Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:09):
hi there, this is
griff hi, this is costello happy
cancel radio guys.
Baby boomers, we are babyboomer topics boom, boom, boom,
boom, boom, boom, boom, boom,boom, boom, boom, boom, boom,
boom, boom.
We have a lot of stuff to cover.
Man, I gotta tell you our ournumber one consultant, our
number one advisor number onecritic costello's sister came up
(00:34):
with the two following things.
One don't smile enough, that's agood thing.
Two, she says we're not lookingat the camera.
So you know, we're radio guys,so we I look down and check
things we want to talk about.
So my camera, though, is likeon top of my screen, so even
(00:56):
though I may be looking at you,it may look like it's coming
down on me, you know.
Speaker 2 (01:00):
So I don't know well,
that thing, that's better,
that's better, that's too much.
That's way I feel that smilingso the only way to get it this
way.
Nice top set, by the way.
What Nice top set, thank you,is it?
Hold it?
Speaker 1 (01:18):
like this or
something, I have no way to put
it.
See, it's a clip on thing.
You clip on the date camera.
Is this making people sick?
We're running, we're running,we're hurling.
Speaker 2 (01:32):
I got the same setup
on mine.
It's somehow ugly.
That's good, right there.
Speaker 1 (01:39):
I'm having to hold it
.
Speaker 2 (01:41):
Well, as we have
discussed before, the podcast is
supposed to be audio only.
At least that was myunderstanding when we started.
People want to see stuff, youknow.
Speaker 1 (01:49):
So, again, it's a
visual thing now too.
Now, how do I put this thingback up again?
Okay, I have no idea what thehell I'm doing.
Okay, we can tell.
Speaker 2 (01:58):
Okay, camera two,
camera two.
Speaker 1 (02:00):
I suck.
What can I tell you right?
Speaker 2 (02:05):
Clip on there, man.
Now I get all screwed up.
That was pretty good there, no,Pat.
Oh, he's gone to Australia.
G'day good people.
Speaker 1 (02:12):
I'm still smiling.
Speaker 2 (02:13):
There he is this
ladies and gentlemen, of course
is the original cancelled radioguy.
Speaker 1 (02:22):
Stuff like this is
why we're cancelled.
Okay, they're going.
These guys get their frig,their freaking act together here
, okay.
Speaker 2 (02:27):
No, really
Technically, technically, how's
that?
That's good.
Speaker 1 (02:31):
I'm hands free, okay,
A little light there okay.
Speaker 2 (02:34):
Now you get the light
and you can make the light come
through.
Do you have the ring lightthere?
Speaker 1 (02:41):
How's that?
More Is it different Go blue,let me win, I'm clicking.
Speaker 2 (02:48):
Keep going.
I know you're kind of a niceorange color anyway, but right
now you're bright orange, that'sbetter.
Speaker 1 (02:56):
That's like doing
bright, I think.
Speaker 2 (03:00):
Well, it changes the
color temperature.
I'm orange.
Speaker 1 (03:05):
Oh shit.
What is this Halloween?
Speaker 2 (03:10):
Well, we'll go with
that, all right, ladies and
gentlemen, you've just got tounderstand that Chris has been
unwell recently.
Speaker 1 (03:19):
How's that?
That's not bad.
It's not bad.
Does that look orange?
Speaker 2 (03:23):
Yes.
Speaker 1 (03:24):
Well, I'm pushing the
stupid button?
Speaker 2 (03:28):
What button are you
pushing?
How about that one?
Ah, there, that's perfect.
You had it perfect for a secondthere.
Speaker 1 (03:37):
What me in the dark?
You like that, ah, ah ah.
Speaker 2 (03:42):
Now you just look
wicked.
Speaker 1 (03:44):
You've got bags under
your eyes I know I don't know
where those come from.
That's a bad light.
Speaker 2 (03:50):
That's still bad.
Speaker 1 (03:51):
It's lighting man let
me turn the botox light back on
.
Speaker 2 (03:53):
Oh crap okay, there
you go, all right that's as good
as it's gonna get.
Speaker 1 (03:58):
I don't know what
it's doing so well, I can tell
it's the.
It is the blue light, I thinkit's probably the.
The way the paint is in thewall behind me just feeds off
that and gives you that color.
So I don't know.
There's two of them justnaturally beautifully tanned.
I am Mr Melanoma, well you are.
Speaker 2 (04:13):
This is true.
You are a darkie.
Speaker 1 (04:18):
Maybe we should hit
the.
He's not really a southern boyat all.
I'm a son of the south, asouthern boy at all.
I'm a son of the south.
I'm a son of the south.
I can sound like it, but youlook at me and go.
Speaker 2 (04:27):
I'm the son of the
south and he ever let on.
He's actually Mexican.
Speaker 1 (04:32):
You look more like a
redneck than I do.
Speaker 2 (04:36):
I was thinking about
how much this place has rubbed
off on me since I've been herefor two years.
Have you not been outside?
Speaker 1 (04:41):
in a couple of months
I haven't been outside.
You're like a damn albino man.
Look at you.
You're white as can be.
Speaker 2 (04:48):
My neighbor came down
, the one who lives a couple of
houses up.
He's a young man, he's got acouple of kids and a wife and
he's been very good to me.
They helped me out when I waspoorly last year and I couldn't
be whiter.
He said have you ever beenoutside?
It was amazing.
I'm not that bad, but I shallbe going out here soon.
Speaker 1 (05:09):
You look pretty white
.
Look at me, look at you, lookat the skin tone.
Speaker 2 (05:13):
Well, yeah, european,
something that you haven't
admitted to yet.
Speaker 1 (05:21):
Yeah, I tell you,
this is your light.
I mean, I look dark, a littlebit orange, and you look.
I look Trumpy tan and you'rewhite as can be.
I guess you're getting readyfor Halloween.
You're going to be Dracula, ahah, ah, there we go.
Speaker 2 (05:35):
It's better without a
light today.
Speaker 1 (05:37):
Southern Dracula.
So you go to bite.
You have to bite to the grease,you know.
So it'd be different.
Ah yeah, to bite to the greaseyou know, so it'd be different.
Speaker 2 (05:43):
Ah yeah, fabulous,
Fabulous, you know.
Speaker 1 (05:47):
We had to cover the
good news, I guess, first.
Right, because we always talkabout stuff that sometimes is
all the best.
I mean, yesterday I thought itwas pretty cool being a Georgia
boy, president Carter having his100th birthday yesterday that's
right In the backyard.
The Jets had a flyover andstuff.
No, I did that.
His quality of life kind ofsucked, but he goes.
I don't care about the birthday, I just want to live long
(06:10):
enough to vote for Kamala Harris.
Speaker 2 (06:12):
That's what he said,
I said I hope you do, man, I
hope you do.
He can do early voting.
He's probably thinking if Ivote, then I'll die.
Speaker 1 (06:19):
So I mean we're proud
.
A lot of people think he wasn'tmaybe not the best president.
I think he gets beat up alittle bit too much over that.
Who cares?
Talk about a quality humanbeing.
I mean you can't get a betterguy than President Jimmy Carter.
The work he's done since thenyou know in the Habitat for
Humanity, trying to cure diseaseand famine all over the world,
make sure people have housing.
(06:40):
He worked at it.
Speaker 2 (06:46):
He actually did the
work for as long as he could up
to about 95, 96 years old.
Yeah, I mean, it wasn't justlip service, I mean he really
was.
Speaker 1 (06:50):
No, he got out there
and did it.
He was just a great human being, just 100 years old.
So we're happy for you, sir.
Speaker 2 (06:58):
Yeah, happy 100th.
I don't know too many get there.
Speaker 1 (07:01):
Happy belated
birthday.
I was about 15 years away fromget there.
Happy belated birthday.
Speaker 2 (07:06):
Castello's, about 15
years away from being there, so
Well as you know actually.
Speaker 1 (07:12):
I'm coming up for an
anniversary myself.
Speaker 2 (07:14):
What, what
anniversary Since we went and
started a new life, got mysecond chance, oh you're talking
about, since you had yourtriple quadruple thing thing,
bypass and semi-arterialroundabout.
Speaker 1 (07:29):
That's what's been a
slow recovery for you, because
you're down there right next toSouth Carolina.
They put probably a pig valvehere, a chicken artery there,
you know a horse doodah overhere, and it's just like you
just go, man, it's all workingtogether.
Speaker 2 (07:40):
Yeah, they put a
horse doodah down there too.
You hope they did, man thatcost me.
Speaker 1 (07:50):
I got one from the
horse.
That's why I guess you can tellthere's other good news too as
well, too.
I don't know if you watched thevice presidential debate at all
last night.
Some people thought it wasreally boring, because it was
actually because they coveredpolicies.
They were nice to each other.
There was a moment where Waltzcould have jumped on the
falsehoods that Vance was saying, and probably vice versa as
(08:11):
well too.
He missed some opportunities.
I thought he even said from thestart I'm not a great debater
he was kind of nervous, but hegot a little stronger at the end
when he zinged him about.
So are you going to admit thathe lost the election?
He wouldn't do it.
I went oh, that's what I'vebeen waiting for.
Instead of being Mr Smooth, I'mtrying to be polished, like me.
After all, jd Vance, the truepart came out at the end.
There.
He said what Mike Pencewouldn't do.
(08:33):
He said he would do and hewould not admit that they lost
the election.
I go oh man, it took 90 minutesinto it for the good stuff to
come out.
Then it was over.
So that was good, but it wascivil.
They were teaching his wife,teaching each other.
That's the way things used tobe.
That's what we want to seeagain.
Do I really think that way?
Personally, no, I think youwant to convey that niceness
(08:54):
because everyone thinks he's aweirdo and his likability, his
favorability rating is so lowand we want to keep it that way
yeah, well, I do think he's aslimy git personally.
Speaker 2 (09:05):
He just exactly yeah
slimy git uh, I thought it was.
They were very polite, it got alittle.
It was kind of a little boringreally, I mean.
But then again, but you won'thear about him once the
election's over, if we thinkboring.
Speaker 1 (09:23):
That means we want to
do the slander and the
name-calling stuff because youknow who.
It's kind of flipped it thatway.
So let's don't think that way.
We've got to think back and go.
Let's be civil, like it used tobe Professional, and disagree
with stuff, but they can stillbe nice to each other.
It's kind of like things shouldbe now.
It's like if we run into aTrumper, I'm just going to go.
Well, that's how you feel.
It makes you happy, you believein him, good for you, and still
(09:45):
be nice to the person.
As I walk away, I'll go, youstupid loser.
I'm just kidding.
Oh, I'm just putting my sister.
Hang on.
See, we're both smiling, we'reboth smiling.
Speaker 2 (10:00):
Now the problem.
I just noticed that if I lookat the camera, I can't look down
to see whether I'm looking inthe right place.
I'm now looking at the camera.
Speaker 1 (10:08):
You're supposed to be
looking at me and I'm looking
at you, that's well.
Or if we're doing the TV thing,then we're looking straight
into the camera, like that Iguess.
So if that's I'm talking to you, I guess I'll have to look up
at the camera.
I'm at the camera If I look atit, my eyeballs look down what
do I want to talk about next?
Here it goes right down there.
(10:29):
That's my eyeball doing that.
I want to keep sis happy she'sthe director and producer of
this show.
Speaker 2 (10:40):
I'll pick up in the
thing.
Speaker 1 (10:43):
Your sis is the
director and producer of this
show.
I'm going to do a hiccup in thething.
Your sister is the director ofthe show.
I'm only listening.
Speaker 2 (10:46):
I'm only listening
now, yeah is she listening, okay
?
Speaker 1 (10:50):
So anyway, it's a
debate Kind of boring Civil.
I like that.
We know the two main people,the main guys is far from civil,
never will be.
So it was kind of a nice changelast night.
It's a one and done anyways.
Speaker 2 (11:05):
It's okay, you know.
Yeah, yeah, it wasn't too bad.
I still think, you know, keepsaying it's razor thin, it's
razor thin.
You know the difference betweenthat.
And then they say, well, inthese, what do they call them
states?
There's a terminology.
They use Swing states, Swingstates or battlefield states,
Underground states.
Speaker 1 (11:22):
Swing states Must
have states Well Swing states or
battlefield states, undergroundstates Swing states, must-have
states.
Speaker 2 (11:25):
Well, that might be
the truth there, but I have a
feeling you're all going to bereally surprised to find out
that it's not that close of arace.
Speaker 1 (11:33):
I hope you're right.
I think maybe they're sayingit's a poultice-hole type.
Maybe it's not a bad thing tosay it that way because it'll
make people go out and votebecause they're going.
It's that close, I better votebecause they're going.
Is that close, I better votebecause my vote's going to count
.
Speaker 2 (11:46):
I got to get out
there and do it, so there's a
big question.
Speaker 1 (11:49):
This is why I'm going
to embarrass Costello.
I'm voting and you're not,because you still, after all
these years, are not an Americancitizen.
Speaker 2 (11:55):
That's right.
And you still have theelectoral college.
Get rid of that.
I'll vote that simple.
Speaker 1 (12:05):
Like we don't want to
.
It's never going to go away.
It's getting an early part ofthe Constitution.
It's never going to go bye-bye.
Speaker 2 (12:11):
It should.
I almost got rid of it.
Speaker 1 (12:14):
It's easy to do.
Personally, most votes wins.
That's the way it should be.
Speaker 2 (12:19):
Well, I suppose,
maybe I will.
I mean, one day I might getaround to it.
Speaker 1 (12:22):
But the most votes
will pay off because you know,
because if you win those swingstates with a popular vote, you
get the electoral votes.
I mean, it's just there you go.
You should Some states havemore electoral votes than others
.
You know, all those ones in themiddle of the country,
mid-america or Trump areas,those are small numbers of
electoral votes.
Arkansas's got three,nebraska's got three, kansas has
(12:45):
like four, then you've gotTexas like 55.
That's a big Trumpy type state.
Then you've got California.
That's common.
She's got California huge, newYork huge.
So she builds her numbersthrough that.
So we'll see, we'll see.
I hope you're right.
Everybody go vote, we'll all behappy.
At the end we're going to havea big Kristen Costello
post-election party.
Speaker 2 (13:04):
Yeah, yeah, we'll
invite everybody.
Everybody can come here toSouth Carolina.
Well, do you want nobody?
Speaker 1 (13:09):
to show up.
We'll do it here in Colorado orVegas instead.
Are you kidding me?
Oh, there you go.
Yeah, let's do it in Vegas.
We'll do it this time.
Let's do it in Vegas.
We're going to have a big andthe other person wins.
Speaker 2 (13:23):
Where do we go?
Yeah, everybody, okay,everybody moves on their own
self One way or the other.
Speaker 1 (13:30):
Yeah, I said to my
wife last night, if it just
happened to turn out becausethere's always that possibility
If the idiot wins I'm not goingto watch the news for four years
.
Last time I was so stressed outI looked at my phone, turned on
TV.
It was something he was doingevery day, something he turn on
TV, something he was doing everyday, something he was saying
every day, something he wasdefending.
I can't go through that again.
I'm just going to cut the newscycle off and just not pay
attention so I don't have todeal with whatever it is he's
(13:50):
doing, which is not going to begood.
Speaker 2 (13:52):
so it was a hit.
I remember that.
I remember that very well,Weird Al liked it, he goes.
Speaker 1 (14:00):
I like that, so I'm
only good for one song.
You keep going yeah, that'sright.
Really, barbarian is like bumbum, bum, bum bum.
I ran Bum bum, bum, bum bum youmade me do that too, so I'll
bring my song back out All rightthere's a big wobbly here.
Speaker 4 (14:24):
Bum, bum, bum, bum,
bum.
I ran Bom-Bom-Bom-Bom-I-Rin.
A country's got a feelin'really in the ceiling.
Bom-bom-bom-bom-i-rin.
Went to a mosque gonna throwsome rocks.
Tell the Ayatollah, gonna putyou in a box.
Bom-bom-bom-bom-bom-i-rin, acountry's got a feelin' really
(14:45):
in the ceiling.
Bom-bom-bom-bom-i-rin.
Speaker 1 (14:51):
Sad week for all baby
boomers.
I mean, people are droppinglike flies this week, you know.
Speaker 2 (14:58):
Yes, they are.
Speaker 1 (15:00):
Some are old and it's
okay because they had a good
long life.
Some, I think, had it earlier.
I don't know.
There's John Amos.
I love John Amos.
What a great actor he was inthat show, good Times.
He had to deal with Jimmy JJWalker, dangly mate when he left
the show.
After a couple years he goes.
I can't deal with this bastardanymore.
I had that prick on my showonce.
He thought his shit didn'tstink.
(15:22):
He was just rude.
He was awful.
He went to the show.
I said I'm not going to be niceduring the show.
You're an asshole.
I cut him off 10 seconds.
I said get off.
He was at some comedy club thatnight.
He was an asshole.
Amos is also the elder KuntaKinte in Roots.
They were in a favorite rolewhen he played Mr McDowell in
Coming to America.
(15:42):
He goes I'm not McDonald's, I'mMcDowell's.
Remember.
Speaker 2 (15:45):
Mm-hmm, I saw the
clip today.
You haven't seen that movie.
Oh yeah, it was a long time ago.
How could you?
It's a classic.
I saw it when it came out.
In fact, I watched it.
It was on reruns a couple ofmonths ago and I watched it.
Speaker 1 (16:03):
Well, john Amos died
in LA but he was here in
Colorado for a while.
He actually played.
He went to school at ColoradoState, tried to play a little
college football, tried to go tothe pros.
He got injured.
So that ended that.
And the coach of the Chiefs atthat time he was the Kansas City
Chief, he didn't have a homefor it.
Hank Stram told me he goes,you're not a football player,
son, you'd be better off in theentertainment industry.
(16:25):
And he just kind of led himthat way and off he went.
So that's pretty cool.
I think John was like 86,something like that 86, 88.
Yep, Then one you can relate towould be Maggie Smith, okay.
Oh yeah, yes, I knew it.
You bring up an English woman,oh yeah.
Speaker 5 (16:40):
She's not from the.
Speaker 1 (16:41):
I'm going to have an
English woman.
Oh yeah, oh, that's right, Isaid the English thing.
No, I know what that is.
89, classy lady, great actress.
Most people remember her beingin the Harry Potter movies, but
she did so much before that.
Speaker 2 (16:52):
Oh, a lot of stuff
before that.
Speaker 1 (16:53):
Yeah, yeah, she did
great in screen Downton Abbey,
wasn't she in that too?
Speaker 2 (17:06):
Yeah, she was the all
kinds of things on british tv
way, way back.
Speaker 1 (17:07):
I mean, obviously she
goes back to the beginning of
it pretty much.
Can you answer something for me?
Okay, why is it not calleddowntown abbey?
Why is it downton abbey?
Is that just an english way tosay downtown downton?
Speaker 2 (17:18):
we don't use the term
downtown in england.
That's first of all what use.
Well, you have a high street.
It's like you don't havedowntown London.
Speaker 1 (17:28):
Well, what's Downton
Abbey?
What does that mean?
Speaker 2 (17:31):
Well, the name of the
people who originally bought it
or had it built were probablythe Downton.
That was probably.
The last name was Downton, oh,okay.
Speaker 1 (17:40):
I said what the hell
is that I never watched it?
Speaker 2 (17:43):
Well, isn't it
spelled T-O-.
Speaker 1 (17:48):
I don't know.
I don't know.
That's a tough question, Idon't know.
Okay, let's go.
Maggie was 89.
Good long life.
Great actress, great lady.
So just like, as far as youknow, as you get baby boomers, I
said it's going to become apoint.
All these rock stars are likegoing to be in the 80s.
(18:10):
Ringo's 82.
Paul McCartney like 80.
It's just like it's inevitable.
Don't want it to happen.
Pretty soon it'll be like someof these old folks will
disappear and you won't see them.
They get too old to do anything.
You see Jack Nicholson anymore.
Nope, no.
Santa Fe, new Mexico.
Someone sent me a picture ofhim.
Jimmy Carter type.
(18:30):
Look, I'm going.
If I'm going to look like thatat 90, maybe I don't want to go
that far, but we'll see how wedo.
Yeah, yeah, we'll still bedoing this podcast at 90 years
old.
Wait a minute.
Drool, drool there'll be a handcoming in to mop the drool
you're not an athlete, but Ihave to pay a little homage to
this guy.
He's a Vegas resident.
He was all the disgraced.
(18:51):
Famous athletes die in Vegas,OJ, and now you have Pete Rose.
Speaker 2 (18:56):
Pete Rose.
Yeah, Boy, there's a lot ofthem this week, isn't?
Speaker 1 (18:59):
there.
My goodness, yeah, pete was 82,83.
The video of him just hangingout with his friends just a week
ago he's in low 80s.
I didn't know he had any health.
He died in his sleep.
He was diabetic.
He had heart issues, cardiacissues.
Oh, okay, I found him.
Pete, get up, pete, let's go.
Pete, get up.
Oh shit, he's like no.
(19:20):
So he lived in Vegas like OJ.
It's controversial, friggingawesome.
I watched him growing up I'mbeing an Atlantaves fan.
He had that hitting streakgoing for a bit, 44 games
straight with getting a hit.
He ended in Atlanta.
He's going they preach me likeit was the World Series.
We don't want you, it's our jobto get you out, man.
(19:42):
The streak ended in Atlanta.
I appreciate him as a greatbaseball player.
As a human I don't know.
I saw him one day sitting atthe Legacy Sports store in the
forum shops there outside ofcaesar's palace right, which he
did frequently.
He'd be sitting there signing abaseball, a jersey, whatever
you want.
He's sitting there by himself.
I didn't know him paying towalk by.
that's pete and you know he'slike three times a week signing
(20:04):
out.
He's got more autographs outthere than probably any athlete,
so I would say that's probablynot worth that much because
there's so many.
So I walked up and I decided Isaid hi, pete, he goes.
Are you buying a baseball orsomething?
I said no, I'm just saying hi,he goes.
Well, I'm talking to you,that's your mindset.
(20:24):
I went okay.
Speaker 3 (20:27):
Get your bag from Las
Vegas too.
Speaker 1 (20:29):
He said he had that
sports toy.
He would not even converse withyou unless you're going to
spend some money on somethingthat he could put in his pocket.
Speaker 2 (20:37):
We lost another
really cool person.
That's Chris Christopherson.
He was 88.
How cool.
He was great.
I told you that I worked on amovie with him.
It wasn't a big production butit was big enough and we had a
little banter going on way backwhen I used to do this thing
(20:58):
called what was it called?
Video assist is what I was.
I was the video assist guy,whereas I'd have a cable going
to the big film camera and itwould record it as video which
is how long ago it was, so theycould look at the shot
immediately.
So I'm sitting next to thelikes of Tim Burton just all
(21:19):
kinds of people.
But anyway, I ended up workingwith him and he was lovely.
He was an absolute gem.
Speaker 1 (21:26):
He's a great
songwriter, great actor.
He's a Rhodes Scholar.
Speaker 3 (21:31):
He gives the country
bumpkins?
Speaker 1 (21:31):
No, he's a Rhodes
scholar.
He gives the country.
Bumpkins no, he's a roadstersmart guy.
You know?
Yeah, okay, I don't know.
Anybody didn't like chrisgossard, so he was 88 years old
so he died in his place in maui,hawaii.
So, oh, hey hey, I'll be.
I'll be going there in januaryoh, you may die in your sleep,
so try to stay awake whileyou're there the whole time.
(21:52):
That's how all these people die.
They all die in their sleep.
Speaker 2 (21:58):
We can't just call it
this week.
Speaker 1 (22:01):
If I know that I'm
going to be afraid to go to
sleep, I'd like to wake up.
Sure, they did too.
So yeah, there's also anotherathlete way too young he's only
56 years old.
And he was drafted number one afew years ago by the Denver
Nuggets and he was just thegreatest guy.
He's not so much.
He's one of those guys who wasa better human than he was like
(22:24):
a basketball player, kind oflike Jimmy Carter was.
He was a better human than hewas at the present Dikembe
Mutombo.
I mean he was like oh, oh, Isee that human than it was the
president Kimbe Mutombo.
I mean he was like, oh, he'sfrom the Congo man.
He made millions.
He gave away.
Probably 90% of his money wentback into where he was from.
I mean he wanted to buildschools, athletic stuff, to take
care of the kids there.
(22:44):
He just gave and gave and gave,didn't care about it.
He said I'll just keep it upjust a little bit.
I'm going to give the rest back.
Right right, that's the way itshould be.
And today a 3D athlete gimme,gimme, gimme, pay me, pay me,
pay me, and then they share anddon't do anything to give back.
He was the ultimate give backer.
Everyone loved him.
That's cool.
It was a sad day.
(23:04):
They traded more.
He played for six to teams, youknow, because he just yeah, it
was a good bargaining chip.
He made millions and he gaveaway millions.
So only 56 years old he hadbrain cancer.
I don't think anybody knew hehad brain cancer.
That was the, I guess the onlyshock.
Only his middle 50s.
He died very young.
Speaker 2 (23:22):
Yeah, but I had a
friend die at that about
probably about the same age, Ithink there in Las Vegas.
That's a rotten way to go, butlet's not dwell on that.
Speaker 1 (23:35):
I feel like face the
case of yeah, you put an
up-tempo song there and I got todo the damn death dedication.
It's like to me how many aregone this week.
It's just like, oh, love him,oh, love him, oh, love him.
Like him as a baseball player,prick human being, but just you
know, love ball.
Speaker 2 (23:51):
Ladies and gentlemen,
it's in memoriam, with the
original Cancel.
Speaker 1 (23:56):
Radio guys.
I hope you find the appropriatemusic to play in the background
, like Casey Kasem would saydon't play a goddamn up song
when I'm doing death dedications.
Oops, I've done it again, or wecould play the jelly roll, hey.
Speaker 2 (24:16):
He's in Everything
Something about him.
He's going to be or maybe he'sjust going to be on some TV show
.
Speaker 3 (24:23):
He's everywhere.
Speaker 1 (24:24):
Yeah, I like the song
Not Okay, which is true for
those folks we talked about,because they're dead.
So not okay now.
You're not okay, you're dead.
But the two most overexposedpeople.
I think right now you can addto it if you've got someone else
, costello is freaking.
Travis Kelsey Way overexposed,way overexposed and.
Jelly Roll.
Speaker 2 (24:42):
They're freaking
everywhere, you know what the
Kelsey brothers have their owncereal, what their own cereal?
Speaker 3 (24:50):
Yeah, you know what
it's called.
Speaker 1 (24:56):
What's it called?
Speaker 2 (24:57):
Overexposed.
It's called Kelsey's Yum Yumsor something I think.
Speaker 1 (25:02):
Tired of you now Yum.
Speaker 2 (25:03):
Yums, it's probably
worth picking up a packet and
never opening it and putting itsomewhere, and one day it'll be
worth a fortune.
Speaker 1 (25:08):
It was a brand-new
cereal named after this.
Yes, they have Time out, it'sfor your sister.
Speaker 2 (25:17):
No, it's those idiots
in Texas that will not leave me
alone.
Speaker 1 (25:21):
It's your sister
break.
Get up there, castillo.
We're doing a sister break.
There we go, pay attention,we're doing a sister break.
Speaker 2 (25:27):
There we are.
We got rid of them.
Speaker 1 (25:31):
Yeah, look at the
camera and smile.
We're doing a sister break.
Get up Doing a sister break.
Speaker 2 (25:38):
Talking of sisters.
Okay, I don't know, this willprobably get me ostracized, but
it doesn't really matter.
My daughters have threehalf-sisters, okay.
Speaker 1 (25:51):
And as far as I know,
you couldn't give them a whole
sister.
Speaker 2 (25:54):
No, only a half.
Couldn't afford the other half.
Only half.
Okay, One of them, right?
I guess we'll leave itrelatively.
One of them decided to benon-binary, which means they
don't live with either male orfemale.
Speaker 1 (26:08):
Right.
Speaker 2 (26:09):
So she had a
hysterectomy.
She's under 30, which I thoughtwas ridiculous.
I'll be quite honest with you,but you didn't have a
hysterectomy, and then she had amastectomy, a double mastectomy
.
I was like, well, I would strapthem down and go through that,
but anyway, so what's left?
So then I'm reading well,nothing, you know, put some hair
(26:29):
on there, I suppose.
But here's the thing.
So I said to one of my otherdaughters oh so that means she's
going for the sex change then.
And that particular daughtergot really pissed off.
I mean, you can't say that.
And blah, blah, blah.
And I said well, okay, maybethat is stupid if they're
non-binary.
Well then, come to look atsomething on Facebook.
Her father is now calling themhim, and he Did she go get a
(27:00):
wanker?
Well, that was the question.
I mean, are you going to go dothat?
I didn't ask that.
Speaker 1 (27:07):
You've got to ask
that man.
The last thing is did she get awanker poodle?
Speaker 2 (27:13):
No, not yet.
Maybe that's Christmas, I don'tknow.
I wish her the best.
Speaker 1 (27:22):
It's called dick in a
box, okay.
Speaker 2 (27:25):
Otherwise known as a
hot dog.
But you know, what used toannoy me was when they'd be
talking, and they all did thisbecause they're all in Portland
and Seattle, so this is kind oflike the headquarters of all
this stuff.
You know, to be politicallycorrect, you have to say they or
them.
Now, if you're having aconversation with someone, they
(27:47):
or them.
So I would say, instead ofsaying Chris, I say they.
Now you're thinking there'slike four people involved.
Speaker 1 (27:53):
You're calling a
singular person, you're calling
them they.
That's like a group.
Speaker 2 (27:57):
Exactly, and them, so
that apparently is not an issue
anymore.
Now it's he.
Speaker 1 (28:04):
Maybe they got more
than one wanker.
I mean it's just, they put on adouble.
Speaker 2 (28:11):
There was a teacher
who got fired because they
wouldn't do it.
No, you're a he or a she.
It's not a political thing.
You're one or the other.
Pick one or the other who saidthat that was in a news report
somewhere.
Speaker 1 (28:26):
That's me saying who
said pick one or the other, did
you say, or was that whatsomebody else said?
Speaker 2 (28:30):
No, that's what I'm
saying.
That's what you say.
Okay, that's what I say, but iflisten, that's what I think
Trump would say.
Speaker 1 (28:36):
Pick one or the other
.
You have to be what you'renaturally born with it's.
Speaker 2 (28:42):
you can change that
if you want.
That's fine, I don't care.
But I mean, then it's going allthe way to be non-binary,
because now you don't, you don'thave anything that really says
you're male or female.
Well, of course you still havecertain things left, I'm sure,
but um, I would say, you'dprobably you're, you're an it
(29:03):
well, yeah, yeah, well then youwould be, except because your
brain was born female and thatwill never change.
Speaker 1 (29:09):
It came over today
and it just left Cousin.
Speaker 2 (29:13):
It.
Speaker 1 (29:15):
Yeah, cousin it,
there you go.
What is he or she?
You don't know, right.
Speaker 2 (29:21):
It's like a freaking
landmine out there.
It's like, oh, what do I callher?
Not her original name?
Well, we learned that a whileback.
Okay, it's them.
Well, they.
Speaker 1 (29:30):
I like it Cousin.
Yes, cousin it.
Oh, it's yeah, fair enough.
Sister it, cousin it, mommy it,whatever, just it Wow.
Speaker 2 (29:41):
It said, that's
pretty rough, though I guess you
know I'm just thinking as ababy boomer.
Now, I mean, this is somethingwe never, ever even thought of.
Well as, baby boomers.
Speaker 1 (29:51):
We're more open to it
than our parents would have
been.
Holy crap that would have been.
They'd take it to a shrink orsomething and go straighten him
out.
He can't be gay.
He can't be gay, whatever.
Something's mentally wrong withyou.
So it's, of course, mostly, Iwould say, acceptable today by
most.
Speaker 2 (30:09):
I just, you know, it
just kind of made me wonder how
many people out there have hadto deal with this.
Probably not that many, I mean,if you have a gay daughter More
than you think, probably so.
Well, it seems everybody I knowhas a gay daughter or a gay son
yeah, of which I do, and then Ithink at least one more of her
half sisters is now gay.
(30:37):
I think Like racking up morethan the average family.
Yeah Well, you know, you've gotfive kids.
At least one of them isprobably going to be gay.
Speaker 1 (30:44):
Let's just ask about
our producer, your sister.
Wait a minute, sister breakSmiling.
Speaker 2 (30:53):
Is your sister gay
sister no, I'm just checking you
got something in your family.
Speaker 3 (30:57):
I'm checking.
Speaker 2 (30:57):
No sister gay, no, I
like that no stupid or maybe I
mean, if we were all born 30years later, maybe, maybe.
Speaker 1 (31:11):
I mean it always
changed later in life.
You know, you're young, 80years old, based on the
generation you know, finallycoming out, finally being my
true self.
Some people do it after 50,after 60, you know so.
Speaker 2 (31:25):
I just thought it was
something I thought about.
Well, maybe you shouldn't talkabout this one.
No, maybe we should.
Speaker 1 (31:30):
Yeah, of course we
should you bet we should?
We cover everything.
Man, what's her name?
Maybe we're equal opportunityoffenders?
We cover everything.
Speaker 2 (31:42):
So now this
individual is now he.
So I'm just wondering if he isgoing to change her name To what
?
Her name?
No, I think we'll go that far.
Give it some anonymity.
Her name, I don't think we'llgo that far, Give it some
anonymity, but you know her nameis.
You know, was she changed it toa kind of bisexual name?
(32:02):
Either way, Do you know what itis?
No, yeah, of course I do, but Idon't think I'm going to say
that Well, give me an idea.
Speaker 1 (32:08):
What would a bisexual
name be?
Speaker 2 (32:11):
Well, I don't know
what that would be.
Jamie would be one.
It could be male or female.
Speaker 1 (32:23):
Jamie, that's just
what comes to mind.
My daughter's name could bethat.
Her name is Danielle, but shegoes by Danny.
Yeah, the A&I, you could goeither way with that.
Okay, I see what you mean.
All right, okay, yeah, so I runthe topic of gay family members
.
Did you watch the EllenDeGeneres special on Netflix?
Was she making a comeback?
She said this is her laststand-up comedy thing ever.
Did you see it?
Speaker 2 (32:44):
Oh, I remember the
talking about it.
Speaker 1 (32:55):
So she's done Netflix
.
I watched it and it's likeshe's Trying to explain or
explain off the fact that shewas mean.
The employees who worked thereDidn't like it at all because
they're saying she's not owningup To it still, and she did not,
she just made jokes about it.
I mean, you know she said she'sgot a lot against her because
she's old, she's gay, she'sancient.
Now she's old, she's gay andshe's mean.
She goes that's a trifecta I'mold, gay and mean.
(33:15):
So you know, all three she'sthe only specific.
The parts are funny, but I guessthe people who went through it,
you know, and she didn't own upto it, they go.
She still doesn't get it, sothey would know, know more than
(33:35):
we would.
But he was making a joke abouthow it used to be a fun
workplace.
You like to play tag?
I chased the employees around,tag you're in, do this because
you know what.
After explaining it that way,it does sound kind of bad, does
it?
I'm chasing employees and tagyou're in and hiding and scaring
them and stuff.
You know, it seemed like fun atthe time when I thought, think
about it and talk about it.
Maybe it didn't come across sowell, you know, but the
ex-employers are going.
It was a lot worse than that.
It's more than tag and scaringpeople, it's just the overall
vibe that she, she belittledpeople and treat them like crap
(33:58):
and just yeah, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (33:59):
So well, some people
think that's kind of funny and
endearing to do that, um, butthey, they didn't live to.
Speaker 1 (34:06):
That was that that
was.
She was their boss and it justit was a bad, bad workplace
environment.
So she said she goes.
Her old joke is I've beencanceled again.
I've been canceled a couple oftimes.
I was canceled because I cameout as gay, I was canceled
because I was mean, and now I'mcanceled because I'm old.
Speaker 2 (34:27):
So there you go.
Welcome to the club, thecanceled club.
Speaker 1 (34:31):
Well, we're two out
of three Old and we're not mean,
you know.
Speaker 3 (34:35):
Hmm, and my game is
not that I know of.
Speaker 2 (34:40):
I think I would know.
Maybe I don't know, it wouldn'tmatter you call me they or them
.
Speaker 1 (34:49):
Whatever you are,
jimmy, you're just tell them, no
matter which way you swing, itdoesn't matter to me.
That's right, damn it.
Do you feel that way about yourdaughter?
Is it the same way about mine?
Whatever way they want to go,you love them the same.
Speaker 2 (35:02):
Oh, absolutely.
Speaker 1 (35:04):
Parents' generation.
They kick you out of the houseand go.
What the hell happened to you?
I raised you right.
What do you mean?
You're gay.
Get the hell out.
Speaker 2 (35:10):
What do you mean?
You're gay.
Speaker 3 (35:11):
It's just different.
Speaker 1 (35:14):
now it's like you
know, I see parents now and
their kids go oh dad, dad, loveyou dad, let's go play dad dad.
You know it's different.
When we were growing up it waslike oh shit, dad.
Oh dad's a good dad.
It's like I'm terrified.
Speaker 2 (35:27):
There was a cartoon
by Hanna-Barbera that was called
Wait Till your Father Gets Home, and you know what the dad in
it looked very much like RichardNixon.
Speaker 5 (35:40):
I thought I love my
mom and dad, and my brothers too
, and the groovy way we getalong.
Every time the slightest littlething goes wrong, mom starts to
sing this familiar song Waittill your father gets, until
your father gets.
Wait till your father gets home.
Dad's not so bad and he seldomgets mad and we aren't about to
(36:05):
desert him.
Kids today like to have theirown way, and what Daddy doesn't
know won't hurt him.
I think my mom's just swell,but she starts to yell Every
time we have a fuss.
Just wait till your father gets, until your father gets.
Wait till your father gets home.
(36:26):
See what I mean Wait till yourfather gets home.
We know.
Speaker 1 (36:40):
This is a long time.
If I did something that my momthought was bad and she told my
dad one of the two things thathappened Either you take the
belt off and I wouldn't just sitthere and take it.
He had to catch me, okay.
So I didn't want to take abeating without trying to run
away from it or he'd go outsideand find a hanky stick, a good
piece of wood there, which theyused to have in school as well,
(37:01):
and he'd come up with that andwant to beat me with a stick.
Either way, I'm on the move,man, I'm running.
So I see belt, I see stick, I'mgoing.
You know, if you have mecornered in the house, I'll go.
Here we go.
So if you do that now, the kidwill call the police.
They'll come pick you up andarrest you.
You know that's true.
I got paddled in school.
You know, strangers take me outof the home, beat my butt up.
(37:23):
I'm going.
I don't know this teacher, he'spissed at me.
Speaker 2 (37:28):
I know I told this
story before, but we have so
many new listeners.
Welcome folks.
Speaker 1 (37:37):
Welcome, it's a
sister break.
Wait, costello, wait, it's yoursister break.
Speaker 2 (37:44):
Okay, I thought I'd
join in with that one because my
producer happy.
Okay, look at the camera andI'm smiling.
Speaker 1 (37:49):
Go ahead.
Speaker 2 (37:50):
Tell the story Go
ahead.
I was just going to say I didtell this story before, but for
those that didn't know, therewas a teacher at the school I
went to who would be about 11,12 years old and you'd get the
slipper.
So what he'd do is he'd get thechalk and he'd put a big round,
you'd put a circle on your assin chalk and then he put an X on
(38:13):
the sole of the slipper and hewouldn't stop whacking you until
he got the X in the circle.
Nice guy.
Speaker 1 (38:23):
Dang.
Speaker 2 (38:24):
I used to get the
slipper so often I was immune to
it.
I mean, go ahead.
I had another teacher who usedto put push pins in there.
Speaker 1 (38:32):
I was going to say
where I'm from, it would be the
cleat.
They'd take a big amount ofcleats.
I'm not saying they didn't dothat, I'm saying that that'd be
where I'm from.
They would go to that extremepart if they knew about it.
But, man, they'd go to shop andtake a baseball bat, flatten
out one side, flatten out thisside, drill some holes in it for
aerodynamics, write tape aroundit and put a leather handle up
(38:53):
on their wrists and they'd wraptheir thing around that.
And that would be it.
Freaking thing hurt like youknow.
What too, I mean you beat yourass with a baseball bat.
Speaker 3 (39:05):
That's been flattened
out.
Speaker 2 (39:06):
They did that.
Speaker 1 (39:08):
Well, maybe it's a
good thing we moved on Well to
this day.
It's why I have a plank butt.
It was beat in when I was a kidI had no chance to have a round
butt.
I beat the crap out of a plank.
I got a plank ass because ofthat White man.
Plank ass.
No butt Jeans there.
What's all that gap in yourjeans for?
Because I don't have an ass.
I was beat by teachers and myfather Okay, let's bring back
(39:34):
some beds.
I gotta go see a therapist.
It's really fucked me up.
Speaker 2 (39:36):
They'll smack you.
They'll smack you upside thehead.
Speaker 1 (39:41):
Who gives a shit
about your day?
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (39:46):
So what's happening
in Vegas right now Is anybody?
Speaker 1 (39:49):
opening any.
You know it's just like.
It's kind of like In betweenactivity.
I guess you know it's kind oflike in-between activity.
I guess you know what's comingup in November?
It's the stupid Grand PrixFormula One race again.
Oh what?
Again they got a 10-yearcontract, dude every November
for the next nine years.
Number two is coming up thisNovember.
They have eight more to go, sothey're constructing the
grandstands.
(40:10):
The strip is blocked off,traffic's backed up and it's
just locals we hate it.
Speaker 2 (40:16):
We hate it, hate it.
Yeah, I'm not surprised.
Surely it can't be the mayhemthat they had last year.
I mean the majority of it'sthere right?
Speaker 1 (40:24):
I mean the majority
of it's there, right?
Well then they've got to set itup again, I mean, you know?
So they move the trees out fromthe Bellagio, put the
grandstands back, block thestrip off.
You can't get to the mostcasinos when it's going on.
They lose money.
It's just.
Everybody hates it.
A couple of events I think it'slike 10 businesses who filed a
multimillion-dollar lawsuitagainst the city, clark County,
and also Grand Prix sponsors andthe race itself for the
(40:46):
millions they lost in businessbecause of the stupid Grand Prix
race.
So they'll win something.
I don't think they'll get alltheir money back.
They lost a lot of money andthey will again this year.
So we hate it.
Speaker 2 (40:58):
I mean Las Vegas is a
special case because of the
strip, because you know in otherplaces they do this, but it's
you know, you haven't got onemain area, fiscal area, which
the strip would be.
I mean you could do this up inSummerlin, it wouldn't matter.
Speaker 1 (41:16):
I know they think I
don't know it's just people come
for the strip and by blockingit off blocking off access to
the casinos and shows when theGrand Prix's on, there's no
shows because they go why bother?
People can't get to them, sothey just cancel them all.
Okay, but there was a newresidency announced this week.
The new kids in the block werein Vegas last week and they
announced they started residencyin June at the Park.
(41:37):
Mgm, are you ready for this?
I mean, these guys havesustained power.
Okay.
After they announced, two hourslater, all the shows were sold
out.
Wow, you think it was a taylorswift thing.
I mean, taylor swift was donein 30 seconds.
These guys took a couple hours,but they were shocked too.
So they came out the next dayand said we sold everything out
to their surprise.
We're adding on more shows.
So well, you do that.
(41:59):
That's great.
The new kids were kids beforethey became what they are now,
which is old kids on the block.
They were on my show and DonnieWahlberg wanted to kick my ass.
He did not like what I told him.
I said proud of you kids.
You guys have fun, you're doinggreat.
Enjoy it, because next year itwill be new.
What New?
Who?
And he's going.
(42:19):
Who are you talking about?
I said, guys, you're a youngboy band.
Your staying power is just notgoing to be there.
You know, meet me outside theshow.
I'm going to kick your ass.
You come out here to the radioand kick my ass.
I might just do that.
They're going.
You have another commitment.
I'm going to kick your ass.
It was funny as hell.
It was great.
And of course, the next yearthat did happen because they'd
(42:42):
been around for two years theywent bye-bye.
But as older adults they foundout all these.
You know that group behind us,not the boomers.
What's the group you call afterthe boomers?
Or the what?
Millennials?
Gen Z, gen.
Speaker 2 (42:55):
X Gen Z okay.
Speaker 1 (42:56):
Losers, I don't know
which one.
Anyway, they grew up on them.
So when they came back andstarted doing these reunion
tours, they tours.
They're doing them togetherwith the Backstreet Boys
Together.
Damn, they're selling outeverywhere.
They even did the O2 there inLondon, so that's like four
shows in a row, man.
Wow.
Now they tour every year.
They just got done.
(43:16):
When they made the announcementthey have a residency, they
were just finishing up a 50-citytour that they did this summer
that's a lot Spring and thesummer and they're busy, busy.
So they did this summer that'sa lot Spring and the summer,
they're busy, busy.
They're making more money nowthan they did when they were
naked, it wouldn't surprise me,it's good to be an old kid.
Give them the money, Pay themthe money.
Speaker 4 (43:36):
Oh oh, oh, oh oh.
(44:05):
We send love to everybody.
If, if you wanna take a chance,just get on the floor and do
the new kids dance.
Don't worry about nothing,cause it won't take long.
We're gonna put you in a trancewith a funky song, cause you
(44:27):
gotta be stankin' tough,stankin' tough.
Speaker 2 (44:33):
Stankin' tough, we're
up, up, up Now.
That's cool that they'vemanaged to keep their career
going.
Who would have thought You'reright?
Usually two years and you'regone.
Speaker 1 (44:49):
And the music they
made.
They play that as like aso-called oldie.
Four or five years later a newkid song?
Hell no, they play themsometimes on satellite radio
because they have to.
They go deeper.
Okay, it's very rare you hearany of their songs, but a lot of
people flood to see and hearthem in person, who grew up with
it.
So now some of the satellitestations are playing their music
(45:09):
a little bit more.
Air Backspeeds play a lot morethan New Kids sometimes, but
they're playing both.
You know they're having like aresurgence and a renaissance.
They're back.
Speaker 2 (45:18):
It doesn't happen
that often.
I mean, I was listening to theradio.
As a matter of fact, mysatellite subscription has not
followed me into the new car, soI'm listening to all the FM
stations.
Speaker 1 (45:32):
There's an awful lot
of them, which would surprise me
, you'll listen to the regularterrestrial radio on FM dial in
Columbia, south Carolina.
The choices must be stupendous.
Speaker 2 (45:42):
There are way more
than I was.
Actually, you'd be quitesurprised.
There's one called Public Radioand they play some great stuff
and anyway, they just see whatit's they were playing.
Remember Lord, yeah, had thatgreat song and it's quite a few
(46:03):
years ago.
I was just thinking about her.
It's like, wow, she was a onehit wonder, that's right, yeah,
I bought tickets to give themaway, but there you go.
Uh, but it was, I was shit 10years ago, so so there, but it's
not somebody like that.
Speaker 1 (46:21):
This so far this
summer it's the season of
Carpenter and Shabuzy.
The bar song yeah, I showed onelast week and mostly pop stars
run it because they're allcrossing the country, you get a
resurgence.
They had Machine Gun.
Kelly won a country award forredoing John Denver's Country
(46:45):
Road it's now called lonely roadand he did it with who else?
Jelly roll, and he never won anaward as a pop star Cause he's
just like, yeah, but the countrygets this first country song he
does, he wins award best singleand stuff and he's like he
looks.
He's damn shocked and veryappreciative too.
Speaker 2 (47:01):
Yeah, he dropped it
and it broke.
Speaker 1 (47:04):
No, really, he's
saying out there at the end with
Shania Twain, I'm going, here'sMachine Gun, kelly and Shania
Twain.
That's a weird group.
And then you got Shabuzy's inthe bar.
Other folks are doing stuff.
Beyonce is kind of ignored, butthen also other folks came in
so she opened the door Everybodyfollowed in.
So about six of the top tensongs in the country are by pop
(47:25):
artists you know, or Jelly Roll.
You know, jelly Roll?
I have some advice for you, sir.
Speaker 2 (47:30):
Stop eating, put your
food away, stop eating okay,
talking of that, yep, as we'rerolling on to the end of the
show, here there's a TV stationhere, I think it's CBS.
They have and this is the ohGod, what's her name?
The woman we love so much.
(47:52):
She's enormous and I'veforgotten her name.
Speaker 1 (47:55):
Is it Melizzo?
Speaker 2 (47:56):
Lizzo who the Lizzo
effect?
Well, they have employed threemorbidly obese women to be their
weather girls.
Three morbidly obese women tobe their weather girls.
So the funniest thing aboutthis is right that she stands in
(48:20):
front of the green screen andfills it up.
Boy, I tell you what, if I wasin master control, I'd be having
some fun with that.
Speaker 1 (48:23):
You know when we were
coming up through radio and TV,
you'd never see any personclose to being just the inkling
of fat on TV.
They just wouldn't do it.
I mean one.
It adds some pounds on anyway.
They wanted small, prettypeople, no way.
But now it's just nothing wrongwith diversity, that's fine.
(48:44):
But now the weight and stuff isall out the window.
Speaker 2 (48:49):
We have some big
anchors and stuff here in Denver
but I mean I guess a couple ofthese are more in Denver, yeah,
but I mean, okay, I know this islike less than a secondary
market, but I mean it's okay.
One, okay, you're being nice,but three, it's like who's
picking these women?
Speaker 1 (49:12):
I couldn't watch them
.
I couldn't do it.
I'll be thinking aboutlistening to the weather and
going like what is this fatchick doing on doing the weather
?
I'm sorry, Look incorrectHashtag me too.
I'm dead meat, I'm sorry.
Speaker 2 (49:25):
Hashtag she's
morbidly obese meat.
But I'm sorry, I just Hashtagshe's morbidly obese.
You can be long, that's fine,but morbidly obese I mean.
They do quite a good job of it,except you can't see the East
Coast.
You can see up to say like, oh,I don't know Oklahoma.
Speaker 1 (49:41):
You don't get local
weather, you get west of the
Mississippi.
Speaker 2 (49:46):
She has to back out
of the shop for her to be there.
Speaker 3 (49:51):
She sounds sweet.
Speaker 2 (49:53):
I'm sure that all
three of them are absolutely
wonderful people, but this isjust where you need to be.
Speaker 1 (49:59):
Same thing here.
If I don't look at her.
I'm just listening to them talkon TV.
I'm just going, she's got agood voice, she's doing a good
presentation.
I turn around and look I'mgoing too big.
Speaker 2 (50:10):
Exactly, and I just
you know.
I just got to wonder who thedirector is.
Somebody likes big women.
Speaker 1 (50:21):
They apply to it.
Maybe all they're gettingapplied to they go.
What do we have to do?
These days it's supposed to beokay, I don't know.
I say to Jelly Roll personallyI'd like Jelly Roll to be
smaller so he lives longer.
But you know, I like hispositive vibe, his always happy
attitude and putting out a goodmessage.
All that's great.
That part I think he's great.
I like all that stuff.
Speaker 2 (50:46):
I just wish he was
smaller so he'd live longer.
That's all.
The same could be said forthese women, and as for Lizzo as
well.
The interesting thing is thatshe Ozempic is out there.
Speaker 1 (50:56):
Go get it, go get it.
Speaker 2 (50:58):
I run out of Ozempic
this week.
Keep shrinking, keep shrinking.
I have 20 pounds.
Anyway, a really importantpoint.
I think we feel it keepshrinking, Keep shrinking.
Well, I have 20 pounds, butanyway, uh, plus.
Speaker 1 (51:08):
I think you're
talking about it.
Let's go to a really importantpoint.
We talk about all these people,these great baby boomer people
who died this week.
What do they all have in common?
Not one of them was overweight.
Okay, that's what they all livein their eighties, except for
the the.
That's true With Brain Catcher.
He died at 58.
Everyone else is in theirmiddle to upper 80s.
Nobody fat, not even close tobeing obese, because if they
(51:30):
were, they would have died along time ago.
I mean, come on.
Speaker 2 (51:33):
Lucky if you hit 50.
65, you're done.
Speaker 1 (51:36):
Zempik.
Uh-oh, sticky in your tummy,sticky in your tummy.
Pounds go away, pounds go away.
Speaker 2 (51:44):
The problem with
Zempik is it takes your appetite
away, it slows your wholemetabolism down, and so you're
sitting there at like 6, 7o'clock at night, going you know
what?
I'm just not hungry Now.
This is not healthy.
Speaker 1 (51:57):
You eat one good meal
a day and you're fasting for
the 24 hours until you eat again.
It's a very healthy thing to do.
It just depends on what you doeat at your meals.
It's important you don't haveto eat again for another 24
hours.
It's fine, that's okay to dothat.
Speaker 2 (52:11):
Well, what happens?
Yeah, but if you've gotdiabetes, for example, your
blood sugars go all over thebloody place, so you have to eat
.
Speaker 1 (52:27):
You're lowering those
numbers so you won't be a
diabetic anymore.
Lose the weight, not diabetic.
We're talking about type 2diabetic.
Okay, it's different.
Most people who are overweightare type 2, okay and lead to
even stronger stuff.
So just drop the weight.
You won't be diabetic anymore.
Health issues most of them gone.
You're a happy, healthy person.
Or just be fat and just go.
You can't body shame me, youknow, next week.
Oh, she's dead.
Speaker 2 (52:49):
You know what they
said okay, oversized casket Okay
.
You've got obviously diabetesone and type two, yes, and
apparently there's type three,which is dementia.
This is what they're saying now.
That is actually diabetes.
Speaker 1 (53:06):
It's a point of these
, yeah.
Speaker 2 (53:10):
I know I forget
things every once in a while.
Speaker 1 (53:12):
Well, it's okay, I
just don't know what time it is.
We have to run and wrap theshow up before we do your sister
.
Once again, we're smiling,we're happy and we're looking at
the damn camera.
Okay.
Speaker 2 (53:26):
Yes, yes, there you
go, producers.
Speaker 1 (53:29):
Thanks for listening
folks, thanks to all the fat
people listening.
We appreciate everybody.
We've lived a long time.
Speaker 2 (53:36):
And don't forget that
next week We'll be bringing
even more shocking stuff,shocking interviews.
And of course, you can email usat chrisandcostelloatyahoocom.
You can go and see us atchrisandcostellocom.
Speaker 1 (53:56):
And If we pay the
bill to our social media people
who put us out there, maybeyou'll see us more often as well
too, hopefully hopefully we cancircumnavigate that, because
neither of us it's a matter ofjust setting up a payment system
, okay.
So that works.
Catch on Frenchies.
Catch on okay.
Yep, we want to send you money.
Catch on Okay.
We sent it by carrier Grab usan email, go to our website page
(54:20):
, enjoy the show visually,listen to the car everywhere.
So we appreciate it, guys.
Speaker 2 (54:26):
We do, we do.
Speaker 1 (54:28):
I'm Tim Waltz.
He's JD Vance.
We're done, we're done.
Speaker 3 (55:04):
We're done.
Thank you ¶¶ ¶¶.
(56:12):
© BF-WATCH TV 2021.
Thank you.