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June 12, 2024 35 mins
WARNING: This episode is ridiculous and probably not worth listening to.  Don't say I didn't warn you.
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
Scott Vordiez, I want to starthere with the assessment of this neighbor.
Amy is her name. She talkedto KMTV three News Now and said,
I am so happy that police andcity officials are looking at this business here
in my neighborhood. Quote, Iam actually thrilled, and honestly, if

(00:24):
I won the lottery tomorrow, Iwould go and buy that place and bulldoze
it down unquote. Now, fromfrom a pure financial situation, that doesn't
make a lot of financial sense unlessyou have plans to rebuild on the same

(00:45):
site. I mean if you're goingto buy. First of if you buy
the property, you're gonna have topay property taxes on it, which means
that if you unless you just likehemorrhaging money, you're gonna have to put
something there that generates some funds.Otherwise, just out of spite buying a
property, you're gonna have to gothrough the permit process. This stuff's not

(01:07):
cheap. You're gonna hire a company. You can't just go and borrow your
neighbor's bulldozer and just start tearing theplace down. Plus, it's a big
business. I don't know that abulldozer is your play. But I think
maybe I'm obsessing on the wrong thing. What she wants is for this place
to be gone. What is thisplace none other than the place that will

(01:30):
leave the light on for you.Motel six the location near eighty fourth and
Grover. And you're doing the mentalthoughts and okay, so you're you're on
I eighty and you take the eightyfourth Street exit. Oh yeah, right
down there. Yeah, just northof the Interstate. Off of eighty fourth,

(01:51):
take the eighty fourth Street exit andyou go around that little frontage road
there, past Denny's, past thatwonderful auto glass place we spent so much
of our summer out a few yearsago when people were getting rock chips fixed.
There's a I think there's still aHusker store down there. And if
you keep going, you can crossback under the Interstate and you can go

(02:14):
to moby Dick Water Slides. Ifthis show we're on the air forty years
ago when Moby Dick Water Slides werestill there. Baseball party anyway, So
Motel six over there, now you'rethinking, all right, yeah, I
know where it is. Neighbors,what neighbors are there? Like there are
people of houses. Yeah, justkind of north of there, you've got

(02:38):
an enclave. Guess. But here'sthe SoundBite from Omaha Police Captain John Selkalik
told KMTV three News Now. Quote, three years ago, the night clerk

(03:00):
was accepting ground beef as payment fora room. Now, three years ago,
I don't know what the statute oflimitations is on accepting meat for room,

(03:22):
but boy, I've got a lotof questions about this. Probably the
first thing that comes to mind isyou ever see planes, trains on automobiles.

(03:43):
They're trying to check into a hoteland Steve Martin has a nice watch
and John Candy does not, andso Steve Martin is able to get a
room by selling his nice watch.John Candy has like four dollars and a
Cassio watch, and so he can'tget the room. So I understand there

(04:08):
are circumstances that come up where you'relike, I just I need a place
to stay. I don't have anymoney. All right, what do you
have now? The scenario I justgave you from that classic John Hughes' eighties
film, one of my favorite movies, makes sense because Steve Martin would have

(04:30):
a do you see where I'm goingwith Steve Martin has a watch on his
wrist. Therefore he's able to think, all right, what do I have
a value I can trade for roomtonight? Who is standing there in the
lobby at the Motel six saying Idon't have any money, nor do I

(04:51):
have a credit card major Minor playersclub card. Telly Savalis has not provided
me any things, no means ofpaying for that. I have no money,
I have no currency. I've gotno bitcoin, no credit cards,
no debit card. What do Ihave in exchange for the possibility of staying

(05:15):
in your fine establishment here at theMotel six tonight. Well, as it
turns out, my pockets happened tobe full of ground beef. Or I've
just been driving across the country andI've got ground beef here in the car.
Now the negotiation is underway, probablyafter the question what do you mean

(05:39):
you have ground beef on you?Is it refrigerated? Do you have some
sort of freezer car that is?Is it like seal packed? Is this
quote? I mean, can Ieat this meat? Is this dog food
grade? What are we talking about? I'm trying to watch my weight.

(06:00):
My wife doesn't like it when Iget the uh, the stuff that's not
good quality? Is it at leastninety percent? Eighty five? It's fine,
you know, eighty five You getsome of the more fat in there,
and it just makes for a juicyor burger. Those of you who
are like I need ninety five percentroll the dice once in a while,

(06:26):
you just don't have that grease andthe burger that's not grease, So you
don't have the juice and that burgerto have when you take a big bite
of a big handslap patty cheeseburger andthe juice starts running down your chinnaw man,
that's good. And some of youare like, no, I don't
want I wanted almost one hundred percentfat free. I want to take a
bite and have dust come out,Like, come on, who hurt you?

(06:48):
What are you doing? Everyone's I'mnot saying three meals a day,
but every once in a while yougotta do it that way. I want
my one free burger done over,well done. Like here's a coaster.
Just eat this, put some ketchupand mustard on. You say, here's

(07:08):
a coaster. What quality ground beefare we talking about here? And then
the question is, well, howmuch ground beef what's the cost of good
ground beef? About five dollars apound? Right now, what's the cost
of stay at the Motel six?They've got the sign right there right like

(07:30):
a room. What was it?Fifty bucks to stay at the motel six.
So we're gonna need we're doing theeasy math here, ten pounds of
ground beef to stay here at themotel six. Now you're the desk clerk
working at the Motel six, andyou've seen a tremendous opportunity to get yourself

(07:55):
ten pounds of ground beef. Well, someone, there's still a ledger,
right, They still have to like, well, someone checked into the room.
Service had to go and clean theroom, do the towels and the
bed sheets and so forth. Imean someone up top, up the corporate
ladder, who I presume is TomBosley, is the one who is saying,

(08:15):
well, we show that someone checkedin the room three twelve, but
we don't see any money for it. What happened to the money? And
then you gotta be like, oh, something must have got screwed up.
And they're like, you know,you pocketed ten pounds of ground b for
that room. But see you're theovernight clerk. I presume this happened sometime

(08:37):
in the overnight hours, right,This isn't at two o'clock in the afternoon.
Most plays the most hotels. Hecan't even check in at two in
the afternoon anyway. They don't wantyou to check in till three. Then
you gotta walk around with your ba. You gotta sit over at Denny's,
have a moon's over my hammy,sitting there with your bags right next to
you for an hour. So thisis probably in the middle of the night.

(09:01):
You're the overnight guy working at thishotel. Now, you got ten
pounds of ground beef? Where doyou put it? A company fridge?
That little back room where some ofthese guys sleep all night. It's not
big enough for ten pounds of groundbeef? Is it? You call your
wife, she comes picks it up. And then, on top of all

(09:24):
of this, why have the Omahapolice been involved? And why are they
investigating something that this Omaha police captainsays happened at this hotel three years ago?
Is this against the law? CanI not trade meet for a hotel

(09:45):
room? What happened to the bartersystem? I mean, come on,
we're consenting adults. I am consentingto give you a room key to one
of these fine rooms here at theMotel six. Why is it called Motel

(10:05):
six? Anyway, they got alot more than six rooms five. Motel
five not enough, Motel seven's toomuch. It's about the only answer I'd
accept. So year's a room keyto one of the rooms. I will
take my payment in glorious ground beef. It just so happens. I've got

(10:26):
people coming over this weekend. I'mgonna make some chili. It's gonna be
ninety some degrees. I'm gonna makesome chili for my guests. Is this
illegal? And if it is,let's say it is, who call the
police? The person trading the groundbeef, the person accepting the ground beef?

(10:50):
Who heard about this? Someone laterwatching the security camera, going,
it looks like he just traded aroom for meat. I'm calling the cops.
Well, a reporter for KMTV threeNews Now contacted the corporate office for
Motel six, and here's the statementwe got from Motel six. Oh man,

(11:16):
it would have been a great radiobit if I had that old Motel
six music ready to go, Alittle violin, uh, you know,
scratching n We'll leave the light onfor you. That's, by the way,
how this statement is going to end. That part's fake. All right.
Here's the quote from the Motel sixspokesperson, who again I presume is
Tom Bosley. If you're under theage of forty and have no idea the

(11:41):
reference you can have to ask someone. Quote. There's nothing more important to
us than the safety of our guests, hotel staff, and the communities in
which we operate. We are committedto providing clean, comfortable rooms, and
great service at an affordable rate,and we work hard to ensure a positive
guest experience at our locations. Wehold ourselves and our franchise ease to the

(12:03):
highest standards of safety, and arecommitted to being a partner to local law
enforcement and helping address community crime orviolence in any way we can. We'll
leave the light on for you,all right? What did I miss in
this story? Police captain says that, Yeah, they've been out at the

(12:28):
motel here recently. There have beensome accusations of crime. Police captain says,
yeah, a few years ago,the night clerk. Oh maybe that's
why I knew it was the nightclerk. It was part of the quote
a few years ago, the nightclerk was accepting ground beef as payment for
a room. And then there's aneighbor here that says, I'm thrilled the
police are looking into this place.If I won the lottery tomorrow, I

(12:52):
would go buy that place and bulldozeit down. Where did I miss the
part about all the crime and theislands and the threat to the community.
Well, we got gang members,drug pushers, pimps, and prostitutes,
and people with a bunch of meatand a Coleman cooler in their back seat

(13:13):
hanging out here at the Motel six. I like Motel six. I travel
around this country by myself once ina while because no one will go with
me to the places I want togo hang out. In fact, it
was ten years ago this week thatI drove. I drove all night.
Feel free to sing whatever version ofthat song fits in your head this time

(13:37):
your mental jukebox. Roy Orbison,Celine Dion. I prefer the Cindi Lauper
version myself, But so I droveall night. I drove all night,
stayed in a few Motel sixes onmy way from here to Pinehurst, North
Carolina to go watch the US Opengolf tournament in twenty fourteen, ten years

(13:58):
ago. This week, Oh notTom Bosley, Tom Bodette. All right,
thank you, Gary. Gary Sadlemeyerjust sent me a Texas says not
Tom Bosley, tom Bodette. Ihear Tom Bodette. I picture Tom Bosley.
It might as well be Tom.I'm sticking by Tom Bosley, all

(14:20):
right, So wink Martindale, theI don't Tom Bodette. All right,
dang it? Where was I?Oh? Yeah? I like Motel six.
It's a clean room. In somecities they have not had a box

(14:41):
spring because they say that sometimes bedbugs live there. So I have slept
in a Motel six on a thinmattress that was put on basically a card
table. It was like a woodenlike it's a like a table in the
shape of a bed frame, andthere's just a thin mattress on top of

(15:05):
the wooden table to ward off bedbugs in the room. Doesn't have any
carpets on because we know so nocarpet, no box spring, thin mattress.
I like that attention to detail atthis room. I have paid twenty
nine dollars and ninety seven cents forI like a Motel six It's not the

(15:30):
Hilton, granted, but it's finetowels or I've stayed in several Motel sixes
where there weren't stains on the towels, and I've stayed in some fancy hotels
where there were stains on the towels. I don't like stains on the towels.

(15:52):
What a terrible feeling that is.By the way, I finally gratefully
got to my room, I've takena shower, I have grabbed the towel
off the rack, I've unfurled thetowel, and right there in the middle
of it is a big stain andit's brown, and you're like, ah
am wet, what am I supposedto do about this? Trying to work
around the stain? It's ah Itell you on the crime of humanity that

(16:18):
happens in hotels and motels. Exchanginga room for meat pretty low. I
mean, I don't care. Let'sif you're waiting the line behind this person
and you're an idiot there with moneyand the other person's trading Hamburger patties.
Yeah, I don't what are yougonna do? Like, I am not
staying here. I was willing topay twenty one dollars for this room,

(16:42):
but I didn't know people are tradingmeat for it. We're still a few
days out from having guests in townfor the College World Series, right,
they're not listening to this great Idon't want them to think exactly what their
stereotype of Omaha, Nebraska might beby listening to the radio station serving this
community and hearing about this. SoI don't know what's going on there.

(17:10):
There's the hidden conversation in the storyhere that there might be some elements of
ne'er Dowell's gutter snipes and degenerates hangingout in the evenings around this place.
But first of all, I don'tthink that you can buy a room with
meat. And police say that they'regoing to be police in the area just

(17:34):
a little bit more than they alreadywere. And if this lady wins the
lottery, she's going to bulldoze theplace to the ground. Well, leave
the locate. I've never stayed atthis motel six, Scott, Why would
you stay at a motel six inthe town where you live. Suffice it

(17:56):
to say, we don't need togo into the detail. And they're not
with your what you're thinking. ButI had to one night stay in the
Motel six off one hundred and eighthand L Streets. Years it's like thirty
years ago. It made sense atthe time. I grew up in that

(18:17):
neighborhood, and I have an affinityfor that Motel six because growing up at
the best time in the world.That's being born in the mid seventies,
growing up in the eighties, comingof age in the nineties, the best
swath of time for anyone to haveever done those things. Meaning when I
was a kid, you could takelike a dollar fifty and quarters and go

(18:41):
sneak in the side door at theMotel six. Because in the early eighties,
what did they have. They havevending machines right there in the hallways
at the hotels. Oh you gotcant No, not candy, not pop
smokes. You could buy a packof cigarettes. You put like six quarters
in there, did you know thing? And then like a pack of Salem's

(19:03):
cools come out. I was sixyears old, We're buying cigarettes. You
were smoking. No, I didn'tsmoke them. We just bought them because
we knew we weren't supposed to,and we thought it was hilarious because we
weren't supposed to. I don't knowwhat happened to the cigarettes. Probably gave
him a new guy and said,here, you can trade these smokes for

(19:25):
a room. Scott Bodies were NewsRadio eleven kfab. I'm digging through the
Zonker's custom was inbox, and it'shard to find any emails besides the legion
of people saying Scott quit saying TomBosley. Tom Bodette is this sorry?
Tom Bodette is the spokesperson for Motelsix. If you're just joining us,

(19:48):
you're thinking, what did Tom Bodettedied? I don't have any idea.
Apparently I don't know who the guyis. Jerry West died heard from Fox
News Jerry West, the logo manJerry West, who, as we learned
in the opening minutes of the firstepisode of the fantastic HBO series Winning Time

(20:10):
about the purchase of the Lakers inthe late seventies by doctor Jerry Buss Jerry
West. The quote is Jerry Westconsidered one of the great gentlemen of the
game of basketball by those who donot know him, and the Jerry West
we were treated to in that programwas an angry yelling, chair throwing,

(20:34):
anxiety riddled maniac. And I thoughtit was the funniest thing I'd ever seen,
because I've never seen Jerry West beanything other than a perfect gentleman,
and he probably was, and maybehe had a few bad days. I
don't know. As a lifelong Lakersfan, Jerry West is on a pedestal

(20:57):
and probably even an of course,he didn't like how he was portrayed in
that show. I loved it.I was like, I love this guy
even more. This is great.I don't know if I feel the same
way. If that's how I wasportrayed, they'd probably have to tone it
down a little bit. I'm nuts. So we were talking about how the

(21:18):
Motel six there right off of eightyfourth Street and I eighty is, according
to some people, a den ofiniquity and a place where perhaps there might
be some degenerates, gutter snipes,ne'er Dowell's deplorables hanging out. Now,

(21:41):
this is not the fault of theMotel six. I say that, and
like, look, we're a bigcity here in Omaha, Nebraska, right,
We've got grocery stores. I oncewent to basketball camp in Fayetteville,

(22:03):
Arkansas, when I was in middleschool and a kid, one of the
local kids a Arkansas and says whereare y'all from? I said, Omaha.
He just gave me a blank look, and I said Nebraska. He
goes, ah, big town,Like, yeah, it's big town.
He said, y'all got a grocerystore. So that's my measurement as to

(22:25):
whether or not there is we area big town. We have several grocery
stores. In fact, we gota high v out by Gretna that you
can see from space. Yeah,we're big city. So we're gonna have
some pimps and some prostitutes, andsome gang members and some you know,
those who only come out at nights. You know, we're gonna have people

(22:48):
like that. The people will walkaround dragging a club foot behind them.
You know, well, they've gotlike one tooth and they're not even taking
care of it. David Tel hadthat line. So I mean, come
on, where are they supposed togo? They're not hanging out of borsheims,
you know, where are they supposedto go? I take comfort and

(23:12):
knowing that they can find a placewhere the light may or may not be
left on for them, and somaybe the night clerk was accepting ground beef
as sale for a a room.I like ground beef. So that's what's

(23:34):
happening here in Omaha. Up inthe thriving metropolis of Stanton, Nebraska,
a borough just southeast of Norfolk,it's a guy named Marty who tells k
e TV News Watch seven. Hesays, I live on a farm,
I have farm equipment running, Ihave grain bind fans running, and this

(23:59):
is louder than any thing I haveat my place. And the business up
there says, not only are wenot going to stop operations like some people
in this town tell us to,we want to have more and what they're
doing might as well. It mightit might as well be hogwarts for all

(24:19):
I know. I still don't understandthis. We'll talk about it next.
Scott Byes News Radio eleven ten kFAD. I was just rereading the first
line of the story on the Motelsix story from KMTV three news win Now,

(24:41):
Lucy's not here to play along withit KMTV three news Now. I
guess the idea of the story isthat the Motel six off eighty fourth and
I eighty is a a place wherethere might be a criminal element trying to
hang around the place, which againI drive by that place all the time.

(25:02):
You see the sign right there,here's what the cost of a room
is. There's a little marquee outthere says something like we'll leave the light
on for you, which everyone knowswas said famously in those commercials by Wilford
Brimley. Now I'm just purposefully gettingthe name wrong. I think it was
mister T who used to do thosespots, right, I pitied a fool

(25:23):
who don't leave the light on foryou, Remember those old Motel six spots.
It was mister T. Right nowsomeone's emailing going, no, it
wasn't. It was Tom Bodette.Should have been here earlier. Anyway,
the sign out there's got some hometownmessage and rate for the room free HBO.

(25:47):
I don't know what. They haven'tchanged it since nineteen eighty six,
So that's what I said, freeHBO in here? What HBO? What?
So? I don't think the signsays plus you can hang out out
and engage in pimpery and gang thuggeryand drug cellery and prostitutionery. I don't

(26:11):
think that they're actively inviting it,right, don't blame the Motel six,
But I love that. The accusationis is that you could be in the
area and some be subject to acriminal element. And they go talk to
this Omaha police captain and he says, oh, yeah, at motel's been

(26:32):
on our radar. Why three yearsago? I mean you lean in,
like, wow, what happened there? They found a bunch of dead hookers
in the mattress. You know whathappened Like they opened up the attic and
just bodies fell out. So thepremise is that this is a place where
maybe you don't want to be hangingout at night. And the police captain

(26:55):
says, oh yeah, oh yeah, we're aware three years ago the night
clerk, Like what was he do? Was he eating people? What was
what happened there? Yeah, threeyears ago the night clerk was accepting ground
beef as payment for a room.This is the worst example you can think,

(27:17):
like, oh, you think thatthe selling of drugs, you know,
like you you got the baby fromthe old Dave Chappelle bit selling weed
outside like hey baby, you knowyou know he's out there selling weed fentanyl
and he's a Fred Garvin male prostitute. We'll get all the old comedy references
in here. Fred Garvin male prostitute. Like all this stuff. You might

(27:41):
get shived, you might get stabbed, you might get tattooed, you might
get hung. But you think that'sbad. Three years ago the night clerk
was accepting meat as payment for aroom, and it wasn't even the good
stuff. Kangaroo meat. Actually,kangaroo meat, if prepared correctly, is

(28:04):
actually quite good. Yes, I'vehad it. I just think that's the
frame of reference, the swapping ofmeat for lodging. So that's what's happening
here in Omaha. Welcome to allof our guests coming here for the College
World Series this week. Great tohave you in Stanton County. In fact,

(28:29):
in the standard bearer of the countyStanton, Nebraska, just southeast and
Norfolk. Marty lives about a halfa mile to the west of this business.
And Marty says, quote, Ilive on a farm, I have
farm equipment running, I have grainbeIN fans running, and this is louder
than anything I have at my place. Unquote, That's what he tells k

(28:52):
E TV News Watch seven. What'sgoing on? Is it the same neighbor
that you have who's just blasting asmut and you're looking out your back window
and your neighbor's just blasting music andyou're like, are they having a party?
And you look out there there's noone there. They don't have people
over the He's not even out theredoing yard work. He's not staying in

(29:15):
the deck. You know, likeif you look out and the guy's doing
some work and you got some musica little loud, like all right,
I get it, and you lookout there nothing even going on. We
were playing Johnny Applewood golf course afew years ago. I call it Johnny
Applewood because I grew up in Ralston, so it'll always be Applewood to me.
But they've renamed it Johnny Goodman,so I at least sometimes meet him

(29:36):
halfway and call it Johnny Applewood.And there was a house on the back
nine there that was just blaring theGoo Goo Dolls' greatest hits. You could
hear it from the tenth hole allthe way back down like almost to seventeen
t just blaring. And we finallyget to the hole that runs with this

(29:57):
house in the backyard and I'm lookingover there's no one there. There's not
even like no one in the backyard. There doesn't seem to be anyone home
at the house, and you wonder, did someone accidentally do this? Did
someone accidentally click something on their phoneat work and trigger their at home speakers

(30:18):
or something, or is there probablythere's someone inside the house, like I
just want to listen to some music. I'm doing a little bit of housework
inside the home. I just wantto listen to some music. It turns
it on. It doesn't realize thatthe Bluetooth is connected to the outdoor speakers
exclusively, so you're turning the volumeup going these speakers don't work. How

(30:40):
come I can't hear anything? Andthen you're like, well, I faintly
hear something. That's because it's yourspeakers outside just blasting Broadway by Goo Goo
dolls across an entire nine holes ofgolf course. Probably something like that.
Was that what was going on upand Stanton? No, they've got a

(31:03):
jigawat bitcoin bah. They try thatagain. They got to take two three
two. They got a jigawat bitcoinmining farm in Stanton, Nebraska. Now
that might as well be written inMandarin. I don't know what this is.
Don't email me and try and explainit. Many have tried before you

(31:25):
to explain how this works. Idon't know. Oh, here's a link
I can click on teach me aboutblockchain and bitcoin mining. I don't know.
I'm apparently too stupid to figure itout. I am unwilling to learn.
I am absolutely that idiot who giventhe opportunity, like, do you

(31:45):
want to sign up for our car? Do you want to do this on
the app? Do you want tohave a membership to this? And I'm
like to save a few bucks.Nah, I apparently have too much money.
I'll just keep doing things the oldfashioned way. I don't need all
that stuff. People are mining bitcoinand making a fortune. I don't know
what that is. I'm just goingto come in here and just clock in

(32:08):
and clock out and make my money, and that's fine. I don't need
so I don't know. I don'tknow what bitcoin is. I don't know
how you mine it. As faras I'm concerned, this is basically Superman
three, right, where they gotpeople they're shaving off, they're rounded off

(32:30):
half pennies and putting it all intoan account. It's basically Superman three.
Right. So you got all thesecomputers, a vast network of computers,
generators, and they're constantly mining bitcoinbecause if you get a hundred bitcoin,
you get a free life and SuperMario Brothers, so that's pretty important.

(32:50):
And so they're mining bitcoin, andapparently it's so loud that Marty up there
with all of his farm equipment runningain't been fans going. Can't hear himself
think over the constant hum of thegenerators and the computers at this jigawat bitcoin
mining farm. Is no one emailingthis? No I was looking over to

(33:20):
see if there was a one pointtwenty one reference in my inbox. Nope.
Instead I get an email that says, mister t never did ads for
Motel six. Yeah, I know, I know. How many jiggawats do
you need? To get a bitone point twenty one jigawats your eighties movie

(33:43):
reference For this segment of the radioprogram, this is where Lucy would say,
is that from Happy Gilmour. She'snot here though. So this is
apparently so loud that neighbors are puttingsigns up stop bitcoin noise, and the
owner of the bitcoin place says,nah, yeah, all industry makes noise,

(34:06):
And he says, I can't sayif it's loud or quiet. I
don't know, you know, oneperson's loud as another man's quiet. It
sounds like it's probably pretty loud.But this is an egg community, isn't
everything kind of loud up there?But like, what's going on in Stanton
to where that's like the place tomine bitcoin? And how come I'm not

(34:28):
doing this? Why am I sostupid that I'm just you know, beating
my head against the corporate wall allthe time. Meanwhile there's some guy that's
like plugged a computer into a combineand he's mining bitcoin and making a fortune
or something or something. I don'tI don't know. I don't know what
bitcoin is. I don't know whatyou what do you use it for?

(34:51):
Like I can't go to high vand buy ground beef to try and barter
with a hotel nightclerk, you knowwith bitcoin? Right? I imagine if
you're using bitcoin, this is somethingyou buy things with on the dark web,
like rocket propelled grenade launchers and peopleorgans, stuff that you don't want

(35:13):
to have a real good currency trackrecord of what you bought, right,
Like this is what Hunter would useto buy crack with with bitcoin. So
I don't, I don't know,But apparently it's really loud. Scott Boys
Mornings nine to eleven on news radioeleven ten kfab
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