Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Scott VORDIEZ Lucy, what up girl? Oh?
Speaker 2 (00:04):
You know just stuff.
Speaker 1 (00:05):
You want some dirt, I do. I got some dirt,
local political scene dirt. Oh this is let me have
it the best kind of dirt, all right now. The
quick timeline is Mike McDonald. He is the former Omaha
fire chief and then he became the fire union president.
(00:27):
He became the fire union president at a time when
we had week leadership on things like the fire union
going to the City of Omaha saying all right, we
want our guys to all make a billion dollars an hour.
And then city leadership said, all right, we can't. We
can't pay you a billion dollars an hour, but I'll
(00:49):
tell you what we can do. And this is how
we started getting to a fire and police union contract
that allowed them to retire at an early age and
collect pension based on how much they were making at
the highest point in their term as police or fire Yes,
(01:11):
there were some guys who people got mad and said
this police officer or this firefighter or this person abused
the system. They were suddenly promoted to a rank where
they got paid twice their normal salary, and then they
retired and they got a pension based on that salary
they had for a half second. Yes, it is very
(01:33):
easy to get mad at something like that, but that
is the system the City of Omaha allowed them to
take advantage of. I always blamed the City of Omaha specifically,
this is stuff that happened with Mayors Fahee and Subtle,
and this is how we got to our restaurant tax
(01:54):
to try and pay for this bloated system where we
suddenly were paying pension based on ridiculousness. Mayor Stothard became
the city mayor and has been working to try and
fix all of this. Yes, we still have the restaurant techs,
(02:16):
but we also don't have pension spiking and all the
rest of this. Now, when Mayor Stothard got an office,
she was I mean, the fights with the Fire Union,
including their Fire Union president Mike McDonald, were legendary and
super super frickingdiculous. One of my favorites was the fire
(02:39):
Union tried to say that the equipment they had to
save your life in the event of a fire was
so outdated that this is what they were using, and
it was some box that when it rang, it would vibrate,
and they had a bunch of like cans of cream
corn and stuff on top of it, and so the
box would vibrate and it would move the cans of
(03:00):
cream corn and they go crash to the ground. And
that's when the firefighters are like, oh, corn on the ground,
we got a fire. And they're like, this is so
antiquated and ridiculous. It was all just made up bunk,
highly entertaining. But this is where some of this stuff
got so ugly. I have it on good authority. At
(03:24):
one time the firefighters had a a fundraising golf tournament,
and once they found out that the mayor lived on
the golf course, they all started pelting her house with
golf balls.
Speaker 2 (03:40):
Is that true?
Speaker 1 (03:42):
I have it on good authority that that happened. I
know this. The firefighters had their golf tournament on this course.
That incident may or may not have happened. The firefighters
have not had their golf tournament on that course again.
(04:03):
So now we get to more recent time. He times,
Mike MacDonell becomes the Nebraska state Senator and starts to
break with what has long time been his party, the Democrats.
He's a labor guy, he's a union guy, of course,
(04:24):
he's a Democrat, right, Well, the Democrats got a little
crazy for him, and it was decided that there was
no room in the Democratic tent for someone who is
a pro life Catholic Democrat. And so he said, well,
I'm not changing my stance, nor am I changing my
vote on some of this stuff in the legislature, and
(04:47):
so they broke up with him. He has since moved
to be a Republican. He did that this past spring,
and he was asked at the time, you know, we
don't know. I think at the time we didn't know
whether Mayor Stott was going to run for another term
in office, and there were a lot of people looking
(05:07):
at Mike McDonald's saying are you going to run for mayor?
And he said, eh, you know, maybe you know, he
hemmed and hawed about it. That's still technically where we are.
There's all your backstory. Now here's some dirt. Other than
(05:30):
for purposes of using the term right now one time,
I've never used the term nor do I think I'll
ever use the term spill the tea. I think that's
stupid and I'm not going to say it, but I'll we'll, we'll,
we'll use it We'll throw some dirt on this.
Speaker 2 (05:47):
Just dish the dish.
Speaker 1 (05:48):
We'll do We'll dish the dirt.
Speaker 2 (05:50):
Dish the dirt.
Speaker 1 (05:51):
Okay, here's some dirt dish, all right. I hear that
Mike McDonald is going to run for mayor and he'll
be announcing soon. And now this is what I hear.
Is this true? Telling you? This is just what I've heard.
(06:19):
I've heard that MAGA win wing of the Nebraska State
Republican Party that tends to have a bit more well
a lot more leadership positions than previously had. I won't
go into all the backstory on that, but there was
a little bit of a situation over the last couple
(06:41):
of years, and these mega like the twenty to thirty
percent of super Maga Republicans, got tired of being ignored
by what they saw as the old wing, blue blood
country club Republican part of the Nebraska party. And so
they went in there and they got leadership positions, and
(07:01):
it's gotten kind of ugly. When I say twenty to
thirty percent, I'm talking about some of these recent primaries
where someone like a Matt Innis runs against a Ben
sass for Senate in the Nebraska Republican primary in has
got something like twenty to thirty percent here locally, Nebraska's
(07:21):
second district, Dan Fry did I think a little bit
better than that in the primary, but was still soundly
defeated by Don Bacon. So this is this is where
I'm basing these stats on. Okay, so that call it
twenty five percent of state. Republican Party leadership has been
(07:42):
cozy enough to Mike McDonald. Are they mad at Jean Stouth?
Do they no longer support Jean stoutht I don't know.
Of course, there's you know that there's been some rankling
and handwringing and complaining about the street car. They don't
believe mayor Stother when she says, you're tax dollars are
not going to be used to pay for this. I
(08:03):
have said time and time again, I think the street
car is unnecessary. I think putting down tracks in the
road when you could just have a trolley go wherever?
You know, based on did we just have a bunch
of tree to breed down in the road? Is a
sinkhole up in the road? Do we have a bunch
of piles of snow in the road? Has something opened
up over here? And now, like, boy, sure to be nice,
(08:25):
we'd go a half block south. A trolley seems like
a good idea. But then the argument is, well, if
we don't have, you know, a trolley can go anywhere,
that means the businesses that want to come along the
street car line won't come along because it won't seem permanent.
So I've said I don't think the street car is necessary.
I've also said that the surest that I can be
(08:46):
that Mayri Stoth believes the street car is the right
thing is the fact that she is running for reelection.
If she thought, oh this is this was a terrible idea, Well,
we're just going to hand it off to the next administration.
I'm out. And she said I'm not gonna run for
mayor anymore. It's been a good run. Good luck everybody else.
And then she leaves she didn't do that. She's running
(09:08):
for reelection, which would see through the completion of the
street car, which tells me she believes in it, and
that at least causes me to look at it in
a different way. Do I like it yet?
Speaker 2 (09:21):
No?
Speaker 1 (09:21):
Will I ride it? Sure? I can envision sometimes I
get on ride the thing. But back to Mike McDonald.
So the rumor is here is that, like the twenty
five percent of the MAGA State Republican Party, they want
McDonald to run and oh there's more and and they
(09:47):
want him to rally the votes among Nebraska state senators
where you would need thirty three, rally the votes and
then call a special session of the legislature. Can a
state senator call a special session of the legislature? I don't.
(10:09):
Someone told me that they could. Good enough for me.
I have no idea. I thought the governor had to
call it, but someone said, oh, no, state senator can
do it, especially if they've got the votes. So you
call a special session of the legislature, you get your
thirty three votes, you drag them all back down there,
kicking and screaming they just left after this property tax debacle.
(10:34):
Colossal waste everyone's time. You drag them back down there
for like an hour and say, all right, the special
session has been convened. And the purpose of this is
to award all of Nebraska's electoral college votes in a
winner take all system. Nebraska has five electoral college votes,
(10:54):
two for whoever wins the popular vote in the state,
and then one a portion by each legislative district. So
the Republican's gonna win District three Western Nebraska.
Speaker 2 (11:06):
You said five, you meant three?
Speaker 1 (11:08):
No, five, Okay, I started, I start over. There's five
two go to whoever wins the statewide popular vote. And
then Nebraska has three legislative districts and you get one
vote for each of those, adding up to five.
Speaker 2 (11:24):
My mistake, Yes, I discourage you.
Speaker 1 (11:26):
The Republicans a lock in District three. It's thought that
the Republicans a lock in District one. But Nebraska's second
district here is our little purple dot, isn't it. It's
gone for Mitt Romney, it's gone for Barack Obama, it's
gone for Trump, it's gone for Biden. It's kind of
all over the place, little purple dot. And you got
those that say that is absolutely asenine that Nebraska could
(11:48):
award one Electoral College vote to a Democrat when a
Republican has an avalanche of votes in the state. We
shouldn't do it this way. Only Nebraska and Maine do
it this way. This is so stupid, especially since some
of the experts and Klay Travis here on eleven to
(12:09):
ten kfab have no problem coming up with the scenario
where it would all come right down to you need
two hundred and seventy Electoral College votes to win the presidency.
And then you start doing the beautiful mind type of math. Well,
if Trump wins Pennsylvania, but Kamala wins Nevada, and then
(12:30):
Florida goes, and then Wisconsin, and you start doing all
this stuff, you can get to two hundred and sixty
nine to two hundred and sixty nine and it all
comes down to one vote. And they say, if Nebraska's
a little blue dot goes Harris, she wins the presidency
based on our one little vote. Is that likely to happen?
(12:52):
I don't think so, because I've been here for multiple
election cycles on this radio station, and every four years
someone says, you know, if John McCain and then they
start doing all this stuff and they get to their situation,
and it could be you know, it's never even come close,
but could it happen? Sure it could. It's not the
(13:15):
craziest thing that anyone's ever come up with. So back
to Mike McDonald, what I hear is that the twenty
five percent super maga like Klay Travis, wants them to
give a winner takes all vote for all of Nebraska's
electoral College votes to whoever wins the popular vote in
(13:35):
the state. They want a Republican to do it. Pillin
Is said like, well, I don't know, give me a vote.
We'll take a look at it. He's not been pushing
for it. He thinks that Nebraska's doing it the right way.
And I'm guessing since she's not a fan of Donald Trump,
Mayor Stot's not jumping up and down, going, oh, let
(13:57):
me try and influence this. By the way, she can't,
she's not in the legislature. But Mike McDonald is kind
of I mean, he's term limited out, but he could
still call a special session. He could get the votes.
He could call a special session and we could do
a winner take all, and then he could say, and
by the way, I'm running from mayor, and then all
(14:18):
these Trumpers would be like, he's my guy. That's the dirt.
Let's say that's true. First of all, we would need
the likelihood of that happening based on what we've seen
from this legislature over the last few years. And during
(14:38):
the special session, you need thirty three votes to get
that to happen. I don't think you can get thirty
three of those people to agree that this is Tuesday.
So that's number one. That is a big, big if.
Then all right, again, let's just say he gets it done.
Let's say he does it. Okay. Now, now we have
(15:01):
this coming spring, a city primary election. You've got the
three major players for mayor of Omaha, Nebraska. You got
your incumbent, Jean Stothard, you got your Democratic challenger, John Ewing,
the Douglas County treasurer, and then you got Mike McDonald.
The top two vote getters advanced to the general election.
(15:22):
Who votes for McDonell. It seems like you split that
Republican vote. Are there enough conservative Republicans who are willing
to break away from Jean Stothard? In other words, in
what we hear all the time about the presidential election,
(15:43):
are you better off now than you were four years ago?
All right? Is the city of Omaha better off now
than it was twelve years ago when she took office?
I think you get a lot of people, including in
our little blue city, Jean sto keeps winning elections. I
think you got a lot of people who like the
(16:05):
direction of the City. Now you also got what we've
seen here in Omaha that goes along with a little
bit of voter fatigue. Someone gets in office, they're there
for a while and then suddenly it's like I'm tired
of Lee Terry. You know, no offense Lee, you know,
but this kind of thing happens. Is there enough of that?
Is there enough of? Again? I brought up the examples
(16:28):
there you get all these people saying Don Bacon's done,
We're gonna even Trump said, who wants to challenge Don
Bacon in a primary? Got Dan Fry, dusted him off,
ran him against Bacon. It was a good campaign by both,
and Bacon won convincingly. As much as those these kind
(16:49):
of new maga like Republican types, as much as they say,
like a you're a rhino, we're getting ready, and all
this stuff, whether it's Ben Sas, whether it's Don Bacon,
you know, I hear this kind of thing once in
a while, is never enough to topple that person who
this twenty five or so percent has labeled a rhino. Now,
(17:13):
past performance is no guarantee of future results. But in
a primary, who votes for McDonald The Democrats aren't. Now
the firefighters will. But the firefighters are also going to
get pressure from Hey, I know he was your guy,
he was your chief, he was your fire union president.
He's your buddy. This guy has literally been out there
(17:34):
fighting for you, right, He's been punching people in the
throat for you for years as your fire union president.
But he's a Republican now, and you're a labor guy,
you're a union guy. You're not going to go vote
for a Republican, are you. That'll be interesting. So I
think you even fracture the firefighter vote. The Democrats are
(17:58):
going to vote for him because he's a pro life
caire athletic and now he's a Republican. I think Ewing thinks,
all this is a great idea. You know, he probably
he was gonna get to the final two anyway. You know,
he'll get all the Democrat support. It comes down to
(18:19):
how does that conservative vote split. Well, if McDonald can
get thirty three votes on a winner take all for
Nebraska's electoral college, that could be interesting. But like I said,
I don't think you'd get thirty three of those people
to agree that it's time for me to take a
(18:40):
break and get to a Fox News update in just
a moment, as signs are popping up here in midtown
in the Dundee area. I'll tell you about this next.
I talked about how there are those who think that
state senator, former fire chief, fire union leader, former Democrat,
(19:01):
now Republican Mike McDonald is going to join the Omaha
mayoral race very soon, jumping in maybe in the next
couple of weeks. So one of the things that he
could do to help himself out with his newfound Republican
party is to convene a special session of the legislature,
get thirty three votes and make Nebraska a winner take
(19:22):
all state for electoral College votes. Since you hear people
like Clay Travis say it's going to be a two
sixty nine two sixty nine split, it's going to come
down to Nebraska's second district. And if Nebraska's second district
it's a little blue dot that votes for Kamala Harris,
then Kamala Harris is the next president of the United States,
and Nebraska ruined it. You blew it. So that's some
(19:44):
of the talkie talk about all of this. Now, as
this is happening, we've got a couple here who about
a week ago. According to the story from k ETV
News Watch seven, Jason and Ruth had a sign like
a little lawn service sign that you know, they come out,
(20:06):
whether it's the roofers, the lawn service, headlice, mattress sale,
you know whatever. These signs that go up there your
house is for send out someone selling your house. Don't
paint over the sign. It's going to be very difficult
to sell your house that way. But these guys had
the sign that was out there, and they said, we
(20:27):
don't need to be an advertisement for this company any longer,
but it wouldn't it be fun to use the sign.
So they took the sign and then he painted over
it with white paint. And then he painted a circle
and made it blue, a little blue dot against a
(20:47):
white background. And I don't know if he even put
any phrasing or anything on there. It was just a
blue circle, the blue dot of Nebraska's second district. And
he said that they were just going to do it
as just a little political statement. And then their neighbors said, ooh,
(21:13):
we saw your blue dot, and we thought, is this
about swinging And they said no, no, that's the pineapple, Like, oh,
little pineapple rock. Okay, sorry about that.
Speaker 2 (21:25):
I think the blue dot has to be upside down?
Speaker 1 (21:26):
Yeah, right, is that blue dot? No, the blue dot's
right side up. It looks a little cock eyed to me.
So yeah. Once the neighbors came over and determined whether
or not it was an indicator of swinging going on there,
then they were like, oh, well, shoot, you know, Brad
was really excited, but you know, what's the blue dot about?
(21:48):
And they said, well, it's about our electoral college and
how Kamala Harris might win the presidency based on what
the Omahas are running here. I say, no more, I
like this kind of thing. Where do we get a
sign like this? So they said, we'll make you one,
and so they made about a dozen more signs, and
then other people said look at these signs, and they made
(22:10):
like four hundred more signs. And now they can't make
enough signs to keep up with the demand. Are you
people charging for this? Are you just making hundreds and
hundreds of signs out of the goodness of your own
democrat beating heart? Whatever? Anyway, one thing in the story
(22:34):
here is they said we were shocked. This is what
Ruth said, She tells k ETV news Watch seven. We
were shocked. There were so many people who didn't realize
how this electoral college thing works. They didn't know that
it could come down to the one vote here in
Nebraska's second district that might decide the presidency. So we
(22:56):
had to tell him like, now, this is great, it's
a real special thing. And then they said something no offense.
I mean, I don't like to say things like this
about people who are not only here in the Omaha area,
but they're literally our friends and neighbors. The story comes
from Dundee and news radio eleven ten kfab is here
(23:17):
in Dundee, which, by the way, people like Jason and
Ruth absolutely can't stand. So they're probably not listening unless
their friends were like, hey, the guy's talking about you
on the radio. So I won't say anything too mean here,
but I will say, you can't have a sign talking
about how special Nebraska's little blue dot is and then
(23:40):
tell the news Yeah, we're educating all the people about
how great and how special Nebraska is that has the
opportunity for this one vote to go to the congressional
district winner, and how great is that? And it might
be Kamala Harrison she might win, and Nebraska's getting all
this attention because then they said, we don't like the
(24:00):
electoral college anyway. We think it should just be a
national popular vote. You know, how we decide important things
like whether or not Alfonso Robero gets to stick around
on Dancing with the Stars for another week. You know,
the really important things is Sanjaya gonna win American Idol?
The really really important things should just be decided with
(24:23):
a national popular vote. So we don't like the electoral
college anyway. Well, guess what, ruth if we had a
nationwide popular vote that decides the presidency, let me tell
you exactly how many people would give a good gosh
(24:43):
darn about Nebraska's second district vote, and not just our
second district vote, any vote in Nebraska. Or hmm, Iowa
has not. Iowa was not really the swing state it
used to be. It's very solid red right now. So
and Iowa doesn't have a real big population. So there
(25:07):
may be a little of attention in around Des Moines,
but really nothing Kansas, forget it, South Dakota, North Dakota, Wyoming.
No politician would come here other than the ones running locally.
There would be no national attention on. I wonder what
(25:28):
the people in flyover country think about this. No one
would care. Basically, our president of the United States would
be decided by New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston, Atlanta.
Speaker 2 (25:44):
And what you mean, it's not.
Speaker 1 (25:46):
No because of the way we don't have a democracy.
I know that their hero Kamala Harrison Joe Biden keeps
saying democracy. Democracy is a threat to democracy. That's great.
We don't have a democracy. We have a representative republic.
And the reason we have it set up this way
is to look at it a different way. Let's say
(26:08):
you've got eight lions and then you've got two antelope,
and we're gonna have a vote and decide whether or
not the lions are gonna eat the antelope. In this instance,
the antelope their votes wouldn't count for anything. Now, admittedly
(26:29):
I have a hard time following through my little analogy
there to a point where the antelope survived, but I
think you get my meaning. The antelope would have no
say in the matter. In this instance, Nebraska, Omaha, we
would be the antelope and the lions. In the big
cities out there in Los Angeles and San FRANCISCI and
(26:53):
New York City, you know, and all the rest of
the they would be deciding policy for Nebraska, and our
vote wouldn't count drowned out drop in the ocean, nothing,
and no one would care about your little blue dot,
and no one would care about your little sign, and
no one would care about anything that anyone in Omaha
(27:14):
thinks about anything. Nationally, if you get rid of the
electoral college, the presidential race would be decided by the
politicians focusing exclusively on eight cities. And that's it. That's
not the way that the country should be set up.
(27:37):
That's not the way the leanings of the country are
set up. Yeah, that'd be great. The people in the
cities go and we don't need all that farm country
out there. It's bad for the environment, it's bad for
those animals, so stop doing all that. And then they'd
be like, hey, where'd all the food go? And that's
(28:00):
that's what you're promoting by not wanting the electoral college.
Cute signs, you know, you see them all over Dundee
in Midtown. They're durable, But behind it, apparently is more
than just a little bit of hypocrisy. I'm interested in
a red sign with a red background and a red
(28:22):
dot in the middle that you can't see because the
whole sign's read I am all big read it out
right now. Yes. I posted that on Facebook on Saturday
in the wake of Nebraska's win against UTEP, just to
tweak the haters. What I said was, now, you know what,
if you're not on Facebook and you're not my friend,
then forget it. Why am I going to give this
(28:44):
to you for free? All right? Just this once? So
what by the way, if you are on Facebook and
we're not connected on Facebook, you might as well delete
your account. I'm very easy to find on there. Two
o's and goose. There's your eighties movie reference for this
segment of the radio program Lucy, what's that one? Now,
there's two o's and goose top gun. So I posted
(29:05):
on Facebook. I said, clearly, we're the best team in
college football today. The question is where are we going
to rank among the all time greats? And of course, predictably,
here come the haters. Whoa beat? You tap and suddenly
you think you're a national chamionship, Like, yeah, it's just
(29:30):
to tick you off?
Speaker 2 (29:31):
Is that Facebook?
Speaker 1 (29:33):
Yah? Yeah, there's a gift for that. Yeah. Hey, what's
the point of being a fan if you can. And
I know, I know it's just you tap, but you
know what, I've seen this Nebraska team in recent history
go out and play just McNeese state, just Ball State,
(29:54):
just Wyoming, just what Illinois state. I mean all I've
seen this happen where it's like, well, it's just and
we either don't win or we don't get it done.
Nebraska got it done. It was fun to watch. It
gave me something to look forward to this Saturday, and
I can't wait for this Saturday in Colorado on Saturday night.
(30:17):
Oh hey, before I do anything else, let me do
this because I will forget. I'm so stupid. I know, Scott.
I listen to your show. Thank you, thanks for listening.
I leave myself reminders on my phone, and then the
reminders pop up on my phone and I ignore it,
and then I get done with the show and I
(30:38):
look at my phone and it's like, don't forget to
mention this. I'm like, dang it, I need a reminder
to remind me to check my phone. But the only
place I could do that would be on my phone,
and I'm clearly not checking it. Why was I checking it? Now?
I don't. Oh, my wife just texted me something. I'll
get back to her later. I saw this on Facebook.
(31:01):
It was posted by Alan. It got my attention because
I don't know this individual to post a lot of
stuff that would require this label, and I was overcome
with curiosity and clicked on it. What did I click on? Well,
it says now the picture is all blurred and it
(31:25):
has the Facebook warning label. Have you seen this? I have.
Speaker 2 (31:28):
Well, I've seen pictures that are blurred before and I
don't click on them.
Speaker 1 (31:32):
Well, that's because when some random guy sends you a
picture and it's blurred, well you know what it is.
And again, I'm sorry about that. I thought I was
supposed to go to someone else. So this picture is
all blurred and it's got the Facebook label, the warning
label on it that says violent or graphic content. This
(31:56):
photo is covered so people can choose whether they want
to see it. Learn more click here now. By learning more,
by clicking there, you see the picture, which is actually
I think unfair because someone might want to learn more
and then they see the picture and go, oh my gosh,
it's so violent and graphic. I didn't want to see this.
I wanted to learn about what violent and graphic mant
(32:18):
this is. I don't like it. I'm gonna delete all
of this. So this photo has covered so people can
choose whether they want to see it violent or graphic content.
Speaker 2 (32:30):
And which was it?
Speaker 1 (32:31):
Yeah, well, I'll tell you exactly what it was. I'm sorry, Hey,
you know, hide the children and cover up grandma. I'm
going to tell you what was so violent and graphic
that Facebook obscured it so people wouldn't just happen across
it and think hah, hey, you know and be horrified.
Speaker 2 (32:48):
So it was violent and I saw you were saying violent.
Speaker 1 (32:52):
This says violent or graphic?
Speaker 2 (32:53):
Okay?
Speaker 1 (32:54):
And again the guy who posted dude named Alan. I
think I've met Alan. Alan's like I thought we were
best friends. But I recognize the guy and I don't
know him to post a lot of crazy stuff. So
I clicked on it, like, what is this? You know
what it is? And you're gonna take my word for it.
(33:16):
I'm not making any of this up. It's a bald
eagle bowing its head, and the image laid over it
is that of a waving American flag. Here's the text,
Dear God, I bow my head and ask if it
be Thy, will please save this land from those who
(33:41):
seek to destroy it? Amen. I don't know if you
use I'll go with I don't know if you caught
my show the other day when I said, yeah, it's
great that Zuckerberg came out and said, yeah, the Biden
team asked us to do some stuff on Facebook. We
(34:01):
went along with it. Maybe we shouldn't have, and he
said it kind of like, yeah, we're not doing that
stuff anymore. And I said, bowl, my whole Facebook feed
is just full of people I've never seen any of
their stuff, and it's only got like two likes in
one comment. And suddenly Facebook is like, we bumped this up.
We thought you wanted to see how great Kamala is
(34:22):
or how bad Trump is, and that's all. And then
they covered this a bald eagle saying a prayer, Dear God,
I bow my head and ask, if it be thy,
will please save this land from those who seek to
destroy it? Amen? That's what Facebook determined to be violent
or graphic content. Again, why do I stay on Facebook?
(34:51):
And again the answer is I've got a lot of
ex girlfriends to keep tabs on, and they're not reaching
out to me. Saying, oh, got a new job, or
my son just made a tackle on the football game.
And if I can't keep tabs on these people, then
then I can't sleep at night. Gotta keep I don't
(35:14):
want to date any of these girls again, but I
just gotta know what they're doing, right, not only ex girlfriends,
anyone I ever thought would be a great girlfriend, anyone
who ever asked out and they said no. Gotta find
out what they're doing. And that's why I'm on Facebook.
Speaker 2 (35:33):
We're getting into professional therapy right And.
Speaker 1 (35:36):
Right now you're asking your husband, is that why you're
on Facebook? And he's going no. This guy on the
radios is ruining everything for us. Now, yesterday was Labor Day,
by the way, you're right, Lucy, this is this is
my therapy every morning from nine to eleven. Yesterday too.
(36:00):
Yesterday was a labor day, I said, And that must
be true. I said it on the am radio and
everyone was here yesterday except us, Lucy. What were we
doing yesterday? We were out skipping holding hands. Do people
think we're married?
Speaker 2 (36:19):
I don't think so.
Speaker 1 (36:20):
I thought Billy and Judy were married. You did, Yeah,
The morning show team on our sister station Omaha's Greatest Hits,
ninety nine point nine kgo R.
Speaker 2 (36:29):
I've heard of it.
Speaker 1 (36:30):
Yeah, you do afternoon drive on that station.
Speaker 2 (36:35):
But they're always talking about her dates.
Speaker 1 (36:36):
But I didn't hear any of that. I just kind
of got I don't know, I just got the impression
I thought they were I thought they were a married
couple that did a radio show together. And then suddenly
he was talking about his wife and she was talking
about some date, and I thought they're a divorced couple
who's so comfortable.
Speaker 2 (36:51):
You wouldn't let it go. You were going to find
an angle.
Speaker 1 (36:54):
So I wonder do people think that we're married.
Speaker 2 (36:57):
I don't think so.
Speaker 1 (36:58):
We are married, not to each other.
Speaker 2 (37:01):
That reminds me of that old country song. What's that
when you're married, but not to each other. I didn't
give it. I didn't do it justice.
Speaker 1 (37:13):
That was great. Reminds me of that old country song,
I can't get over you until you get out from
under him.
Speaker 2 (37:23):
Oh that's so bad.
Speaker 1 (37:25):
It's a good song.
Speaker 2 (37:26):
I'm sure.
Speaker 1 (37:28):
What did you do on Labor Day?
Speaker 2 (37:31):
I wasted two days. And when I say wasted, I
needed them. I didn't do anything. I just sat on
the couch for two of those days.
Speaker 1 (37:39):
Not a waste. You're totally justified. You worked so hard.
I I hope you're sitting down. I played golf what
and then ate too much food. Ooh, and my wife
came back from the store and said, I bought this,
but it doesn't mean that you get to drink it. Oh,
we're saving it for fall. But because sometimes this couple
(38:02):
couple years ago, we wanted this and we went to
the store and we couldn't find it, and so all
the stories were out of caramel vodka, which is mixed
great with either hot apple cider or if you're not
in the mood for hot apple cider, it mixes great
with cold apple cider aka apple juice. And I think
it's just delicious. So she said, I bought some of
(38:25):
this in case they run out later. It's not for now,
we don't have any apple cider. So I took some
and I mixed it with strawberry lemonade. She told you, no,
she did tell.
Speaker 2 (38:37):
Me now, And yet you did it anyway. Yeah, And
I hope it was terrible.
Speaker 1 (38:43):
I regret nothing. Was it good? Sure? Do I need
any more tonight? I do not. In fact, I was
driving to work this morning, and I could still kind
of taste it because it'll kind of feel it, not
liking an like it and bibe kind of a way.
I just felt the effects.
Speaker 2 (39:01):
It's the memory of.
Speaker 1 (39:03):
Yeah, and I was like, ah, that kicks kind of
hard in the next day. I don't know about that.
Speaker 2 (39:09):
She warned you.
Speaker 1 (39:10):
I know, I know, I hope you're not listening to
this checking my phone, not texting. Okay, So that's what
I did on Labor Day. Now, of course, with Labor Day,
there's the annual story is about Here's what's going on
with labor in America, the number of people in the
labor participation for us, those who are actually working, those
(39:31):
who aren't working for whatever reason they're not working. Here's
what they're doing in terms of what they're making per hour.
Here's what salaries look like. Here's what they look like
five years ago. Are you making ground or you're losing ground.
Here's the workers satisfaction things. So you have all these
different things about work. Well since COVID. Now, this is
something you used to hear about happening like in China
(39:52):
right where it's like they cut the umbilical cord and
then sit you down in front of a sewing machine
and say get to work, and then the you just
do that until you die. And I wouldn't think that
this would happen in America, but I'll shoot. My wife
is texting me and she says, you have no portion
control with your pores. Yes, I do.
Speaker 2 (40:16):
Why people had such a hard time going back to
the bars after COVID.
Speaker 1 (40:19):
I do have portion control based on the size of
the glass.
Speaker 2 (40:26):
Can't get the bartenders to pour like you do at home.
Speaker 1 (40:28):
By the way, portion control is my favorite print song.
Not gonna sing it? Remember that song? Ah, portion control
A no?
Speaker 2 (40:45):
Is that a real song?
Speaker 1 (40:46):
Kind I'll explain to you later. All right, Oh yeah,
I think that this could happen. Well, it did happen
in America. It happened in Arizona, specifically, I want to
say Temple, Yeah, Tempe, Arizona. And I wouldn't have thought
before COVID this could ever happen. I thought that we
(41:07):
had a better working environment in America, But now we
have a situation like this. Seven o'clock on this we're
just learning about the story. It happened a couple of
weeks ago. So seven am on Friday, August sixteenth, sixty
year old Denise clocks into work seven am, right goodness.
(41:32):
And this is at a bank, so the bank doesn't
even open until nine I don't know, but she clocks
into work at seven am on Friday, August sixteenth. She
was later found dead at her desk in her cubicle
(41:52):
on Tuesday afternoon. So she clocks in Friday morning seven am,
sits down to work in her cubicle on the third floor,
kind of away from the main aisle, and then I
don't know, she's sitting there working on her TPS reports
(42:13):
or whatever, and at some point just lays down and dies.
Speaker 2 (42:22):
It's a great argument for you know, not working in
the office unless everybody is.
Speaker 1 (42:30):
Well.
Speaker 2 (42:31):
But there are other people around, and it was those
little cubicles, yeah.
Speaker 1 (42:35):
But it was. It was not until Tuesday when they
found her. You know why why Someone said, you, I
want to call the plumber. Something smells kind of funny
in here. That's terrible, that's but that's what happened. And
so someone, when investigating the source of the odor, finds
(42:55):
their coworker. Now, well, this is not the same as
a bus driver not checking on the bus to see
if all the kids got off of it. You know,
I never think as I leave if I'm the last
person here in the building for the day. I never
walk all over the building, Hey is anyone dead in here?
(43:16):
But the fact that someone could die on Friday, it's
it's a bank, so there's people there on Friday, Like,
no one's gonna leave and go Bidenise, have a good weekend.
It's open on Saturday. You got the bank open on Saturday.
(43:40):
It's open.
Speaker 2 (43:40):
This was in offices, yeah right.
Speaker 1 (43:43):
Yeah, but it's open on Monday. And I don't was
there anyone in her life that she had anything? Like?
Did no one notice? I with if she were married,
had kids, you'd think someone to be like, hey, where's
my wife? My meat loaf is cold? You know who?
(44:06):
Apparently nothing, No one. They didn't know she was missing.
No one was looking. I think that the janitors didn't
come around and dumped the trash. Nothing From Friday seven
am until Tuesday afternoon, it was she might.
Speaker 2 (44:24):
Have been seen, but they might have thought she was
just sleeping, you know, put your head down on the
desk for a minute. So it's not like I doubt
that nobody saw her. They they wouldn't have kept walking
if it had been a couple of days early on.
Speaker 1 (44:41):
That's sad.
Speaker 2 (44:42):
It's very sad. And I think the part of the
problem is that we were forced into so much isolation
beginning about four years ago that we've kind of adapted.
A lot of us have adapted to isolation. And it
doesn't if somebody doesn't answer a text in a couple
of days, Yeah, they'll get to me.
Speaker 1 (45:05):
I know, I'm not going to start bugging people, but
you're right. I mean there are people like we've gone
to kind of a hybrid work environment here at the
radio station, those of us who you hear on the radio,
We're here. Hi, I'm here, I'm talking. It's ten twenty
one on Tuesday, September third. This shows it's live. Right.
(45:29):
So some of the support staff, I guess, still work
for the company. Like there's one person in particular, I
have no idea. I still see her name like pop
up in circumstances around the office.
Speaker 2 (45:45):
I don't know if she I know what you're talking about.
Speaker 1 (45:47):
I don't have any idea either, I don't right, yeah, right,
then one of the offices downstairs you get like her her,
and then there's this office, and then the one down
the end. I don't know, I have any idea.
Speaker 2 (45:58):
Right So, if they came into the into the station,
if they were in the basement doing their work in
the offices.
Speaker 1 (46:05):
We should call her, Hey, we're just curious, do you
work here?
Speaker 2 (46:10):
And are you okay?
Speaker 1 (46:11):
Haven't seen her in four years. And the sad thing
is in this building, we wouldn't if there was a
foul smell coming in within the building, we'd just go like, yep,
plumbing that bathroom, someone left something in the refrigerator. It's
not my job and we just walk away from it.
(46:31):
I'm gonna go check her office and make.
Speaker 3 (46:33):
Sure it's Scott Fores News Radio eleven ten k FA.
Speaker 1 (46:39):
We were both thinking about the same employee, I think.
But I think she got some new job, like higher
up in the company where she doesn't have to deal
with us minions here in Omaha. I think that I
think she's doing stuff for iHeartMedia still maintains offices here
in Omaha that she never comes to, and she doesn't
(47:01):
come to any of our stuff. She doesn't come to
the tailgate party. She's probably not gonna be here on
Friday for the Gina party.
Speaker 2 (47:08):
Is there a party for Gina.
Speaker 1 (47:10):
You know there is, you replied to the email.
Speaker 2 (47:13):
I didn't see a party.
Speaker 1 (47:15):
That's what the email was about.
Speaker 2 (47:16):
Oh don't I'll go.
Speaker 1 (47:19):
Don't act like you don't know.
Speaker 2 (47:21):
I need to bring a gift, all right.
Speaker 1 (47:22):
There's Lucy. Yeah, do we have to bring a gift?
Speaker 2 (47:24):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (47:25):
I'm not bringing her anything. There's Lucy Chapman. I'm Scott
Vorhees's sorry. We're just having a intra office caddy chit
chat about our coworkers right here on the radio on
news radio eleven ten kfab Lucy. It's called lunchbox shaming.
(47:45):
This story is out of Canada. It's this whole other.
Speaker 2 (47:48):
Country, Oh Canada.
Speaker 1 (47:54):
By the way, that was your nineties movie reference for
the segment of the radio program. It's this whole other country.
Speaker 2 (47:59):
Uh, Bill and Ted excellent brew Adventure.
Speaker 1 (48:04):
Yeah, Forrest Gump and I did appreciate the oh Canada reference.
That didn't slide by. So the story out of Canada,
it's up. It's up there. But this is something that
I'm sure local and American media outlets will pick up
on and go, Yeah, I bet this happening all over
(48:24):
the place, because we got a lot of people who've
moved here to North America from other cultures?
Speaker 2 (48:34):
When did that happen?
Speaker 1 (48:35):
Last last Wednesday?
Speaker 2 (48:37):
Here?
Speaker 1 (48:37):
Yeah, yeah, last Wednesday. So then they moved they what
happens is they move here and then they send their
kid to school with the cultural diverse lunch offerings from
their homeland. And so you get your American or in
this case, Canadian kids. I don't know what the you know,
(48:58):
they just open up like it's just bacon and beer.
I mean, is this with the kids in Canada and syrup? Yes,
it's it's bacon with maple syrup and beer. Actually sounds
really does not sound bad.
Speaker 2 (49:14):
Oh, and don't forget Canadian bacon.
Speaker 1 (49:16):
Well up there, they just call it bacon. It's Canada.
So here, like the American equivalent is like all these
kids open up their lunch boxes and they all have
like a ham sandwich or something like that, and then
here enough here Yeah, so I don't know what it's
would it keep until lunch.
Speaker 2 (49:36):
Tuna sandwich and a twinkie?
Speaker 1 (49:40):
So then they sit down next to some kid from
parts unknown, some island or Asian nation where the offerings
might be a little bit more different. And so they
sit down and there they eating like shrimp, octopus, dumpling, tentacle,
(50:06):
and they're eating something that looks like like if pudding
and squid had a baby. It's this and it's got
like an eyeball sticking out of it. And then over
heres the kid from you know, some weird part of
Sri Lanka is eating a monkey brain. And then the kids,
the American ear in this case Canadian kids go what's
(50:31):
that a boot? And they make fun of the culturally
significant dishes that these kids are eating that are delicacies
from their homeland, and of course the kids feel ashamed.
It's called lunch box shaming. And the story here is
(50:52):
position in such a way as to suggest that this
kind of thing has never happened before to anybody.
Speaker 2 (51:00):
You're laughing, Yeah, I'm laughing. Okay, why are you laughing?
Because this is what kids have done since the prairie
one room school house.
Speaker 1 (51:08):
Yes, yes, it didn't matter what you were eating or
what lunch box you were pulling the items from. If
there was an opportunity for someone to make fun of you,
they were going to take it. And if there was
no opportunity to make fun of you based on what
you did or did not have. They were just going
to pick something else and make fun of you for that.
Speaker 2 (51:28):
Now, don't misunderstand. I am one hundred percent against actual
terrible bullying. But kids tease each other. That's how they learn,
that's what they learned to cope with life.
Speaker 1 (51:41):
Mm hmm. There's a difference between teasing, right and bullying
and this. You know, someone looking at some weird food
they've never seen before, going you, what is that? And
making the person feel bad and ashamed. Yeah, I imagine
(52:01):
the kid doesn't feel great. But what a traumadously not
what a tremendous opportunity to say, Oh it's mousetail. I
don't know. Whatever they eat. I don't know. It's like, ooh,
what's that? Oh well, you're going to learn about it
six period in science class. But for right now, this
is what I eat in my homeland, and so this
(52:23):
is what I'm having. Who cares?
Speaker 2 (52:27):
So what's the outcome? Who's making a big deal out
of this?
Speaker 1 (52:31):
Toronto dot Com is where I got this story. I leave. No,
they're saying no stone unturned when doing show prep for
this program.
Speaker 2 (52:39):
And they're saying that this is a terrible, terrible thing
that is happening to our children. Yes, they probably do
think that because they do also understand that this is
how children learn to cope with people around them, says.
Speaker 1 (52:50):
More than one in four Canadian parents say their child
has experienced lunch box shaming in elementary school, and the
number goes up to thirty one percent in Ontario.
Speaker 2 (53:02):
Well it's Ontario.
Speaker 1 (53:03):
Lunchbox shaming, and this elementary school teacher says lunch box
shaming is bullying. The minute a kid hears eu or yuck,
they can shut down for the rest of the day.
Oh my gosh. I hope no one calls him by
the wrong pronouns. Then they'll just explode. Fox News update
(53:23):
here in just a moment Scott on lunchbox shaming. Adam
emails via the Zonkers custom woods Inbox Scott at kfab
dot com and says, pungent The food from Asian countries
is pungent. I detasseled with several Vietnamese people when I
(53:44):
was a kid. Their food is pungent. One time, in particular,
a young fellow had a sandwich type thing that included
a small whole carp complete with scales and bones. Fast
forward thirty years and I really enjoy kim chee, a
traditional Asian firm me ed cabbage side dish. My wife says,
my breath reeks of it for many hours after I
(54:05):
eat it. That's from Adam, Thank you, Adam.
Speaker 2 (54:10):
Bones and scale. Wait, well, first of all, KRP doesn't
have scales.
Speaker 1 (54:15):
It doesn't.
Speaker 2 (54:17):
I think it's skin like a catfish, isn't it doesn't
have scales.
Speaker 1 (54:20):
Yeah it's a fish.
Speaker 2 (54:22):
No, not all fish have scales. Catfish doesn't have scales.
That fish's skin. Salmon has skin.
Speaker 1 (54:29):
You know now that you mentioned I yeah, I don't know.
I don't know. All I know is getting too close
to lunchtime. Dude, figure out what's going on there.
Speaker 2 (54:43):
Where's your lunch? I want to shame it?
Speaker 1 (54:45):
Yeah, I don't have any right now I'm going about
to lose it. The lunch box shaming story says that
these kids from other cultures move into the stories from Canada,
but America, same thing, and then they pull out their
cultural delicacies in the local kids go EU and then
the foreign kids say, oh no, now I feel bad.
(55:07):
Now I feel othered, and so we need to stop
doing that. And this story here is saying stop doing that.
Stop lunchbox shaming. Meanwhile, had to dig a little bit
for this one. Here's an assistant principle in where did
this happen? Texas who got in the middle of a
(55:30):
fight with kids and the kid punched her in the
eye and knocked her eye out of the socket. Assistant
principal who is a woman of I would I would.
You know it sounds bad to say a middle aged woman,
but you know this is someone who is mom between
(55:54):
like mom and grandma, aged for the kid in the
school situation, and this kid thought would be a good
idea to just knock her eye right out. And as
far as the kid, they say, we're gonna deal with
this in the juvenile court system, and everyone here and
around Douglas County knows that that means, oh, nothing will happen.
(56:14):
She loses an eye, he gets a slap on the wrist. Now,
this kind of thing happens, maybe not with the eye
knocked out, but the teachers getting in the middle of
these fights were being the target of the fights, getting
injured and then nothing happens. And this kind of thing
happens all the time. Yeah, you won't see the media
(56:36):
make a big deal about that. As they do a
lunch box shaming. That's it. That's the only soapbox. I
was gonna stood on the soapbox there for a second,
and now I'm gonna jump off. And then wonder, Lucy,
did you take a flight over the weekend?
Speaker 2 (56:54):
I did not.
Speaker 1 (56:56):
There were some women on a plane and there was
a child looked to be about one or one and
a half somewhere, like a toddler kid, who was crying consistently.
So the women did what anyone would.
Speaker 2 (57:10):
Do, jump out of the plane.
Speaker 1 (57:14):
They tried to soothe the little kid, little girl.
Speaker 2 (57:17):
He tried to sue him soothe.
Speaker 1 (57:19):
Tried to soothe the little girl by locking the child
in the airplane bathroom, and of course they had to
post a video of it. And we're telling the kid,
we're not going to let you out until you stop crying.
Speaker 2 (57:34):
Where was the mother amongst these I don't know.
Speaker 1 (57:41):
The child was with her grandparents and cried non stop
during the nearly three hour flight, and two women, not
related took the girl to the restroom to quote educate
her with the grandma's consent.
Speaker 2 (57:55):
I guess, oh, now that's a problem.
Speaker 1 (57:57):
And uh, and then they put the lock the girl
in the bathroom and said you can't come out until
you stop crying. And now everyone's thinking two separate thoughts.
Number one, how terrible, how horrifying for this little girl,
and also wondering did it work? It did?
Speaker 2 (58:20):
Well, of course it did. You would do anything to
get out of that bathroom, even at one years old.
One year old, you understand that.
Speaker 1 (58:28):
Yeah, there was a guy in there at the time,
which probably made it a little Oh. So the girl
stops crying and they say, okay, are you done, and
they opened the door and they let the kid out
of the bathroom and everyone has a RESTful flight the
rest of the way.
Speaker 2 (58:45):
So that can't be the end of the story.
Speaker 1 (58:47):
That's well. Now some people, since they posted it on
social media, they want the airline is investigating and they're
wondering if they can press charges.
Speaker 2 (58:58):
I don't I thought you were going to talk about that,
this new thing of raw dogging. Did you see that.
Speaker 1 (59:06):
I have a different idea what this might be about
than probably where you're going with it.
Speaker 2 (59:11):
But that is that? Does that mean something? I didn't know.
Speaker 1 (59:15):
That, So I'm I'm ready to learn.
Speaker 2 (59:17):
Okay, I'm sorry, I'm going to have to tell you
what it is now, so that you know, I didn't
understand that that means something. I don't want it to mean.
Speaker 1 (59:23):
I'm kind of hoping it means exactly, but me and
several other guys think it to me.
Speaker 2 (59:29):
Okay, well, it's these guys mostly, it's been guys. Oh
it's just sounds like it's getting worse, isn't it. They
get on flights and they have nothing to read, nothing
to eat, nothing to drink. They must just sit there
and stare forward. Is this not new? Is the first
(59:50):
I've ever heard of it?
Speaker 1 (59:50):
First?
Speaker 2 (59:51):
How stupid is that.
Speaker 1 (59:52):
First I've heard of it being given a label that
is generally reserved. Oh boy, it's a I'm sorry, it's
a more intimate I didn't know.
Speaker 2 (01:00:04):
Gosh, we need to.
Speaker 1 (01:00:06):
Like writing bareback.
Speaker 2 (01:00:08):
Okay, I need to go to rehearsal.
Speaker 1 (01:00:14):
Why start now? Rehearsal every radio show is practiced for
tomorrow's radio show. How does the show get worse every day?
I don't know. It's amazing people looking into it. So
so people are doing this.
Speaker 2 (01:00:32):
I'm turning right over here.
Speaker 1 (01:00:33):
I I no, no, you're fine, No, you're you're fine.
To stay with me here on your definition of it.
I think that that's it's not hard for me to do.
I could pull it off. I would think that for
men of a certain age especially, it would be nearly impossible.
(01:00:53):
If you've grown up with a device at your disposal
anytime there I'm talking about younger guys. Yes, you know,
you've always been conditioned that you've got various phones, iPads, AirPods,
there's always something there to entertain you. And now to
just sit there with your own thoughts at a time
(01:01:14):
when your parents never had you do that. My wife
and I are cave people in how we've raised our kids.
Sometimes our kids ask hey, can we have this? Or
can we do this? Or I'm driving in a long
car trip can I do this? And we don't call
child Protective Services on us. Again, we tell them no,
(01:01:40):
they have to just sit there. Like if we're going
visiting friends or family, they don't walk in with their
face buried in a phone. They actually have to go
and intermingle. They actually have to be a part of
life for a few minutes. It's amazing it can be done.
(01:02:01):
So to take someone who's twenty seven years old, who
has never been forced to just sit there with your
own thoughts for a while. I imagine for some of these
people it's got to be pretty horrifying.
Speaker 2 (01:02:14):
I wouldn't do it.
Speaker 1 (01:02:15):
I'm a gen xer. This is how I grew up. Hey,
can I take a TV with me on this flight? Yeah? Here,
he will get three guys to help you carry it.
Speaker 2 (01:02:24):
Well, their rules are they can't even have conversations with
the people around them. I just think that that's that's
like self imposed weirdness.
Speaker 1 (01:02:35):
No, I think it's it's good training. But also, if
you saw a young guy who's clearly not comfortable sitting
right there, staring straight ahead, fidgeting like jonesing for that
fix of some sort of phone or iPad or something
to look at, and he just was sitting there like
(01:02:55):
sweating and looking uncomfortable, I'd contact the air marshal, right right.
Speaker 2 (01:03:02):
The one guy he went thirteen hours I think he
said Singapore to Houston or something like that. I don't know.
Thirteen hours and.
Speaker 1 (01:03:10):
The reward though, was he what he got to Houston?
All right? Speaking of gen xers and TV, we had
Parker Lewis on the program the other day. That's actor
coorn Nemic.
Speaker 3 (01:03:22):
Good morning, honey, guess what I made you pancakes for breakfast.
Speaker 1 (01:03:30):
He made us pancakes, Parker Lewis can't lose, and so
therefore Parker Lewis's pancakes can't lose. So, along with the
other guests in the history of this program who have
made us pancakes for breakfast, I've gone specifically for those
who have been the stars of Fox television programs, usually
(01:03:51):
the same time period, late eighties, early nineties. It's a
little smaller list than we sometimes do, but it includes
Nancy Cartwright aka Bart Simpson. Away Man, I can't do that.
I can't talk like Bird Simpson. You're making me talk
like talking about pancakes in the morning, Sean Wayans of
you know the Wayans Brother fames, including Wayne's brother fame,
including in Living Color. Hi, I'm Brittany Wilson and good morning, Honey,
(01:04:16):
I mean you pancakes for breakfast. In his White Chicks
character Angela Johnson Reyes, who was on Mad TV and
played Bunky keyth good morning Honey, I'm Ason pancake for
Brickley bon Bunk weak Que forgot how she pronounced that
character's name. We had Lois Griffin, Alex Borstein Plan.
Speaker 2 (01:04:38):
And Honey, I make it pancakes to breakfast.
Speaker 1 (01:04:42):
The star of Chuck Grassley Can't Lose on Fox in
the early nineties Chuck grass League Morning.
Speaker 3 (01:04:47):
I made cakes for you, honey.
Speaker 1 (01:04:51):
And even though he's not the star of a Fox
TV show, I wanted to hear this because we had
Dennis Quaid on the show a few years ago, who
plays Ronald reg in the new movie Reagan, and I
asked him to make us pancakes in the same way
that Ellen DeGeneres had him shouting out his coffee order.
Wants some pancakes, Dennis Denis, Dennis Quaid wants coffee. Dennis
(01:05:14):
Quaid wants some pancakes. Love that we had Dennis Quaid
on the program. I hope we can talk to him again.
All right, we got to wrap up this show next
and we will.
Speaker 3 (01:05:23):
Scotty's News Radio eleven ten kfab.
Speaker 1 (01:05:28):
Most all fish have scales, Lucy, including the ones that
you named. The only ones that don't are clingfish, razorfish,
more eels, which is an eel and not what would
be normally considered to be a fish.
Speaker 2 (01:05:43):
Where is a scale on catfish?
Speaker 1 (01:05:45):
Well, I hang on and I'll go get one and
show you.
Speaker 3 (01:05:51):
Scott Vories mornings nine to eleven, Our News Radio eleven
ten kfab