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March 1, 2022 9 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
What would you talk about on your on your podcast
fun show. Here we go the fifty minute morning show

(00:23):
podcast as we roll out of our Tuesday show, and uh,
there you have it, Guy Fieri. He had a great
time with him. He was just an awesome guest as always,
do you guys agree, Always so much fun, He's always
up to play, and he's just always so. He's a
nice guy very much. So what Nate, That's where I
wanted to start. I think he may be my favorite
guest ever. He's always just so much fun. He always

(00:46):
rolls with like he would be a fantastic addition to
the show. You know. That's how I kind of determine
whether or not somebody's a good guest is if I
feel like they could be a part of the show
on a regular basis. Funny you mentioned that maybe everyone
full agree. I remember there was a time when, well, um,
you know who was a big part of our show.
The other chef who shall remain name was, I want

(01:11):
to say it, Bobby Flay. But Bobby is always fun too.
And you know who the other chef is. I love
Marcus Samuelson. He is my absolute favorite. I love I agree,
but Bobby would come on and be a He would
just walk in without even being invited a part of
the show. And now he's so busy. We but guy,
I don't know. He's almost in first place here anyway,

(01:31):
everyone's here. There's Froggy, and there's Brody, and there's Scotty
be eating his banana, and there's Gandhi and Danielle and
say something and Garrett and Nate. Yes, what Scotty usually
eats that banana first thing in the morning. I think
he saved it today for this podcast so that we
could talk about him eating his BANANSA. I swear I didn't.
I haven't eaten all morning and I'm super super hungry.

(01:54):
So no, I did not save it for this. I
won't even finish hating it. Then. I'm not doing it
for attention. Sorry, I'll eat your banana. I know, Scotty.
Why don't you lean down under the counter. I need
my own banana. No, I don't know you people, so

(02:21):
um you know. As as we as we produce this
fifteen or maybe slightly less than fifteen minute morning show podcast,
I'm still keeping an eye on the news. We're doing
this at nine am on Tuesday, and uh wow, another
day ahead. I'm just I know, I don't know about you.
I'll be glued. I'll be glued to the news today
to keep an eye on what's going on. And well,

(02:44):
I'm sickened. I'm sickened that I have to turn the
news off after five five minutes. I can't watch more
than a few headlines. I'd rather than just come over
my phone and just deal with it that way. Maybe
that's all of the Ukraine news that you need for
that moment. Maybe that's a smart thing. Brody, are you
do you like to watch the news? I know you're
a news junk. Here are you watching off all day? Oh?
I'm watching every minute because I feel like I'm gonna

(03:05):
miss some good news coming out of the you know. Plus,
I like watching the loop of the same fifteen second
clip that the networks have where they keep showing the
same guy smoking the cigarette, you know, walking back and forth.
Uh no, I I I'm addicted to it. And I
you know, there's a lot of inspirational moments in the
horror and that's what I that's what I'm sort of
leaning on. Well, and we need them now more than ever.

(03:27):
So the lady with the seeds, you know she was fantastic.
The lady with the seed what was I didn't see
that story? What was that? So help me out here,
Gandhi if I miss anything. But an older woman, a
Ukrainian woman, went up to a Russian soldier and she said,
you don't belong in my city. And then she said,
I have seeds in my pockets, sunflower seeds. I want
you to put them in your pockets so when you
die here sunflowers will grow. So I just thought that

(03:50):
was ballsy. I can't imagine walking up to a soldier,
an enemy soldier, and like talk and trash. I think
at some point you feel like, well, what do I
have to lose, Let's go give these seeds to this soldier. Yeah. Wow,
you know. So that's the story we're watching. And look,
you know, it's tough doing a show like ours because
we're here to have fun and make people laugh. And

(04:11):
we still, you know, I think we still have a
lot of fun, even in the shadow of something that's
so tragic coming out of Ukraine, and um, gosh, there
you go. Thoughts from anyone, what's that? I think you
should watch Winter on Fire. Have you guys seen that documentary? Okay,
it's on Netflix. It's called Winter on Fire, Ukraine's Fight
for Independence or for Freedom, and it's about the protests

(04:33):
that happened roughly eight nine years ago. Do you guys
remember that, um and it was battling the corruption in
the government because basically their president was a stooge for
Putin and you know, going back through their history since
the end of the Cold War, I mean, they've basically
been a puppet government from the Soviet States, you know,

(04:56):
the old Soviet government now Russia. And I think it
really gives you a great insight as to the people
that are in Ukraine right now. And let's Winter on Fire,
Winter on Fire. Watch any other thoughts before we switch
channels here? What are you thinking? I'm following maximum Chremerkovsky
from Dancing with the Stars. He's actually over there because

(05:18):
that's where him and his brother and his his family
grew up. And watching what he's giving an account of
every day, Like yesterday, he was just trying to get
home and he got arrested for trying to leave UM
and so he's trying to find a way to leave
and he got on a train, which he said normally
is just filled with four people but had almost twelve

(05:38):
with a family of six, uh in there trying to
just flee. My question is, uh, concerning the journalists and everyone.
They're supporting them, cameras and all that. I mean, they're
there and they're saying, Okay, they're gonna be or any
second now, what are they thinking? Like, supposedly they are

(06:00):
supposed to be protected, but I don't think that those
rules apply at all times, right, I believe to journalists
actually just got shot um yesterday, that happened. I need
to check on how they're doing. But as much as
you want to think that they're protected, how do you
know where a shell is gonna land. You don't know
where any of that stuff is gonna happen. So these
people heading out in the field to do that, I

(06:21):
am just always so amazed and impressed by them and
thankful that they exist. But it's not super safe for
them over there either. I saw the video just just
a few minutes ago of the building that they had
bombed in the Ukraine, and you can see it's just
there are cars driving by the street, it was a
normal day and the bomb just falls out of the
sky and hits the right corner of this building, there's
a big explosion, and now they're, you know, assessing how

(06:42):
bad the damage is and how many people have been lost.
But it just it literally falls out of the sky
and comes out of nowhere in these poor people. My
mom was saying, how crazy it is that, you know,
back in the day, it took days to get the
news of what was going on because you didn't have
all this instant access on Instagram more, you know, things
like that. She said, Sometimes we wouldn't find out things

(07:03):
were going on, and you know who did what to who,
And now it's right in front of your face and
you watch it unfold. It's crazy. So would you prefer
a life like that where all communication, as far as
journalistic communication goes, is severed, so we don't see what's
happening as it's happening, and we just hear reports. I
don't know, maybe sometimes maybe, depending on what it is.

(07:24):
I mean, you remember, you won't remember this, but I'm
sure you've seen footage like Elvis has seen footage. World
War two, you still have to go to the movies
and before the film would start, you would see a
film reel of what was going on in the war.
That's how you got your news like a week or
two later newsreels. In fact, William Randolph Hurst, who ran

(07:45):
many many powerful newspapers and eventually movies dudios around the country,
he was actually in a race with other newspaper and
media owners to get the footage and fly it over
and have it in the theater the next day. And
and that was cutting technology. Two days later, it was
cutting into technology. Back then, you have what would you
have to pay to go to that movie or like

(08:07):
like to get that news or they would run them
before the film you went to see typically, but they
also had theaters that they also experimented with theaters that
were just news theaters. Believe it or not, I don't
think they worked out. You know, imagine news theaters now. Yeah,
I don't know. Another thing to think about. And of course,
you know the way we we look at media and
we actually we look at content. You're seeing the bits

(08:30):
and pieces of TikTok videos and videos on Instagram which
were just scenes like a miniature scene, a three second scene,
a five second scene on a street corner where something's
happening whatever, and that's all you see. So we are
now clouded into thinking it's that way everywhere and in
the city. The same as a friend of yours who's
like scary, who's always in restaurants. You think, well, the

(08:50):
guy never goes to bed, he's always in a restaurant.
That's always, that's always. See you know, I don't know.
It's very interesting to see how we're covering this or
they're covering it. Yeah, So to be continued, right, to
be continued, anything else you wanna talk about. I think
we're done. Yeah, you know what. God bless the world,

(09:13):
God blessed the citizens and the President of Ukraine. Have
a good day. The fifteen Minute Morning Show

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Elvis Duran

Elvis Duran

Danielle Monaro

Danielle Monaro

Skeery Jones

Skeery Jones

Froggy

Froggy

Garrett

Garrett

Medha Gandhi

Medha Gandhi

Nate Marino

Nate Marino

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