
(13:53):
and intercept of them require a secret US court that
nobody see, seems to oversee, or hold accountable for their
screw ups. In reality, the secret courts are needed because
it's not foreign nationals that need to be navigated in
the surveillance system. It's the American citizenry engagement within that
(14:16):
surveillance that requires a different legal approach. Why should an
American citizen suddenly have their constitutional protections switched from US
federal court to US federal piza courts the secret Court
simply because their contact, perhaps inadvertent, skims up against a
foreign national. The constitutional protection the Fourth Amendment should not
(14:39):
be arbitrary. Depending on your contact, A regular federal court
judge can decide on the issue of a Title I
warrant that can be filed under seal if the exploration
of the contact is a genuine concern. There's no need
for a secret court for either foreign nationals or US citizens.
The former don't have constitutional protections, and the latter should
(15:02):
not lose their constitutional protection under arbitrary determinations of US
government officials. That's the entire predicate that underpins the Fourth Amendment.
So why is the issue of seven oh two so
important for them? Why is the phis coat so important
to the deep State? Well, it's got nothing to do
(15:23):
with the future, not the past. The justification for the
phisis seven oh two warrantless searching of American metadata is
a cornerstone for the enlargement of the surveillance state that
they want to build, ball and teer anybody. The flawed
preset behind seven oh two specifically is the gateway needed
(15:44):
to expand the system real id digital IDAI used in
facial recognition systems, and the larger issue of track and
trace capability of US citizen data connecting your physical identity
to a digital fingerprint that requires some legal justification to
create a surveillance network. Despite the Fourth Amendment, FISA seven
(16:06):
oh two's a proverbial camel's nose under the tent of privacy.
If we were to abolish FISA seven oh two, which
we should immediately, then what legal justification would exist to
continue unsecuring the American people from their private papers and effects.
(16:27):
The buildout of the surveillance state becomes more legally tenuous,
perhaps impossible if privacy protections of the Fourth Amendment are firm.
So finding a way to surveil Americans while working around
the constitutional protections in place to stop it is why
phisas seven oh two issue has become more important for
(16:47):
those who are building the surveillance system under the guise
of national security, challenge the legal justifications for FISA seven
oh two, and you throw a massive wrench in the
machinery of a growing surveillance state. So that's what we
need to do, because there is no legal justification for
(17:09):
FIZIS seven oh two, none at all, none zero. If
you're securing your papers and effects, you can't be forced
to show your papers. But right now, the monitoring system
designed is being done so that they can get the
answers to your identity without even having to ask you
(17:31):
to show your papers, which is unconstitutional. You drive through
the metaphorical checkpoint because the system automatically recognizes your identity.
That's said to be a legal workaround. However, what happens
at the checkpoint, bank, atm machine, employment verification, port of entry,
or even voting booth when government identifies you for whatever
(17:55):
arbitrary reason they construct as a quote politically exposed person.
So don't think Congress is stupid about this. They know
exactly what's going on. They understand just how dangerous this is.
That's why in the last PHISIS seven oh two reauthorization,
Congress literally wrote into the renewal that federal representatives cannot
(18:17):
be subjected to the fisas seven oh two rules surveillance
of you, but not for me, because I'm special.
Speaker 1 (18:28):
You elected me.
Speaker 3 (18:30):
Ha, you screwed up. All members of Congress must be
notified in advance if their private metadata is going to
be reviewed by the FBI, DOJ or any of the
other thousands of people with access to the NSA full
spectrum database library. They exempted themselves and secured their Fourth
(18:52):
Amendment protections exclusively for themselves, but not for you or me.
That's the change in the law that they all agreed
to during the debate of the renewal. However, we the
people are not granted this same notification or protection from
weaponized access. Expanding the point in essence, Congress made themselves
(19:14):
gray walkers, individuals that can go through the checkpoints with
a database return result that permits them unimpeded travel a
special designation. Now do you see how a surveillance state
creates a tiered hierarchy of disparate power and constitutional protection.
If AI converges, converges with this total identity state, which
(19:36):
it's going to, which is what they want, pallenteer anybody,
then the automation will have designations for people of special privilege,
brutally easy to see how this system is going to
be weaponized. These people are scum, story, and they need
(20:02):
to be stopped two six fifteen eighty toll free eight
eight eight four four one fifteen eighty. Well they're dumbing
people down enough to buy into this crap, this digital crap,
which again, your whole life will be under their control,
(20:23):
and your whole life is one mouse click away from
disappearing if you piss them off. Wish you people to
wake the hell up. Well look look at this, I
mean again, the idiocracy continues. How many gen zers does
it take to change a life bulb? Now it's not
(20:47):
a joke, legitimate question. New survey. One in five people
between the ages of eighteen to twenty seven claim they
couldn't change a light bulb and would just hire someone
else to do it, specially if it was a ceiling light,
because going up the ladder could be dangerous. So is
(21:09):
this another sign of the times now that screwable light
bulbs are being phased out for LED lamps that last
ten to twenty years, No, they don't. Your LED lamp
is not going to last ten to twenty years.
Speaker 7 (21:25):
Let me know, I've had them.
Speaker 3 (21:30):
The LEDs we have in the studios burn out all
the time, particularly when we kick over to the generator
on Wednesday for an hour. So sorry, they're not any better. Actually,
the LEDs suck for internal light. Just saying it's too bright.
(21:51):
You almost feel like you're being questioned. But anyway, it
could just be laziness that these gens don't know how
to change a light bulb. The report found that gen
zs are spending more than fifteen hundred dollars a year
on average calling in pros to do basic jobs that
they can do themselves. Wow, five times what boomers spend
(22:16):
on stuff like that. Idiots. It just isn't changing light
bulbs either. The survey also found that a lot of
gen Zers don't know how to do basic car maintenance,
even cleaning it. Oh yeah, I've seen I've seen that,
or hanging picture frames. Some didn't even recognize common tools
like a wrench. Oh and you're relying on Social Security. Yeah,
(22:47):
well good luck with that. Two l six fifteen eighty
toll free eight eight eight four four one fifteen eighty
twenty twenty five. We have Lakes Superior States State College,
Lake Superior State's annual Banished Words list is out. This
(23:07):
is it comes out once a year, annual words and
phrases that they would like to banish from our vocabulary.
I guess it came out a couple of weeks ago,
but just making the rounds Now it's the forty ninth
year that they've done it, and here's the ten words
and terms that they want us to ditch in twenty
(23:28):
twenty five. Cringe. It's overused, so saying cringe, can, I guess,
seem kind of cringey? Now you're okay with dumping cringe.
I don't use the cringe that much. Here's one so
I'm okay with it.
Speaker 1 (23:46):
Eagle, let it go.
Speaker 3 (23:46):
I don't really say it that much. I would, I
don't other than right now. Here's one that yes, I
actually chastised somebody the other day for using this phrase.
Game changer, stop it stop it overused?
Speaker 7 (24:08):
Era era?
Speaker 3 (24:12):
Why what's wrong with that? Word's been around a long time?
Era used to describe a new phase of your life.
I guess, oh, Taylor Swift, oh era?
Speaker 1 (24:22):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (24:23):
Okay, so yeah we can. I don't need to say
that dropped like hey, my new album just dropped. They
think words like released or introduced should make a comeback, okay, right.
Speaker 7 (24:41):
On the text or on the social media post.
Speaker 3 (24:44):
You post something and then you put the iykyk if
you know, you know, irritating, nonsensical, forced stop it. Sorry,
not sorry, sorry, not sorry. They say it's a half
hearted apology masquerading as bold honesty. Just say what you mean. Yeah,
(25:07):
you could just say I'm not going to apologize. I
don't think I did anything wrong. But if you're Canadian,
you know, sorry not sorry.
Speaker 11 (25:16):
Uh.
Speaker 7 (25:17):
Here's one I've never heard of. Why do I have
to end it?
Speaker 3 (25:20):
It sounds kind of fun? Ski bitty I've never heard of.
I've never heard the ski bitty. It's fun to say.
Why do I have to stop saying ski bitty? Even
Jen Alpha can't agree on it. Oh that's why you
don't know what it means. It can mean cool, bad, dumb,
or it can mean nothing. It's just a filler world.
Ski bitty sounds like that would be cool.
Speaker 7 (25:40):
So I'll tell you what.
Speaker 3 (25:41):
I'm just finding the word ski bitty here today. I
kind of like skibitty. It's fun.
Speaker 1 (25:46):
Huh.
Speaker 3 (25:47):
You want to have fun, don't you? You want to
have fun, don't you uh, ski Bitty, it's gonna be cool.
Ski Bitty will be cool. From now on on this show,
we will utilize the word skiddy, which is another word
that we're supposed to stop saying.
Speaker 7 (26:04):
Utilize.
Speaker 3 (26:05):
Yes, they say stop stop trying to sound smart, Really utilize.
You're trying to set what you So if I say
the word what, I'm racist. If I'm trying to sound smart,
just say use Why. I will utilize the word utilize
any time I deem it necessary to utilize it.
Speaker 7 (26:27):
This is a global conflict.
Speaker 3 (26:29):
There's a lot of people working very hard to make
this happen. Like being on your shirts.
Speaker 4 (26:33):
We'll be right back with Charlotte County Speaks on news
radio fifteen eighty WCCF.
Speaker 1 (26:40):
I have a great job, man, I get to drink
at work. How cool is that?
Speaker 11 (26:44):
Not a lot of jobs you can drink at work. Well,
unless you're a pilot or a tanker captain. Those guys
hit start you guys. Read about those airline pilots that
we're getting loaded and landing people in the wrong city.
Speaker 1 (26:54):
I don't have a joke for that. I just think
it's funny. Consume up in the cockpit, put them down.
Speaker 3 (27:00):
Evening then go to Rock and roll Hall of Fame.
Speaker 9 (27:03):
Bro, I.
Speaker 11 (27:05):
Understand how you get drunk and you crash a plane
or you wreckond barge. Always makes me laugh when these
guys get loaded and crash a train.
Speaker 1 (27:13):
It's on rails. There's one lever up front. Faster slower,
faster slower. What happened? I went like that, wyman.
Speaker 2 (28:19):
I don't want a soul hanging around my house when
I'm not at home. Why I don't want a soul
baby hanging around my hoss when I'm not at home.
(28:52):
I don't want you to answer the door when nobody
been there.
Speaker 3 (29:02):
And you know you all alone. Bbu sounding a bit jealous.
News Radio fifteen eighty one hundred point nine FM WCCF
ten forty seven just about here on a Tuesday morning,
Charlotte County Speaks. Phone lines open nine four one two
zero six fifteen eighty, toll free eight eight eight four
four one, fifteen eighty. Another phrase that Lake Superior State
(29:29):
College wants to ban get rid of is one hundred percent,
like I agree with you, one hundred percent. It's been
overused for too many years. They say it's too late.
It's too late. They've even shortened it now it's just
one hundred. It's become an emoji. It's an emoji. You
(29:49):
can't get rid of an emoji.
Speaker 1 (29:53):
You can't.
Speaker 3 (29:55):
Just saying two six fifteen eighty toll free eight eight
eight four to four to one fifteen eighty. Cheap hobbies.
Speaker 7 (30:12):
A lot of people have them.
Speaker 3 (30:15):
A lot of people think they're getting into a cheap
hobby and then find out, Wow, this can get really, really,
really expensive. Some hobbies you can go either way. You
can just stay, you know, the cheap way, or expand
up price of eggs high people struggling with the soaring
(30:43):
costs of supposedly cheap hobbies that they picked up during
the pandemic that have not become so cheap anymore. A
list of online seemingly cheap hobbies that quickly become very
expensive to continue doing. Some popular answers. Number one woodworking.
I've never I was able to get the little shoe
(31:06):
box together in wood shop, but it's about it, somebody
joked online woodworking. Why buy something when you can make
it half as good for three times the price in
a couple of months. Horseback riding, Yeah, that can get expensive. Boating,
(31:28):
even fishing, if you can't resist upgrading that can get
really expensive. Or fish keeping you ever, particularly the exotics.
Oh man, that can get really expensive and you get
sucked into it too. I just need one more tank.
Three D printing, I would imagine that that could get
(31:51):
really expensive, depending on what you're printing and what kind
of printer. Just the printer. I know they've become cheaper.
But cycling, yeah, cycling can be expensive, but only initially.
If you take care of your bikes, you know, it's
(32:11):
not that expensive. It's expensive every once in a while,
but for the most part, Nah, you're pretty good. Get used.
A lot of people are into cycling and spend a
lot of money on a nice bike and then don't
ride it and you find it in Facebook marketplace for
half the price. That's what you want right there. Surfing
in the summer is that expensive, I guess it would be.
Speaker 4 (32:35):
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (32:36):
Snowboarding in the winter, yes, snowboarding or skiing, yeah, it
wasn't when I was growing up, I was very lucky.
He was able to ski every season. A whole bunch
was pretty cheap back then. It's pretty expensive now. Golf, yes,
can get very expensive. Crochet what crochet.
Speaker 1 (32:58):
I guess.
Speaker 3 (33:02):
When the yarn buying turns into collecting and hoarding, I
guess that would it could get expensive gardening. Well, yeah,
depending on what type of gardening you're doing. Somebody joked
the first tomato is a hundred bucks, but the second
tomato is also one hundred bucks, and there is no
third tomato. CrossFit. Yeah, I mean, you can play pay
(33:27):
that little personal trainer rent in the warehouse too much.
But then again, those tractor tires and ropes don't come cheap.
Speaker 7 (33:38):
Coffee.
Speaker 3 (33:39):
Yes, you guys spend I don't know why.
Speaker 1 (33:45):
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (33:46):
You guys spend a lot of money on coffee. It's well,
it's the Starbucks.
Speaker 7 (33:50):
I get it.
Speaker 3 (33:51):
You know, it's okay and stuff. But man, you guys
get into all the whippity do does and you just
can't drink it black. Even a black coffee from stuff
box is still relatively expensive in comparison to what you
can do yourself. Just say. Somebody also joked all of them,
every damn one, every damn hobby, because every hobby has
(34:13):
got a rabbit hole that can be very expensive to
jump down.
Speaker 7 (34:19):
I would agree with that to each his own.
Speaker 3 (34:23):
Huh. And now it's time for five random random facts.
Number one of your five random facts Greenland, the upcoming
fifty first state. You know, recent poll majority of people
(34:49):
in Greenland are okay with it too. Anyway, In Greenland,
the sun does not set for two months from the
end of May until the end of July, and in winter,
the sun sets in October and does come up again
till February, with the only natural light coming from the
moon and the Aurora borealis. Ooh, I could kind of
live with that. That'd be kind of cool. Number two.
(35:11):
Cleopatra lived closer to the debut of the iPhone than
the building of the Great Pyramid. The pyramid was finished
in the year twenty five forty BC, or so they say.
Cleopatra was born twenty four hundred and seventy one years
later in sixty nine BC, and the iPhone debuted in
(35:32):
two thousand and seven, just two thousand and seventy six
years after her birth. Yeah, that's a random fact. Number three.
The words highbrow and lowbrow come from phrenology, which is
an old pseudoscience that measured people's intelligence by the shape
of their head. People with higher brow lines were considered
(35:54):
more intelligent. Number four. Just like there's earthquakes here on Earth,
there are moonquakes on the Moon, sun quakes on the Sun,
well you kind of expect that, and Mars quakes on Mars.
That's moon quakes, not moon cakes, which very delicious Chinese
(36:15):
treat by the way. And finally, number five of your
five random facts, the first super Bowl was carried by
both CBS and NBC because of their TV contracts. No
other super Bowl has been on more than one network since.
And there's your five rand There you go, right there, kids,
(36:42):
huh all we got we gotta have a food story,
weird food update. Are you ready? Weird food breaking news.
Doritos been around since the nineteen sixties, always have been triangular.
Some people know that the Dorito's UK Instagram account had
(37:03):
an image of a squared chip and it said quote
the shape of things to come. So some people started
freaking out, thinking Dorito's may never be the same again,
what's the big deal anyway, It's still gonna look and
taste the same be a triangle. Not everyone is having
an ulcer about it. The official wheat Thins account responded,
(37:26):
square looks good on you. For the record, it's unclear
what they're promoting, but the world's not going to end,
so don't worry. Cheetos releasing a new Cheetos Puff Cheese
pizza flavor, which it says tastes just like the slice
from your favorite pizza shop. We've been able to we've
got the scientists together once they've been able to get
(37:49):
the chemicals all wrapped up to Casa sorelliste.
Speaker 1 (37:52):
Just like EO, just like a yo, a pizza.
Speaker 3 (37:55):
You know. Who know we were using it for sun
blasting Rostov's this day listill last week.
Speaker 7 (38:01):
And it got in some mouth and next thing you know,
he it tastes like a pizza.
Speaker 3 (38:08):
This Valentine's Day Brox Candy Brox It's kind of like
the uh, It's kind of like the Walmart of candy.
Right Anyway, Brox is launching a new global version of
its conversation Hearts. They're going to feature quote sentimental sayings
(38:31):
from around the world, including more than thirty expressions in
thirteen languages.
Speaker 7 (38:39):
We don't care two h six.
Speaker 3 (38:46):
Fifteen eighty toll free eight eight eight four four one
fifteen point eighty. Well, there are some good news out there.
Have you ever dreamed of winning the lottery? Who doesn't
dream of winning the lottery. Even if you don't play
the lottery, still dream about what you do if you
want it. A woman in Marylyn used five numbers that
she saw in a dream fifty thousand dollars. Small town
(39:15):
in France randomly inherited for some reason ten million dollars.
It's a town near Normandy called Teberville. A ninety one
year old guy who'd never even been there left them
ten point two million from his estate because it's where
his family name came from. His name was Roger Teberville. Well,
(39:37):
that's pretty cool. Less than eighteen hundred people live there,
and ten million is more than five times their annual budget,
so they're putting it in the bank and planning to
slowly dole it out. That's cool. We heard about these
two last summer. Five year old kid from New York, Ezra,
needed a liver transplant, and his former preschool teachers showed
(40:00):
up at his family's door last May to let them
know that she was a match. Her name's Carrissa Fisher
and she's twenty one. They're back in the news after
the hospital shared a follow up video. Surgery was a success.
They're both doing great, Carissa said, the reward of knowing
you've helped someone in need is incredibly fulfilling, and she
(40:23):
hopes it inspires more people to become for organ donors.
Speaker 7 (40:28):
Quote.
Speaker 3 (40:28):
It's a decision that can truly change lives. All it
can say to life too. So there you go, some
good news out there. It's not all craziness. It's not
all freak show leftists trying to Yeah, just causing aracus
and being escorted out of the Senate confirmation hearing of
our new Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. Oh god, these guys.
(41:01):
But again, any Republican that doesn't want Pete hag Seth,
you know, is just sucking up to their defense owners
who want to keep the grift going. In Ukraine, liberals.
Speaker 7 (41:15):
The same way.
Speaker 3 (41:16):
Other than the fact that you know, Pete isn't a gay,
transsexual or else, they'd be all in on him. That's
where we are. Good luck in God bless talk to
you tomorrow.
Speaker 7 (41:52):
Anybody got any more jokes, any funny Nope? Nope, all right,
see you folks.
Speaker 8 (41:58):
We're a news radio fifteen A D A, M W
C C F PUNDA, GORDA and F M one hundred
point nine W two sixty five e A Punda Gorda