Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Scott Vorhees, I went to the movies yesterday afternoon in
the middle of the day, which feels weird. I never
do that, but yesterday I was working, Lucy. I was
working because we had a special screening. And before I
get too far down this road, thanks again to our
sponsors Patriotic Productions, Patriotic Productions dot org and Fallen Giant Films.
(00:26):
Had a great conversation with Bill Williams of Patriotic Productions,
Randy J. Goodwin Fallen Giant Films yesterday morning about the
movie we saw yesterday and also the movie that came
out fifty years ago, Blazing Saddles. It was a great
conversations up on the Vintage Varheats podcast link on the
Scott Vorheas page at kfab dot com. And we put together,
(00:51):
much like we did for the Reagan movie a couple
of weeks ago, a special screening only for kfab listeners
of the new film from the day Ailey Wire called
m I Racist. Matt Walsh plays first of all himself.
Let me tell you exactly how the whole movie can know.
This is the synopsis. Matt Walsh, who was a conservative
(01:14):
commentator and provocateur, is himself going into anti racism seminars,
trying to get on this path to be anti racist
and find out what that is as more and more
companies cities are enacting these DEI policies boards, leadership positions
(01:37):
DEI Diversity, Equity and Inclusion. So he goes in as himself,
and I didn't enjoy some of the opening parts because like, well, yeah,
you got kicked out of this this meeting because you
were trying to get kicked out of this meeting. So
(02:00):
I started off going, is this the whole movie?
Speaker 2 (02:04):
No?
Speaker 1 (02:05):
I mean that kind of that had to go that
way to set up what happens next, because now he
puts on this horrible wig with a man bun and
this tweed jacket and.
Speaker 3 (02:16):
Kind of like undercover boss terrible.
Speaker 1 (02:18):
Yeah it's terrible. It's like, yeah, well, yes, terrible costumes.
But there are a lot of people working throughout the
country who don't know who their boss is.
Speaker 3 (02:28):
That's true.
Speaker 2 (02:29):
I mean, I come.
Speaker 1 (02:31):
Right, I mean, you know who your immediate supervisor is,
and maybe his or her immediate supervisor, but as far
as your if our boss in this company, one of
them came in here and and just started like dumping
the trash while I was doing the radio show. I
wouldn't know it was him. I'd be a little entertained
(02:52):
by it, but I wouldn't know. Yeah, and in case
they're listening, I would love to have them here. But yeah,
in this case, I mean Matt Walsh. He's recognizable to
a point with certain people, both those who love him
(03:12):
and those who think he is the devil, but he's
not immediately recognizable. So it was just kind of for
fun that he puts on this wig and then goes back,
not to the same place, but starts this process where
he's talking with authors and educators, and then he goes
online and gets his own DEI Instructor of Certification with
(03:34):
card that he's very happy to show off, and begins
this process of not only going and learning more about
what it means to be white in America, which is
you're racist. You are not supposed to see color, but
you are supposed to see color, but when you see color,
don't see it too much, and don't see it for
the wrong reason, and don't bring your biases which you
(03:56):
inherently have and can't do anything about. And it's just
this confusing mess where if you just keep buying these
books or paying these speakers to do seminars, then you'll
get closer to a point you can't reach, which is
not being racist. Because if you're white, especially a straight
Christian white male in America, you are always racist, no
(04:18):
matter what you do. So it's about all of that,
and a lot of the people who he talks to
here they could be mad about this. There's one in particular,
and there's, by the way, a very subtle dig because
there's this white woman who's written a book called White
Fragility and a couple of other things, and there are
(04:42):
also in other scenarios black DEI experts who take shots
at her like she's just trying to profit off of
all of this. What does she know? She's white? So
it's it's pretty subtle within the movie. But I enjoyed
that and what I won't give this away, but what
they ultimately end up doing with her at one point
(05:07):
is amazing, not just for how awkward the situation is,
but how in the world Matt and his producer are
able to keep a straight face. So there's just a
little comment for those who have or will see the movie.
I don't know how they did that. But the theme of
(05:31):
the movie is is is it all about trying to
be a better white person or is it all about
paying the right people a certain amount of money so
you can unload some of your white guilt, which should
never go away. Is it about profiteering or is it
(05:51):
about trying to make a better world? Is it about
telling people who really hadn't considered too much about race
or racism that they're somehow wrong or they grew up
in this institutional structure that just made them racist, whether
or not they even know it, And the fact that
they don't know it makes them even more racist. So
(06:13):
that's what this whole documentary is about. And the people
who are subjects duped into being a part of it,
they can get mad, and they are, but you actually
get a chance to hear them in long, unbroken segments
what they have to say. I would think for that
that they would be pleased. Well, my message is getting out.
(06:34):
At the same time, I checked on a couple of
them who are duped into being in this movie, and
they signed all the releases and they can't do anything
about it. They might not like what happened with it,
but they all say and I will not be seeing
this movie, and one big thing the theme is he's
mocking people of color in this movie. They absolutely should
(06:59):
be the first ones buying a ticket. He'd probably let
them in for free to see this movie and then
tell me when he reaches his conclusion at the end
of the film, what it is that they have a
problem with, What it is that needs to be fixed,
what's wrong with him? Because it seems to me that
racism here in twenty twenty four is not what it
(07:24):
was like in eighteen sixty four, nineteen twenty four, nineteen
fifty four. Yes, this country has definitely had its issues,
and we've definitely been striving to get to a better place.
And this has been done with the help of all people,
all different walks of life. What he's able to do
(07:45):
talking to a bunch of white guys in a biker
bar versus you know, some black guys like working at
a car repair shop and have them all come to
the same conclusions is beautiful in this movie. Yeah, there
are racists out there, and I've always said you don't
(08:06):
have to wonder who they are. They always seem super
proud to tell you what they think. Like I just
asked what time it was, you know, and they just
want to start espousing all this stuff. They don't have
positions of power. They don't run the strings on what
(08:26):
goes on in society. They certainly don't run what happens
in my heart or your heart. So what does racism
look like in twenty twenty four? Here's an example of it.
There's a sports commentator named Skip Bayless and he was
(08:46):
talking about this on his podcast the other day, how
he finally feels like he can openly support Caitlyn Clark.
Just in case you don't know, Caitlin Clark, recent graduate
of the University of Iowa who jumped immediately into the
WNBA after a couple of different championship runs so close
(09:11):
for Iowa in college, she jumps into the WNBA, by
the way, side note, smartest thing the WNBA ever did,
or I didn't know if this is always the case
or just to capitalize on this hot streak of girls basketball.
It's like they played the national championship game on a Monday,
and it's like the WNBA season started the next day
(09:31):
when we drafted her, and she now plays for Indiana
and we're still going because in a regular basketball schedule,
like the men's basketball wrapped up in March early April,
and the NBA season doesn't start for another couple of months.
The Caitlin Clarks of men's college basketball, we've moved on.
I don't know who those guys are. I honestly can't
(09:52):
remember who won the national championship this past year. Probably
villain O. I don't know. I don't remember this stuff.
But the WNBA like, and we're tipping off super smart.
So a lot of attention has been on this basketball player.
And if you don't know, Caitlin Clark is white. So
(10:14):
commentator Skip Bayless was talking about this, saying that he
felt guilty watching her, supporting her, thinking that she was
a good ballplayer, and then he admitted the other day,
he says, quote, I started to think, deep down in
my psyche, wait a second, she's really good. But I'll
(10:36):
be the first to admit I felt guilty saying so
on TV or on social media. I did not want
to look like this red state white guy cheering for
this red state white girl. Our country feels split enough
racially already. I didn't want to pour gasoline on that fire.
(10:57):
He goes on, He says, maybe I was wrong about this, maybe,
but Caitlyn Clark started to feel like some sort of
new right wing symbol, white woman dominating game dominated by
black men and women for years and years, I could
almost hear some people thinking white power baby. And please,
I'm not saying Kaitlin Clark is far right in her
(11:18):
politics or belief I have no idea what her politics
or religion are, because she is carefully and smartly avoided
taking any rookie year's stance because she's already such a
lightning rod. I know what a powerful point of pride
basketball has been to the black community in this country.
Black men and women obviously have been routinely and consistently
better at basketball. Unquote, so he says, I didn't feel
(11:44):
like I could cheer for Kaitlyn Clark because I didn't
want to look like a racist white guy cheering for
a white girl. First of all, the basketball has been
a point of pride for the black community. It has
been a point of pride for basketball fans, including black
(12:05):
basketball fans who play basketball. You know who doesn't like
this white guy saying, oh yeah, basketball point of pride
for the black black guys that can't play basketball. Talk
to these guys, what was it like for you growing up? Oh,
the black guy who couldn't play basketball?
Speaker 2 (12:24):
It was rough. Man.
Speaker 1 (12:27):
I got to school and suddenly all these guys are like, hey,
oh good, welcome to seventh grade. Let's get a basketball
in your hands so you can go out there. You're
a tall black kid. You're gonna be great. I remember
two guys in particular who I went to school with.
They were brand new in our middle school and our
basketball team was like, hey, all right, we got some height.
And this guy talks a good game. He's probably pretty
(12:47):
good until he went out for the team and slammed
a layup into the bottom of the rim, and we're like, oh,
he sucks. And the other guy, tall guy, he was tall.
He was terrible. And and I've talked now as an
adult with buddies of mine who were that guy, the
black kid who couldn't ball, And man, is it rough
(13:10):
for those guys. So this whole like, oh, yeah, basketball
is But like Skip Bayless apparently thinks that if you're
born black, you've got this innate ability to go out
there and shoot the j and that's not the truth
for some of these guys. And to not be one
of those guys. It's tough being these guys. So the
last thing he said there that's racis he's trying not
(13:33):
to be That seems to me to be a racist statement.
And then this idea that as a white guy, I
feel guilty cheering for a white basketball player. Do you
even hear yourself? Is is this what racism looks like
in twenty twenty four? Because if so, we won, we
(13:58):
have beat racism. For the low, low price of fifty
thousand dollars or whatever, Matt Walsh has to pay some
of these these experts to join him in his pseudo
documentary film that they learned later is the new movie
Am I Racist? If you've seen it, I'd love to
hear your thoughts. Scott atkfab dot com. When you see it,
(14:18):
send me an email with your movie reviews. I love
movie reviews, whether it's AMI racist, Reagan, A lot of
people excited about vindicating Trump. A new film coming out
here before the election from Denesh Desuza. Will be interested
in that, certainly, But I also really want to know
what you think about Beatlejuice, Beetlejuice, you know, really anything,
Scott atkfab dot com. Okay, I mentioned Trump. I think
(14:43):
we have enough diverse material on that subject to initiate
something that was coming up here in just a couple
of minutes that I call a Trump date.
Speaker 2 (14:53):
Scott Byes News Radio eleven ten kfab.
Speaker 1 (14:56):
Now, when we have a number of different news story
and the only link between them is the former president
of the United States, I squished them together, much like
the beautiful accordion. I pushed them together and make a
beautiful sound. That becomes a Trump date. All I WANNAZZI
(15:18):
just shake your Trump, Just.
Speaker 2 (15:23):
Shake your Trump.
Speaker 1 (15:24):
All right, here we go, check baby, check baby, one
two three four truck. It's time for a Trump date here.
The first one is in Nebraska, but it doesn't involve
Trump coming to Nebraska. Instead, he sent a contingent to
meet with Governor Pillin and some state lawmakers. Yesterday. Senator
Lindsey Graham was here. I imagine they found Governor Pillen
(15:48):
cow Governor Pillen cowering under his desk. Governor Senator Lindsey
Graham is here to see you, and he looks really mad.
Senator Lindsay Graham's interesting character. He does get all worked
up sometimes and politically. I like what he says about
(16:10):
a lot of things. He's a little interesting, but yeah.
So Lindsey Graham sash ate his way into Lincoln and
told the governor, along with a letter from Congressman Mike Flood,
Senator deb Fisher, Senator Pete Ricketts, Congressman Don Bacon, Congressman
Adrian Smith, and the Speaker, and this was sent to
(16:31):
the Speaker of the Legislator John Arch and Governor Pillen
and delivered by Senator Lindsay Graham, that Nebraska needs to
be like every other state except Maine and implement winner
take all electoral college votes. I'm sure you know this.
Sorry for the refresher if you're well versed, but Nebraska
(16:53):
has five one three or five five five electoral college votes.
There's your eighties stand up comedy movie reference for this
segment of the radio program.
Speaker 2 (17:05):
I have five.
Speaker 1 (17:08):
Children. You want to take a shot at that one.
I never remember if it's raw or delirious. It's all
one great Eddie Murphy, but that's Eddie Murphy impersonating Bill Cosby.
Speaker 2 (17:23):
I have five.
Speaker 1 (17:25):
Children, one to three or five five five children? Now
that's so all right. So we have five electoral college votes,
and the way it works right now is whoever wins
the popular vote in the state, they get two of those.
Then we have our three congressional districts. If you win
the third district, you get one. You win the first district,
the Lincoln area, you get another one. But Nebraska's second
(17:48):
blue dot purple district. You could lose the popular vote
in Nebraska, but win the popular vote in Nebraska's second
district and get one electoral college vote. Why does that
make a difference when you're trying to get to two
hundred and seventy. Well, because sometimes a football game comes
down to the last second and an extra point. And
(18:10):
there's a scenario. This happens every four years, by the way.
There's a scenario where someone looks at the map and says, well,
if Trump wins this state in that state, and Kamala
Harris wins this swing state and that swing state and
takes Arizona, well, it turns out this could all come
down to one electoral college vote. And here's Nebraska's second
district that does something real stupid. Unlike any of the
state except for Maine, they apportion out their electoral college
(18:34):
votes by congressional district, and Kamala Harris could be the
president if Nebraska's blue dot emerges and she gets that
last one vote. So there's a bunch of Republicans who
are leaning on Governor Pillin to call a special session
for the purpose of making Nebraska a winner take all state.
(18:55):
It's Thursday, September nineteenth. Is it even possible for this
to happen so late in the game. I know we
still got a ways till November fifth, but is it possible. Yes, Actually,
they could make this decision on November fourth. I don't
know if they're gonna make the decision at all. I
(19:15):
don't know if they're going to do a special session.
I don't know if they have the votes. I know
that Jane Kleb, the chair of the Nebraska Democratic Party,
it says, hey, if you guys are so confident in Trump,
then why don't you compete for the votes? Why do
we do things right here in Nebraska. By the way,
I don't hear her going to any other state and
(19:37):
suggesting that they do what is done in Nebraska And also,
by the way, by the way, to the by the way,
if Nebraska, if it turned out that Nebraska was a
blue state and it was a red dot that might
give Trump a victory. Jane Cleb of the Democratic Party
(19:57):
in our state would be the first one saying this
is un Nebraska needs to fall in line with all
these others. So it's it's certainly playing politics, which I
expect him to do. They are political players. But this
whole idea that Nebraska and this electoral college winner take
all thing is dead for this election year is apparently
not dead. Like Jason Vorhees, it keeps coming back again
(20:23):
and again, Like his cousin Scott, that's me. We got
a Fox News update, I got a lot more Trump stories.
We'll continue our Trump date next, Scott Vorhees, where you're going.
The Zonker's custom was inbox Now pictures Now. It features
a picture of our friend Enoch. Enoch is a great dude.
(20:43):
He came and visited us recently on his birthday, and
he was at our debate viewing party the other night
for Trump versus Harris.
Speaker 2 (20:54):
And Enoch now.
Speaker 1 (20:57):
Who is a high school student, now has braces and
he just sent me a picture of a very close
selfie of his face with a big grin showing off
his braces. Enoch, fantastic. You're not gonna be able to
have a lot of taffy for a while. But I
can't wait to see what the choppers look like when
(21:19):
you get those braces off. Congratulations, that's a big move
with the braces. And as soon as I hear about
anyone getting braces, I remember when I had them twice.
That was fantastic. Hey, you just started high school. Remember
when you had braces. Yeah, we apparently didn't leave them
on long enough. Let's just put them on for another
annoying nine months or so as you start high school. Yeah, sure,
(21:43):
that'd be great. But as soon as I think about braces,
I can feel the orthodontists tightening them. Do you ever
have braces, Lucy, you can feel them tightening? I didn't, Yeah,
clearly not. So that's Lucy chap I'm kidding.
Speaker 3 (21:59):
Sorry, don't even pay me to be here. I am
volunteering my services to be here.
Speaker 2 (22:07):
Who is getting paid to do this? Not me?
Speaker 3 (22:09):
Not me?
Speaker 1 (22:10):
That's Lucy Chapman. I'm Scott Vorhees. We work on smiles
sent to us in the Zonker's custom woods in box
Scotti kfab dot com. We are in the midst of
a Trump date. Now talk about Trump talk about Trump.
The Trump date now moves on to a couple of
other points. The International Brotherhood of Teamsters did not endorse Trump,
(22:37):
and this was a very kind of a smart move
on their part because they ended up taking this poll
of Teamsters that was released yesterday, and the rank and
file teamsters. These are the guys out there on the
lines doing the work, making something like seven and a
half times the minimum wage and complaining they can't get by,
(22:58):
you know, assault of the earth people. They preferred in
a race of Trump versus Harris, Trump to the tune
of sixty percent in favor of Trump. And so the leadership,
so as not to upset their guys, said, you know what,
We're just not going to endorse a candidate this year.
(23:20):
This is of course seen as a blow to Kamala
Harris because the Teamsters union has endorsed the Democrat in
every presidential election since two thousand and now they just said, ah,
no endorsement, which is a shot against Kamala. Trump's very
happy with it. He was on Fox News last night
(23:40):
trumpeting that on Gutfeldt Show and saying he doesn't know
if they're aliens. At fifty one, when Kat Timp, who
was a guest on this show last week, said are
there aliens an Area fifty one? He deftly maneuvered around
the question and said, I've talked to some pilots and
said that they have seen things up there that they
can't explain in the sky. He sidestepped Area fifty one.
(24:05):
But Trump says that his campaign has been spied on again,
and he's blaming the Kamala Harris campaign and Iran. Apparently
some Iranian hackers stole information from the Trump campaign. How
did they break into the campaign email servers and do
(24:26):
that the same way that everyone steals all your stuff?
By the way, Lucy or Mic is still on, and
it makes me nervous when it's just open like that.
You don't like clicking well, waiting for someone to come
into your room and start cursing loudly and they just
let you know. I know they've been warned, but we
(24:46):
know how, we know the people we work with, and
we know how that goes. So how did they steal
Trump's emails the same way they steal everyone's emails? You
get this email saying yeah, this is Amazon, Yeah that's it,
and we're trying to deliver your package and we think
your address is wrong. Can you click on this link
(25:09):
from Amazon at gmail dot com or something like that,
and you're like, I didn't order anything. I wonder what
this is and you click on it. Oh, no, we
just gave all of our secrets to Iran. So through
some phishing schemes, some people within the Trump campaign have
been hit and they think that this was emanating from
(25:31):
or at least sold to Iran. I imagine someone could say, ooh,
we got some emails of the Trump campaign. We can
sell them to Iran. Iran's like, yeah, we'll pay good
money for that. And it's just stuff like I don't
know why he keeps saying like saying stuff like that.
We tell him not to say that, and he keeps
I mean, what else are in these emails? Trump doesn't
listen to any of these people. Mostly that's that benefits him.
(25:55):
Sometimes it doesn't. But what is in these emails? Trump
seems to be running a campaign exclusively out of his
own head. So they sell the stuff to Iran, and
Iran turns around and tries to send it to the
Biden and now the Harris campaign, and they got some
of this stuff. Now the campaigns, the Biden Harris campaign
(26:18):
say well, there's no evidence that we ever replied to
these emails.
Speaker 2 (26:22):
Well, what did you get?
Speaker 1 (26:23):
We're not at liberty to say what we got from Iran?
How about this? Why it does Iran want Kamala Harris
to be the next president of the United States? Why
in the world would Iran, which had assets to the
tune of hundreds of millions of dollars unfrozen by the
Biden campaign. Why would Iran which had assets that's totaled
(26:45):
in the hundreds of millions of dollars delivered to them
via aircraft carrier from the Obama Biden campaign. Why in
the world would Iran want Kamala Harris to continue this
lineage that benefits Iran getting hundreds of million, millions of dollars.
I wonder you know, and in case you're not fluent
(27:05):
in sarcasm, because they know they profit and they continue
to sew seeds of terrorism like trying to stop Israel
or America with the money that we give them or
allow them to have. That works out better for Iran
if Trump doesn't win. Now, speaking of money, Trump is
(27:27):
now all in on cryptocurrency. He announced the other day
that they now have a beautiful Trump crypto currency. I
am the first person to admit once again, I don't
know what any of the stuff is. I mean, on
some level I get it, but mostly if it goes
(27:51):
any deeper than that, I really don't know. So Trump
is now the first US president, former or sitting to
publicly use bitcoin A to form a cryptocurrency. And he
just announced the other day that yeah, we're doing crypto
and we've got a big purchase here. And then we
(28:12):
went and we spent it at the pub Key Bar,
New York City, Greenwich Village, where he went into this
bar after his rally yesterday in Long Island and just
walked into this bar and was like, hey, everyone, how's
it going? As the Secret Service is like, please don't
just walk into this bar. I'm sure it was all
people like this is a photo op?
Speaker 2 (28:33):
Yes? Is it political in nature? Yes?
Speaker 1 (28:36):
Did it still involve people who are hanging out at
the bar having the president come in there after they
were already wanded and checked and all this stuff And
Trump comes in there and buys everyone drinks and burgers.
Trump doesn't drink beer himself. So it's said here it
was nine hundred and fifty dollars worth of diet cokes
(28:59):
and burger for those in attendance that were purchased with bitcoin.
And just to tie this in to a previous story,
I think some people here at this joint are teamsters guys.
So I guess if you're looking to buy all things Trump,
(29:24):
you can buy a Trump bitcoin and then what if
you get a thousand of them? You get a free
life and super Mario brothers.
Speaker 3 (29:34):
I understood he was made to look kind of silly
that he didn't know how to use this, that he
had to have somebody help him on his phone or whatever.
Speaker 2 (29:41):
I don't blame him, I don't, okay, but if.
Speaker 3 (29:43):
You have bitcoin, then you do how to use it, right?
Speaker 2 (29:49):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (29:49):
He just he previously said he thought cryptocurrency was a
scam and now he's like, no, this is this is good.
We're going to do it. And I don't know he
went in there and bought a bunch of people burgers
and drinks. One more Trump related story here before we
(30:11):
shut down our Trump date for this hour, and it
comes from Kirsten m Hoff. Do you recognize the name?
Speaker 2 (30:19):
Yes? M Hoff? Yes?
Speaker 3 (30:21):
Is that Disney?
Speaker 2 (30:23):
No, you're thinking of like off whatever.
Speaker 3 (30:28):
His name is.
Speaker 1 (30:29):
Michael Eisner, but Jack m Hoff anyway, So Doug m
Hoff is the second. Oh, yes, it's Kamala Harris's husband,
Doug m Hoff. Well, who's Kirsten m Hoff his ex wife,
who is all in supporting Kamala Harris with the presidency.
Speaker 3 (30:46):
I have no doubt.
Speaker 1 (30:48):
I would have some doubt. It's still your ex husband,
and your ex husband's your ex husband's wife. And I
think that Kamala Harris is younger than her, so I
don't I don't know any of this stuff. But Kamala
Harris helps raise her kids and they like her. They
call her Mamla, which is actually adorable. And she's Kursten
Mhoff is responding to Sarah Huckabee Sanders, governor of Arkansas,
(31:12):
former White House the best White House Press secretary unless
you're counting Melissa McCarthy is Sean Spicer on Saturday Night Live,
and Sarah Huckabee Sanders made some comment that she said,
my kids keep me humble. Unfortunately, Kamala Harris doesn't have
anything keeping her humble, which they took as a slap
at the childless cat lady. Kamala Harris's step mom to
(31:34):
these kids. Their mom mom comes out and says that
Kamala Harris has spent her entire career working for the people,
all families. That keeps you pretty humble. And by the way,
I support Kamala Harris for presidency more enthusiastically then Malania
Trump supports her husband for the presidency, which I don't
(31:59):
and she no, yeah, And I don't know how she
would know that, but that is the let me just
double check. I think that's the last of the stories
involving the former and potential future president. So that wraps
up our Trump date, Trump Up the Jam, trump it Up,
(32:19):
Trump Up the jamp trumpet trumpet trumpet trumpet Trump. Sean
Callahan's Got a Husker Buzz Extra next right here on
Big Red Radio, Scott charl says, it was funny when
you made fun of Lucy's teeth. You had me shoot
Coke zero out of my nose. Though Lucy has great teeth,
I just never make her smile on the show, clearly,
(32:40):
and Scott says, you keep referring to the Biden Harris campaign.
It's Harris Walls you mora. Yeah, I was talking about
how Iran had given emails over to the Biden campaign,
and then he dropped out and now it's the Harris campaign.
So that's the juxtaposition. Speaking of Tim Walls, he is
debating Senator Vans coming up here on Tuesday, October first,
(33:05):
this is the vice presidential debate. A debate viewing party
will be back at Ref's Sports Bar and Grill, ninety
seventh in Giles, coming up that evening eight o'clock debate
start time. Get there early to get some food, get
a place to sit, and have a great time with
us at the debate viewing party at Ref's. That's ninety
seventh and Giles, La Vista. Lucy, I did this yesterday
(33:27):
twenty five hours ago, and I had several people who
enjoyed it and asked me to do it again. We
do take requests on this program. Oh lord, so I'll
set it up. I'm not going to do the whole
rant again. I get a chance to move it in
a different direction. But here's how this topic sets up.
(33:49):
Second verse, same as the first. Hey Lucy, Hey Scott,
you know we got some special guests coming too the
football game tomorrow night at Memorial Stadium. What Yeah, the
anti Israel I'm sorry Pro Palestine group at dear old Nebraska.
You is bringing in a bunch of their comrades. They're
like minded cohorts from across the world. They're bringing in
(34:13):
hes Belah so they can come to Memorial Stadium and
enjoy a Huscar football game.
Speaker 3 (34:18):
Do they have to show id uh?
Speaker 1 (34:20):
No, No, you don't have to show any idea or
anything like that. All they got to do is just
come in and enjoy the game. I can't wait for
that halftime show. And Hez Bellah is sitting all over
a Memorial Stadium. Why it might sound something like this,
(35:02):
that a mushroom cloud, that last pager, that debt finish,
that finished the job right there, Boy, that's gonna be fun.
And then I have to say, no, I am joking.
Hesblah is not because people believe things that you say, Lucy,
and I have to always caution against them. I'm gonna
make it seem like you said this.
Speaker 3 (35:22):
I've got enough problems with the things that I do. Say.
Speaker 1 (35:26):
Name one, name one problem you have. The people believe
things when you say them on KFAB all right, So
Hesblah to my knowledge, is not coming to the Memorial
Stadium Nebraska fight in the Lini game tomorrow night. Though
people hear that and go oh, I do believe there
is a pro Palestine student group that did invite these
(35:48):
people to campus. Yeah, you know anymore, I don't know
that you could decided anything is not going to happen.
But that's not gonna happen. That's what big football.
Speaker 2 (36:00):
Fans, they would be.
Speaker 3 (36:03):
All right, it's a different football though.
Speaker 1 (36:06):
Yeah, they this is American football. And I'll tell you what,
I'm a fan of watching terrorists blow up real good.
And now, yesterday we started off the program talking about
these booby trap so I said, booty trap. Uh, these
booby bok gotta chime on. This is your eighties movie
reference for this segment of the radio program.
Speaker 3 (36:27):
Okay, I'm gonna go with goonies on this one.
Speaker 2 (36:29):
Oh my gosh, you got one, Lucy never gets one.
Speaker 3 (36:33):
Seriously.
Speaker 2 (36:34):
Yeah, it just.
Speaker 1 (36:36):
Booby trap, booty traps. That's why I said booty traps.
But it was not a deposit bottle. The the booby
trapped pagers and walkie talkies that the terrorists got in Lebanon.
And then and we were able to see this through.
I guess there's skycam footage of beautiful downtown Bay Route
(37:01):
and have you seen this video. There's not much to see.
It's just a picture. Like when you look at your
traffic cameras to do Timesaver traffic reports. You see kind
of the skyline and you see some traffic moving, and
then like over here between some buildings, there's just a
puff of smoke and then a couple of blocks down,
another puff of smoke, and then a couple of blocks
(37:23):
down another. As terrorists are blowing up in a line,
one after the other, like someone lit a fuse on
some firecrackers, just one after the other, boom, bang pow.
As terrorists are just exploding right down the street. And
(37:47):
you know, there was that moment where you're standing not
too far from a guy and his pager starts beeping
and you're like, oh, you got a message. And then
he blows up, and then your pager starts beeping. You're like, oh, no,
wh puck is it? And then someone else standing there going, uh,
do I have a pager? Then you hear the beeping ah,
(38:11):
And it's just all these things given to them from
the Trojans, right, this is the Trojan Horse twenty twenty
four Israeli Defense Forces. Addition, these guys made the pagers
and made the walkie talkies managed to get like a
second or third party intermediary to deliver this stuff to
(38:32):
these guys, going hey, we're your friends, and we know
those darn Israelis. Ooh, them Jews, they're intercepting your messages
on your smartphones. You can't use smartphones here, use this
technology from nineteen eighty seven. Yeah, it's nineteen eighty seven.
I think Mannequin is in theaters and rock Steady is
(38:54):
on the radio.
Speaker 2 (38:54):
We begin to rock Steady.
Speaker 1 (38:57):
You know this is ninet eighty seven. It's a great time.
I think that movie in music reference might be correct,
and so it's it's pager technology. The Israelis will never
be able to crack this. They can, they're not cracking
to crack it. They're gonna blow it up, but they
can't crack it. And they're like, hey, thanks, new friend.
Is that a yamaka? No, No it's not. It's anyway.
(39:19):
Here's all your stuff. Well how much did they cost?
Speaker 2 (39:22):
You know what?
Speaker 1 (39:23):
We like you guys. We're gonna give them to you
for free. Wow, thanks bud. And then they take all
this stuff disseminate them or amongst all the terrorists, and
then on Tuesday they start blowing up. Now that's what
we talked about yesterday. Just when I thought this story
(39:44):
couldn't get any better, Do you know what happened yesterday?
Speaker 3 (39:49):
This?
Speaker 1 (39:50):
Two days This is I talked yesterday about stuff that
happened two days ago. What happened yesterday?
Speaker 3 (39:55):
This was the cell phones.
Speaker 1 (39:57):
No walkie talkie isn't paiger still, it's still walkie talking
round two, which means that there were hesballah bad guys.
Speaker 3 (40:09):
I know where this is going.
Speaker 1 (40:12):
Who heard that they're cohorts, comrades, fighting partners, they're terroristic
allies were blowing up and they heard why, and they
kept carrying around their pagers and walkie talkies. Someone probably
(40:34):
told these guys like, hey, careful, it seems like it
was those darn Jews that gave us the sploding pagers,
and if you still have one of these things, you
need to get rid of it. And there was someone
that was like, don't tell me what to do. I
get I. How am I gonna hear from my drug dealer?
(40:57):
How am I going to know it's time to go
into surgery? Unless I got an old pager. I'm sure
mine will be free. These idiots knew that they were
blowing up, and we're still carrying them around. And because
I don't know if you know how this works, but
(41:18):
over on the other side of the world, a lot
of times when a guy dies, the funeral isn't sometime
late next week or in some cases even months from now.
The funeral is like, all right, that guy's dead. When
does everyone have fifteen minutes today? I mean they it's
(41:39):
sometimes it's like we have to bury this person by sundown,
or at least by sundown the next day. They don't
mess around. The funeral has to be like right now,
it's like, all right, more in the dead. Someone dig
a hole. We're having a funeral service. And so they
had a bunch of people who showed up for a
funeral that day or the next day for someone who'd
(42:03):
just been blown up by an exploding pager, and being
that they're all his friends, all part of the Hesbala network,
they all go to the funeral and these morons still
have their pagers. And at the funeral for a guy
who died from a sploding pager.
Speaker 2 (42:25):
Twelve twelve people.
Speaker 1 (42:30):
Were blown up at a funeral for a guy who
blew up at like you know, as they and they
start beeping first, and I don't know, it was probably
not all twelve of them who had the sploding pagers.
They are like, all right, we know we had to
get rid of these things. Like everyone got rid of
these things, right, But in any organization, whether you work
(42:54):
for you know, a great company like Microsoft, let's bring
it back on. You work for a great company like
you know, a good Omaha business like conn agrew n Run. No,
So you work for a great Omaha company Berkshire Hathaway,
or you work at a radio station, or you work
for a terrorist network known as his Boulah. If you
(43:18):
get twelve of your co workers together, there's going to
be one idiot who didn't read the.
Speaker 3 (43:23):
Email or didn't read all of it. That would be.
Speaker 1 (43:28):
So these guys show up for the meeting in this
case it's a funeral, and they're probably talking to everyone like,
all right, just to make sure no one still has
those sploding pagers, right, everyone, they ditch the walkie talkies
in the pagers. Everyone's like, no, I didn't know, I
didn't bring them.
Speaker 2 (43:43):
No, not me. And then they're there at the funeral.
Speaker 1 (43:47):
You know it's hay, which roughly translates to, you know, sorry,
this terrorist is dead. And then suddenly it's the beeping
from a pager and they all know immediately who it
comes from, and they turn around and go randy, and
then they all blow up real good. They're like, I
(44:12):
knew it. When I asked that guy, did you get
rid of the patron? He went the pager. Yes, yes
I did. I did get rid of that. No need
to search me. And then the beeping starts. Twelve terrorists
(44:35):
killed by exploding pagers at a funeral. Just when the
story couldn't get any better, it got better.
Speaker 3 (44:45):
You're not making this up.
Speaker 2 (44:47):
No, I don't know if all twelve died well, but
that's why.
Speaker 3 (44:52):
I still had them.
Speaker 1 (44:54):
They still had Yeah, there was another round yesterday. People
still had this stuff. I love it. I love it.
I love it. There's your eight nineties movie reference for
this segment of the radio program. There's an obscure one
dirty rotten scoundral That.
Speaker 2 (45:11):
Would be me.
Speaker 1 (45:12):
I've been swimming in raw sewage. I love it. I
love it. Nothing Naked, gun to and a half excellent
Dirty rotten Scoundrels I guess though, Lady Fanny of Omaha
the uh so, this Lebanese woman tells the BBC that
everyone there is terrified and just panicking. All right, well, here,
I don't mean to tell the terrorists what to do,
(45:35):
but if you know that the pagers are blowing up,
what you do is you'll look around. Are there any
pagers in here? And if there are, you throw them
away somewhere far away. This is a dumpster way down there.
So like, I don't know what they're worried about. If
we're afraid that we're gonna blow do you still have
(45:56):
the pagers? They should be worried though, because they know
Israel tricked them. They gave him the device and then
they blew them up. And if they could do this
with a pager, what else did they do this with
your smartphone, your laptop. It's Lebanon. I imagine that if
(46:20):
they're using pagers, the technology is probably not that great.
So you're Waylon Jennings eight tracks. You know whatever it
is that you have your rebock pumps, your member's only jacket,
your stonewashed denim jean jacket with the Reo Speedwagen button
on it.
Speaker 2 (46:37):
Whatever.
Speaker 1 (46:38):
By the way, Lucy still wears that every day, and
that's thankfully not a joke. So whatever it is you have,
did Israel put a bomb in that too, You should
be scared. Just a matter of time before you all
blow up.
Speaker 2 (46:54):
Real good.
Speaker 1 (46:56):
Scott Boys snooze Radio eleven se kyfab Karen emails and says,
I love it. Terrorizing the terrorists. Yes, that's exactly what's
happening here, And Justin says, what's even awesomer is that
after the pagers exploded, they retrieve they retrieved their emergency
(47:16):
communication radios, the walkie talkies. Oh, we can't use the
pagers anymore. Let's go to these walkie talkies we got
from the exact same people. And it was the walkie
talkies that blew up. As they're like, all right, throw
away the pagers. These walkie talkies are probably then those
blew up too. Yes, I can't wait for tomorrow. Is
(47:39):
there anything better than exploding terrorists? Secretary of State A. Blincoln?
Did someone say a blinken, there's your nineties movie reference
for this segment of the radio program. Lucy Chapman's not
here to guess stripes or something equally as dumb that
would be Robin hood men and Tights. Secretary of State
(48:00):
Antony Blinken said that the United States did not know
about nor was involved in these incidents. He said, We're
still gathering the information and gathering the facts. Oh, the
information and the facts. Yes, I'm not surprised that the
Biden administration feels these are two separate things. Of course,
we're not gathering. Why in the world would Israel tell
(48:24):
this administration, which has done a horrible job of supporting
them for now almost exactly a year since Hamas terrorists
backed by Iran, our buddies in Iran, backed by Hesbelah,
Why in the world would Israel share with America, who
again has done a horrible job not only supporting our
(48:48):
partners in Israel through everything they've been in since October seventh,
but gave Iran the money so they could give to
Hesbellah and Hamas terrorists to commit acts of terror against Israel.
That is the timeline here. Why would that poor country
Israel tell their good buddies in America, Hey, just letting
(49:12):
you know, we're gonna blow up the terrorists by use
of pagers. You're gonna tell that to this president next time.
He walks off the beach. Yeah, Israel, they got the pagers.
They're gonna blow up and kill hesbelats. I mean think
that's that's great, as long as no innocent people. You know,
they has to be a measured proportion of response. And
(49:33):
I told Benjamin then Yahoo, you know that that's fine
as long as they kill bad guys with the exploding pagers.
They're like, mister President, it hasn't happened yet. You just
gave it all away. Oh well, I'm going back to
the beach with Frankie and Annette Scott, Voice News Radio
eleven ten KFAB and finally, Omaha police say, if you
(49:57):
see someone exposing himself just as the sun sets an
American Heroes park in Bellevue, well yeah, you got to
make sure the light is just right. Then don't engage,
Stay calm and see if you can get a picture,
because that'll help police get the guy. Yeah, that's exactly
what he wants you to do. This has happened now twice.
(50:18):
They caught one guy. They're still looking for another guy.
I don't know if they're working in tandem. Look, I
know we want everyone to be equal, but until men's
start calling the police going there's a woman exposing herself
to me at the park, then there will still be
a difference between the genders.
Speaker 2 (50:36):
Scott Boys Mornings nine to eleven on news Radio eleven
ten KFAB